REPORTS, OF Divers Choice CASES in LAW. TAKEN By those late and most judicious Prothonotaries of the Common Pleas, RICHARD BROWNLOW, & JOHN GOLDESBOROUGH. Esqrs. WITH DIRECTIONS HOW TO proceed in many Intricate Actions, both Real and Personal, showing the Nature of those Actions, and the Practice in them; excellently useful for the avoiding of many Errors heretofore committed in the like Proceedings; fit for all Lawyers, Attorneys, and Practisers of the Law. Also a most Perfect and exact Table, showing Appositely the Contents of the whole Book. Solon: 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. LONDON, Printed by Tho: Roycroft, for Matthew Walbancke, at Grays-Inne Gate, and Henry Twyford, in Vine Court in the Middle Temple, 1651. THE PUBLISHER TO THE READER. THese Reports coming unto my hands, under the Commendations of men of so much sufficiency in the knowledge of the Laws, I could do no less than fear that it would prove too obvious a neglect of Common good to keep them in the dark, therefore here I present them to the World, to the end that all men may take that benefit by them now being in Print, which some few only have hitherto enjoyed by private Copies. And indeed I think I shall put it beyond dispute, when I name the two worthy, and late famous Prothonotaries, M r. Brownlow, & M r. Goldesborough, whose Observations they were, that they will both profit and delight the Reader, since there are contained under these heads, viz. Actions upon the Case, Covenant, Account, Assize, Audita querela, Debt, (upon almost all occasions) Dower, Ejectment, Formedon, Partition, Quare Impedit, Replevin, Trespass & Waste, Many excellent conclusions, as well of Law, as of the manner of plead, Demurrers, Exceptions, Essoins, Errors, and the qualities of many Writs, with other various and profitable Learning, in which may be found the number of the Roll, for so many as have had the luck of a full debate and definitive sentence. And for the rest, though there is no Judgement in them, so as to determine what the Law is, yet at least they will afford a very considerable compensation for the Readers pains, by opening unto him such matters as are apt for Argumentation, and may acquaint his Genius with the manner of Forensall Disputations, from which benefit, to detain you any longer, will deserve a Censure; therefore I remit you to the matter itself, which I am confident (the Printers faults excused) will easily effect its own praise beyond my Ability. SPECIAL OBSERVATIONS AND RESOLUTIONS OF THE JUDGES OF THE COMMON PLEAS. Upon several Actions upon the Case, there depending and adjudged. PEdley versus Langley, Hill. 14. Ja. rotulo; the Plaintiff Case for words, You are a Bastard, tried by the Country. brought his Action for these words, You are a Bastard, for your Father and Mother were never married. The Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was a Bastard, and justifies the words laid: and it was held by the Court, that this Issue should be tried by the Country, and not by the Bishop, as in other Cases. SMayles one of the Attorneys, etc. versus Smith, for these words, Judgement arrested, because the Plaintiff did not aver that he was an Attonrney at the time of the words spoken. he, meaning the Plaintiff, took corruptly five Marks of Brian Turnor, being against his own Client, for putting off and delaying an Assize against him: and after a Verdict, exception was taken against the Declaration, for that the Plaintiff did not expressly allege that at the time of speaking the words, He was an Attorney, but laid it that he had been an Attorney. The Court held the words would bear Action. MAle versus Ket, Hill 14. Jac. rotulo 1506. for these words, William Case for words which d●d amount to but petty Larceny. Male did steal my Corn out of my Barn. Judgement for the Plaintiff. The Court held that an Action would lie for these words, You are a Thief and have stolen a Cock, which was but Petty Larceny. COwte versus Gilbert, Hill. 10. Jac. rotulo 3176. Thou art a Thief, and hast stolen a Tree. Judgement, that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ. The like, Thou art a Thief, and hast stolen my Maidenhead; no Action. HArding versus Bulman, Hill. 15. Jac. The Plaintiff declares, that in such a Term he had brought an Action of Case against B. for scandalous words, to which he pleaded not guilty; and at that Trial gave in Evidence to the Jury, to take away the Plaintiff Credit and Reputation, that the Plaintiff was a common Liar, and recorded in the Star-chamber for a common Liar, by reason whereof, the Jury gave the Plaintiff but very small Damage, to the Plaintiffs Damage of, etc. The Defendant pleads not guilty. And it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Action would not lie. And of that opinion the Court seemed to be. Bridge's one of the Attorneys, versus Playdell, for words, You, meaning the Plaintiff, have caused this Boy, meaning A. W. then present, to perjure himself. Judgement for the Plaintiff. STone versus Roberts, Mich. 15. Jac. rotulo 635. for these words, Thou art a Witch and an Enchanter, for thou hast bewitched For calling one Witch, no Action will lie. Stronges Children; no Action lies but if thou say, Thou art a Witch and hast bewitched Children, and that they are wasted and destroyed; they are actionable. SCarlet versus Style, Trin. 14. Jac. rotulo 541. for these words, If Felony be committed, good cause to arrest one for it, but not to speak words to defame one. Thou didst steal a Sack and Curricomb, and I will make thee produce it; and thou didst steal my Father's Wood, and didst give it to a Whore. The Defendant justifies, that such a day the Goods were stolen, and there was a common fame and report that the Defendant had stolen them, and upon that report the Plaintiff did vehemently suspect that the Defendant had stolen them, and thereof did inform a Justice of the Peace, and complaining of the Defendant to the Justice, and informing him of the Premises, did speak the words before mentioned. If a Felony be committed, it is good cause to arrest one for Felony, but not to speak words to defame one. If there be two Issues in several Counties in Trover, and one is tried, and Judgement and Execution of the Costs and Damages; and afterwards the other Issue is tried, and Costs thereupon, the last is erroneous, as to the Costs. Broccas Case. Note, Trover was brought against Husband and Wife for Goods, A Feme covert cannot convert. which came to the hands of Husband and Wife, & the Conversion was alleged to be by the Husband alone, for the Wife could not convert. And the Court held that the Action would not lie against the Wife. MOse versus Canham, Mich. 6. Jac. rotulo 508. The Plaintiff declares, Action upon the casebrought upon a collateral consideration, and good. that one Levet was indebted in such a sum, and for the payment thereof had delivered to the Plaintiff divers Goods of the said Levets: the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would deliver to the Defendant the said Goods, promises to pay the Plaintiff the money due from Levet: and exception was taken to the Declaration, for that the certainty of the Goods were not expressed, and for that the consideration was but collateral. Another Exception for that the Plaintiff might grant the Goods over, but the Court held the contrary. And Judgement for the Plaintiff. SMith versus Bolles Sheriff of London, Pasc. 9 Jac. rotulo 1353. Judgement reversed by Writ of Error, because Sheriff's name was omitted on the venire fac. In case for that the name of the Sheriffs were omitted, on the venire fac. And for that cause one Judgement given for the said Smith was reversed by Writ of Error. And for that Misprision Smith brought such Action of the Case. HArris versus adam's, If thou hadst had thy Right, thou hadst Case for words not actionable. been hanged for breaking of Paches House; the words not actionable. Thou art a Thief, thou hast stolen the Town-beam, meaning the Town of Wickham: Sergeant Hutton of opinion the Action would lie. Stephens' Attorney, versus Battyn, for words, Thou hast cozened Gaze for words. M. Windsor of his Fee, and I will sue thee for it in the Star-chamber, for that thou didst not come for Windsor. Judgement for the Plaintiff. Trin. 11. Jac. BRadley versus Jones, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo 3390. The Plaintiff brings A man shall not be punished for mistaking the Law. his Action upon the Case for unjust vexation. The Defendant had exhibited Articles against the Plaintiff, to have the good Behaviour against him, and took his Oath before Doctor Cary one of the Masters of the Chancery: and afterwards the Defendant ceased prosecution there, and obtained from the King's Bench a Supplicavit, to have the good Behaviour there. And the Court was of opinion, that the Action would lie, because he prosecuted in the King's Bench and not in the Chancery. But the Court said, that if he had prosecuted in the Chancery, though the Articles had been scandalous, yet no Action would have lain; for a man shall not be punished for mistaking the Law, for he may be misadvised by his Counsel. BRooks versus Clerk, Pasch. 11. Jac. rotulo 307. Action brought for these words, His Son Brooks hath deceived me in a Reckoning for Case for words. Wares. And his Debt-book which he keepeth for Sale of Wares in his Shop is a false Debt-book; and I will make him ashamed of his Calling. Hubbart and Nichols against the Plaintiff, and Warburton for the Plaintiff. Pasch. 11. Jac. rotulo 2147. Action of the Case brought for a Nuisance for building the Defendants House so near the Plaintiffs, that a great part of it superpends. And the Plaintiff in the conveying his Title, shows a Lease for years made to him, if the Lessor should so long live, and doth not aver the Life of the Lessor, but saith, that by virtue of the Demise the Plaintiff hath been and then was thereof possessed, and adjudged sufficient. MOrton versus Leedell, Hill. 10. Jac. rotulo 1783. Action of the The like. Case for these words, He, meaning the Plaintiff, is a lying dissembling Fellow, and a mainsworn and forsworn Fellow. And Judgement for the Plaintiff after divers motions. THomas Attorney versus Axworth, Pasch. 11. Eliz. rotulo 352. The like for Words. Action of the Case for these words, This is John Thomas his writing, and he hath forged this Warrant, meaning a Warrant made by Buller Sheriff of that County, upon a Capias prosecuted out of the Court of Common Pleas by M. H. against the Defendant, and directed to the Sheriff. ROw versus Alport, Mich. 11. Jac. rotulo 1527. Action upon the Case brought for suing in the Admiral Court, for a thing done upon the Land, and not upon the high Sea. BRay versus Ham, Trin. 13. Jac. rotulo 1994. Action of the Case for these words, Thou art a cozening Knave, and thou hast cozened me in selling false Measure in my Barley, and the Country is bound to curse thee for selling with false Measure, and I will prove it; and thou hast changed my Barley which I bought of thee. And the Plaintiff sets forth in his Declaration, that he was Bailiff to W. C. and H. C. of certain Lands in P. for three years; and during the said time, had the care and selling of divers Corn and Grain growing upon the same Land: and after Trial and Verdict for the Plaintiff, it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Action would not lie; but the Court were of a contrary opinion, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. BRown versus Hook, Pasch. 13. Jac. rotulo 234. Action of the Case Judgement arrested, because the Plaintiff omitted to show in his Declaration the words were spoken of himself. The Defendants Justification adjudged naught, because he justified for words that were actionable. for these words, Brown is a good Attorney, but that he will play on both sides. And it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that those words would not bear an Action, but the Court held they were actionable, but did not give Judgement, because the Plaintiff did not show in his Declaration, that the words were spoken of himself. STober versus Green, Mich. 11. Jac. rotulo 1●91. Action of the Case for these words, Thou didst keep and sell by false Weights, and in 24. s. bestowing, thy Weights were false two Ounces, and thy Man will be a Witness against thee, and I will prove it. The Defendant pleaded that the Plaintiff occupied one Shop, and kept unlawful Weights, and by such Weights sold, by reason whereof he said these words, Videlicet, Thou didst keep and sell by unlawful Weights, and in 24. s. bestowing, thy Weights were false an Ounce and three quarters, and thy Man, etc. And traversed the words in the Declaration, and it was adjudged a naughty Traverse, for that the words in the Bar, and justified by the Defendant are actionable. AGar versus Lisle, Mich. 11. Jac. rot. 318. Action of Trover brought To do a thing allowable by Law is no conversion. in Yorkshire, the Defendant justifies for Toll at Darnton in Durham, and traverse, etc. The Court doubts of his Traverse, being only for the County of York, whereas it ought to be any where else generally. And Hobart said, the Bar was nought, because in the justification, no conversion was sufficiently alleged. And note, that if a man doth a thing which is allowable by the Law, as to distrain Cattle, and impound them, that is no conversion; but if he work them it is a conversion. AVstin versus Austin, Trin. 10. Jac. rotulo 3558. In Troyer, the The Defendants Justification amounted but to Noguilty, and adjudged naught. Defendant pleads, that before the time that the Plaintiff supposes the Goods to come to the Defendants hands, one S. A. was possessed of the Goods, and amongst other Goods sold them to the Defendant, but kept them in his own hands, and afterwards sold them to the Plaintiff, by reason whereof the Plaintiff was possessed, and afterwards loses them, and they came to the Defendants hands, who converts them, as it was lawful for him to do. The Plaintiff demurs, and it was held a naughty Bar, for it amounts to a Non cull. And Cook doubted whether the Court should compel the Defendant to plead, Non cull. or award a Writ of Injury. And a Writ of Inquire was awarded. ALlyns versus Sparkes, & al. Trin. 8. Jac. rotulo 1606, Action of Judgement arrested, for want of certainty in the Count the Case brought for stopping up the Plaintiffs way, and the Plaintiff declares that one H. B. was seized of the Manor of M. of which two Acres were customary Land, and that the Lord of the Manor had for himself, and his customary Tenants for the said two Acres, a certain highway in, by, and thorough, etc. And that the Lord of the Manor granted the said two Acres to the Plaintiff, and that the Defendant made and erected one Ditch and Hedge, by reason whereof the Plaintiff lost the benefit of his way; and after Trial and Verdict, for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, because it did not appear in the Declaration to what Village the common way led to. And it was held a good Exception and Judgement arrested: but if it had been unto a common way there, or in such a Village, it had been good. KEnt versus Prat, Hill. 7. Jac. rotulo 131. Action upon the Case, Judgement arrested, for that the consideration was not valuable. the Plaintiff declares, that Prat was Rector of the Church of S. And that Kent was lawfully possessed of the Parsonage-house, and that there were divers strifes between the Plaintiff and Defendant for the said Rectory: and that the said Prat, in consideration that the said Kent would surrender the Parsonage-house, and the Gleabland, which were then sowed by Kent, he promised, etc. And after Trial it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Surrender was not a valuable consideration, because it did not appear to the Court that Kent had any Estate but at will, which is determinable at the will of the Lessor, and so he surrendered nothing, but if these words had been in the count, viz. of the Demise of the said Prat, For a term of divers years, it had been good, though the certainty of the years had not been expressed. SMailes versus Belt, & uxorem, Hill. 1. Jac. rotulo 1372. Action upon the Case, for words spoken by the Woman, Videlicet, Thou art a Thief, and a mainsworn Thief, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Action would not lie, but Judgement was arrested, because the Issue was Quod ipsi non sunt cull. and it ought to have been that the Woman was not guilty. YArdley Attorney, versus Ellyll, Mich. 11. Jac. rotulo 1252. Action Case forwords, for calling an Attorney Bribing Knave. upon the Case brought for these words, Your Attorney, meaning the Plaintiff, is a bribing Knave, and hath taken twenty pounds of you to cozen me: the Plaintiff laid a Communication, such a day and place by the Defendant with one B. which B. had before that time retained the Plaintiff to be his Attorney, concerning the Plaintiff, Hubbart and Nichols held the words actionable, videlicet, for the first word, Bribing Knave, and that the last words did not extenuate or weaken the former: if the words touch him in his Profession, the Action will lie, for it is against the Oath of an Attorney. Birtridge is an old perjured Knave, and that is to be proved by a stake parting the Land between M. and C. One Judge for the Plaintiff, and two for the Defendant. COrnhill versus Cowler. Trespass upon the Case brought against Baron Judgement arrested being mistried. & Feme for words spoken by the Woman; the Baron & Feme plead Quod ipsi in nullo sunt cull. de praemissis, and the Jury find that the Woman was guilty, and Exception taken after Trial to the Issue and Verdict, and they were both aided by the Statute of jeofayles. But another Exception was, that the Action was laid in Suff. And the Addition in the Writ was A. C. de C. in Com. Essex, and in the Declaration the Plaintiff alleadges, that the words were spoken at C. in the County aforesaid, which was in the County of Essex, and so a Mistryall. CHimery versus God. Action upon the Case, upon a promise to discharge and save harmless the Plaintiff against all manner of persons, and shows a Suit for Tithes in Norwich Court, and the Defendant replies that the Plaintiff was not damnified, and the Plaintiff rejoins that he was damnified, to wit, at S. aforesaid, which was in the County of Suffolk, where the Action was brought, and the Court held the Cause was mistried, because the Suit was in Norwich, and aught to be tried in Norwich, and not in Suffolk, and these words Apud, S. praedictam were idle. TIllet versus Bruen. for words, Trin. 12. jac. The Plaintiff shows a Suit in Colchester Court, and a Trial there before the Bailiff, and that the Plaintiff gave in Evidence his knowledge; and the Defendant willing to defame the Plaintiff, as if he had given false Evidence, said of the Plaintiff, Thou art as much forsworn, meaning in the Evidence aforesaid by the Plaintiff, upon his Oath in Form aforesaid given, as God is true; and moved in Arrest of Judgement, that An invendo. will not maintain an Action. the Inuendo would not maintain the Action, and so adjudged. LAmpleigh versus Braithwaie, Mich. 13. jac. rotulo 712. Action upon the Case, in which the Plaintiff sets forth, that whereas the Defendant had feloniously killed a Man, and after the Felony committed did earnestly request and solicit the Plaintiff that he would labour and endeavour to obtain from the King, for the Defendant, a Pardon for the Felony, upon which the Plaintiff at the instance and request of the Defendant, by all lawful ways and means possible, did often, and by many days labour and endeavour to obtain, etc. Videlicet, by riding and journeying at his own cost and charges, from L. unto the Village of R. where the King then was, and from thence back again to L. to obtain, etc. The Defendant afterwards at H. in consideration of the Premises, did assume and promise to give the Plaintiff an hundred pounds of lawful money, when he should be required: and a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest of Judgement, for that it did not appear that the Plaintiff had spoken to the King for a Pardon, nor done any thing, or obtained a Pardon: and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff; Wynch said, the Promise was subsequent to the Request; and good; for although the Defendant had no good by it, yet because the Plaintiff was at costs and labour, and it was at the Defendants request, sufficient to maintain the Action. If I request one to do a thing for me, and make no promise, and after you let me know that you did such a thing for me, and then I promise to discharge or pay you, this is a good consideration, although the Promise go not with the Request; otherwise it is where a man doth me a courtesy without any request. And Hobart took this difference between a consideration executed and executory; for where Non assumpsit is pleaded Difference between a promise executory and executed: quod nota. to a consideration executed, the Plaintiff needs only to prove the Promise; for where the consideration is executory, the Defendant may take Issue as well for not performing the consideration executory, as upon the Promise. GLover versus Taylor, Hill 13. jac. rotulo 852. Action upon the Non cull. pleaded where Non assumpsit should have been pleaded, and adjudged a good Issue. Case, for ill using a Horse, so that the Horse died, and the Defendant promised to redeliver the Horse. The Defendant pleads Non cull. And after a Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, because he did not plead Non assumpsit. And it was held a good Issue. Marshal versus Steward, Mich. 13. jac. rotulo 1134. Action upon Action of case for words, upon the statute, of 1. Jac. against Invocation of Spirits. the Case reciting the Statute of 1. jac. against Invocation, etc. for these words, The Devil appeareth to thee every night in the likeness of a black Man, riding on a black Horse, and thou conferrest with him, and whatsoever thou dost ask he doth give it thee, and that is the reason thou hast so much money, and this I will justify. Judgement for the Plaintiff. In Trover Judgement by Nihil dic. and Exception taken to the Declaration, to stay the filing the Writ of Inquiry, because no day of the conversion was in the Declaration, and by two Judges held naught. Mich. 14. jac. PArker versus Parker, Hill. 12. jac. rotulo 426. In Trover after a Ehe Imparlannce role supplied by the Issue being perfect. Verdict, it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the imparlance Roll was entered with Spaces for the possession and conversion, but both those Spaces in the Issue were filled up, and held good. The Imparlance was entered. Mich. 12. jac. rotulo 547. WHitepain versus Cook, Pasch. 12. jac. For words, Thou art a Rogue, and I will prove thee a Rogue: no Judgement. STone versus Bates. A man may well encourage one that was robbed, to cause the Felon to be indicted, and accompany him to the Assizes, and this shall be lawful for to do, without incurring the danger of an Action upon the case, upon conspiracy; but if he knew that he was not robbed, than he is in danger of the Action upon the case. COpe and his Wife administratrix, Plaintiffs, versus Lewyn, Trin. Judgement arrested, for not showing the Letters of Administration. 12. jac. rotulo 1714. An Action upon the case brought upon a promise made to the Intestate, and in the Court omits to show the Administration: and after Trial, that Fault moved in Arrest of Judgement; and the whole Court was of opinion, that he should not have his Judgement, for it did not appear that he was Administrator; for at the Common Law no Administration lay, but the Ordinary aught to have the Goods. HArvey Attorney, versus Bucking. Mich. 12. jac. rotulo 842. Judgement arrested, for that the Communication did not appear but by the Inuendo. Action of the case for slanderous words, He, meaning the Plaintiff, showed me first a Bill of forty pounds, without a Seal, meaning the said Bill by the said E. as aforesaid, sealed and delivered; and afterwards he showed me the same Bill with a Seal, and he, meaning the Plaintiff, hath forged the Seal of the same Writing, meaning the Seal of the said Bill by the said E. as aforesaid, sealed and delivered. The Defendant traverses the words, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and it was alleged in Arrest of Judgement, that the Declaration was naught, for that it did not directly appear that there was any communication between the Plaintiff and Defendant concerning the Bill, but only in the (invendo) which will not maintain the Action, and Judgement arrested. MOrton versus Leedall, Hill. 10. jac. rotulo 1783. Action upon the Action of the Case for calling a man mainsworn fellow. case for these words, He is a lying and dissembling Fellow, and a mainsworn Fellow. And a Verdict for the Plaintiff. And afterwards it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Action would not lie, but at length Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. And Sergeant Hutton cited the like case, adjudged in't. & Barnes, He is a mainsworn Villain. 〈◊〉 Skipwash SKipwash versus Skipwash, Hill. 14. jac. rotulo 3472. Action upon Moved in Arrest of Judgement, because no Demand alleged, but not allowed. the case, that whereas the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff would marry one A. B. did assume to pay the Plaintiff twenty pounds when he should, after the Marriage, be thereunto requested: The Plaintiff alleadges no special Demand: and that Fault was moved in Arrest of Judgement. Hobart and Wynch were for the Plaintiff, Warburton for the Defendant. JOtham versus Ball, Hill. 12. Jac. rotulo 1920. Action upon the case Judgement arrested, for incertainty in the Declaration. for slanderous words, Videlicet, Your Master Euseby, meaning the Plaintiff, is a Rogue, a Rascal, and Forger of Bonds; the Plaintiff laid a Colloquium between the Defendant and one R. G. And after Verdict moved in Arrest of Judgement, for that it did not expressly appear, that the said R. G. at the time of speaking the words was Servant to the Plaintiff: and Judgement was stayed by the Court. COddington versus Wilkin, for words, Trin. 12. jac. He is a Thief, By a general Pardon both Punishment and Fault taken away. and why will you take a Theifs part: spoken 1. Martii 10. jac. The Defendant justifies the words, because the Plaintiff stole Sheep. The Plaintiff by way of replication sets forth a general Pardon granted such a time, and further saith, that if any Felony were committed it was before the general Pardon made; and shows himself to be a Subject, and no person excepted in the Pardon. The Defendant demurs. The Court were of opinion, that by the Pardon both the Punishment and Fault were taken away; and that the wrong was done to the King by the Common Law; and the King being the supreme Head, if he pardons, the party is cleared of the wrong. As if a Villain be enfranchised, he from thenceforth is no Villain. Note, if a man upon good consideration promise to become bound to another by his Obligation to do an Act: and if he do not become bound, Action upon the case will lie against him: and the Plaintiff is not bound to tender him an Obligation, but the Defendant hath took it upon himself to do it. Richards' versus Carvamell. Action of the case brought, and counts for nonpayment of money at the Plaintiffs next coming into the Promise upon condition, notice not necessary. County of Somerset; and avers, that such a day he came into the County of Somerset, Videlicet, apud T. in Com. Somerset, and that the Defendant, though often requested, hath not paid. And Exception taken because the Plaintiff did not allege in his count, that he gave notice to the Defendant when he came into the County of Somerset, but not allowed, and Judgement given for the Plaintiff. And Nota. note, when a man assumes to pay money, or do any thing upon condition, the Defendant may take Issue upon the condition, and needs not plead Non assumpsit, but if he pleads Non assumpsit, than he confesses the performance of the condition, which mark. AVstin versus Jarvis, Trin. 13. Jac. rotulo 2180. The Plaintiff declares, Judgement arrested, for incertainty in the Count, and for that the promise was made by an Infant. that such a Day and Year he bought of the Defendant a Horse for a piece of Gold of the value of 22. s. by him to the Defendant then in hand paid, and for a 11. l. to be paid to the Defendant at the Day of Death or Marriage of the Plaintiff, which should first happen, for payment of which 11. l. the Plaintiff should bring to the Defendant one sufficient man to be bound, together with the Plaintiff to the Defendant: the Defendant in consideration thereof assumes to deliver the said Horse to the Plaintiff, when he should be thereunto requested: and the Plaintiff avers, that such a Day he brought the Defendant one sufficient man, Videlicet, I. A. de B. Yeoman, to be bound together with the Plaintiff to the said Defendant for the payment of the said 11. l. and shows that he requested the Defendant to deliver the said Horse, yet the Defendant hath not delivered him, according to his promise. The Defendant pleads Non assumpsit. And a Verdict for the Plaintiff: and moved in Arrest of Judgement, for that the Plaintiff at the time of the Contract was an Infant, and that he could not perform his promise by reason of his Infancy, and therefore the promise void; and another Exception, for that it was not alleged in what sum the Plaintiff and his Surety offered to be bound; and Judgement was, that the Plaintiff, Nihil capiat per breve. JAcob versus Songate, Trin. 9 Jac. rotulo 2776. An Action upon the Justification for calling a man perjured, dis-allowed, because he was 't convicted. case brought for this word, Perjured. The Defendant justifies that it was found by Verdict, that the Plaintiff was perjured, but no Judgement entered upon that Verdict. And whether the Plea were good, being there was no Judgement, was the Question: and it was adjudged no Bar, because no Judgement was given in the first-Action: and so Judgement entered for the Plaintiff. CRuttall versus Hosener, Pasch. 16. jac rotulo Action of the case for these words, He, meaning the Plaintiff, hath caught the French Pox, and brought them home to his Wife. And Judgement for the Plaintiff. THornton versus jepson. The Plaintiff being a Currier brought an Action of the Case will not lie for calling a Currier Barretor. Action upon the case for these words, He is a common Barretor; but the words would not lie for a man of that Profession, but would lie for a Justice of Peace or Lawyer. IReland versus Smith, Hill. 9 jac. rotulo Action upon the case For this word Papist no Action will lie, unless spoken of a Bishop. brought for these words, You Norgate take part against me with Ireland, who is a Papist, and hath gotten a Pardon from the Pope, and can help thee to one, if thou wilt. The Plaintiff laid a communication between the Defendant and Norgate, and alleadges himself of the age of 40. years, and not above, because it might appear to the Court that he was born within Queen Elizabeth's Reign. The Court held the Action would not lie, as it was adjudged in Hall's case, and for this word Papist no Action will lie. If I deliver my Goods to you to keep, and I request them, and you deny the Delivery of them; now an Action of Trover will lie, otherwise Nota. it is without a Denial; if I distrain Cattle, I must not use them. WArter versus Freeman, Mich. 15. jac. rotulo 1941. Action upon Action of the Case for double prosecution of a fieri sac. the case brought for that the Defendant sued out a Fieri facias upon a Judgement which he had against the Plaintiff, upon which Judgement the Defendant had before sued out a Fieri facias, and the Sheriff of Oxford had upon the first Fieri facias returned, that he had levied the Debt and Damages, and that they remained in his hands for want of Buyers; and the Defendant knowing that the Sheriff had levied the Debt and Damages, and intending to charge him, again prosecuted another Fieri facias, and that the Sheriff had again levied the said Debt and Damages, and hath paid the Debt and Damages to the Plaintiff, to wit, at Westminster, in Com. Middlesex, where the Action was brought; and Judgement after Debate was given for the Plaintiff, though the Defendant alleged that the Fieri facias was an Act in Law, and so no cause of Action against him. PArkhurst versus powel, vic. Denbigh, Mich. 15. jac. rotulo Upon a non est invent. returned upon an Outlary, where the party escaped, the Plaintiff hath his Election where to bring his Action. An Action of the case for a false Return of a Capias utlagat. and declares that he prosecuted a Capias utlagat directed to the Sheriff of Denbigh, where the Defendant inhabited, and delivered the said Writ to the Sheriff to be executed; and the Defendant being then in the company of the Sheriff, and might safely have arrested him, did not, but suffered him to escape, and returned that he was not to be found; and upon Not guilty pleaded, it was tried in the County of Middlesex, where the Action was brought; and moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Trial ought to be in Denbigh, because the not arresting was the principal matter, but because the Action was grounded upon double matter, the Plaintiff had his Election to bring his Action, either in the County of Denbigh or Middlesex, by the whole Court. BLand versus edmond's, Pasch. 16. Jac. rotulo 444. Action upon the Judgement arrested for want of an Averment. Case brought for these Words, Videlicet, George Bland is a troublesome Fellow, and he did combine with thee to trouble the Country, and I hope to see thee at the next Sessions indicted for Barratry, or for sheep-stealing, as George Bland was at the last Sessions, for Bland was indicted the last Sessions for sheep-stealing. And it was held by the whole Court, that those Words would not bear an Action, the Plaintiff laid the Words to be spoken to one Jo. Eagle: and the Declaration was held naught and insufficient, because it was not averred, that the Plaintiff was not indicted at the Sessions. BRadshaw versus Walker, Hill. 16. Jac. rotulo Action upon the case brought for these words, Videlicet, Thou art a filching Fellow, and didst filch from A. B. 4. l. And Judgement that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ; for it shall not be intended that he stole the money. adam's versus Fleming, Hill. 16. Jac. rotulo 890. Action of the Judgement arrested for the incertainty of the Count case brought for these words, Videlicet, He hath forsworn himself before the Council of the Marches (meaning the Council of the Marches of Wales) in the Suit I had against him there, and I will sue him for Perjury there. And after Verdict for the Plaintiff, moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the words were not actionable for their uncertainty, because the Court could not take notice that they had authority to hold plea in matters of record. Judgement for the Plaintiff for these words, Thou art a false forsworn Knave, for thou didst take a false Oath before a Judge of Assize to hang a man. GOre versus Colthorpe, Trin. 5. Jac. rotulo The Declaration was For collateral matters which are not Duties, a Request is necessary. in consideration that the Plaintiff would give credit to E. C. then servant to the Defendant for any thing the said E. should deal for, to the use of the Defendant, with the Plaintiff, promised that he would see the Plaintiff contented that which the said E. should deal for with the Plaintiff, for the use of the Defendant any way, when the said Defendant thereof (after it should become due) should be requested, and a special Verdict by which it was found that the Defendant promised to see the Plaintiff contented, that which the above named E. C. should deal with the Plaintiff, for the use of the said Defendant any way. The Judgement of the Court was that the Verdict did not maintain the Declaration, because for collateral matters which are not Duties, a Request is material, and are not like a Duty as for Debt, which is due, and no Day of payment expressed, that shall be alleged to be when he shall be thereunto requested generally. For if I sell my Horse for ten pounds, and no Day of payment, that shall be alleged in the Count, Cum inde requisitus esset. And one case of Peter's was cited, which was grounded upon a promise made in this manner, Marry my Niece, and when I come from London I will give you 100 l. and the Action was brought in this manner, Videlicet, in consideration that he would marry, A. promised to pay the Plaintiff 100 l. after he returned from London, when he was thereunto requested: and for these words, when he was thereunto requested, the Action was maintainable. Hench versus Heald, Trin. 17. Jac. rotulo Action upon the case The word Witch will not bear an Action. for these words, Videlicet, He is a Witch, and hath bewitched me: and the Court held the Action would not lie, for he might bewitch him by fair words, or fair looks. GReen versus Harrington, Trin. 17. Jac. routlo 953. The Plaintiff declares that the Defendant such a Day was indebted to the An implied promise where it is upon the reality will not lie, except upon a collateral cause. Plaintiff in 10. l. for Rent due to the Plaintiff for one year ended at Michaelmas then last passed, for divers Lands in H. demised to the Defendant by the Plaintiff, the Defendant in consideration thereof promised to pay the Plaintiff the said 10. l. when he should be thereunto requested. The Defendant pleads Non assumpsit: and after Verdict given for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that there was no consideration to maintain the Action, because an Action of Debt lay upon the first Contract being in the realty; for upon an implied promise no Action will lie where it is in the realty, except there be a special promise made upon a collateral cause, Videlicet, If the Plaintiff had threatened suit for the said 10. l. and the Defendant, in consideration that he would forbear to sue, promises to pay, etc. and the like: for if a man be bound in a Bond to pay money, and the Day past, now an Action of the case will not lie for that money, except there be a collateral promise: and so in the like cases: and Judgement was given against the Plaintiff. Michaelmas 17. Jac. It was adjudged in the King's Bench in an Action upon the case, Videlicet, whereas the Defendant was indebted An Indebitat. assumpsit for money ruled, good without expressing for what. to the Plaintiff in 10. l. (without expressing the cause for which the Debt grew due) the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff at the special instance and request of the Defendant, then and there had given Day to the Defendant, until a time to come, to pay the money, the Defendant promised to pay the money, that the Action was maintainable, without expressing the cause for which the Debt was. Hill. 17. Jac. rotulo 2722. Action of the case brought for these words, Thou art a perjured Knave, and I will make thee wear Papers for it: the Defendant justifies the words, and shows that the Plaintff was a Churchwarden, and took his Oath to exercise that Office; and whereas one Article made, was, that he should present whether the Churchyard was repaired or no, and he knowing it, did not present it. Action of the case brought for these words, Thou art a scurvy perjured Knave; the Action will lie. WIlson versus Sheriffs of London, Hill. 17. Jac. rotulo 3069. The Action against the Sheriffs of London for discharging one who was arrested, coming to defend a suit depending there. The Court cannot discharge one arrested, except he be arrested in the face of the Court. Plaintiffs declare upon an escape made upon a Capias ad respondendum, after the Defendant was arrested: the Defendant pleads a Custom in London, that the Mayor and Sheriffs of London have used to enlarge Prisoners that were arrested, in coming, and returning from their Courts, having Causes there depending; and set forth a Plaint in London against the Defendant, and that he was arrested, and appeared, and pleaded to Issue; and as he was coming to the Court to defend that Action, he was arrested, as is supposed, in the Action upon the case brought against the Sheriffs; and show that he was brought to the Court, and enlarged by the Court: and the Court held, that if a man were arrested in the face of the Court, the Court might discharge him, otherwise not. PAin versus Newlin, Mich. 16. Jac. rotulo 3042. Action upon the Judgement stayed for variance between the Count and Writ to inquiry. case brought upon a promise and Judgement, by Nihil dicit: and at the return of the Writ to inquire, the Defendant moved in Arrest of Judgement, and showed that the Day of the promise was supposed in the inquiry to be, Anno Domini 1614 And in the Declaration it was made 1617. and for that variance, Judgement was stayed. BElcher versus Hudson, Hill. 6. jac. rotulo 132. The Plaintiff declares, Release by the Husband, pleaded in Bar to an Action brought by the Wife after his Death, for money to be allowed her after his Death, and adjudged no Bar. that in consideration that the Plaintiff at the request of the Defendant would marry one T. M. his familiar Friend, the Defendant promised to pay the Plaintiff yearly after the Decease of the said T. M. 40. s. for her maintenance: and the Plaintiff averrs the Marriage, and that she survived. The Defendant pleads that the said T. M. in his life time after the Marriage, etc. did release to the Defendant all Actions as well real as personal, and all Demands and Challenges whatsoever, from the beginning of the World unto the Date thereof: to which Plea the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged a naughty Plea. BOx an Attorney against Barnaby. Action upon the case for these Action for calling an Attorney Champertor. words, George Box is a common maintainer of suits, and a Champertor, and a Plague of God consume him, and I hope to see his Body rot upon the Earth like the Carcase of a Dog, and I will have him thrown over the Bar next Term, and I will give a Beech to make a Gallows to hang him: and Judgement given for the Plaintiff, for this word Champertor, and no other. Trin. 14. jac. Action upon the case for these words, She is an arrant Whore, and had two Bastards in Ireland: and Judgement by the whole Court, that the words would not bear an Action. YOrk versus Cecil, Mich. 14. jac. Action upon the case brought by A. Tanner for these words, Thou art a bankrupt Knave: and the Court held that the Action would not lie: but Quaere. Skaif versus Nelson, Mich. 12. jac. rotulo 1106. Action upon the The Roll mended after the Record was certified by Writ of Error, it being the Clarks misprision. case brought for words against Husband and Wife, spoken by the Wife, and Judgement was entered for the Plaintiff, and in entering of the Judgement it was made, Et praedicta, E. (being the Woman) in misericordia, which was naught, for it should have been both the Husband and Wife in misericordia: and after the Record was certified by Writ of Error; Sergeant Richardson moved that it might be amended, because the Judgement Papers were right, and so it was ordered to be amended according. SMails an Attorney versus Moor, Hill. jac. rotulo 753. Action He is a forging Knave, spoken of an Attorney actionable. upon the case for the words, He is a forging Knave: and the Court held that the words were actionable, for he alleged in his Declaration, that he was an Attorney of the Common Pleas, and so being touched in his Profession, the words would bear an Action: and if a man said of a Bishop, that he was a Papist, the Action would lie; because Religion is his Profession, and so he is defamed. STeward versus Bishop, Trin. 14. jac. rotulo 769. Action upon the Employed words will not bear an action. case for these words, James Steward (meaning the Plaintiff) is in Berwick Gaol for stealing of a Mare and other Beasts: and after a Verdict for the Plaintiff, it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the words were not actionable, and so it was adjudged, for that he did not directly say, the Plaintiff was a Thief, but only implied, Hill. 15. jac. rotulo An Exception taken to a Declaration in Trover brought by an Administrator, because he declares, that Trover brought by Administrator, as of his own goods, and adjudged good. whereas he was possessed of divers Goods and Chattels, as of his own proper Goods, and should have said, as was pretended, as of the Goods and Chattels of the intestate at the time of his Death; but the Exception was overruled by the Court. Exception to an Action of the case brought, and the Plaintiff declares, that whereas the Plaintiff had delivered the Defendant unum statum salis Anglicae, a Bushel of Salt, pretending that (statum) had another proper signification, but because it was showed to the Court that (statum) by one Dictionary was Latin for a Bushel; Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. In Trover it is usual to prove no more, but that you requested the Demand and demall makes a Conversion. Goods, and the Defendant refused to deliver them, this is a Conversion. When a Justification arises upon a Sale, than I need traverse no more but the place alleged, and not go to the whole County, but where it is a transitory, Trespass, as for Battery, taking of Goods, and the like, than the whole County must be traversed. CAtford versus Osmond, Mich. 16. Jac. rotulo 1063. Action of Trover The Sheriff justifies by virtue of a Process out of the Exchequer, to levy of the Occupiers of S. Lands 59 s. arrear upon the said Lands. brought for two Steers, the Defendant being an Attorney of the Common-pleas justifies the taking as Under-sheriff, by reason of Process from the Exchequer to levy of the Occupiers of the Lands of divers persons in a Schedule in the said Writ named the Debts therein specified, and doth not recite the Schedule; and he being Under-sheriff took the Steers in the Land of the Plaintiff, which was lately one Stones, who was Debtor to the King in 59 s. being behind upon the Land: and Exception was taken, for that it was not directly alleged that the Land such a Day was the Land of the said S. The Writ commanded to levy the sums in the said Schedule mentioned; and if they could not, to take their Bodies; and it was adjudged a good Warrant to levy of the Occupiers of the Lands that were the said S. 59 s. Coals versus Flaxman, Hill. 14. Jac. rotulo 2175. Action of the case Common appurtenant cannot be divided. brought for disturbing the Plaintiffs Common. The Defendant pretends Title to the Common by reason of Common appurtenant to certain customary Land, of part of which he conveys a Title to himself, but not of the whole: and the Question was, whether it were Common appurtenant, or appendent? and if appurtenant it could not be divided. KEymes versus Moxham, Trin. 15. Jac. rotulo 559. Action of the Mistriall, the Venn being mistaken. case brought for a promise made at C. for the Delivery of a Mare, which the Plaintiff delivered the Defendant to plow his ground in P. And shows the Defendant did so excessively and immoderately labour and work the said Mare, that the Mare died. The Defendant confesses the promise, and that the Mare at the time of the Delivery was infirm, and that he worked her moderately, and traverses the excessive labouring of the Mare: and after a Verdict, it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that it was mistried, because the Venn was of C. which was naught, and there was no place alleged where the excessive labouring was; for the Venn ought to come from that place where the labouring was. HArbin and his Wife versus Green, Trin. 14. Jac. rotulo 2263. Judgement arrested, for a mistake of the Jury. Action upon the case brought for not grinding his Corn at the Plaintiffs Mill, and shows that the Bishop of Salisbury was seized of four customary Mills, called A. in his Demesne, as of Fee in right of his Bishopric; and prescribes that all Inhabitants and Residents within the City of Salisbury, holding any ancient Messages of the said Bishop in right of his Bishopric, were time out of mind used, and aught to grind all their Corn whatsoever spent in their houses, or exposed to sale in the said City, at the said Mills, of the said Bishop, and no where else, without the licence of the said Bishop, and to pay Toll therefore to the said Bishop, his Successors Bishops, or their Farmers for the time being; and in consideration thereof, the Bishop, his Successors, or Farmers for the time being of the said Mills, time out of mind have been used and accustomed at their own charges, from time to time to keep and maintain a Servant expert in grinding, as well by night as day there attending, to grind their Corn as soon as conveniently might be; and the Plaintiff shows that such a Day the Defendant was, and yet is, an Inhabitant, in one ancient Mesuage in the said City, held of the Bishop, and so possessed, intending to deprive the Plaintiff of the profit of his Mill, did such a day grind divers sorts of Corn in other Mills, without the Bishop's leave, to his damage of, etc. The Defendant pleads Non cull. The Jury find the Defendant guilty for a longer time, than the Plaintiff had interest in the Mill, and gave Damages entire, and upon a Motion in arrest of Judgement adjudged naught. GResley versus Loather and his Wife Executrix of R. B. and declares In consideration the Plaintiff would agree, the Testators son should marry the Plaintiffs daughter, adjudged a good consideration. that communication was had between the Testator in his life, and the Plaintiff concerning a Marriage to be had and solemnised between one T. B. son and heir apparent of the said R. B. and Jane Daughter of the Plaintiff, and heir apparent of John F. deceased, the said Testator such a Day and Year in consideration that the Plaintiff at the special instance and request of the said R. B. then and there would agree that the said T. B. should marry the said J. promised to pay 20. l. and adjudged a good consideration. GOwland versus Mason Hill. 17. Jac. rotulo Action of the case for these words, I charge him with Felony for taking of money out of the pocket of Henry Sparry, and I will prove it: and the Court was divided in opinion, whether the words would maintain an Action or no. SMith and his Wife versus Stafford Executor of Stafford, Hill. 15 Jac. rotulo 906. Action of the case brought upon a promise made to the Woman when she was sole, in consideration the Woman would marry the Testator, he promises that if the Woman should over-live the Testator, that then he would leave her worth 100 l. and they aver that she did marry him, and after the Husband died, and did not leave her worth 100 l. and the Defendant pleads Non assumpsit, and found for the Plaintiff: and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that by the Inter-marriage the Promise was drowned, and released. Three Judge●…r the Plaintiff, and one for the Defendant. The like Observations in Actions of Covenant. DRury versus Allen, & al. Mich. 6. Jac. rotulo 926. Action of Covenant brought against Administrators. The breach was, for not repairing Houses by the Administrators, according to a Covenant made by the Intestate. The Administrators plead divers Judgements given against them in Bar of the Covenant, and that they have not Assetts over. HAre versus Savill, Trin. 7. Jac. rotulo Action of Covenant Rents arrear, no Plea in Covenant. brought upon an Indenture, upon a special Covenant to pay Rend at certain Days therein specified and reserved. The Defendant pleads that no Rent was behind. The Plaintiff demurs to that Plea: and it was held by the whole Court to be a bad Plea in Covenant; for by that Plea the Defendant confesses the Covenant broken, and that Plea tends but in mitigation of Damages. MOrdant versus Wats, Pasch. 17. Jac. vel 7. Jac. rotulo 1532. Action of Covenant brought for a Rent-charge granted for the life of an Estranger, and for half a Year after to be paid at the Feasts of the Annunciation of the Virgin Mary, and Saint Michael the Archangel, and allege that the Estranger died in February, and that the Rent was not paid at the Feast of the Annunciation, and so the Covenant broken: the Defendant demurs, pretending that the Rent was not due until half a year after the Death of the Estranger, and not at the Feast, but the Court held the contrary. And if the Grantee had died, his Heirs should have had it, during the Life of the Estranger, because it was payable to him, his Heirs and Executors. If I grant an Annuity for Life, and twenty years after, these are two several Difference between Covenant and Debt to bring an Action. Grants, and the Executor shall have it after the Death of Tenant for Life. And Sir Edward Cook said, When an express Covenant is made to pay the Rent at divers Days, an Action of Covenant will lie before all the Days of Payment be past; but an Action of Debt will not lie Difference between Covenant and Debt to bring an Action. until all the Days be past, and that in such case Debt doth properly lie upon a Grant of an Annuity for life or years, H. 7. Eliz. rotulo 908. Lamb versus Tresham, Hill. 7 Jac. rotulo 2145. The Indentures of Breach assigned in default of the Party that never sealed the Indenture of Covenants. Covenant were made between T. Tresham E. Lord Stourton, Meriel, T. and the Defendant, and the Lord Stourton and Meriel never sealed the Indenture, and mention thereof was made in the Count, Videlicet, which Lord Stourton and Meriel were parties to the said Indenture, but never sealed. The Case was Sir T. T. conveyed one Lease to the Lord Stourton, and he to the said Meriel, and by the Indenture brought into the Court, it was covenanted, that the said T. T. M. and L. or one of them at the time of the ensealing and Delivery of the said Indenture, was lawfully possessed of, and in the Manor of, etc. And covenant that the Defendant, his Executors, and Assigns, might and should quietly have and enjoy the said Manor clearly and absolutely freed and discharged, or otherwise upon request saved harmless from all Incumberances and former Bargains by the said T. S. E. M. and the Defendant or any of them: and the breach was, that the Plaintiff was damnified, for that the said M. that had the State did not seal, and adjudged good. PYot versus Lord Saint-John, Mich. 7. Jac. rotulo 3214. The Plaintiff had the Reversion of two Houses, one in Fee, and the other for years, and makes a Lease for years, with Covenant for Reparations of both Houses, and Question was, whether the Plaintiff should have one Action, or several Actions, and adjudged that he should have a joint Action for both. FIsher versus Ameers, Hill. 8. Jac. rotulo 1061. Action of Covenant Covenant lies against the first Lessee upon breach of Covenant made by the Assignee. brought against the first Lessee after he had assigned over his term for not repairing: and the Question was, if an Action of Covenant would lie against the first Lessee upon a Covenant to repair the Houses, etc. who had assigned his term to another, whom the Lessor had accepted for his Tenant, and received the Rent, and he suffered the House to be consumed by fire, and if the Covenant by such Acceptance were gone as Debt, for the Lessor is barred of his Action of Debt for Rent against his first Lessee, after he hath assigned, and the Difference between Covenant and Debt. Lessor accepted the Rent of the Assignee. If I covenant, that I, my Executors, Administrators, and Assigns, shall pay the Rent, if I assign over my term, and the Assignee pay the Rent to the Lessor, yet the Covenant lieth against the first Lessee, otherwise it is where Rent is reserved, and no Covenant to pay it, there, if the Lessor accept the Rent of the Assignee, the Action will not lie against the Executor of the Lessee, and Judgement after a Demurrer for the Plaintiff, that the Action would well lie. WAlter versus Decanum & Capitulum Norwici, Trin. 9 Jac. Covenant upon a void Lease is good. rotulo 1414. Action of Covenant brought upon an express Covenant in a voidable Lease; and the Question was, whether the Covenant be good, the Lease being void; and it was adjudged, Trin. 10. Jac. that the Action would lie, although the Lease were void: and Mapes case was cited, which was, Mapes made a Lease of a Parsonage of D. for seven years, and did covenant to save the Lessee harmless against B. the person, etc. in that case it was held, if the person sue the Covenant by right or wrong, an Action lies upon the Covenant: and Sir E. Cook said, that if the Lease were originally void, yet the Action of Covenant would lie; for else a great mischief might happen; for a Dean might as to day make a Lease to one, and keep it secret, and to morrow make another, and covenant to enjoy it, and so avoid the second Lessee. If a Lease be good at the beginning, and become void after, their terminus, is the number of years, otherwise, where it was void at the first, if a Dean and Chapter make a Lease contrary to the Statute, and reserve a Rent, it shall not be void against them, so long as the Dean liveth, but against his Successor. The Lease in question was not void, but voidable. A Covenant in Law shall go to lawful eviction, although the Lease be void. A Covenant real to Warrant and Defend, there must be a Title paramount, and a lawful eviction. Covenants for Lessees shall be taken beneficially for the Lessees. BRight versus Cowper, Trin. 9 Jac. rotulo 638. Action of Covenant Action would not lie, because if the Covenant was not performed, Piracy is no excuse to perform a Covenant. brought upon a Covenant made by the Merchant with a Master of a Ship, Videlicet, that if he would bring his Fraight to such a Port, than he would pay him such a sum, and shows, that part of the Goods were taken away by Pirates, and that the residue of the Goods were brought to the place appointed, and there unladed, and that the Merchant hath not paid, and so the Covenant broken: and the Question was, whether the Merchant should pay the Money agreed for, since all the Merchandises were not brought to the place appointed: and the Court was of opinion, that he ought not to pay the Money, because the agreement was not by him performed. CRockhay versus Woodward, Hill. 15. Jac. rotulo 2001. An Action of Covenant brought upon this Writing, Videlicet, Memorandum that Judgement arrested for default in the Declaration. I John Woodward do promise and assume unto B. C. to pay to him such Moneys, or other Goods, as Josias my son shall imbessell, misspend, or wrongfully detain of his, during the time of his being Apprentice with him within three Month's next after request to me in that behalf made, and due proof made of such imbesselling, or wrongful detaining, in witness, etc. and the Plaintiff shows that the Defendants son did imbessell Goods of his Masters, and showed what Goods, and left out in his Declaration these words, Videlicet, and due proof likewise made of such imbesselling or wrongful detaining. The Defendant demands Oyer of the Writing, and pleads that he did not imbessell; and it was tried for the Plaintiff, and after Trial Exception taken, because the Plaintiff did not allege any proof made, and for that reason Judgement was arrested. Brag Assignee of Bragg, versus Wiseman, Executor of Fitch, Mich. A Covenant in Law shall not be extended to make a man do more than he can. 12. Jac. rotulo 538. Action of Covenant brought, and the case was this, that Fitch and his Lady were seized of Land in right of his Wife for term of her life, and join together in a Lease by Deed indented, in which were these words, demise, and grant, and afterwards Fitch dieth, the Lady enters, and avoids the Lease, and maketh a new Lease to a stranger, whereupon an Electione firm is brought against the first Lessee, and Judgement thereupon, and the first Lessee put out of Possession: whereupon the first Lessee brings his Action of Covenant against the Executors of Fitch, upon the words, demise and grant. The Defendant demurs. The words were, have demised, granted, and to farm let for years, if the Wife should so long live; and Judgement for the Difendant. A Covenant in Law shall not be extended to make one do more than he can, which was to warrant it as long as he lived, and no longer. The Law doth not bind a man to an inconvenience. If Tenant for Life make a Lease for twenty years, and covenant that the Defendant shall enjoy it during the term, that shall be during his Life, for the term endeth by his Death; but otherwise it is, if the Covenant be during the term of twenty years, by the word, Demise, an Action of Covenant lieth, although he never enter, and this word Demise implieth as much as Dedi & concessi. An Action of Covenant brought, for that the Defendant covenants to bring again a Ship, Perils and Damages of Sea only excepted, and he to excuse himself, saith, that the Hollander in a warlike manner by force and arms took the Ship: and much doubt was where the Issue should be tried; and the opinion of the Court was, that the Action should be tried where it was laid. COwling versus Drury. Action of Covenant brought, for that the Defendant did not pay a Rent with which the Land was charged; the Defendant replies, he was to enjoy the Land sufficiently saved harmless, and answers not the Breach, and adjudged a naughty Bar by the whole Court. SElby versus Chute, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo 3804. Action of Covenant A Suit in Chancery, no Disturbance. brought, and the Breach was alleged, that the Plaintiff should quietly enjoy the Land demised to him, and he shows that Chute exhibited a Bill in Chancery against him, pretending the Lease was made in trust, and it was decreed to be otherwise: and whether the exhibiting this Bill was a Breach of Covenant, there being no Disturbance at Common Law, was the Question: and the Court were of opinion, that it was no Breach of Covenant, for it was no Disturbance at Common Law, nor Entry; and the Law could not take notice of it: and Judgement for the Defendant. HOlder versus Tailor, Pasch. 11. Jac. rotulo 1358. An Action of Judgement arrested for defects in the Declaration. Covenant brought upon this Covenant, that the Lessee should repair the House, provided always, and it was agreed that the Lessee should have such necessary Timber to be allowed and delivered by the Lessor: and the Breach was, that the House wanted Reparations, and that so many Loads of Timber were necessary, and that the Lessor allowed them according to the form and effect of the Indenture; and a general Request laid, and Exception was taken to the Declaration, for that the Plaintiff did not allege a special request to the Defendant: and that it was laid in the Declaration, that a stranger brought the Timber, which was held to be naught by the whole Court, for it amounted to an Entry upon the Lessees Possession. Exception taken to a Breach laid in Covenant for Repairs, because it was generally alleged, and not showed in what, but being after a Verdict it was helped by the opinion of the whole Court. TIsdale versus Essex, Trin. 12. Jac. rotulo 2131. Action of Covenant Breach that one entered, and shows not by what Title, and naught. brought upon these words, covenant, promise, and agree, that the Lessee should quietly occupy and enjoy the Lands demised, for and during the term of seven years: and the Plaintiff shows that an Estranger entered upon the Land, and shows not that he entered by Title; and the Court was of opinion that it was naught, because it did not appear that he had a good Title to enter, Dedit & concessit, imply a Warranty for Life; and Judgement was given for the Defendant, because the Breach was naught. HIcks versus Action of Covenant brought, and the Land alleged to be in Weston, alias, Weston Underwood, and the Venn was the visu de Weston Underwood, and it was alleged by the Defendant, that the Venn was misawarded; because it was not of Weston only, but the Court was of a contrary opinion, that it was well awarded, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. CAstilion & al. versus Smith, Exec. Smith, Trin. 17. Jac. rotulo 1849. Action of Covenant brought against the Defendant, and the breach of Covenant alleged to be in the time of the Executor: and the Judgement was entered of the Goods of the Testators: the Breach was for ploughing of Land contrary to Covenant. RIdent versus Took, Hill. 13. Jac. rotulo 3516. Action of Covenant brought to discharge the Plaintiff of a single Bill, in which he was bound for the Debt of the Defendant, and he alleadges for Breach nonpayment, and a Suit and recovery at Law for the Money which remained in force. The Defendant pleaded, that he paid the Money at the Day, and thereof gave the Plaintiff notice, before the purchasing his Writ, the Plaintiff demurs; and the Court held the Plea naught, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. Actions upon Account. WIlloughby against Small. An Action of Account brought Release cannot be given in Evidence upon a Plea, that the Defendant was never a Receiver of the Plaintiffs Money. In Account the Process are sum. Attaint and Distress. In Account two Judgements, and upon a Nichil Process of Vlamy lies. against the Defendant, as Receiver of the Plaintiffs Money. The Defendant pleads, that he never was Receiver, where he hath a Release from the Plaintiff, whereby he shall lose the benefit of his Release, for that he cannot give that in Evidence upon such Issue. The Process herein is Summons Pone & Distress, and upon a Nichil returned upon the Summons pone, or Distress, the Outlary lies, the Process is returnable from fifteen Days to 15 Days, & an Essoin lies. In this Action there are two Judgements, the first Judgement is, that the Defendant shall account, because he hath not accounted before in this first Judgement, the Plaintiff shall not recover Costs or Damages, but a Capias ad computand. shall issue, and if a Non est inventus shall be returned thereupon, than an Exigent: and when the Defendant by the rigour of the Law is imprisoned, yet the Court doth in favour of the Defendant take Bail, for he shall account before Auditors, which the Court shall appoint, which shall be the Officers of the Court to audit the Account; and he shall appear from day to day before the Auditors at every day and place assigned by the Auditors, until the Account shall be determined; and before the Auditors the Plaintiff or Defendant may join Issue or demur upon the Plea pleaded before the Auditors, and if any of the parties shall make Default, and shall not appear, then if after Appearance the Defendant shall not plead, or if he shall join Issue, or join in a Demurrer, the Auditors shall certify that to the Court, and the Court shall proceed to the matter certified by trial of the Issue, if it be joined, or by arguing the Demurrer as the cause shall require: and if the Plaintiff shall make Default, or shall not prosecute, or if the Defendant shall not answer, they may commit him to the Fleet; and if Verdict pass for the Plaintiff Costs and Damages shall be recovered, by reason of the interpleading; and the Plaintiff shall recover his Goods or Moneys demanded, with his Costs and Damages; and a Fisa, or Elegit or casa, shall be awarded, and if a Non est inventus be returned, than an Outlary after Judgement. An account against a Bailiff of Lands shall be brought in the Account against a Bailie local. County where the Lands lie. In every case in account where an Attachment may be returned, an Essoyn lies. Where the Defendant is charged to account for Moneys received The Defendant may wage his Law if the Receipt be per manus proprias. from the hands of the Plaintiff, the Defendant may wage his Law, and likewise for Goods delivered to be sold, but it is otherwise where the Receipt is by the hands of a Testator, or of any other than the Plaintiff. That after a year and a day after Judgement given, every Action Nota. shall be revived by Scire facias, which is given by the Statute; for all Actions at Law, if the Plaintiff shall not obtain his Execution within a year and a day, he shall be driven to bring a new Action. Or if a Defendant be charged as Receiver by Indenture, he shall not be admitted to plead, that he was not a Receiver. If the Plaintiff die before the second Judgement, the Writ shall abate, In Account the Writ abates the Death. and no Scire facias lies for the Executor, if the Defendant die before the second Judgement. If two be adjudged to account, and a Ca & exfa. issue, and one appear, and the other be outlawed, he that appears shall account alone, for that the Plaintiffs Process is determined against the other: and so if one die, the other shall account alone; and if one be adjudged to account, and will not, he shall be committed to the Fleet. That if I deliver Goods to one, to the value of 100 l. to traffic Nota. with for my use, and he sells them for 10. l. I have no remedy, but if my Bailiff buy a thing for 10. l. which is not worth it, he shall not be allowed it. Account lies not before a Sheriff, for that he can assign no Auditors. Nota. If two be jointly possessed of Goods, one of the two deliver the Goods for Merchandise, he only shall bring the Action. An Account lies not against an Executor or Infant. Nota. An Account lies not for a Park of Deer. Matter that is in discharge of an Account shall not be pleaded in Matter in discharge of the Actions shall not be pleaded in Bar. Bar of the Action, for the Judges are Judges of the Action, and not of the Account. If Money be delivered to render an Account, (an Account lies) but if it was delivered to keep until the Plaintiff shall require; Account doth not lie, but Detinue. If the Plaintiff account upon Witness of the Receipt, the Defendant Nota. shall not wage his Law. If an Account shall be brought for Goods, in the Declaration the Nota. Plaintiff declares, that they were in his house, whereas indeed they were not, it is good. HArrington versus Dean, Hill. 10. Jac. rotulo 3230. Action of Account Judgement in Account upon a special Verdict. render brought against the Defendant for the Receipt of Money by the hands of one Rotheram for 200. l. The Defendant pleads that he was not a Receiver for to render an Account: the Jury find it specially that Rotheram was indebted to the Plaintiff in 200. l. and the Plaintiff required the Defendant to receive the said 200. l. and the Defendant required Rotheram to pay the 200. l. and Rotheram upon Request to him made, desires the Defendant to borrow of any person 200. l. and to pay the Plaintiff, and find that the Defendant did borrow 200. l. of one Stanhop to pay the Plaintiff; and Rotheram became bound to Stanhop for the payment of the said 200. l. and that the Defendant appointed his Wife, to pay the Money to the Plaintiff; and if upon the whole matter, etc. and Judgement was given, that the Defendant was a Receiver. THe Earl of Cumberland against Hilton. The Clerk that entered Misprision of the Clerk amended after Verdict. the Cause had omitted the Charge which was for 400. l. and it was omitted in the Roll, and Nisi prius: and after a Verdict, Excepon taken, and amended by the Court. Assize. IN an Assize Trin. 29. Jacobi, rotulo 27. brought against Thacker No Tenant at the time of the Writ purchased, nor afterwards, and if, etc. no Disseisin. and Elmer: the Defendants come and say, that there was no Tenants of the Tenements put to the view of the Recognisors of the Assize aforesaid, nor at the time of purchasing the Writ, to wit, such a Day, nor any time after; and this they were ready to verify, and pray Judgement; and if so, than they say, that they have done no injury or Disseisin of the Tenements with the appurtenances to the said W. T. and put themselves upon the Assize; and the said W. T. doth so likewise, therefore the Assize was taken between them; and thereupon the Recognisors of the Assize say, that the said E. E. at the purchasing of the original Writ of the Assize, Videlicet, such a Day were Tenants of the Tenement aforefaid, with the appurtenances, as of his freehold; and that the said W. T. was seized of the Tenements aforesaid, with the appurtenances in his Demesne, as of Fee until the said E. did unjustly, and without judgement disseise the said W. but not by force and arms; and assess Damages to 12. d. and for Costs 6. d. and Judgement given that the said W. should recover his Seisin of the Tenements aforesaid against the said E. by the view of the Recognisors of the Assize, and his Damages, etc. An Assize brought, and the Grant was of the Herbage and Pannage, Note upon the Kings Grant. etc. and whether this were good or no: some held it void, for the incertainty of the Grant, when it should begin; Sir Edward Cook held the Grant good; for if the King make a Lease for Life, and granteth the Land without reciting the state to one for life, this is a good Grant for Life of the Reversion, to begin immediately after the Death of the Tenant for Life. Trin. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 35. An Assize brought for the Office of a View to be there where the Office is performed. Harald, at the Funeral of the Earl of Exeter; and the great Question was, where the view should be made; and it was alleged, that it should be made in the place where he exercised his Office, but the Court doubted of that; but they were examined of the view made in the Abbey of Westminster, being the place where the Funeral was performed; and the Court were of opinion, that in Dower, where Tithes are demanded, no view lies, for of things that are invisible, no view lies, but the Tenant in such case shall be denied it. SIr William Saint Andrew brought an Assize de Darrein Presentment, Another Writ brought, and hanging, a good Plea in abatement. against the Archbishop of York, the Countess of Shrewsbury, and F. H. for the Church, of O. in the County of Nott. The Archbio p and H. appeared, and the Countess did not appear; and though the Countess made Default, yet the Assize was not taken against her by Default, but a re-summons was awarded against the Countess, and the same Day given to the Archbishop, and H. and a Habeas Corpora against the Recognisors. And note, the Tenants that appeared pleaded in abatement, that a Writ of Quare impedit, for the said Church was hanging in such a Court between the same parties, and the Assize was brought afterwards: and with this agrees the Register; and it was adjudged a good Plea. The Writ was returned in this manner, Pleg. de prosequend. John Do, Richard Roose. The within named Archbishop and Countess are attached, and either of them is attached, per Pleg. H. S. N. J. And the within named H. hath nothing in the Sheriffs Bailywick, by which he may be attached, nor hath a Bailie within his Liberty, nor is therein found: and the residue of the Execution, etc. and Judgement given, that the Writ should abate: and the like was in the Earl of Bedford's case, where two Quare impedits were brought one after another, and the last Writ abated. J. Lovelace versus Baronissam Despencer, & R. Harvey Clericum, Assize taken by default against Harvey, and the other Tenant pleaded in abatement of the Assize, that there was a Quare impedit depending. Trin. 12. Jac. rotulo 74. de Darrien Presentment for the Church of M. And the said H. being solemnly exacted came not: and the Sheriff made a Return, that he was summoned by J. O. and W. C. and therefore the Assize was to be taken against him by Default, but the said Baromsh. by T. her Attorney, faith the Assize ought not to be so taken, and confesses the said J. was the person last presented, but conveys a Title to herself of the Manor: to which the presentation belongs, and that being so seized, the Plaintiff in the Assize by usurpation presents the Clerk in the Count, whereupon the Defendant brought a Quare impedit, and hanging the Writ, the Clerk in the Count dies, and the Plaintiff presented the Clerk that made Default, who by virtue of that presentation is yet Parson of the said Church, by which she is seized of the Advowson, as in her former Estate; and so she saith, that the Presentation of the said J. by the said L. made, ought not to prejudice her: and a Demurrer upon this Plea; and that the Assize should remain to be taken, etc. for want of Recognisors; and the Sheriff was commanded to distrain them, etc. and Judgement given, that the Plea was good: but quaere of the Nota. Declaration, whether sufficient, because it was not alleged, that he that presented was seized of the Advowson. Pasch. 8. Jac. rotulo 31. An Assize brought for the Office of Clock-keeper of, and it was held, that it must be an ancient Office, and because they could not prove that it was an ancient Office, the Plaintiff was nonsuit, and the Plaintiff showed a Grant of the same in E. 6. time, but that was held no ancient time. Pasch. 6. Jacobi. It was held by the whole Court, that an Assize of The King cannot create an Office to the Queen, who may bring an Assize. Saddler to the Queen would not lie, being granted to one by the King, but was held void by the whole Court, for the King cannot make an Officer to the Queen, and by the Patent no place was expressed where he should enjoy and exercise his Office, and take the Profits, and therefore the Jury could not have the view; and for that cause an Assize cannot be taken: and if the King should grant the Office of Usher to his Son the Prince, an Assize would not lie. An Assize brought against Demetrius, the Plaintiff was nonsuit; and Demetrius moved to have Cost, and it was denied by the whole No Costs in a nonsuit in Assize▪ Court, because an Assize is not within the words of the Statute. Audita Quaerela. BIrd versus Kirton, Trin. 13. Jacobi, rotulo 3118. An Audita Quaerela brought, and the case was this, Bird and Milles were bound to Kirton, and Kirton makes a Bond to Milles in the sum of 100 l. that if Milles be not sued upon the first Bond, then that shall be void; and it was alleged, that Kirton did both sue Milles and Bird, and that he had no notice of the second Bond, that he might have pleaded it, and so pretends that the second Bond should be a Defeasance of the first; and Judgement was given for the Defendant. BEck brought an Audita Quaerela, and surmises the matter following, The Court was denied a Supersedeas, the surmise being only matter in suit. that Boon Administrator of C. brought his Action of Debt upon an Obligation, and before Judgement, that Administration was revoked, and Administration granted to another, and notwithstanding the Revocation, he procured Judgement, and the second Administrator released, and the rest brought an Audita Quaerela upon that Release, and the Court would not grant a Supersedeas, because the Revocation was but matter in fait, for that Revocation was not under Seal; and the first Administrator might appeal. Cases in Law, and Notes. IF a Writ of Covenant be brought against two, and if one acknowledge Nota. the Fine before one of the Justices, and the other acknowledge by Dedimus, or before another Justice, that Fine cannot be proceeded upon these two acknowledgements by the opinion A Writ of Covenant brought against more than acknowledged, and prayed to be amended, and denied. of the Court. A Writ of Covenant was brought against three men, and their Wives, and only two men and their Wives acknowledged the Fine, and the other Husband and Wife never acknowledged, and the Fine was sued, as a Fine acknowledged by all, and it was desired the Fine might be amended, and the Man and Wife that did not acknowledge might be put out, but the Court would not grant it. If I make a Lease for years, reserving Rend, during the Life of A. Lease made to one during the life, two if one die the Lease is ended. and B. if one of them die, the Rent is gone. If I make a Lease for Life, reserving a Rent to me and my Executor, neither the Executor nor the Heir shall have the Rent, Justice Walmsley held this difference in making a Lease to two, during their Lives, if one die, the other shall have it; otherwise it is if it be made to one during the Life of two, and one of them die, in this case the Lease is ended: and there is difference between a reservation of Rent and Lease, for Reservation is according to the will and pleasure of the Lessor; and Justice Walmsley said, if a Lessee for years granteth a Rent to A. during the Life of B. and C. this Reservation is good, although one should die, which Sir Edward Cook denied: and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, in Hills case. If I make a Lease for years, reserving a Rent, and then I grant, demise, and to farm let, Reversionem domus, for years, and the Rent, to Nota. have and to hold the Reversion, and the Rent from a time past, if the Lessee cannot get an Attornement, yet it is a good Lease in Reversion, and shall take effect after the end of the first Lease habendum terram & habendum reversionem est terra revertens, and no difference. If the Husband with his own money purchaseth for his Wife's A case of Jointure. Jointure, Land to them and the Heirs of their two Bodies, the Remainder in Fee to the Wife, and they have Issue two Sons, and the Husband dieth, and the Wife suffereth a Recovery to the use of the youngest Son, the eldest Son notwithstanding shall have the Land, by the Statute of Jointures. Hill. 6. Jac. If I set-out my Corn, and after take it away, the Parson Nota bene. may sue me in the Spiritual Court, or bring an Action of Trespass against me: but if the Parson sue in the Spiritual Court a stranger for taking away the Tithes which were set out, this is a Praemunire in the Parson. Tenant at will shall pay his Rent when he holdeth over his term, Difference between Tenant at will and sufferance. but Tenant at sufferance shall not pay any Rent, if a man hold over his term, and pay his old Rent, he shall be accounted Tenant at will. For one joint Debt, for one Contract, you cannot plead Nil debet, Joint Debt and Contract cannot have several Pleas. Nota. for part, and demur for the rest; for he pleads Nil debet, and the matter in Law is reserved. Licet saepius requisite, is a sufficient Request upon a Bond, because it is a Debt. Unto an Action brought against a man upon a Bond, pleads Denis Nota. age: the case was this, that when the Obligation was sealed and delivered, the Defendant was of full age, but at the time when the Bond bore Date, he was under age; and at the Assizes the Judge there ruled, that at the time of making the Bond, was when the Bond was sealed, and not when it bore Date. The Court were of opinion, that where a Bishop holds Land discharged Nota. of Tithes, and he makes a Feoffment of the Land, the Feoffee shall be discharged of Tithes; and the like, if the King hath ancient Forest-land discharged of Tithes, and the King grants this Land, the Grantee is discharged of Tithes; and it is a general Rule, that he which may have Tithes, may be discharged of Tithes. If I let Land for years, reserving Rend, if I command one to put his If I command one to do a Trespass, an Action will lie against him. Cattle into the Land, I cannot distrain them, for my commandment is a wrong, and an Action of case will lie against the commandor. If I make a Lease, and bid the Tenants cut down the Trees, yet I may have an Action of waste against my Lessee. In Sir Cheydens' case, the commandment to take Possession was void, unless he had commanded him to expel the Tenant, and then he might join either to distrain, or bring an Action of Debt, for the Lease was made by him and two more. 28 H. 8. If I make a Lease to the Husband and Wife, covenant to Wife not bound to perform Covenants of the Lessee. do no waste, or repair Houses, and the Husband dieth, and the Wife surviveth, and holdeth in, if the Wife commit waste, or not repair the House, no Action lieth against the Wife; but to such a Lease the Wife is tied to pay the Rent, or to perform a condition made by the part of the Lessor, but not observe or perform Covenants of the Lessee. Pasch. 10. Jacobi. The Court much doubted, whether one that had Nota. a Park, and was used to pay one Shoulder of Deer for all manner of Tithes, and the Park is disparked, should now pay Tithes in kind or not. For Wool and Lamb, no Action upon the Statute for not setting No Action for small Tithes. out of Tithes, for they are no predial Tithes: and no Action lies upon this Statute for small Tithes. An Administration granted durand. minori aetate execut. is not within Administration granted during minority not within the Statute 21 H. 8. the Statute of 21 H. 8. And by the Civil Law the Judge may after Administration by him granted, revoke it, and grant it to another. And if an Administration be granted to a Feme Covert, yet she shall sue in their Court as a Feme sole. One Briefly married an Administratrix, and entered into Bonds for the Intestates Debts; and afterwards the Wife leaveth her Husband, and refuseth the Administration, and it was granted to another, and now B. prayeth a Prohibition, for that he may be sued for Debts, and denied by the Court, until he be sued. This Administration was first granted by Doctor B. and after by him revoked, and a new granted by him to the Wife's Brother, and afterwards he revoked that, and established the first Administration and the Appeal. A Feoffment in Fee by Deed indented, Rend reserved, it is good; but without Deed cannot reserve Rend. If Land be devised by three, upon condition to pay them 100 l. Nota. equally to be divided, and one of them dieth, his Executor, or Administrator shall have the Money: and so it is, if one were bound to pay Money. The Commissary granted Administration of the Intestates Goods Ordinary cannot make a Dividend of themselves. to the Wife, and did make a Dividend of his Estate to some of the rest of his Kindred: and this was-held not to be warranted by Law, and more than the Ordinary could do; because the Administratrix is chargeable to pay all Debts and Promises of the Intestate, and to bring up his Children, which she cannot do, if the Goods be taken away; Vbi delinquit ibi punietur. If a Copyholder of Inheritance accept a Lease for years of his Copyhold, the Copyhold is gone by the opinion of the whole Court. If a Legacy be granted of Land, this shall not be sued for in the Legacy of Land shall not be sued for in Court Christian. Spiritual Court; but if one by Will devise Land to be sold for payment of Legacies, this shall be sued for in the Spiritual Court by the opinion of the whole Court. If two Fulling-mils be under one Roof, and a rate-tithe paid for Nota. For Tithes. the Mills, and after you alter these Mills, and make one a Corn-mill, your Rate is gone, and you must pay Tithes in kind; or if you have but one pair of Stones in your Mill, and pay a Rate for them, then if you put on another pair of Stones, new Tithes must be paid in kind. If one in Fee make a Lease for Life, and after granteth a Rent-charge, if the Grantors' Cattle come upon the Ground, I may distrain Nota. them, although I cannot distrain the Tenant in Possession, but the Grantor cannot avoid it. If the condition of a Bond be to discharge a Message of all Incumberances, than one may plead generally, that he did discharge it of all Incumberances; but if it be to discharge it of such a Lease, than I must show how. If a man devise his Trees to his Executors to pay his Debts, the Executor must in convenient time cut down the Wood And so if a Nota. man sell his Trees, the Vendee must sell them in a convenient time. If I grant you out of my Manor, 10. l. per ann. and recite but five pounds, the Recital shall not diminish the Grant. And so if I grant Recital shall not enlarge the Grant. you ten pounds out of my Manor, and recite 20. l. this shall not enlarge it. If I infeoff two of Land, habendum to me in Fee, and habendum to the other in Fee, they are Tenants in common. In the Court of Wards, one Dymack was a Purchasor by Bargain Nota. and Sale, and before inrolment D. dies, and after his Death the Indenture was enrolled; the Question was, whether his Son shall be in Ward for the Land; and it was adjudged, that he is Heir to the Land, and is in by the Statute of 27 Eliz. of Bargains and Sales, and not by the Statute of Uses. My Lord Hobard held, that if an Executor pay a Bond made upon Money paid by an Executor upon a usurious Contract is a Devastavit. Proportiament of Rent. a usurious Contract, it shall be a Devastavit in the Executor: and if he be bound to present one to a Church, and he present one upon a Simonaical Contract, the Bond is broken. Hill. 10. Jac. Resolved, if one make a Lease of a Manor, reserving Rend, and afterwards the Lessor grants the Reversion of forty acres thereof; now if an Action of Debt be brought by the Grantee, he may aver the rate of the Acre: and if the Defendant plead Nil debet per patriam, the Jury shall rate the value, and although the value be found less by the Jury than the Plaintiff surmiseth, yet the Plaintiff shall recover after the proportion. For Acts in Law no Attornement is necessary: as if a Lease made No Attornement necessary for Acts in Law. for years, reserving a Rent, which is assigned to a Woman for Dower, she shall have the Rent without Attornement. In Cambels' case upon an Elegit returned, that the Lessor was seized in Fee, and that by virtue of the Judgement the moiety was delivered to the Plaintiff; and for the Rent reserved upon the Lease for years before Judgement. If a man top a Tree under the growth of 21. years, and suffer the Nota. For Tithes. body to grow; and afterwards when the boughs are grown out again, he doth lop and top it again, I shall pay no Tithes, although the Tree was not privileged at the first cutting, by the opinion of the whole Court. If a Debt be recovered in a Court of Record, that Debt cannot be Nota. assigned over to any man by the opinion of the whole Court, Mich. 10. Jac. Pasch. 14. If Money be to be paid, upon proof made, there the trial Note how far Proof extends. shall be the proof to be made before: but if it be to pay Money within 3. Months after proof, there proof must be made first: but if it be upon proof before A. then proof being made before A. this extending proof shall tie the party: but Warburton held the contrary, and he resembled this to a surmise to have a prohibition, which is no binding proof, for the Jury may pass against the proof in the surmise: when a Bond is to pay Money upon proof, this is a legal proof by Law, if it be laid generally to be paid by proof; if it were by proof before two Justices, or two Aldermen, this shall be intended a sufficient proof, when the Action shall be brought upon the Bond, and if the Defendant say, that due proof was not made, than they shall say, that before the two Justices, etc. it was proved by testimony before them, and then the Judges shall judge whether it be a sufficient proof or not. If I devise Lands to my Executors for three years, for the payment of my Debts, this is Assetts in the Executors hands; but if I devise Nota, Difference. my Land to be sold for the payment of my Debts, it is no Assets before it be sold. Mich. 9 Jacobi. It was held in the Common Pleas by the whole Court, that in the King's case, the consideration of the Money paid, is Nota. never to be proved. Likewise in a common case of Bargain and Sale in consideration of Money paid, where in truth none was paid, yet it is good, and the Bargainee is not tied to prove the Payment, for the Bargainer may have an Action of Debt. If a Legacy be granted out of Leases, and a Suit in the Spiritual Nota. Court, for this shall not be prohibited, but otherwise it is, if it were out of Fee Simple Lands. HE'll versus Frettenden. Resolution upon two Cases upon the Statute Nota. of E. 6. for not setting forth of Tithes, Videlicet, A man possessed of Corn sells it, and before two Witnesses sets out his Tithes, and afterwards privately takes away his Tithes: and the Parson sues him upon the Statute of treble Damages, for not setting forth of Tithes: and the Defendant proves by Witnesses, that he set forth his Tithes, yet this Fraud is helped, for the words are without fraud or deceit. In the second case, one secretly sells his Corn to one who was not known, and afterwards the Vendee commands the Vendor to cut the Corn, which he doth, and takes away the whole Corn without setting forth his Tithes; and the Question was, who should be sued for the Tithes: and the Court held the first Vendor should be sued, for it was fraudulent. If a man be found guilty of Felony, and after receives his Pardon, Nota. he shall not be Legalis home, to pass upon a Jury. If a Venire facias be against an Archbishop, the Venire facias shall be Tam milites quam alios liberos, etc. because he is a Lord of the Parliament. Copyhold land extendable upon Statute of Bankrupt. Being a member of the Cinque Ports will not free one from Arrest. Difference of things that are in Prender and that are in Render. If a man be obliged in a Statute staple, his Copyhold Land is not extendable, but it is upon a Statute of Bankrupt. If a man have Common in three Acres, and purchase one of the three Acres, his Common is extinct. If a man of the Cinque Ports shall come to London, he may be there arrested, and shall not have the Privilege of the Cinque Ports. Difference between those things which are in the Prender, and such things that are in the Render; for if I take not such things as are in Prender according to my Prescription, it is void. If I have Estovers in Woods to be taken every other year; if I omit to take them every other year, I cannot take them in the third year. But for Rent, and such other things that are in the Render, I ought to have it when ever I demand it, as it best pleases me. And note, that in such Nota. case one prescribed for eight Loads of Wood to be cut and taken, as appertaining to a Message, which was held naught by the whole Court, for the Prescription should be laid for Estovers to be employed upon Repairs of the said Message, or to be spent in it: for a man cannot prescribe to have a Prescription to come and cut down my Wood, which is as much as I that have the freehold can do. For the claim to take and sell my Wood cannot be good. And the Court held it a good Prescription, to prescribe to have Common every other year, although you show not the Commencement, as to show what time of the year when it begins. If a man hath Common of Pasture, in divers Closes and parcels of Ground, where he hath some Land of his own, there, and in all other cases where one is to prescribe, he need not to make his Title to every piece, but to say, he hath Common in loco in quo, &c. in't. alia, and need not to speak of the rest of the Land in the residue of the Field, because he hath Land of his own. Common appendent belongeth to arable Land, not to Pasture Land. If two Issues be joined, and in the awarding the Venire facias, Omission in awarding the venire of these words, Quoad triand. etc. held good. Local things shall not be made transitory. these words, Videlicet, Quoad triandum tam exit istum quam praedictum alium exit superius junct.) were omitted, and after a Verdict such Default was moved in Arrest of Judgement; and the Exception overruled, and held good, notwithstanding that omission. The whole Court were of opinion, that local things shall not be made transitory, by laying the Action in a foreign Shire, as for Corn growing in one Shire, and an Action of Trover brought in another. COmes Cumbr. versus Comitem Dorset. It was moved by the Defendant, A Tales prayed by the Defendant upon the Plaintiffs Distring. in another Term, but denied. that whereas the Plaintiff had prosecuted a Distring. Jur. and only eleven of the Jury appeared, and the Inquest remained to be taken for want of Jurors: and that at such time neither Plaintiff nor Defendant desired a Tales; and afterwards the Defendant in another Term prayed a Tales of that Writ which the Plaintiff had prosecuted, and the Court denied to grant it, because he prayed not a Tales when the Distress was returned; and if he would have a Tales, he must purchase anew, a Plur. distring. and if then the Jury fill not, the Defendant may pray a Tales, and the Court ought to grant it. And note, upon the first Habeas Corpus the Defendant shall not have a Tales, but in Default of the Plaintiff. IF the Chamberlain of the County Palatine of Chester make an insufficient If Chamberlain of Chester make an ill Return, the Sheriff shall be amerced. No Distress in a Court, Baron but by Prescription. Actions upon penal Statutes, not within the Statute of Jeofailes. Return to the Court of Common Pleas, upon a Writ issued out of that Court; the Sheriff shall be amerced, because the Sheriff is the Officer responsible to the Court. The King hath power to make and create a Leet anew, where none was before. A Distress is incident of Right, but in a Court Baron a Prescription must be laid to distrain. J. Rogers versus powel. My Lord Cook held that the Surrender of a Copyhold in Tail is not any Discontinuance: and Justice Foster of the same opinion. In Doctor Husseys' case in a Ravishment de guard, wherein the Judgement is penal, the Habeas Corpus was denied by the Court to be amended, being a blank Writ after a Verdict, but was adjudged Error. For the Proviso in the Statute of Jeofailes, 18 Eliz. excepts Actions upon penal Statutes. One Jury was impanelled of the Town of Southampton, and called Nota. to the Bar, and made Default; and the men of that Town showed to the Court a Grant made to the Inhabitants of that Town, that no Return should be made of the men of that Town to be of any Jury, and prayed the Allowance of their Charter, and the Court appointed them to plead their Charter, and it was done accordingly. TRier versus Littleton. A special Verdict was found, whether Fraud or not Fraud; and the Jury did not find the Fraud expressly, Judges not meddle with matters of fact. but they found Circumstances that the Deed might seem thereby to be fraudulent; but the Court will not adjudge it Fraud, where the Jury do not expressly find the Fraud; for the Judges have nothing to do with matter of Fact; and so by the whole Court no Fraud. Tenant for Life, Remainder for Life, Remainder in Tail, Remainder in Fee, the first Tenant for Life suffereth a Recovery, the Remainder in Nota. Tail is barred, although the second Estate for Life be no party. Baron & Feme seized of the Wife's Land for Life of the Wife, Remainder to the Husband and Wife in Tail, and afterwards the Husband doth bargain and sell the Land by Deed enrolled, and a Praecipe is brought against the Bargainee, and he voucheth them in Remainder: this is a good Recovery to bar the Estate Tail. If an Information be brought against three upon the Statute of Information against three, and two appear, may declare against those two. Maintenance, and two of them appear, and the third doth not appear, the Plaintiff may declare against the two that do appear, before the other appears, for it is but a Trespass and Contempt, as in Trespass and Conspiracy; but it is otherwise in Debt upon a joint Contract, for there the Plaintiff cannot declare against one until the Process be determined against the other by the opinion of the whole Court. If Judgement be entered in Trespass of Oct. Hillarii, the Writ to inquire Nota. of Damages may bear teste of any other Return of that Term, besides of Octab. Hillarii, for the Term is as one Day, and so hath been adjudged upon a Writ of Error in the upper Bench; but it is otherwise held in the Common Pleas. If a Bargain and Sale be void in part, it is void in all. If an Officer or privileged person of the Court of Common Pleas, sue another privileged man of any other Court whatsoever, yet he of the Common Pleas that first sued, shall force the other privileged person to answer in the Common Pleas; but if a privileged man be sued with another as Executor, no Privilege lies. Summons and Severance lies between Executors, Plaintiffs; and if one of the Executors be outlawed or excommunicated, he may be demanded, and if he comes not, shall be severed by an award without Process, after he hath appeared, and the other shall proceed without him; but if he had not appeared, than Summons, and Severance shall issue out against him. FLetcher versus Robson. An Extent upon a Statute Merchant issued Return of a Sheriff insufficient upon a Statute Merchant, for omitting, that he had no other Lands, etc. out against Robson the Cognisor, and the Sheriff returned, that the Cognisor was possessed of divers Goods, and seized of Lands, which he delivered to the Cognisee, and that the Cognisee accepted of the Land; and because the Sheriff did not return, that he had not any other Lands, Goods, or Chattels, it was adjudged insufficient, and a new Writ awarded; but many held, that in the case of a Cognisor it was well enough, but not in the case of a Purchasor. If one knowledge a Statute, and after a Judgement is had against the Cognisor, now against the Cognisor the Statute shall be preferred, Nota. but not against an Executor. If a man plead a Bond, knowledged to the King in the Exchequer, it must be averred to be a true Debt. If a Debt be assigned to the King, in this case no priority of Execution. If one staul a Debt by 20. s. a year, this shall not stay my Execution: the Court were of opinion, that an Extent would not be good at Barwick, for the Writ runs not there. If a Judgement be given in a Court of Record, it shall be preferred A Statute first acknowledged shall be preferred before a Judgement, afterwards retained. in case of an Executor before a Statute: But if a man acknowledge a Statute, and afterwards confess a Judgement; and if the Land be extended upon the Judgement, the Cognisee shall have a Scire facias, to avoid the Extent upon the Judgement, otherwise in case of Goods, for therein first come first served: for if I have a Judgement against one, and afterwards he acknowledgeth a Statute, and by virtue of the Statute the Goods of him (being dead) were taken in the Executors hands, then upon the Judgement a Scire facias was sued, and afterwards a Fieri facias, of the Testators Goods: it was held, that the Goods first extended were lawfully extended, and shall be good. A Judgement was had against Sir Fr. Freeman, and an Extent came to the Sheriff, and afterwards, and before any thing was thereupon done, one Fieri facias against the Executor upon a Judgement, given before the acknowledging the Statute, was delivered to the Sheriff, and the Question was, whether the Extent or Fieri facias shall be first executed. And note, if the Land be first extended upon the Statute, and afterwards an Elegit, upon a Judgement obtained before the acknowledging the Statute, come also to the Sheriff, the moiety of the Land extended shall be delivered to the Plaintiff upon the Judgement. HIll. 15. Jac. The case of Villainage is within the Statute of Limitation, The case of Villainage within the Statute of Limitation. and in the case of M. Corbet it was held, that the Prescription of the Seisin of the Plaintiff and his Ancestors, as Villain, was more than needeth, and the Issue thereupon taken was good by the whole Court, after Exception taken thereupon: and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. In every Elegit the Sheriff must return, and set out the moiety distinctly, Nota in Elegit. unless they be Tenants in common, and in that case he must return the special matter. An Extent issued out against one Greisley by the name of Greisley Esquire, who was at the time of suing out the Writ made Knight and Baronet, and it was naught, and the Plaintiff prosecuted a new Writ. MIch. 10. Jacobi. A Tenant by Statute Staple or Elegit, that hath Two Inquisitions taken at several Days by several Juries upon one Writ, naught. extended an Abbot's Lease, or a Lease made out of an Abbot's Lease, is not bound to show it, because he cometh in by Act of Law: but any other that cometh in under the Lease, must show it, by the opinion of the whole Court. And note, that in Hillary 10. Jac. two Inquisitions taken at several Days by several Juries upon one Statute Merchant, were adjudged naught; one was taken of the Land, and the other for Land and Goods: and Extent of the whole fourth part was naught, for it should be of the moiety of the fourth part: and mark, Nota. it was of a Lease, which was but a Chattel, and the Sheriff might have sold it as Goods, but seeing he had extended it, in this case he should receive benefit but as in a common Extent. COmyrrs versus Brandling. A Lessee that had a Lease of the value All Goods and Chattels bound by the Teste of the Elegit, and cannot be sold afterwards. of 100 l. and after the Teste of the Elegit, and before the Sheriff had executed the Elegit, assigns his term to one, who assigns it over to the Plaintiff in the Scire facias, and afterwards, and before the last Assignment the Sheriff executes the Elegit, and delivers the Lease to the Plaintiff, tenend, etc. for satisfaction of the Debt, which came to but 43. l. 6. s. 8. d. & it was held by all the Judges, that the Sheriff could not deliver the Lease at another value then what the Jury had found it at; and the Sale made by the Sheriff is as strong as if it had been made in open Market: and that all the Goods and Chattels are bound after the Teste of the Elegit, and cannot be sold by the Owner after the Teste of the Writ. If a later Extent be avoided by an ancient Extent, after the ancient Extent is satisfied, the later Extent shall have the Land, according to his first Extent, without any reextent, by the opinion of Sergeant Hutton, if the Husband charge the Lease of the Wife, and dieth, the Wife shall hold the Land discharged. HIll. 12. Jac. The Earl of Lincoln against Wood, the Earl of Lincoln Audita Quaerela and Bail put in in the Chancery, and held good. did arrest Wood, upon a Capias, upon a Statute Merchant, Wood being in Execution, obtained in the Chancery an Audita Quaerela, and did put in Bail there, and had a Supersedeas, and was discharged of his Imprisonment; and the Audita Quaerela, and Bail sent into the Common Pleas to be proceeded on. The cause of the Audita Quaerela was grounded upon the performance of the Defeasons of a Statute; and after this case was debated for the Bailment of Wood, and held by the Court to be good, it was allowed of. If the Act for Dissolution of Monasteries had not given the Land The Act of E. 6. for Dissolution, reaches only to such that are regular. to the King, the Founders ought to have had them. And if an Hospital or religious House is impeached upon the Statute of Superstitious uses, it must be proved to be regular, for they must be religious that are dissolved, by E. 6. JOules versus Joules Alderman purchased Land of one, against whom a Judgement was given long before the Purchase, and the Vendor afterwards became unable to pay the Judgement, and long after the Plaintiff in the Judgement purchased a Scire facias against the Defendant, and had Judgement against the Defendant by Default, and afterwards had an Elegit, and by virtue of that the Sheriff extends the Land of Joules the Purchasor, who prays the aid of the Court, because the whole Land was not extended, but he was forced to bring his Audita Quaerela. If I make a Lease for years, reserving a Rent during my Life, and Nota. my Wife's Life, if I die, the Rent is gone, because she is a stranger, she shall never have the Rent, because she hath no Interest in the Land; if one of them die, nothing can survive to the other, and a Limitation must be taken strictly, otherwise it is by way of Grant, that shall be taken strongly against the Grantor. If 2. Tenants in common join in a Lease for years, to bring an Ejectment, Nota. and count Quod cum dimisissent, etc. that is naught, for it is a several Lease of their Moities, and you must declare, Quod cum, one of them demised one moiety, and the other the other moiety, and good. If a Tenant in Socage hath Issue, and die, his Issue being under the Nota. age of 14. years, the next Friend of the Heir, to whom the Inheritance cannot descend, shall have the Guard of the Land, until the Heir come to the age of 14. years, and he is called Guardion in Socage, and in pleading a Lease for Life, you are never to allege the place where the Lease was made, because it passeth by Livery, which was executed upon the Land. He that pleads a Demise, aught to show that the Lessee entered, and he that pleads a Descent, aught to show that he entered: and an Exchange is a good Plea in Bar, but it shall never be adjudged a good Exchange, except this word Escambium be used in the Charter of Exchange. HOpkins versus Radford. A Defendant shall take no benefit of his Nota. own wrong. In Sir James harrington's case, the Original was returned Quinque Pasch. and the issue joined that day, and the Venire facias returned that day, and held naught by the Court upon the first motion. A future Lease cannot be surrendered but drowned. For things in Action a Deed of Gift is void, as Debts without Specialty, Deed of Gift for things in Action. although he say, Goods, Chattels, and Specialties, but for other Debts by Specialty, and Goods, it is good; and for the Debts in Action after the Death of the Party Administration is to be granted, and the Administrator is to have the Goods. RAiner versus Mortimer. One had Judgement upon a Scire facias Supersedeas granted, because Capias ad satisfaciendum was not returned. to have Execution, and a Capias ad satisfaciendum returnable, 15. Martini, and that Writ was returned Album Breve, and a Testatum thereupon, and the Defendant taken, and this matter was moved to the Court, and a Supersedeas prayed, that the Testatum issued out erroneously, because the Capias was not returned; and it was granted by the whole Court, because the Capias was not returned. One seized in Fee may bargain and sell, grant and demise Land to others, and their Heirs, to the use of one for years, because he hath a Nota. Fee-simple, but Lessee for years cannot bargain and sell his Lease, to the use of one for years. If a Marriage is intended between two men, and one of them in consideration that the other hath upon the Marriage, assured Land to Nota. his Son, he doth assume to pay to my Son such a Sum, immediately after the Marriage; if the Money be not paid, the Son must have the Action, and not the Father. MIch. 5. Jacobi. 61. One Juryman appear in Court, and when he A Juror who hath appeared, cannot be passed by, and to swear others. came to the Bar to be sworn, he informed the Court that he was eighty years old, and prayed to be discharged, and the Court could not grant it, nor pass him by, and swear others, without committing Error, except the Parties would consent; for it is Error to skip a Juror who is returned, if he appear, and therefore the Juror was drawn by the consent of the Parties. TRin. 6. Jacobi. Upon a Levari facias out of a Court Baron, Goods Goods cannot be sold upon a Levari facias, in a Court Baron without a Custom. cannot be sold without a Custom to sell the Goods: and if Goods be attached by Pone out of a Court Baron, the Defendant shall not lose his Cattle; otherwise it is, if it be a Process out of the Common Pleas, than the Defendant loseth his Cattle, for not appearing: if you lay, that you have a Court time out of mind to be held before a Steward, you must show what Pleas you have used to have Conusance of. A Sheriff returned but 21. only upon a Venire facias, and at the Sheriff returned but 21. upon a Venire facias, and naught. Trial ten only appeared, and a Decem tales was awarded, and tried, and Verdict for the Plaintiff; and this matter was moved in Arrest of Judgement, for that the Sheriff had returned but 21. and the Court were of opinion, that if 12. of them had appeared, that it had been good notwithstanding; but because 10. only appeared of the principal, therefore it was naught; and Judgement arrested for that cause. If a Juror be sworn of the principal, and the Jury remain, Nota. when the Jury comes again, he shall be sworn again. TRin. 6. Jac. rotulo 251. Dunnall versus Giles. A special Verdict, Judgement, that it was a good Devise. and the Question was, a man being possessed of a term, devices the whole term to A. for Life, and if he dies within the term, to B. during the minority of C. and that C. when he comes to full age shall have the Remainder of the term, and held a good Devise. To devise Land, or Term, or Lease, all one, it is an Executory Devise. If one surrender Land to the use of an Estranger, that is, to resty the use in Reversion, for the Land is in him immediately. If a man hath a Rent in esse, you cannot grant that in Reversion after your Death; but if I surrender to the use of one after my Decease, is not good, by his opinion of Warburton and Daniel. If the Sheriff shall by virtue of a Fieri facias levy the Debt and The property is not altered, upon the Sheriffs taking of goods upon a Fieri facias, but remains in the Defendant. Nota. Damages of a man, and make a Return, that the said Goods remain in his hands for want of Buyers: the Property remains still in the Defendant, although the Sheriff hath Possession of the Goods. A Sheriff may sell Goods levied upon a Fieri facias out of his County. In Waterman's case, the Issue was, whether a Copyholder in one Town had Common in Land lying in another Town, and the Plaintiff shows that he is Lord of the Hundred of C. within which Hundred one of the Villages lie: and prays a Venire facias of the Town next adjoining to the said Hundred; and it was granted, and tried, and Exception to the Trial, for that the Venire was not of both Villages. An Alien born being no free Denizen may defend and bring a Writ Alien born no Plea in a Writ of Error. Nota. of Error, and it is no Plea to say, that he is an Alien born. Note, by the Common Law the Lord of the Manor may come and take away a Tree cut down upon the Copyhold Land by his Copyholder, without laying a special Custom for it. If there be an unlawful Marriage, as the Brother doth marry his Issue cannot be bastarded after Death. Sister, and they have Issue, and one of them dieth before any Divorce had between them; now after the Death of one of them, the Issue cannot be bastarded, as in Cordies' case, 39 E. 43. 22 E. 4. After a general Imparlance one cannot plead an Outlary in Bar to an Action of Trespass or Case, but it must be pleaded in abatement, except he be outlawed after the last Continuance; for you shall plead nothing in Bar but what goeth to the pit of the Action; now the Damages in Trespass or Case are not forfeited by Outlary, as Debt, because of the incertainty. To the Owner of the Soil on both sides of the way, of common Nota. right belong the Trees that grow in the Lane, whether he be Lord or Freeholder. The best badge of truth, is the usage of taking the profit of the Trees. 11 H. 4. rot. 80. Where the Court, ex officio, should inquire, and that Where the principal is omitted cannot be supplied by Writ. omitted, the Court may supply it; but where an Attaint lieth, that is not to be supplied, as in a Valour Maritagii, the value is the point of the Writ, and if that be omitted by the Jury, never to be supplied by Writ. Cheyneys' case, Valour Maritagii, and intrusion were at the Common Law before the Statute, and the Statute doth but enlarge the Common Law; for by the Statute the Judgement is otherwise then at the Common Law. It is vain to plead the Execution of a Writ of Seisin upon a Recovery, Nota. but to plead that he did enter. MIch. 10. Jac. If I purchase Land by a name, and allege it to be in a wrong Parish, or Shire, it is good, notwithstanding the King could not grant precedency in public things. mistake by the Court. A stranger shall be bound by a Law made for the public good, but he must come within the place where it was made. The King cannot grant precedency in public things, as to go by Nota. Water, or by passage on the Land, as by Coach: if a Bond bear Date Super altum mare, than it must-be sued only in the Admiral Court; otherwise it cannot be sued there. Every Bishop hath his Cathedral and Council, and the Council and Bishop there decide matters of Controversy, the prebend's have their names from their affording of help to the Bishop, and in time of the vacancy of the Bishop, the Archbishop is Guardian of the Spiritualties, and not the Dean and Chapter. TRin. 14. Jac. rotulo 1810. Birtbrook versus Battersby Exception raken after Trial. The Action was laid in Westmoreland, and the Jurata written at the end of the Record, was Ebor. ss. ura. Inter, etc. and recites the Day of Trial in the County of York, and the place where the Trial was, at York, and prayed that it might be amended, and it was granted to be amended, by the whole Court. INt. Bullen & Jarvis. The Venire facias was made in this Form, Videlicet, Liberos & legales homines de B. and it should have been De vicineto de B. and it was notwithstanding held good, and amendable by the Roll; for it shall be intended, that the Jurors are inhabiting in the Town of B. although the Sheriff returns the Jurors of other places, and none of them be named of B. and the Venire facias was returned by. A. B. Ar. without naming him Vic. and it was amended by the Court. GRiffin versus Palmer, Trin. 15. Jac. rotulo 924. Issue taken, whether Ancient Demesne tried by Doomsday Book. the Lands contained in the Fine were ancient Demesne or not, pretending they were parcel of the Manor of Bowden in the County of Northampton, which was pretended to be ancient Demesne, and the Doomsday Book was brought into the Court, and by that Book it appeared, that the Manor of Bowden was in the County of Leicester, and not in the County of Northampton, but the Council affirmed, that the Manor was both in the County of Leicester and Northampton, but it valued not, for the Doomsday Book was against the Plaintiff. The Court was moved to amend a Venire facias, which was Album The Venire facias was Album Breve, and denied to be amended. Breve, but the Court would not grant it, although the Sheriff's name was put to the Pannell; but if the Sheriff upon the Venire facias had returned, that the Execution of that Writ did appear in a certain Pannell annexed to that Writ, and had not put his name to the Writ of Venire facias, but to the Pannell, in such case the Court would have amended the Venire facias. Lessee at will cannot grant one his Estate, if one occupy with Tenant Lessee at will cannot grant over his Estate. Note, difference between Tenant at will and sufferance. at will, this is no Disseisin, to the Lessor. If a Tenant for seven years suffer Trees to grow above the age of 21. years, they are Timber, and it is waste to cut them. Tenant at will shall pay his Rent, when he holdeth over his term, but Tenant at sufferance shall not pay any Rent. If a man holdeth over his term, and pay his old Rent, he shall be accounted Tenant at will. If one being sick, giveth Notes to make his Will, and after by infirmity Nota. of sickness he becometh so weak that his memory faileth him, and these Notes are made into a Will, this is a good Will, otherwise it is, if he become lunatic after the Notes given. MIch. 15. Jacobi. One Warter was committed to the Fleet by the One committed, bailed, being no cause expressed. Lord Treasurer of England, and the Prisoner was brought to the Common Pleas by Habeas Corpus, which was returned, and no cause of the Commitment expressed, and for that cause the Prisoner was set at liberty, and bailed. TRinity Term 15. Jacobi. Hanson one of the Attorneys of the Common Pleas delivers a Note to the Sheriff's Clerk, of the names Attorneys name put out of the Roll for a mis-demeanour. of divers Jurors that were to be returned, and of divers others that were not to be returned, in a case concerning one Butler, and for this Offence he was put out of the Roll of Attorneys. In Spilmans case; if I have Estovers in Land, and cut down Estovers, Nota. and a stranger taketh away the Estovers, I shall have an Action against him that taketh them away, although he have there Common of Estovers also. If the Husband sow the Ground, and die, the Executors and not the Heir shall have the Corn; but if the Father sow the Land, and Nota. dieth, or the Heir sow the Land, and the Wife recover Seisin in Dower, she shall have the Corn. The setting open a Shop on the Sabbath day is punishable by Statute Law, and so is a House of Bawdry, and not to be dealt with by Nota. the high Commissioners. So long as the Land is occupied by him that hath the Fee-simple, which did formerly belong to the Order of the Cistercians, it shall pay no Tithes, but if he let it for years or life, the Tenant shall pay Tithes. HIll. 11. Jac. rotulo 90. A Recovery was had upon a Writ of Entry in le post, for a common Recovery between Hartley and Towers, Writ of Entry filled after the Death of the Tenant. in the County of Bucks; the Attorney who prosecuted the Recovery, by negligence did not file the Writ of Entry, which was prosecuted orderly, and all Fees paid, when the Recovery was passed. And in Easter Term, 14. Jac. it was moved that the Writ of Entry might be filled, and it was granted, although the Tenant was dead, the Writ of Entry was returnable, Octabis Purificationis. MIch. 14. Jacobi. My Lord Hubbard, Justice Warburton, and Winch, held, that when there were but three Judges of the Common-Pleas they might argue Demurs, and if two of them were of one mind, and one of the other, the Judgement should be given according to their opinions. My Lord Cook said, that for the Body of the Church, the Ordinary Ordinary to place and displace in the Church. is to place and displace; in the Chancel the Freehold is in the Parson, and it is parcel of his Gleab; Tpespass will lie by the Heir for pulling down the Coat-Armor, etc. of his Ancestors, set up in the Church. A Pew cannot belong to a House. Fraud shall never be intended, except it be apparent and found, and Fraud shall never be intended, except apparent and found. that conveyance which at the time of the making was good, shall never by matter ex post facto be adjudged to be fraudulently made, for before primo Eliz. at the Common Law. A conveyance made for natural affection without valuable consideration is not to be avoided; none shall avoid it, but such as come in upon valuable considerations. Lands devised to one in Tail upon condition, that he shall not alien, Nota. and for Default of such, the Remainder to R. in Tail, this is a Condition, and no Limitation, by the whole Court; and the Heir at the Common Law may enter for the Alienation. Matters of instance which are between party and party, as for High Commission nothing to do with matters of instance for Tithes. Tithes, and Matrimony, are not to be dealt withal by the high Commissioners, if they proceed inverso ordine, that cannot be holpen in the Common Pleas but by superior Magistrate, if they be Judges of the cause. If one in Norfolk come within another Diocese, and commit Adultery Nota. in another Diocese, during the time of his residence he may be cited in the Diocese where he committed the Offence, although he dwell out of the Diocese, by Cook, Warburton, and Winch. If the King grant Lands to A. and his Heirs Males, and doth not Nota: say, of his Body, he is but Tenant at will, Tamen quaere. A Deputy of an Office for Bribery cannot make his Master be punished Master shall not be corporally punished for his Deputies Offence. Nota. corporally, but pecuniarily, equity shall not bar me of the benefit of Law. Note, the Probate of Wills and Administrations did not belong to the Ordinary originally, but to the Common Law. If two Aliens be at Issue, the Inquest shall be all English; but if between an Alien and Denizen, that Inquest shall be de medietate Linguae, 21 H. 6. 4. A Judgement given against a dead person is not void, but Error, 28. Ass. 17. A Juror was committed to the Fleet, For making his Companions Nota. stay a whole Day and a Night, having no reason for it, and without the Assent of any of the rest of his Fellows, and after was bailed, but not until the Court was advised, 8 E. 3. 75. In a Writ of Estate Probanda, every Juror ought to be of the Age of 42. years. If I grant Land to one, and his Heirs, in the Premises of the Deed, Nota. Habendum, to him, and the Heirs of his Body, he shall have the Land in Tail, and the Fee-simple after the State in Tail, when the Estate is certain in the Premises, the Habendum shall not control it. If one make two Executors, one of seventeen years of Age, and One at seventeen years old may be an Executor. the other under Administration, during the minority is void, because he of seventeen years old may execute the Will of Administration, during the minority, in such case be granted; and the Administrator brings his Action, the Executor may well release the Debt. Pigot and Gascons case. If a Record go once to Trial, and warning given, if the first Attorney No new notice needs if the Attorney be living. If no place of Payment be in a Will, must be a Request. be alive, the Plaintiff is not tied to give warning again, but if the Attorney be dead, he is. If no place of Payment be in a Will, which appointeth Money to be paid, there must be a Request to pay the Money, for he is not bound to seek all England over for him; otherwise it is, if it were by Bond. In every case where the Plaintiff might have Judgement against the Defendant, there if the Plaintiff be nonsuit, the Defendant shall have his Costs, if the Plaintiff be nonsuit. TRin. 11. Jac. In cases of remitting causes from the inferior Judge, Nota. the archdeacon cannot remit the cause to the Archbishop, but he must remit it to his Bishop, and he to the Archbishop. It was held by the Court, that one might distrain for a Legacy. In a special Verdict the Plaintiff must begin to argue first. OLive versus Hanmer. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Warrant of Attorney filled upon a motion, after Writ of Error brought, and Error assigned. Judgement by Nile. dicit, for want of a Warrant of Attorney, and the Record certified, and a Certior are to the Clerk of the Warrants, and Error assigned for want of a Warrant. And the Court was moved, that a Warrant might be filled, and it was granted, and a Warrant filled accordingly. Pasch. 12. Jac. An Action was brought against Baron & feme: and Nota. an Attorney appeared for the Husband alone, and the Court held, it was the Appearance of Baron & feme in Law. PAsch. 12. Jacobi. Sheriff versus Whitsander. One Judgement was Warrant of Attorney filled after Writ of Error, by Order of Court. confessed in Trin. 42. Eliz. rotulo 504. And afterwards in Trinity Term 43. Eliz. the Defendant brought a Writ of Error bearing Date the 12. of May, Anno 43. and upon that Writ the Record was certified 25. May, and afterwards Error was assigned in the upper Bench, for want of a Warrant of Attorney by the Defendant. And Mich. 43. & 44. Eliz. the Warrant of Attorney was received, and entered upon Record by Order of Court of Common Pleas. And the like was Pasch. 2. Jac. rotulo 1956. Int. Bathgrone and Smith, and the like, Mich. 1. Jac. rotulo 1306. Inter Smith & Kent. CRane versus Colpit. Question was, whether the Attornement of Attornement of an Infant is good. an Infant be good or not: and by the whole Court it was held good by three Reasons; First, he gives no Interest. Secondly, it is to perfect a thing. Thirdly, he is a Freeholder. IT was held in the case of Gage an Attorney, who as an Administrator An Attorney ought to have no Privilege as on Attorney. brought an Action of Privilege, that his Privilege ought not to be allowed. And after a Bill was filled against Drury an Attorney, as Executor, and held, that the Bill would not lie, but in both cases the Suit should be by Original. BEarbrook versus Read. The name of Confirmation must stand, for Sir Francis Gawdy was christened Thomas, and confirmed Francis, by that name he must be called. SIr Henry Compton was sued for clothes of his Wife, bought without Husband shall pay for his Wife's Clothes, though bought without his privity. his command or privity: and the whole Court were of opinion, that if the Wife should buy Merchandises, and thereof make clothes, and wear those clothes, although the Husband know nothing of them, yet he shall pay for them. PAsch. 10. Jac. The Court was moved, to know whether the Wife A man's Wife or Infant cannot be examined. of a Bankrupt can be examined by the Commissioners upon the Statute of Bankrupt; and they were of opinion, she could not be examined. For the Wife is not bound in case of high Treason to discover her Husband's Treason, although the Son be bound to reveal it: therefore by the Common Law she shall not be examined. An Infant shall not be examined. If an Administration be granted to one, during the minority of two Infants, and one of them dieth, the Administration continueth still. Actions of Debt. LOvelace versus Cocket, Mich. 6. Jac. rotulo 1001. Action of Debt One Bond cannot overthrow the other. brought upon an Obligation for the Payment of Money at a certain Day specified in the Condition. The Defendant pleads, that the Plaintiff at the Day of Payment accepts of another Bond for the Payment of the said Money, in satisfaction of the said 52. l. 11. s. and upon a Demurrer held to be a naughty Plea, for one Bond cannot overthrow another. LEa versus Pain, Hill. 14. Jacobi rotulo 953. An Action of Debt Exceptions to an Award, pretending the Arbitrators had exceeded their Authority, but adjudged good. brought upon an Obligation with a Condition to perform an Award, the Defendant pleads, that the Arbitrators made no Award. The Plaintiff by way of Replication sets forth an Award, that the Arbitrators did arbitrate of all matters, until the Date of the Award, which was a Month longer than the Submission, and so pretends they exceeded their Authority. The words were for all causes before the Date of the Award. Another Exception was, because the Arbitrators awarded that the Defendant should pay the Plaintiff such a Day of April, and doth not say, what year, or next following: and the Court held that good enough, because the second Day of Payment was made to be such a Day, and such a year: and it was held good enough, for if any new matters did arise between the Submission and Award, or, etc. the Defendant ought to show it. Another Exception was, that it was not said, that the Award was made between the Parties, but it shall be intended to be made between the Parties, because the Award was made the & super praemissis, and therefore it shall be implied, that it was made but of such things as they had power to deal in. The Court was of opinion, that the Award being de & super praemissis, the Court shall not say, but that this was a cause submitted; and except it had been discovered by pleading, that there was a new cause since the Date of the Award, which was made known to the Wardsmen, the Court is not to take notice thereof. SCot Executor versus Herbert. The Plaintiff in his Declaration says the Testator in his life-time was possessed of Land for a Judgement for the Defendant, for insufficiency in the Count term of years; and so possessed grants part of his term to an Estranger, reserving Rend, and he grants his Estate to the Defendant. And that the Testator died possessed of the Reversion of the term, and because the Rent was behind, the Executor brings his Action of Debt for the Rent, and the Declaration was held naught, for that it did not appear that he that made the first Demise was seized in Fee, or in any other Estate by which he could make a Lease. NOrris and Trussell Wardens of the Society of Weavers in the Judgement' for the Defendant, upon a by-law. Town of Newbury in the County of Berks, versus J. Scapes, Pasch. 14. Jac. rotulo 907. An Action of Debt brought, and the Plaintiffs declare that Queen Elizabeth had incorporated them by such a name, and given them Power to make by-laws, for the better governing their Corporation, etc. and further show that they made an Order which was confirmed by the Justices of Assize according to the Statute of 19 H. 7. and for the Breach of such Order brought their Action: the Defendant pleaded that he owed them nothing, and tried, and a Verdict for the Plaintiffs, and Hutton Sergeant moved in Arrest of Judgement, and took three Exceptions: the first, because the Constitution was against Law, to restrain one to exercise a lawful Trade. The second, the Constitution was, that the Offender should forfeit such a sum, and it did not appear to whom this Forfeiture should go. Thirdly, the Plaintiff shows in his Count, that the Queen by her Letters Patents had appointed A. B. C. to be Wardens for one year, and shows not which those that brought the Action were elected, which ought to be, to entitle them to that Action. It was against sense to bar all their own Apprentices, it doth not appear how many Wardens should be, and they do not entitle them to the Action by the Corporation, the Law is altered; and Judgement was given for the Defendant. BRet versus Averder, Mich. 29. & 30. Eliz. Debt brought upon The Defendant at his peril ought to make Payment. an Obligation, to perform an Arbitrement: the Defendant confesses the Arbitrement, but pleads in Bar, that the Plaintiff did not require him to make Payment, and to that Plea the Plaintiff demurs; and it was adjudged no Plea; for the Defendant at his peril ought to make Payment, and the Plaiutiff ought not to make a Request. HAles versus Bell, Trin. 39 Eliz. rotulo 1974. The Plaintiff If part of a Condition be to be performed within the Realm, and part without, aught to be triable here. brought an Action of Dèbt upon an Obligation, with a Condition for the Payment of 40. l. within fourteen Days next after the return of one Russell into England, from the City of Venice, and then the Obligation should be void; the Defendant pleads in Bar, that the said Russell was not at Venice, upon which Plea the Plaintiff demurs; and adjudged a naughty Plea; for where part is to be done within the Realm, and part out of the Realm, the Plea ought to be triable within the Realm. GArret versus Harrison Executor, Trin. 40. Eliz. rotulo 1651. To Defendant pleaded six Judgements in Bar, and two found to be by fraud, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. an Action of Debt upon a Bond brought against him as Executor; the Defendant pleads six Judgements in Bar; the Plaintiff replies, that they were by fraud and covin; and the Jury found for the Plaintiff, that two of the six were by covin; and Williams moved in Arrest of Judgement, because the Jury ought to have found all; but Glanvile said, that if any part of the Plea be insufficient, defective, or false, the Issue shall be found against you, for your Plea is one entire thing; and he said, that the Plaintiff should have taken Issue upon one only, as in an Obligation, with divers things in the Condition. Walmsley held, that by the Plea the Defendant had confessed implicatively, that you have sufficient to satisfy those six Judgements, and no more. So that if any part be found against you, this is Assets; and Judgement was given accordingly for the Plaintiff. GReen versus Wilcox Executor. To an Action upon an Obligation brought against the Defendant as Executor, he pleads that the Testator was obliged to A. in 20. l. which remained due to him at his Death; and that the said A. recorded against him in the Common Pleas, and avers that it was a true Debt, and the persons and matters to be the same, and that he had no Assetts beyond that; and the Plaintiff replies, that the said Recovery was had by fraud and covin between them, to defraud him of his Debt; to which Plea the Defendant demurs, specially because he had in his Plea averred, it was a true and just Debt, so that it could not be by covin. Trin. 44. Eliz. It was adjudged for Law by the whole Court, that The Sheriff cannot break open the outward Door to do Execution, but that being open he may break open any other. if a Fieri facias be directed and delivered to the Sheriff, he may not break the outer Door of the House, and enter, and do Execution; but if the outer Door be open, than he may enter by that, and then he may and aught to break the Door of an Entry or Chamber which is locked, and break open any Chest which is locked, and take the Goods in that in Execution; and if he doth it not, an Action of Case will lie against him. In Debt, if it be demanded by Original, the Process is Summons, Attachment, and Distress; and for Default of sufficiency upon a Nichil, returned Process to the Outlary, if the Summons or Attachment be returned, an Essoyn lies. And Wager of Law lies if the Count be upon a simple Contract. And if the Parties be living which made the Contract or Debt against an Heir, the Writ shall be brought in the Debet; but when it is brought against an Executor, or Administrator, or of Chattels, it shall be in the Detinet tantum. The Judgement in Debt where the Demand is in the Debet & detinet, is to recover the Debt, Damages, and Costs of Suit; and the Defendant in misericordia: but if the Defendant denies his Deed, than a Capias for his Fine issues out. And if the Original be in the Detinet for Chattels, than the Judgement is to recover the thing in Demand, or the value thereof, and Costs, and Damages; and the Process of Execution is a Distress to deliver the Chattels, or the value, and Damages. And if the cause of Action be against Executors or Administrators, the Judgement is to recover the Debt and Damages of the Testators Goods, if the Executor hath so much in his hands, and if he hath not, than the Damages of the Executors or Administrators proper Goods. And if the Sheriff upon a Scire facias return a Devastavit, than a Fieri facias, or Elegit, may be sued out to levy the Debt and Damages of the Executors or Administrators proper Goods. And if the Executor plead, that he never was Executor, and it is found against him that he hath administered but one Penny, the Judgement shall be to recover the Debt and Damages of the Executors own Goods. Debt brought upon a Record, the Execution shall be brought where the Record remains. MIch. 9 Jac. rotulo 2304. Throckmorton Administrator, versus Hobby. The Aministrator releases, and afterwards the Administration is revoked, and declared by Sentence to be void and null, and then the Release is void. TRin. 9 Jac. rotulo 917. Brookesby & Vaux versus M. Tresham Exception taken to the Defendants Plea. Executor of the Testament of T. T. and Exception was taken to the Defendants pleading, because the Defendant pleads divers Statutes to divers persons; and the Plaintiff shows that some were by fraud, and that others were for performance of Covenants, that were not broken, and for other Statutes that they were satisfied, and the Nota. Defendant in pleading a Statute by three, says, two of them did not pay, and doth not say, that the three nor any of them have not paid. In pleading of a Statute it must be generally pleaded, that it is a true Debt. And my Lord Cook held, that a man without a Defeasance may plead, that the Statute was acknowledged for Payment of a lesser sum; and it was held, that if the Count be good, and the Plea naught, and Replication naught, if it appears that the Plaintiff had good cause of Action, the Plaintiff shall have Judgement. And Warburton said, that one may plead generally, that the Statute was acknowledged by fraud, without showing the special matter. SPeak versus Richards. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt Debt lies for Money levied by the Sheriff, upon a Levari. for Money levied by the Sheriff upon a Levari facias, and not paid to the Plaintiff upon the Sheriffs Return upon the Levari issued out of the Chancery, and that it would well lie. But note, the Plaintiff had concluded his Demurrer ill, for he demurring to the Defendants Plea, which was grounded upon a Release should have demanded Judgement, if the Defendant should be admitted to plead a Release, which was made after the Sheriff had made his Return. TRin. 15. Jac. rotulo 1630. Parson versus Middleton. Action of Nota. Debt brought to be tried in Durham, and the Record sent to the Chancellor of Durham, because the Bishop's Sea was empty, and before the Day given by the Judges, a Bishop was elected, and he sent the Record, and not the Chancellor. MIch. 15. Jac. rotulo 2118. Maddock versus Young. The Plaintiff Nota. brought an Action of Debt for an Escape against the Sheriff upon a Capias utlegat, after Judgement; the Defendant pleads that there was no such Record of the Recovery of the Debt and Damages; to which Plea the Plaintiff demurs, pretending he had not directly and plainly answered the Declaration, but Judgement was given for the Defendant. Where a Capias is not the Process, a Capias ad satisfaciendum is not the Execution; and no Capias lies against a Countess or Baroness; and at Common Law no Capias ad satisfaciendum would lie, but only where the Action was Vi & armis, but only a Levari facias. MIch. 14. Jac. rotulo 3140. Bawkey versus Isted. An Action of Exception taken, because the Venire facias was of the Town, and not of the Parish, but ruled good. Debt brought upon the Statute of E. 6. for not setting forth of Tithes of Land lying within the Parish of Horsted parva, the Defendant pleads Nil debet per patriam, and after Trial and a Verdict, Exception was taken to the Venire facias, because the Venire facias was of Horsted parva, and not of the Parish of Horsted parva, but the Court were of opinion, that it might be either of the Town or Parish of Horsted parva, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, because both the Town and Parish were named in the Record. An Action of Debt brought against an Administrator, who pleads, Creditor administered, and is sued, aught to plead fully administered generally. that the Intestate was indebted to him, and that he had fully administered, and that he had no Goods or Chattels which were the Intestates, beyond Goods and Chattels to the value of 10. l. which the Administrator retains towards satisfaction of the said Debt to him due, the Court were of opinion that the Administrator ought to plead generally, fully administered, else the Debtor should be prejudiced in taking Issue upon that Plea, the Case was between Fox and Andrew. PAsch. 6. Jac. rotulo 751. Sharpley versus Hurrell. Action of Debt Debt brought for 60. l. tr be paid at the Return of a Ship from Newfoundland to Dartmouth, only 50. l. lent is not Usury. brought upon an Obligation, and the Defendant pleads the Statute of Usury, and sets forth, that one Ship went a fishing to Newfoundland, which Voyage might be performed within eight Months, the Plaintiff delivered fifty pounds to the Defendant, to pay sixty pounds upon the Return of the Ship to Dartmouth from fishing, and if the Ship should not come to Newfoundland, by reason of Leakage or Tempest should return to Dartmouth, than the Defendant should pay the principal Debt, and if the Ship should never return he should pay nothing; and it was held by the Court that it was not Usury, for if the Ship stayed at the Newfoundland two years he should pay but 60. l. An Action of Debt brought against an Executor, who pleads, that Plea made good by Verdict. Nota. he had nothing in his hands at the time of the Writ purchased, and saith not, nor any time after the Plea, is not good; but if the Plaintiff had took Issue, that he had Assets at the Day of the Writ purchased, and it had been found for the Plaintiff, now the Plea is made good. If an Action of Debt be brought against two Executors, and one of them only appear, and confess the Action, the Judgement shall be against both of them, of the Goods of the Testators in the hands of all the Executors, and the Damages of him that appeared only. TRin. 16. Jac. rotulo 988. Houldsworth versus Barker. An Action Judgement against both of the Testators Goods, and Damages of him that appeared only. of Debt brought upon a Bill, the Defendant pleads the Bill was delivered to the Plaintiff, upon a Condition not performed, and it was held a naughty Plea by the whole Court. HIll. 13. Jacobi rotulo 842. Harrison & al. at the Suit of Fleet. An Action of Debt brought for 32. l. and the Plaintiff counts upon an Emisset; Harrison pleads, that he and the other do not detain Nota. from the Plaintiff the said 32. l. nor any Penny thereof; and the other pleads to Issue, and a special Entry made, that the Issue should remain, until the said Harrison had perfected his Law, or made Default, Nota. and he at the Day did wage his Law, and Judgement was, that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ. PAsch. 16. Jac. rotulo 1200. reason versus Winder. An Action of If no time of Payment in an Award due upon Demand. Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition to perform an Award, which was good in part, and void in part, and the Breach assigned upon the good part, and the Award was to pay Money, but no time of Payment, & afterwards it was demanded, & the Award is good. GAsington versus Burcher Knight, Turner, Jones, and Bowden, for Though two appear by one Supersedeas, yet they may vary in Plea. 1800. l. Burcher was outlawed, Turner and Jones appeared by Supersedeas, and Bawden appeared by another Attorney, and the Plaintiff declared against them three that appeared upon an Account; Turner offered to wage his Law, and the others plead Nil debent per patriam; and the Court was moved pretending that Turner shall not be admitted to wage his Law, because the Defendants should not sever in Plea, but the Court upon sight of divers Precedents were of another opinion, although it was urged that Turner & Jones joined in a Supersedeas, and therefore pretend that Turner should not sever in Plea from Jones, that pleaded Nil debet per patriam, but that Exception was disallowed, for although two appear by Supersedeas, yet they may vary in Plea. MIch. 16. Jac. rotulo 581. and the Imparlance entered, 16. Jac. rotulo The Imparlance amended after Trial, upon the Attorneys Oath. 1727. An Action of Debt brought by Lee versus Arrowsmith upon an Emisset, for divers Parcels, and upon an Account, and the Parcels, and Account amounted to the sum of 300. l. but in the Imparlance Roll, the Parcels and sum accounted for, did not amount to 300. l. by 6. l. And this variance was moved in Arrest of Judgement after a Verdict, but the Court were of opinion, that it was amendable, because Ball the Attorney made Oath, that he commanded his Clerk to sum the Account for 6. l. to maintain his Writ, and therefore the Roll was amended. HIll. 36. Eliz. rotulo 1908. Action of Debt brought by Gage versus Nota. Bene case. Gilbert, upon an Obligation for 500 l. bearing Date, first of February, Anno 25. Eliz. The Defendant pleads a general Release made to him by the Plaintiff, bearing Date after the making of the Bond, of all Dues and Demands whatsoever, except an Award made between the Plaintiff and one G. W. why R. R. then dead, and one Obligation of 500 l. for performance of the said Award, bearing Date 29. April, 25. Eliz. and whether these words (bearing Date 29. April) shall have reference to the Arbitrement, or Bond, was the Question, upon a Demurrer upon the Replication, in which the Plaintiff showed the special matter that the Award was made the 29. April, and that the Bond was made the said first of February, and it was adjudged that these words, bearing Date, should have reference to the Award, and not to the Bond. And if the Heir pleads Ciens per descent, besides one Acre, if the Plaintiff please he may have Execution of that Acre; or if the Plaintiff plead that he hath Assets beyond that Acre, and it be found that he hath ten Acres more, the Plaintiff shall have Execution of the Land only, and not of his person: as it is where the Heir pleads, that he hath nothing by Descent generally, and it is found against him, that Land, and all other his Land which he hath, and his Body are liable to the Judgement, by a Capias ad satisfaciend. Fieri facias, or Elegit. If a man be retained in London, to serve beyond Sea, he may have his A Servant hired to serve beyond Sea may have his Action in England. Action for his Wages in England, in any County. And the like of an Obligation bearing Date at Rouen in France, it may be sued in England, alleging the place to be in such a County, where he brings his Action. And note, that Debt may be brought in the Common Pleas, without Nota. Original, against any Officer or Minister of the said Court, by Bill exhibited to the Court, but no Process of Outlary lies upon that; and the Judgement upon that, is, that the Plaintiff shall recover his Debt, and Costs, and shall have an Attachment, ad satisfaciendum, but no Exigont; for because it is not by Original; and all the Process by Bill shall be returnable at a Day certain: but no Bill lies against a Sergeant at Law. And note, that the Judges, Sergeants, and Officers, Clerks, Attorneys, and Ministers of the Court may have an Attachment of Privilege out of the said Court, without an Original to arrest any to them indebted, or for any personal cause to proceed upon it, as if it were by Original, but no Process of Outlary lies thereupon, and such Process of Attachment shall be returnable at a Day certain, and not at the common Return, and they may be returned from Day to Day. If a man be bound to perform an Award of Arbitrators, and they Nota. make an Award accordingly, that one shall pay Money, he may have his Action of Debt for the Money, and declare upon the Award: and afterward may have another Action upon the Obligation, for not performing the Award, by the opinion of the whole Court, Mich. 5. Caroli. An Action of Debt brought by an Executor; the Defendant pleads Outlary in the Executor, no Pled. an Outlary in the person of the Executor, and demands Judgement, if he ought to answer his Writ; the Plaintiff demurs in Law to that Plea; and Judgement was given, that the Defendant should answer over. WOlly versus B. and his Wife, Trin. 37. Eliz. rotulo 1306. An Outlary in the Testator in Bar, adjudged naught. Action of Debt brought by Husband and Wife as Executrix: the Defendant pleads in Barr an Outlary in the Testator by an Estranger, which is in its force; and upon a Demur and solemn Debate, adjudged a naughty Barr. Trin. 40. Eliz. rotulo 507. The like Plea pleaded to an Executor that brought an Action of Debt, and adjudged no Plea. And Dixon Administrator of Collins, exhibited a Bill against Fawden an Attorney of the Common Pleas, and he pleads in Barr an Outlary against the Administrator, and adjudged no Plea. MIch. 4. Ed. 4. rotulo 144. An Action of Debt was brought against A wrong man of the same name offers to wage his Law. J. R. de W. in Com. L. Chapman, the Defendant appeared by his Attorney, and offered to wage his Law, and essoyned; and at that Day the Plaintiff appeared, and the Defendant being solemnly required, one J. R. came to answer the Plaintiff as Defendant in that Action, in his proper person, and offered to wage his Law; the Plaintiff said, that J. R. now appearing to wage his Law, ought not to be admitted, because the said J. R. is not that person which the Plaintiff prosecutes, because this I. R. appearing, is I. R. de W. in Com. L. Jun. Chapman, and he who the Plaintiff prosecutes is I R. de W. in Com. L. Sen. Chapman, both of them at the purchasing the Plaintiffs Writ, living at W. and that he agreed with the Defendant so to do, therefore because I. R. de, etc. hath not appeared to wage his Law, prays Judgement: the Defendant confesses such matter, and says, that he believing that the Writ was prosecuted against him, appeared by his Attorney, and offered to wage his Law; and prays to be discharged of the Debt: and the other I. R. being exacted, appeared not: and the Court would advise, but no Judgement for the Plaintiff. HIll. 26. Eliz. rotulo 420. The Lessor makes a Lease by Indenture Lessor and Lessee for years, one Assigns his term, and the other grants his Reversion, Grantee of the Reversion shall have Action of Debt against the Assignee. Nota. for years, and the Lessee grants over his whole Term; and the Lessor grants over the Reversion, and it was adjudged that the Grantee of the Reversion should have an Action of Debt for the Arrears of Rent, against the Assignee of the term, and not against the first Lessee. HIll. 43. Eliz. Pasch. 41. Eliz. rotulo 425. An Action of Debt brought against an Executor in the Debet & detinet, for Rent due in the time of the Executor, upon a Lease made to the Testator, upon a Judgement given in the upper Bench, and that Judgement was reversed in the Exchequer, because it was not in the Detinet alone; but afterwards in the upper Bench. Int. dominum Rich. & Frank Administrator for Arrears due, after the Death of the Intestate, it was adjudged good in the Debet & detinet, and also in the Common Pleas, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo 2013. MIch. 30. & 31. Eliz. rotulo 907. An Action of Debt brought, Nota. to which the Defendant pleads an Outlary against the Plaintiff in its force, the Plaintiff replies the general Pardon granted by Parliament; the Defendant demurs, and Judgement, that he should answer over. MIch. 40. & 41. Eliz. Ralph Rogers brought an Action of Debt Default of the Clerk amended, and afterwards upon advice made as it was at first. upon an Obligation of 400. l. and Judgement was entered by the Clerk upon a Nichil dic. that the said Roger should recover, etc. and for that Default the Defendant brought his Writ of Error to reverse the Judgement given for Ralph; and when the Record was certified, the Judges of the than King's Bench would not proceed. And afterwards the Judges of the Common Pleas upon a motion, and before another Writ of Error brought, amended the Mistake of the Clerk. And Justice Walmsley would have committed Keale the Clerk to the Fleet, for his carelessness, but afterwards the Amendment was withdrawn by the Court, and upon further advice, the Roll made as it was before. An Action of Debt was brought upon a single Bill for Payment of A Bill to pay Money upon Demand, must lay a special Demand. Money upon Demand, and the Plaintiff declares generally, that he often had requested, etc. and Sergeant Harris demurs to the Declaration; and the opinion of the Court was, that he ought to plead: yet if the Defendant had demanded Oyer of the Bill, and upon that have demurred, it had been a good Demurrer, because one special Demand was in the Bill, and no special Demand alleged in the Count MIch. 3. jac. Burnell versus Bowes. Action of Debt brought upon Amendment of Issue Roll by the Imparlance Roll. a Bond, and the Plaintiff in the Imparlance Roll had counted upon a Bond made the tenth of March, and an Imparlance thereupon until the next Term, and in the next Term he declared, as of a Bond made the tenth of May, and the Defendant pleaded per Dures, and it was entered of Record, and the next Term after Entry thereof the Plaintiff moved that that Mistake might be amended, and at first it was denied to be amended, because the Defendant had pleaded to it, and by that Amendment his Plea should be altered, as if he had pleaded, that it was not his Deed; and the cause of his pleading that Plea was the the Mistake, and if that Mistake should be amended, he would be trised and overthrown; and upon the first motion it was denied to be amended, but afterwards granted to be amended by the whole Court, for the Imparlance was entered, Hillar. first of James, and the Issue was Pasch. second of James, but the Defendant was admitted to plead a new at his pleasure. MIch. 3. Jac. rotulo 2575. Fitch versus Bissie. An Action of Debt Estoppell. brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition to pay Money yearly, according to the form and effect of the Indenture made between the Plaintiff and Defendant; the Defendant pleads that there was not any such Indenture made between the Plaintiff and Defendant, as is in the Condition supposed: and the Plaintiff demurs upon that Plea, for that the Defendant is estopped to plead that Plea. KIng and his Wife Executrix of J. Wright, Plaintiffs, brought a Scire facias after the said Executrix came to full Age, against Death and his Wife, Administratrix of W. D. to have Execution of a Judgement had by J. D. and H. E. Administrators, during the minority of the Executrix, upon a Bond entered into, to the Testator, and whether a Scire facias lay by the Executrix or no, was the Question; and by the better opinion of the Court it did not lie. MAyor and Burgesses of Linn Regis, in Norfolk, Mich. 10. Jac. rotulo 2413. brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond against one Pain, and it was (Ad respondendum Majori & Burgensibus de Linn Regis in Comitatu Norfolciae,) Pain pleads, that it was not his Deed; and a special Verdict was found, that the Mayor and Burgesses were incorporated by the name of Majores & Burgenses Burgi de Linn, & non per aliud. And whether the omission of this word (Burgi) should bar the Plaintiffs, was the Question: and Judgement was given by Cook, Warburton, and Nichols, for the Plaintiff; for Cook said, that if the essential part of the Corporation was named, it was sufficient: and in this case the Mayor and Burgesses was one essential part, and Linn Regis is another essential part, and those two were duly expressed, and sufficient to maintain the Action; and Cook said, that those words (Et non per aliud) shall be intended to be Non per aliud sensum & non literae; and of the same opinion were the other Judges there. NIchols versus Grimwin, Mich. 12. Jacobi, rotulo 1609. or Hill. in the same year, rotulo 3027. The Plaintiff brought his Action upon a Bond, the Condition whereof was performance of an Award, for and concerning all matters, Causes, Suits, and Demands whatsoever, had, moved, or depending, etc. so as the said Award be made, etc. The Defendant pleads no such Award made, the Plaintiff by Reply sets forth the Award, it was made De praemissis, to wit, that the said I. should clearly depart with, and avoid out of her House, in which she then lived, and that the said I. should carry away all the Hay, etc. The Defendant re-joynes, and says, no such Award; and a Verdict for the Plaintiff; the Defendant moved in Arrest of Judgement; for that the Award was made but of one part, and so void; but Judgement was given for the Plaintiff; for though the Award be made but of one part, yet if the Defendant may plead it in Bar of the other Action brought against him for the same cause, in all such cases the Award is good. But my Lord Hubbart and Nichols took this Difference upon these words (so that) for then the Arbitrators must make their Award of all such things which are in Controversy, and in such manner as the Condition prescribes; but if the Parties put themselves by Parroll, if the Arbitrement be made of one part it is good. And Hubbart said, that in all Arbitrements, whether by Bond, or Parroll, they ought to be reciprocal, and to be made in such manner, that it may make an end of all Controversies between the Parties. For if a man be bound in a single Bill, and put it to Arbitrement, and the Arbitrators order that the Obligor pay to the Obligee a sum, and do not award that the Obligee shall seal a Release, or that the Money paid shall be in Discharge of the said Bill, the Award is void. But in Barpools case the Submission was by Parroll, for Money due before the Submission; and the Award was, that he should pay such a sum for the same Debt, and good; for the Award shall inure to a Dischage. See Paschals case, 8. Rep. STutfield Plaintiff, Grony Defendant; in Trinity Term, 13 Jacobi, rotulo 859. The Defendant pleads to a Bond taken by the Sheriff for his Appearance in the King's Bench, Die Sabbati proximum post Oct. Martini, that he appeared at the Day; and the Court of Common Pleas gave him a Day to bring in the Record of his Appearance by Mittimus issuing out of the Chancery, the Record was certified, Videlicet, that he appeared Lunae post xv: am Martini, which was after the Day, yet it was adjudged good; for if the Appearance was the same Term, it is good, though it be not the same Day. SErle against Harris, Trinity Term, 9 Jacobi, rotulo 1321. Judgement is there entered by Non sum inform. against Harris, Harris brings a Writ of Error upon that Judgement, and assigns for Error, that the Record was Fr. Harris de Brownton. and the Original filled to warrant that Judgement was Fr. Harris de Browton, and there reversed for that Variance. HAmond versus Jethrell, Mich. 8. jacobi, rotulo 2354. Hamond brought his Action of Debt upon a Bill obligatory, for the Payment of Money, and no Day limited in the Bill for the Payment thereof: but after the words (In witness whereof, etc.) these words were written, Nevertheless it is agreed, that the said Jethrell shall not be hereby compelled or required to pay the said 30. l. until the said Jethrell have recovered against B. Hudson the sum of 30. l. or more, upon a Bond of 40. l. wherein the said Hamond, etc. The Defendant demands Oyer of the Bill, and hath it, Memorandum that J. W. J. etc. and demurs in Law, and shows that the Plaintiff had not alleged any Day of Payment, nor when it was requested; and the Declaration adjudged good notwithstanding: and my Lord Cook held, that whatsoever comes after these words, In witness, etc. is no part of the Bill, but words after, In witness, etc. may be a Condition, and must be pleaded, and not demurred upon: and 21 Henry the sixth, direct in this point, and so the third Report. An Action of Covenant brought upon words of Covenant in Indenture after In witness, etc. and above the Seal, and held good and maintainable. SAaint-John versus Cracknell, Mich. 12. Jacobi, rotulo 1153. An Action of Debt was brought upon the Statute of the 24. of Henry the sixth for 40. l. for Election of Burgesses in Parliament, and it was tried, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff. And Sergeant Moor moved the matter ensuing in Arrest of Judgement. First, the Statute directs the Sheriff to issue out his Warrant to the Mayor, if there be one, and if no Mayor, then to the Bailiff: and it appeared by the Court that the Sheriff made his Warrant to the Bailiff, and do not show that there was no Mayor there: and the Exception disallowed; for if there was a Mayor, the Defendant ought to show it by Plea. Secondly, that the Plaintiff doth not allege that the Warrant made to the Bailiff was under the Sheriff's Seal, as the Statute directs: and the Court held the Count good notwithstanding, because the Declaration was, that the Sheriff by virtue of a Writ to him directed, made his Warrant to the Bailiff: and if it was by virtue of the Writ, it shall be intended to be under his Seal. HOpe versus Holman, Mich. 10. Jacobi, rotulo 3612. Debt upon an Obligation, the Defendant pleads a foreign Attachment in London, and the Plaintiff demurs, and the Exceptions were; first, that the Defendant had attached the Moneys in his own hands by way of Retainer, and so the Custom unwarrantable. Secondly, it appeared that Judgement was given in the Mayor's Court, by the Default of him in whose hands the Money was attached: and it appeared, that the Defendant which brought the Action in London, and he in whose hands the Attachment was made, and that made Default, was the same person; and it is a contrariety, that the same person should appear and not appear, and a Prescription for that is naught; and the Custom is in London, that the Recoveror in London ought to find Sureties, that if the Debt be discharged within a Year and a Day, then to pay the Money, and did not appear by the Record, that he found Sureties, which was an incurable Fault, and so adjudged by the Court. POtter versus Tompson, Hill. 14. Jacobi, rotulo 3449. To one Obligation with Condition to make Assurance of Lands to such Uses therein expressed; the Defendant pleads, that he made a Feoffment of the same Lands to other Uses, which the Plaintiff accepted; the Plaintiff demurs, and it was adjudged a naughty Plea; for he ought not to vary from the Condition. HIggenbotham versus Armot, Hill. 8. Jac. rotulo 906. Action of Debt brought upon a Retainer, in the Office of an Husbandman for one year, and so from year to year; the Defendant wages his Law, and at the Day to wage his Law, the Court refused to accept it, for that he ought not to wage his Law for Wages; yet if the Retainer were not for a year at least, the Court seemed to be of opinion that he might wage his Law. VErnon versus Onslow, Pasch. 12. Jac. rotulo 1047. Upon an Action brought upon a Bill for 80. l. the Defendant demands Oyer of the Bill, was Pro octogesimis libris, and to that the Defendant demurs, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. Hutton cited the Case in Cooks 10. Rep. Roland's Case. And another in Mich. 44. & 45. Eliz. rotulo 131. Proseptingentis libris, and the Bond was Proseptungentis libris. And another, Mich. 11. Jac. upon a Bill for seventeen pounds, and adjudged a good Bill. YOung versus Melton, Trin. 10. Jacobi, rotulo 3434. An Action brought upon a Bond for performance of Covenants; the Defendant pleads Conditions performed. The Assigns, the Breach for nonpayment of Rent, and pleads in this manner, that in December he demised to the Defendant one Wine-Cellar, etc. for one year; and if the Defendant would hold the Wine-Cellar for three years paying 40. l. yearly during the said term; and alleadges nonpayment of the Rent of on Quarter in the first Year: and the Defendant demurs; and the Court were of opinion, that the reservation had reference as well to the first year, as to the two years following: and in that case Cook said, that if a man demise, etc. reserving Rent to himself, the Heir shall not have the Rent, but if the Rent be reserved generally, the Heir shall have it. WHickstead versus Bradshaw, Pasch. 14. Jac. rotulo 2175. There was Judgement entered against the said B. and after the Bail of Bradshaw, brought a Habeas Corpus to the marshalsea, Bradshaw being a Prisoner there, to have his Body before the Judges of the Common Pleas to be committed in Execution, in Discharge of the Bail, but before the Return of the Habeas Corpus, the said Bradshaw had brought a Writ of Error returnable the Day following; and when he came to be committed, the Court doubted, that their hands were tied by a Writ of Error, by reason he could not be committed upon the Judgement, and yet they would have discharged the Bail, if they knew which way, therefore Quaere. GErrard & al. versus Dannet, Hill. 9 Jac. rotulo 2015. Judgement was had upon a Bond by Non sum inform, and a Writ of Error brought for that the Christian name of the Defendant, Attorney was left out in the Imparlance Roll; but it was in the Roll, whereupon the Judgement was entered, and a Warrant of Attorney entered accordingly: and the Court was moved, that it might be put into the Imparlance Roll, which was granted upon sight of the Judgement Roll, and Warrant of Attorney entered. If a man be bound by Award to pay one 20. s. And I at the Day offer it, and he refuseth it, or comes not to receive it; I must plead that I was ready to pay; and shall not plead an Vncore priest. because it is upon a collateral matter. An Obligation was made to pay 10. l. 8. s. and eight (not saying Pence, or any thing else) An Action of Debt lieth for the 10. l. 8. s. WIlde versus Vinor, Trin. 7. Jac. rotulo 1629, or 2629. Debt upon an Obligation to perform an Award. The Defendant pleads, that the Arbitrators made no Award; the Plaintiff replies, that the Defendant by Writing did revoke, and null the Authority of the Arbitrators. Foster held the Bond was forfeited, although he might revoke, the Plea was that he did discharge the Arbitrators against the form of the Condition. My Lord Cook held, that the Power was countermandable, if the Submission be by Writing, the Countermand must be by Writing, if by word I may countermand by word. If two bind themselves, one cannot countermand alone. If Obligor or Obligee disable by their own Act to make the Condition void; the Bond is single, 14 H. 7. If I am bound to infeoff A. and I marry her before the Day, the Bond is forfeited, 18 E. 4. 18. 20. the great doubt was, because no express notice, but notice was implied. And the Bond forfeited, because he did not stand to it. Judgement for the Plaintiff. PArker versus Rennaday, Trin. 6. Jac. Action brought upon a Bond for 60. l. the Bond was in Italian in these words, In cessanta libris, and held a good Bond for 60. l. O. K. ux. ejus Admin. versus Needham, who was bound to the Intestate in a Bond, and pleads, that Administration of the Intestates Goods was committed to him by the Archbishop, the Intestate having Bona not Abilia, before it was committed to the Plaintiffs Wife. The Plaintiff replies, that the Administration committed to the Defendant was revoked and made void; to which the Defendant demurs, pretending his Administration to be a Release in Law, but it was otherwise adjudged. But if the Debtor were made Executor, than the Debt is released: like unto an Administrator during the minority, he may do all for the good of the Infants, but nothing to their prejudice, if an Executor marry the Debtor, it is no Release in Law: Judgement for the Plaintiff by the whole Court. LAwrance and Althams' case; if I have no means to gain my Right but by Action if I release my Action, I release the thing itself, because I release my means to come to my Right. If I release all Actions I may have Jus prosequendi. A Release made by the Testator shall be no Bar to the Executor to bring a Writ of Detinue, because it continues a wrong still to the Executor. A Bond to pay Money at Michaelmas, may be released because it is a Debt, otherwise it is of a Rent reserved by Lease: the like it is of a single Bill to pay Money at four Days, if the first Day be broken no Action, until all the Days be past; but in case of a Lease, after the first Day, Debt doth lie; in the first it is a Debt, but not in the other. Quarrels, Controversies, and Debates are all one, that is all Causes of Quarrels, Controversies, and Debates, are more large than Actions: and Suits are more than q. c. & d. and by Release of Suits, Executions are gone, Release of Duties Executions are gone: neither Fraud nor Might can take a Title without Right. Demand is most large, and by it Rents are gone, Executions gone, Incidents gone, as Relief, Warranties gone, all Causes of Demand gone, Actions and a man's Right gone. When a condition is to arbitrate of all matters between, etc. there if the matters be not made known to the Arbitrators, they are not bound to arbitrate more than they know for, if it appear to the Court that all matters committed to the arbitrators be not arbitrated, the Award is void; but if the submission be of all matters between, etc. so that now all must be arbitrated, or else it is void: and in every award there must be satisfaction of that which was awarded. POwel versus Crowther trin. 9 Jacob. rotulo 313. det port e un. three executors which appeared at several terms, and plead severally, ne unques execut. the plaintiff proceeds to trial against one of them, and was nonsuit. And then one of the other defendants take the record down by proviso, and the plaintiff was again nonsuit, and both the defendants desire costs, before the third issue was tried: but costs was only given to the first, and denied to the second, for his trial was erroneous, because by the first trial the original was determined. If a defendant wage his law, no excuse of sickness, or water, can save his default; but in real actions he may excuse himself by such accidents. If the condition of a Bond be to discharge a message of all encumbrances, there one may plead generally that he did discharge it of all encumbrances; but if it be to discharge it of such a Lease, there he must show how. NOrton versus Sims Pasch. 11. jacob. rotulo 346. debt upon a Bond entered into by an under Sheriff to his high Sheriff, that the under Sheriff shall not meddle with the execution of executions, and shall discharge the Sheriff from all escapes, and the plaintiff shows a breach in the under Sheriff for an escape; by reason whereof, the Sheriff paid the debt and damages: question was, whether this covenant be good, or not Judgement for the plaintiff. A high Sheriff may make an under Sheriff to be at will. An under Sheriff hath the same authority an high Sheriff hath: it is a void condition to save a man harmless from all men, but good, if it be special: if the condition be to discharge and acquit, I must show how: An under Sheriff was before the Conquest. A Bond made to the Sheriff by the under Sheriff, to discharge of all escapes, this is good and lawful. If any part of the condition of a Bond be against a Statute-law, it is void in all: but otherwise, if part be against the common-law. See Boswels case 10. Rep. when a man is under Sheriff he may do all ministerial things the Sheriff may do, but not judicial. If the under Sheriff will covenant, that he will not meddle with executions above 20. l. this covenant of his own accord is good: if a Sheriff bind his under Sheriff, that he shall not return Venire Facias, nor intermeddle with executions, until he be acquainted, it is against Law, and naught by all the Court. A Bond to perform divers Covenants, some against Law, and others lawful, it is good for lawful things, and void for the rest. The Death of one of the Parties in an Original Writ doth abate the Writ, it is otherwise in a Judgement. If Husband and Wife sue a Scire facias, and the Husband dieth, the Scire facias shall abate; for it is no more a judicial Writ, but as it were an Original to revive a Judgement. The Court were of opinion in the case of Sir H. Dowckray, that where he had delivered Money to his Servant to provide Victuals; and the Servant buys the Victuals in his Master's name, and pays not for them; and afterwards an Action is brought against the Master for the Money, and he offers to wage his Law; and the Court held, he could not safely wage his Law, because the Victuals came to his own use, and therefore he is chargeable, and must have his Remedy against his Servant. But if the Master did forbid the Tradesman to deliver any Wares, except his Man paid for them; in that case if the Tradesman deliver Wares, the Master may safely wage his Law, as it was adjudged in Sir H. Comptons' case. Mantel versus Gibbs, Trin. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 1254. An Action of Repleader awarded. Debt brought upon an Obligation; to which the Defendant pleads, that an Estranger was imprisoned by another stranger, and kept in Prison, until the Defendant, as Surety of the stranger, made the Bond; and it was held a naughty Plea, and a Repleader awarded. ALston versus Walker, Mich. 6. Jacobi, rotulo 1342. Land was Mortgaged, Money due upon a Mortgage payable to the Heir, and not to the Executor. and a Promise, that if the Mortgager at such a time and place should pay the Money to the Mortgagee, his Heirs, or Assigns, that then the Mortgage should be void; the Mortgagee died, and the Money was paid to his Executors; and it was adjudged to be no performance of the Condition, for the Executor was not named, and the Money ought to be paid to the Heir, who should have the Land, if the Money were unpaid, and not the Executor. STurges versus Dean, Trin. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 2915. An Action of Money to be paid fifteen Days after return, etc. he proving his being there, Court divided which proof shall be, precedent or subsequent. Debt brought upon a Bill for Money to be paid within fifteen Days after his Return from jerusalem, he proving his being there; the Defendant pleads, that he did not provehis being there; to which the Plaintiff demurs, he making proof, that is, if it be true. Sir Edward Cook and Daniel held, that the proof should be made upon the Trial, and the proof should be subsequent. But Warburton and Foster held, that the proof shall be precedent, because it was restrained to a certain time: but it had been otherwise if no time had been appointed. NOrton versus Goldsmith, Trin. 7. jac. rotulo 3100. An Action of Condition that an under-sheriff shall not intermeddle with Executions of such a value, held void. Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition that Chamberlain, his Under-sheriff, should not meddle with Executions beyond such a sum, and alleadges a Breach for intermeddling with Executions, contrary to the Condition; and the opinion of the whole Court was, that the Bond was void. PAin versus Nichols, Trin. 8. jac. rotulo 134. An Action of Debt Judgement arrested, because the whole matter laid was found, and part was not actionable. brought upon the Statute of Ed. 6. for not setting forth of Tithes, and the Plaiutiff declared as well for predial Tithes, for he might well bring his Action, and for other Tithes, as of Lamb and Wool, for which no Action would lie, and upon a Trial the Jury found for all, as well for those that would, as would not bear an Action; and after a Verdict, this Exception was taken, and Judgement arrested. BOoth versus Davenant, Trin. 8. jacobi, rotulo 805. A Bail taken in Bail discharged upon the principals rendering his Body in another Term after a case returned. Quaere. the than King's Bench, and an Action of Debt brought upon that Recognisance, which was, that if it happened the Defendant in that Action to be convicted, than the Manucaptors granted, and every of them granted, that as well the Debt as Damages, and Costs, which should in that Action be adjudged the Plaintiff, should be levied upon their Lands and Chattels. And in Easter Term 7 jacobi, the Defendant upon a Capias ad satisfaciendum, awarded against him, did not render his Body, but afterwards Mich. 7. Jacobi, he did render his Body, and the Court accepted of it, and discharged the Bail: and whether the Bail should be discharged, or not, was the Question; and the Court held, the Bail should be discharged; and Judgement was given for the Defendant. An Award good in part, and naught for part, and Breach assigned in the good part, and held good. RAyson versus Winder, Pasch. 16. Jac. rotulo 1200. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, for performance of an Award, which was void in part, and good in part; and the Breach alleged for that part which was good, and the Award was to pay Money, but no time of Payment alleged in the Award, and afterwards it was demanded, and such Demand was held good. KIng versus Law, Trin. 16. Jac. rotulo 507. An Action of Debt If the Plaintiff be nonsuit, yet no Cost upon the Statute of Perjury. brought upon the Statute of Perjury, in which the Plaintiff was nonsuit; and the Defendant moved to have Costs upon the Statute of 23 H. 8. upon these words, or upon any Statute for any Offence or Wrong personally, immediately supposed to be done to the Plaintiff or Plaintiffs; and the Plaintiff after Appearance, etc. be nonsuited, etc. but the whole Court held, that he should not recover Costs upon that Statute, because the Statute of 5 Eliz. was made long after the Statute of 23 H. 8. and upon the Statute of 7 Jacobi, the Defendant shall not recover Costs; for if the Plaintiff had recovered, he should have recovered no Costs, and so no Cost was given to the Defendant in that Action. Panel versus Metcalfe, Trin. 17. Eliz. rotulo 2722. Action of Nota. Debt brought against the Defendant as Administrator, and he pleads a Recovery had against him in the City of Norwich, and alleadges a special Custom, that time out of mind, that they had Cognisance of Pleas; and in pleading the Custom, he omitted this word Cur, and held naught. FEtherston versus Tapsall, Mich. 13. Jacobi, rotulo 3409. The Imparlance Amendment of the Imparlance deemed, after Error brought. was entered, and Hill. 13. Jacobi, rotulo 715. The Issue was entered. An Action of Debt was brought upon a Bond, and in the Imparlance the Bond was alleged to be made at Newcastle, and in the Issue Roll it was alleged to be made at York, and tried; and afterwards a Writ of Error was brought, and the Record was certified, and upon a Scire facias that Error was assigned; and the Court of Common Pleas was moved, that the Imparlance Roll might be amended, but the Court would not grant it. GAtes versus Smith, Mich. 16. Jac. rotulo 945. An Action of Debt A thing out of the Submission awarded, and void. brought upon an Obligation to perform an Award; the Defendant pleads, that the Arbitrators made no Award; the Plaintiff by way of Replication sets forth the Award, and that the Arbitrators had awarded the Defendant to pay such a sum, and that he should be bound with another in such a sum, and shows that the Defendant did not become bound with the other; and the Defendant demurred, for because it was out of the Submission, and it was not in the Defendants power to perform it. JAckson versus Coming, Trin. 16. Jac. rotulo. An Action of Debt Nota. brought upon an Obligation to perform an Award, so that the Award be signed, sealed, and delivered: and in pleading of an Award, upon the Defendants saying, there was no Award made; the Plaintiff omitted in his Plea to set forth, that the Award was signed, and it was tried, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff; and this was moved in Arrest of Judgement, and stayed by the Court. CLempson versus Bate, Trin. 17. jacobi, rotulo. An Action of Debt Defendant wage his Law upon a Recovery in a Court Baron. brought upon a Recovery in a Courtbaron, and declares, that every Court was held before the Steward only, and not before the Suitors, and a Declaration there for Rent reserved upon a Lease for years behind, and the Court held the Declaration void, and that these words, according to the Custom of the Manor time out of mind, would not help the Declaration; and the Defendant was admitted to wage his Law presently, if he would. COventry versus Windall, Hill. 13. jac. rotulo 2588. An Action of A man cannot send his Apprentice beyond Sea, except he go with him. Debt brought upon a Writing, thereby showing that whereas one T. before the sealing of that Writing had become bound to the Defendant, to stay with him, and serve him as his Apprentice for the term of eight years, and Woodall covenants with the Plaintiff, that he before such a Day would receive and take the said Apprentice for the residue of the said term of eight years then to come, and would teach, keep, and employ the said Apprentice in his House and Service in the Art and Mystery of Surgery, which the said Woodall then used, and professed, if the said I. should so long live, and binds himself in 20. l. the Plaintiff alleadges that the Defendant did receive the said Apprentice in his Service at London, etc. and further says, that the Defendant within the time, to wit, such a Day and Year, sent the said Apprentice in a certain Voyage, in a Ship called the Dragon, from the House of the Defendant, unto the East Indies, there to stay; and that the Apprentice did there arrive, and doth yet there remain, for which he brings his Action. The Defendant pleads, that he for the better instruction of the Apprentice sent the Apprentice to the Indies, to use and exercise his Art; and to this the Plaintiff demurs; and Judgement for the Plaintiff, that the Defendant could not send the Apprentice out of England, except himself went with him, although it be in his own House, and own proper Service, but clearly he might send the Apprentice to Chester, or any other part of England. GArrard & al. versus Dennet, Hill. 9 jacobi, rotulo 516. The Defendant after a Judgement entered, brought a Writ of Error, and assigned for Error, that the Christian name of the Attorney for the Defendant was left out in the Imparlance Roll, but it was in the Judgement Roll, and also in the Roll with the Clerk of the Warrants was perfect, to wit, Henry Snag; and therefore the Imparlance was made perfect, and Henry put into the Imparlance Roll, after assignment of Error by the Court. COwchman versus Hawtry, Hill. 14. jac. rotulo 2167. Action of Upon a nul. tiel. Record, though some Variances, yet the Debt and Damages agreeing, Judgement for the Plaintiff. Debt brought against a Bailiff of a Liberty, upon a Recovery in a Court of Record. The Defendant pleads no such Record. The Plaintiff brings the Record into the Court: and there were divers Variances between the Record upon which the Plaintiff declares, and the Record certified, Videlicet, in the name of the Bailiff and Continuances; for in the Record certified there were divers Continuances which were not in the Record in Court, and divers other Differences; but the Judgement and Recovery of the Debt and Damages agreed, and the other Variances were not material, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff notwithstanding▪ DOminus Rex jacobus versus Castle. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation taken in the King's name in the Court of Request, Bond taken to appear in the Court of Request, void. with a Condition to appear before the Master, etc. and the Declaration is general, that the Defendant such a Day and Year by his Obligation did acknowledge himself to be bound to the King in the said 60. l. to be paid, etc. and it was adjudged naught, for it did not appear to be taken in a Court of Record. Child versus Peisley, Hill. 14. Jac. rotulo 2184. Habeas Corpora returned Return of the Habeas Corpus amended. by the Sheriff, and these words omitted, Videlicet, Quilibet jur. per se seperatim Attach. est per Pleg. I. D. & R. R. exitus eor. cujuslibet x. s. R. W. & M. L. Vic. and it was amended by the Court. ANdrews versus Delahay an Attorney of the Common Pleas, Debt upon two Bills, and one not due, and tried for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest, the Plaintiff released his Damages, and had Judgement upon the Bill due. Hill. 14. Jac. rotulo 3057. A Bill filled against the Defendant as an Attorney, upon two Bills obligatory for payment of Money, and one of the Bills was not payable, and due at the time of exhibiting the Bill: and the Defendant pleads to Issue, and the Cause received a Trial, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff; and afterwards the Defendant in Arrest of Judgement moved, that one of the Bills were not payable at the time of exhibiting the Bill against him, and thereupon the Plaintiff remitted his Damages, and had Judgement for the Bill that was due. HArris versus Cotton. As long as the Vicar occupies his Gleabland Lessee of the Vicar's Gleabland shall pay Tithes. Nota. in his own hands, he shall pay no Tithes; but if he demise it to another, the Lessee shall pay Tithes to the Parson that is impropriate. If the Vicar sow the Land, and die, and his Executor takes away the Corn, and doth not set forth his Tithe; and the Parson brought an Action of Debt upon the Statute of 2 Ed. 6. and the Court seemed to incline that it would lie. DArrell versus Andrew, Mich. 14. jaeobi, rotulo 2327. An Action of Venire facias de D. or within the Parish of D. or de Parochia, good. Debt was brought in London for Rent reserved, upon a Demise of Lands in Cawson in the Parish of D. in the County of War. and of one capital Message. The Defendant pleads Extinguishment of Rent, because the Plaintiff had entered into one House called the Wooll-house, and into one Buttery at the upper end of the Hall of the said House, and in one House called the C. parcel of the Premises before demised, upon the Defendants motion, and had expelled the Defendant out of the Possession thereof, and the Venire facias was of Cawson, within the Parish of Dale, and Exception taken, because it was Infra Parocham: but my Lord Hubbard said, that where Land is laid in Dale, in the Parish of Dale, that the Venire facias may be made of Dale, or within the Parish, or of the Parish, and both good. HAll versus Winkfield. An Action of Debt brought in London for a Scire facias upon a Recognisance may issue out into any County. 100 l. and the Plaintiff declared upon a Recognisance taken at Sergeants Inn in Fleetstreet, London, before the Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, and afterwards enrolled in the Common Pleas at Westminster, in Middlesex. And the Defendant demurred to the Declaration, and the Question was, whether the Action should be brought in London or Mid. And note the Recognisance as soon as it is acknowledged is a Record, and shall relate to the time of the taking to bind. Sergeant Hutton said, that a Scire facias may issue upon a Recognisance taken out of Court into any County, and none is bound to sue Scire facias where the Recognisance is taken: but after it is enrolled in the Court, an Action of Debt shall be brought in the County of Middlesex. At the Common Law the Execution was by Levari facias, and after the Year an Action of Debt; it is not a Recognisance consummate, until it be enrolled in the Court, yet it taketh its life by the first acknowledgement: for if you have an Action of Debt or Trespass in a foreign Shire, when you have recovered Debt or Trespass, your Debt or Trespass is now altered and made new. My Lord Hubbard held, that if I bring Debt in Norfolk, and I have Judgement, and bring an Action of Debt upon that Judgement, it must be brought in Middlesex, and so in Trespass. The Inrolment of the Recognisance is but a fortification of the Recognisance. Mortime versus Freeman, Hill. 9 jacobi, rotulo 2001. An Action Deprivation of a Minister may be given in evidence. of Debt brought, for not setting out of Tithes, to which the Defendant pleads, Nil debet per patriam, and to prove that the Plaintiff was not Parson, he showed a Deprivation of the Plaintiff for Drunkenness by the high Commissioners: and the Court held, for such a common Fault, after Admonition, the high Commissioners might deprive a Minister; but because this Crime of Drunkenness was committed before the general Pardon, and that the Sentence was given after the Pardon, the Sentence was void. For Wool or Lamb no Action lieth upon the Statute, for they are not predial Tithes: nor for small Tithes. If an Action of Debt be brought upon two Contracts, and both Best to have Damages severed upon two Contracts. found for the Plaintiff, in that Case the Jury may tax Damages entire, but the safer and better way is to sever the Damages; for it may come to pass, that an Action will not lie for one of the two, and if it will not lie, than your labour and charge is lost. An Action of Debt brought for 300. l. upon an Obligation. The Defendant after a general Imparlance demands Oyer of the Bond, and pleads specially, that it was but for 30. l. and it was not allowed after a general Imparlance. And the Defendant pleaded, that it was not his Deed, which was the proper Plea in that Case. PReston versus Dawson, Pasch. 11. Jacobi, rotulo 2310. An Action Breach for not acknowledging a Fine. of Debt brought upon a Bond, for performance of Covenants in an Indenture, in which Indenture was this Covenant following, that the Vendor should make further Assurance at the cost and charges in the Law of the Purchasor; and for Breach it was alleged, that a Note of Nota. a Fine was devised and engrossed in Parchment, and delivered to the Vendee to acknowledge the Fine at the Assizes, which he refused to do, and the Plaintiffs Breach was demurred upon, because he did not offer Costs to the Vendee, and the Court held it to be idle. GLyver versus Lease, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo 734. An Action of Debt Feossment of Land in satisfaction of Debt upon a single Bill, held naught. brought upon a single Bill. The Defendant pleads, that he did infeoff the Plaintiff of Lands, in satisfaction of that Debt, and the Plaintiff demurred upon it: and upon reading the Record, ruled to be a naughty Plea to a single Bill, otherwise it had been upon a Bond, with a Condition to pay Money. WIlliamson versus Barnsley, Trin. 12. Jac. rotulo 1291. An Action A Steward of a Leet within the Statute of E. 6. against buying of Offices. of Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition to perform Articles, that he before Easter Term next following, at the Request of the Plaintiff, should surrender, and yield up to the Plaintiff, his Letters Patents of the Stewardship of Bromsgrove, to the intent that he might renew the said Letters Patents in his own name; and it was objected at Bar, that the Office of a Steward of a Court Leet, or Court Baron, was within the Statute of 5 E. 6. made against buying of Offices that were for Ministration: and so Winch held the Stewardship of a Leet to be within the Statute, and so was adjudged in Gray's Case; but the Question was, whether the agreement to surrender, be within the Statute or no, the words of the Statute are, to have and enjoy; and Winch said, it was within the Statute; and so the Office of a Cursitor was within that Statute. Exception was taken to an Action of Debt brought upon the Statute of E. 6. for not setting out of Tithes, because the certainty of Loads of Corn were not expressed, but it was held good notwithstanding. HAwes versus Birch, Hill. 12. Jacobi, rotulo 1843. An Action of One thing in Action cannot be a satisfaction for another thing in Action. Debt brought upon a Bond of 6. l. for the payment of 3. l. upon the 16. of April. The Defendant pleads, that an Estranger at the Defendants request, the said 16. of April, made an Obligation to the Plaintiff in lieu of the first Debt, and adjudged naught by the whole Court, for one thing in Action cannot be a satisfaction for another thing in Action; but this being done by a stranger, is good by no means. Pasch. 12. Jacobi. The Court was of opinion, that if Money be Upon a Request and none ready to receive, and after a Request Damages shall be paid from the Request. tendered, and none ready to receive it, and afterwards he to whom the Money is payable, demands the Money, and the other refuse to pay, and afterwards an Action is brought, and a Tender pleaded, the Court held, that the Defendant should pay Damages from the time that the Money was demanded. FLeet versus Harrison, Hill. 13. Jac. rotulo 841. An Action of Debt Nota. brought against two Defendants, one of them pleads Nil debet per patriam, and the other lets a Judgement go by Default, and he that waged his Law, at the Day appointed performed it; and Judgement that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ, for a Respectuatur of the Judgement was entered, until the other had done his Law. WIlliamson versus Spark, Mich. 13. Jac. rotulo 3511. Upon a cire facias brought against the Bail upon an Attachment of Nota. Privilege. The Defendant pleads a Release made after the Verdict, and before Judgement, which was before the Recognisance was forfeited: and if the Recognisee may release before the Damages are ascertained, or no, was the Question, and it seemed he might. An Action of Debt brought against a Baker, for a Fine imposed on him in a Court Leet, and an Exception was taken, because it was not alleged that he sold Bread against the Assize of Bread made to sell; for a man may make and bake Bread for his own use, under the Assize limited. BAcon versus Pain, Trin. 14. Jac. An Action of Debt brought, and Nota. declare, that such a Day and Year the Defendant was a Brewer, and for one Year than next following, and that the Defendant the said Day at K. bought of the Plaintiff the fourth part of the Grains that the Plaintiff that Year next following should make in brewing, for 3. l. to be paid upon Request. The Defendant pleads, that he ought him nothing, and after a Trial, an Exception was taken to the Declaration, because the Plaintiff did not aver that he made Grains in that Year. LOrd versus Huxly. An Action of Debt brought on a Judgement thereupon, and the Defendant taken in Execution upon that An Almoner would have acknowledged satisfaction, and doubted. Judgement, and afterwards the Plaintiff became Felo dese, by which the Almoner seized of all his Goods, and afterwards the Almoner would have acknowledged satisfaction of the Debt and Damages in that Judgement, and doubted that he could not. SAwyer versus Crompton, Hill. 14. Jac. rotulo. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt for Costs given before the Judges of the marshalsea, Judgement against the Plaintiff, for incertainty of his Count newly erected, 9 Jac. by Letters Patents of the same King within the Verge. And the Plaintiff declared, that whereas at the Court of the said King, for the Household held at S. in S. within the Verge of the Household then at Whitehall, such a Day and Year before T. B. Knight Martial, etc. and F. B. etc. Judges of the said Court, to hear and determine all Pleas personal within the Verge, between Persons not being of the Household, arising, by virtue of Letters Patents, bearing Date such a Day and Year, in due manner made, came, etc. and the Court held a repugnancy in the Count, and the whole Court against the Plaintiff. If it had been brought upon the ancient Court, it must be between two of the Household, and they held that cost lay: and the Exception was, because the Plaintiff had not showed the Grant to hold the Court. If a Bond be made to one, and he doth not say in the Bond, that it Nota. shall be paid to the Obligee, in this case the Plaintiff must show that it is to be paid to him, though not expressed in the Bond. HOnne Executor of R. Hutton, and E. May, Pasch. 40. Eliz. rotulo Judgement for the Plaintiff. 433. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition that the above bound T. G. or his Heirs do or shall at any time before the Purification of the blessed Virgin, which shall be in the year 1596. according to the Custom of the Manor, etc. Surrender into the hands of the Lord of the same Manor for the time being, all those, etc. to the use of the said R. Hutton, his Heirs, and Assigns for ever, in such wise as the said R. Hutton his Heirs, and Assigns, shall, or lawfully may by the custom of the Manor be admitted, etc. or if after such Admittance the Premises shall be recovered against the said Rich. his Heirs or Assigns by one W. K. within four years, then if he shall pay upon notice, etc. The Defendant pleads, that the Plaintiff ought not to have his Action, because the said R. Hutton after the making of the Bond, and before the said Feast of the Purification, which was in the year 1696. to wit, the sixth of October 38 Eliz. at B. died. The Plaintiff demurs, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. If one be indebted to one, and he dieth intestate, and after his Nota. Death Administration is committed to the Debtor, this is no Release of the Debt. If he marry the Executrix of the Debtee, and the Executrix dieth, the Husband shall be charged with the Debt after her Death. VAughan versus Chambers, Trin. 20. Eliz. rotulo 145. An Action Because the first Contract was not usurious, the latter shall not. of Debt brought upon a Bond; the Defendant pleads the Statute of Usury, and shows a corrupt Agreement for Money lent in the year 32. to be paid in 33. and afterwards in 35. a new Bond given for part of the first sum, and it was pretended that this Bond was void; but it was adjudged, because the first Bond was no Corruption, the later should not be. LEech Attorney versus Phillips Executor of Phillips, rotulo 3415. No Action of Debt for Soliciting Fees. An Action of Debt brought for soliciting a Cause in the upper Bench, and it was adjudged by the whole Court, that an Action of Debt for Solicitors Fees would not lie, but aught to bring an Action of the Case, and afterwards the Court held an Action of the Case would not lie. PAsch. 12. Jac. Grove versus Jordan. An Action of Debt brought Defendant pleads, the Plaintiff was indebted to him, and he took Administration, and retained his own Debt in his hands. against an Administrator, who pleads, that the intestate was indebted to him by Obligation, and that he retained the Money in his hands to satisfy the Debt. The Plaintiff replies, that the Money was not due and payable to him at the time of the Intestates Death; and that he took Administration after the Day of Payment; and if the Administrator had pleased he might have took Administration before the Day of Payment: and the Court held the Defendants Plea good, but he shall not have the Forfeiture. CArrell versus Paske, Trin. 13. Jac. rotulo 1018. Debt brought Bailiff of a College claims the Liberty of the University, but denied to him. upon an Obligation made at C. in the County of Surry. The Defendant pleads the Privilege of Cambridge, granted to them by the Queen Eliz. for Scholars, Bachelors, Masters, and their Servants, upon Contract made within the University, and shows the Bond was made in Cambridge, and that he was a Servant of the Scholars, to wit, Bailiff of King's College in that University, and inhabiting within the Town of Cambridge, and Precincts of that University, and therefore a privileged Person of the same: and upon reading the Record it seemed, that the Defendant being a Bailiff of the College is not capable of the said Privilege. Priest versus Cee, Trin. 12. Jacobi, rotulo 2197. An Action of Debt Special Verdict. brought upon a Bill, bearing Date 17 Novomber, 1604. by which Bill the Defendant did acknowledge himself to owe the Plaintiff 10. l. to be paid to the Plaintiff at two Payments, to wit, 5. l. to be paid upon the 19 of November than next following, and other 5. l. to be paid upon the 10. Day of December than next following. The Defendant pleads, it was not his Deed. The Jury find it specially, that the Defendant the 17. of November, 1604. sealed and delivered to the Plaintiff one Bill obligatory, showed to the Jury, bearing Date the Day and Year above, and find the Bill, in haec verba, Be it known, etc. to be paid at two Payments, that is to say, 5. l. to be paid the 19 of November, which is the present of this Month, and the other 5. l. on the 10. of December. The Question was, whether the Bill maintain the Count for the first Payment, and adjudged it did. RAwdon versus Turton, Trin. 13. Jac. 1011. An Action of Debt Nota, well. brought upon a Bond for Payment of Money such a Day. The Defendant pleads, that he the same Day made an Obligation for the Payment of the said Money another Day, which the Plaintiff accepted for the Money; and Issue taken thereupon, and tried for the Defendant; and after the Verdict, the Plaintiff moved the Court to have Judgement, though the Verdict passed against him, because the Plea was insufficient, and that he confessed the Debt, but the Court would not grant it. The like Mich. 6. Jac. rotulo 1061. And the like Hill. 12. Jac. CArter versus Freeman, Mich. 13. Jac. An Action of Debt brought Appearance, though at another Day the same Term saves the Bond. upon a Bond, with a Condition that the Defendant should appear before the King at a certain Day, Videlicet, Die Jovis post Octobras Martini, and upon a Nul. tiel Record pleaded, the Defendant brought his Record of Appearance, Lunae post xvam. Martini; and this was held by the whole Court an Appearance at the Day in the Condition by the whole Court. GRubham versus Thornborough, Hill. 12. Jac. rotulo 1773. An Demand necessary for a Nomine penae. Action of Debt brought for Rent, and for a Nomine penae the Rent due 14 November, Anno 9 and no name alleged for the Nomine penae, therefore the Action would not lie for the Nomine penae, but it would for Rent. PAsch. 44. Eliz. eliot versus Golding. An Action of Debt brought, Costs omitted in the Roll, and Error brought, and deemed to be amended. and Judgement given for the Plaintiff, and a space was left in the Roll for the Costs of the Judgement; and after the Year and a Day, a Scire facias was brought to revive the Judgement, and in the Scire facias the Costs are put in, and so Judgement by Default; and afterwards a Writ of Error brought, and the Error was assigned, because there were no Costs put into the principal Roll; and afterwards the Record was removed, the Count was moved, that Costs might be put into the Roll, but it was denied upon the first motion, and afterwards Pasch. 13. Jac. it was denied by the whole Court. BOnd versus Green Administrator. An Action of Debt brought against Nota. him as Administrator; he pleads divers Judgements, amounting to 670. l. and the Assignment of 100 l. Debt to the King by Deed enrolled; and he pleaded, that he retained his Debt in his hands, and he might have given this in Evidence, or pleaded it at the Liberty of the Defendant. COoper versus Bacon. Action of Debt brought upon the Statute of The Venire facias misawarded. E. 6. for Tithes, and the Plaintiff declares that one was seized of the Rectory of Elveley, alias, Kirkley, in Kingston upon Hull in his Demesne as of Fee; and being so seized such a Day, and such a Day, at Elveley, alias, Kirkley, did demise to the Plaintiff the said Rectory, with the Appurtenances, to have, and to hold, etc. for years, and that by virtue thereof he hath been, and is thereof possessed; and that the Defendant such a Day, and before, and always afterwards hitherto had held and occupied 30. Acres of Land, in Swandland, in Kingston, in a place called T. and that the Tithes did belong to him. The Defendant pleads, Nil debet per patriam, and after a Verdict it was alleged in Arrest of Judgement, that the Issue was mistried, because the Venire facias was of Elveley, alias, Kirkley, and it should have been of Swandland, where the Tithes grew. CHapman versus Peascod, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo 2106. An Action of The Defendant pleads, that be was ready to grant, and naught. Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition to give and grant to him, his Heirs, and Assigns. The Defendant pleads, that he hath been ready to give and grant; and adjudged naught, for he must plead that he did it, otherwise it had been, if the words had been as Council should devise. MAncester versus Draper, Hill. 10. Jac. rotulo 2613. An Action of Debt brought upon a Bond, with a Condition to pay Money, if C. R. shall be then living, and shall before the same 20. Day of O. by due form and course in Law perfect, levy, and knowledge a Fine, and a Recovery before his Majesty's Justices of his Highness' Court of Common Pleas, of and in certain Houses and Tenements, with the Appurtenances which the said Draper lately had and purchased of the said C. R. the Defendant pleads that C. R. was living, and did not levy, etc. and a Demurrer, and the Question was, whether Draper or Ro. should levy the Fine, and held, that Draper should levy the Fine. BAker versus Pain, Hill. 10. Jac. rotulo 3139. An Action of Debt No Demand necessary. brought upon a Bond to pay Rend, and perform all the Covenants, Grants, Payments, and Conditions contained in a pair of Indentures: and the Defendant pleads the Indenture and performance thereof. The Plaintiff assigns the Breach, that the Defendant had not paid the Money. The Defendant replies, that the Plaintiff had entered into part of the Premises the Day before the Day of Payment, and so at Issue upon that; and Exception was taken, because the Plaintiff had alleged no Demand to be made, and the Court held, that was implied by the Issue, and that it was not necessary. Friar Administrator of Mary Costiden, of the Goods not administered by Mary Friar Executrix of the said M. C. versus Jacobum Note this diligently. Gildiich Executor of N. Pope, Hill. 11. Jac. rotulo 1990. The case was this, two were bound to one, and the Obligee makes the Wife of one of the Obligers his Executrix, and one of the Obligers makes the same Woman Executrix, and she dies, and the Plaintiff takes Administration of the Goods of the Woman not administered; and Judgement was given for the Defendant by the whole Court. If an Executor hath a Lease, and purchaseth the Fee-simple, the Lease is gone, but it shall be Assets in the Executors hands, if a persnal thing be once gone, it is extinct for ever. If the Husband had survived the Wife, he should be charged. HArcock Executor of Harcock, versus Wrenham Administrator of Fully administered, no good Plea by an Administrator to a Scire sacias to revive a Judgement had against the Intestate. Wrenham, Hill. 11. Jac. rotulo 1963. A Scire facias brought to revive a Judgement had against the Intestate, and the Defendant pleads, Plene administravit, which was held a naughty Plea by the whole Court, for he cannot pay so much as Funerals, before he pay the Judgement, and therefore that general fully administered is naught. The Jury found that the Intestate in trust conveyed one Lease to Fisher, and that Fisher promised upon the Payment of 300. l. to re-assure the Interest to Wrenham, and after his Death the Administrator the Defendant preferred a Bill in the Chancery as Administrator against Fisher, and that the Chancery ordered that Fisher should pay the Defendant for his Interest in the Lease more than the sum received, the sum of 1060. l. which was paid the Defendant accordingly; and whether that should be Assets was the Question, and it was held to be Assets. If an Executor make gain of the Testators Money, that gain shall be Assets: the Doubt in this case was, because this was but in Use; and now whether the Court shall take notice of this Use, they shall being found by the Jury, Judgements shall be paid before Statutes or Recognances: and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff: and although in this case the Bar of generally administered be naught, yet an Issue taken thereupon and tried, shall not arrest the Judgement for the Plaintiff. PEase and Stilman Executors, Hanchet against E. Meade, Mich. An Executor an Assignee in Law. 11. Jac. rotulo 945. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, with a Condition, if Meade his Executors, Administrators, or Assigns, or any of them shall pay 20. l. within the Porch of the Parish Church of R. unto such person or persons as the said Hanchet shall by her last Will and Testament in writing limit, nominate or appoint, the same to be made in manner, etc. The Defendant pleads that the said Hanchet by her last Will and Testament in writing hath not nominated, limited, or appointed, to what person or persons the said 20. l. should be paid. The Plaintiff replies, and sues, that the Testator made him Executor, and died, and that he took upon him the burden of the Will, and that the Defendant did not pay the Executor the Money: and a Demurrer thereupon. And if it had been to pay to her Assignee, that she should name the Executor should have it: such things as go by way of Executorship shall be to the Executor, without nomination or appointment. STannard versus Baxster, Trin. 9 Jac. rotulo 1123. An Action of Nota. Debt brought for Damages, recovered in an Assize of Nuzans, for stopping the way, before special Commissioners. The Defendant pleads no such Record, and the Record was delivered into the Court by the special Commissioners. TRin. 8. Jac. rotulo. An Action of Debt brought upon a Bond, Nota. with a Condition, for performance of Covenants of an Indenture. The Defendant confesses the Bond, and that after the making the Bond, and before the purchasing the Plaintiffs Writ, the Indenture by the consent and assent of Plaintiff and Defendant was canceled: and the said Plaintiff canceled the said Indenture: and it was held a naughty Plea by the said Court; for it did appear but that the Bond might be forfeited. For he ought to have pleaded performance of Covenants until such a Day, which Day the Indenture was canceled. BRook versus Smith, Hill. 9 Jacobi, rotulo 829. Two Tenements in Common make a Lease, and reserve a Rent and Covenant that neither Nota. should release, and one of them releaseth his part, this is a Breach, for that in Debt they both should join, and now by the Release the Action is gone. LAny versus Aldred, and another Executor, Trin. 10. Jac. vel An Executor by wrong shall not by his Plea prejudice a rightful Executor. Pasch. 9 Jac. rotulo 504. An Action of Debt brought against them as Executors, one pleads that he was Administrator, and that the Administration was committed to him by the Bishop, and pleads a Recovery against him as Administrator, and that he had fully administered, and had no Assets to satisfy the Judgement, and the other Executor acknowledged the Action; and the Plea was held a good Plea: but it was said, the Defendant might have defeated the Action which was brought against him as Executor, and therefore they would infer, that it was no good Plea, but it was a good Plea; and it was held by the chief Justice, that if an Executor of his own wrong be sued with a rightful Executor in one Writ, the Executor of his own wrong shall not by his Plea prejudice the rightful Executor. MArsh versus Curtis, Hill. 38. Eliz. rotulo 132. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation for performance of Covenants Condition of nonpayment of Rent to re-enter, the Rent was behind, but before reentry accepted the Estate is confirmed by the Acceptance. in a Lease, upon which Rent is reserved, and the Condition was that if the Rent should be behind, then lawful to re-enter, and the Rent was behind and before reentry the Rent was accepted. The Question was, whether he may enter for the Condition broken after the acceptance of the Rent. Sir Edward Cook was of opinion, that by the acceptance of the Rent he did confirm the Estate, but if a Bond be entered into to perform Covenants in a Lease, whereupon Rent is reserved, and a Fine to be paid, with a Condition of reentry for not paying the Rent or Fine, and if the Rent be received, and the Fine not paid, the acceptance of the Rent doth not take away the Condition for not paying the Fine. R. Milton versus R. Pearsey, Trin. 10. jacobi, rotulo 445. An The Defendants name mistaken in the Venire, and a new Trial awarded. Action of Debt brought, and in the Venire facias the Defendants name was mistaken, for the Venire was to impannell a Jury between R. Milton Plaintiff, and I. Pearsey Defendant in a Plea of Debt, and the Court held the Venire as none, and a new Trial awarded, and the like Judgement was given, Trin. 7. jacobi, rotulo 787. in the upper Bench. BRownsworth versus Trench, Trin. 10. jacobi, rotulo 3628. An Action of Debt brought upon an Escape against a Bailiff of a Liberty, and after a Trial Exception was taken to the Declaration, because it was not alleged therein, that the Sheriff made a Warrant to the Bailiff upon the Execution, but it was only alleged that at A. aforesaid, by virtue of the Warrant aforesaid, he took the Prisoner, and saith not, within his Liberty aforesaid, and the Exception was held void. Trin. 10. jacobi. An Action of Debt brought by Executors, and No costs against an Executor. the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiffs were not Executors, and tried, and found for the Defendant; and the Defendant upon the Statute for Costs desired Costs, because the Jury found against the Plaintiff that he was not Executor; and if a Verdict pass against one that is not an Executor, he shall pay Costs, but Costs were denied by the whole Court, for the Jury might find an untruth. BAlder versus Blackborn, Trin. 16. jacobi, rotulo 465. An Action Devise of the profits of the Land itself. of Debt brought for Rent reserved upon a Lease for years, the Case: this Land was devised to a Woman in this manner, that she should have the profits of the Land until the Daughter of the Devisor should be eighteen years old; and the Woman made the Lease in question reserving Rend, and afterwards married, and then died; and if the Husband after her Death should have the Land until the Daughter of the Devisor came to eighteen years old, was the question, and adjudged he should hold the Land for the Devise of the profits is the Devise of the Land, and is not like a Lease made by a Guardian in Socage, which ends by the De●… of the Guardian; the Declaration was for one Mesuage demised the fourth of May 15. Jac. for one year, and so from year to year, as long as both parties should agree, paying twenty four pounds by the year, and Nil debet per patriam, was pleaded; and the Jury found it specially that one I. W. was seized of the Tenement, and held it in Socage, and made it his last Will in writing, and by that did devise to A. his Daughter the said Tenement, and her Heirs for ever, at the full Age of eighteen years; the words of the Will were: Item, I will that my Wife and Executrix shall have the Education of my Daughter, with the portion of Money and profits of my Land to her own use without account, until my Daughter's Age aforesaid; provided she shall pay the out-rents, and keep her Daughter at School, and by that Will made his Wife Executrix, and the said W. died, and his Wife survived, and took upon her the Executorship and married with one P. the Woman performed the Condition, and afterwards died, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, that it was a term, and that the Husband should have it. An Action of Debt was brought against an Executor, and the Case was thus, Administration was committed to one during the minority Debt brought against an Excutor after full age for Goods wasted by the Administrator during his minority. of the Executor who wasted the Goods of the Testator, and after the Executor attained the Age of seventeen years an Action of Debt was brought against the Executor, and the opinion of the Court was prayed whether he might plead generally ne unques Executor, or excuse himself by pleading the special matter, and the Court doubled, but most safe to plead the special matter. An Action of Debt was brought for Rent reserved by Indenture payable at two Feasts, or within twenty days then next following, and the Plaintiff declared upon a Lease for the Rent, and because ten pound at the Feast of the Anunciation, 10. Jacobi, was behind and unpaid, the Action was brought, the Defendant pleads, Non demisit, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and after a Trial exception was taken to the Declaration because it was not alleged that the Rent was arrere at that Feast and twenty days after, but it was not allowed after a Verdict, because he should have taken advantage thereof before. RAtliff versus Executors, Pasch. 15. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation to perform Covenants in an Indenture. The Defendant pleads performance of the Covenants, the Plaintiff alleadges a breach upon this Covenant that the Lessee should enjoy the Land without any lawful interruption or disturbance of the Lessor or his Executors, and shows that the Executors entered upon him in the Land, and outed him, and shows not any interruption for any just cause, and adjudged good in the upper Bench. WHitton versus Buy, Trin. 16. Jacobi, It was adjudged in the upper Release of all Demands, a good Bar in Rent not then due. Bench in an Action of Debt brought by a Lessor against a Lessee for years for Rent reserved during the Term being behind and unpaid, that a Release pleaded to be made by the Lessor to the Lessee six years before the Rent was arrere, of all Demands, was a good Bar: One cannot reserve a Rent to a stranger it must be reserved according to the privity. WAinford Administrator Kirby versus Warner Trin. 13. Jacobi rotulo 1906. An Action of Debt brought upon a Bond, to which the Defendant pleads that the intestate was indebted to him in such a sum, and that he retained, etc. in his hands to satisfy himself of the Debt due to him. And that he had not assets over to satisfy the Plaintiff, to which Plea the Plaintiff demurs, because he did not plead generally fully administered, but an Exception was taken, because he showed not that the Condition of the Bond was for payment of Money. STone versus Goddard, Trin. 14. Jacobi, rotulo 2258. An Action of Judgement arrested for improper words without an Anglice. Debt brought upon divers Emissets of divers Wares, Videlicet, unum ahenum for five shillings, unum scabum for six shillings, and so divers other words which the Court could not understand what they signified, in regard no Anglice was put to them: and the Defendant pleaded Nil debet per patriam, and the Jury gave a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and Damages given for the whole Debt, and moved in Arrest of Judgement, and Judgement that the Plaintiff should have no Judgement for the insufficiency of his Declaration. Week's versus Wright, unum Clericorum R. B. The Plaintiff exhibited The want of a Bill not helped by the Statute of Jeofayles. a Bill against the Defendant for Money due upon an Obligation, and Issue was joined, and the Cause tried, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff; and after Trial the Defendant moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Bill was not filled, & that it was not helped by the Statute of Jeofayles, nor within that Statute, for it is an Original, but afterwards the Court granted that a new Bill should be filled, so that the matter might be put to arbitrement, and if the Arbitrators could not determine the matter the Court would. And note, the Court seemed to be of an opinion that the want of a Bill is not helped by the Statute. WItchoct & Linesey versus Nine, Trin. 9 Jacobi, rotulo 726. To forbid no Breach. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, to perform the Covenants contained in an Indenture, the Covenant was for quiet enjoying without let, trouble, interruption, etc. The Plaintiff assigned his Breach that he forbade his Tenant to pay his Rent; this was held by the Court to be no Breach, unless there were some other Act; and the Defendant pleaded, that after the time the Plaintiff said, that he forbade the Tenant to pay the Rent, the Tenant did pay the Rent to the Plaintiff. Levelly versus Hall, Pasch. 9 Jac. rotulo 805. An Action of Debt The Defendant pleads a Plea by which he pretends the Plaintiff to be barred in another Suit, but no Barr. brought upon an Obligation, to which the Defendant pleads, that the Plaintiff brought another Action upon the same Bond in London, to which the Defendant there had pleaded Non est factum, and it was there found that it was not the Defendants Deed, and in London the Entry is upon such a Verdict, that the Defendant shall recover Damages against the Plaintiff, and that the Defendant should be without day, etc. but no Judgement, that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ, and therefore no Judgement to be barred in another Suit, but bar the Plaintiff, for it is only a trial, and no Judgement, and the Plea was adjudged naught by the whole Court. MIch. 15. Jac. Rotulo 2215. One made another his Executor, and One by his own Election, cannot be Executor for part, and not for part. that Executor died, and made another his Executor, and the last Executor refused to own his first Will, as to his goods, and this matter was pleaded in his Action of Debt, brought by an Administrator of the Goods of the first Executor, pretending the Administration was void, although the Executor refused to be Executor, as to the Goods, and the Court held the Administration void, for the Executor cannot be Executor, for part at his own Election, and not for part, and the Defendant pleaded that the Executor should not bring his Action as Administrator, but as Executor. WHerwood versus Shaw, Mich. 44. and 45 Eliz. Shaw Executor Tenants in common. of A. brought an Action of Debt against Wherwood Administrator of Field, upon a Bill made by Field to A. by which Field doth acknowledge himself to have received of one P. forty l. to be equally divided between the said A. and B. to their use, and upon a Judgement given in the Common Pleas, Wherwood brings a Writ of Error and the Judgement was affirmed, the matters moved were, i. because the forty pounds was given to be equally divided between A, and B. therefore they were Tenants in common of it, and Shaw should have joined B. in the Action with himself, as Tenants in common are to join in personal action, but overruled, that in this case there were several Debts, to wit twenty pound to one, and twenty Several Debts. pounds to the other, as in case of ten pounds rend reserved upon a Lease, to wit five pounds at the Feast of Michaelmas, and five pounds at the Feast of the Annunciation, yet it is but one Rent, and this case is not to be resembled to the Cases of Interest, as in the 20 Eliz. where Land or Lease be given to two equally to be divided, for there they are Tenants in common. The second thing moved was, whether Debt or account did lie, and adjudged that although no contract was between the parties, yet when either money or goods are delivered Debt lies by him to whose use money is delivered. upon consideration to the use of A. A. may have an Action of Debt, and of that opinion was Mountain, 28 H. 8. in Core and Woods Case, and also there is a Precedent of such Actions of Debt in the Book of Entries. Debt upon a Statute of Perjury, at a Commission issuing out of Chancery not lie. BRoad versus Owen, Mich. 44 and 45 Eliz. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon the Statute of 5 Eliz, for Perjury against the Defendant; the case was thus, one Low was Plaintiff against Brode in the high Court of Chancery, and upon Bill and Answer such matter appeared to the Lord Keeper, that he ordered that one Labourer should become party to the Bill against Brode, and afterwards one Commission issued out of Chancery between Labourer and Broad, to examine Witnesses, by which Commission Owen the now Defendant was examined on the behalf of Labourer, and did depose directly for Labourer against Brode, by reason whereof one Order and Decree was made in the Chancery against Brode, and for that cause Brode brought his Action of Debt against Owen, upon the Statute of Perjury, 5 Eliz. for one party grieved by the Oath and Deposition of another, and Owen demurs in Law; and by the opinion of Gaudy and Yeluerton Justices, the Action would not lie, for the words of the Statute are where a man is grieved: and damnified by a Deposition in one Suit between party and party, and in this Case it appeared that Labourer was no party to the Suit, but came in by an Order, and no Bill depending either against him, or brought by him, and so out of the Statute, for it is penal and to be taken strictly: and quaere if he in the Reversion join in aid, and is grieved and prejudiced by an Oath and Deposition may maintain an Action of Debt upon this Statute, for he may undoubtedly by the Common Law have an Attaint. GReen versus Gascoin, Pasch. 1. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought Outlary pleaded in Bar, and Nul. tiel record pleaded, and in the mean time the Outlary reversed Judgement that the Defendant should answer over. upon an Obligation for an hundred pounds, to which the Defendant pleads in Bar to the Action an Outlary against the Plaintiff, and shows it incertain, the Plaintiff replies Nul. tiel, record; and the Defendant had Day till the next Term to bring in the Record, and in the mean time the Plaintiff reverses the Outlary, by which it is become in Law no Record, according to the 4 H. 7. 12. And Yeluerton moved the Court for the Defendant, that although in Law there was a Failer of the Record, yet the Defendant ought not to be condemned, but shall answer over according to the 6. of Eliz. Dier fol. 228. where it is adjudged that Failer of the Record is not peremptory, and so adjudged, for it was no Default in the▪ Defendant, his Plea being true at such time as it was pleaded with mark. WEaver versus Clifford. Action of Debt brought for an Escape, No Escape lies against a Sheriff upon a Capias upon a Recognisance out of the Chancery. the Case was thus upon the Nichils returned against a Conusor in Chancery a Capias was awarded out of the Chancery against him, by virtue of which he was taken by the Sheriff, and suffered to escape, and adjudged that no Action would lie against the Sheriff in this Case, for a Capias lies not upon a Recognisance, but only a Scire facias, and therefore when a man is taken upon the Capias he is not a Prisoner by the course of Law, for the Law hath not ordained any means to arrest him, and is therefore in Custody without Warrant, and no Escape, and it is an illegal Commitment, and so is the trature of Westminster, the 2. to b● construed which g●… Action against the the Jailor, to wit, where the party is in Execution by course of Law, and although the Chancery doth award a Capias upon a Recognisance, and that there are divers Pre●●lents of it; et it is b●t the use of that Court only, which may not step the ●udges mouths, but that they ought to judge according to Law, and this was the opinion of Popham, Yeluerton. Gaudy, but Fennor doubted, for he thought the awarding of the Capias one●y erroneous, and not void; and Sergeant Tanfield and the Attorney General showed a precise Judgement in the Case, 21 Eliz. in the Exchequer Cl●ment Paston Case, against whom an Action of Debt was brought for suffering one to escape who was taken by virtue of a Capias upon a Recognisance, and the three Judges held strongly their opinion. PVdsey versus Newsam, Mich. 1. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation for five hundred pounds, with a Condition, that if the Defendant before Mich. do make knowledge, and suffer, etc. all and every such reasonable Act and things whatsoever they be for the good and lawful assuring and sure making of the Manor Request to make Assurance generally and good. of D. to J. S. and his Heirs, that then, etc. The Defendant pleads that before Mich. the Plaintiff had not reasonably required the Defendant to make any reasonable Act or Acts which should be for the good and lawful assuring of the Manor of D. The Plaintiff replies, that such a Day before Mich. he requested the Defendant that he would convey and assure the Manor of D. to J. S. according to the tenor of the Condition, and upon this they were at Issue, and found for the Plaintiff, and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that no sufficient Breach was assigned, for the Plaintiff ought to have required one Assurance in certain which he would have had made, but the Exception was overruled, and adjudged that the Issue was well joined, and the Condition broken; for by the Condition the Defendant is to make all and every Act whatsoever for the Assurance of the Manor of D. in so much that if the Plaintiff should request one Fine, Feoffment, or Recovery, or Bargain and Sale, the Defendant ought to make all, but they held he was not bound to make an Obligation or Recognisance for the enjoying the Manor, for that is but collateral Security, & is no Assurance. And when the Plaintiff requires the Defendant to convey the Manor generally, the Defend. at his peril ought to do it by any kind of Assurance; and if upon such Request the Defendant should make a Feoffment of the Manor, yet if the Plaintiff afterwards request one Fine, the Defendant ought to acknowledge one Fine also, and so upon several Requests he ought to make several Assurances, and so in making the Request general, he had well pursued the Condition, and the Defendant ought at his peril●…ake every Assurance by the opinion of the whole Court. ELlis versus Warns, Trin. 2. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought upon a Bond for a hundred and twenty pounds, and the Case upon the pleading was, that Warns was indebted to one Ader a hundred pounds upon an usurious Contract, and that Ader was indebted to Ellis in a hundred pounds, for which Warns and Ader were obliged to the Plaintiff, and Debt being brought upon that Obligation, Warns pleads the Usury between him and Ader to avoid the Bond; Ellis the Plaintiff replies, that Ader before the making the Bond was indebted to him in a hundred pounds, a just and true Debt, for Payment whereof Warnes and Ader were bound to him in the Bond in Suit, and that he was not in any wise knowing of the Usury between Warner and Ader, and Warns demurs to this Plea; and adjudged by Gaudy, Yeluerton, and W. for the Plaintiff, for it is not Usury in the Plaintiff, but only between Warns and Ader, to which the Plaintiff being not privy shall not be prejudiced, for although the Statute of Usury is to be taken most strongly for the suppressing of Usury, yet it must be between such parties as use Corruption, and not to punish the innocent, as the Plaintiff, but if no Debt had been due to the Plaintiff before, than it had been clearly Usury, for there had been no lawful Cause to make the Bond to him, but only to countenance the Corruption between Warnes and Ader; and Yeluerton said, that if the Defendants Plea be good, than every man may be defrauded of his just Debt; for if the Bar shall be good by Corruption between the Debtor and Surety, to which the Creditor is a mere stranger, a man may lose his Debt, which is mischievous: but Popham and Fennor doubted of the Plaintiffs Replication, that he ought to have took a Traverse upon the Defendants Bar, which ought not to be; for how should he traverse a thing which could be within his knowledge, and to which he was no party. HArgrave versus Rogers, Mich. 2. Jacobi. Action of Debt brought, and Bail given, that A. upon eight Day's warning shall appear to an Action to be brought by B. for the same Debt; and if A. shall be condemned in the Suit, and not pay it, than the Bail would answer B. the Condemnation; and B. brought his Action against A. in which A. was condemned, and did not pay, by reason whereof B. brought an Action of Debt against the Bail upon the Recognisance, and set forth the Suit against A. and the Condemnation, and that he had not satisfied it, but showed not that it had eight Days warning to appear to the Action; and Fennor and Yeluerton held, that he need not show it, for the Condition of the Recognisance depends upon two Clauses, one the Appearance at 8. Day's warning, the other is the satisfaction by the Bail, if P. should not pay the Condemnation comprehended in these words (And) and in this Case the Action was brought upon the second Clause, to wit, the Default of P. because he had not answered the Condemnation, and therefore needless to meddle with that part of the Condition. But if the Action had been brought, if the first Clause then B. ought to have showed in certain the Warning to have been given by 8. Days; but Popham, Gandy, and W. were of a contrary opinion, and that the Plaintiff of necessity ought to show the Warning to have been given 8. Days, because that part of the condition is not to be performed between parties, but an Estranger, for A. is an Estranger, and the Bail is bound as well to answer such Condemnation in such Action as shall be brought upon the eight Days Warning given, for that is the ground of all; and it is no reason that A. by his voluntary Appearance without eight Days Warning should Appearance upon warning, and for default adjudged naught. prejudice his Bail; but otherwise it had been if the Condition had been between A. and B. for than if A. would appear without such Warning, it is his folly, and no injury is done to one that is willing: and according to this opinion the Plaintiff discontinued his Suit, and the Defendants were ordered to put in new Bail with mark. SIr Rich. Campion verse- Hill, Pasch. 3. Jac. An Action of Debt brought Action of Debt upon the Statute of E. 6. for Tithes. upon the Stat. of E. 6. for not setting forth of Tithes, & the Plaintiff shows that the Rector of M. had 2. parts of the Tithes in 3. parts to be divided, & that the Vicar of the same place had the third part of the Tithes, and layeth this by Prescription, as to the manner of the taking the Tithes, & shows further, how the Parson & Vicar by several Leases had demised the Tithes to him, & so he being Proprietor of the Tithes, the Defend. sowed 10. Acres within the Parish, to wit, Wheat, Rye, etc. & carried it away without setting forth the Tithe to his Damage, etc. And upon a Nil debet per patriam, pleaded, it was found for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Plaintiff had in that Action comprised several Actions upon the Statute, and that it appeared by his own showing, for the Plaintiff claimed not the Tithes under one Title, but under the several Tithes of Parson and Vicar; and Fennor Justice held they could not join, and no more could the Plaintiff who claimed severally under them, and it seemed to him that the Parson could not have this Action against several Tenants, for not setting forth their several Tithes, because he could not comprehend two Actions in one; but the whole Court besides held the contrary; for although the Parson and Vicar could not join in this Case, because they claim their Tithes severally by divided Rights, yet when both their Tithes are conjoined in one person; as it is in the Plaintiff, than the the Interest of their Title is conjoined also in one, Sufficient to say the Plaintiff is Proprietor without showing the Title. and it suffices generally to show the Plaintiff is a Farmer or proprietor of the Tithes, without saying of what Title, for it is but a personal action, grounded merely upon a contempt against the Statute for not setting forth Tithes, and also Tithes are not demanded by this Action, although the Title may come in debate, yet it was agreed by all the Judges, that the Plaintiff should recover his Tithes in damages, and shall not demand them again by any suit, after a recovery in this Action, which Mark. BErket versus Manning, Pasch. 3 Jacobi. Action of Debt brought Misprision of the Clerk amended after Trial against the Defendant, as Administrator of J. S. The Defendant pleads fully administered, the Plaintiff replies that himself had assets and it should have been that the Defendant had assets, and this was moved in arrest of Judgement, but amended by the Court, being the Clerk's misprision, only as where it is entered, & predict. Defend. similiter, and it should have been, & predict. quer. similiter, and this hath been often amended by the Court. PAler versus Hardman Pasch. Jacobi, Hardman and his wife Executrix, Judgement reversed by Writ of error being in the disiunctive. J. H. brought an Action of Debt in the common Pleas against Paler, and as that they should restore a tun of Iron, to the value of twelve l. and declare upon a Bill for the delivery of the said tun of Iron within such a time, and that the Defendant had not delivered it to the Plaintiffs damage, of, etc. and upon non est fact. pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff, and Judgement was given that the Plaintiff should recover the Tun of Iron, or the value of the same, and if he should render the tun then by the oath, etc. should inquire what the tun of Iron was worth, and before any return of the writ to inquire of the damages, the Plaintiff in the common Pleas takes out a Capias upon the Judgement, and on Exigent upon that, and the Defendant brings a writ of Error, and it was adjudged erroneous, for two causes, first because the Judgement was in the disjunctive, that the Plaintiff should recover the tun of Iron, and if not the value thereof, so in detinue, as it appears by the Judgement in this Case, that the Plaintiff may choose whether he will have the Iron or the value thereof, which he cannot do, for if the iron be to be delivered he shall recover that only, but if it be not to be delivered, than the value, and not as before. Secondly, for that the Judgement is not perfect until the writ to inquire be returned, with issues to the Sheriff to distrain the Defendant to render the Iron, and also to inquire of the value, and before the return thereof, nothing in certain appears. One which to ground any writ of Execution for the Judgement comprehends no certainty, but is to be made certain by the return of the writ, to inquire with the whole Court granted. CArpenter versus Collins, Mich. 3 Jacobi, An Action of Debt brought by the Plaintiff for rend arere, and declares upon a Lease The Plaintiff had no Interest but 〈◊〉 rendering of the Land. made to the Defendant at Will to be held from Mich. as long as both parties should agree, yielding and paying three pounds yearly, and shows that Collins entered and occupied from the Feast, etc. unto the Feast of Mich. and upon nil debet plenius, the Jury foundthat J. Norrington had issue a Son and a daughter, and Devises, that his Son shall have his Land, at the age of twenty four years, and gives forty pounds to his Daughter, to be paid her at the age of two and twenty years, an further wills that the Plaintiff should be his Executor, and should repair to his houses, and have the oversight and doing of all his Lands and movable Goods, until the several ages aforesaid, and after dies and Carpenter the Executor makes the Lease before mentioned, and the Jury further find that the Son died, but find not at what age he was at his death, but that the Daughter at the Son's death was nineteen and no more, and find the Lease made by the Plaintiff, and that the Lessee by force thereof entered and continued possession from Michaelmas for one year and more, and find that within that year, the Daughter entered, and that the Defendant atturned to the Daughter, and refused to continue Tenant to the Plaintiff, and by Fennor, Yeluerton and W. Judgement was given against the Plaintiff, for the Plaintif took no interest in the Land by the Will, for the oversight and doing of his Lands shall be intended but in Right of the Heir, and to his use, because the Testator though not his Son of discretion and government, until the age of twenty four years, and in the mean time appointed his Executor to oversee and order the Land to the profits of the He●●e that wanted discretion, 28 H. 8. D. 26. where it is declared that J. S. shall have as well the governing of, etc. as the disposing, setting, letting, and ordering of his Lands, and by the Court held that J. S. had them only to husband, for the profit of his children and no otherwise, but he was of opinion that the Plaintif had an estate in the Land upon a limitation determinable at the Son's age of four and twenty years, and it appears not at what age he died, being not found by the verdict, therefore it is incertain, and the Entry of the Daughter lawful, for the limitation looks but to the age of the Son, and not to the age of the Daughter, for the age of the Daughter shall be intended to be set down for the receipt of her legacy of forty pounds, and for no other purpose, and the Defendant within the time in which the Rent demanded, is supposed to be due, had not determined his Will, as appears by the Verdict: but Fennor and W. said that by the Verdict that the Defendant entered by force of the lease, and occupied the land at the time comprised in the Declaration and more, and that the Tenant at will cannot determine his will, within a little time before the year end, for that would prove very mischievous to the lessor, that his Tenant at will should determine his will within the year, and refuse to occupy the land, twenty days before the year end, and in 21 H. 7. Crooks Reports, it appears that a Lessee at will cannot determine his will within the year to the prejudice of the Lessor, but that he shall answer the whole Rent to the Lessor, but note it appeared, that the Lessee at will was expulsed by the plaintiff that was Lessor, and no other Lessee at Will cannot determine his will within the year but must answer the whole Rent. thing, although done by his agreement can determine the Lease against the Lessor, for it is Covin if the Lessee be not privy, and acquainted with it, which was granted by the whole Court, and all of them agreed in the Title against the Plaintif, but as the Reporter affirmed, Popham was absent, and hearing the Case, was of opinion that the Plaintif had an interest by the words of the will. JEffry versus Guy Mich. 3. Jacobi, An Action of Debt brought upon The Plaintiff not bound to allege a special breach, when the Defendants Plea continues special matter. an Obligation, with Condition, that if Jeffry the Defendant perform all Covenants in such an Indenture, that then, etc. and one Covenant was, that he should permit Guy the Plaintiff from time to time to come and see if the House Leased by Guy. and K. his Wife were in repair, the Case was thus, J. Bill. and K. his Wife were Tenants in Tail of a house, and had Issue, J. B. dies, K. marries Guy the Plaintiff, and they two make a Lease by Indenture to Jeffry, for twenty years, yielding and paying to them and their Heirs three pounds Rend by the year, with the Covenant as aforesaid. Jeffry pleads in Barr the former entail, and the death of R. and that W. the Issue in Tail such a day entered, before which Entry the Condition was not broken, Guy replies that William came with him upon the Land, to see if reparations, etc. and traverses the Entry of William in manner and form, prout, etc. and Issue joined upon the traverse, and found for the Plaintiff, and Judgement given in the common Pleas, upon which Judgement Jeffry brought Writ of Error in the King's Bench, and Judgement affirmed there, but it was assigned for Error, the Jury had not assigned any breach of Covenant in Jeffry, and so had showed no cause of action, but the Court held he need not in this Case, for by the special Issue tendered by Jeffry, the Plaintiff was enforced, one special replication to that point tendered, and the Plaintiff could not proceed error, and it is not like the Case of an arbitrement, wherein Debt upon an Obligation to perform the award, the Defendant pleads nullum fecer arbitrium, than the Defen●… in his replication ought to set forth the award, and assign his breach, because the Defendants Plea is general, but if in such Case the Defendant should plead a release of all demands: after the Arbi-Arbitrement, by which he offers a special point in Issue, there it suffices, if the Plaintiff answers to the Release, or other special matter alleged by the Defendant, without assigning any Breach; so in this Case the special Plea of the Defendant had disabled the Plaintiff, that he could not assign any Breach of Covenants, but of necessity ought to answer to the special matter alleged. RAstell versus Draper, Mich. 3. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought for nine and thirty pounds, the Plaintiff declares that the first of Debt for Flemish Money, but demanded by the name of 39 l. English. May, primo jacobi, sold to the Defendant twenty Northern Clothes for sixty pounds Flemish Money, to be paid upon Request, which sixty pounds Flemish Money amount to nine and thirty pounds English Money; and that the Defendant, though often requested, had not paid the nine and thirty pounds, to his Damages of, etc. The Defendant pleads Nil debet per patriam, and found for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Plaintiff should have demanded the sum according to the Contract, which was for sixty pounds Flemish, and to have showed, that it amounts to nine and thirty pounds English, but the whole Court against it; for the Debt ought to be demanded by a name known, and the Judges are not skilled in Flemish Money: and also when the Plaintiff hath his Judgement, he could not have his Execution by that name; for the Sheriff cannot tell how to levy the Money in Flemish; and also it is made good by the Verdict, for the Jury have found the Debt demanded, to wit, nine and thirty pounds. But if the Contract had been for so many Ounces of Flemish Money, or a Bar of Silver and Gold, now it cannot be demanded by the name of twenty pounds, or such a sum, which is not Coin, nor used in Trade or Merchandise, but in such Case must have a Writ of Detinue, and in that recover the thing, or the value; and so in the Book of Entries, fol. 157. is the Precedent, where Debt was brought upon two several Obligations, and demands eight and twenty pounds, and declares severally, that by one Obligation he owed eight and twenty pounds of Flemish Money, and 34 H. 6. 12. & 9 E. 4. 46. But note in that Case, the Plaintiff if he would might have declared in the Detinet, and it had been good. Rolls versus Osborn, Mich. 3. Jac. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant upon a Bond of a thousand If the Obligor marry the Obligee, the Bond gone. pounds, and Sergeant Nichols moved the Court for the Defendant, and showed that the Plaintiff and Defendant were obliged each to other in a thousand pounds a piece, that they should intermarry before such a Day, and both their Obligations were forfeited, and each of them sued the other; and the Defendant prayed that common Bail might be accepted of her, and she would accept of common Bail of the Plaintiff; and the Court held it reasonable, but said, if they would marry, both their Bonds might be saved. BArneshurst versus Yeluerton, Hill. 3. Jacobi. The Plaintiff as Administrator Judgement obtained by an Administrator, and after Administration revoked, and party took in Execution, and delivered, because erroneous. of I. S. brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant, upon a Bond, and obtained a Judgement, and afterwards the Administration is revoked, yet notwithstanding the Plaintiff proceeded, and took the Defendant in Execution; and upon a Motion in the Court, the Court held the Execution void, and that the Defendant ought to be discharged, because it issued out erroneously; for the Letters of Administration being revoked, the power of the Plaintiff is gone, and determined, for he prosecuted the Suit in another's Right, and is but a Minister of the Ordinary; and then when the Ground of the Suit is overthrown, to wit, his Commission, he hath no Authority to proceed further, and the Execution issued without Warrant. And the like Law upon a Judgement had upon an Administrator, the second Administrator shall not have Execution by it, for he hath no privity to the Record; which mark. ANdrews versus Robbins, Trin. 4. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought To plead an Appearance, and not say, Prout patet per Recordum, na●g●… Debt upon an Obligation made to him as Sheriff, with a Condition, that the Defendant should appear; and Crook said that the Defendant had pleaded his Appearance, and had omitted to say, as it appears by the Court, and it was held a gross Fault, but the Record being perused, it appeared to be otherwise; for the Case was, that the Defendant was obliged to make an Obligation to appear in the King's Bench at a day prefixed in the Writ and that the Defendant pleaded there was no day prefixed in the writ for his Appearance; and Crook moved that it was no Plea, for the Defendant was estopped, to which the Court agreed, that he was estopped, and Williams said, that if a man be bound to pay a hundred pounds, that I. S. owes to him, he cannot plead that I. S. doth not owe him a hundred pounds; and Tanfield said, if it were to pay all sums that I. S. owed him, he isconcluded: & so it is held, 3 Eliz. Dyer. And the Court commanded Judgement to be entered for the plaintiff, if no cause showed tooth contrary such a day. JAckson versus Kirton, Trin. 4. Jacobi. In Common Pleas an Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, the Condition was, that if Nota. A. would render himself to an Arrest in such a place, etc. The Defendant pleads, that by Privilege of Parliament, those of the Parliament, and their necessary Servants ought not to be arrested by the space of forty Days before the Parliament, nor sitting the Parliament, nor forty Days after; and sets forth that A. was a Servant to such a man of the Parliament at such a time, so that he could not render himself to be arrested; to which the Plaintiff demurs; and the opinion of the Court was for the Plaintiff; for A. might render himself, and let it be at their peril, if they will arrest him. MArkham versus Jerux, Hill. 4. Jac. Action of Debt brought upon a Bond, with a Condition to stand to the Award, Arbitrement, Award void for the incertainty, for being the Judgement of one it ought to have plainness and certainty. etc. of Master Porley of Gray's Inn, about the Title of one Copyhold Tenement, M. P. awarded, etc. that the Defendant should pay to the Plaintiff six pounds upon the 21 May, 3 Jac. at such a place, to wit, in the Church Porch of C. and further awards that the Plaintiff by his Deed should release to the Defendant his whole Right, etc. upon the said 〈◊〉 Day of May at the same place upon the payment of the Money: and in another Clause of the Award he awarded that the Plaintiff should make further Assurance to the Defendant for the extinguishing of his Title, as should be advised, etc. And Yeluerton moved that this Arbitrement was void, and is in a manner no Award, for it is repugnant and insensible; for although it be certain at what Day the Defendant should pay the six pounds, yet it doth not appear when, nor upon what Day the Plaintiff should release to the Defendant, for there is no such first Day of May in the whole Award, and it is not bound or tied to any year of the King, so that it is altogether incertain; and although it may be collected that the Arbitrator did intend the 21. Day of May, because it is appointed to be made upon the payment of the six pounds, which was the 21. May, yet it is not expressed but only by way of inference and implication: and it was objected, that admit the Award to be void in that part, yet it is good in the residue, which is to be performed by the Plaintiff, to wit, the making of better assurance; to which Yeluerton answered, that all the Clauses in one Award are material, and the Clause of further assurance depends upon the repugnant Clause of the Release to be made; for the Award appoints that the Release is to be made upon the said first Day of May, whereas no such Day in the whole Award, shall be the first assurance; and the assurances which were to be made by the following Clause were in the intention of the Arbitrator, to be for the strengthening of the first Release, which was granted; and the Court said, there was much difference between Wills and Deeds, and between Arbitrements; for Deeds, etc. shall be construed according to the intent of the parties, and upon the words to be collected out of the Deeds; but an Award, is of the nature of a Judgement, and Sentence in which ought to be plainness, and no collection of the intent and meaning of the Arbitrators; for how it ought to be his Judgement, and not the Judgement of another upon the words of the Arbitrator; and Tanfeild said, it had been adjudged, that where the Arbitrator did award, that one of the parties should become bound to the other in the sum of, and no sum in certain, but a space left for the sum, that it was void: and if an Arbitrement be void in one Clause, although it be good in all Clauses, yet it is in Law no Award; for a Judgement ought to be plain, certain, and perfect in all things: but if the Arbitrators award, that one of the parties, and J. S. an Estranger shall do such a thing, that is good; as to the party who is within the Submission, and void only to I. S. the Estranger, 19 E. 4. ATkins versus Gardiner, Pasch. 5. Jac. The Plaintiff being Precedent Judgement obtained by Precedent of the College of Physicians, his Successor after his Death, and not his Executor shall have Execution. of the College of Physicians in London, brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant, for practising Physic upon the Charter made to them by H. 8. that none should practise Physic in London, nor within seven Miles thereof, except such as were authorised by them, and gives them Authority to impose Fines upon such as shall practise Physic, which Charter was confirmed by Act of Parliament in 14 H. 8. and he obtained Judgement upon the Statute, to recover a sum for himself, and the College, and before Execution the Precedent died, and whether the Successor should have Execution, and 8 E. 1. was cited, and divers other Books to that purpose. STamford versus Cooks, Pasch. 5. Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought Assurance. upon an Obligation, with a Condition, that the Defendant should seal such Assurances as should be devised by the Plaintiff, and that the Assurance should be of Copyhold Land; and the Plaintiff devised that the Defendant should seal a Letter of Attorney made to one to surrender the Copyhold for him, and also seal one Bond for the enjoying thereof; and the Plaintiff offered these Writings to the Defendant to seal, and he refused, and upon such Refusal the Plaintiff brought his Action, and a Verdict was given for the Plaintiff; and Sergeant Yeluerton moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Plaintiff ought not to have Judgement; for he said, that the Defendant was not bound and compellable to seal that Obligation, because it was not in Law any Assurance, but a collateral thing; and the whole Court agreed that; and therefore being the Action was brought for refusing to seal the Obligation and Letter of Attorney, and the Judgement according it ought to be arrested: but Cock said, that Judgement ought not to be arrested, for the Premises of the Declaration, it appeared that he refused to seal the Letter of Attorney, and thereupon concluded, that it should not be arrested: and Fennor said, that the Letter of Attorney was not any such Assurance, as the Law required in such Case; for when he had made the Surrender, it should be accounted the Surrender of him that made the Assurance, and he said, he should make a present Assurance of it: but Tanfeild was of another opinion, and said, that when the Surrender was made, it shall be said to be the immediate Surrender of him that made the Letter of Attorney, and such an assurance as the Law required, and Yeluerton, Justice, said, the Letter of Attorney was lame for this cause, the Letter of Attorney was made to one, for the surrendering of such a Copyhold, and did not say in the Letter of Attorney for him, and in his name, for otherwise, the Copyhold might be the Copyhold of him that surrendered by virtue of the Letter of Attorney, and then he should surrender his own Copyhold; but Tanfeild was of another opinion, because he said in the Letter of Attorney, that he did constitute and appoint, and in his stead and place put such a one, which words in his stead and place, are as full, as if he should have said, in his name. HOllingworth versus Huntley, Pasch. 5 Jacobi, An Action of Debt brought upon an Obligation, the Condition, amongst many other things, contained that the Husband and Wife being Lessees for life of certain Lands, that if the said Husband and Wife should levy a Fine to an estranger, at the Costs and Charges of an estranger, and also that they should levy a Fine of other Lands, that they also held for their lives to an estranger, and at their Charge, then, etc. the Obliger says that the Husband and Wife did offer to levy the Fine, if the estranger, to whom the Fine was to be delivered would bear their Charges, the Obligee demurs, and it was adjudged for the Plaintiff, because the levying the second Fine had not any reference to the other, because they are two distinct sentences, and these words, and also make them so. Man versus Somerton, Pasch. 5. Jacobi, The Plaintiff being Parson Tithe shall be paid of Wood above twenty years' growth, if it be not Timber. of Henly, brought an action of Debt for six hundred pounds upon the Statute of 〈◊〉. 6. for not setting forth Tithe of Wood, and the Plaintiff shows that the Defendant had cut down two hundred loads of Wood, to the value of two hundred pounds, and saith, the tenth part of that did amount to two hundred pounds, and so he brought his action for six hundred pounds upon the Statute, and the Plaintiff was nonsuit, for one fault in his Declaration, for whereas he names the price of the Wood to be two hundred pounds, it was mistaken, for it should have been two thousand pounds, for he demanded more for the tenth part, than the principal is, by his own showing, and Tanfeild Justice held that Beech by the common Law is not Timber, and so it was adjudged in Cary and Pagets Case, and it was held, that Tithes shall not be paid for Beech above the growth of twenty years in a common Country for Wood, as in Buckingham-shire, for there it is reputed Timber, but in a plentiful Country, of Wood, it is otherwise, for there it is not Timber and Tithes shall be paid for such wood, Silva cedua, for which Tithes shall be paid, is under the growth of twenty years, but Tithes shall be paid for such wood which is not Timber, which is above the growth of twenty years. PErcher versus Vaughan Trin. 5. Jac. An action of Debt brought Variance between the Obligation and count shall not be showed after imparlance upon an Obligation for six pounds thirteen shillings eight pence. The Defendant demands Oyer of the Obligation, and imparles, and after an imparlance the Defendant comes and says there was variance between the Plaintiffs writ, and the Obligation, for it appeared by the Obligation that the Defendant was obliged in viginti nobilis, and so his action ought to be brought according to the Obligation, and demands Judgement, if the Plaintiff ought to have his action, the Plaintiff demurs, and it was argued by the Plaintiffs counsel, first, that it was no variance, for it was said that twenty nobles, and six pounds thirteen shillings eight pence, were all one in substance, if a man be bound to pay a hundred nobles, and brings his action for fifty marks, it is not variance, 34 H. 8. 12. and 4 E. 3. Fitzherbert, Title varians, 102. agrees to that, but if a man be obliged to pay certain money in Flemish money, he ought to show the performance of that strictly, 9 Ed. 4. 49. and the Plaintiffs counsel said that it was variance, it could not be showed after an Imparlance in Marks Case, Co. 5. 74. and said the conclusion of the Defendants Plea to demand Judgement of the Plaintiff, aught to have his action, was not good, for this Plea was not in bar of the action, but in abatement of the Writ, and Yeluerton, Justice, agreed to that, and he said when the Obligation was in viginti nobilis, it shall be intended twenty nobles, and good. Tanfeild said, that when there is no good and apt Latin words, for a thing, & no unapt Latin word is put in the Bond for that thing, the Bond is void, as when a man is bound in quinque libris, it it was adjudged in Mich. Term, 5 Jac. that the Obligation was void, because there was a fit Latin word, and that was quinque, and so it was adjudged in the Lord Danvers Case, where the Indictment for one blow super capud, and it was held void, because it was an unapt word, and there was a fit and apt word, to wit Caput, and William's agreed to this, for he said it was adjudged in the common Pleas, between Pencrosse and Tout, a man was bound in a Bond in viginti literis, when it should have been viginti libris, and adjudged void for the same cause, but after in Hillary Term the Plaintiff had Judgement, because in one Dictionary nobilis was a Latin word for six shillings eight pence. VEntris versus Farmer, Trin. 5. Jacobi. A Lease was made for Demand of Rent must be at the place of Payment. years, rendering Rend payable at a place of the Land: and the Court was moved, whether a Demand of the Rent may not be made upon the Land, but denied by the whole Court; for they said, that the Demand must be made at the place of payment, although it be of the Land. FIeld versus Hunt, Mich. 5. Jacobi. Hunt in Worcester Court obtained Judgement reversed in an inferior Court for want of this word Dicit. a Judgement after a Verdict in Debt upon a Contract, for twenty Sheep, and after it was removed by a Writ of Error into the King's Bench, and general Errors assigned: but upon opening the Errors, it was showed the Court that there was no Declaration in Worcester Court; for the Declaration was thus, Raphael Hunt complains against H. Field of a Plea, that he render to him twenty pounds which he owes unto him, and unjustly detains, and whereof the same Plaintift by M. his Attorney, whereas the said Defendant, etc. and by Fennor, Willams, and Cook, it is no Declaration for Default of this word Dicit, and the sense is imperfect: and although Yeluerton objected, that a Declaration is sufficient, if it be good, to a common intent; and Quer. being writ short, it may be Queritur, and then it is, and whereof the same complains; but the Court held that would not help, for it is not certain to whom the word Idem should refer, whether to the Plaintiff or Defendant, and of the two it should rather refer to the Defendant which is the next Antecedent; and the Court held it matter of substance which is wanting, and therefore naught; but if it had been 4. and whereof the same Raphael quer. being writ short, it had been good; for because the party Plaintiff is certainly named, and then Quer. could have no other sense than Queritur, and Judgement reversed, which mark. HArrison versus Fulstow, Mich. 5. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought Action of Debt for fourscore and six pounds, in the Common Want of an Original after a Verdict no Error, but a vicious Original is Error. Pleas, against T. Harrison, and the Capias was continued accordingly against T. Harrison, but the Plur. capias was against William Harrison, which was the very name of the Defendant, and that was but for fourscore and five pounds, which varied from the first Entry; and William Harrison appeared upon the Exigent, and the Plaintiff declares against William, and he pleads, and they are at Issue by the name of William, and a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and Judgement accordingly against William, and upon a Writ of Error it was assigned for Error, that the Original did not maintain the Proceedings, for the Original is against Tho. and the Proceedings against William: and the Plaintiffs Counsel would have excused it, because the Judgement being against William, and the Original against Tho. as it is certified, it cannot be the Original against William, and so the Judgement against William being without Original it is aided by the Statute after a Verdict: but the Court held it to be Error; for there is great Difference between no Original and a naughty Original; for the want of an Original is helped, but not a vicious Original, and Judgement was reversed; for upon Diminution alleged, that this Original was certified as the Original in that Suit, or else there was no Obtulit at all. LOthbury versus Humphrey, Mich. 5. Jacobi. Lothbury and his Wife Administratrix of W. R. brought an Action of Debt as Administrator Plea naught for want of a Traverse. upon an Obligation of forty Marks, dated 4. April, 38 Eliz. made by the Defendant to the Intestate, 1. the Defendant pleads that Ridge the Intestate. October, the first Jacobi. made his Will, and made the Defendant his Executor, and devised the Obligation, and the Money therein contained to one H. Son of the Defendant, and died, after whose Death the Defendant takes upon him the burden of the Executorship, and administers divers Goods of Ridges, and that he is ready to aver this: to which Plea the Plaintiff demurs generally, and adjudged for the Plaintiff; for the Defendants Plea is not good without a Traverse, that Ridge died intestate. For the Action is brought as Administrator, and they count upon a dying intestate, and that being the ground of the Action ought to be traversed, as it is 9 H. 6. 7. Debt brought against one as Administrator of J. and counts that J. died intestate; the Defendant pleads that J. made his Will, and made him Executor, and held no Plea without a Traverse; and the same Law, 7 H. 6. 13. Debt brought against one R. Executor of R the Defendant pleads that R. died intestate at such a place, and held no Plea; for if the Plaintiff maintain that R. made the Defendant Executor, and the other say, that R. died intestate at such a place, this makes no Issue, and therefore the Defendant ought to traverse that R. died intestate without that, that he made him Executor, and 4 H. 7. 13. the very Case in question is adjudged, that such a Plea in Barr is not good, without a Traverse, to wit, to say without that, that R. died intestate, according to the 3 H 7. 14. and this was agreed by the whole Court without Argument. CHeyney versus Sell, Mich. 5. Jac. Cheyney as Executor of Cheyny, Nota. brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation against Sell, & the case was, that the Testator had put himself as an Apprentice to Sell for seven years, and Sell bound himself to pay to his Apprentice, his Executors, or Assigns 10 l. at the time of the end or determination of his Apprenticeship, the Apprentice serves six years, and then dies, and it was moved by Towse that the Money was due at the time of his Death, because than his Apprenticeship ended, for he said, if a man make a Lease for one and twenty years to another, and oblige himself to pay to the Lessee ten pounds at the end and expiration of his Term, and within those years the Lessor infeoffs the Lessee, so the term expires, and the ten pounds should be paid instantly; but Cook denied that Case, because the Lessee hastened the end of his term; but he said, that if a man lease Land to another for seven years, if the Lessee should so long live, and the Lessor oblige himself to pay ten pounds at the end of his term, and he die within seven years, there he was of opinion, the Money was presently due upon his Death, but in the principal case, the whole Court held, the chief Justice being absent, that the Obligation was discharged, and that the Money should notbe paid. WIllot versus Spencer, Mich. 9 Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt for Tithes of Wood upon the Statute of Plaintiff in Debt for Tithes need not be named Rector in the Plaint in the upper Bench. 2 E. 6. and Forster argued, that Judgement ought not to be given for the Plaintiff, because the Plaintiff did not show in his Plaint that he was Parson; for he ought to bring his Action according to that name that he claimed the Tithes by, and this aught to be expressed in the Queritur, and therefore if a man bring his Action to recover any thing, as Heir, Executor, or Sheriff, he ought to name himself so in the Queritur, 30 H. 6. & 9 H. 4. but Towse said, the same Exception was taken between Merrick and Peter, and disallowed. Fleming Justice said, that if it had been by Writ he must have showed it, but need not, it being by Plaint, if the truth appear in that, and if a man bring his Action as Assignee, he need not show it in his Plaint, if the truth appear in the Declaration, but it is otherwise in an Original, and a Plaintiff in King's Bench, as an original, but not in all things, and if the Plaint be incertain, the Defendant in that Court shall plead in Abatement of the Plaint, as to an Original in the Common Pleas; and at last two Precedents were shown, one between Champion and Hill, and the other between Merrick and Wright, that were allowed without naming of the Plaintiff Rector in the Queritur, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff by the whole Court. Note, it was agreed by all the Court of King's Bench, Mich. 5. Jac. Tithes cannot be leased without Deed, and hath many times been ruled, that if a man sell his Tithes for years by word, it is good; but if the Parson agree that one shall have his Tithes for seven years by word, it is not good, by the opinion of Fleming Chief Justice, because it amounts to a Lease; and he held strongly, that Tithes cannot be leased for years without a Deed. COb versus Hunt, Hill. 5. Jac. Cob sued a Prohibition in the Common Judgement reversec● for Error in the Judgement. Pleas against Hunt Parson of D. in Kent, and suggests a Modus demandi, as to part of the Tithes demanded against him in the Spiritual Court, and as to the residue suggests a Contract, executed and performed between him and the Parson, in satisfaction of the residue, and because he proved not his Suggestion within six Months, Hunt the Parson had a Consultation, and Costs assessed by the Court to fifty shillings, and Damages fifty shillings by the Statute of the 2 E. 6. they shall be doubled, but in truth no Judgement was given to recover them, because these words, Videlicet, Ideo considerate. fuit qd. recuperet, was omitted: yet Hunt thinking that all was certain and perfect, brought an Action of Debt in the Common Pleas for the Costs, etc. and declared of all the matter above, and that the Damages were assessed, upon which it was adjudged, that he should recover, etc. and that the Costs were not paid, Per quod Actio, etc. And had a Judgement against Cob, by Non sum informat. and thereupon Cob brought his Writ of Error, as well in the Record and Process, etc. of the Prohibition, as of the Record and Process in the Action If a Suggestion in part need proof, and part doth not, no Costs. of Debt for the Costs, and assign the general Error: but Yeluerton assigns two Errors in special; first, that there was no Judgement in the Prohibition for Recovery of the Costs, but only an Assessment of Costs without any more, which is not sufficient; for the Assessment of Costs only is but matter of Office in Court, but no Judgement of Court to bind, which was confessed by the whole Court. The second Error was that no Costs aught to be assessed or adjudged in the Cause above, because the Prohibition is grounded solely upon the Modus decimandi, which needs proof, and upon the Contract between the parties, which requires no proof; and the Suggestion being entire, and part of it needing no proof, they could not give any Costs, for that is only where the whole matter in the Suggestion needs proof; and therefore the mixing the Contract with the manner of Tithing privileges the whole, as to the matter of Costs: but they might grant a Consultation, as to that part of the Suggestion which concerned the manner of Tithing, but not for the rest, which was granted by the whole Court, and so both the Judgements were reversed, which mark. MArkham versus Mollineux, Hill. 1. Jac. Mollineux sued out Judgement reversed for Error in changing the Defendants Additions. an Original in the Common Pleas in an Action of Debt upon a Bond against Markham, by the name of John Markham, Alderman de D. and all the mean Process are continued against him by the name of Alderman Markham he appeared, and the Plaintiff declared against him by the name of Markham of D. Esquire, and afterwards the parties were at Issue, and it was found for the Plaintiff, and Judgement entered; and it was reversed by Writ of Error, because it did not appear that, that Markham was the same Markham, against whom the Original was prosecuted, and the Process continued, but it seemed rather that he was another person by reason of his several Additions of Alderman and Esquire, which mark. OLiver versus Collins, Pasch. 6. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action upon the Statute for Tithes, the Statute mistaken, yet it being according to divers Precedents ruled good. Action of Debt upon the Statute, for not setting forth of Tithes, and shows that he is Parson of the Parish Church of Little Lavar, in Com. Essex, and that the Defendant had so many Acres within the Parish of Little Lavor, sowed with Wheat, whereof the tenth severed from the ninth part came to eight and twenty pounds, and shows that the Defendant at Little Lavor aforesaid took and carried away the Wheat without setting forth the Tithes, contrary to the Statute, by reason whereof he forfeited threescore Pounds, and upon Nil debet pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff, and moved in Arrest of Judgement; first, that the Statute was misrecited, for whereas the the Plaintiff declared, that the 4. Novemb. 2 E. 6. it was enacted, it was said, that there was no such Statute; for the Parliament commenced 1 E. 6. and continued by prorogation until the 4. Novemb. 2 E. 6. and therefore the Plaintiff was mistaken in that, but that Exception was not allowed, for there were an hundred Precedents against it; and in respect of the continual use in that form, as the Plaintiff had declared, the Court said, that they would not alter it, for that was to disturb all the Judgements that were ever given in that Court. And secondly, it was objected, that the matter was mistried, and there ought to be a new Trial, because the Venire facias was of Parva Lavar, whereas by their pretence it ought to have been of the Parish of Little Lavar, to which Yeluerton made Answer, that the Trial was well enough, for by that Action no Tithe is demanded nor recovered, but the Defendant is only punished for his Contempt against the Statute, in not setting forth his Tithe, and the wrong done to the Plaintiff complained of, is laid only in the Village of Little Lavor, and not in the Parish; for all the places in the Declaration where the Parish is named, are only matter of Conveyance and inducement to the Action, and not of the substance, for the substance is only that where the wrong and grievance is done to the Plaintiff, and that arises only in Parua Lavor, which was granted by the whole Court upon a grand Debate, at several Days, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff: and the like Judgement was given between Barnard and Costerdam in an Action upon the same Statute, upon the last point for the Venn; and this hath been twice adjudged; but in Costerdams' Case which concerned the Earl of Clanrickard, with whom Yeluerton was of Council, it was resolved, that if the Issue be upon the custom of Tithing, and that it be found against the Defendant, he shall pay the value expressed by the Plaintiff in his Declaration; for because by the collateral matter pleaded in Bar, the Declaration is in whole confessed. SMith versus Smith Trin. 6 Jacobi one Bisse made K. his Wife, and Bill abated for not naming an Infant Executor in the Action, although Administration was granted during his minority. John his Son, being one year old Executors and K. solely proved the Will, and afterwards married the Plaintiff, and they two brought an Action of Debt as Executors against the Defendant, and the Defendant pleads in abatement of the Bill, that John was made Executor with K. and is yet in life, and not named, the Plaintiffs reply, that John was but of the age of one year, and that K. proved the Will, and had Administration committed to her during the minority, and that John is, and was at the time of the Writ purchased within the age of seventeen years, and upon that Yeluerton demurred, and adjudged for the Defendant that the Bill should abate, for both of them in truth were Executors, and aught to be named in the Action, and although by the Administration granted during the minority, K. had the full power, yet the Infant ought to be named, he being Executor. GOmersall versus Ask, Trin. 6. jacobi, The Defendant brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant as Administrator of her Husband, upon two former Judgements given in two Actions of Debt against the intestate, and shows the recoveries, the Defendant pleads that the intestate entered into a recognizance 35 El. in Chancery to Sir Henry Bechel, and shows, that after the Judgements had by the Plaintiff, Sir H. obtained a Judgement against the intestate, upon the Recognisance, and that she hath not assets to satisfy the Plaintiff of the intestates Goods, beyond Goods that are chargeable and liable to the Judgement upon the Recognisance, to which Plea the Plaintiff demurs, and by Fennor and Williams justifies the Plea in Barr was good; for although the Plaintiffs Judgements mentioned in his Actions are before Sir H. Judgement, yet because the Plaintiff by his Action doth not demand Execution of the Judgements, but only his Debt recovered, for this Action brought it as an original, and in the same Court, as if he did demand the Debt upon the first Obligation, and therefore because the Plaintiff had not sued out a Scire facias, to execute the first Judgements, but had prosecuted, a new original the Plea is good and allowable, as it had been upon the said Obligation, but Yeluerton and Fleming were of a contrary opinion, for the Plea had not been good against the intestate himself, and the Executor or Administrator represents his person, and therefore the Plea is not good, but only in excuse of a Devastavit, and they were of opinion, that the Action brought by the Plaintiff, was in nature of a Scire facias, for he demanded the Debt in another course, than it was at first, for that Debt which was but matter of escript, is now become by the Judgement to be Debt upon Record, and of so high a nature, that the Judgement being in Force, he can never have an Action upon the Obligation which is adjuged in Higgins Case, Co. 6 Rep. but Cook doubted, and the Plaintiff dying, the Court did not resolve. APleton versus Baily Mich. 6. Jacobi. Apleton as Executor of Apleton Action upon the Statute 32 H. 8. of Arrearages of Rents. brought an Action of Debt against Bailie for the Arrearages of divers Rents as well Copyhold Rents, as freehold Rents pertaining to a Manor, whereof the Testator was seized and thereof died seized, and the Rents were not paid to him in his life time, by reason whereof they belonged to the Plaintiff as Executor: And the Defendant though he was requested had not paid against the form of the Statute of the 32 H. 8. And the Court, that the Action, did not lie for the Arrearages of Copyhold Land, for the Statute of the 32 H. 8. doth not extend to them, but only to Rents out of Free Land. Secondly, It lies not for the Rent of free Land, because the Plaintiff hath not showed in his Declaration that the Defendant had attorned to the Testator in his life. And although in pleading it is good to allege a Feoffment of a Manor, without pleading any Livery, or of any Attornment of Tenements, but when the Rent of any freehold Land comes in Debate it behoves both the Owner of the Manor and and his Executor that demands it, to convey the privity between the Tenant and the Lord which ought to be by attornment; for Rents and Services rest not without Attornment, which, mark. PEirson versus Ponuteis Mich. 6. Jacobi The Plaintiff as Executor Action lies not upon that Statute for Arrearages of Copyhold Rents. of Peirson brought an Action of Debt against Jo. Ponuties of London Merchant, that he should render to him three and thirty pounds twelve shillings, in that the Defendant 5. Oct. 1598. at London, etc. By his Bill obligatory hath acknowledged himself to owe to the Testator, 1518. Florins, Polish, which then amounted to thirty three pounds twelve shillings to be paid to the Testator, Ad solucionem festi purificat, etc. Called Candlemas day next ensuing, and to that payment had obliged himself by the same Bill. And the Plaintiff avers that, Predicti soluciones dicti festi purificat, etc. Next after the making the Bill were according to the use of Merchants the twentieth of February 1598. Yet the Defendant had not paid the 1518. Florence, Polish, or the thirty three pounds twelve s. to the Testator nor to the Plaintiff. The Defendant pleads, Non est factum, and found against him, and moved in arrest of Judgement; that the Declaration was not good, because first the payment of Candlemas is not known in our Law, but that was not allowed for that which is unknown in ordinary intendment is made manifest, and helped by the Averment in the declaration, because that payment among Merchants is known to be upon the twentieth of February, and the Judges ought to take notice of those things that are used amongst Merchants for the maintenance of traffic, and the rather, because the Defendant doth not deny it, but pleads non factum, by which he confesses the Declaration to be true in that averment. Secondly it was objected, that as the Case is, the use of Merchants is not material, because the Testator by any thing that appears, was not a Merchant, but it was not allowed, because the defendant that bound himself to pay, was a Merchant, and the Testator ought to take the Bill, as the defendant would make it, and he chose to make the payment according to the use of Merchants and not according to the Ordinary intercourse between party and party, which mark this by the whole Court. TAlbot versus Godbold, Mich. 6. Jac. Godbold 28 Eliz. sealed a Bill to the Plaintiff made in this manner, memorandum, that I have received Action of Debt brought upon a Bill, for money received to another use. of Edw. Talbot, who was the Plaintiffs Testator, to the use of my Master, Mr. Sergeant Gaudy the sum of forty pounds to be paid at Mich. following, the Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon this Bill, and declared verbatim as the Bill was, and demanded the four pound, to which Declaration the Defendant demurred, and his pretence was as he supposed, because he had received the money but as a servant to another use, and so he ought not to be charged as a principal Debtor, for the Bill is but a Testimony of the Receipt, as is the 1 H. 6. and 2 H. 6. in account, for there an Indenture testifying the Receipt which under Seal did not alter the nature of the first account, but it was adjudged for the Plaintiff, for although the first part of the Bill witness the Receipt to be to another's use, yet in the last clause of the Bill, for the payment of the money, he doth not say to be repaid by his Master, for than it would not charge him, but the clause is general to be repaid, which of necessity ought to bind him that sealed, for otherwise the party shall lose his Debt, because he had no remedy against Sergeant Gaudy, and because the Debt appears to be due, it shall be intended to go only in satisfaction of a due Debt which mark. ALexander, versus Lamb, Mich. 6 Jacobi, the Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation of forty pounds against An Executor of his own wrong cannot retain Goods in his hand to pay himself. Lamb, as Executor, P. the Defendant pleads that P. in his life time was indebted to him in forty pounds due Debt, and that the goods of the Testator to the value of ten pounds came to the Defendants hands, which he retained towards satisfaction of his Debt, and averred that no more goods beyond the goods to the value of ten pounds came to his hands to be administered, the Plaintiff replied and showed that the Defendant is Executor in his own wrong to P. and that he hath many other goods of P. to be administered at S. in the County of Norfolk, and concludes, & hoc paratum est verificare, etc. the Defendant rejoins, and demands judgement, if the Plaintiff shall be admitted to say that the Defendant is Executor of his own wrong, seeing by his Declaration he had affirmed him to be Executor of the Testament, the Plaintiff demurs in Law to this Plea, and as to the matter in Law, all the Court was for the Plaintiff, for he may well reply that the Defendant is Executor of his own wrong, notwithstanding the Declaration, for there is no other form of declaring as is adjudged in Coults' Case, 5 Rep. fol 30. but the whole Court held the whole Plea to be discontinued, for the Defendant having pleaded as to the Goods to the value of ten pounds, which he retained in his hands for a Debt due to him, and that he had no other Goods, and concludes, hoc paratum est definire, which is not good, for he ought to have said, & hoc petit quod inquiratur per patriam, for there being a surplusage of the Goods denied by the Defendant, and urged by the Plaintiff, it ought to come in issue, but could not by reason of the ill conclusion, but in the same Term between West the Plaintiff, and Lane Defendant, West demanded four pounds' Debt against Lane, as Executor, as above, and all the rest of the Plea, is as above, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, because the Defendant had confessed Goods to the value of ten pounds in his hands, which was more than the Defendant demanded, and therefore although by Judgement of Law, an Executor of his own wrong cannot retain Goods to pay himself, and although the other proceedings in the Plea are naught, yet Judgement shall only be given upon the confession of the Defendant, and so it was entered with Mark. GReen versus Eden, Mich. 6 Jacobi, The Plaintiff brought an Action Primo deliberate. shall not be pleaded without a Traverse. of Debt upon an Obligation for a hundred pounds, dated September the third, 1 Jac. the Condition was, that if the Defendant the fourth of September, anno 20 Jacobi, pay a hundred pounds to I. S. at such a place, and also save the Plaintiff harmless from any suit which should be brought against the Plaintiff, by reason of the Bond, in which he was bound to J. S. as Surety for the Defendant, then, etc. the Defendant pleaded, that true it was, that he by his Obligation bearing Date September the third 1 Jac. did become bound to the Plaintiff in two hundred pounds, but further said that the said Obligation was not delivered as the Defendants deed until the seventeenth of September, in the second year of King James, and then it was first delivered, and further says that he had found the Plaintiff harmless, etc. to which plea, the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the plaintiff, for the Bond mentioned in the Declaration is not answered, for the plaintiff indeed, shows that the Defendant was obliged to him by his Obligation, bearing date the same Day, etc. which is laid to be a perfect Bond, the same day as the Plaintiff counts, and then for the Defendant to come and say that it was first delivered the seventeenth of September 20 Jacobi, which is a year after, is no good Argument, but naught without taking a traverse, without that it was made the third of September 10 Jacobi. Secondly, as the Defendant hath pleaded, he hath made part of the Condition idle, and vain, for by the Condition it appears, that there is a Condition for the payment of a hundred pounds at a Day to come, to wit the fourth of September, in the second year, and now the Defendant by his Plea hath made the Day of payment, passed before he supposes the Bond to be delivered, within a manner takes away the effect of the Plaintiffs suit, and if the Condition had not stood upon two Branches, but upon one only, and the Defendant will plead the Delivery after the Condition becomes impossible to be performed, then is the Obligation become single for the whole two hundred pounds, which mark, by the whole Court. BArret versus Fletcher, Pasch. 7 Jacobi, The Plaintiff brought an If the Plaintiff assign no breach he shall never have a Judgement, though he hath a Verdict. Action of Debt upon an Obligation of five hundred pounds, with a Condition to stand to the Award of J. S. and J. D. so that, etc. the Defendant pleads if the Arbitrator made no Award, the Plaintiff replies, and shows the Award made verbatim, and concludes that they had made an Award, and doth not assign any breach. The Defendant rejoins, that the Award pleaded, is not the Deed of the Arbitrators, and Issue being joined upon that, there was a Verdict for the Plaintiff, and Yeluerton moved in arrest of Judgement, because the Plaintiff in his replication had not assigned any breach of the Award, and so had showed no cause of Action, for the replication is not for any Debt, but is guided by the Condition, and is for the performance of a collateral thing, to wit of an Award and although the Defendant had not answered any thing to the breach, if it had been assigned, yet the Court ought to be satisfied that the Plaintiff had good cause of Action to recover, otherwise they should not give Judgement, and although a Verdict is given for the Plaintiff, yet this imperfection in the Replication, is matter of substance, and is not helped by the Statute, by the opinion of the whole Court, except Justice Williams. BArwick versus Foster, Mich. 7 Jacobi. Action of Debt brought for Rend reserved at Michaelmas or within ten days after, due at Michaelmas. Rent, the cause was thus, the Plaintiff leased certain Lands to the Defendant, at Mich. 1 Jacobi for five years, yielding and paying Rend at our Lady Day, and Mich. yearly, or within ten days after, and for rend behind at the last Mich. the Plaintiff declares, as for Rent due at the Feast of Saint Michael, and prima fancy, it seemed to the whole Court, but Crook that the Action would not lie, but that the Rent for the last quarter was gone, for it was not due at Michaelmas, as the Plaintiff had declared, for his own, showing it is payable, and reserved at Michaelmas, or within ten days after, & although the Lessee might pay it at Michaelmas Day, yet it is not any Debt which lies in demand by any Action, until the ten days be passed, and the reservation being the Lessors Act, it shall be taken most strongly against himself, and although the end of the Term is at Michaelmas, before the ten days, until which time the Rent is not due, and because at that time the Term is ended, the Lessor shall lose his Rent; as if a Lessor die before Michaelmas Day, the Executor shall not have the Rent, but the Heir by descent, as incident to the Reversion, and if the Lessee should pay the Rent to the Lessor at Michaelmas day, and the Lessor should die before the tenth Day, his Heir, being a Ward to the King, the King shall have it again, for of Right it ought not to be paid until the tenth day, according to the 44 E. 3. but this Case being moved again in Hillary Term, Fleming, Fennor and Yeluerton, changed their opinion, and held that the Lessor should have the Rent, for it was reserved yearly, and the ten days shall be expounded to give liberty to the Lessee within the Term, for his ease to protract the payment, but because the ten days after the last Michaelmas are out of the Term, rather than the Lessor shall lose his Rent yearly, the Law rejects the last ten days. MOlineux versus Molineux, Hill. 7 Jacobi. An Action of Debt A Judgement reversed by Writ of error, notwithstanding a Verdict, and the Statute of 18 Eliz. brought against Mo. upon an Obligation, as Heir to his father, the Defendant pleads, that he hath nothing by descent, but twenty Acres in D. in such a County, the Plaintiff replies, that the Defendant had more Land by descent in S. to wit, so many Acres, and upon this they are at Issue, and found for the Defendant, that he had nothing by descent in S. by reason of which the Plaintiff could recover, and had his Judgement to have Execution of the twenty Acres in D. upon which Judgement in the Common Pleas, the Defendant brought his Writ of Error, and assigned for Error a discontinuance in the Record of the Plea, from Easter Term, to Michaelmas Term after, and whether this were helped by the Statute of 18 Eliz. because it was after a Verdict was the question, and adjudged to be out of the Statute, and that it was Error, for the Judgement was not grounded upon the Verdict, but only upon the confession of the Defendant of Assetts, and the Verdict was nothing to the purpose, but to make the Defendants confession more strong, and therefore the Statute of the 18 of Eliz. is to be intended, when the trial by Verdict is the means and cause of the Judgement, which mark; and therefore the Judgement was reversed, the Law seems to be the same, if the Plainiiff brings an Action of Debt for forty pounds, and declares for twenty pounds upon a Bill, and twenty pounds upon a non tenet, and the Defendant confesses the Action, as to the money borrowed, and they are at issue, as to the money demanded by the Bill, which Passes also for the plaintiff, by reason whereof he hath Judgement to recover the forty pounds demanded, and the Damages assessed by the Jurors, and Costs entire, in which Case if there be a discontinuance upon the Roll, it seems that all shall be reversed, notwithstanding the verdict, for the verdict is not the only cause of the Judgement, but the Confession also, and the Costs assessed entirely for both, but yet inquire of this. It was adjudged by the whole Court, that in those Cases, where Executor shall not pay Costs upon the statute of 4 Jacobi cap. 3. an Executor is Plaintiff, touching things concerning the Testament, and is nonsuited, or the verdict passes against him, that he shall not pay Costs upon the new Statute of 4 Jac. for the Statute ought to have a reasonable intendment, and it cannot be presumed to be any fault in the Executor, who complains, because he cannot have perfect notice of what his Testator did, and so it was resolved also by all the Judges of the Common Pleas. GOodier versus Jounce, Trin. 8 Jacobi. Jounce recovered in the common Pleas a hundred and thirty pounds against Goodier, in Crastino Animar. 6 Jacobi, and the eight and twentieth of November the same Term, being the last Day of the Term, the Plaintiff proved an Elegit against Goodier, to the Sheriffs of London, where the Action was laid, and to the County Palatine of Lancaster, returnable, Crastino Purificationis, after; which was granted by the Court, and by the Elegit, to the County Palatine, it appeared, that it was grounded upon a Testat. returned by the Sheriffs of London, that Goodier had nothing in London, where in truth they never made such a Return, and upon that Elegit by a Jury impanelled before the Sheriff of Lancaster; a Lease of Tithes was extended for fifty nine years then to come, at the value of a hundred pounds, which the Sheriff delivered to J. the Plaintiff, as a Chattel of Goodiers, for a hundred pounds, and returned it, and that Goodier had no more Goods, etc. and thereupon Goodier brought a Writ of Error in the upper Bench, and assigned for Error, that no Return was made by the Shetiffs of London, nor filled in the common Pleas, as was supposed in the Elegit, and it was adjudged Error, for although the Plaintiff might have an Elegit, as he desired in the common Pleas, immediately both into London and Lancashire, but seeing he waived the benefit thereof, and grounded his Execution upon a Testatum, which was false, it was Error in the Execution, for as it appears, 18 H. 6. 27. and 2 H. 6. 9 that a Testatum is grounded upon a former Return filled, that the party had nothing in the County where the Action was brought, and because it appeared upon Record, that the prayer of the Elegits was made the eight and twentieth of November, the last day of the Term, and by the Testatum it is supposed that the Sheriffs of London had returned quindena Martini which is before the eight and twentieth of November, that the Defendant had nothing in London, which seemed to be contrary to the Record, yet that is not material, but makes the matter more vicious, for it may well be, that since the Judgement was Crastino animarum, a Testatum might not issue out returnable Quindena Martini, and it shall be the Plaintiffs fault that he did not file it, and it shall be presumed to be such a Writ, as the Plaintiffs own Process doth recite, and note that the whole Court did adjudge in this Case, that Goodier should be restored to the Term again, and although it was valued by the Jury, but at a hundred pounds, and delivered to Jounce the Plaintiff to hold as his own Goods and Chattels, yet Goodier shall have it again from Jounce, for he being the party himself, it is in Law but a bare delivery in specie, and therefore aught to be restored in specie again, and doth not absolutely alter the property, but attends upon the Execution to be good or naught, as the Execution is, and so it was adjudged before, in Robothams' Case, and also in Worrells Case, as Mr. Noy said to Yeluerton, but it had been otherwise, if the suit had been to an estranger, by the Sheriff of the Term, for a hundred pounds according to the opinion of 28 Eliz. Dy. for it is the party's folly, that he doth not pay the Judgement, and if such sales should be made void none would buy Goods of the Sheriff, by reason whereof, many Ex-, ecutions would remain undone, and this by the opinion of the whole Court. SMith versus Newsam and his Wife, Mich. 6 Jacobi. The Plaintiff, as Son and Heir of Geo. S. his father, brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant for twenty Marks, and declares that his father, April the twenty seventh, 25 Eliz. leased to the Defendant one house, etc. in B. in the County of Bedford, from Michaelmas next following, for one and twenty years, yielding and paying during the Term, if the Father should so long live, thirty pounds at our Lady day, and Michaelmas, by equal portions, and yielding and paying to the Heirs and Assigns of the Father after his death twenty Marks, at the Terms aforesaid, by virtue whereof the Defendant entered, and occupied from Michaelmas 35 Eliz. etc. the Father died the fourth of May 7 Jur. at B. and because twenty Marks for a half years Rent were behind, the Action was brought, the Defendant demurred to the Declaration, and adjudged against the Plaintiff, How a reservation for Rent shall be construed. for the clause by which the Court is reserved to the Heirs, gives but twenty Marks for the whole year, and not twenty Marks every a year, and therefore the Plaintiff had mistaken his demand in suing for twenty Marks, for one half year, (for these words ad Terminos praedictos) are only the time of payment of the twenty Marks which were to be paid as the thirty pounds were, and although in the clause that reserved the Rent to the Heirs, the words (by equal portions) were omitted, yet the Law will supply them, as it is in the 13 H. 9 Avowry 2. 40. Rend granted to be taken at two Terms of the year, and they named it shall be intended by equal portions, although the Deed makes mention of that, for the reservation being the Act of the Lessor, shall be taken most strongly against him and his Heirs, and therefore shall have but twenty Marks for all the whole year, and no more, as in Perkins 22, two tenements in common make a Lease, rendering ten shillings, it shall be five shillings to each of them March 171. according to it the second cause of the Judgement was because the Plaintiff brought this Action as Heir to his Father, and doth not show in his Declaration, that the Reversion descends to him, and the Rent demanded, is incident to the Reversion descended, and so the Plaintiff doth not make any Title to have the Rent, which mark, and Judgement was given, that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Bill. NEale versus Sheffeild Trin. 8. Jacobi rotulo. 782. The Plaintiff One must not plead in discharge of the Obligation, but of the Condition contained in the Obligation. brought an Action of Debt upon an obligation for fourteen pounds, the condition was that if the Defendant should pay seven pounds to the Plaintiff upon the birthday of the Child of John living which God shall send after the Date of the Bond then, etc. The Defendant pleads, that the Plaintiff after the making of the Obligation and before the birth of any Infant of the said J. living to wit the 1. September 7. Jacobi was indebted to the Defendant in one load of Lime to be delivered upon request, and the same day it was agreed between them at L. that if the Defendant would discharge the Plaintiff of the said load of Lime, that then in consideration thereof, the Plaintiff would discharge the Defendant of the said Obligation, and would accept the said load of Lime, which the Plaintiff accepted in discharge of the Obligation, and did then acquit the Defendant of the said Obligation, and demands Judgement, to which Plea, the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the Plaintiff for two causes, first because the Defendant had pleaded his Bar in discharge of the Obligation, whereas he should have pleaded it in discharge of the same contained in the Condition of the Obligation, for it is not a Debt simply by the Obligation, but the performance or breach of the Condition makes it to be a Debt, for the Obligation is proved by the Condition, so that if the Condition be not discharged the Obligation remains in his force and the matter in the Bar is not pleaded in discharge of the Condition, but of the Obligation, and therefore it is A contingent Debt cannot be discharged. not good, which mark. Secondly, it appears that the Condition itself cannot be discharged; for the seven pounds is not due nor payable until the Birth of the Child of John living, which is a mere Contingency, and remote possibility, whether he shall ever have a Child or no; and therefore it resting in Contingency, whether it will ever be a Debt or no, it cannot be discharged; for a possibility cannot be released, as it hath been adjudged in Carters Case, and it is not to be resembled to the Case where the Condition is to pay Money at a Day to come, for that may be discharged presently, for it is presently a Duty, although it be not demandable until the Day; and therefore because it cannot be known whether the Day will ever come wherein John will have a Child; and because it is no Debt nor Duty, therefore it cannot be discharged, by the opinion of the whole Court. DOdson versus Keys, Mich. 8. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an False Latin shall not overthrow an Obligation. Action of Debt upon an Obligation for ten pounds, and declares that the Defendant 23. Octob. 1608. at M. became bound to the Plaintiff in ten pounds to be paid upon request; the Defendant demands Oyer of the Obligation, which was entered in haec verba, Noverint universi per praesentes me Thomam Keys tenerie & firmiter obligarie Edw. Dodson, etc. Anno Regni Reginae Dom. nostri Jacobi, etc. Rege Defensor suis de Scotia sexto & Angliae quadragesimo secundo, 1608. And upon this the Defendant demurred, and adjudged for the Plaintiff; for there are two principal things to be contained in one Obligation; first, the parties to whom: secondly, the sum in which one party is bound, and they are both here expressed sufficiently to the view of the Judges, for both the Obligor, and Obligee, are well named, and also the sum is well expressed to be ten pounds, but those words, by which it may be gathered, that the party intends to bind himself, are found in false Latin, Videlicet, (tenerie & obligarie) in which words there is only an e. too much; and it is true, false Latin, as it is, 10 H. 7. shall abate a Writ, because the party may purchase a new Writ, but it shall not overthrow an Obligation; for the party cannot be again bound when he will: and although there is no such year of the Reign of the King, as of Scotland, the sixth, etc. it is not material, for it is good, though it have a false Date, as 13 H. 7. Kelly, and the party may surmise a Date in his Declaration, and it is good, and the Defendant must answer to the Bond, and not to the Date, and the Law is the same, if it have an impossible Date, as the 30. of February, whereas there is but eight and twenty Days in February, yet it is good: but in the principal Case it is helped by the Year of our Lord which is certain, and sufficient, and the Declaration good, which had omitted the year of the King, and put in the year of our Lord, and Judgement was given by the opinion of the whole Court. HAwes versus Leader, Hill. 8 Jacobi. Haws brought an Action A Deed of gift good against him that makes it, notwithstanding 13 Eliz. and against his Executors, and Administrators. of Debt against Leader Administrator of Cookson, the Case was Thomas Cookson, the nineteenth of February, 20 Jacobi, for twenty pounds paid into the Defendants hands by the Plaintiff, grants all his Goods mentioned in a Schedule annexed to the Deed, and gives possession of the goods by a Platter, and the goods remained in his house, as they were before, to be carried away upon demand by the Plaintif, and covenants that the intestate, his Administrators, etc. should safely keep them, and quietly deliver them, and to perform that covenant, the intestate binds himself in forty pounds to the Plaintiff, and afterwards Cookson died, and the Plaintiff, the sixteenth of March, the sixth of King james, demanded the goods of the Defendant, being Administrator, and he would not deliver them, by reason whereof the Plaintiff brought his Action, and in his Declaration shows, in specie, what goods were contained in the Schedule, the Defendant pleads the Statute of the 13 Eliz. of fraudulent Deeds and gifts, etc. and further says that Cookson the intestate, the twelfth of February, 2 Jacobi, was indebted unto divers persons, and names them in several sums, amounting to a hundred pounds, and being so indebted the nineteenth of February, 2 Jacobi, made the Deed of gift, as is above declared, being then of those and other goods possessed amounting to fourscore pounds and no more, and that it was made by fraud, and covin, between Cookson and the Plaintiff, to the intent to deceive his Creditors named, and shows how that Cookson, notwithstanding the Deed of gift, occupied, and used the Goods all his life, and died, and that Administration was committed to the Defendant, the Plaintiff replies, that the Defendant had assets in his hands, to satisfy the Debts demanded, and further says that the Deed of gift was made upon good considerations, upon which they were at issue and at trial at Huntingdon Assizes, Cook rejected the Trial, because the Issue was not well joined, and a Replender ordered, upon which the Defendant pleaded as is above, and the Plaintiff demurred, and adjudged for the Plaintiff, first because the Defendant had not averred in his Bar, that the Debts due, yet certain, unpaid to the Creditors named, for there was four years' time between the Deed of gift made, and the death of the intestate, in which time the Debts might well be presumed to be satisfied. Secondly, the Defendant did not show that the Debts due to the supposed Creditors were by specialty, and then the matter of his Plea is not good, for the Defendant cannot plead such a Plea, but to excuse himself of a Devastavit, and that could not be as this Case is, for he being Administrator is not chargeable with the Debts, if they be not upon Specialty. Thirdly, the Defendant supposed that it would be a Devastavit in him, if he should deliver the Goods to the Plaintiff which were contained in the Deed of Gift, but that cannot be, for those Goods in the hands of the Plaintiff are liable to the Creditors, as an Executor of his 〈◊〉 wrong, if the Deed of Gift be fraudulent. And fourthly, it may be the Creditors will never sue for their Debts, and by that means the Defendant will justify the Detainer of the Goods for ever, which would be very inconvenient. But if the Defendant had pleaded a Recovery by any of the Creditors; and that such Goods to the value, etc. had been taken in Execution this had been a good Plea. Fifthly, the Defendant is not such a person as is enabled by the Statute of 13 Eliz. to plead the Plea aforesaid, for the Statute makes the Deed void, as against the Creditors, but not against the party himself, his Executors, or Administrators, for against them it remains a good Deed of Gift, and this by the opinion of the whole Court. SAllows versus Girling, Pasch. 9 Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon a Bond, and the Condition to stand to the Action brought upon an Obligation to stand to the Award of four, or two of them, Award made by two good. Award of A. B. C. & D. of all Actions, Quarrels and Demands, etc. so that the said Arbitrement were made in writing, before such a Day by the said A. B. C. & D. or by any two of them under their hands, etc. The Defendant pleads that the said A. B. C. & D. nor any two of them made no Award: the Plaintiff replies, that A. and B. two of the Arbitrators, before the Day, by writing under their hands, etc. made an Award, and set forth the Award, and assigned a Breach in the Defendant for not paying of three pounds at a Day passed limited by the Award, to which the Defendant demurs, and it was adjudged the Plaintiff; and the Question was, whether the Award made by A. and B. alone were good or no, because the Submission was to four named, and in the Premises of the Condition the Defendant is bound to stand to the Award of four also, yet it was adjudged by the Court upon consideration had upon every part of the Condition that the Award made-by two alone is good; for the Arbitrators are made Judges by the assent and election of the Parties, and it appears that the parties put their trust not in the four jointly, but jointly and severally, and the Ita quod, etc. is an explanation of all the Condition that they four or any two of them might arbitrate all matters between them, and so much appears, 2 R. 3. 18. where two of one part, and one of another part put themselves to the Award of I. S. now by this Submission I. S. may arbitrate as well any matters between the two parties of one part, as between them, and the third because in the intent of the parties the end of their Submission was to have peace and quietness: and 4 H. 4. 40. the Condition of a Recognisance was, that if A. A. shall stand and abide the Award of four, named three, or two of them, of all matters, etc. which is a division of their power; and observe in the principal Case, that until the Ita quod, comes the Condition is not perfect, for all the Condi●… is but one Sentence. BRisco versus King, Trin. 9 Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action Debt. of Debt upon a Bond for three hundred pounds, with a Condition, that the Defendant should perform all Covenants, Clauses, Payments, and Agreements, contained in one Deed poll of the same Date, made by the Defendant to the Plaintiff, the Defendant by way of Plea sets forth the Deed poll, in haec verba, in which Deed was contained one Grant and Bargain, and sale of certain Lands made by the Plaintiff to the Defendant for one hundred pounds paid, and two hundred pounds to be paid, in which Deed there was one Proviso, that if the Defendant should not pay for the Plaintiff to one J. S. forty pounds, to J. D. forty pounds, etc. at such a Day, that then the Bargain and Sale should be void: and the Defendant pleads that he had performed all the Covenants, etc. comprised in the Deed: the Plaintiff assigned a Breach for the not paying of forty pounds at the Day, according to the Proviso; and the Defendant demurs, and adjudged for the Defendant by the whole Court; for the Condition binds the Defendant to perform other Payments than such as the Defendant is bound by the Deed to perform, for the Obligation was made but for the strengthening of the Deed, and the Deed requires not any compulsory Payments to be made, but leaves it to the will of the Defendant, or to make the payments specified in the Proviso, or in Default thereof to forfeit the Land to the Plaintiff, and therefore it appears that it was not the intent and meaning of the parties to make an Obligation with a Condition repugnant to it, and contrary to the Deed poll of Bargain of Sale, and by this means the Payment of forty pounds to J. S. which is made voluntary by the Deed poll, shall be made compulsory by the Obligation: but the word (Payments) in the Condition of the Obligation shall have relation only to such payments contained in the Deed poll which are compulsory to the Defendant, and not otherwise; and because the neglect of the payment of forty pounds to J. S. assigned for the Breach is denied to be voluntary for the Defendant to pay or not, to which the Condition of the Obligation cannot in any reasonable construction extend, therefore it was adjudged against the Plaintiff. WOolby versus Perlby, Mich. 9 Jacobi. An Action of Debt brought upon a Lease for years, the Plaintiff derives his Title Judgement arrested for Nile showing in what Court the Deed was enrolled. by the grant of the Reversion, by way of bargain and Sale in Fee from the first Lessor, and declares that by an Indenture of such a Date, one grants bargains, and sells for money the Reversion to him in Fee, which Indenture was enrolled such a day, according to the form of the Statute, and because he showed not in his Declaration in what Court it was enrolled, and the Statute of 27 H. 8. Parles, of many several Courts, and that it is no reason to put the Lessee to such an infinite labour to search in all Courts, as well at Westminster, as in the Country with the Clerk of the Peace, and for this cause after a verdict, a nil capiat per Billam entered by the whole Court. SIR George Savill, versus Candish Hill. 9 Jac. The old Countess of Shrewsbury, had a Verdict against Savel, and upon a challenge Judgement reversed for want of these words, in a Tales at Assizes, nomina Jurat. etc. of the Sheriff on the Plaintiffs part of the County of Derby, the Tenure was directed to the Coroners, who returned all the Writs, and at the Assizes, a Tales was awarded, and the name of one of them of the Tales was Gregory Grigson, etc. and by postea returned by the Clerks of the Assize in the Common Pleas, the Tales was returned to be by the Sheriff, but in the entering up the Judgement it was made by the Coroners, and the name of the man of the Tales, by the Clerk of the Assize, was restored according to his right name Gregory, but entered in the Roll, by the name of George, and upon that Judgement Savill brought a Writ of Error, which depended ten years and more, and the first Plaintiff, who was the Countess of Shrewsbury died, this matter being indiscussed, and Candish as Executor to the Countess, revived all by Scire facias why he should not have Execution, and after many debates, the Judgement was reversed for three causes: first because upon the Pannell of the Jurors names, after the twenty four Jurors were named, at the foot of the Pannell, two names were added to the Jurors, which in truth were the men of the Tales, but no mention was made that they were the names of the Jurors, impanelled, de novo, according to the form of the Statute, which ought to be, for at the Common Law the Justices of assize cannot grant any Tales, to supply the default of the first Jurors, but it is given only by the Statute of the 35. H. 8. which ordains that their names shall be added to the first Pannell, and this cannot be discerned to be done accordingly, if such a stile and Title be not made over their names viz. nomina Jurator. de noto apposite. secundum formam Statuti, to distinguish what is done by the Common-Law, and what by the aid of the Statute, and also the Coroners names ought to be added to the Tales, at the bottom of the Pannell, and in this Case, their names were only endorsed, which was upon the Return of the first Pannell, and although divers Precedents were shown to the Court, wherein the names of the Jurors de novo appoposit. etc. were united upon the Pannell, yet the Court did not regard them, because it seemed that they passed in silence without debate had upon them, the second cause was because it appeared by the Return of the postea, that the Tales were returned by the Sheriff, which is error in the first Process to the Coroners, and although in the Entry in the Common Pleas of the Judgement, it is made to be by the Coroners, yet it is not helped in this Case, for the warrant of the Roll is the Clerk of the Assizes Certificate, and thus is that, the Tales was returned by the Sheriff, and the Court cannot intend it to be otherwise then is certified, and thirdly the name of the Juror in the Tales, which is, Gregory is made in the Entry of the Judgement to be George, and although the will shall be amended in this point according to the Certificate of the postea, then in the other point of the Return of the Tales by the Sheriff, it is not amendable, and so it is error every way, and the Judgement was reversed by the whole Court. Bridge's, versus Enion Hillar. 9 Jac. The Plaintiff declares, how By a Release of all demands money to be paid at a day to come, may be released before the day. that he and the Defendant, February tenth Anno 7. submitted themselves to the Award of S. R. Bodenham, who awarded they should be friends, and that the Defendant should pay the Plaintiff ten pounds at Miasummer following, at such a place, and the ten pounds being unpaid, the Plaintiff brought his Action, the Defendant pleads in Barr a release made by the Plaintiff to him, of all demands which was made, the tenth of April, before Midsummer, when the Debt was to be paid, and the release was of all demands, from the beginning of the world, until the tenth of April, and shows the Release to the Court, to which the Plaintiff demurs and adjudged against the Plaintiff, for although the sum of Money awarded is not grounded upon any precedent Debt or contract between the parties, yet by the opinion of the Court it lies in demand presently, and the Plaintiff might assign it by his will, and the Executor should have it, and by the spiritual Law, Administration may be granted of it, before the day of payment, if the Plaintif die before, yet it is not recoverable before Midsummer, nor will any Action lie for it, but it is a duty presently by the Award, and as the award is perfect presently as soon as it is pronounced, so are all the things contained in the Award, if they be not made payable upon a condition precedent on the part of one of the Parties, as if an award be made, that if the Plaintif shall give to the Defendant at Midsummer one load of Hay, that then upon the Delivery of the Hay, the Defendant should pay the plaintiff ten pounds, in this case the ten pounds cannot be released before the Day, for it rests merely in a possibility and contingency, for it becomes a Duty upon the Delivery of the Hay only, and not before; and therefore it is like the Case, 5 E. 4. 42. of a Nomine pene waiting upon the Rent, which cannot be released until the Rent be behind, for the not paying the Rent makes the Nomine pene a Duty; and the Case in question is like the Case, Littleton 117. where a man is bound to pay Money at a Day to come, for a Release of Actions before the Day cuts off the Duty, because by 7 H. 7. 6. it is a Duty presently, and the Case is stronger here, because the Release is of all Demands; which observe. MOrgan versus Sock, Pasch. 10. Jacobi. Sock brought an Action If the Defendant confess he hath Assets, the Sheriff may return a Devastavit. of Debt upon an Obligation of fourteen pounds entered into by Ar. Morgan, Anno 1. Jac. against Tho. Morgan his Administrator; the Defendant pleads that after the Death of Arth. and after Administration was to him committed, to wit, the 16, of September, Ann. 6. the Plaintiff brought his Original against him, of which he had no notice nntill the 24. of February Ann. 6. before which Day the Defendant was upon the Exig. for not appearing, which Exig. was returnable Tres Pasch. after, and that the 17. of Febr. which was before the notice, his Letters of Administration were revoked by the Archbishop, and granted to Rich. M. the Brother of Arth. which Rich. is now Administrator, and that he at the time of revoking the Administration had divers Goods of the Intestates in his hands, and shows them what they were, to the value of two hundred pounds, and that he after the Administration revoked, and before notice of the Suit, had delivered them over to Rich. to wit, the 22. of February, 6. Jacobi, and that he at the time of the Administration revoked, had fully administered all the Goods of the Intestates, besides the Goods delivered to Rich. etc. The Plaintiff replied, that the Administration was revoked by Covin between the Defendant and Rich. and upon that they are at Issue, and the Jury found it to be Covin, by reason whereof the Plaintiff had a Judgement to recover the Debt and Damages of the Goods and Chattels of the said Arth. at the time of his Death, being in his hands, to be levied, and upon that Judgement he brought a Writ of Error, and assigned for Error, that the Judgement ought to be conditional, to wit, to recover the Debt of the Goods of the Intestate, if so much remain in his hands, and not absolutely. But the Judgement was affirmed by the whole Court; for where the Judgement may be final and certain, there it shall never be conditional. And because it appears by the Defendants Plea, that he had two hundred pounds in his hands of the Intestates Goods, it would be in vain to give Judgement against him, if he had so much in his hands, seeing he himself hath confessed by his Plea, that 〈◊〉 more in his hands then would satisfy that Debt; and if 〈…〉 could not levy the Debt in the Defendants hands, he may upon the Defendants 〈…〉 Damage return a Devastavit, and this by the opinion of the whole Court, and then there was showed to the Court a Precedent in the Common Pleas to that purpose. DOnghty versus Fawn, Mich. 11. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares upon an Obligation of an hundred and twenty pounds, dated 2. Novemb. 43. Eliz. And the Condition was, that one Edw. Astle by his last Will in writing of such a Date, had disposed the Wardship of the Defendant, whereof the Defendant was possessed, etc. if therefore the Defendant do save and keep harmless the Plaintiff, etc. from all Charges, and Troubles, etc. which may happen to the Plaintiff, etc. for or by reason of the last Will of the said Ed. A. or from any thing mentioned in that, touching or concerning one M. Fawn, or any Legacy or Bequest to her given or bequeathed, or otherwise from Ed. A. to her due, than the Obligation, etc. The Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff was not damnified. The Plaintiff replies, that after the Obligation made, one M. Smith in the behalf of Jo. and Ed. A. Sons of the said Ed. A. named in the Condition, did exhibit a Bill against the Plaintiff, as Administrator of A. in the Chancery, for the payment of the Portions of the said Sons, to which Bill the Plaintiff by way of Answer pleaded fully administered, and for the making good thereof, sets forth divers payments by him made, and amongst other payments shows that he had paid to M. Fawn, named in the Condition, sixty pounds for a Legacy due by the Will of the said Ed. A. the payment of which sixty pounds was disallowed by that Court, and by the Order of the Chancery, sixty five pounds paid, for not allowing the first sixty pounds to Ed. A. the Son, which sixty and five pounds the Defendant had not repaid, though thereunto requested, and so he was damnified; to which Replication the Defendant demurs; and the opinion of the whole Court after a great Debate, was against the Plaintiff, for the Plaintiff in his Replication had alleged two Causes to enforce his Damage; the first was, that the Plaintiff in his Answer in the Chancery had alleged the payment of sixty pounds to M. F. for a Legacy due to her by the Will, and that such Allegation was rejected by the Court, of Chancery, and neither of those matters are certainly alleged, but by way of Implication, and not expressly; for he ought to have shown that a Legacy of sixty pounds was given to M. F. by the Will of E. A. for although the Will of E. A. is recited in the Condition in the Date, against which Recital the Defendant may not be admitted to say, that he made no such Will, yet the Legacy given to M. F. is not recited in the Condition, if not in the General, against which the Defendant may take a Traverse, that Eáw. A. did not bequeath such a Legacy of sixty pounds, and upon that a good Issue may be taken. And secondly, the Plaintiff says, that the payment of the said sixty pounds was disallowed by the Court of Chancery, and doth not appear in the Replication where the Chancery was at that time, to wit, whether at Westminster, or at any other place, and it is issuable and triable by a Jury, whether any such Order of Chancery were made or not, for the Orders there are but in Paper, and are not upon Record to be tried by Record, but by a Jury: and the Plaintiff perceiving the opinion of the Court against him, prayed that he might discontinue his Suit, which was granted by the whole Court; but Quaere of this, it being after a Demurrer. WEaver versus Clifford, Pasch. 44. Eliz. rotulo 453. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon an Escape against Clifford, Action of Debt brought against the Sheriff upon an Escape, for one taken upon a Capias upon a Recognisance, and adjudged that it would not lie. and declares that one A. was bound to the Plaintiff in one Recognisance of a hundred pounds to be paid at a Day, at which Day A. made Default of Payment, and the Plaintiff sued out two Scire fac. and upon the second Scire fac. a Nihil was returned, and the Plaintiff had Judgement to recover; and afterwards he sued out a Levari fac. and a Nihil being returned, the Plaintiff prosecuted a Capias ad satisfaciend. by virtue of which Writ the Defendant being then Sheriff took the said A. and afterwards at D. in the County of S. permitted him to go at large; to which the Declaration the Defendant demurred. Damport for the Defendant, and he showed the cause of the Demurrer to be because a Capias upon the Recognisance did not lie; and he divided the Case into two parts, first whether a Capias would lie in the Case; and secondly, whether the Sheriff would take the Advantage of such a naughty Process; and as to the first it seemed to him that a Capias would not lie, because it appeared by Herbert's 5. Repub. fol. 12. And Garnons Case 5. Rep. fol. 88 that the Body of the Defendant was not liable to Execution for Debt, by the Common Law, but only in Trespass, where a Fine was due to the King, or that he was accountant to the King: and the Plaintiff could have no other Process but a Fieri facias within the year, and if the year were passed, than he might have a new Original in Debt. But now by the Statute of Marlbrig, cap. 23. And Westm. 2. cap. 11. a Capias is given in Account, and by the 25 E. 3. c. 17. Capias is given in Debt and Detinue, and by the 19 H. 7. c. 9 the like Process is given in Case, as in Debt and Trespass, and the 23 H. 8. c. 14. a Capias is given in a Writ of Annuity and Covenant, but Statute gives a Capias in this Case, and therefore it remains as it was at Common, and by that it would not lie, which is also apparent by the Recognisance, for that is, that if the Debt shall be levied of the Goods and Chattels, Lands and Tenements, etc. and doth not meddle with the Body, and by an express Authority, 13 & 14 Eliz. Dier, 306. Puttenhams Case it is held that the Chancery hath no Authority to commit the Defendant to the Fleet, upon a Recovery in a Scire facias, upon a Recognisance, because the Body is not liable. And for the second point, it seemed to him, that the Sheriff should take Advantage of this, which should be as void and as null, whereof a stranger may take benefit, and to prove this he took this Difference, when a Process will not lie, and where it is disorderly awarded, as if an Exigent be sued out before a Capias, or an Execution before Judgement; for if that Process be originally supposed, there the Process is but erroneous, in Druries' Case, 8. Rep. 142. 34 H. 6. 2. b. But if the Action itself will not maintain the Process as a Capias in Formedon, there that Process is as void and null: and he took another Diversity, when the Capias is taken by the Award of the Court, when Judgement is given that he shall recover; for in that Case it shall remain good, until it be reversed, because it is the Act of the Court; and so is Druries' Case to be intended: but if the party himself take it, it is at his own peril, as here it is; for the Plaintiff hath only pleaded, that he prosecuted, etc. which is as void to the party who sued it out, and he shall have no benefit of it; but the Sheriff shall not be punished for false Imprisonment, because he is not to examine the illegality or validity of the Process; for the 11 H. 4. 36. If a Capias issue out without any Original: and the party be taken, the Sheriff shall not be punished; and for these Reasons he prayed Judgement for the Defendant: Noy was for the Plaintiff, and he agreed, that at the Common Law no Action did lie in this Case, as it hath been said; but he was of opinion, that this Case is within 25 E. 3. cap. 17. for the intention and drift of the Statute was to give speedy remedy to recover Debts, and the Action is all one in the eye of the Law, as if it had been done by Original, which in the equity of the Statute. And a Capias lies upon a Recognisance against a Surety for the Peace, and upon a Scire facias against the Bail in the Upper Bench. As to Puttenhams Case, the Reason, because he was not in Execution before. And for the second Objection, although the Capias did not lie, yet it is but Error; for if the Court had Jurisdiction to hold plea of the Cause, although the Process be naughtily awarded, it is but Error, of which the Sheriff shall not take benefit; and therefore if a Woman have recovered in Dower, and hath Damages in the Common Pleas, and thereupon the party takes a Capias for the Damages, and the party be taken, and suffered to go at large, it is an Escape, 10 Hen. 7. 23. and if a Capias be awarded in the Common Pleas, after the Record removed, it is but Error, and so ruled, 13 E. 3. Title Barr, 253. But if the Court hath no Jurisdiction in the cause, as a Formedon brought in the upper Bench, as it is 1 R. 3. 4. or an Appeal in the Common Pleas, or where a Writ is awarded out of the Chancery, returnable in Chester, these are void, and coram non Judice, and there ought not to be any arrest upon such a Writ, and he cited a Case, Trin. 31. and 37. Eliz. in the Exchequer, Woodhouse and Ognells Case, ruled accordingy, and as concerning the difference taken, there is no other form of pleading, but only, quod prosecutus fuit quoddam, etc. without saying, that it was by the award of the Court, and the Court at that time did strongly incline, that it was but Error at the most, but Mich. 11 Ja. It was adjudged by the whole Court, that the Capias could not lie, and that it was only Error, of which the Sheriff shall not take the benefit. Kketleys' Case, Pasch. 11 Jac. An Action of Debt brought for arrearages of Rent, brought against R. upon a Lease for years, the Debt brought upon a Lease made to an Infant. Defend. pleads in Bar, that the time of the Lease made, he was within age, to which the Plaintiff demurs, and upon the first reading of the Record, the question was whether a Lease made to an Infant be void, and it was said it should be void, otherwise, it might be very prejudicial to Infants, whom the Law intends not to be of sufficient discretion, for the managing of Land, and also the Rent may be greater than the value of the Land, to the great impoverishing of the Infant, and took this difference, where it is for the apparent benefit of the Infant, a sa Lease made by an Infant rendering Rend, and the like, and when it is but an implied benefit, as here, for the Law intends that every Lease is made for the benefit of the Lessee, although prima fancy, it seems to be but tail and trouble, but the Court held it only voidable, as Election, for if it be to the Infant's benefit, be that benefit apparent or implied, it shall be void in no Case, prima fancy, as 21 H. 6. 31. b. but the Infant may at his Election make it void, for he shall before the Rend day come, refuse, and waive the Land, an Action of Debt will not lie against him, for otherwise, such a Lease shall be more strong than any Fine or Record, and great mischief would ensue, and as to the prejudice, it well be answered, for if more Rent be reserved, than the value of the Land, he ought to have set it forth, that it might have appeared to the Court, which is not done, for then clearly he should not have been bound, for there had been no profit to the Infant, as russel's Case is, 5 Rep. 27. for if an Infant release, it is not good, except he hath received the money, and it also appears by 21 H. 6. that if he did not enter and manure the Land, that an Action of Debt would not lie against him, but the principal Case was without colour, for the Rent, and taking the profits were Land, as one day of the Reservation, and secondly it was not showed, that the Rent was of greater value, and thirdly, the Defendant was of full age, before the Rend day came. HIggins Case, Pasch. 11 Jac. Action of Debt brought by Higgins One may take his Execution either against the principal or Bail at Election. against Yeluerton, was of an opinion at the Bar, that if one be arrested, upon a Process in that Court, and he puts in Bail, and afterwards the Plaintiff recovers, that he might, at his Election take out his Execution either against the principal, or Bail, but if he took the Bail, or arrested him, or had him in Execution for the Debt, although he had not full satisfaction, he could not meddle with the Plaintiff, but if two be Bail, although one be in Execution yet he may take the other also, and Coderidge, Justice, was of the same opinion, and Man the secondary, said it was the daily practice there, and so if the principal be in Execution, he cannot take the Bail. HAukinson versus sandiland's, 11 Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought An Action of Debt brought upon a Bond, which was, Obligamus nos, vel quemlibet nostrum, adjudged to be joint and several at the Plaintiffs Election. an Action of Debt upon an Obligation for forty pounds against the Defendant, who demanded Oyer of the Condition, and afterwards pleads that the Obligation was made and delivered by him, and one M. who is still living at D, and demands Judgement of the Writ, to which the Plaintiff demnrres the words of the Obligation, were Noverint universi, etc. adquam solucionem bene & fideliter faciend. Obligamus nos vel quemlibet nostrum. And whether this was, should be accounted a Writ, Obligation, or Several, at the Election of the Plaintiff, was the question, and Ger. Cook was of opinion, that it should be brought against both, and his only reason was, that at most the Plaintiff had but an Election, for the word (vel) could not be taken for (et) as it is 11 H. 7. 13. a Grant made to J. S. at J. D. is void, and 20 H. 6. grant to two, to them, or to the Heirs of one of them, is not good, and then if he had only an Election, he hath made that already, for the Defendant hath pleaded and averred, that is, was made by two, jointly by the appearance, whereof he hath agreed to take it accordingly, but Yeluerton argued in this manner, that although the words in an Obligation be not proper and apt, yet if they be substantial, it is enough, and therefore 28 H. 8. 19 utrumque nostrum is adjudged good, and the 21 R. 2. 939. ad quam quidem solucionem obligamus nos, & singulos nostrum, is adjudged several and joint and for a direct authority he cited 7 H. 4. 66. where an Obligation was, nos, vel alterum nostrum, and the Plaintiff brought several Precipes, and adjudged good, that he might make it several or joint, and all the Judges were clearly of an opinion, that the Action was well brought, for as it hath been said, the Plaintiff had his Election, and that Election would be said to be executed by the joint Delivery, for there was no cause to make Election until the Bond was perfected, and therefore though one delivers it at one time, and the other at another, yet the Plaintiff may have a caput Praecipe, if he will, for the Election is in bringing the Action, and the words, (vel) and (&) are but Synonimaes, and Champions Case, Plowden 286. (&) is taken for (vel) and the 21 E. 3. 29. in Mallories Case, (u) is taken for (and) therefore they gave Judgement that the Defendant should answer over. FReeman versus Shield, Trin. 11 Jacobi, and adjudged Pasch. 12 Action of Debt upon an Obligation to perform an award, and the breach assigned for exhibiting a chancery Bill, and adjudged no Breach. Jacobi. Freeman brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation against Shield, and proved Oyer of the Condition, which was that, if the Defendant should stand to the Award, and Arbitrement of J. S. that then, etc. the Defendant pleads that the Arbitrators, awarded, that whereas there was no suit in the Chancery, depending against the Plaintiff for divers matters, that the Plaintiff should be acquitted of that suit, and of all the matters contained in the same Bill, and the Defendant further alleges, that he did not make any prosecution of the said Bill, but that the Plaintiff stands acquitted thereof, the Plaintiff replies that the Defendant after the said Award such a year and day, did exhibit a new Bill which did contain the same matter which the first Bill had, and set forth at large, both the Bills, by which it appeared to the Court that it was so, to which Plea the Defendant Demurs, and the cause of the Demurrer only was, because the Plaintiff had pleaded, that the Defendant had exhibited a new Bill, but had not alleged any Process taken forth upon the same Bill, and if this be a breach of the award is the question, Govin was for the Plaintiff, and he was of opinion, that it was a breach for the words were quod staret acquietatus, and to be acquitted is not only to be intended of an actual disturbance or molestation, but if the party be put in fright, or is liable to any Process, it is a breach, 8 Ed. 4. 27. a Condition to save one harmless, if a Capias be awarded against him, although it be not executed, yet it is a forfeiture of the Bond, nay, though it was never delivered to the Sheriff, for otherwise the Plaintiff should be in continual care & trouble, for fear lest the Defendant should do it, and so the Defendant may dally with him a long time, which shall be mischievous, & therefore it may be resembled to 9 H. 7. where if a man sell a thing with warranty to pay for it at a day to come, if the thing sold be corrupt, the party may have his Action of deceit, before the day of payment, because it is in the others power to bring his Action, and so it is in the Defendants power to serve the Plaintiff with Process when he pleases, and therefore it is a breach, Coventry for the Defendant; first because it is no such Process as can prejudice, for neither goods nor Body shall be taken, and therefore is not like the Cases before cited. And secondly, it is not such a process as our law respects or regards, for a Bill is but as a Petition: Haughton Justice was of the same opinion with the rest of the Judges, but adjourned until Hill. 11. Jac. and an Exception taken, because the Defendant had not answered the Declaration, for the Condition is that he should be acquitted, & the Defendant pleaded that he hath been acquitted; and Cook was of opinion that it was good, and Pasch. 12. Jac. Judgement was given for the Defendant by the whole Court. KIpping versus Swain, Trin. 11. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt for Tithes, the Defendants time ended before the Co●n carried, yet held good for the Plaintiff. Action of Debt against Swain, upon the Statute of 2 E. 6. for not setting forth of Tithes, and declares, whereas the Plaintiff being Proprietor of the Rectory of B. in the County of, etc. for the term of seven years, and that the Defendant was Occupier of Lands within the same Parish for six months by a Devise made the tenth of March, Anno decimo Jacobi. And that the Defendant 27. Aug. the year aforesaid did cut his Corn there growing; and that the tenth of September than next following the Defendant being (Subdit. dicti Domini Regis) carried away the said Corn, not setting out the Tenth according to the Statute; and upon a Nil debet pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff, and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, first, because of the Plaintiffs own showing he had no cause of Action against the Defendant, for the interest of the Defendant in the Land was determined, before the Tithes were carried away; but the Court were of opinion, that it was no Exception, for although his interest in the Land was gone, yet he remained Owner of the Corn; for if An Action will lie against a stranger, that shall carry away the Corn before the Severance. Corn is cut, although a stranger take them away before severance, yet an Action will lie against him upon this Statute, for otherwise the intent of the Statute may easily be defeated. Another Exception was taken, because the Plaintiff said, he was (Subdit. dicti Domini Regis) which is a Fault incurable; for the Statute refers Subdit. to his politic capacity, but Dicti goes to his natural and sole capacity; and so the force of the Statute shall be determined by his Death; and for this cause an Indictment upon the 8 H. 6. Contra pacem dicti Domini, had been several times reversed; and of this opinion were three Judges, but Haughton doubted of it, and so it was adjourned. Pennyworth versus Blawe, Trin. 11. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation, and prayed Oyer of the Condition, which was, that he should stand to the Arbitrement of J. S. of all Suits, Quarrels, Controversies, and Debates, from the beginning of the World until the making the Obligation, so that the Award be made in writing, under the hand and seal of N. S. and should be delivered to the parties before such a Day, etc. and observe that the Sealing and Delivery of the Obligation was at twelve a clock the first of May: the Defendant pleads in Bar, that the Arbitrators made an Award, and did deliver that to the parties abovesaid, but said further, that in the morning, and before twelve a clock the first of May aforesaid, one Debate and Controversy did arise between the parties, concerning a Trespass committed by the Plaintiff the same morning, of which the Defendant gave notice to the Arbitrator, before twelve a clock of the said first of May, concerning which Trespass the Arbitrator made no Award, and therefore pretends the Award to be void, and demands Judgement; to which the Plaintiff demurs; and Yeluerton being for the Plaintiff, that the Plea was not any Answer to the Plaintiff, and therefore Judgement ought to be given; for the Plaintiffs Action is grounded upon an Obligation, as single, and the thing which helps the Defendant is the Condition endorsed, to stand to the Award of S. the which is restrained, so that it be delivered under the hand and seal: and if the Defendant will plead the Condition against the Plaintiff, he must plead it to be performed and executed according to the Submission by the Arbitrator, for else the Bond remains as single: and so in this Case the Defendant pleads, that the Arbitrator made an Award, and that it was delivered by the Arbitrator; but whether it was delivered in writing or under his hand according to the Submission is not pleaded, and therefore it is no Answer to the Plaintiff, for he hath not pleaded an Award made according to the Condition, and therefore the Bond is single. Yea Cook argued for the Defendant, and said, that the Plaintiff by the Demurrer had confessed that the Arbitrator had made no Award, as the Defendant had pleaded, and then he shall never have Judgement: for if it may judicially appear to the Court, that the Plaintiff had no Cause of Action he shall never have Judgement; and that the Plaintiff ought to have averred, and joined with a Traverse of that the Defendant pleaded, to wit, that the Arbitrator had made an Award, and delivered it in writing under his hand and seal without that, etc. and as to the other matter of the Trespass the same Day, and so he might have demanded Judgement, for his Plea doth but amount to the general Issue, that the Arbitrators made no Award: but Yeluerton answered, that it could not be pleaded in any other manner than he had pleaded it, because he could not traverse it, because the Defendant himself had pleaded, that he made an Award: and although the Demurrer confess all matters in Deed, yet they are such only as are well pleaded, as Burtons' Case, 5. Rep. 69. And also although the Award pleaded cannot be intended the same Award specified in the Condition, yet the Plaintiff had good cause of Action; and all the Court, Fleming being absent, were of opinion, that the Plaintiff ought to recover for the Reasons before alleged, but as for that point whether the Controversy that grew in the morning should be arbitrated, because there cannot be a fraction of Days, it was not argued, nor any opinion of the Court delivered, only Cook cited 5 E. 4. 208. that the Arbitrator ought to arbitrate of that, because the Condition was of all matters, until the making the Obligation. WHeeler versus Hayden, Trin. 11. Jacobi. W. Parson of the Church of A. brought an Action of Debt against the Defendant for Arrearages of Rent, and declared upon a Lease made to the Defendant for four years, if the Plaintiff did so long live, and continue Parson, etc. and upon a Non demisit pleaded, the Jury found an especial Verdict, to wit, that the Plaintiff had leased it to the Defendant for four years, if the Plaintiff shall so long live only; and whether this Verdict was found for the Plaintiff or Defendant was the Question; and Cook Serj. seemed that it was found for the Plaintiff; for the main matter was, that he should lease it, if he so long lived; and the subsequent words are of no effect, because they contained no more than by the Law was before spoke of; for the Law says, that if he be nonresident, or if he resign, or be deprived, that the Lease shall be determined, like to the 30. Ass. 8. A Lease to two, and the longest Liver of them, and the 17 E. 3. 7. A. A Lease to one of Land and a House for years, and that the Lessee may make good profit of it, this last Clause in both is idle; and Dallidge was of the same opinion; but Yeluerton against them, for the Plaintiff had entitled himself to the Action by such a Cause; and if he fail in that it is his folly, and shall not recover; for the Lease upon which he declared had two Determinations, the first by Death, the second by removing; and the Jury had found the Lease only upon the first Determination, and therefore various in substance; and therefore the Jury have found against the Plaintiff, as if a Lease be made by Baron and Feme, if they shall so long live & continue married, both of them ought to be found. Haughton to the same purpose, for when a Parson makes a Lease, if he shall so long live, he doth take upon himself, that he will do no Act by which the Lease shall be determined, but only by his Death, for otherwise an Action of Covenant will lie against him; but if the other Clause be added, to wit, and shall so long continue Parson, than he may resign, or be nonresident without danger, and so there is great difference between the Verdict and Declaration, and it was adjourned the Court, being divided in opinion. Dower. MIch. 6. Jacobi. Dower may be brought as well against the Dower may be brought against the Heir or Committee of the Ward. Heir himself, as against the Committee of the Ward: but if an Infant be in Ward to a Lord in Chivalry, the Dower shall be brought against the Guardian in Chivalry. If Dower be brought against one who is not Tenant of the freehold, the Tenant before Judgement shall be received, and upon Default of the Tenant, and after Judgement he may falsify. MIch. 9 Jac. Dower demanded of the third part of Tithes of Wool and Lamb in three several Towns, and it was demanded Nota. of the Court, how the Sheriff should deliver Seisin, and the Court held it the best way for the Sheriff to deliver the third part of the tenth part, and the third tenth Lamb, Videlicet, the thirtieth Lamb. In Dower against the Lord Morley, the Tenant at the Day of taking He in Reversion received after Default made by Tenant for Life. of the Inquest after the Jury had appeared, and before the Jury were sworn made Default, and a Petty Cape was awarded, and the Tenant at the Day in Bank informed the Court, that the Tenant is but Tenant for Tenant for Life, and that the Reversion is in one P. who at the Return in Bank ought to be received to save his Title, and the Court appointed him at the Return of the Petty Cape to plead his Plea. HIH. 13. Jacobi. Allen and his Wife Demandants versus Walter in Dower of a freehold in Munden Magna, Munden Parva & B. Return of the Sheriff adjudged insufficient being too general. the Sheriff returned Pleg. de prosequend, J. D. R. R. And the Names of the Summoners J. D. & R. F. And after the Summons made, and by the space of fourteen Days and more, before the Return of the said Writ, at the most usual Church Door of Munden Magna, where part of the Tenements lay upon the 27. of October, being the Lord's Day, immediately after Sermon ended in that Church, he publicly proclaimed all and singular things contained in that Writ to be proclaimed according to the Form of the Statute in that behalf made and provided, L. P. Ar. Vic. And Exception was taken to the Return, because Proclamation was not made at the Doors of the Churches where the Lands lay, and the Court held it not necessary; but it was sufficient to make Proclamation at any of the Churches; but the Return was insufficient, because he said, that he had caused to be proclaimed all and singular in that Writ contained, and says not what; and the Demandant released his Default upon the grand Cape. CLefold versus Carr. The Tenant in Dower before the value inquired No Writ of Error lies until the value be inquired upon. of, and Damages found, brought a Writ of Error, and by the opinion of the whole Court a Writ of Error would not lie, for the Judgement is not perfect until the value be inquired upon. The Demand in Dower was of the third part of two Messages in three parts to be divided, and the Judgement was to recover Seisin of the third part of the Tenements aforesaid, with the Appurtenances, to hold to him in severally by Meets and Bounds, and adjudged naught; because they are Tenants in common, and the Judgement ought to be, to hold to him together, and in common; but if it had been in three parts divided, it had been good. Actions in Ejectment. ALlen versus Nash, Hill. 5. Jacobi, rotulo 719. The Plaintiff Implication not good in a Surrender, though it be in a Will. brought an Ejectione firm, and a special Verdict upon a Surrender of Copyhold Land, which was to the use of the second Son for Life, after the Death of the Tenant and his Heirs, and it was adjudged not to be good in a Surrender; for though it be good in a Will, yet Implication is not good in a Surrender; and in Copyhold Cases a Surrender to the use, etc. this no use but an Explanation how the Land shall go; if the Lord grant the Land in other manner than I appoint, it is void, if there be found joint-tenants, and one Surrender to the use of his Will, it was a Breach of the Joinder, and the Will good. EYer versus Bannaster, Trîn. 16. Jacobi, rotulo 719. The Plaintiff Challenge because the Sheriff married the Daughter of the Lessors Wife, and held no cause. brought an Ejectione firm, and declared upon a Lease made by Ed. Kynaston; to which the Defendant pleads not guilty, and the Plaintiff alleadges a Challenge, that the Wife of the Sheriff is Cousin to the Plaintiff, and desires a Venire facias, to the Coroners, and the Defendant denied it, and so a Venire was made to the Sheriff; and at the Assizes the Defendant challenges the Array, because the Pannell was arrayed by the Sheriff, who married the Daughter of the Wife of the Lessor; and note, the first Challenge was made after the Issue joined, and at the Assizes the Defendant challenged as above, and a demurrer to it, and Hutton held, that a Challenge could not be after a challenge, except it were for some cause that did arise after the challenge made, and that the party ought to rely upon one cause of challenge, though he had many causes, & observe the Defendant could not challenge the Array until the Assizes, but Husband held that a Challenge might be upon a Challenge, but this challenge was adjudged naught by all the Judges. HIll versus Scale, Trin. 16 Jacobi rotulo 5. 18. the Plaintiff brought an Ejectione firmae, and declares upon a Demise made to the Plaintiff by J. C. bearing date, the first of January, anno 15. and sealed and delivered the twelfth of January following, to hold from Christmas, than last passed, for two years, the Jury found a special Verdict, and found the Lease, and a Letter of Attorney to execute the Lease, in this manner, that the Lessor was seized of the Land in Fee, and being so seized, he made, signed, and sealed an Indenture of a Demise of the said Tenements, and found it in haec verba, this Indenture, etc. and they further found that the Lessor, the said fifth Nota. day of January, did not deliver the said Indenture of Demise to the Plaintiff as his Deed, but that the Lessor the said fifth day of January, by his writing, bearing Date the same Day, gave full power and authority to one C. to enter into all the premises and to take possession thereof in the name of the Lessor, and after possession so taken, to deliver the said Indenture of Demise to the Plaintiff, upon any part of the premises in the name of the Lessor, and find the Letter of Attorney in haec verba, To all etc. whereas, I the said J. C. by my Indenture of Lease, bearing date with these Presents, have demised, granted, and to Farm let, etc. for and during the Term of two years, etc. and they further find, that the said C. such a day, as Attorney to the Lessor, by virtue of that writing did enter into the Tenements aforesaid, and took possession thereof to the use of the Lessor, and immediately after possession so taken, the said C. did deliver the said Indenture of Demise upon the Tenements, as the Lessors Deed to the Plaintiff, to have, etc. and the doubt was because the Lessor in the Letter of Attorney, and said that whereas he had demised, and if it were a Demise, than the Letter of Attorney was idle, but notwithstanding the Court gave Judgement for the Plaintiff. Week's versus Mesey, An Ejectione firmae brought against two, and one of them was an estranger, and was in the house, and the principal would not appear, and the other appeared, and pleaded non informat. and the Court was acquainted with the proceedings, and the Plaintiff prayed an habere facias possessionem, and the Court told the Plaintiff, that by that Writ and recovery, he could not remove him that had Right, when a Lease is made to bring an Ejectment of Land in divers men's hands, than they must enter into one of the parcels and leave one in that place, and then must he go unto another How to execute a Lease to try a Title, the Land being in many men's hands. and leave one there, and so of the rest, and then after he hath made the last Entry there, he sealeth, and delivereth the Lease, and then those men that were left there, must come out of the Land, and this is a good executing of the Lease, and Pasch, the ninth of James, the Court held that an Ejectment would not lie of Common pasture, or of Sheep-gate. BEamont versus Cook, Trin. 13 Jacobi. An exception taken in Ejectment, Original against four, and count against 3. without a Simulcum, and held naught. because the Original was teste the very same day that the Ejectment was made and adjudged good by the whole Court, and one Goodhall brought an original in Ejectment against Hill, and three others, and the Plaintiff counts against three of the Defendants, and no simulcum against the fourth, and this matter was moved in arrest of Judgement. And the Judgement was stayed by the whole Court. COronder, versus Clerk, Hill. 10 Jacobi rotulo, 3315. Action upon The intent of a will must be certain, and agreeable to Law an Ejectment brought, the Jury found it specially upon a Devise, the words of the Will were to my right Heirs Males and posterity of my name, part and part like, the question was, who should have the Land, and the Court held, the Land must go to the Heir, at the Common Law, and not according to the words of the Will, because they cannot consist with the grounds of Law, a Will must be construed in all parts, the brother cannot have it by the Devise, because he is not Heir, and the Daughters cannot, for they are not Heirs and posterity, and therefore, neither of them could have it, because they are not Heirs and posterity, because they that take it must be Heir and posterity, for the intent of a Will must be certain and agreeable to Law, and there must not an intent out of the words of the will, be sought out, and the whole Court held, that the Plaintiff was barred. YOung, versus Radford, Pasch. 10 Jacobi Rotulo 1515. Action upon an Ejectment brought, and the Jury found a special Nota. Verdict, and the Case was, that Elizabeth Rudford, was possessed of a house full thirty years, and she took a Husband, the Husband and Wife mortgage the Term, the Wife dies, and the Husband redeems the Land, and marries another wife, and then dies, and makes his Wife Executrix, and she maries the Lessor. The Defendant takes Administration of the Goods of the first Woman, and it was held void, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. PEttison, versus Reel, Pasch. 12▪ Jacobi, Rotulo, 2350. An ejectment brought, and Trial, and Verdict for the Plaintiff, and exception taken in arrest of Judgement to the Venire Facias, because this word Juratum was omitted, for the Writ was posuerunt se in illam, and omitted the word Juratum, and this was amended by the Court. When a Title is to be tried upon an Ejectment, and a Lease to be executed by Letter of Attorney, the course is this, that the Lessor do seal the Lease only, and the Letter of Attorney, and deliver How to execute a Lease by Letter of Attorney the Letter of Attorney, but not the Lease, for the Attorney must deliver that upon the Land: and upon an Ejectruent brought of Lands in two villages, of a house and forty Acres of Land in, A. and B. and a special Entry in the Land, adjoining to the house to wit, the putting in of a Horse, which was driven out of the Land by the Defendant, and this was adjudged a good Entry for the Land in both the Villages, by the opinion of the whole Court. ARden versus Mich. 12 Jacobi. The Plaintiff delivers, that whereas such a day and year at Curdworth in the said County did demise A Venire facias of the Parish adjudged good. to the Plaintiff two Acres of Land, with the Appurtenances in the Parish of C. and the Venire facias was of the Parish of C. and after a verdict, exception was taken because it was not of Curdworth, but it was adjudged good by the Court, and to prove the Lease made Lanheston an Attorney swear, that the Lessor sealed the Lease, and subscribed it, but did not deliver it, and by word gave authority to one W. to enter into the Land, and to deliver the Lease upon the Land to the Plaintiff as his Deed, and by that authority he entered, and delivered the Lease as his Deed to the Plaintiff, and it was adjudged good. MArsh versus Sparry, Hill. 14 Jacobi Rotulo, 1859. An Ejectment brought ex dimissione G. W. and the Original was A mistake of the Cursitor in the Original amended after Trial. made ex divisione, and after a Trial, Sergeant Hitchaw moved the Court, that the Original might be amended, and make ex dimissione, and the Court granted it, and the Cursitor was ordered to amend it, and also in the end of the Original, it was written Barnabiam, and it should have been Barnabas, and that also was ordered to be amended by the Court. CRadock versus Jones, Trin. 14 Jacobi. Rotulo 2284. An Ejectment brought upon a Demise, made by Cotton Knight, the Defendant pleads not guilty, and a Challenge to the Sheriff, and prays a Venire facias to the Coroners, because the Sheriff is cozen to the Plaintiff, Nota. and shows how, and because the Defendant did not deny it, a Venire facias was awarded to the Coroners, and after a verdict, it was alleged in arrest of Judgement, because it was not a principal Challenge, and a Venire facias de novo, awarded to the Sheriff. PArkin versus Parkin, 13 Hill Jacobi Rotulo 979. And Ejectment Though the Defendants Plea be naught, yet the Plaintiff shall not recover, because he showed not any Title by his replication. brought and verdict, and after a Trial, Exception taken to pleading, of a Deed enrolled, the Action was brought in the County of York, and pleaded thus, ut infra, sex menses tunc proximos sequent. coram milite uno Justice. etc. in West-Riding, Com. Eborum, ad pacem, etc. conservand. Assign. & W. C. Clerico pacis ibidem debito, modo de Recor. irrotulat. and Exception was, because the enrolment was not made according to the Form of the Statute, because it did not appear, that the Justice before whom the Deed was enrolled, was a Justice of the Peace, of the County of York, but of the West-Riding, and it was not alleged, that the Land did lie in the West-Riding, and note that the Defendants Plea in Bar, was insufficient, because the Defendant did not confess, nor avoid the Count, and the plaintiff by his Replication doth not show any Title to the Land, because it did not pass by the enrolment, and so he hath lost his Suit, and although the Bar be insufficient, yet notwithstanding, the Plaintif shall not recover. GReenely versus Passy, Hill 5 jacobi Rotulo, 808. An Ejectment The question is upon the Statute of 32 H. 8 upon Feoffements made by Husbands during the coverture. brought, the Defendant pleads not guilty, and the Jury found it Specially, that one Woodhouse was seized of Land in Fee, and did infeof the Husband and Wife, to have and to hold to the said Husband and Wife, and the Heirs of their bodies between them to be begotten, by virtue of which Feoffment, the Husband and Wife were seized of the whole Land in Fee Tail, to wit, etc. the Husband infeofs the youngest Son of the land in Fee, and afterwards the Husband dies and the woman survives, and afterwards she dies before any Entry by her made into the Land, and further find the lessor to be the eldest son, of their bodies, and that the younger Son enfeoffed the Defendant; and afterwards the eldest Son entered into the Land, and made the lease in the Declaration, and whether the Entry of the eldest Son was lawful, or no, was the question upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. that Fines or Feoffements made by the Husband, etc. during coverture be or make any discontinuance, etc. or be hurtful to the said wife, or her Heirs, and Sir Edward Cook held, that the Heir is not barred of his Entry by the Statute. PAcy versus Knollis, Trin. 6. jacobi Rotulo 291. An Ejectment brought, the Defendant pleaded not guilty, and the Jury found A verbal averment shall not overthrow a will. it Specially, and the question is upon the words of the Will, to wit, And I give to Katherine my Wife, all the Profits of my Houses and Lands lying and being in the Parish of Billing, and L. at The mistaking of the Town not hurtful in a Will. a certain street there called Broke-street, and the Jury found that there was not any Village or Hamlet in the said County called Billing, and that the Land supposed to be devised lieth in Byrling-street; no man's verbal Averment shall be taken, or admitted, to be contrary to the Will, which is expressly set out in the Will. If I have two Thomas to my Sons, and I give it to Thomas, it shall be intended my youngest Son, because my eldest Son should have it by Descent, the Will was held by all the Court to be good. HEllam versus Ley, Trin. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 2718. A special Verdict Property of Goods cannot be in obayance. in an Ejectione firm, the Question was upon the words of the Will, which were, that her Husband had given all to her, and nothing from her, and whether these words imply a consent, and so an Agreement to the Devise of the Husband or no. And Foster, Warburton, and Walmsley, that it was an Assent; but Sir Edward Cook was of a contrary opinion: and note she was made sole Executrix, and she proved the Will, and Justice Foster held it to be an Assent in Law. The property of Goods cannot be in obayance, they must be in the Executor, Administrator, or Ordinary; and Warburton held, that the words made an Assent, and said, that when the Bond is delivered to one to the use of another, until he disassent, it is his Deed, but when he dis-assenteth, than it is not his Deed, Ab initio: if a Lease be given by Will to divers, and made one of them his Executor, in this Case the Executor must make his special Claim, else he must have it as Executor: and Sir Edward Cook held, that the general Entry, and proof of the Will is no Assent, she must first have it as an Executor, before she can have it as a Legatee, a Legacy is waiveable; but if the Law work it in me whether I will or no, than I cannot waive it, and therefore he held she should enter specially. Rolls versus Mason, Hill. 6. Jacobi, rotulo 2613. An Ejectment Difference between Prescription and Custom. brought, and the Question grew upon two Customs, one was that the Copyholder for Life may name to the Lord of the Manor who should be his Successor in the Copyhold: and the other that the Copyholder for Life may cut down all the Trees of wrong upon the customary Land: and the third Question was, whether the second Lessee of the Manor may take advantage of the pretended Forfeiture for cutting down the Trees, by the Law a Copyholder shall have, houseboot, free-boot, and hedge-boot, and common of Turbary to burn in his house, but he cannot sell them. A Copyholder by Custom may name his Successor, and if the Lord refuse to admit him, the Homage may set▪ a reasonable Fine, and so he shall be admitted. The Lessee of the Manor may take advantage of the Forfeiture, but in this Case it is no Forfeiture, and the Copyholder may cut down Trees, for he hath a greater Estate than a sole Tenant for Life, because he shall name his Successor: APrescription goeth to one man, and a Custom to many; and Judgement for the Defendant. MAson versus Strecher & alios, Pasch. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 606. An Ejectment brought for the Manor of P. it was held by the Court, that the consent of a Servant in the absence of him who is possessed of the Term shall not out his Master of the Possession, because the Servant hath no interest in the Land. CRamporne versus Freshwater Patch 8 Jacobi rotulo 2742. An action Copyhold Land cannot be demised for three years without licence or custom. of Debt brought upon an Ejectment, the Plaintiff was nonsuit upon his own Evidence because he declared upon a Devise made for three years, and it was confessed by the Plaintiff that the Lands were Copyhold Land, and that the Plaintiff had not licence to demise them for three years neither could he prove; that by any custom he could demise them for three years without a licence, and so the Lessor was taken for a Disseisor by the opinion of the Court. CAffe versus Randall Trin. 9 Jac. rotulo 3299. An Ejectment Record of Nisi prius amended by the Roll. brought against Randall and his Wife, the Ejectment made by the Wife and not guilty, pleaded and tried; and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, because the Issue was pleaded in this manner, Et dicunt quod ipsi in nullo sunt culpabiles, etc. And the Ejectment was made by the woman alone, and aught to have been that she was not guilty, and upon examination of the Plea Rol and Record of Nisi prius it appeared to the Court that the Plea Roll was right but the Record of Nisi prius mistaken, but Sergeant Barker said that at the time when the Record of Nisi prius was tried, the Plea roll agreed with the Record, and was afterwards amended. and Waller the prothonotary confessed that he amended the plea rol, as upon his private examination of the roll but without notice that there was a Record sent down to try that Issue, and therefore the Court ordered that the Record of Nisi prius should be amended according to the Plea roll which was done accordingly. PAts versus Chitty Trin. 9 jac. rotulo 2151. vel 2151. An Action of Concord with satisfaction a good Plea in Ejectment. ejectment brought, the Defendant pleads a concord with satisfaction in Bar, the Plaintiff demurs, and it was held by Winch and Foster a good Plea because the Action is not only in the realty for he recovers damages and possession which are mere Chattels. Secondly, Because the Defendant pleads the satisfaction as in discharge of that Action and all others and ten shillings for rests, Warburton of the same opinion, and he vouched the like case satisfaction is good. Plea in a Quare impedit wherein a man recovers the presentation: And Cook said, that in all Actions wherein money or Damages are recoverable as well wherein the Defendant might wage his Law as wherein he might not, it is a good Plea Pasc. 3. Jacobi rotulo 1033. Eden and Blake, but in matters where one freehold or Inheritance is recoverable, concord is no Bar and in dower recompense in other Lands or Rent is no Barr. But by petition in Chancery, but Rent Issuing out of the same Land demanded is a good Bar; and in all Actions Quare vi & armis wherein process of Outlary lies by the common Law, concord or an Award is a good Bar, 38 H. 6. title Barr satisfaction in trespass by an Estranger is a good Bar although it be without notice of the trespassor by the opinion of the whole Court. CRaddock versus jones Trin. jacobi rotulo 2284. An Ejectment brought, and declares upon a Lease made by W. Cotton Knight, Misconveyance of process, what it is, and helped by the Statute. the Defendant pleads not guilty, and makes a challenge and prays a venire facias to the Coroners because the Sheriff is Cousin to the Lessors Wife which is not a principle challenge but by favour, and after a Trial and Verdict it was amended in arrest of the Judgement because it was mistried and Barker vouched a case in the Exchequer Chamber, in 43 El. upon a Writ of Error, between Higgins, and Spicer, upon a Venire facias, awarded in the like manner, and it was adjudged to be mistryed, and it was then agreed that misconveyance of process is, where one Writ is awarded in place of another to an Officer which of right aught to execute that process, and he returns it, this is helped after a Verdict by the Statute. But if a writ be awarded to an Officer who ought not to execute that process, and he returns it, this is a mistriall and not helped by the Statute and Warburton said that Dyer folio 367. To the contrary is not Law, two Tenements in Common join in a Lease for years to bring an Ejectment and declare that whereas they did demise the Tenements and it was held nought for it is a several Lease of moities and if they had declared, that one of them had demised one moiety and the other another moiety it had been good. WIlson versus Rich, Pasch. 44. Eliz. The Husband and Wife join in a Lease by Indenture to A. rendering Rend, and this is A feme covert cannot make a Letter of Attorney to deliver a Lease upon the Land. for years, and make a Letter of Attorney to seal and deliver the Lease upon the Land, which is done accordingly; A. brings an Ejectmentand declares upon a Demise made by the Husband and Wife, and upon Evidence to the Jury ruled by Popham, Fenner, and Yeluerton, that the Lease did not maintain the Declaration, for a Woman covert could not make a Letter of Attorney, to deliver a Lease upon the Land, although Rent was reserved by the Lease, and so the Warrant of Attorney is merely void, and the Lease is only the Lease of the Husband, which is not made good by the Declaration, by the opinion of the Court. STretton versus Cush, Pasch. 1. Jacobi. J. L. leased a House for fourscore years, in which Lease there is one Condition, that the Lessee his Executors and Assigns should keep and maintain the House in reparation, and if upon lawful warning given by the Lessor, his Heirs and Assigns, etc. to enter; the Lessee for fourscore years' leases the House to A. for thirty years; and A. leases it to Wilmore for fifteen years; the Assignee of the Reversion came to the House, and seeing it in decay gave warning to Wilmore then possessed of that House to repair it, which was not done within six Months, by reason whereof the Assignee entered for the Condition broken, and upon a Not guilty pleaded, the matter before recited was found by a special Verdict, and adjudged against Sir William Wade the Assignee of the Reversion, for the warning given to Wilmore to repair, who was but an under tenant, was not good, for he was not Assignee of the term, nor had but a petty interest under the grand Lease, upon whom no Attorney could be made for the Rent, nor any Action of Waste brought against him, for there wanted the immediate privity: and in this Case there is a difference to be taken between a rent and a Condition for reparations, for the Condition is merely collateral to the Land, and merely personal, and therefore warning is not of necessity to be given at the House, but notice of Reparations ought to be given to the person of the Lessee, who had the grand interest. And a Difference is to be taken between a time certain in which a thing is to be done, and a time incertain; for in the Case of Rent reserved at a Day certain, Demand thereof must be made upon the Land only, because the Land is the Debtor; for Popham said, that if the Lessor should come and demand his Rent, and there should meet with J. S. a stranger, and should say to J. S. Pay me my Rent, this is no good Demand of the Rent, having mistaken the person who is chargeable with it: but in this Case one general Demand of Rent, without reference to any person who is not chargeable, is good. And he was of opinion, that if a man lease Land, rendering Rend for a year, whensoever the Lessor should demand it, in this Case the Lessor come and demand it before the end of the year, his Demand upon the Land is not good, except When a demand shall be made to the person, and when upon the Land▪ the Lessee be there also; for the time being incertain, when the Lessor will demand it, he ought to give notice to the Lessee of it. And if the Lessor come to the Lessee in person, and demands the Rent, yet it is not sufficient; for although notice is to be given the Lessee in person, yet the Land is the Debtor, and therefore the Law ties the Lessee to the Land, as to the place in which he shall be paid; but if the Lessor stay nntill the eud of the year, than the Lessee at his peril ought to attend upon the Land to pay it, for the end of the year is time of payment prescribed by the Law which was granted, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. CLerk versus Sydenham, Pasch. 4. Jacobi. An Ejectment brought by A Lease made to three for their lives, with a Covenant that the Land should remain to the survivor of them for ninety years, a good interest in the survivor. the Plaintiff of a Lease made of Land by P. and B. and Not guilty pleaded: and the Evidence of the Defendants part was by reason of a Lease of the Land in Question, made by the Abbot of Cleeve, before the Dissolution to W. D. and Jo. his Wife, and F. their Daughter for their Lives by Indenture; and by the same Indenture the Abbot covenants, grants, and confirms to the three Lessees, that the land should remain to the Assignee of the Survivor of them for ninety years; Fr. survived, and took to Husband one Hill, who the 20 Eliz. grant their Estate for life to J. S. and all their interest in the Remainder, and all their power for all the term, and this by mean Assignments came to the Defendant: and whether any interest passed in Remaindor by the Lease of the Abbot was the Question; and by all the five Judges it was held to be a good interest in possibility, and to be reduced into a certainty in the person of the Survivor; as where Land is given to three and the right Heirs of the Survivor, this is a good limitation of the Inheritance presently, but it is in expectance until the Survivor be known, for then the Fee is executed in him. And Popham vouched a Case in his experience, 17 Eliz. in which Sergeant Baker was of Counsel, and it was a Lease was made to Husband and Wife for life, and for forty years to the Survivor of them, the Husband and Wife join in Grant of this Interest: and although it be certain, one of them shall survive, yet the Grant is void, because at the time of the Grant there was not any interest, but only a possibility in either of them: and although in the Case in Question the Remainder is not limited to any of the three Lessees, but to the Assignee of the survivor; yet the Court was of opinion, that this was not a bare nomination in the survivor to appoint what person he pleased, but a term and an interest; and Popham took this difference, if a Lease be made to J. S. for life, and after his death to the Executors and Assigns of J. S. this is an interest in J. S. to dispose of it, but if it had been limited to J. S. for life, and afterwards to the Executors and Assigns of J. D. here this is a bare power in J. D. and his Executors, because they are not parties or privies to the first interest which was agreed, and it was also agreed, that whether it was an interest or a word of nomination, it was all saved to the party by the Statute of 31 H. 8. of Monasteries, which gives the Houses dissolved to the King, but in the same degree and quality as the Abbot had them. And the Abbot was charged with the power given by himself, and so was the King. Which mark. Wanto versus Willingsby, Pasch. 5. Jacobi. The Bishop of Exeter in the time of H. 8. by his Deed gives Land, etc. to Nicholas: Turner, and by Bill his Cousin in consideration of service done by Turner, and for other considerations him moving to them, and the Heirs of their bodies, and dies. They have Issue Jo. and William, N. T. dies, and Sibyl marries Clap. and they alien the Land to john in Fee; Sibyl and john leavy a Fine to Walther in Fee of the Land. And afterwards Sibyl infeoffs William her younger Son, who infeoffs Willinghby, Io: enters, and leaseth to Walther and Willingby for the trial of his title, seals a Lease to ward, who declares of so many Acres in Sutton Cofeild. And the Jury upon a not guilty pleaded foundby the Verdict that the Bishop gave the Tenements aforesaid by his Deed, the tenor of which Deed follows, etc. And by the Deed it appeared that the Lands did lie in Little Sutton within the Lordship of Sutton Cofeild. And notwithstanding the Plaintiff shall recover. For first it was held not to be any Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. for it is not any such gift as is intended by the Statute, for the Bishop was not any Ancestor of the Husband, and the Husband took nothing by that, but it was a voluntary recompense given by the Bishop in reward of the service passed. And the Statute intended a valuable consideration. And also the Bishop might well intend it for the Advancement of the woman, who appeared to be Cousin to the Bishop. And Tanfeild held if the woman were a Done● within the Statute of 11 H. 7 she could be but for a moiety, for the gift was before the marriage, and then they took by moieties. And the Baron dying, first the woman came not to any part by the husband, but by the course of Law as survivor. But quaere of this conceit, for the other Judges did not allow it. And secondly, they held that the Fine of Io. the elder Son of Sibyl levied to Walther destroyed A precise Verdict makes the Declaration good, which otherwise is naught. the entry of Io. and of Walther. For although in truth the Fine passed nothing but by conclusion, yet Io. the Son, and Walther his Conusee shall be estopped to claim any thing by way of forfeiture against that Fine on the woman's part, than any title accrueing after the Fine. For they shall not have any new right, but Io: the Son upon whom the Land was entailed is barred by the Fine. Thirdly, although upon view of the Deed made by the Bishop the Land which by the Declaration is laid to be in Sutton Cofeild, by the Deed appears to be in Little Sutton, yet this is helped by the Verdict, by which it is found expressly that the Bishop gave the Lands within written, and therefore being so precisely found the Deed is not material. Which mark. KNap versus Peir jewelch Pasc. 5. Jacobi. An Ejectment brought for A demand of Rent to avoid a Lease upon a condition ought to be in the most open place. Lands in Wiccombe, which were the Deans and Chapters of Chichester, And in this case it was agreed by the whole Court, that if it be a Corporation by prescription, it is sufficient to name them by that name they are called. And the Court held, that if a man demands Rend upon the Land to avoid a Lease upon a condition, the Demand aught to be made in the most open place upon the Land; The Dean and Chapter of Chichester made a Lease to one Raunce, the Lessee of the Defendant of Lands in Wiccombe, rendering Rend payable at the Cathedral Church of Chichester, upon such a condition, it was agreed by the whole Court, that the Demand aught to be made in the Cathedral Church of Chichester, although it was of the Land Leased. And the Demand aught to be made at the setting of the Sun the last instant of that day, and when he made his Demand, he ought to stand still, and not walk up and down, for the Law did not allow of walking Demands. As Pipham said, and he ought to make a formal demand. And because those whom the Dean and Chapter did send to make the demand of Rent said, bear witness, we are come hither to demand and receive such Rent, it was held by the Court, that such a demand was not good. And they held the demand ought to be made at that part of the Church where the greatest and most common going in is. And in this case it was said by Popham, that if a man make a Lease to one for years to commence at a day to come, and then he lease to another for years rendering Rend upon a condition to commence presently. And he enter. And the first Lease commence, and he enter the Rent, and Condition reserved upon the second Lease is suspended. A man leases for years rendering Rend, & after he leaseth to another to commence at a day to come, and the first Lessee attorns, the second shall not have the Rend reserved upon the first Lease by Popham; but he doubted of it. And Popham and Tanfeild held, none contradicting, that the Letter of Attorney made by the Dean and Chapter to demand their Rent was not good, because the Letter of Attorney was to make a general demand on any part of the Land, which the Dean and Chapter had leased. And that ought to have been special only for that Land. And secondly, it was to demand Rend of any person to whom they had made a Lease. And the Letter of Attorney ought to be particular, and not general of any person. TOmpson versus Collier, Mich. 5. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares upon a Lease of Ejectment made by Robinson and Stone of one Message, and forty Acres of Land, in the Parish of Stone in the County After an Imparlance cannot plead in abatement. of Stafford. The Defendant imparled trial another Term, and then pleads that within the Parish of Stone there were three Villages, A. B. and C. And because the Plaintiff hath not showed in which of the Villages the Land he demanded Judgement of the Bill, etc. And the Plaintiff demurred upon this Plea; And adjudged for the Plaintiff. For first, after an Imparlance the Defendant cannot plead in abatement of the Bill, for he hath admitted of it to be good by his entering into defence, and by his Imparlance. And secondly, the matter of his Plea is not good, because the Defendant hath not 22 H. 6. 6. Foxlies' Case. 5 Rep. 111. showed in which of the Villages the House and forty Acres of Land did lie; And that he ought to have done. For where a man pleads in abatement, he always ought to give to the Plaintiff a letter writ with mark. And the whole Court held that this Plea was not in bar, but that he should answer over. And William's Justice took this difference, that when a man demurs upon a Plea in abatement; And when he goes to issue upon it, for if they descend to issue upon such a Plea, and it be found against the Defendant, it is peremptory, and he shall lose the Land: but upon demurrer it is not peremptory, but only to answer over. Which mark. Workley versus Granger, Mic. 5. Jacobi. An Ejectment brought for two Houses, and certain Lands, etc. And upon a special Verdict, The case was one He●: Wells and his wife ne'er seized of a parcel of Land to them, and the Heirs of their bodies begotten, as for the jointure of the wife, the remainder to the Heirs of the Husband in Fee, the Husband bargains, and sells the Land to Stamp and his Heirs in Fee. And afterwards the Husband and one Winter leavy a Fine of that Land to another who grants that Land back again to Winter for one month, the remainder to the husband and wife, and the heir of their bodies to be begotten, the remainder to the husband and his heirs. The Husband dies, the Wife survives, and makes a Lease to the Defendant for ninety nine years, if she should so long live; the woman dies, and the Plaintiff claims under the bargainee: and in this Case two points were debated. First, what Estate passed to the bargainee, and Digges of Lincoln's Inn, who argued for the Plaintiff, that the bargainee had a Fee simple determinable which issued out of both the Estates as it was held by Periam in Alton Woods Case. And he said that the Proclamations upon the Fine are but a repetition of the Fine, as it is held in Bendlones Rep: put in the Case of Fines in Cooks 3. Rep. And see Pinslees Case, for then for the same cause the Issue in tail is bound, although the Fine be levied by the Husband alone by the Statute of the 4. H. 7. and 32 H. 8. because he cannot claim but as Heir to the Father, as well as to the Mother, and therefore his Conveyance is bound: and see 16. E▪ Did 332. Husband and Wife Tenants in special tail. The husband is attainted of Treason, and executed having Issue, the woman dies, the Issue shall never have the Land. And if husband and wife Tenants in special tail; And the Husband levies a Fine to his own use, and devises the Land to his wife for life which remainded over rendering Rent; the husband dies, the woman enters, pays the Rent, and dies, the Issue is barred for two causes: first by the Fine which had barred his Conveyance of the entail: secondly, by the Remitter waived by the Mother. 18 Eli: Dyer 531. See 5 H. 7. Assize Thorp and Tirrels Case. Secondly, the Lease made by the woman was determined by her death, and it was said that the woman had not any quality of an Estate tail, but only she might take the profits during her life within the Statute of 11 H. 7. And when she dies the Estate is denised. See Austin's Case. Doctor Wyatt Tenant in tail leased for years, And died without Issue, the Lease was determined. See first of Eliz: title Executors. And 31 H. 8. Dyer. Where a Bishop made a Lease for years, and afterwards makes another Lease to one of the Lessees, etc. And Fleming held that if the woman survived as under Tenant in special tail, and made a Lease for 21. years, it is out of the Statute of 32 H. 8. and so it was adjudged in Wattes and King's Case. LAne versus Alexander Hill, 5. Jaco. The Plaintiff declares in Ejectment upon a Lease made to him by Mary Planten for three The day of a Copyhold of Court roll traversed, and adjudged naught. years, the Defendant says, etc. that the Land is Copyhold Land of the Manor of H. in Norff. whereof the Queen Eliz: was seized in Fee, and long time before the Lessor had any thing there in Court such a day, that J. S. her Steward at the Court, etc. granted the Land to the Defendant by Copy in Fee, according to the custom, and so justifies his entry upon the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff replies and says, that long time before the Copy granted to the Defendant, to wit, at a Court of the Manor held such a day, the 43. Eliz: the Queen by Copy, etc. granted the Land to the Lessor for life according to, the custom, by force whereof he entered, and made a Lease to the Plaintiff. The Defendant by way of rejoinder maintained his bar, and traverses: with that the Queen at the Court of the Manor by J. S. her Steward, such a day, etc. granted the Land to the Lessor and upon this the Plaintiff demurred in Law generally. And Yeluerton moved that the traverse was good in this Case upon the day, and Steward: and the difference is where the act done may indifferently be supposed to be done on the one day or the other, there the day is not traversable as in the Case of a Deed made such a day; there the day of the Deed is not traversable, for it passes by the livery, and not by the Deed. And the livery is the substance, and the day but a abundance. 10 E. 4. And the Law is the same if the day in trespass wherein the day is not traversable. For although it be done upon another day it is not material. But when a man makes his title by an especial kind of Conveyance, as in this case, the Plaintiff makes his title by one Copy, there all that is concerned in the Copy is material, and the party cannot depart from it, for he claims not the Land by any other Copy but by that which is pleaded, as is in the 18 H. 6. 14. where an Action is brought for taking his Servant, and counts that he by Deed retained with him his Servant the Monday in one week, in such a case it is a good plea for the Defendant to say, that the Servant was retained by him such a day, after without that that the Plaintiff did retain him the Monday. And the Law seems to be concerning Letters Patents, wherein the day and place are traversable, being the special conveyance of the party from which he cannot depart. And also it seems that although the day in the principal case be traversed, yet the Statute of 18 Eliz: of Demurrers aids it, it being but a general Demurrer, and the day being only matter of form. But the whole Court were of opinion, that the day was not traversable in this case. For the Queen granting an ancienter Copy to the Plaintiffs Lessor then to the Defendant, and the traverse should have been without this, that the Queen did grant in manner and form, etc. to the Plaintiffs Lessor, and the Case is the same in the Letters Patents, for there the traverse should be without this, that the Queen granted in manner and form, etc. And the day and place shall not come into the traverse. But Justice Fennor was of a contrary opinion, for the Reason delivered by Yeluerton before, and he also, and the Lord chief Justice held it to be holpen by the Statute of 18 Eliz: for it is but matter of form. For if the Jury find a prior grant of the Queen to the Plaintiffs Lessor, although it be at another Court it is sufficient; and so by consequence the day is not material in substance, which mark. But William's Justice, and the rest held the traverse to be naught, for by that the Jury should be bound to find the Copy such a day by such a Steward which ought not to be, and that it was matter of substance not helped by the Statute of 18 Eliz. DArby versus Bois Hill. 5. Jacobi. An Ejectment brought for an Houses in London pass by the delivery of a bargain and sale without inrolment. House in London, and upon not guilty pleaded, The Jury found a special Verdict; And the case was Tenant in tail of divers Messages in London, 7 January, 44 Eliz: bargains and sells the said Houses to J. S. and delivers the Deed from off the Land the 8. of January the same year. Indentures of Covenants were made, to the intent to have a perfect recovery suffered of those houses; and the ninth of January after a Writ of right is sued in London for those Messages returnable at a day to come. And the tenth of January the same year the Tenant in tail makes livery and seisin to J. S. of one of those Houses in the name of all. And the other Messages were in Lease for years, and the Lessees did not atturn. And the question was if the Messages passed by the bargain and sale, or by the livery. And it was adjudged that they passed by the bargain and sale. And Yeluerton took a difference between several Conveyances both of them Executory, and where one of them is executed presently, as in Sir Rowland Heywoods' Case, where divers Lands were given, granted, leased, bargained, and sold to divers for years; the Lessees were at election whether they would take by the bargain and sale upon the Statute of 27 H 8. or by the demise at the Common Law. But otherwise it is if one be executed at first, for then the other comes too late, as it is in this Case; for by the very delivery of the bargains and sale, the Land by the custom of London passes without enrolment, for London is excepted, and this custom was found by the Verdict. And therefore it being executed, and the Conveyance being made perfect by the delivery of the Deed without any other circumstances, the livery of sesin comes too late, for it is made to him that had the Inheritance of the Message at that time. And the possession executed hinders the possession executory, for if a bargain and sale be made of Land, and before enrolment the bargain takes a deed of the said Land, this hinders the enrolment, because the taking of the livery did destroy the use which passed by the bargain and sale which was granted by the Court. And another reason was given, because it appeared that the intent of the parties was to have the Land pass by the bargain and sale; because it was to make a perfect Tenant to the Praecipe, as appears by the subsequent acts, as the Indentures Covenant, and the bringing the Writ of Right etc. All which will be made frustrate, if the livery of seisin shall be effectual: and when an Act is indifferent, it shall be taken most near to the parties intents that may be if a man hath a Manor, to which an advowson is appendent, and makes a Deed of the Manor with the appurtenances; And delivers the Deed, but doth not make livery of seisin, yet now although the Deed in itself was sufficient to pass the Advowson, yet because the party did not intend to pass it in Posse, but as appurtenant if the Manor will not pass, no more shall the Advowson pass alone, as it was agreed, 14 Eliz: in Andrews Case. Which mark. And the whole Court gave Judgement accordingly, that the Defendant who claimed under the bargain & sale, should enjoy the Land. CHalloner versus Thomas, Mich. 6. Jacobi. A Writ of Error was brought upon a Judgement given in Ejectment in the Cour● of An Ejectment will not lie de aquae cursu. Carmarthen, and Yeluerton assigned the Error, because the Ejectment was brought de aquae cursu, called Lothar in L. and declares upon a Lease made by D. de quidam rivulo & aquae cursu: And by the opinion of the whole Court the Judgement was reversed, for rivulut se● aque cursus lie not in demand, nor doth a praecipe lie of it: nor can livery and seisin be made of it, for it cannot be given in possession, but as it appears by 12 H. 7. 4. the Action ought to be of so many Acres of Land covered with water, but an Ejectment will well lie by, if a stang for a praecipe lies of them, and a woman shall be endowed of the third part of them, as it is 11. E. 3. But if the Land under the water or River do not pertain to the Plaintiff, but the River only, then upon a disturbance his remedy is only by Action upon the Case, upon any diversion of it, and not otherwise. Which observe. Wilson versus Woddell, Mich. 6. Jacobi. The Grandfather of A Servant is a sufficient Ejector, if he dwell with the pretended owner. the Plaintiff in an Ejectment being a Copy holder in fee, made a surrender thereof too L: Woddell in fee, who surrendered it to the use of Margery I. for life, who is admitted, etc. But L: Woddell himself never was admitted. The Grandfather and Father die, the Son who is Plaintiff was admitted, and enters upon the Land: Margery being then in possession, and the Defendant then living with her as a servant in those Tenements, and this was the special verdict, And Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. And the Court was of an opinion, that the Defendant was found to be a sufficient Trespassor, and Ejector, though he be but a Servant to the pretended owner of the Land, because the Verdict found that the Defendant did there dwell with Margery. And in such case he had the true title and had made his entry, might well bring his Action against Master or Servant at his election. And perhaps the Master might withdraw himself that he could not be arrested. And secondly, it was adjudged, that the surrender of J. S. of a Copyhold is not of any effect, until J. S. be admitted Tenant. And if I. S. before admittance He that is a Purchaser of Copyhold hath nothing in it, nor can he surrender to another before admittance. surrender to a stranger who is admitted, that that admittance is nothing worth to the estranger. For J. S. had nothing himself, and so he would pass nothing, and the Admittance of his grantee shall not by implication be taken to be the admittance of himself; for the admittance ought to be of a Tenant certainly known to the Steward, and entered in a Roll by him; and it was held, that the right and possession remained still in him that made the surrender, and that is descended to his Heir, who was the Plaintiff. And they took a difference between an Heir, to whom the Copy descended, for he may surrender before admittance, and it shall be good; because he is by course of the Law, foe the custom that makes him Heir to the estate casts the possession of his Ancestors upon him: but a stranger to whom a Copy hold is surrendered, hath nothing before admittance because he is a purchasor. And a Copy made to him, upon which he is admitted, is his Evidence by the custom, and before that he is not a customary Tenant, and so he could not transfer any thing to another, and adjudged so according to 24 Eliz: Alderman Dixies Case. BEdell versus Lull, Pasch. 7. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares in Ejectment How an Abatement shall be traversed. upon a Lease made by Eliz: James of certain Lands. The Defendant pleads that before Eliz: had any thing, one Martin James was seized in fee of it, and had issue Henry James, and died seized, by reason whereof it descended to H. J. as Son, and Heir; and that Eliz: entered, and was seized by abatement, and made the Lease to the Plaintiff: and that afterwards the Defendant as servant to H: James, and by his command, etc. The Plaintiff by way of replication confesses the seizin of M. James, And that he being so seized by his last Will in writing, devised the said Land to Eliz: in fee, and afterwards died seized by reason whereof she entered by force of the devise, and made the Lease to the Plaintiff, and traverse without, that Eliz: was seized by abatement in manner and form, etc. And 1 E. 4. acr. 1 E. 4. 9 acr. the Defendant demurs upon this replication, and showed for cause that the traverse was not good, and adjudged for the Defendant: for the Plaintiff by his replication need not both confess, & avoid, and traverse the abatement too, for the Plaintiff made a title to his Lease by the Will of his Ancestor, and that proved that he entered legally, and not by abatement, as the Defendant had supposed. And then to take a traverse over makes the replication vicious. For a traverse shall not be taken, but where the thing traversed is issuable. And here the devise is only the title issuable. And it was also held that the traverse was not good as to the manner of it, for he should not have traversed without that, that he was seized by abatement, but it ought to have been without that, that he did abate; and also if the Plaintiff had minded to have fully answered the Defendant, he ought to have took his traverse in the very same words the Defendant had pleaded it against him, to wit, without that, that he did enter, and was seized by abatement, which observe. The Case concerned Sir H. James to whom the Defendant was Tenant. SAunders versus Cottington, Mich. 7. Jac. An Ejectment brought of two Houses, but the Bill was only for one, and it was filled. And The Bill amended after a Writ of Error brought and before the Record was removed. the Defendant by his paper book pleaded to both Messages; And the Roll in Court, and the Record of Nisi prius were two Houses. And there was a verdict for the Plaintiff, and Judgement entered accordingly. And a Writ of Error was brought by the Defendant, and before the Record was removed, the Plaintiff moved the Court that the Bill upon the file might be amended, and made two Messages. And because the Defendant had pleaded to Messages in his Answer in paper, and that the Roll and Record were according, it was resolved by the whole Court, that the Bill upon the File should be amended, and made two Messages; for that Bill which made mention only of one House could not be the ground of all the proceedings afterwards; but it was as if no Bill had been filled, and therefore it should be supplied, and so had been several times before the Record was renewed. Which observe. THe Plaintiff declared in Ejectment upon a Lease of an House, Where the Prenomen destroyesthe quantity inthe declation. 10 Acres of Land, 20 Acres of Meadow, 20 Acres of Pasture, by the name of one Message, and ten Acres of Meadow be it more or less, and upon not guilty pleaded the Plaintiff had a Verdict, but moved in Arrest of Judgement, and Judgement was stayed. For by the Plaintiffs own showing in his Declaration, he could not have Execution of the number of Acres found by the Verdict; for in the Lease there is but ten Acres demised. And these words more or less could not in judgement of Law be extended to thirty or forty Acres; for it is impossible by common intendment, and the rather because the Land demanded by the Declaration is of another nature then that which is mentioned in the per nomen, etc. For that is only of Meadow, and the Declaration is of arable and Pasture. Moor versus Hawkins, Mich. 8. Jacobi. In Ejectment after issue Joined upon a not guilty pleaded, the cause came to be tried before Brook and Yeluerton, Judges of Assize in the County of Oxford, the Plaintiff had declared of divers Messages, and divers Acres of Land lying in three Villages in the said County. And at the trial before the Jury was sworn, Walter the Defendants Counsel put in a Plea, that after the last continuance, to wit, such a day in Trinity Term before the day of Assize, to wit, the 20. of July, the Assizes being held at Oxford, the 21 of July the Plaintiff had entered into such a Close by name containing eight Acres, parcel of the premises specified in the Declaration, etc. and this Plea was received by the Judges of Assize. And afterward in Mich. Term Yeluerton and Walter being of Counsel with the Defendant, desired that they might amend their Plea, to wit, to put in the very Village where the Land did lie, into which the entry of the Plaintiff was, because it was but matter of form, and not of substance: and they were of opinion, that the trial of that new lssue ought to be of all the three Villages named in the Declaration. And Yeluerton Justice having asked the opinions of all the Judges in Sergeants Inn Fleetstreet, related their opinions in the Court, the Record of Nisi prius was returned into the Exchequer, to wit, that it was in the discretion of the Justices of Assize to accept such a Plea as is before, and that it might be well allowed, as the 10 H. 7. is, and it shall stay the Verdict. But otherwise it is of a protection, for although they allow a protection, yet the Judges may take the Verdict, de bene esse; yet he said that in the 7. E▪ 3. in a Precipe quod reddat, a Release was pleaded at the trial, and the Jury found the Verdict, but that was the indiscretion of the Judges to allow it, when it should not have been allowed. And all the said Judges held as he related, that the Plaintiff could not have a replication to that Plea at the trial; for the Justices have no power either to accept a Replication upon that Plea, or to try it, but only to return it as parcel of the Record of Nisi prius. And they held also that the Plea being put in the Country, could not be amended in adding the Town in certain in which the Close did lie; for it was matter of substance. And that the Court of Exchequer where the Record was, would not award the Venire Facias of all the three Villages named in the Record, if it did not appear judicially to them that the Close did extend in all the Villages; and it doth not appear for parcel, if the premises doth not necessarily extend to all the Villages, but may well be, and so presumed in one Village only, and therefore it is matter of substance. And the Judges had not power after their Commission determined to amend the Plea. DAvis versus Pardy, Mich. 8. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declared of a Where words in a Declaration shall be void, rather than the Declaration shall be void. Lease made by one Cristmas the sixth of May, Anno 7. of one Message, etc. In D. by reason whereof the Plaintiff entered, and was possessed, until the Defendant afterwards, to wit, 18. of the same month, Anno sexto supradicto, did eject him. And not guilty being pleaded, a verdict was found against the Plaintiff. And Yeluerton moved in Arrest of Judgement to save Costs, that the Declaration was insufficient. For that Action was grounded upon two things: first, upon the Lease: secondly, upon the Ejectment, and both those aught to concur one after the other. And in this case the Ejectment is supposed to be one year before the Lease made, for the Lease is made Anno 7. and the Ejectment supposed to be done Anno 7. 6. And therefore the Declaration naught. And Yeluerton vouched the case between Powre and Hawkins, Anno septimo, Termino Pasch. Where the Plaintiff declared upon the Lease of Edw. Ewer, 27. April, Anno sexto, and laid the Ejectment to be 26. April, Anno 6. And the Court held then, that the Declaration was naught, yet in the case in question, the Declaration was adjudged good. And the word sexto to be void, for the day of the Ejectment being the 18. of the same month of May, it cannot be intended but to be the same year, in which the Lease is supposed to be made, by the opinion of the whole Court. AYlet versus Chippin, Mich. 8. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares upon a Lease made by John Aylet, for one year, of certain Land in C. in the County of E. by virtue whereof he entered, and was possessed, until the Defendant did eject him. The Defendant pleads that the Copyhold Land is parcel of the Manor of D. etc. of which one Jo: Aylet the Lessors Father was seized in Fee, according to the Custom, and that he made a surrender thereof to the use of his Will, and by his will devised the Land in question to John the lessor, and H. Aylet his sons, and to their Heirs Males of their Bodies, and willed that they should not enter until their several ages of 21 years. And further willed that W. B. and H. B. his Executors should have the Lands to perform his Will, until his said Sons Jo: and H. came to their several Ages, of one and twenty years, etc. To which Plea the Plaintiff replies, and confesses the Will, but shows further how that such a day and year before the Lease, Jo: his Lessor attained to his full Age of one and twenty years, and entered, and made a Lease thereof to him, etc. To which Plea the Defendant demurred, and adjudged for the Plaintiff. For although the Estate to Jo: and H. precede in words, and the devise to the Executors ensues in construction, yet the estate to Io: Executors, precedes in possession. And is as if he should have demised the Land, until his Sons Io: and H. should attain to their several Ages of one and twenty years. And afterwards to them and their Heirs Males, etc. to be enjoyed in possession at their several Ages, so that the Executors have only a limited estate, determinable in time, when either Son severally should attain to his full age, for his part. For so it appears, the Devisors intent was that either Son might enter, when he attained to the age of one and twenty years. And although it was objected by Justice Williams, that the two Brothers are joint-tenants by the Will, and if one should enter when he comes to his full Age, the other Brother being under age, that would destroy the intent of the devise, for than they should not take jointly, but the Court as to that said, that the entry of him that attained to his full age, doth not destroy the juncture, but that they are joint-tenants notwithstanding. For that entry in the intent of the Devisor, was only as to th● taking of the the profits, and the possession, and not as to the estate in joint-tenancy, and this is proved by 30 H. 6. Devise 12. where a devise was to four in Fee, and that one of them should have all during his life, and this was adjudged good, and it was as to the taking of the profits only, which observe by the whole Court but Williams. RIce versus Haruiston Pasch. 10. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares of a Lease made by Jo. Bull, etc. The Defendant pleads that the Land is Copyhold Land, parcel of the Manor of, etc. Whereof the King was seized, and is seized, and that the King by his Steward such a day granted the Land in question to him in Fee, to hold at will according to the custom of the Manor, by virtue whereof he was admitted, and entered, and was seized until the lessor entered upon him, and outed him, and made a Lease to the Plaintiff, and then he entered, and did eject him, etc. The Plaintiff replies, that long before the King had any thing in the Manor, Queen Eliz. was thereof seized in Fee in right of her Crown, and before the Ejectment supposed by the Defendant, by her Steward at such a Court did grant the Land in question, by Copy to him in Fee, to hold at Will according to the custom of the Manor, who was admitted, and entered, and further showed the descent of the Manor to the King, and how the Lesser entered, and made a Lease to the Plaintiff, who entered, and was thereof possessed, until the Defendant did eject him. Upon which Plea the Defendant did demur, because he supposed that the Plaintiff ought to traverse the grant alleged by the copy of the Defendant in his Barr. But the Court held the replication good; for the Plaintiff had confessed, and avoided the Defendant by a former Copy granted by Queen Eliz: under whom the King that now is claimed, and so the Plaintiff need not traverse the grant to the Defendant, but such a traverse would make the Plea vicious, for which see Hilliais Case, 6. Rep. And 14 H. 8. Dotknis Case, 2 E. 6. Dyer. And Brooks title confess, and avoid, for as no man can have a Lease for years without assignment, no more can a man have a Copy without grant made in Court. Which observe. SHecomb versus Hawkins, Pasc. 10 Jacobi. The case was in an especial verdict in Ejectment, that one Mrs. Luttrel Tenant in fee of the Manor of L. levied a Fine to the use of herself for life, and after death to the use of her eldest Son in tail, etc. With power to herself at any time, to make Leases for one and twenty years, and before the Lease in being expired, she made another Lease to B. for one and twenty years to commence after the determination of the first Lease. And as to the third part of the Land she made a Lease of that for one and twenty years after the death of one Carn, who in truth never had any estate in the Land, and afterwards she dies, the first Lease expires, And I: the Son enters, and makes a Lease to the Plaintiff, And the Defendant claims under B. the Lessee, And adjudged for the Plaintiff, for by such a power she could not make a Lease to commence at a day to come, but it ought to be a Lease in possession, and not in interest to commence in future nor in reversion, after another estate ended, but the Law will judge upon the general power to make Leases without saying such aught to be Leases in Possession, for if upon such power she might make Lease upon Lease she might by infinite Leases detain those in Reversion or Remainder out of the Possession for ever, which is against the intent of the parties, and against reason, and adjudged accordingly: Trin. 30 Eliz. Earl of Sussex case, 6 Rep. 33. And Justice William's said, that when he was a Sergeant, it was so adjudged in the Common Pleas in the Earl of Essex Case, and Judgement by the the whole Court. BRasier versus Beal, Trin. 10, Jacobi. Upon an especial Verdict in Ejectment, the Case was, that a Copyholder in Fee of the Manor of B. in the County of Oxford, by licence of the Lord lease the Land in question for sixty years to M. if he should live so long, rendering Rend with a Condition of reentry, the Copy holder surrenders to the Lessor of the Plaintiff in Fee, who demands the Rent upon the Land, which being not paid he entered, and made a Lease to the plaintiff, & without any Argument the Court seemed to be of opinion that the Entry of the Lessor was not congeable, for Copyhold land is not within the Statute of 32 H. 8. of Conditions, nor the Lessor such an Assignee that the Statute intends, for at the Common Law a Copy-holders' Estate is but an Estate at will, & custom hath only fixed his Estate to continue, which Custom goes not to such collateral things, as Entries upon Condition, for such an Assignee of a Copyholder being only in by Custom is not privy to the Lease made by the first Copyholder, nor only by him, but may plead his Estate immediately under the Lord, by the opinion of the whole Court. ODingsall versus Jackson, Mich. 10. Jac. In Ejectment the Declaration was, that the Defendants intraverunt, and that he did eject, expulse, and amove in the singular number, and after a Verdict for the Plaintiff upon Not guilty pleaded, the Defendant showed this matter to the Court in Arrest of Judgement, for the Declaration is incertain in that point, because it cannot be known which of the Defendants did eject the Plaintiff; for by his own showing it appears that the Ejectment was but against one, and upon that Declaration the Jury could not find all the Defendants guilty, for by the Plaintiffs supposal one only did eject him, but the Court gave Judgement for the Plaintiff, that the Declaration should be amended in that point, for it was but the Clerk's fault, and so it was, and upon an Evidence in an Ejectment by the Lessees of Cresset and Smith: Yeluerton said, that if a man comes into a Copyhold tertiously, and is admitted by the Lord, and afterwards he makes a Lease for three Lives, which is a Forfeiture of his Estate, yet if he that hath the pure Right to the Copyhold release to the wrongdoer, that it is good; for until the Lord enter he is Tenant in fait, and if the river as Copyholder, 4 Rep. 15. But Walter seemed of another opinion, and therefore quaere what benefit he shall have by the Release. In an Ejectment the Plaintiff declared of an Ejectment of decem acris pisar. and upon the general Issue it was found for the Plaintiff, and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, because the Plaintiff had declared the decem acris pisar. which is not good, for Pease are not known by the Acre, and therefore he should have declared the decem acris tene pisis seminaris, as if a man will demand Land covered with water, he must say, decem acras terrae aqua co opertas, but the whole Court held it good, for in a common acceptance ten Acres of Pease, or ten Acres sowed with Pease is all one, and so is the opinion of Catesby, 11 E. 4. 1. And the man the Secondary said, that so it had been adjudged in the Exchequer Chamber upon a Writ of Error. MEerton versus Orib, Trin. 11. Jacobi, Orib brought an Ejectment Nonage shall be tried where it is alleged, and not where the Landlyes'. against Meerton in the Common Pleas, 6 Jacobi, of a Cole-mine in Durham in the County Palatine there; the Defendant pleaded not guilty, and it was found for the Plaintiff before the Justice's Itinerantes there, upon which Judgement the Defendant brought a Writ of Error, and assigned for Error, that the Plaintif appeared by an Attorney, whereas it ought to have been by Guardian, being under age: And upon an Issue that he was of full age was tried at Durham, and found that he was within age; but the Plaintif had licence to discontinue his Writ of Error, and brought a new Writ of Error, Quod coram nobis residat: And declared that M. was inhabiting at Westminster in the County of Middlesex; and being within age, appeared by an Attorney; the Defendant in the Writ of Error confessed that he was inhabiting at Westminster, but that he was at full age at the time: And upon the trial in Middlesex, it was found that M. was under age: And it was alleged in Arrest of Judgement, and it depended a long time that it was a mistryall; and the doubt and question was only, whether the trial at Westminster in this Case was good: And Davenport, and Yeluerton were of opinion that it was not good, for the Error assigned was done at Durham, and because they there have the best notice of it, it ought to have been there tried: As if Error be in a Record, it shall be tried where the Record is, 19 H. 6. 79. Secondly, This is a real Action, in which the Land shall be recovered, and therefore though the Issue be upon a collateral matter, yet it shall be tried where the Land lies, because it concerns the realty, but if it had concerned the person only, it had been otherwise; and this difference is taken by Montham, 19 H. 6. 10. And therefore if a Feoffment be made upon payment, etc. If upon an Assize brought, the Defendant plead payment in another place, yet it shall be tried where the Land lies: And so likewise if the Issue should be, which is the eldest Son, although they allege their births in several Counties, yet it shall be tried where the Land lies; and so in that Case a Release of all his right was pleaded against him, and he pleaded that he was within age, and borne in another County, yet it shall be tried where the Land lies, and so adjudged, 7 H. 4. 8. and 17 E. 3. 36. b. 19 H. 6. 15. Nay though the Espousals be alleged to be in another County, yet it shall be tried where the Land lies, and adjudged, 7 H. 4. 8. And Davenport infers from 36 H. 6. 9 A grand Cape against one, he comes and pleads that he was within age at the time of the first Cape, which shall be tried where the Land lies: And another exception was taken, because the Venire facias was not well awarded, for it was directed to the Sheriff of Middlesex, that he should cause to come twelve, Coram nobis apud westmonasterium, which is not good, for that Court follows the King, and may be removed to any place, and therefore it ought to have been Vbicunque fuerimus in Anglia, but all the Judges, Fleming being absent, after mature deliberation held the trial at Middlesex good, for they took this difference in their answer to the rule laid down, that what concerns the realty, it shall be tried where the Land lies, for when nonage or the birth are alleged to entitle one to the Land demanded, as if in an Assize the Tenant pleads a discontinuance, the Demandant says he was within age at the time; or to debarr another of Land, that he was borne before marriage in these Cases, because the Inheritance of the Land depends upon it, although they be alleged in another place, yet they shall be tried where the Land lies, 19 H. 6. And so it is 39 H. 6. 49. b. to be intended, but if nonage or birth be pleaded as matter dehors, and not to the disabling of the title to the Land, but to another purpose, as here it is to the person, because he could not appear by Attorney, in this Case it shall be tried where the Infancy is alleged: As if in a Formedon in the Remainder, the Tenant pleads nonage in the Plaintiff, and prays that the Plea may stay until his full age, if Issue be taken upon it, it shall be tried in the place where it is alleged. And as to the Exception to the Venire facias the Roll is right, which warrants the Writ, and therefore they held it was but the Writers fault, and should be amended: and Doddridge and Cook held the Trial good: if Infancy be alleged, the Trial shall be by inspection during his Nonage, as it is 17 E. 3. Account, 121. and 11 H. 4. 115. 25. Ass. 2. and 48 E. 3. 11. and the 11. Rep. f. 30. but if his Age upon inspection remains doubtful, than the Judges may swear the party and examine Witnesses. And 25 E. 3. 44. and 50 E. 3. 5. but if the Infant come to full Age, it shall be tried by the Country, 33 H. 8. and they took this Difference in what place it should be tried, for if the Action be real, it shall be tried where the Land lies, as it is 21 E. 3. 28. 28 E. 3. 17. 44 Assis. 10. 46 E. 3. 7. 13 H. 4. 3. and if both places be in one County, than the venire facias shall be of both, 22 E. 3. 11. H. 4. 75. but if nonage be alleged in a personal Action, the Trial shall be where the writ is brought, 43. H. 6. 40. in Debt the Defendant pleaded infancy, and that he was born in such a place, yet the Venire facias was awarded of that place where the Action was brought, and 43 H. 6. 40. Prisot was of the same opinion, and the Law is the same, when it concerns the person as in misnomer, or that he is not the same person, and so in the Case in question, although the Action be brought in one place, and the nonage pleaded in another County, yet it shall be tried where the Action was brought, and therefore the Action being brought in Midd. the trial of Midd. is good, for a writ of Error, is of the nature of an Original which is personal, and they held the Venire facias should be amended, being but a matter of Form, and that it was no mistriall, it being awarded at a right place, and likewise the will is right which warrants it, and therefore it is but a misprision, and no mistriall, and the Venire facias shall be amended according to the will, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff in the writ of Error. Formedon. BRigham versus Godwin, The Formedon did abate, by the death of one of the Demandants, and upon a new writ brought by Journes Essoin lies in a writ brought by Journes account, although he was essoined upon the first Writ. accounts, the Tenant was Essoined, and it was moved by the demanded, that the Essoin should be quashed, because the Tenant was Essoined upon the first writ, but the Essoin was allowed by the Court, but it was held by the Court, that if the Tenant had the view upon the first Writ, he should never have the view again, at the Common Law we might have had a new Essoin upon view, as often as he brings a new writ, and Husband held, that if by the Common Law it is to be granted, the Statute doth not abridge it, two views do not lie upon one writ at the common Law, and if this shall be accounted but one Writ, the view lieth not, but in this case the Tenant did relinquish the view, because he had day to plead. NEvill versus Nevil, Mich. 15 Jac. rotulo 77. Formedon in le Discender, the writ was general, and the Count was upon a Feoffment made after the Statute of uses, and a special verdict, whether the Deed warrant the Count, the verdict, is whether upon the whole matter the said A. N. gave the moiety of the third part of the Manor, etc. for default of Issue of the Bodies of either the said G. and D. to the use of either of them surviving, and of the Heirs males of his Body to be begotten or no, the Jury are wholly ignorant, the writ was to the use of G. and D. and of the Heirs males of the Bodies of the said G. and D. lawfully to be begotten, and for default of such issue male of the Body of either of them, then to the use of either of them, having issue male of his Body lawfully begotten, and for default of such issue male of both the Bodies of the said G. & D. or either of them lawfully to be begotten, then to the use, etc. By Deed an implication By Deed an implicationbe intended. cannot be intended, if there be not apt words, otherwise, it is in a Will, for this is but a gift to a man and his Issue, for this gift is but to both of them for life, and several inheritances. Bishop & al. versus Cousin, Trin. 16 Jac. rotulo 62. In Formedon, the Tenant pleaded a warranty, and pretends that it was collateral warrantry, where in truth it was a lineal warranty, and it was held naught, because the warranty was in Law a lineal warranty; the Case was, that Land was givenby Feoffment made to the use of the Feoffer, for life, remainder in Tail, Tenant for life dies, Tenant in Tail had Issue a Son and two Daughters, and the Father and Son join in a Feoffment with warranty, and after the Father and Son die without issue, and the Daughters bring a Formedon, and this is a lineal warranty. Pity versus Staple, Trin 14 Jac. rotulo 112. Formedon in le discender against three which plead non-Tenure, and issue thereupon joined, and found specially, that two of them were Lessees for life, the remainder to the third person, and whether the three were Tenants as is supposed by the writ, was the question, and the better opinion was, that it was found for the Demandant, for the Tenants should have pleaded several Tenancy, and then the Demandant might maintain his writ, but by this general non-Tenure, if any be Tenant it is sufficient, but in some Cases, the Praecipe may be brought against one who is not Tenant, as a morgagor or morgagee. COmes Leicester versus Comit. Clanriccard. In Formedon upon a Judgement given in part for the Demandant, and part for the Tenant, the Tenant brought a writ of Error, and had a Supersedeas upon it, and afterwards the Demandant prosecuted a writ of Seisin, and delivered it to the Sheriff, and he executed the writ, and immediately afterwards, the Tenant delivered the Supersedeas to the Sheriff, and the Tenant moved the Court, and prayed a writ of restitution, and it was granted him, because the Tenant had done his endeavour, and had not delayed the prosecuting the writ of Error. COmes Clanriccard & Francisca uxor. Ejus Demandants, versus R. S. milit. vicecomit. Lyple for three messages, etc. which R. late Earl of Essex, and Frances late wife of the said Earl, by Fine in the Court of the Lady Elizabeth, late Queen of England, before her then Justices at Westminster, levied and gave to William Gerrard Esquire, and F. Mills Gentleman, and the Heirs of the said W. for ever, to the use of Elizabeth Sidney, Daughter and Heir of P. S. Milir. and the Heirs of the Body of the said E. coming, and for Nota. default of such issue, to the use of the said F. then wife of the said Earl, and the heirs of the said Fr. and which after the death of the said Eliz. aught to revert to the said Fr. by form of the gift aforesaid, and by force of the Statute in such case provided, because the said Eliz. died without Heir of her Body. The Tenant pleaded in abatement of the writ, because the writ ought to revert to the woman alone, and it should have been to the Husband and wife, and upon a demurrer, Judgement was, that he should answer over, the writ may be either to revert to the Husband and wife, or to the wife alone, and herein the Tenant vouch two vouches, and one is Essoined, and an idem dies given to the other, and Sergeant Harris demanded of the Court if he should Fourcher by Essoin, because the Statute of Westminster, the first is, that Tenants, Parceners, or Joint Tenants, shall not fourcher in Essoin, therefore they two should not fourcher by Essoin, but the Court held, that before appearance it could not appear to the Court, whether they were Tenants or not, and therefore before appearance they shall have several Essoins, and Westminster, the first is expounded by Gloucester the tenth, which is, that two Tenants shall not fourcher after appearance▪ and at the day of the adjournment of the last Essoin, the Tenant was Essoined, and such Essoin was allowed and adjudged by the whole Court, and the reason hereof seemed to some to be, because the Tenant might be informed of the Vouchee, that he vouched was the same person or no, for he might be another person, for if he should be an estranger, and demand the place, and the Demandant could not hold him to the warranty, the Demandant should lose his Land, and they held that upon several Process, to wit upon the view and upon the summons to warranty, which are divers Processes, the Tenant ought to be Essoined, and the Court held that this Essoin was at the Common Law, if the Tenant and the vouchee at the day given to the Tenant, and the vouchees make default, Judgement shall be given against the Tenant, to wit a petty Cape, and nothing against the vouchee. SHotwell versus Corderoy, In Formedon the Tenant prays in aid, ●nd the prayee in aid and Tenant vouch, and the Vouchee was essoined and adjourned, and at that Day the Attorney of the Tenant, without the Prayer in aid cast an Essoin; and an Idem dies given the Prayee in aid, and it was quashed; for they shall not have several Essoines but joint Essoines. A Formedon brought of Lands in A. B. & C. The Tenant pleads a By the Name of a Manor the Land in all the Villiages will pass. Fine of all by the name of the Manor and Tenements in A. & B. And it was objected that he said nothing to the Land in C. but the Courtheld that by the name of the Manor the Land in all the Villages would pass: and the Demandant may if he will plead as to the Land in C. that it was not comprised in the Fine. Hill. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 76. vel 69. Formedon in the Discender the Nota. Writ was general that J. L. gave to T. L. and the Heirs Males of his Body, upon the Body of D. V. Widow lawfully to be begotten, which D. the said T. afterwards took to Wife, and which after the Death of the said T. etc. Son and Heir Male of the Body of the said T. upon the Body of the said D. lawfully begotten to the said J. L. younger Son and Heir of the said J. L. Son of the said T. aught to descend by form of the Gift aforesaid, etc. and whereof he saith, that the said T. was seized, etc. and 2 Eliz. of the said Tenements did infeoff the Plaintiff in Fee to the use of the said T. L. and his Heirs, etc. and note, in the Count no mention made of the Marriage. If a Gift be made in tail to D. and his Heirs Males: the Remainder to A. in tail, D. discontinues in the Life of A. and D. dies without Issue, and the Heir of A. brought his Writ, as the immediate Gift to A. his Ancestor, who never was seized in his Life, and for that cause the Writ was naught; but if A. had been seized of the Land, than it had not been necessary to have showed the first Gift to D. by the opinion of the whole Court. Actions upon the Statute of Hue and Cry. NEedham versus Inhabitant. Hundredi de Stoak, Trin. 8. Jac. Action brought by the Servant in his own name, part of the Goods being his Masters. rotulo 534. Action brought upon the Statute of Hue and Cry by the Servant who was robbed in his own name, and part of the Goods were his Masters, and part his own proper Goods, and found guilty as to his own Goods, and a special Verdict, as to the Goods of his Master; and Judgement for the Plaintiff. COnstable versus Inhabitant▪ in dimid. Hundred. de Walsham in Nota. Comitat. Essex, Trin. 15. Jacobi, rotulo. 2244. The Action wabrought for a Robbery, the Defendant is found guilty, and it was alleged in Arrest of Judgement, that the Action would not lie, because it was not brought against the whole Hundred: and it was answered on the Plaintiffs behalf, that the half Hundred is a Hundred by itself; and the Court held, the Writ should have been brought against them in this manner, Inhabitants in Hundredo de W. called the half Hundred of Waltham; but the Writ was held good; for the Writis, & so shall be intended to be brought against the men inhabiting in the half hundred of W. & Judgement for the plaintiff; & in a special verdict, the Jury found that the robbery was done upon the Sunday, and it was held in the King's Bench, that the Hundred was liable. NOrris versus Inhabitants in Hundredo de G. Hill. 14. Jacobi, rotulo 431. And the Plaintiff declares upon a Robbery done the Nota. ninth day of October, An. 13 Jacobi. And the Original bears Teste the ninth of October 14 Jacobi, and after a Verdict, Sergeant Harvey moved to stay the Judgement, because the Writ was not brought within one year after the Robbery done, according to the form of the Statute of 27 Eliz. And the Court held it a good Exception. CAmblyn versus Hundredum de tendering, Trin. 15. Jacobi, rotulo The Record of Nisi prius amended upon motion. 1952. The Plaintiff in his Declaration had mistaken to allege the very Day of the Robbery, for he showed the Robbery to be committed in October, where in truth it was committed in September; and the Court was moved, that the Record which was taken out for Trial, but never put in, might be amended, for the notice given to the Hundred, as the Record is, would appear to be before the Robbery, and they granted that it should be amended. Actions in Partition. THe Process in Partition are Summons, Attachment, and Distress, and the Process are returnable from fifteen Days to The Process in Partition. fifteen Days; and if the Writ be brought against two or more, several Essoines will lie, but no View, and the Sheriff upon the Distress is compellable to return the value of the Land from the teste of the Original until the Return thereof: and if the Writ be against two or more De●e●●iants, and only one appears, the Plaintiff cannot declare against him, until the residue of the Defendants appear: and Partition lies by the Statute of 31 H. 8. cap. 32. between Joint-tenants, Tenants in Common, Tenants for Life or for years, but at the Common Law Partition was only between Coparceners, his Petit. is no Plea in Partition, and in this Action there are two Judgements, the first is, that Partition shall be made, and if the Plaintiff die after the first judgement, and before the second Judgement, the Writ shall not abate, but his Heir shall have a Scire facias against the Defendants, to show cause why Partition should be made, and a Writ of Partition will not lie of the View of Frank Pledges; and the Death of one of the Defendants abates the Writ. And note, the Plaintiff may have a general Writ, but a special Count: and if the Defendant confess part, and plead Quod non tenet insimul & pro indiviso, for the residue the Plaintiff may have Judgement upon the Confession, and a Writ to make Partition upon the Confession before the Trial, and afterwards try the Issue for the residue, or else he may respite his Judgement upon the Confession until the Issue be tried, but this is dangerous; for if the Plaintiff be nonsuit at the Assize, than the whole Writ will abate: and if the Sheriff return the Tenant summoned, when in truth he was not, an Action of Deceit lies not, but an Action upon the Case, because the Plaintiff shall not recover the Land by default, and you shall never have a Writ of Partition against one, where he cannot have one against the other; thirteen men join in a purchase of a Manor, the Conveyance was of the moiety to one of them in Fee, and the other moiety to the other twelve men in Fee, the twelve make a Feoffment to one, of twelve several Tenements, and Land, and that Feoffee makes twelve several Feoffments to those twelve men, now the thirteenth man which had the other moiety bringeth one Writ of Partition against them all, pretending that they held insimul & pro indiviso, and by the opinion of the whole Court it would not lie, but he ought to have brought several Writs, and Mich. 6. Jacobi. in Partition, because both of them are in Possession, he that is not prohibited may cut down all the Trees and no Estrepment will lie. Cock's versus Combstoks. The Plaintiff declares that one A. was Error in Partition upon the first Judgement. seized in Fee, and demised for years to J. and L. and to the Plaintiff for term of Life: and one of them demised to one of the Defendants for years; the Defendant as to part pleads, that he did not demise; and the other pleads Non est informat. and a Demurrer to the Plea of Non demisit, because it is but argumentative, Quod non tenet insimul, and it was adjudged a naughty Plea, a Writ of Error lies in Partition upon the first Judgement, before the Writ be returned. MIll versus Glemham. The Defendant pleads, that he before the Defendant pleads he had brought a Writ for the same land, and adjudged no plea. purchasing of this Writ, had brought a Writ of partition for the same Land against the Plaintiff, which yet depends, and demands Judgement if the Plaintiffs Writ were brought. And the Court held, that the Writ last brought is well brought; for if the first Plaintiff will not proceed upon his Writ, and the Defendant shall confess the Action, yet the Defendant cannot sue a Writ to make partition upon that Plaintiffs Writ, and therefore it is reasonable that the Defendant in the first Action may sue out a Writ to make partition, and that the Defendants plea is naught, and the last Writ is well prosecuted. Actions upon Quare Impedit. THe Process in this Action, are Summons, Attachment, and Distress, Process in a Quare Impedit. peremptory by the Statute of Marlborough, cap. 13. the Sheriff must summon the Defendant by good summoners, and return their names upon the original Writ, and not return common summoners, as John Do, and Richard Roose; for a Writ of deceit lieth in this Writ, if the summons were not made indeed; The Writs hereupon are returned from 15. days to 15. days. The summons upon the first Writ may either be made at the Church door to the person of the Defendant. And although a nihil be returned upon the first summons, Attachment, and Distress; yet if the Defendant make default upon the Distress, a Writ shall go to the Bishop upon the title made by the Plaintiff: but at the common Law a Distress infinite did lie, and no Writ to the Bishop before the appearance of the Defendant; but now this is taken away by the Statute of Marlborough, cap. 13. A Writ of Journes accounts lieth upon the death of the Testator, and summons and severance if one of the Plaintiffs will not sue. The Judgement in a Quare impedit, is to recover the presentment, and the value of the Church for half a year, if the Plaintiff remove the Clerk: And if he do not remove the Clerk, than the value of the Church by two years, and the value shall be levied by fifa or elegit, and not by capias ad satisfaciend. for that no capias lay before the appearance upon the Original. Four things are to be enquired on in a Quare Impedit; the first is, whether the Church be full or no; the second is, if it be full, of whose presentment; thirdly, whether the six months be passed from the time it became void; fourthly, the value of the Church by the year. If a Quare Impedit be brought against divers, they shall have several essoins before appearance; if the first man be essoined, it must be adjourned for 15. days, idem dies shall be given to the rest. And at that day another of the Defendants may be essoined for 15. days more, and an Idem dies given to the rest, and so of all the rest of the Defendants. And if the Defendant take not his essoin upon the summons, he may take his essoin upon the Attachment. And if the Plaintiff do not adjourn the essoin, he shall be nonsuit: And note, that the Defendants are not bound to appear after they have had their essoins until the return of the Distress; for an essoin is no appearance, because it may be cast by a stranger: And note, if the Quare Impedit be not brought against the Incumbent that is presented and admitted into the Church, at the time of purchasing the first original Writ, that Clerk shall never be removed by the Plaintiff, although he hath judgement to remove his presentation: but if a stranger be presented, hanging the Writ; if the Plaintiff recove, he shall remove him: And therefore the surer way is to bring the Writ against the Bishop, Patron, and Incumbent, and then the Bishop shall not present by Cups: and if the Patron be omitted in the original, the Writ is abateable. If the Original writ be brought against three, one May appear before his companions, and Process shall be continued until Distress be against the rest, and the Plaintiff in the mean time declare against him that appears in the Simulcum, and if he that appears pleads non impedivit, the writ shall be awarded to the Bishop, but there shall be acesset Executio, until the Plea between the Plaintiff, and the other Defendants be determined, and if the Bishop appear and claim nothing but as Ordinary, a writ shall issue to the same Bishop upon that Judgement, but if the Bishop makes a Title to present, & Judgement is given for the Plaintiff, than the writ shall issue to the Metropolitan of Canterbury, if the Church be within his Province, and so to the Metropolitan of York, if it be within his, and upon a Judgement by non sum informat. or nihil dicit, the writ, shall go to the Archbishop, and not the Ordinary, if the writ be against him. The death of one of the Defendants, hanging the writdoth not abate the writ, nor of one of the Plaintiffs Parcenors. If the Incumbent recover, he shall recover damages, for he cannot have a Writ to the Bishop, and if a man recover in a Quare impedit, and die, his Heir shall not have Execution, for it is not a real Action, and the Plaintiff ought always in his Declaration to make mention of the last Incumbent, or otherwise his Writ shall abate. The Husband alone, but in the Right of his wife, may without his wife bring a Quare impedit, but not an Assize, the Durraigne presentment, for he shall recover nothing but his presentation and damages, and if the wife die hanging the writ, it shall not abate, and a writ did abate because it was that he should permit him to nominate a fit person, where it should be to present, for an Advowson in Wales, the writ shall be brought in the next English County, and Judgement shall be given in his Action for the Plaintiff, at the Assizes, and deceit lies as upon a Judgement had in this Action upon default upon every Issue issued, joined by jury, the jury shall inquire of the points of the writ, and note, admission, plenarty, institution, and ability shall be tried by the Ordinaries Certificate, but if the Issue be whether the Church be empty by resignation, or whether the Patron have presented his Clerk, it shall be tried by the Cowtrey, and in this writ the Defeudant shall neither have his age, nor a protection, nor an Essoin, as in the King's service to avoid the Cups. If the King was Plaintiff & that the defendant was not summoned by the Sheriff, nor attached, nor distrained, and the King had Judgement by default, no writ of deceit lies in an Assize of Durraign, Presentment of the writ be brought in Midd. at the Return of the writ, the Assize shall be there arraigned by the Sergeants at the Bar in French, and the Tenant shall be demanded, and if the Tenant do not appear, when he is demanded, a resummons shall be awarded, and if upon the resummons, the Tenant shall not appear, the Assize shall be taken against him by default, and if the Tenant appear, he may demand Oyer of the writ and the Return, and the writ shall be read to him, in haec verba, and the Return thereof, and the Jury shall have the view, and the Tenant may take exception, either to the writ, or to the Return thereof, if there be cause, and if there be no cause, than he may pray a day to plead, and if the Court give a day, than the Jurors that appeared, shall be discharged of their attendance, and aught to appear upon a new Process to be awarded against them, the Judgement in this Assize is to recover the Presentation, damages, and the value for half a year, and if six months be past, the value of the Church for two years, by the Statute of Westminster, Ed. 2. and six of the Jury ought to have the view of the Church, to the intent that they may put the Plaintiff into possession if he recover, and in this writ the Plaintiff shall not recover the Advowson, but the Presentation, the Process in this writ is summons, resummons against the Tenant, and summons, habeas corpus, and distress against the Jury, and the Process shall be returned from fifteen days, to fieteen days, and no Essoin nor voucher lies after a resummons. If the King present his Clerk, one may have an Assize against his Clerk only, and not against the King, and at Common Law none can have an Assize, but only the Tenant of the Freehold, but by the Statute, Tenant by Statute, Merchant, or Elegit may have an Assize, if the Incumbent hanging the writ die, and the disturber present again, that writ lies by Journes account upon the first disturbance, and always in a Declaration in a Quare impedit, you must lay a Presentation in him from whom you first derive your Title, or under some from whom he claimeth, otherwise it is not good. The Bishop cannot grant a Sequestration in no Case, but where the Church is void, but if the Clerk be instituted, and inducted, no Sequestration lieth. CVppel versus tansy, Trin. 16 Jac. rot. 3210. Quare impedit brought for the Church of Bleby, the Issue was, that there was no such Exception taken to the Venire, and overruled. Church, and the Venire was, de visu de Bleby, and the Exception was, because it was not of the Body of the County, but the Exception was salved, because in the Declaration it was alleged, that one died at Bleby aforesaid, and it was held, that every place alleged, shall be intended to be a Town, and by the user of the writ, it is presumed in Law to be a Parish, and then if there be a Parish, and a Town, if the Venire facias be either of the Parish or Town, it is good, and it is a good Writ to demand Manerium de D. with the appurtenances. Several Quare impedits may be brought against several Defendants, as one against the Bishop, and another against the Patron and Several Quare impedits, may be brought against several men. Incumbent, but if J. S. brings a Quare impedit against A. B. that A. B. cannot have a writ against the said J. S. if a Quare impedit, abates, within the six months the Plaintiff may bring another writ, but if the Plaintiff be nonsuit within the six months, he cannot have a new writ, because the Defendant upon Title made, hath a writ to the Bishop, and for that cause, a new writ will not lie. COmber versus Episcopum Cicester, & al. Trin. 6 Jacobi. rotulo 1629. The issue in a Quare impedit was, if S. Rose by covin Admittance of a Resignation by fraud, takes not away the King's Title. between him and Cumber and Rivers, did resign into the hands of the said Bishop, if the King hath Title of lapse, and a resignation be made by fraud, and one admitted, this shall not take away the King's Title, for if the King's Title appear upon Record, then shall go out a writ for the King, but otherwise it is upon matter of Evidence, the King shall lose his presentation, as well by resignation, as by Death, where he hath Title to present by lapse, and doth not, except the resignation be by fraud, and where an avoidance is by Statute, there needeth not notice to be given to the Bishop. LOrd Say versus Episcopum de Peterborrow, Mich. 30 Jacobi rotulo The state is determined by the death of Tenant in Tail. 2601. The Imparlance and the demurrer entered, Hill. 7. Jacobi, rotulo 3458. The Case was Tenant in Tail grants the Advowson to others, to the use of himself and his wife, and the Heirs males of the Husband, and the Husband dies, and the wife survives, and the Lord Say marries the woman, and brought the Quare impedit, the estate is determined by the death of Tenant in Tail, and Judgement was given for the Bishop upon a Demurrer, in a Quare impedit, if any of the Defendants do bar the Plaintiff, the Action is gone. WAllop versus Murrey, Trin. 8. Jacobi, rotulo 3905. The Church became void by resignation and a presentation upon the proviso in the Statute of 21 H. 8. for the King's Chaplains. The King's Chaplains might have three Benefices with licence, nay he may give to them as many as he will, being of his own gift, Judgement for the Plaintiff, if the Incumbents Plea be found for him, he shall never be removed, although other Pleas be found for the Plaintiff by the whole Court, Pasch. 9 Jacobi. If the writ abate for Form, you shall never have a writ to the Bishop, nor where it appears that you have one Title. DOminus Rex versus Emerson. Trin. 8. Jac. rot. 1811. The question was, where the King had Title to present to a Church by reason A presentment by words, good. of ward-ship, and after livery: and before the King doth present under the Seal of the Court of Wards, the King doth present by his Letters patents under the great Seal of England, and the Clerk is admitted, instituted, and inducted, whether the Clerk shall be removed or no, and the Court held that he should not: and Judgement that the Plaintiff, nihil capias per breve, he that getteth it first by the Court of Wards or great Seal shall have it, there needeth no recital in the grant. A common person by his letter or his word may make a presentation to a Benefice to the Bishop; the King may present by word if the Ordinary be present; for a presentment is but a commandment; if the King under any Seal present, it is good: It is best to plead the King presented generally, and not to plead it by Letters Patents, for it is the worst way, and judgement was given for the Defendant: and Mich. 10. Jacobi, it was held by the whole Court, that a presentment under the great Seal, to a Church parcel of the Duchy of Lancaster is good, and needeth not to be under the Duchy Seal. CRanwell versus Lister. The Defendant had been Parson for three years, and pleaded plenarty generally by six months of the presentation of one Styles, a stranger to the Writ: And the Court held Nota. the Plea to be nought, because the Defendant showed no Title in Stiles. NEedler versus Winton and Needham, Hill. 12. Jacoci, rotulo, 1845. In a Quare Impedit, the Case was, Husband and Wife, bargain and sell Land to the King; this is as good as a Fine being found, if it was delivered to the King, but not entered of Record; if it was made and delivered, it was good: but if the King should before it be delivered, grant it out, it had been void, being not enroled of record; for the King in consideration of the bargain and sale of the Husband and Wife before the Deed enrolled, did grant to them the Parsonage of Horsham: in this case the Wife is bound as strong as by Fine, and the King made the grant between the date of the deed, and before inrolment. If the King's Clerk be once inducted, the K. cannot remove his Clerk at the common Law, before the Statute of 34. H. 8. If a Quare Impedit were brought against the Patron and Clerk, the Patron might confess the Action, and so prejudice the Clerk; therefore by the Statute the Clerk being inducted, he may plead that he is Parson impersoned, and so defend himself. GLaswick versus Williams, Hill. 9 Jacobi, rotulo, 854. A Quare A subsequent debt to the Qu. related to award an assurance made upon good consideration. Impedit brought of the Rectory of I. Stoneley, one of the Tellers in the Exchequer, was indebted to Queen Eliz. And it was found that he was seized of a Manor, ad quod, etc. in fee, and sold it to the Plaintiff, who brought a writ to remove the Clerk, who was admitted by the presentation of Stoneleys wife, to whom a jointure was made by her Husband before he was indebted to the Queen: and it was pretended that the jointure was void by the Statute of 〈…〉 and so was the opinion of the Court. If one usurp upon the King, where the King hath Title, the Clerk cannot be removed, but by a Quare Impedit: but where the King is to present by laps, and one doth present the King during the life of the The King hath lost his presentation by the Clerk's death. Clerk, shall remove him: but if he die, the King hath lost his presentation; but if the Clerk resign, then is it no prejudice to the King. COmes Bed. versus Episcopum Exo. Trin. 14 Jacobi, rotulo, 2235. A Defendant pleads another writ depending against the said Bishop, & good. Quare Impedit brought, the Bishop and Incumbent join; and plead that there is another writ depending against the same Bishop only, and pleads it: and that the disturbance in this Declaration, and the disturbance in the former Declaration, are one and the same disturbance. The Plaintiff replies, that the first writ was brought for another disturbance, and traverses without that, that they are one and the same impediment, and the Defendant demurs upon that plea, and Judgement given for the Defendant, that it was a good plea in abatement; for although the presentation and the disturbance are both of them in question, yet the presentation is the main, and the presentation but as accessary. BIrkhead versus Archiepiscopum Eborum & al. Pasch. 14. Jacobi The Bishopsplea shall not prejudice the Incumbent. rotulo 953. A Quare Impedit brought for the Vicaridg of Leeds in Yorkshire. The Archbishop claims nothing but as Ordinary, and pleads further, that the Church became void the first of January, An. 12. Jacobi, and that six months had elapsed; by reason whereof he collated the 23. Decem. and Cook the Incumbent pleaded the same plea; the Plaintiff replied, and confessed the Avoidance the first of January: but he further said, that within the six months, to wit, the 20. of May, etc. he presented his Clerk, and the Archbishop refused to admit him: And afterwards, to wit, the 30. of May, the Bishop collated, and the Defendant demurred for the doubleness of the plea. If the Incumbent plead good matter for his presentation, although the Bishop plead insufficiently, that shall not prejudice the Clerk: And the Defendant took exception to the Plaintiffs writ, because it bore-date the 9 of May, the presentment was 29. of May, and the refusal of the Bishop was the said 29. of May, and he collated the 30. of May: and so the writ was brought before the refusal made by the Archbishop. DOminus nuper Rex Jacobus versus Episcopum Roffen. & al. Hill. 13. Jacobi rotulo, 2330. A Quare Impedit brought for the Church of Milton near Gravesend in Kent, and the issue was, that Queen Eliz. was seized of the advowson of the said Church, etc. and upon trial of the issue, the Jury found it specially; by which it appeared, that the Queen had Title but at two turns, and the Bishop had one turn: and because it appeared to the Court, that the Queen had Title to that turn, therefore a writ was awarded to the Bishop for the King. WInchcomb versus Episcopum recutor. & al. Pasch. 14. Jacobi rotulo, 1026. The case was, that a Clerk in Salisbury, when the Church was full, contracted with the Patron, to give him 98. l. when the Church should become void, the then Incumbent being a very old and sickly man, and did conclude, that the Patron should grant the next avoidance to a Friend of his who presented him. And this was held to be a simonaical contract. The Clerk was admitted and continued in all his life, and died, and now the King presented. The qustion was, whether the King, not taking advantage thereof during his life, shall have now the presentment, if he had resigned or made session, and then another had been presented, and then the first Nota. Clerk had died, the King then had lost his turn. Hubbard and Winch held that the King had not lost his presentation, for he never was Parson, and that the King after his death shall have his turn: and Winchcomb cannot have it, because the Church was void when the lease of the Manor was made. And Calverts case in the Exchequer was remembered; for the Church being void, P. contracts simoniacally with the Patron to have the presentation, and upon this corrupt agreement he presents R. who was ignorant of this corrupt agreement, and yet he was removed; for he shall be punished for the offence of his Patron: the admiission upon such corrupt agreement maketh the institution and induction void. AVsten versus Episcopum London, & al. Pasch. 12. Jac. rotulo, 2255. A Quare Impedit brought for the Church of B. he claimed by grant of the next avoidance from Sir Edward Pynchion. The Defendant pleads a Usurpation by Queen Mary upon a deprivation and plenarty of her Clerk by six months. The Plaintiff pleads a recovery by a Quare Impedit upon a non sum informat. by the Patron against the Queens Clerk. If the King upon usurpation present, and his Clerk be in by six months; if the Patron bring a quare Impedit against the King's Clerk, and recover by non sum informat, this shall remit the Patron to his ancient right: otherwise it is, if the King do present by Title in the case of deprivation, the Patron must have six months after notice. And Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. WIvel versus Episcopum Cestrie & al. Pasch. 12. jacobi rotulo, 626. Tenant in tail and his son, grant an advowson, and the Father dyeth, the grant is void, and Judgement for the Plaintif. WIndham versus Episcopum Norwic. & al. Mich. 13. Jac. rotulo, 2042. A Quare imped. brought that the Bishop should permit the Plaintiff to present, etc. to the Church of A. etc. and declares, that whereas E. W. Knight, was seized of the Manor of M. with the appurtenances, to which the advowson of the said Church, to wit, to present to the said Church every first turn, etc. and that the Duke of Norfolk was seized of the advowson of the said Church, to wit, to present to the same every second turn. And that one T. G. was seized of the advowson of the said Church, to wit, to present to the same every third turn, etc. And an exception was taken to the Declaration, because by the writ the Plaintiff claimed the entire advowson, and by his count he claimed but the third turn: and also he did not allege that he ought to have the first turn; but the exceptions were overruled by the Court; for when the Church is void, and it appertains to him to present; he hath the entire advowson, but otherwise it is, when there are two advowsons in one Church, for there the Court must be to the moiety of the Church, or the third part. THe late King James against Matthew, Trin. 4. Jacobi. The King was Plaintiff in a Writ of Error against Matthew, upon a Judgement given in a Quare impedit, against the King in the Common Pleas, of the Church of A. and the Question was, whether a double usurpation upon the King doth so put him out of Possession, that he shall be forced to his Writ of Right, and it was adjudged in the Common Pleas against the opinion of Anderson, that he was put to his Writ of Right; but a Writ of Error being brought upon that Judgement in the Common Pleas, the Judgement was reversed by the opinion of Popham, Yeluerton, Williams, and Tamfeild; Fennor, being of a contrary opinion, and they alleged two Reasons; first, because the Right of Patronage, and the Advowson itself being an Inheritance in the Crown; upon Record the Law will so protect it, that no force or wrong done by a Subject, it shall be devested out of the King, for there is a Record to entitle him, but there is no matter of Record against him, for a Presentationby a Subject is but matter in fait, the which Act although it be mixed with the judicial Act of the Bishop, to wit, Institution, yet it shall not prejudice the King, being only grounded upon the wrong of a Subject: and the second Reason was, because no man can show when the Usurpation upon the King should commence and begin; for it is not to be doubted, but that the King after six Months passed, if the Incumbent cy might have presented, for plenarty is no plea against him, and Nullnm tempus occurrit Regi; and after that Usurpation upon the King, the Court doubted not but that the Patronage was still in the King; and Popham said, that a Confirmation being made by the King to such a Presentee, is good, to establish his Possession against a Recovery in a Quare impedit by the King afterwards, but that it should not inure to any purpose, to amend the Estate of the Usurper, for he gains no Posaession by the Presentation against the King, but the Release to him made by the King is void, as to so much as is in posaession, and during the life of the first Presentee, the whole Court did not doubt but that the King might present, and then the Death of the Incumbent could not make that to be an Usurpation, which was not an Usurpation in his life, for his Death is a Determination of the first wrong, which will rather help then injure the King: and Tanfeild said, that so it had been resolved in the Common Pleas, 23 & 24 Eliz. in one Yardleys' Case, for in that Case there was not any Induction, for which reason Judgement was not entered, but they were all of the same opinion, as the Court then was; and only 43 E. 3. 14. 14 E. 3. and 18 E. 3. are against it; and Popham said, that a Quare impedit was by the Common Law, but it was only upon a Presentment, to wit, Induction; but if the Incumbent was to be inducted, then at the Common Law a Writ of Right of Advowson only lies. DIgby versus Fitzch, Trin. 14. Jacobi, rotulo. It was said, in this Case by Justice Warburton, that the Presentment is the Posaession in a Quare impedit, as in Rent, the receiving, and in common, the taking of the profits: and in a Quare impedit one aught to show in his Title a Presentation either by himself, or one of those, under whom the Plaintiff claims as in a Writ of Right of an Advowson, one must show a Presentation in himself, or in his Ancestors, whose Heir he is plenarty in a Quare impedit, shall be tried by the Bishop, for the Church is full by Institution only in common persons Cases, but in the King's Case the Church is not full until the Clerk be inducted, but whether a Church be void or not, shall be tried by the Country, for of Voidency the Country may take notice. Actions upon Replevins. IF the cattle be distrained, the party that owes them may have a Replevin, either by Plaint, or Writ, at his pleasure, and if it be by plaint in the country, and the Bailiff return to the Sheriff that he cannot have the view of the Beasts to make deliverance, than the Sheriff ought to inquire of that by Inquest of office, and if it be found, that the Beast be not to be had, than he ought to award a Withernam, and if the Sheriff will not do it, than an Attachment shall issue against the Sheriff to the Coroners, and after that a Distress, and if a Withernam be granted, and a nihil returned upon the Withernam, he shall have an alias & plures, and so infinitely; and a second deliverance lies after a Withernam; and note, that sometimes a Withernam lies after a Withernam, as when the Plaintiff is nonsuit, and after a Return habend. and that the Beasts are not to be found, & that the Beasts of the Plaintiff are taken in Withernam, and the Plaintiff appears, and alleadges that the Defendant, had the cattle first taken, and prays Delivery. And if the Defendant, when the Sheriff comes to make replevin of the cattle, claims property, then at the return of that writ, another writ, de proprietate probanda shall issue to the Sheriff, by which writ the Sheriff is commanded; that taking with him custodibus placitorum, etc. he shall inquire of the property. And if it be found that the property was to the Plaintiff, than a redeliverance shall be made the Plaintiff, and an Attachment against the Defendant, to answer for the contempt in taking, and unjustly detaining, the cattle of the Defendant appear upon the plures withernam, he shall gauge deliverance presently. And if the Defendant in Court claims the property, and it be found against him, the Plaintiff shall recover the value of the cattle and his damages. And if the Defendant plead in abatement of the writ, that the property is in the Plaintiff and one other, etc. and the Plaintif confess it, by which the writ shall abate by an award upon the Role, and a return habend. be awarded to the Defendant, yet the Plaintif shall have a new replevin, and the return shall not be irreplegiable; for the Statute of Westm. the second, doth not help a false writ, or abatement of a writ: but the Plaintif may have a new writ from time to time, but it helps non-suits in replevin; for if he be nonsuit, he shall not have a new replevin, but a writ of second deliverance. And if the Defendant upon the return habend. adjudged for him, cannot have the return of the Beasts, and the Sheriff returns upon the return habend. that the cattle first taken are dead, he may have a Scire facias against the pledges: and upon a nihil return upon that, he may have a Scire facias against the Sheriff, for insufficient pledges are no pledges; and the party may relinquish his withernam, and fall upon the pledges or the Sheriff. And if cattle be put into a Castle or Fortress, the Sheriff may take the power of the County to make a replevin upon the plures replevin: a replevin will not lie of deeds or charters concerning Land, and no return habend. lies upon a justistification: and if a discontinuance be after a second deliverance, the return habend. shall be irreplegiable. And if the Defendant after an advowry will not gauge deliverance, he shall be imprisoned for the contempt: no disclaimer lies upon a justification, but upon an advowry. And if the replevin was sued by writ, and the Sheriff return thereupon, that the cattle are not to be found, than a withernam shall be awarded against the Defendant: and if a nihil be returned, than a capias alias & plur. withernam, and thereupon an Exigent: and if he do at the return of the exigent find pledges to make deliverance, and be admitted to his Fine, than the Plaintiff shall declare upon an uncore detent. and go to trial upon the right of the cause of distress: and if it be found for the Plaintiff, he shall recover his costs and damages: And if for the Defendant he shall have a return habend. But if upon the return of the Plures repleg. the Defendant appear, than no withernam lies, but he must gauge deliverance, or be committed: and the Plaintiff shall count against him upon an uncore detent. and so proceed to the rightful taking of the distress. And if it be found for the Plaintiff if the cattle be not delivered, he shall recover the value of the goods, and costs and damages, if for the Defendant, costs and damages, and a return habend. WIlkins versus Danre Trin. 6. Jacobi, rotulo, 930. The Defendant avowed a rend charge, granted to his Father in fee, with a clause of Distress: the Plaintiff demands Oyer of the deed, which was a grant of the rent to one and his heirs, to hold to him his Heirs, Executors, and Assigns to the use of the said H. and his Assigns during the life of a stranger: And whether it was in fee, or for life, was the question, and whether the habendum be contrary to the premises, or do stand with the estate: If the habendum had been to him and his Heirs during his own life, this had been void; but it was held otherwise for a stranger's life, and no occupancy can be of a rent. Chapel versus Whitlock, Mich. 6. Jac. rotulo, 1316. The question was upon a liberty in the deed to make Leases, provided Liberty to make Leases. they shall not exceed the number of three lives, or twenty and one years, and the lease was made for 80. years, if two live so long; if he make a Lease absolute, it must not be above twenty and one years, but in this case it is uncertain. MAnning versus Camb, Pasch. 7. Jacobi rotulo, 341. in Replevin, the Defendant avows damage pheasant by reason of a devise A devise for years in confidence, the condition must go to the estate, and not to the use. made to the Advowant by will for one and twenty years, by one Lockyer, who was seized of the Land in fee: The Plaintiff saith, that true it is, that Lockyer was seized in fee of the Land in question, and by the said Will devised the Land to the said D. for the said years, in confidence only to the use of it, if she should remain unmarried, and afterwards, and before the taking, died thereof, seized J. L. being then Son and Heir of the said Lockyer, after whose death the Land descended to the said J. as Son and Heir, etc. after whose death the Legatees entered into the Land, and were thereof possessed to the use and confidence above said, the reversion belonging to the said J. L. And the woman took Manning to her Husband; by reason whereof, the said term devised by the said L. to the said A. and J. to the use and confidence abovesaid, ended the said being under the age of 14. years, to wit, of the age of two years, by reason whereof the custody of the Heir did belong to the Husband and Wife, by reason whereof they seized the Heir, and entered into the Land, and maintained their count; the Defendant confessed the Will, and the devise for years, in confidence: and further, that after the term he devised the Land to his son in fee, and a demurrer. The condition must go to the estate, and not to the use. COuper versus Fisher, Trin. 6. jac. rotulo 513. The Defendant as Administrator of Foster, advows for rend reserved upon a Feoffment made in fee of the Manor, reserving rend in fee to the Feoffer, in the name of a Fee-farm-rent, with a clause of Distress for the not The scisin of rent reserved upon a Feosment within the time of limitation not to be traversed. paying of it, and that the rent did descend to the issue of the Feoffer. And for the rent due to the Heir, the Feoffer in his life advows the Plaintiff in his bar to the Advowry, saith; that neither the intestate nor his Ancestors, nor any other whose estate the said T. hath in the rent were ever seized of the same rent within forty years then last passed before the taking, etc. And a demurrer pretending that he ought to allege seizin in the Advoury with forty years: And it was held by the whole Court that the seisin is not to be alleged being it was by deed made within the time of prescription; neither is the seisin but where the seisin is traversable, there it must be alleged, and in no other case, and the Judgement was given for the Advowant. Mich. 8. Jacobi. An Advowry was made for an amerciament in a Nota. Court leet, and shows that he was seized of the Manor in Fee, and that he and all, etc. have had a Court leet, and the plaintiff traverses that he was seized of the Manor in Fee: and the Court held. If the Defendant had a reputed Manor, it would maintain the Avowry, though he had indeed no Manor in truth. REynolds versus Oakley. The Defendant avows for rend reserved The beast of a stranger shall not be distreined for rent except they have been upon the land some time. upon a lease for life, and the Plaintiff shows that the place in which &c. did adjoin to the close of the Plaintiff, and that the cattle against the Plaintiffs will did escape into the other close, and that he did presently follow the cattle; and before he could drive them out of the close, the Defendant did distrain the Plaintiff's Beasts: And whether the Distress were lawful or not, was the question. And the Court held in this case, because the Beasts were always in the Plaintif's possession, and in his view, the Plaintiff would not distrein the cattle of a stranger; but if he had permitted the Beasts to have remained there by any space of time, though they had not been levant and couchant, the Lessor might have distreyned the Beast of a stranger. BLown versus Ayer, Hill. 40. Eliz. rotulo, 1610. In a Replevin the question was upon these words, to wit, the said Abbot and Covent granted to the said R. that he and his Assigns, Fierboot, Cart-boot, and Plowboot, sufficient by the appointment, etc. without making waist under the penalty of forfeiting the devise, whether those words make a condition or no, and by the whole Court held to be a condition, but Judgement was given for the Plaintiff for doubleness in the plea. BRown versus Dunri, Hill. 15. jac. rotulo, 1819. The Defendant made cognizance etc. as Bailiff, M. Walker, Widow, Administrator, etc. R. W. for one rend charge of 6 l. granted by one Warner Demand not necessary in a Replevin for rent. to the said R. and M. his wife for life of the Wife. And the said R. by the said writing granted, etc. That if it should happen the said yearly Rend to be behind, and not paid in part, or in all by the space of ten days next after any Feast, etc. being lawfully demanded, that then, etc. the said Warner, etc. ten shillings, nomine paene, for every default, and that then it should be lawful to the said W. and M. and their Assigns, to enter into the premises, and distrain as well for the rent as for the nomine paene, and shows that the rent was behind in the life of the Husband, and that he died intestate, and that administration was committed to the woman, and made cognisance for the rent due at such a Feast in the life of the Husband, and being then behind, and the issue was, that the Grantor was not seized: and after a trial divers exceptions were taken; one was for that a demand was not alleged; another was, that the cognisance was made as Bailifle to the Administrator, when as the woman by the survivorship should have the rent. Another was, that it is not alleged that the rent was behind by ten days next after the Feast, and the exceptions upon debate at divers days were overruled. First, the demand is not necessary, for the Distress is a sufficient demand, as it was adjudged in jaces case: The second was, because the cognisance as Administrator are void, idle, and superfluous: and for the ten days it was good, because that predicto tempore quo, etc. It was behind, and adjudged by the whole Court for the Advowant. SLoper versus allen, Trin. 15. Jac. rotulo, 3002. Replevin upon the taking of 40. Sheep; the issue was, that the Sheep were not levant and couchant, and found by a special verdict that twenty Sheep were levant and couchant, and that twenty Sheep were not levant Nota. and couchant: and it was held upon the reading of the Record, that the Plaintiff should have his Judgement. BVrton versus Coney, Hill. 16. jac. rotulo, 2044. The Defendant Exct●tion to the advowry too late after judgement entered. avows for a rent charge granted to him for life by his Father, issuing out of all his Lands in such a Town, to have and to hold, to levy, and yearly to take the said annuity or annual rent of etc. during the natural life of the said P. at two Feasts in the year, to wit, etc. by equal portions: the first payment to be made at the first and next Feast of the said Feasts, which should next happen after the term of 8. years ended and determined, specified and declared in the said will. And if it should happen, etc. And avers in the avowry, that there is not any term of years specified and declared in the said Testament before recited. And note, that in the premises of the Deed it is recited thus in fulfilling the Will or Testament of me the said T. bearing date such a date I have given, etc. And the Court held that the grant was present if no term was contained in the will, and Judgement was given for the Advowant. But after Judgement was entered upon Record, an exception was taken, because it was not averred that the Grantor was dead: and it was allowed for a good exception, but it came to late judgement being entered. HEyden versus Godsulm. Judgement for the Defendant who avowed Replevin not within the statute of 3. jac. for rend reserved upon a Lease for years: and it was moved that the Plaintiff who brought the writ of Error upon that Judgement ought to find bail upon the writ of Error by the Statute of 3. jacobi, and it was held by the greater number of the Judges that the Plaintiff should not find bail for Replevins are not within the Statute. TVrny versus Darnes, Trin. 17. jac. rotulo, 2887. Demurrer in a replevin upon a traverse of Lands, when as the parties have not agreed of the quantity of Land. The Avowry was that C. was seized of one Message, two Barns, one Mill, etc. and 100 acres of Land, with the appurtenances in W. and held them of etc. by fealty & rent, etc. and suit of Court, etc. And the Plaintiff prayed in aid, and he joined, and alleges that he was seized of 70. acres of Land with the appurtenances in his demesne as of Fee, and held them of G. by fealty and rent, etc. and suit of Court, and traverses that he held the Tenements of the said G. as if his Manor of W. in manner and form as etc. and a special demurrer: and one cause was, because he denies not the seisin of the said services, but only denies and traverses the tenure, and therefore they pretended that the plea contained double matter, and was a negative pregnant, and secondly, whether the Seisin or Tenure be traversable, and the Plea was held good by Hubberd and Warburton. Richards' versus Young, Trin. 16 Jacobi rotulo 104. vel 1700. judgement arrested, for that the plea was naught. A Replevin brought for taking of cattle at Aller, in a certain place called Land Mead, the Defendant avows as Bailiff of Sir John Davies the King's Sergeant, containing four Acres for damage fesant, the Plaintiff pleads in Bar, that Henry Tearl of Hunt. was seized of the Manor of Aller, whereof one Message, etc. was parcel, and customary Land, and devisable by Copy of Court Roll, and that within the said Manor there was a Custom that every customary Tenant of the said Message hath been used to have Common of Pasture in the said place called Land Mead, the Issue was without that, that within the said Manor, with the appurtenances whereof, etc. is, and time out of mind, was a custom that every customary Tenant of the laid Message etc. had Common of pasture in manner and form, etc. and Sergeant Harris moved in Arrest of Judgement, that there was no custom alleged, because it did not appear in the pleading, that the place where the taking was supposed to be was within the said Manor, and no custom of the Manor, could extend forth of the Manor, but he ought to prescribe in the Manor, and note he ought to have pleaded, that the place in which, etc. was parcel of the Manor, and then the Plea had been good. In a Replevin upon an Avowry for Rent, the Plaintiff for part Nota. pleadeth, payment, for the other part an Accord, the one Issue is found for the Paintiff, and the other for the Defendant, the Plaintiff shallrecover his costs and damages, and the Defend. shall have Judgement of Return habend. and no costs and damages, I think otherwise it is, if the Avowries be several, then on both sides they shall recover costs, and damages. Loe versus Edwards, Trin. 19 Jacobi rotulo, 470. The Case was Nota. in Replevin, a Copyholder claims Common in another man's Land, & the Lord infeofleth the Copyholder of his Copyhold Land, whether he hath now lost his Common, and held that he had, but if a Copyholder hath Common in the Lords waste, and the Lord inseofeth him, of the Copy hold with all Commons, the Common is not gone. Oabel versus Perrot, Hill. 9 Jacobi rotulo 2734. Tenant in Tail The Plea naught for want of amendment. hath power to make a Lease for 89 years, if three persons live so long, and reserving the old Rent due, and payable yearly, and he maketh a grant in Reversion for years, and whether that be good or no was the Question, there being a Lease for life in possession, the second Lease was for 89 years, if three live so long, for the matter in Law, the Court held the Lease good, but for want of an averment of the life of, etc. the Plea was not good. Roberts' versus Young, Hill. 9 Jacobi routlo 1835. the Defendant Amends made to the Bailiff not good. in a Replevin pleads that he offered amends, and doth not show that he offered it before the impounding of the Cattle, and adjudged an ill Plea, and the offer of amends cannot be made to him that maketh cognisance. BAcon versus Palmer. Trin. 12 Jacobi rotulo 3947. A Copyholder If one enclose part, it is an Extinguishment of Common for cause of vicinage. in Replevin prescribes to have Common of pasture appurte nant to the Copyhold, the other party, pleads an Extinguishment of Common, because the Lord had enclosed Land, lying in another field in which field, and in the other field, the Lord had Common by cause of vicinage, and note that in Common for cause of vicinage, if one enclose part, it is an extinguishment of all the Common. SHarp versus Emerson, Mich. 12. Jacobi. The Defendant makes avowry for Homage, Fealty and Rent, the Plaintiff prays in aid, Avowry amended after Entry by consent. and hath a Summmons in aid, and at the return of the Summons, the Prayee in aid was Essoined, and after the Ession, the Defendant moved the Court, that the Homage might be put out of the Avowry, which was entered with by consent of parties, was raised out of the Will. ARundell versus Blanchard and Jackson, Pasch. 13 Jacobi rotulo One of the Jurors names mistaken in the Pannell of the Return, and amended upon the Sheriff's Oath, that he was the same man. 2037. The taking in Replevin was supposed to be at Southwark, and one of the Defendant pleads non cepit, and the other Bailiff of the Governors of the possessions, revenues, and good of the Free-Grammar-School of etc. for the Parishioners for the Parish of Saint Olaves, in Southwark, in the County of Surrey, and the Advowry was made for damage fesant, the Plaintiff prescribed for a way belonging to his house, in the Parish of Saint Olaves in Southwark, and the Venire facias was of Southwark, in the Parish of Saint Olaves in Southwark, and exception taken to that, and held good, because one Defendant had pleaded non cepit, and another exception was, because he had not showed when the Corporation begun, and held an idle exception, for one need not show when they were incorporated, another exception was, because the name of one of the Jury was mistaken, because in the Return of the Venire it was to Lisney of Croyden, and in the Pannell of the Habeas Corpus, it was written to John Lisney of Croyden, and because in sound it is all one, and the Sheriff made oath, that he was the man, that was returned, in the Venire facias the Return was amended in Court, and Judgement given by the whole Court for the Plaintiff. PAin versus Mascall. Hill. 12 Jacobi. rotulo 3400. The Lord avows If two men distrain one Mare, and both have Judgement, no Return. the taking of one Mare, as for Rent behind, so for the fourth part of a Relief, and doth not express the same due for the relief, and for the Rent, the Plaintiff pleads tender, and demurs for the Relief, because he had not expressed the same, and because he had distrained one thing for the Rent, and Relief, pretending that if one cause pass against him, and another for the Avowant, that he could not have a Return habend. but the Court were of a contrary opinion, but if two men shall distrain one and the same Mare for two several causes, and one hath Judgement for himself, and the other for himself. In this case no return habend. can be made of the Mare, BRown versus Goldsmith, Trin. 13. Jacobi rotulo, 607. A Court of Court Baron in order to the Manor. Pipowders is incident to a Fine, and a Court Baron to a Manor: And a Court Baron cannot be separated from a Manor; for it is a wealth to a Manor: the like of a Court of Pipowder to a Fair by the grant of a Manor with cum pertinencijs the Court passes; for it is an incident inseparable to the Manor, and a man cannot grant his Court but he may grant the profits of his Court. MAgistri & socij Collegij Emanuel is in Cambridg. The writ was adjudged naught in replevin, because they had distrained in their proper names for a Corporation: as Maior and Comonalty cannot distrain in their own persons but by their Bailiff. The Court held Nota. that the Sheriff could not take a Bond in replevin, but must take pledges according to the old custom. JVid versus Bungory, Trin. 8. Jac. rotulo, 3059. The Defendant shows that one was seized of Land in fee, and held it by Knight's service of a Manor, and for the rent of two Cocks and two Hens: and the Lord grants the third part of the Manor to another, who avows Nota. for the service, and the Cocks and Hens, and held he could not alone avow for that joint service, but the other should join with him. WEnden versus Snigg, Trin. 11. Jac. rotulo, 1137. In replevin A lease for life to three to hold successively, naught. the question was upon a Lease for life made to three, to have and to hold to them the said A. B. and C. and every of them for the term of their lives, and the longest liver of them successively one after another as they are writ in order. And the question was, whether this was a remainder or no, and it was held to be a remainder upon the reading of the Record: but if the grant had been only successively, not saying as they are named in the writing, it had been naught because he could not tell who should begin. THorold versus Hadden. Trin. 11. Jac rotulc, 451. In replevin a The panel of the Habeas Corpus amended upon Oath. Juror was returned by the name of Payly, and in the distress the name was T. P. and in the Pannell he was written Baily, and tried by that name of Baily, and moved in arrest of Judgement for the mistaking of the name. And the Court held, that if the right name was sworn, yet notwithstanding the mistake it was good; for if the name in venire was not mistaken, all was good, and the Sheriff ought to amend his misprision: and the Court demanded if any one could swear that Paly was sworn; and one then present in Court made oath that Paly was sworn: and the Court ordered that it should be amended, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff; every Leet was derived out of the Sheriffs turn. PAul versus Berwick, Hill. 11. Jac. rotulo, 2147. A stranger in replevin pleaded non est factum, where he should have pleaded non concessit, and good after a verdict, though it's not formal pleading. REad versus How. In replevin the place was omitted in the Declaration, and the Defendant demurred and held a good cause; for the Plaintiff is bound to take notice where the cattle are distrained; a man cannot distrain for a rent charge but in the day time, because I may take notice where it is, because the Law presumeth that I or my servants are all the day upon the ground. A second deliverance must not vary in the place; a disclaimer goeth to the locus in quo, etc. Hind versus Wainman, & al. Pasch. 8. Jacobi rotulo, 758. Wainman pleaded non cepit, and the other made cognisance as Bailiff to Wainman. The Plaintiff pleads, that the parties to the Fine had nothing, Nota. etc. and it was tried Mich. and Jacobi, and it was moved by the Council of the Defendant, that the Plaintiff should prove an actual taking: but the Court held the contrary. And the Judges said, that if one takes cattle as Bailiff to another, and by his command, this shall be adjudged to be the taking of the Master as of a Bailiff in trespass. FRancis versus Forrest, Trin. 9 Jacobi rotulo, 2033. In replevin for the taking of cattle at A. in a certain place called R. the Defendant avows damage pheasant; the plaintiff in his Bar says, that he was seized of one Message, etc. in C. in the Parish of A. and prescribes for common: And after a trial it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the venire facias was ill awarded because it was of A. only: and so it was adjudged by the Court. And Cook said, that at C. or in C. imply a Village, and therefore he said, the venire facias ought to have been of C. and A. or at least of the Parish of A. and Brownlow chief Prothonotary agreed to this. RIchardson versus Sterer, Trin. 13. Jacobi rotulo 786. In Replevin the Defendant avows for Damage fesant. The plaintiff replies that long before the time of taking the cattle, H. late Earl of L. was seized of one Message. etc. and so prescribes for Common of Pasture for ten Beasts, and so justifies the putting in of one Cow of the two Cowsusing his Common. And the Plaintiff further says that the said W. R. long before, etc. lent to the said T. P. the other Cow to manure the Land of the said T. P. as long as the said W. pleased; And so prescribes for the putting in of that Cow being thereof possessed by reason of the lending of it, and so demands Judgement. And Hutton Sar●eant moved that the Bar was naught, because the Plaintiff had falfified his Replication, because the Replication is by two, and by the pleading another time of the taking the property was in P. only▪ and the special property by virtue of the lending was also in P. And so Replevin ought to have been brought in the name of P. only, and the Defendant demurred the Replication, and the Plaintiff was none suit. POpe versus Shurm Hill. 7 Jacobi rotulo 336. The Defendant avows Damage pheasant. The Plaintiff claims Common by reason of a Demise made to him by one H. W. who was seized in Fee of one Message and Common for him, his Tenants and Farmers, etc. And alleges one Lease made the thirtieth of March 11. to have, and to hold, etc. from the Feast, etc. then last passed for one year, and so from year to year, etc. The Defendant traverses the Demise, and the Jury find that the said H. W. before the said time of the taking, to wit, the 25 of March, Anno 11. did demise to have for one year than next following, and so from year to year, and this found specially. And Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, because the matter in question was whether he had right of Common, or not, and not the title of the Lease, and it appears by the Jury that he had just right of Common. And Warburton put this difference, if a Tenant brings an Action of Trespass wherefore by force of Arms, etc. against his Lord; And the Lord pleads that the Defendant holds by such services, and Issue be taken upon it; And the Jury find that he holds by other services, the Verdict is sufficiently found for the Lord, because the Plaintiff could not maintain an Action against his Lord. IOhnson versus Thorowgood Trin. 12 jacobi rotulo 1734. In Replevin the Plaintiff allows damage pheasant, the Plaintiff claims Common by prescription to, when the Fields called F. and C lie fallow all the time of the year. And when the Fields are sowed after the Corn, etc. After the Feast of Pentecost. they used, etc. And the Jury found that he had Common to wit, when the Fields lie fallow every year, all the time of the year. And when the Fields were sown, they used to have Common, etc. And it was held by nichols that for Common Appendent it is not necessary to prescribe, but to say he is seized of one Message, etc. in Fee; and that he hath Common of Pasture in the said place, as belonging and appertaining to the Tenement. And says further, that Judgement ought to be given for the Plaintiff, because it appeared by the Record, that the Defendant took the Cattle at such time as the Plaintiff ought to have Common. And therefore nichols said, that if a man have Common for great cattle and Sheep, and the Sheep be taken, and he prescribes that he hath Common for Sheep only; and the Jury said Common for Sheep and great cattle, the Common is found for the Plaintiff. And the like if one claim Common all the time of the year, when the Land lies fallow, and when it is sown, from such a day unto, etc. And his cattle are taken in the year when it is sown as lies fallow, it is sufficient for the Plaintiff to prescribe for Common, either in the year when it is sown, or when it lies fallow. And if the Jury find all the Common, it is sufficiently found for the Plaintiff. The like if a man hath Common from such a day to such day, and the cattle are taken, and a day between the days, and he prescribes that he hath Common in the said time, quo, &c And the Jury find he had Common before that time the same day, and after the Verdict is found for the Plaintiff, and Warburton and Winch of the same opinion. PIts versus James, Mich. 12. Jacobi rotulo 2155. Upon a special Verdict for the Misnomer of a Corporation. The first question was, whether the foundation of poor men to pray for Souls departed is within the Statute of Chaunteries: and secondly, for the Misnomer: And Winch: held that the Plaintiff should not be barred for the Misnomer; and for the second he held that his house was within the Statute of Chaunteries, and so the interest in the King, H. 6. And so the Lease made by the Master of the Hospital void. Dyer 246. 287. And Warburton held the Plaintiff should be barred upon both points. SWynerton versus Mills, Hill. 14 Jacobi rotulo 2049. In a Replevin the Defendant a vows for a rent charge reserved by a Copiholder who Atturnment not necessary for a Copyholder. is seized in Fee, and made a Lease by the licence of the Lord, reserving Rend at four Feasts, or within one and twenty days, being lawfully demanded, and afterwards the Copiholder surrendered one moiety in Fee to a stranger, and afterwards surrendered the reversion of the other moiety to another, to which the Termer atturned, and so avowed for Rent. The Plaintiff pleaded in Bar● that he was seized of a Close adjoining to the place, in which, etc. and put therein his cattle, and that they escaped by fault of enclosure, and issue taken upon that. And after a Verdict by default those exceptions were taken to the Avowry in Arrest of Judgement. First, because it appeared by the Advowry that the Copiholder had surrendered a Reversion, which could not be, because a Copiholder is a Tenant at will, and so could not have a reversion; for he cannot make a Lease for years without the licence of the Lord, but this exception was overruled by the Cou●t. Secondly, because there was no Atturnment alleged in the first surrender. And it was held no exception, because the Rent for which he avowed was reserved by the Copiholder by the second surrender, to which the Termer had atturned. And also the Court said, that an Atturnment is not necessary for a Copiholder, because there is no time when the Term should atturn. For before the surrender he cannot atturn; and after the surrender and admittance it is too late. And the Copyhold estate is like an estate raised by uses or devise, in which an Atturnment is not necessary. As also in an estate raised by Fine, and the like, an Atturnment is not necessary, for if the Termer will not atturn, he is compellable by Law, as by a Quid juris clamat: but a Copiholder hath no means to make the Termer atturn if he refuse. And thirdly in the conclusion of the Advowry, he doth not say that the Rent was behind such a day, and one and twenty days after at least; and this exception was disallowed, because the distress is a sufficient demand of the Rent; and it appears that the day of the taking of the distress was one and twenty days after the Feast, at which the Rent was due, and Judgement was given for the Advowant: and note, that a Covenant to distrain is idle, for a man may distrain of common right. HOwell versus Sambay, Mich. 13 Jacobi rotulo 2009. In Replevin, the Demand necessary for a Nomine pene. Defendant a vows for a Rend charge, and a Nomine pene granted by Tenant in tail general, and one Fine levied afterwards, and the use expressed: the Plaintiff replies, and says that the Grantor had only an interest for life, and so makes inducement, and traverses the use of the Fine. The Defendant demurs; And held by the Court that the Grantee was not seized in tail, nor to the use of the Fine. And it was said, that in this case, that it was necessary for the Advowant to plead the Fine with the estate tail; for if the Tenant in tail grant a Rend charge, and die, no Fine being levied, and the estate tail descends, the issue in tail is not chargeable with the Rent. And note, the Advowry was as well for the Rent as for the Nomine pene, and no special demand was alleged in pleading the Rent: and it was adjudged by the Court a naughty advowry as to the Nomine pene, but good for the Rent, as it hath been adjudged in one Mildmaies Case. COtterell versus Harrington, Pasch. 6. Jacobi rotulo 545. In a Replevin the Defendant avows for an Annuity for 20 d. granted for years payable upon demand, and alleges a demand; the Plaintiff demands either of the Deed, and by the Deed it appeared that for a hundred and ten pound one Rent of twenty pound was granted for eight years, and another for 20 l. for two years, if E. R. and T. should so long live: the Plaintiff pleads the Statute of Usury, and sets forth the Statute, and a special usurious Contract. If it had been laid to be upon a loan of Money, than it was Usury; but if it be a bargain an Annuity it is no usury. But this was alleged to be upon a lending Wood versus Moreton Hill, 6 Jacobi, rotulo 1802. In Replevin the Defendant advows to have Common Appendent out to his house and Land, the Plaintiff saith, that he had Common Appendent to his House and Land. And the Defendant to avoid the Common saith, that the Commoner sold to the Plaintiff, five Acres of the Land, to which the Common is appendent, pretending that he should not have Common for that Land, being but parcel of the Land to which the Common was appendent, Common Appurtenant cannot be to a House alone, purchasing of part of Common Appendent, doth not extinguish the Common, otherwise it is of Common Appurtenant. And it was pretended to be Common Appurtenant, because it is to a House and Land, whether by severance his Common is gone, and held to be common Appendent, and Judgement given for the Plaintiff. MOrse versus Well. Replevin for Common of Pasture, the casewas that the Father was seized of two yard Land with Appurtenances, Common Appurtenant and purchase part, the Common is gone, but not if Appendent. and had Common of Pasture, for four rother Beasts, three Horses, and sixty Sheep, and he demised part of the said two yard Lands in being. And whether the Common should be apportioned, and if it should be apportioned whether the Prescription failed, because the issue was taken, that he and all those, etc. had Common in the said two yard Land, A Release of Common in one Acre, is a Release of all. If I have Common Appurtenant, and purchase part, the Common is gone, but otherwise it is of Common Appendent. And note: this Common was Common Appendent, and the purchasing of Common Appendent, doth not extinguish the Common, and Judgement was given for the Commoner by the whole Court. HVghes versus Crowther, Trin. 6 Jacobi. rotulo 2220. In a Replevin a Lease for years made to Charles H. and the said A. T. to have Nota. and to hold from, etc. for sixty years if they live so long, Charles died, in this case Judgement was given, that the Lease was ended by the death of Charles, but otherwise it had been if it had been for life. BIcknall versus Tucker, Trin. 9 Jacobi rotulo 3648. in a Replevin the case was, whether a Fine with five years will bind the Copyholder Nota. in remainder, there was a Copyhold granted to three for lives, to have and to hold successively, the first had the Free hold granted to him, by the Lord of the Manor. And then he levied a Fine and five years pass, whether he in the Remainder be Barred or no, those whose estates are turned to rights, either present or future, are meant by the Statute, to be barred of a Copyhold for years, be put out of possession, and a Fine Levied and no entry by him, he is barred by the Statute, by the Bargain and Sale, he in the Remainder is not put out of possession, if a man make a Lease to begin at Easter next, and before Easter a Fine is levied: and five years pass, this Fine will not bar, because at the Levying of the Fine he could not enter, for then his right was future, if the Lease had been in possession, and the Lessee had never entered he had been barred. A Lease for years, Remainder for years, if the first man taketh for life, the first estate is not so determined but that the Remainder standeth, if a Copyhold surrender for life, there passeth no more from him then so much as maketh the estate and no more, and the rest remaineth in him. CRantley versus Kingswel, Pacsb. 15 Jacobi rotulo 710. The Defendant makes cognisance as Bailiff of Kingswell his Father for Rent, service Demand of Rend service upon the Land sufficient. due to his Father at such a Feast. And shows that Cramley holds of him by fealty, and rend paiable at such a Feast, and for Rent due at such a Feast made Cognisance, the Plaintiff in Barr says, that he at the said Feast offered the Rent upon the Land, and that no body was there to receive it. And the Plaintiff saith, that afterwards he demanded the Rent upon the Land, and the Plaintffe made a Replevin, pretending the Lord should make a personal demand, but the whole Court was against him. And Warburton took acception against the pleading the Tender, because he saith that he offered the Rent to pay, when as he was not present. And the question was, whether the Lord for a Rend service, did not demand it at that day whether he can distrain without a demand of the person, and held he might, for the Tenant is yet bound to tender, and the Land is debtor, and the Lord may resort thither, when he pleases to demand the Rent upon the Land, but if he tender his Homage, and the Lord refuses it, he cannot distrain without a demand of the Person, and Judgement for the Defendant. STokes versus Winter, Trin. 15. Jacobi rotulo 2242. In Replevin, the Defendant makes cognisance as Bailiff to Tenant for life, to whom the Annuity was granted for life, to begin by will, after the death of the devisor; And alleges the death of the devisor, but not the day of the death: after whose death the said H. was seized of the yearly rent aforesaid in his demesn, as of his freehold for term of his life, by virtue of the devise aforesaid. And because seven pounds of the Rent aforesaid, for one year, ended at the Feast, etc. and by the space of 14. days then next following were behind to the said T. the said time, with, etc. the said T. as Bailiff of the said H. doth make cognisance of the taking of the cattle aforesaid in the said place, in which, etc. for the said 7 li. for the yearly Rent aforesaid being so behind, etc. and issue was taken whether the said I. at the time of his death was seized of the said six Acres of Land in his demesne as of Fee, as, etc. And after trial exception was taken to the Advowry, because it was not alleged that the annuity at such a Feast, after the death of the devisor was behind, but it was overruled, because there is so much expressed, and Judgement given for the Defendant. HVmfrey versus powel, Trin. 12. Jacobi rotulo 2791. Replevin, wherein the Defendant avows for one Annuity granted to the Defendant, to whom the office of Catorship of the Church of Roffen in Kent was granted by the D●an and Chapter of that Church for life, with an Annuity of 6. pounds for the exercising of that Office, with a clause of distress, by virtue of which grant he was possessed, and avows for the Annuity, and avers that it was an ancient Office pertaining to the Dean and Chapter of Roffen: and doth not aver that the Annuity was an ancient Annuity. The Defendant pleads the Statute of the 13 Eliz: that all Devises, Donations, Grants, etc. made by any Master, and Fellows of any College, Dean and Chapter, etc. other then for the term of twenty and one years, or three lives from the time of this Devise, etc. should be totally void. And shows that the old Dean died, and another was elected; And a Demurrer thereupon; And Judgement that the Grant was void. HYen versus Gerrard, Mich. 13. Jacobi rotulo 752. The Defendant in Replevin avows, that one being seized in Fee made a Lease to him, and avows for Damage feasant. The Plaintiff in Barr pleads, and maintains his Declaration, and traverses the Lease upon the Avowant, demurs, and adjudged a goodtraverse. IEnyx versus Applefourth, Trin. 17. Eliz: rotulo 543. The Defendant avows for a Rend charge, the Plaintiff in Barr pleads that the Defendant had presented a Writ of Annuity, And that he had an Imparlance thereunto; And demands Judgement, if the Defendant did well make cognisance to the taking of the cattle in the said place, in which, etc. in name of a distress for the rent aforesaid, by virtue of the said writing, as Bailiff of the said R. the said Writ of Annuity being prosecuted, etc. upon the said writing, in form aforesaid, etc. And a Demurrer thereupon, and Judgement by the whole Court for the Plaintiff; it is not needful to lay a prescription to distrain for an Amerciament in a Court Leet, but it is otherwise for an Amerciament in a Court Baron, by the whole Court. DArcy versus Langton. The Defendant avows for a Rend charge, and for a Nomine penae, and no mention made in the Avowry of the Rend charge, and the Plaintiff was nonsuit, and afterwards in Arrest of Judgement this matter was alleged, and at first held to be a good exception; but afterwards Judgement was entered, an Advowry is in the nature of a Declaration, if that be vicious no Judgement can be given for the Advowant. TRin. 9 Jacobi Regis, rotulo 2033. Replevin for the taking of cattle at Andover, in a certain place there called R▪ The Defendant makes cognisance for damage pheasant: the Plaintiff says, that he was seized of the Message, etc. in C. in the Parish of A to which he claimed Common of Pasture. And issue taken upon the prescription, and a Venire Facias of A. and exception taken, because it was not tried of C. and A. or of the Parish of A. but it was adjudged to be good. TRinbone versus Smith, Trin. 12. Jacobi rotulo 626. In Replevin, four Nota. and twenty were returned upon the Venire facias, and upon the Habeas Corpus, only twenty and three were returned, and the Jury did not appear full, and a Tales was awarded, and tried for the Plaintiff, and good, because the Venire Facias was returned full. PIgott versus Pigott, Mich 20 Jacobi. In Replevin, Avowry that Ellen Enderby was seized in Fee, of three Acres in Dale, and took to Husband S. Pigott, and had Issue Tho: Ellen died, and the husband was in by the Courtesy, the Husband and Tho: the Heir, granted a Rent of 10. 〈◊〉. issuing out of the three Acres to the Avowant, and avows for so much behind, the Plaintiff in barrsayes, that before Ellen had any estate, one Fisher was seized in Fee, and gave it to John E. in tail, Jo: had issue Ellen, who after the death of her Father, entered and was seized in tail, and took a Husband, as is before declared. And had Issue Tho: and that Tho. Tenant by the Courtesy living, grants the Rent as above without this, that Ellen was seized in Fee of three Acres, and issue was joined thereupon, and found for the Avowant. And in arrest of Judgement it was objected, that in effect there was no issue joined. For the traverse of the sesin of Ellen E. was idle, for no title of the Rent is derived from her, but they ought to have traversed the seisin of Thomas the grantor, and then the Issue had been of such a nature, that it had made an end of the matter in question, which was not in this case, no more than if the Tenant in Formulen should plead not guilty, but the Court held that though an apt issue might have been taken, and that the traverse is not good, yet it was helped by the statute of Jeofailes. For the estate of Ellen H. was in a sort by circumstance material. For if she were seized in tail, and that estate tail, descended to Thomas the grantor, then by his death the Rent is determined after the Fee descended to Tho: from Ellen, there the estate was of that nature, that he might grant a sufficient rend charge. And although it might well be presumed, that Thomas after the Fee descended to him from Ellen had altered such estate tail, yet by Popham the Courts shall not now intent that, because the parties doubted nothing, but whether Ellen was seized in Fee or not when he died, And that doubt is resolved by the Verdict, as if a Defendant should plead a D●ed, of J. S, to A. and B. and that it died, and B. survived and enfeoffed the Defendant, if the Plaintiff should say that J. S. did not infeoff A. and that they should be at issue upon that, and should be found against him, although this be no apt issue yet it is helped by the statute, because the parties doubted of nothing, but of the manner of the feoffment of J. S. whether it was made to A: or not, and of the same opinion was Fennor, Yeluerton, and Williams. but not Gandy. CRate versus Moor, Mich. 3. Jacobi. In Replevin of cattle taken in D. the Defendant avows as Bailiff of H. Finch, And the case was thus, the Lady Finch Mother of H. Finch, granted a Rend charge to H. issuing out of her Manor of N. and out of all her Lands in D. E. and is in the County of Kent, belonging or appeartaining to the said Manor▪ And the Plaintiff to bar, the Defendant pleads an abatement in H. Finch into the Lands in D. And upon the Defendant demurs for the Lands in D. were not belonging or appertaining to the Manor of N. and adjudged for the Defendant. For no Land can be charged by that grant, if it be not belonging to the Manor. And that for two Reasons, the first is because by the word (aut alibi) it appears that it is all but one sentence, and the (Aut) conjoins the words proceeding to wit, all the Lands in D. S. and to put in the County of Kent in these words following, to wit (alibi) in the said County to the said Manor appertaining, and the sentence is not perfect until you come to the last words, (to the said. Manor appertaining) for if the Rent be issuing out of the Land in D. etc. which is not appertaining to the Manor, than the sentence must be perfect, and these words (County of Kent, and these (aut alibi) must begin a new sentence: which was never seen, that they should make the beginning of a sentence. And therefore this case is not like the case between Bacon and Baker, second of King James, in the prohibition, where Queen Eliz. grants all her ●ith Hay, etc. within the liberty and precincts of St. edmond's Bury, belonging and appertaining to the said Monastery, and which were lately collected by the Almoner of the said Monastery; for there the latter sentence is perfect and complete: And these words (in the County of Suffolk) and the nec non that ensues are a new sentence: And therefore the last clause (And which by the Almoner, etc. go only to the Tithes following the (nec non) and not to the Tithes contained in the first clause: but it had been otherwise if the (nec non) had been (unacum) as in truth the patent was, but it was mispleaded; for then the (unacum) would have reinjoyned all, and made it but one sentence. The second reason was, in respect of the nature of the thing granted, which was but a rent. And therefore, if rend be granted out of a Manor, to be perceived, and taken out of one acre, this shall be good: and nothing shall be charged but that one acre only, 17. Ass. but otherwise it is of Land for a Feoffment of a Manor. To have etc. one acre it is a void habend. For here it appears, that the intent of the Lady Finch was only to charge the Manor, and such Land only which were appertaining to the Manor: But Popham held the contrary, for he conceived that D. S. and W. in the County of Kent were particularly named and bounded in by the name of the place and County, and therefore they should be charged, although they were not appertaining to the Manor. As if a man grants all his Lands in D. R. and V. in the County of M. and in Darn in the same County which he hath by descent, it should only extend to Darn, but denied by the Court, but he was strongly of that opinion. And he held that by the first of the charge out of the Manor; all the Lands parcel or appertaining to the Manor are charged, and therefore the subsequent words if they should be limited, as is abovesaid, would be idle and frivolous. And Yeluerton said, that the words before belonging or appertaining, shall be taken to extend to the Land occupied in the Manor, although it is not parcel of it, and Fenwood and Willams granted, and Judgement was given that the Defendant should have a return habend. TOtt versus Ingram, Trin. 4. Jac. In a replevin brought by T. against I. who makes conisance as Bailiff of Sir Ed. Br. for a common Fine which was assessed upon the Plaintiff who was resident within the Leet of his Master: The Plaintiff replies, that Sir Edw. by his deed had released to him all rents, services, exactions, and demands out of his Manor except suit of Court; the Defendant demurred: And Nichols; that suit of Court for which this common Fine was set is excepted, and therefore the common Fine is not released by that, but is excepted: also a common Fine is assessed, when the Jurors in the Leet do conceal that which they ought to find, and with which they are charged, and therefore the release being for exactions out of the Land: And this is not for any thing by reason of the Land, but because he doth misbehave himself; and by the opinion of the whole Court, a release of all demands doth not discharge a man of his suit to a Leet by reason of his residency; because a Leet is the King's Court, to which every leige-Subject is to come and perform his allegiance to him. And also because suit of Court is inseparably inoident to a Court▪ leet which cannot be released. PAllets Case, Pasch. 5. Jacob. In a replevin in which Pallet was Plaintiff, the case was such, where a man made a Lease of Lands, of which Land he was seized by a good Title, and of Land of which he was seized of a defeasible Title for years, rendering rend: and in the replevin, the Lessor avows for the whole rent: The Plaintiff in the replevin saith; that after the lease made, the Disseisee had entered upon part of the Land, and a demurrer. Sergeant Hicham moved for the Advowant that he ought to have a return; for he agreed that the rent should have been apportioned; but he said, that if a man avows for many things, and he hath right but to one, he shall have a returh habend. 5. H. 7. and 9 H. 7. And 4. Ass. Pl. 6. where a man brings an assize for rent, and hath right but to part, yet he shall recover for that part, and cited the opinion of Popham put in Walkers Case in the third Rep. 24. when rend reserved upon a Lease for years should be apportioned. If a man in an action of debt demands more than he ought, yet upon a nil debet pleaded, the Lessor shall recover so much as shall be apportioned and assessed by the Jury, and shall be barred as to the residue. But Yeluerton was of another opinion; for he said, as this case is, the Avowant shall not have a return habend. But if the apporciament had been made by the Jury, he should have had a return habend. but in this case the apporciament must be made by the Judges, to whom the quantity of the Land cannot appear, and therefore they cannot make apportiament; for they all agreed that the apportiament ought to be accotding to the value of the Land, and not according to the quantity: And to prove this, he cited Hubberd and Hammonds Case, 43. Eliz. co. lib. 427. As where the Fines of Copyholders upon admittance are uncertain, the Lord cannot exact excessive Fines: and if the Copyholder deny to pay it, it shall be determined by the opinion of the Judges before whom the matter depends: and upon a demurrer to the evidence to a Jury upon the confession or proof of the annual value of land; the annual value ought to appear to the Judges; but in this case the value doth not appear to them, and therefore they cannot make any apportiament, and therefore the Avowant shall not have a return habend. But T●anfield held the Avowant should have a return habend. for the whole rent; for the Judges could not apportion this, because the value did not appear: and the eviction is matter of privity, which ought to be discovered by the Lessee, and he should give notice to the Lessor, and he ought to show the value of the Land from which he is enriched to the Judges. And Popham is of the same opinion; for he said the value of the Land ought to be showed by the Lessee, for every one ought to plead that which is in his knowledge, and that was in the Lessee's knowledge, and not the Lessor: and Fenner of the same opinion, but Yeluerton and Williams against it; for Yeluerton said, that it appeared that part of the Land was evicted, and therefore it ought to be apportioned; but because the value did not appear to the Judges, it could not be apportioned. William's said, that if the Lessee surrender part, the Lessor need not show the value: and Popham agreed to that, because the acceptions of the Lessor had made him privy to it. KEnrick versus Pargiter, Trin. 6. Jacobi. The Defendant justifies A Commoner may take the cattle of the Lord damage pheasant. the taking of the cattle damage pheasant upon a surmise of a custom; that the Plaintiff being Lord, hath the place in which &c. wholly to himself until Lammas day: and after that day it is common for the Tenants, and the Plaintiff is not to put in but only three horses, etc. And because the Plaintiff after Lammas put in more cattle than three horses, the Defendant took them damage pheasant, as it was lawful for him to do: And issue was joined upon the custom, and found against the Plaintiff; and Yeluerton showed in arrest of Judgement that the Defendant could not take the cattle damage pheasant, for it appears that the Defendant is only a Commoner: and it also appears, that the place in which &c. is the soil of the Plaintiff, and the cattle cannot be taken damage pheasant upon his ground, no more than the Tenant can have an Action of Trespass against his Lord guare vi & armis, etc. in regard of his Seignory, as it is in Littleton, and 5. H. 7. But the Court said, that the matter of taking the cattle did not come into question; for nothing was in issue but the custom, which is found against the Plaintiff; for if the Plaintiff would have taken advantage of that, he ought to have demurred. And although by that he had confessed the custom, yet whether such Commoner could have taken, the Lords cattle would then properly have come into debate. And by Fenner, Williams, and Cook, the taking the Lords cattle damage pheasant was good; for by the custom the Lord is to be excluded but only for his stint: and the Lord may well be stinted, and the whole vestive and benefit of the soil is the Commoners, and they have no other remedy to preserve the benefit they have in feeding their cattle, but by taking the cattle of the Lord if he offends. And the Custom hath made the Lord as mere a stranger as any other: and without doubt the Commoner might take the cattle of a stranger, 15. H. 7. The chief Justice and Yeluerton doubted of it: And although the Commoners by the custom had gained the sole feeding in the land of the Lord: Yet they ought to have showed the custom, and also the usage to have distrained the cattle of the Lord damage pheasant, and observe his. BRaxall versus Thorold. Trin. 8. Jac. In Replevin for the taking of 4 Oxen at Coringham in the County of Lincoln, in a place called Judgement arrested for not showing in what place the Message did lie to which the Common did belong. Dowgate leys, Sept. 6. Jac. The Defendant says, the place contained four acres in Coringham magna, which was his freehold and justifies the taking damage pheasant. The Plaintiff in his bar to the Avowry, that the place where &c. lies, in a place called Harrerart quarter, parcel of a great Common Field called E. in Coringham aforesaid: and that the Plaintiff the said time, and long before was seized of one Message, and of 14. acres of Land, Meadow, and Pasture, with the appurtenances to the said Message belonging, and that the Plaintiff and all they whose estate the Plaintiff had in the Tenements, aught to have common, and so prescribed to have common for him, his Farmers, & Tenants, etc. for all comunable cattle levant & couchant upon the Tenements, etc. And upon issue taken upon the Common, it was found for the plaintiff, and alleged in arrest of Judgement, that it did not appear by the Bar to the Avowry in what place the Message and Land to which the Common did appertain did lie, to wit, whether it did lie in Coringham, or in any other place or County, and thisof necessity ought to have been showed in certain, because the tenure ought to be both of the place where the House and Land did lie, and of the place where the Land did lie in which the Common was claimed, and therefore of necessity ought to have been showed incertain, and shall not of necessity be intended to be in Coringham where the Common is; For a Common may be appendent or appurtenant to Land in another County. And the trvall shall be of both Counties, and Judgement was arrested by the whole Court TRuelock versus Riggsby Mich. 8. Jacobi. In Replevin, for the Common, when the field and acres unsown the sowing of parcel shall not debar him of his common in the residue. taking of six Kine in a place called Brisley hill, in Radley, in the County of Berks, the Defendant as Bailiff of one Read, makes Conisance that the place, where, etc. contains fifty acres, and is parcel of the Manor of Barton, whereof the place, where, etc. is parcel, and shows that E. 6. was seized of the Manor of Barton, whereof the place where is parcel, and granted it by Letters Patents to R. Leigh, and divers other Lands. by the name of the Coxleyes, etc. and amongst other particulars in the Patent, the King granted Brisley hill in Barton, and deduces the freehold of the Manor, of which the place, In which, etc. is parcel to Read, and he as Bailiff to him, took the Kine damage pheasant: the Plaintiff replies, and shows that one Hide was seized of a Message, and divers Acres of Land in Radley, and that he and those, whose estate he hath for himself, his Farmers and Tenants used to have Common in the said place called Brisley hill in Radley, when the said Field, called Brisley hill in Radley, was fresh and not sowed, all that year with their cattle Levant and Couchant, and when the Field was sown with Corn, and when the Corn was carried away, until it was referred, and so justify the putting in of six Kine using his Common, because the Field was not sown with Corn at the time, to which the Defendant pleads, and says, that part of the Field, called Brisley Hill in the Avowry named, was at that time sown with Corn, etc. and the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the Plaintiff for two reasons. The first was, because the Defendant in his Avowry refers the taking of the cattle to another place, then that set forth in the Avowry, which is not in question, and in which the Plaintiff claims no Common, for the Plaintiff may claim Common in Brisley hill in Radley, and the place named in the Defendants Avowry, to which he refers his Plea is Brisley hill in Barton, for Brisley hill in Radley is not named in the Avowry by any special name, but only by implication, by this name the place in which, etc. and for that reason the rejoinder doth not answer the matter in the replication. The second cause was, because the Plaintiff claims Common, when Brisley hill in Radley was unsown with Corn, and the Defendant to that, although his Plea should refer to the same Brisley, yet hath he given no full answer, for he saith that parcel of the said Field was sowed with Corn, and the Court held that sowing of parcel of the Field shall not hinder the Plaintif from using his Common in the residue, for that may be done by covin to deceive the Plaintiff of his Common, for the Plaintif claiming his Common, when the Field, that is, the whole Field is sown, shall be barred of his common by sowing of parcel of it, notwithstanding that parcel be sowed, the Plaintif shall have his common by the opinion of the whole court. GOdfrey versus Bullein. Mich. 8 Jacobi. Bullein brought a Reple vin against Godfrey, for the taking of six Beasts, in such a place in Bale, in the County of Norfolk.▪ the Defendant as Bailif of R. Godfrey makes conisance, because before the time, and at the time, in which &c. the said R. Geffrey was seized of a Court Leet in Bail of all the inhabitants, and r●●dent within the Precinct of the Manor of Bail, to be holden within the Precinct of the Manor, as appertaining to his Manor, and shows, how that he had used to have a Fine of ten shillings, called a Leet Fine of all the chief pledges of his Leet, and if they failed to pay, the Steward had used to amerce them that made default in payment, & showed, how that at a Court holden within the Manor, such a day it was presented, that the Plaintif in the Replevin being an inhabitant in B. and resident within the Precinct of the Manor, made default in payment of the said Fine of ten shillings, being then one of the chief pledges of the Court, by reason whereof he was amerced at five pounds, which being not paid, the Defendant took the Beasts, and the Issue was, whether Bullein at that court was a chief Pledge or no, and the Venire to try his Issue was only of the Manor, and found for the plaintiff, and damages, and costs to thirty pounds given against Geffrey, upon which he brought a Writ of Error, in the late King's Bench, and adjudged Error and the Judgement reversed, for the Venire facias should have been both of Bail which was the Village, as of the Manor, for although the Court be held within the Manor, yet the Leet itself is within the village of Bail, and the Plaintiff was an inhabitant, and resident within the village, which village is within the Precinct of the Manor, and though Fleming chief Justice held, that nothing was in question but whether the Plaintiff was chief pledge at the Court held within the Manor or no, and so nothing within the village is in question, or could come in Issue, yet it was resolved by the whole Court, but him, that those of the village of Bail might well know whether the plaintiff being an inhabitant within the village in which the Leet was, were a chief Pledge at the Court or no, for to have chief pledges, doth properly belong to a Leet, which Leet is within the village, and therefore they of the Manor cannot have so good knowledge of the matter, as they of the Manor and village together, and therefore they all ought to have been of both, as in the Case of Common, or a way from one village, to a house in another village, this aught to be tried of both villages, and so also of the Tenure of Land in D. held of the Manor of Sale, the trial must be as well of the village, where the Land lies, as of the Manor of which the Land is holden, as it was adjudged Hill. 45. El. in the than Queen's Bench, in the Case between Loulace and and Judgement was reversed, and see 6 H. 7. and Arundels case, in my Lord Cooks Reports. BVrglacy versus Ellington. Burglacy brought a Replevin against When a Deed is perfected and delivered as a Deed, one agreement after pleaded in defeasance thereof, and when the agreement is parcel of the Original contract, it may be pleaded. Ellington, for the taking of his cattle, etc. the Avowant pleads that one W. B. was seized of the place in which, etc. in his Demesne, as of Fee, and being so seized died, by reason whereof the Land descended to one Crist. his Daughter and Heir, who took to Husband the Avowant, the Plaintiff in his Bar to the Avowry, confesses that W. B. was seized, and that it descended to C. who took to Husband, the Avowant, but he further said that the 16 of April, primo Jac. the Husband and Wife by their Deed indented, and enrolled, did bargain and sell the same Land unto one Missenden, and a Fine levied by them, and that M. the 30 of James, bargained and sold it to F. M. in Fee, and he being so seized, licenced the Plaintiff to put in his cattle, the Avowant replies, if in the said Bargain and Sale made by the Husband and Wife, a Proviso was contained, that if the said Ellington should pay one hundred pounds a year after, then, etc. and pleaded the Statute of 13 Eliz. of usury with an averment that the profits of the Land were of the value of twelve pounds by the year, the Plaintif rejoined that true it is, there is such a clause in the Indenture but he further said, that before the sealing of the Indenture, it was agreed by word, that the said Ellington should have and receive the profits, and not the plaintiff, and thereupon the Avowant demurs, and the Case was thus, Ellington bargains his Land to M for the payment of one hundred pounds a year after to be paid, and that the Bargainee should have the profits, the bargainor enters as upon a void Sale, because of the statute of usury, for by the Proviso ●he is to have the hundred pounds, and ten pounds for the forbearance, and by the Law, he is to have the profits, and the which did amount above ten pounds by the hundred, the bargainee to avoid the usury pleaded an agreement by word, before the sealing of the Bargain and Sale, and the question arising upon this was, if the Bargainee might plead this verbal agreement, for the avoiding of the Deed which did suppose the contrary, and Moor of Lincolns ●nne counsel, was of opinion that he could not put that maxim that every thing must be dissolved by that, by which it is bound, and his whole argument depended upon that, and he cited divers Cases, as 1 H. 7. 28. 28 H. 8. 25. 1 Eliz. Dier 16. 9 Rutland's Case 5 Rep. and Cheyney 6 Case there, but the whole Court without any argument were of opinion, that he might plead the verbal agreement, and avoid the usury, and first they all agreed, that when a Deed is perfected and delivered as his Deed, that then no verbal agreement afterwards may be pleaded in destruction thereof, as it is in the Cases put, but when the agreement is parcel of the Original contract, as here it is, it may be pleaded and secondly otherwise it would bring a great mischief, being the custom so to do by word, but if it had been expressed within the Deed, that the Bargainee should have the profits, and that it was delivered accordingly that no agreement or assignment of the profits could now avoid it, for it is an usurious contract, and therefore the whole court gave Judgement for the plaintiff that he might well plead the agreement. Actions of Trespass and Battery. JOhnson versus Turner, Trin. 44 Eliz. Trespass brought for breaking the Plaintiffs house, and the taking and carrying away his goods, The Defendant in his Demurrer answers not the whole Declaration, and Judgement reversed. the Defendant justifies all the Trespass, the plaintiff, as to the breaking of the House, and taking the goods, and the matter therein contained demurs upon the Defendants Bar, the Defendant joins in demurrer in this form, to wit, because the Plaintif aforesaid, as to the breaking of the House, and taking the goods is sufficient, demands Judgement, and Judgement given in the Common Pleas for the Plaintiff, and a Writ to inquire of Damages, upon which Damages are assessed for the breaking of the House, and taking the goods, and whether the subsequent words, to wit, and the matter therein contained go to the whole matter in the Bar, to wit, to the carrying of the Goods away also, for when the Defendant joined in Demurrer with the Plaintiff he joined, specially to wit, to the breaking of the House, and taking the Goods, but nothing of the carrying them away, and so as to the carrying of them away, nothing is put into Judgement of the court, yet the Writ to inquire is for the whole, and the Judgement also, and the carrying of the Goods away being parcel of the matter, and for which greater Damages, are adjudged, and that being not put into the Judgement of the Court by the Demurrer, therefore the Judgement is erroneous, for there is a discontinuance, as to the carrying of the Goods away, which is part of the matter, and this business concerned Mr. Darcy of the privy chamber, concerning his patent for Cards. PVrrell versus Bradley. Pasch. 1 Jacobi. The Plaintif declares in Trespass, wherefore by force and Arms, such a day the Defendant did assault him, and one Mare, price six pounds, from the person of the Plaintiff, then and there did take, and Yeluerton moved for the Defendant in arrest of Judgement, and the Declaration was not good, for the Plaintif did not show any property in the Mare, for he ought to have, that it was his Mare, or the Mare of the plaintiff, for as it is laid in the Declaration, the words may have two intendments, that the property of the Mare was to the Defendant, and then the taking was lawful, or that the property was in the plaintiff, and then the taking was wrongful, and it being indifferent, to whether it shall be taken most strongly against the Plaintif, for his is not a fault in form, which is helped by the Statute, but it is a defect in matter, and then the Jury having assessed entire Damages for both the Trespasses, and that no cause of Action is supposed form, the verdict was not good which the Court granted. FReshwater, vers. Reus, Mic. 2 Jac. tenant in tail, convenanted to stand seized in consideration of a marriage, to be had by his Son, with the Daughter of J. S. to the use of himself & his heirs, until the marriage be had, & afterwards to the use of himself for life, & afterwards to his Son and his wife, the daughter of J. S. and the heirs of their bodies, and suffers a recovery with a single voucher to that purpose, they die without Issue, and adjudged that the Entry of him in the Remaindant depending upon the estate. Tail was lawful, for first there is no consideration, to raise an use for the consideration, is only the marriage of his Son with a stranger, the which as to the changing of the possession is not any benefit to the Father, for he is as a stranger to that personal & particular consideration, but if the consideration had been for the establishing of the Land in his name and blood, it had been good, for that only concerned the Father, and the whole Court agreed, that although it were an alteration of the Estate, as to himself, but not to strangers, for if he had after such Covenant to stand seisedtook a Wife, she should have had Dower. In Trespass the Process is Attachment and Distress infinite, but if nihil be returned, Process of Outlary lies; and if the Defendant be returned attached by such Goods and Chattels, if the Defendant omit to cast an Essoine at the return of the Writ of Attachment, he shall forfeit the Goods by which he was attached, but if he cast an Essoine, he shall have a special Writ, reciting the matter to the Sheriff, to deliver to him his Goods or cattle, although he do not appear at the day of the adjournment of the Essoine: And if the Defendant at the return of the Attachment will appear without an Essoine he may, and then he shall not forfeit the Goods: And note, the Essoine shall not be adjourned by, from fifteen days to fifteen days: And if the original Writ be against many, they shall have but one Essoine in personal Actions: And if a Lord of the Parliament appear not, he shall forfeit an hundred pounds, and upon issue joined in this Action, the Process against the Jury, is the Venire facias, Habeas corpus, and Distress: And if a Baron of the Parliament be a Defendant, then if a Knight be not returned upon the Pannell, the Defendant may at the Assizes quash the Pannell; and if at the Assizes the Jury do not appear full, to wit, twelve men, this may be supplied by the Justices at the request of the Plaintiff; and the Sheriff ought to return two Hundreds at the least in this Action, and so in every personal Action; but four in real Actions, for if a challenge be made, Pro defectu hundredo, if two be not returned, the Jury shall remain; and a Distringas, with a Decem tales shall be awarded, returnable in Court, but no circumstances shall be awarded in Court, for if the Jury in Court do not appear full, or are challenged, for that the Jurors have no freehold, and it be tried, a new Habeas corpus shall issue out with a Decem tales, if it be desired: And if the Jury appear full in the Court, and the Array be challenged, either for that it was of the Plaintiffs denomination, or that the Sheriff or under Sheriff who returned the Jury, are of the Kindred of the Plaintiff, or any other principal cause of challenge, and this is confessed or tried by two of the Jurors who have appeared, being assigned and sworn by the Court to be tryers of the challenge, who shall give their Verdict that the challenge is true, than the Array shall be quashed; and if he that arrayed the Pannell remain Sheriff, the Venirefacias de novo, shall be awarded to the Coroners, if there be no cause of exception against them or any of them by reason of Kindred, or any other principal cause: And if there be cause of challenge to any of them, the Venire facias shall issue to the rest, and his companion shall not intermeddle with the execution of it; and if there be good cause against all, than a Venire facias shall issue to Estizors to be appointed by the Court to return the Writ, but if the Sheriff who returned the first Pannell be removed, than a new Venire facias shall issue to the Sheriff who shall be then in Office: And note, no challenge shall be made to the Array returned by the Estizors but by the Poll; and if the Jury appear full, and no challenge be made until twelve be sworn, the Jury shall proceed to hear their Evidence, and give their Verdict; and if the Jury find for the Plaintiff, than they shall give costs and damages, but if they find for the Defendant, they shall find neither costs nor damages: And the Judgement for the Plaintiff is, that the Plaintiff shall recover his damages found by the Jury and costs of suit, but if the Jury find for the Defendant, the Judgement is, that the Plaintiff shall, in't. capiat per breve, but if Judgement in this case had lain, a Nil dicit confession. or Non sum informat. than the Court shall award to the Sheriff a Writ to inquire of damages, and no challenge lies to the Jury upon a Writ to inquire: And if the Sheriff return but twenty and one upon the Jury, and twelve of them appear, and try the Issue and give a Verdict, it is a good Verdict, but if only ten or eleven of them appear, and the Jury be made up at the Assizes, De circumstantibus, and the Issue be tried and a Verdict given, it is naught, and not holpen by the Statute: And if the Issue be joined, and the Sheriff be cozen to the Defendant, the Plaintiff shall not have a Venire facias upon the challenge of Kindred of the Sheriff to the Defendant, but it ought to stay until that Sheriff be removed and another Sheriff made: And if the Defendant be Lord of the Hundred, within which Hundred the ten doth arise, the Plaintiff may show that, and have a Venire facias to the next Hundred; or if the Array be quashed for that cause, he may have a Venire facias to the Coroners of the next Villiage in the next Hundred next adjoining: And note, The Venire facias shall not issue to the Coroner but upon the principal challenge, and if a challenge be to the Tales, and that be found true, the Tales only shall be quashed, and the principal Pannell shall stand: And if an Issue be joined between the Mayor and Commonalty of a City, and another concerning a Trespass done within that City; the Plaintiff surmising that the Sheriff and Coroners are Citizens of that City, may pray a Venire facias to the next County of the body of the County, or of the next Villiages in the next County: And if the challenge of Kindred be not rightly alleged in the challenge, it matters not if it be Kindred; and if a Venire facias be quashed, because it was returned by the Under Sheriff who was Kin to him, or other good cause, it shall be quashed, and the Venire facias shall be returned by the high Sheriff, with words in it, that the Under Sheriff shall not intermeddle with it: And if the Array be challenged and affirmed, the Defendant may after challenge the Poll, and must show his cause of challenge presently: And if the Land in question lie in four Hundreds, if four of any Hundred appear, it is good; and note, That the challenge of the Array shall be drawn in Paper, and delivered presently after the Jury appears; and the Defendant is not bound to make good his challenge with these words, Et hoc parat. est ver iscare, etc. And those that try the principal challenge may also try the challenge upon the Tales, if the King had been party alone no challenge was to be allowed, but if the suit had been in the name of another, who sued as well for the late King as for himself, in a Writ to inquire of waste after a distress, no challenge to the Poll lies. It is good cause to challenge a Juror because he was attainted in a conspiracy or attaint, or if any Juror was put into the Pannell at the desire of the party, it is good cause of challenge to the Array: And if a Jury of two Counties, and both Arrays are challenged, two of one County shall try the Array of that County, and two of the other County shall try the Array of the other County, and they shall not join until they be sworn of the Principal, and two of one Hundred and two of the other Hundred do suffice, if in Trespass the Defendant justify as a Servant to the Lord and by his commandment. It is good cause of challenge to the Juror that he is a Tenant to the Lord, although the Lord be no party to the Record; and if Process by challenge is awarded to the Coroners, the Process afterwards shall not go to the Sheriff, although there be another Sheriff, but after Judgement execution shall issue to the new Sheriff: And where a man challenges the Polls of the principal Pannell, he afterwards shall not challenge the Array of the Tales, and if the Array be quashed, it is entered upon Record, but if it be affirmed than it is not entered. If Trespass be done in divers Towns in one Shire, they may all be joined in one Writ, to wit, why by force and arms the Closes and Houses of the Plaintiff at A. B. and C. have broken; and, etc. WOlsey versus Sheppard, Constable, The Constable being Defendant The mistake of the day of an Act by way of Bar, not prejudicial. justifies the Imprisonment, by reason that the Plaintiff kept one Alehouse against the form of a Statute of Queen Elizabeth, and therefore by the warrant of two Justices he was committed to Prison, and Issue was, that he did not keep an Alehouse against the form of the Statute aforesaid; and indeed the Statute was made in Edw. 6. time, and the Jury found that he did keep an Alehouse against the Statute in Edw. 6. time: And the Court held the mistaking of the day of the Act is not prejudicial by way of bar, but by way of count it must be laid truly. GLasbrook versus Einsey, Pasch. 16. Jacobi, in Assault and Battery, the Defendant pleaded not guilty, and the next term after A confession after an issue joined, refused. the Writ of Venire facias was awarded, the Defendants Attorney would have confessed the Action by Relicta verificatione, which the Plaintiff did deny to receive, having took out his Venire, and that those Errors which had escaped in the proceedings by that confession were not holpen as they are after trial; and it was much controverted by the Court, whether the Defendant without the consent of the Plaintiff might confess the Action; and the Court was in several opinions, but because the Plaintiff always prays for the confession, it seemed he might refuse the confession; and afterwards it was adjudged the confession should not be received, because it appeared to the Court to be but a practice to lessen the Plaintiffs Damages. COok versus Jenman, Trin. 12. Jacobi, rotulo 329. An Action of Trespass and Battery was brought the last day of October, 10 Jacobi: The Defendant as to the force and arms says nothing, but pleads generally that he and one, in the said last day of October did jointly enter into the Plaintiffs at S. and did then and there assault the Plaintiff; and that afterwards, to wit, such a day and year, the said Plaintiff▪ did by his Writing, etc. release, etc. the said R. of all Actions, etc. And avers it to be the same Trespass whereof the Plaintiff complained, and the Plaintiff traverses without this, that the Trespass, etc. was jointly done, and demurrer upon this Plea, pretending the Trespass is several and not joint, and so no satisfaction, but it was held a good Plea, for the Battery was joint or several at the Plaintiffs election, to have his Action against one or other: And a satisfaction by one is a satisfaction for all, and the Plaintiff cannot have several damages, but one damage against them all, and he hath his choice, as in Heydens' Case, to have the best damages. COok versus Darston, Mich. 15. Jacobi, An Action of Trespass brought by the Committee of a Lunatic being a Copyholder to whom the Lord had committed the Lunatic, and a stranger sowed the Land, and the question was, whether the Committee or the Lunatic should have the Action, and the Court held, the Action should be brought in the name of the Lunatic. Young versus Bartram, Battery brought by the Plaintiff against Husband and Wife and two others, the Woman and one of the others, without the Husband plead not guilty, and the Husband and and the other plead, Son assault demesne, and tried, and alleged in arrest of Judgement, because the Wife pleaded without her Husband, and Judgement stayed and a Repleader by the whole Court. CRogate versus Morris. If a stranger come over a Common, the Lord may have an action, but not the Commoner; for the petty Trespass, multiplicity of actions will not take away my action: & except it be a damage whereby I lose my Common, I can have no action. If a stranger come and eat up my Common, a Freeholder may bring an Assize of common, for it is a Disseisin; for a Disseisin of Common; is the taking away the profits of the Common: And an action of case will lie against the Lord for cutting down the body of the tree, when the Tenant should have the loppings; if the Commoner may have his Common, although another take away part of my Common, yet no action lieth. As if one beat my servant lightly, except the Master lose his service, no action lieth. And if my friend come and lie in my house, and set my neighbour's house on fire, the action lieth against me, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. HAtton versus Hun, Trin. 13. Jacobi, rotulo, 3314. In Trespass and Imprisonment, the Defendant justifies by virtue of a Capias, and the Plaintiff did afterwards escape, and he being Sheriff, did follow him by virtue of the said Warrant taken upon the Capias, the Plaintiff replies that he escaped by licence of the Sheriff, and traverses the latter taking by virtue of the Warrant: and the Court held the traverse idle, because the Plaintiff had sufficiently confessed, and avoided: and if he escaped by the Sheriff's Licence, that aught to be the thing put into issue, and not the traverse. PAtry, versus Wilsh, Trin. 9 Jacobi. rotulo, 1055. An action of Trespass brought, wherefore by Force and Arms he broke the Plaintiffs Close, and eat his Grass, etc. The Defendant justifies for common of pasture, and saith, that he was seized in Fee of one Message, with the appurtenances in G. and used to have common for all his cattle, levant and couchant upon the said Message. And it was moved after a verdict in arrest of Judgement by Sergeant Nichols, that the plea was insufficient, because the certainty of the cattle was not expressed, as for 200. or the like: but the Court held the contrary that levant and couchant is a certainty sufficient, and all the Books prescribe for a Common by reason of a Message. RInghall versus Wolsey, Mich. 11. Jacobi rotulo, 820. An action of Trespass brought; wherefore by force and Arms the servant A Constable cannot detain one, but for Felony. of the Plaintiffs out of the service of the said Plaintiff, hath taken and laid to be at H. The Defendant justifies that one was possessed of Corn at S. And that the said servant by the command of his Master, had carried away the Corn: and that the Owner came to the defendant, being Constable, and prayed him to detain the servant until he could procure a Warrant of a Justice of Peace, and traverses that he is guilty at H. The Plaintiff demurs, that it was held by the Court a naughty plea: First, because the Constable could not detain any man but for Felony: And secondly, the traverse is naught, because the Trespass is in the same County, and so he might have justified as well in H. as in S. DArney versus Hardington, Pasch. 9 Jacobi rotulo, 1857. An action of Trespass brought, to which the Defendant pleads a justification for an Amerciament set in the Sheriffs turn; to which Justification exceptions were taken. First, because the Defendant justified by virtue of a precept to him lawfully granted, & saith not at what place. Secondly, he prescribes for the turn to be held, and doth not any, or what estate, etc. And Hutton said, that a prescription for a turn, or one hundred Court by what estate, is naught, because a hundred is not manurable, but lies in grant; but he ought to have said, that the King and all they that were seized of the said Hundred have had, and from the time, etc. And my Lord Cook said, that a prescription by what estate for a thing incident to a Manor is good, for an Hundred that lies in grant, it is naught: And he and Warburton held that except it was showed before whom the turn was held, it was naught; because where any thing is taken by common right as the Sheriffs turn, it ought to be holden before the Sheriff, as in the prescription it ought to be showed, before whom the turn was held, or else it would be naught. Roberts' versus Thacher, & al. Hill. 11. Jac. rotulo, 1928. An action of Trespass brought; wherefore by Force and Arms the Close and House of the Plaintif at A. did break, and a certain Cow, price, etc. took. The Defendant saith, that the Plaintiff ought not to have his Action against him, because he saith that the Close & House is one Message, etc. in A. aforesaid: and that before the time in which, etc. such a one was possessed of the said Cow, as of his own proper Cow, to wit, at A. aforesaid; and being thereof so possessed, certain Malefactors unknown to the said, etc. before the said time, in which, etc. the said Cow out of the possession of the said B. did feloniously steal, take, and lead away, whereupon he made Hue and Cry; and thereupon he had intelligence, came, and was in the possession and custody of the Plaintiff, and B. upon notice thereof, did request the Defendant to ask the Cow of the Plaintiff, and to bring her, etc. By reason whereof, the Defendant the said time, in which came to the said Message by the usual way, by and through the said Close, etc. to demand, etc. And the Defendants then & there finding the aforesaid Cow in a walled parcel of the Message, they took the Cow from thence, and brought her to the said B. and to him delivered her, as etc. which is the same Trespass, to which plea the Plaintiff demurs, and it was adjudged a naughty Justification for these reasons. First, because it doth not appear but that the Plaintiff had good right to the Cow. Secondly, because the Defendant took the Cow without demand. And thirdly, it is not pleaded that the Defendants were servants to the said B. R. and that he did it by his command, and therefore Judgement given for the Plaintiff. HAll versus Stanley, & al. Pasch. 9 Jacobi. rotulo, 2289. An action marshalsea hath no authority to hold plea in debt, except both are of the Household. of false imprisonment: The Defendant as to the whole Trespass except the Battery and Imprisonment, and keeping in prison not guilty: And as to that pleads that the Marshal's Court is an ancient Court, etc. and so justifies, because the Plaintiff was the pledge of T. C. to the Defendant in an action of trespass upon the case in an indebilat. assumpsit general, and thereupon a Judgement against C. and a Capias awarded, and a non est invent. returned, and thereupon a capias awarded against Hall the pledge according to the custom, by virtue whereof the said Hall was taken and detained, and traverses that he was guilty, etc. of any imprisoning the Plaintiff before such a day, and avers that they are the same persons: And the Plaintiff replies, that neither R. C. nor T. T. at the time of exhibiting the Bill were of the household, etc. The Defendant demurs, and Judgement for the Plaintiff: and the whole Court agreed, that the Marshals Court could not hold Plea, Covenants, and Contracts, except both of them were of the household of the King; and all the matters of which they could hold plea, were Trespass, Covenants, and Contracts of the household, and within the verge, to wit, within twelve miles of the Court, and Doddridge said that before the Statute of 28 l. as it appears by Fleta and Brian, the authority of the Marshal was absolute in civil and criminal causes at the Common Law, and that Statute restrains them for Debts, but not for Trespass of what nature soever, and therefore see the Statute of 30 l. 1. 5 E. 3. ch. 2. and 10 E. 3. ch. 2. Swaffe versus Solley, Trin. 14 Jacobi. rotulo 689. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore he took his Close, the Defendant justifies for a way, the Plaintiff replies that he did the Trespass of his own wrong without any cause alleged, and so an Issue joined, and after a Verdict, for it was moved in arrest of Judgement, that the Issue was not well reined, and prayed a new Trial, because the Issue ought to be special, but that exception was disallowed, and adjudged that it was helped by the Statute of Jeofails, by the opinion of the whole Court. PLaint versus Thirley, Hill. 6 Jacobi rotulo 161. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by force and Arms, the Goods and chattels of the plaintif did take and impound, the Defendant pleaded the common Bar, and the plaintif assigns the place, and are at issue upon that, and after a verdict it was moved in arrest of Judgement that there was no Issue joined, because the Lands are not in question, and so no assignment necessary, and Judgement was stayed, but afterwards upon a motion Judgement was given for the plaintiff, because the Issue was holpen by the Statute of Jeofails, and there was the like case upon a Demurrer, in the court of common pleas, Trin. 4 Jacobi, rotulo 1131. CHild versus Heely, 13 Jacobi, rotulo 3381. vel 381. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by force and Arms, the Close, Hedges, and Gates, of the Plaintiff at W. did break, and his grass with walking over it did destroy, and other his Grass with cattle did eat and consume, the plaintiff assigned one Close of pasture called Drew, and another close called Sutton, one other close called L. and the Defendant as to the Trespass, except the breaking of the close called G. and P. and the treading, etc. with his feet, and eating with his cattle in the said close called P. and E. not guilty, and as to the breaking of the close, etc. saith the plaintif ought not to have his Action, because he saith that E. 6. was seized of the Manor of W. of which one Message etc. was copyhold and shows the custom for a way, and another custom for a Common, and conveys the Copyhold to himself, and justifies, as to the pedibus ambulandi, and as to the Trespass with the cattle justifies for Common, the plaintiff replies as to the Trespass pedibus ambulandi, that it was of his own wrong without any cause alleged, and traverses the way, and as to Trespass with the cattle demurs, and the cause of the Demurrer was, as it appeared by motion, because in the justification of the cattle the Defendant had not alleged any custom for Common, and so the Plaintif could not take any Issue of that custom, but had alleged a custom for the way, as for the common, and the court were of opinion that it was well pleaded; and Judgement upon the Demurrer for the Defendant. FAirchild versus Gair Pasch. 3 Jac. An Action of Trespass brought for the tithes of the Church of B. and therein a special verdict was as followeth, the Defendant was collated to this Church of B. being a Donative by A. and B. the Patrons, and that the Church was exempt from the Jurisdiction of any Ordinary, the Defendant resigned to A. and C. who was a stranger, and to other persons who had no Interest, his Church of B. with all Rights, etc. and afterwards the persons pass their Rights to D. who collates and interests the Plaintiff in the Church, by reason whereof he seized the Tithes in question, and the Defendant took them, and concludes that upon the matter, etc. and if the Resignation be good, than they find for the Plaintiff, otherwise, for the Defendant, and by the opinion of the whole Court, Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, for the Resignation was good, both in respect of the thing resigned, and of the person to whom it was made, for it being a Donative, and exempt from ordinary Jurisdiction, the Resignation must be into his hands, and the Incumbent shall not be constrained to keep the Church, whether he will or no, if the Patron will not accept it, and because there is no person, to whom the Resignation can be made, but only into the hands of the Patron, it is good, and although the Resignation be to one Patron, and to a stranger, it is good to both the Patrons, and void as to the stranger, and the more strong it is, because of the following words, (to wit, to all persons whatsoever, which words involve all, that have any manner of interest, and then seeing it is found, that D. who collated the Plaintiff, and the Estate of both the Patrons, although no agreement be found of the Patrons, it is not material, and the resting of the Plaintiff in the Church is good to give him power to take the profits by reason of the primer possession, and although the Defendant did resign but the Church only, yet it is good to all that appertains to the Church, and that which the Defendant may have as Rector there, 6 E. 3. is, that if the Patron grant Ecclesiam, that will pass the Avowson, but Herlethen said, that was in ancient time and therefore not so then, to which the court seemed to agree, and the court waived the Dispute of any other thing, but only the Resignation, for of that only the Jury doubted, and was only referred to the court, but Popham chief Justice said, that if the Patron would not collate any man to such a Donative, there was no way to compel him, but he is left to his own conscience, and he might in time of the vacancy take the profits, and sue for the Tithes in the spiritual court, for such Donatives at first grow by consent of all persons, who have any manner of Right or Interest, to wit the Ordinary, and Parishioners, but Gawdy, Fenner, Yeluerton, and Williams, against him, that the Ordinary might compel him to collate any clerk, for the Rectory is only exempted from the power of the Ordinary, and not the Patron, and that is only as to charges to be taxed upon the church, for the ordinary attendance in a Visitation, and such like, and Popham said, that although the Church in execution of the charge is spiritual, yet the patron may collate, and a mere lay man, as the King may make a temporal man a Dean, which hath often happened, but all the other Judges were against him in case of the person, which is merely spritual, but as to the Deanery, they did agree it, for the function is temporal, but yet Williams said, that lay men who have Deaneries, aught to have, and at all times used to have a Dispensation from the Archbishop, and if the Incumbent in this Case should preach Heresy, as the Attorney and Popham said, the Ordinary might correct him, for the parson is not exempted out of his Jurisdiction, but his Parsonage only, but by Gawdy and the rest, the Ordinary could not meddle with him, for the Parson is privileged in respect of the place, but the Patron may commission and examine the matter, and thereupon out and deprive him, and so it happened in Coverts Case, as Gawdy and Williams said, wherein the Bishop of Winchester was the Donor of such a Donative, 13 E. 4. Loe versus Lacon, 3. Jac. In trespass, the action was Land in the County of Salop, and not guilty pleaded, and the venire facias was made with a space for Salop, but Salop was not named there: And by virtue of that Writ the Sheriff of Salop impanelled the Jury, and found for the Plaintiff, and the matter above specified was moved in Arrest of Judgement, to wit, that the venire facias was vicious, and so a mistriall; but by Fenner and Williams it was to be accounted his, if no venire facias had been awarded: And so indeed by the Statute of Jeofailes; for the County, to wit, Salop, is omitted, and left out, and so the Sheriff of Salop had no power nor authority to summon the Jury, because the Writ which is his Warrant is general (to the Sheriff) and not naming of any County: but the Court held it to be the best way to amend it, and they put this difference: For when the action is laid in Salop, and upon a special pleading, the issue is drawn into a foreign County, there the entry and award of the venire upon the Will is special, to wit, to the Sheriff of that County, where the issue arises to be tried: and in such case a venire facias with a blank shall not be good, because it cannot be judged to which of the Sheriffs the venire was to be awarded, and upon that incertainty it shall be naught: but when the general issue is taken, or the matter is triable in the same County where the action is laid, there the venire facias is awarded generally, and must of necessity be intended to be the Sheriff of that County where the action is laid, and cannot be otherwise intended: and for this reason it was but the default of the Clerk which is amendable, and so it was amended. Bailiff versus Moon, Trin. 3. Jacobi. An action of Battery brought Judgement before a wrong Officer erroneous. in Plymouth Court before the Major and Bailiffs there, and not guilty pleaded: but afterwards the issue was waived, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, and a Writ to inquire of damage was awarded to the Sergeant of the Mace, that by the oath of twelve, etc. he should inquire: and the Writ was made returnable at the next Court before the Mayor and Bailiffs. And upon a Writ of Error brought, it appeared by the Record certified, that the Writ to inquire of damages was taken before the Mayor of Plymouth, who was also Judge of the Court, and for that cause reversed; for the Writ warrants the inquiry to be before the Sergeant of the Mace, who by the writ for that purpose is made a distinct Officer, and so an inquiry before the Mayor is not warranted by any writ: And so by consequence a Judgement to recover those damages taxed before a wrong Officer to whom the Writ was not directed, is erroneous, which was granted by the whole Court. LAxworth versus West, Mich. 3. Jacobi. Trespass brought for the taking of Hay severed from the ninth part of Elthorp in the County of Warwick, the Defendant to part pleads not guilty, and to the residue pleads a devise of the Parsonage made by Lepworth to the Defendant at Wapenbury in the same County, and to enable the devise for tithes in L. alleges L. to be a Hamlet in Wapenbury, to the intent that the whole Tithes may pass: and upon a non devisavit, the venn was of Wapenbury, and found for the plaintiff, that T. L. did not devise it, and the other issue of not guilty found for the Defendant, and moved in Arrest of Judgement that the venu was mistaken, because it was of Wapenbury only, and not of Elthorp, and they of W. could not try a matter in E. And although it was answered, that the Defendant himself by his plea had confessed that E. was but an Hamlet, yet the Court held the venu mistaken; for when the plaintiff declares of a Trespass in E. This by general intendment is presumed to be a Village: of which Village the matter which is there in question ought to be tried: and although the Defendant had alleged Elthorp to be but an Hamlet; yet it was but to enable the devise, and doth not extend to the issue before joined upon the not guilty for part; for in that issue both parties agree that Elthorp is a Village, and it is a perfect issue taken, which hath not any coherence with the other issue of non devisavit: but if the Defendant had to the whole issue pleaded the devise as his excuse, and had alleged E. to be an Hamlet of W. and that only been in issue there, the venu awarded had been good of W. only; but in this case it was adjudged that the venire was misawarded, and that the Plaintif should have a venire facias de novo. DElves versus Wyer, Mich. 3. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an action of Trespass for breaking his Close, and for cropping The Court could not mitigate damages in trespass which was local. 200. Pear-trees, and 100 Appletrees, and damage found to 40. l. And the Court was moved by Richardson, for that the damages might be mitigated, because he produced an Affidavit, whereby it appeared that the party himself before the Action brought, would have took 5 l. but denied; for the Court said, that they could not diminish the damages in Trespass which was local, and therefore could not appear to them, and the damages might well amount to 40 l. for cropping of an Orchard, and so Judgement entered. WOody's case, Mich. 3. Jacobi. Woody brought an action of false imprisonment and Battery against two, who justify and The Defendant justifies the imprisonment by the command of the Mayor of London, and naught. set forth that London is an ancient City, and that the Mayor of London is a Justice of Peace, and that the Defendants were Sergeants of the Mace according to the custom of the City, and that the Lord Maior, to wit, one Lee, commanded them to arrest the Plaintif for causes to them unknown, but to him known, and to imprison him, etc. Walter moved that this Justification was insufficient, because they only showed that they were Sergeants at Mace duly elected according to the custom of the City; but do not show the Custom and Authority that they have to make Sergeants, and to arrest, as it is 4. H. 4. 36. in trespass the Defendant justifies, that the Tower of London is within the City of London, and time out of mind, etc. one Court was there used, etc. and that the Plaintif was sued there by J. S. and that he was summoned: and upon a nihill returned, a capias issued according to the Custom, etc. And that he being an Officer there, did arrest: and the Court ruled him to plead the Custom particularly for holding the Court, and to prescribe, etc. And here it is shown that the Mayor is a Justice of Peace: And it doth not appear whether he did it as a Justice of Peace, or Mayor, as 14. H. 7, 8. A Justice of Peace cannot command his servant to arrest one without a Warrant in Just. of Peace cannot command his servant to arrest in his absence without warrant in writing. writing in his absence. And Popham, chief Justice, said, That although the Judges knew the Authority of the Mayor, by which they arrested men; yet because it did not appear to them judicially as Judges, it must be pleaded: And a Justice of Peace cannot command his servant to arrest one if not in his presence, which was granted. And Fennor, Justice, said, that the servant is not an Officer to the Mayor as he is a Justice of Peace, but the Constable: and Walker also added, that the Plea was, that the Mayor commanded to imprison him presently without showing any cause, which was held naught; for the mayor ought to temper his Authority according to Law. For the Judges cannot imprison without showing cause; but them and the Mayor both may command an Officer to arrest a man without showing the cause, for else before he shall be examined he may invent and frame an excuse, and the accessories will fly away: And Williams, Justice, finds that it was incertain for the plaintiff, by what authority he commanded it, whether as Mayor or Justice of Peace: and his power as a Justice of Peace the Judges knew by common Law; but his power as a Mayor they knew not, if it be not showed by pleading and Judgement. HVggins versus Butcher, Trin. 4. Jac. The plaintiff declared that If a servant be beaten, & die, the Mr. shall not have an action for the loss of his service. the Defendant such a day did assault and beat his Wife, of which she died such a day following to his damage 100 l. And Sergeant Foster moved that the Declaration was not good, because it was brought by the Plaintiff for a Battery done upon his Wife: And this being a personal wrong done unto the woman, is gone by her death: And if the woman had been in life, he could not have brought it alone, but the woman must have joined in the Action; for the damages must be given for the wrong offered to the body of the woman, which was agreed. And Tanfield said, that if one beat the servant of J. S. so that he die of that beating, the Master shall not have an Action against the other for the battery and loss of service, because the servant dying of the extremity of the beating, it is now become an offence against the Crown, and turned into Felony, and this hath drowned the particular offence, and prevails over the wrong done to the Mr. before: And his action by that is gone, which Fennor and Yeluerton agreed to. BRown versus Crowley, Pasch. 5. Jac. Action of Trespass brought against Croyley for wounding the plaintiff upon the hinder part of Declaration shall not abate for false Latin. the left leg, being rendered in Latin, super posteriorem partem levis libaei, and the Jury found for the Plaintiff: And Harris moved in Arrest of Judgement; for he said that these words (levis libaei) made the Declaration vicious for the incertainty; for he said that levis signified light, and it was an improper word for left; and that judgement ought to be respited for the incertainty. And Yeluerton argued that judgement ought to be given for the Plaintiff; for he said, the Declaration was not vicious; for if the Plaintiff had declared generally that he had wounded, broken, or evil entreated him, and had omitted those other words, it had been sufficient, and then the adding of those words which were not material, but for damages did not make the Declaration vicious: and he said, that levus leva levum was Latin for left: And whereas he hath said, that he struck him, super posteriorem partem levis libaei, where it should have been (levis libaei) it was but false Latin, and the Declaration shall not be made naught for false Latin. And Popham said, that he showing upon which part of the body the wound was, were laid only to incense damages; for the Declaration had been sufficient, though they had been omitted: And Justice Fennor agreed to Popham, and he said, it had been judged, that where a man brought an Action against another for calling him strong Thief: and the Jury only found that he called him Thief, but not strong Thief, yet the Plaintiff recovered; for this word strong was to no other purpose then to increase damages, and Judgement was given for the Plaintif. VIccars versus Wharton, Pasch. 5. Jac. Viccars brought an action of false imprisonment against Wharton and others, and shows that he was imprisoned two days and two nights without meat or drink. The Defendants come and show that King Edward the 1. by his Letters Patents did incorporate one Village in Nottinghamshire with Bailiffs and Burgesses, and that the King did ordain and make those Burgesses Justices of the Peace there; and that the Defendant was Baili●●, and a Justice of Peace there; and that the Plaintiff did speak A man cannot prescribe to be a Justice of the Peace. divers opprobrious and contumelious words of the Defendant, by reason whereof they imprisoned him: And shows further, that the Bailiffs have used from the time of the making their Patent to imprison the disturbers of the Peace, and it was held a naughty plea, for a custom could not be shown in such a manner: And Tanfield held in this case, that a man could not prescribe to be a Justice of peace; but Justice Williams held he might prescribe to be a conservator of the Peace. And Tanfield held that the King might grant that all the Burgesses and their Heirs should be Burgesses, which Justice Williams denied. HAll versus White, Pasch. 5. Jac. An action of Trespass brought If a Book that ought not be given in evidence, the Court above cannot remedy it, except it be returned with the Postea. against the Defendant for impounding the Plaintiffs cattle, the Defendant justifies for Common: And upon that they were at issue in Derbyshire, and the Jurors being sworn, the Bailiff found one Bagshaw one of the Jurors, rending of a Letter concerning the said cause, and showed it to the Judge, and a verdict given by the Jury: And this matter moved in the than King's Bench to quash the verdict, but denied by the whole Court, because the Letter and the Cause was not certified by the Postea, and made parcel of it; for otherwise the examination of that at the Bar after the verdict, shall never quash it. And so it was adjudged between Vicary and Farthing, 39 Eliz. where a Church Book was given in Evidence, of which you shall never have remedy except it be entered and made parcel of the Record. BVtler versus Duckmonton, Trin. 5 Jacobi. In Trespass upon a special Verdict, the Case was, that no demised Land to a woman, A release to Tenant at sufferance, void. if she should live sole and unmarried, the remainder to John D. bastard in Tail, the Remainder to the Defendant Ro. Duckmonton in Fee, the woman married with Ro. D. the Defendant the Term expired, Jo. D. Tenant in Tail, in remainder releases to the Husband, and whether this should alter the estate of the Husband, he being Tenant at sufferance was the question, and adjudged by the whole Court, that the Release was void, and it was chiefly void, because the Release was made to him in the Remainder to take effect, as upon the Remainder, and there was no privity, and he had but a bare possession, and no Freehold, and 10 Eliz. Dier, Lessee for years, surrenders, and afterwards the Lessor releases to him, and held a void Release for the reason aforesaid, and 31 and 32 Eliz. it hath been adjudged between Allen and Hill, where a Devise was made to the woman for life, if she would inhabit and continue in the house, and he went and inhabited in Surrey, and the Heir released to her, and it was held void, because she was but Tenant at sufferance, and so no privity, but Yeluerton and Tanfield, that such estate for life was not determined without Entry, and Yeluerton Justice demanded, that when the Husband continued in possession after the Lease determined whether he should be in the Right of his Wife, and so remain Tenant at sufferance, whether he should be in his own Right, or be as an intruder, Disseisor, and then the release made to him was good, but no answer was given to him, but Judgement was given that the release was void, and Fennor put this Case, Tenant for life, remainder in Tail, remainder in Fee, he in the remainder in Fee released to Tenant for life, a void release, because of the mean remainder in Tail, and cited 30 E. 3. and no answer was given to it, and Yeluerton said, that if Tenant for life release to him in the remainder in Fee, it is void, because it shall be void, as a surrender, and this word release, shall not recite as a surrender. HOldesden versus Gresill Mich. 5 Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought for breaking the Plaintiffs Close called B. at L. and for Commoner cannot chase the Lords cattle, if the surcharge be Common. taking of two Coneys, the Defendant to the whole Trespass, but the entering in the Close pleads not guilty, and as to the Close justifies, because he Common in the Close called B. for five Cows, and because very many Coneys were there feeding, and spoiling the Common, the Defendant in preservation of his Common entered to chase and kill the coneys, to which the Plaintiff demurred in Law, and Judgement was given that the justification was naught, for a Commoner cannot enter to chase or kill the Coneys, for although the owner of the Soil hath no property in the Coneys, yet as long as they are in his Land he had the possession, which is good against the commoner, for if the Lord surcharge the common with Beasts, the commoner cannot chase them out, but the owner may distrain the Beasts of an estranger or damage pheasant, or chase them out of the common, for the stranger hat no colour to have his Beasts there, and also coneys are a matter of profit to the owner of the Soil for Housekeeping, and therefore because it appears that the cause of Entry was to chase, and also to kill, which are not lawful, as against the Lord, who is Plaintiff, therefore the matter of the justification is not good, for if the Lord surcharge the Soil with coneys, the commoner may have an Action of case against him for that particular damage, which is a sufficient remedy against the Plaintiff, upon a full and deliberate considera-of all the Judges. JEnnings versus Haithwait, Mich. 5 Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought, to which the Defendant pleaded not guilty, the Jury found The Statute of 13 Eliz. for nonresidence a general law. the Defendant Vicar of D. and that he such a day leased his vicaridg to J. S. for three years rendering rend, which J. S. assigned one Acre parcel thereof to the plaintiff, and the Defendant was absent several quarters in one year, to wit sixty days in every quarter, but they did not find the Statute of 13 Eliz. & adjudged for the Defendant, for the Statute of the 13 Eliz. is a general Law, for although it extends but to those which have cure of Souls, yet in respect of the multiplicity of Parsonages and vicaridges in England, the Judges must take notice of it as a general Law, and adjudge according to the said Statute, and so is the Statute of the 21 H. 8. for nonresidence. DRewry versus Dennys, Mich. 5. Jacobi, An Action of Trespass brought against a man and his Wife, and the Plaintif declares, that they did beat one Mare of the Plaintiffs, and committed divers Where Husband and Wife shall be joined, and where severed in Action. other Trespasses, and upon not guilty pleaded, the Jury found that the Woman beat the Mare, and for the residue they found for the Defendant, and the Verdict adjudged naught by the Court, for it is altogether imperfect, for they have found the Woman guilty of the beating the Mare, and have given no Verdict concerning that for the Husband, either by way of acquittal or condemnation; and the finding the Defendant not guilty, as to the residue, doth only extend to the other Trespasses contained in the Declaration, and not to the beating of the Mare: And Williams and Cook Justices said, that where a Battery is brought against Husband and Wife, supposing that they both beat the plaintiff or the Mare of the plaintiff, and upon not guilty pleaded, it is found that the Woman only made the Battery and not the Husband, this Verdict is against the Plaintif, for it now appears that the Plaintiffs Action was false, for the Husband in this case shall not be joined for conformity only, and there is a special Writ in the Register for this purpose, and is not like a Battery charged upon I. D. and I. S. for there one may be acquitted and another found guilty, and good, because they are in Law several Trespasses. SAnds and others, versus Scullard and others, Mich. 5. Jacobi. The The Venire facias vicious, no damages in Partition. Plaintiffs brought an Action of Trespass against the Defendants for entering their Close; and Judgement was entered against Dawby one of the Defendants, by nil dicit, Scullard pleaded not guilty, whereupon a Venire facias was awarded upon the Roll between the parties, as well to try the Issue, as to inquire of the damages: And the Plaintiffs took their Venire facias to try the Issue between the two-Defendants, and the two Plaintiffs. And according to that was the Habeas Corpus, and Distringas, but the Plaintiffs knowing Dawby to be dead, took their Record of Nisi prius against Scullard only; and he was found guilty: And Yeluerton moved in Arrest of Judgement, and showed the Venire facias, and that there was no Issue joined between the Plaintiffs and Dawby, for Judgement was given against him by Nil dicit; and the Writ ought to have made mention only of the Issue between the Plaintiffs and Scullard: And their ought to have been an inquiry of damages between the Plaintiffs and Dawby, according to the Award upon the Roll, which is the warrant for the Venire facias; and it was showed that the Jury knew nothing of the matter for which they were warned, for they ought to have only given their Verdict against Scullard and not against Dawby; and it was likened where two matters are in Issue, and they give a Verdict for one and nothing for the other, it is naught for all: And this was the opinion of the whole Court except Justice Williams, who relied upon 9 Eliz. Dyer, Sir Anthony Cook, and Wotton's Case in partition against two, one confessed the Action, and the other pleaded to Issue, and the Venire facias was to try the Issue between the Plaintiffs and the two Defendants, and it was amended by the opinion of the Court: But mark the difference, for no damages are to be recovered in partition, but it is otherwise in Trespass; and therefore in Cooks Case it was found by the Court, that it was as if a mere stranger to the Record had been named in the Venire facias. WInckworth against Man, Mich. 5. Jacobi. The Plaintiff declares If the Jury find a man guilty in Trespass for a foot, where it is laid in an Acre, good enough, and so in all Actions where damages only are to be recovered. for a Trespass in one Acre of Land in D. and abuts that, East, West, North, and South; and upon not guilty pleaded, the Jury found the Defendant guilty in half an Acre within written; and moved in Arrest of Judgement, because upon the matter no Trespass had been found, for there is no such moiety bounded as the Plaintiff had declared, for the whole Acre is only bounded by the Plaintiff, containing his Trespass within those bounds, and the Defendant ought to be found a Trespassor within those bounds, for otherwise it is not good; and it is impossible for the moiety of one Acre to be within those bounds: But the whole Court except Fenner, were of opinion that the Plaintiff should have his Judgement; for if the Plaintiff layeth his Action for a Trespass committed in one Acre, and the Jury find that only to be in one foot of it, it is good; and here they have found the Trespass in the moiety of the Acre bounded, which is sufficient in this Action, where damages only are to be recovered, but if it had been in Ejectment, the Verdict had been naught, for it is incertain in what part he should have his Writ of Habere facias possessionem. BVckwood against Beale, Mich. 5. Jacobi, In an action of Trespass it was said by the Court, That if a Sheriff execute a Capias, and there is no Original to warrant it, he is excused it, for he is not to Nota. examine whether the Original be sued out or no: and for this Trewyrmards' Case, 38 H. 8. And so if a Bailiff execute a Process made to him by the Steward for damages recovered in the Manor in a thing in which they had no authority to hold Plea: The Bailiff is excused, and shall not be punished, because he is not to examine the jurisdiction of the Court, 7 H. 4. 27. 22 Ed. 3. & 22. Ass. But if Process come to the Sheriff to arrest J. S. and he arrest J. N. or to make execution of the Goods of J. S. and he make execution of the Goods of I. N. he is a Trespassor; for in this Case he must take notice at his peril of the Person and the Goods, for when he arrests I. N. or does execution upon his Goods, he doth it without warrant: And so if I. S. sue a Replevin to the Sheriff to replevin his cattle, and I. S. comes to the Sheriff, and shows him the cattle of I. N. and saith they are his cattle, and he makes replevin of the cattle, he is a Trespassor to I. N. and the Sheriff may have an Action of Trespass against I. S. for his false information, for the Sheriff must at his own peril take notice whose cattle they be, 3 H. 7. 14 H. 4. but if there be any fraud in the matter he may aver that. MOnrey versus Johnson, An Action of Trespass brought for entering into a man's House, The Defendant pleads that he was a Constable, etc. And it was held by the whole Court that a Constable may justify his entry into the House of any man for Felony or Treason. STrickland against Thorpe, Pasch. 6. Jacobi. Thorpe brought an Error assigned because in trespass nothing was entered of the Fine, etc. where it was a continued trespass, and part of it was laid to be after the Pardon. Action of Trespass against Strickland, wherefore he broke his close the 20. of June 3 Jacobi, with a continuance thereof until the sixth of November after; and upon a not guilty pleaded, it was found for the plaintiff and Judgement entered, but it was entered nothing of the Fine because it is pardoned: And upon a Writ of Error brought he assigned for Error that the Judgement should have been entered with a Capiatur, because the King and Parliament pardoned all offences before the 25. of September, and therefore the Trespass being alleged to have been continued until the sixth of November following, only part of the Trespass was pardoned; and therefore, as to that it should have been a Capiatur; but the whole Court were of opinion that the Judgement was well entered for the first Trespass, which was by force and Arms being pardoned, all that depends on that was pardoned, and the continuance of the Trespass being only as to the entering and consuming the Grass is for increase of damages only, but not for the King's Fine, for the first entry being only with force and Arms makes the Trespass. REpps against Bonham, Trin. 6. Jacobi, The Case in Trespass was that a Feoffment was made of three Acres to R. Repps and Mary his Wife for their lives, and afterwards to the first, second, and third Son of the body of the said Mary; and after to the heirs of the body of the said Mary by the said Richard to be begotten, and they had no Son but one Daughter: Richard levies a Fine of the Land, and Mary dies, the Plaintif enters, and the Defendant pleads Richard's Fine, and adjudged that the Plaintif is not barred by the Fine, for Richard had only an Estate for life, and the Estate tail was in the woman only by the opinion of the five Justices; for they said that the Husband is only named to declare what heir of the body of the woman should inherit: and not any Heir, but such an Heir as Richard her present Husband should beget. And if the limitation had been to the Heirs of the body of the woman by her Husband, and by I. S. to be begotten, the Inheritance had been only in the woman, but by the last words; for if she had no Heirs by her Husband, and afterwards marries I. S. the Heirs that she should have by I. S. should inherit: And they were all of opinion, that the Inheritance was only in the woman, because the word Heir which makes the estate of inheritance, is annexed only to the body of the woman: but if it had been to the Heirs which the Husband should have got of the body of the woman, there the entail had been in both, 19 H. 6. 75. And the like Law, if it had been to the Heirs which the Husband should beget of the body of the woman, Little. 82. 6. HOrn against Widlake, Mich. 6. Jac. An action of Trespass brought wherefore he broke his Close, and spoiled his Grass in D. The Defendant pleads, that in the Close wherein the Plaintiff supposes the Trespass to be done time out of mind, there hath been a footway for all people passing in, by, and through the said Close until such a day, Nota. and that such a day the Plaintiff ploughed up the said Footway, and sowed it with Corn, and laid thorns on the sides of it: And further pleads, that in the said Close, near the said ancient Footway, the Plaintiff, before the Trespass supposed to be committed, left, and set out another Footway for all people who would use that new way; which way, since it was laid forth, hath been used by all Foot-passengers; by reason whereof, the Defendant the time in which, etc. went in the way so laid forth unto such a place, etc. which is the same trespass▪ etc. and demands judgement, etc. and the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged against the Plaintiff, because the Plaintiff made the first wrong in stopping up the ancient way, and had assigned a new way for passengers: And therefore the Defendants plea is good by way of excuse as to the Plaintiff; for it is not fit he should punish the Defendant against his own agreement. As if there were a Footway through the Close of I. S. over an hedge, and I should remove the hedge into a new place, if passengers in using their way go over the hedge where it is newly placed and fixed, they shall not be punished for that; for it arises of the Act and wrong of the Plaintiff himself: and volenti non fit injuria: As if water run by the Land of M. and M. stop the watercourse, so that it surround my ground; if now abate this, he shall not have an action against me for entering into his Close, because the stoppage was his own Act, and the same law in the principal case. And although the Defendant hath pleaded generally, that the Plaintiff hath set out a way, and shows not where it is, is not material; for that which is common to all cannot be assigned to any particular person, which was the opinion of the whole Court, except Justice Yeluerton. MEtham versus Barker, Mich. 6. Jacobi. An action of Trespass brought, for that the Defendant the first of August, in the fifth year, the Plaintiffs Close at L. in the County of Suffolk, hath broken, and entered, and spoiled his Grass with his cattle, etc. The Defendant pleads, that in the time when the Trespass, etc. the freehold Nota. of the Land where, etc. was in Sir Jo. T. And that the Defendant as servant, and by his commandment, hath entered, and put in his cattle. The Plaintiff replied, that true it was, that the freehold was in Sir John T. But said, that a long time before the Trespass, etc. Sir john leased the Close to the Plaintiff at will, by reason whereof he entered, and was possessed until the Defendant did the Trespass, and traverses without that, that the Defendant by the command of Sir Io. entered, and put in his cattle; and the Defendant demurred, and adjudged against the Plaintiff, for the plea in Bar is good, and in no wise avoided by the Replication; for the Replication must be good only by way of Title: And the Plaintiff doth not entitle himself to any good Lease at will; for he doth not allege indeed any Seisin in Sir john, or any possession in him, out of which a Lease at will may be derived. And although a Declaration may be good to a common intent, and in debt upon a Lease, as 21. H. 7. is, the Plaintiff may declare that he devised. And need not allege a seisin in himself, when he made the Lease, etc. Yet when a title is made by Bar or Replication, as 2 E. 4. 9 is, that aught to be certain to all intents, because it is traversable, and because the Defendant had made a good Justification in Law, that aught to be answered by the Plaintiff with a good title, to wit, that Sir I. T. was seized, and made a Lease to him at will, which is not so done; but it is all one, as if he should have replied, that Robin-Hood in Barnwood stood, without that by the command of Sir john, etc. which observe. And this by the opinion of Fennor, Williams, and Cook, being only then in Court, and Judgement was given accordingly. GOodman against Ayling, Mich. 6. Jac. An action of Trespass If the verdict find the tenure in substance, though not in manner and form, it is good intrespasse. brought, that the Defendant the 8. of February, 4. jacobi. broke the Plaintiffs house, and took and carried away one Brass Chaffer of the Plaintiffs, price, 20 s. The Defendant pleads that the house is parcel of half a yard Land in P. and that it was holden of H. Earl of North, as of his Manor of W. by homage, fealty, escuage, incertain suit of Court, enclosure of the Park-pale, & rend one pound of Comyn, and for the Rent behind for three years, and the homage and fealty of Th. P. Tenant thereof; the Defendant as servant of the Earl, and by his command, justified the Entry, and taking, etc. The Paintiff replies, that the house was held of R. Stanley, as of his Manor of Lee, without that, that it was held of the Earl in manner and form, and upon this they were at issue, and the Jury found it was held of the Earl, as of his Manner of P. by homage fealty, enclosure of the pale rent of a pound of Comyn, and no otherwise. And if it seemed to the Court that it was not held in manner and form, they found for the Plaintiff, etc. And adjudged for the Defendant, for although the verdict did not agree with the plea in manner and form of the tenure, yet it agreed in substance in the point, for which the taking was, to wit, that the Land was holden of the Earl, and that suffices; for there is difference between a Replevin and Trespass: For in Replevin, because Difference between Replevin and Trespass. the Avowant is to have return, it behoves the Avowant to make a good Title in all things, but otherwise it is in Trespass; for there the Defendant is bound only to excuse the Trespass, and therefore if there be any tenure it suffices; for if the Lord or Bailiff in his right distrains for that which is not due, yet he shall not be punished in Trespass, as Littleton, 114. for the manner and form: And 9 H. 7. which mark by the whole Court: and Fleming, Justice vouched the 33, H. 8. Dyer 48. B. where the issue was, whether a Villain regardant, etc. or free: And the Jury found a Villain in gross, yet it was held good for the substance of the Villainage, and of the issue were found, H. 5. Jac. rotulo, 834. GOodwin against Welsh and Over, Pasch. 7. Jacobi. The Plaintiff brought an Action of Trespass for several things against the two In a writ to inquire of damages, the Plaintif is not bound to prove the property of goods, but the value only. Defendants, and declares to his damage, etc. The Attorney for the Defendants, pleads non sum informat, and thereupon Judgement was given severally for the Plaintiff, and Writs to inquire of the damages issued out, and were returned: and it was moved, that the Writs should not be filled, because the Plaintiff at the time of the inquiry did not prove that the goods did appertain to him, but only proved the value of the goods; for Sergeant Nichols took a difference between an Action confessed, and non sum informat; for in the first case the property of the goods is also confessed to be in the Plaintiff, but it is not so in the other case: for here Judgement passes without the privity of the Defendant, and only for want of pleading, as in the case of a nil dicit, but by the whole Court it was all one. And the Plaintiff is not bound to prove the property in any of the Cases: and the reason is, because the Writ commands only the value to be inquired of, and no more, and that only is the charge of the Jury: And the whole Court were of opinion, that they themselves as Judges, if they would in such Case might assess Damages without any Writ, if they would trouble themselves, for the Writ goes only, because it is known what Damages are, but it is otherwise, when not guilty is pleaded, for then the Trespass is denied, which must be proved and tried by the Jury, and there both the value and property come in proof; and observe, the Judgement is, that he should recover, and if upon a Writ of inquiry he should be bound to prove the property, and fail thereof, it would be in destruction of the first Judgement which cannot b. observe this. TAilor against Markham, Trin. 7 Jacobi. An Action of Trespass Where of his own wrong without such cause shall be a good issue and where not. and Battery brought for, etc. The Defendant pleads, that he at the time of, etc. was seized of the Rectory of, etc. where the Battery was supposed in Fee, and that at the time in which, etc. Corn was severed from the nine parts at the place aforesaid, and because the Plaintiff came to carry away his corn, and the Defendant stood there in defence of his corn, and keeping the Plaintiff from taking it away, and the hurt that the Plaintiff had, was of his own wrong, etc. the Plaintiff replies, that it was of his own wrong with the such cause allege, etc. and the Defendant demurred in Law, and adjudged for the Plaintiff, for that general replication is good, and doth not behoove the Plaintiff to answer the Defendants Title, because the Plaintiff by his Action doth not claim any thing in the Soil or corn, but only damage for the Battery, which is altogether collateral to the Title, but when the Plaintiff makes a Title by his Declaration to any thing, and the Defendant shall plead another thing in destruction thereof, or if the cause of Action in such Cases, the Plaintiff must reply specially, and not say without such cause, as it is in 14 H. 4. Trespass brought for taking a servant, the Defendant shows that the Father of him that the Plaintiff supposes to be the servant, held of him in Knight's Service, etc. and died seized his Heir, the Servant being within age, by reason whereof he seized as his Ward, as it was lawful for him to do, and there the Plaintiff replied that he did it of his own wrong, and without such cause, and disallowed by the Court, because he did not answer to the Seignory, to wit, that he did that of his own wrong, without it, that the Father of him, that is, supposed to be the Servant, held of him in Chivalry, and the reason was, because the plaintiff by his Action made Title to the Servant, according to 16 E. 4. and Judgement given accordingly. ALlbon against Dremsall, Mich. 7 Jacobi. The plaintiff declares The Defendant prescribed for a passage over Land, and naught, it should have been for a way. in an Action of Trespass, that the Defendint the twentieth day of February, 5 Jac. did break the plaintiffs Close, at etc. called Sandy Heath, and entered it, and spoiled his grass, and kiiled took and carried away a hundred Coneys, and also that the Defendant the same day the free Warren of the plaintiff at Sandy aforesaid did enter, and chase without licence, and killed fifty Coneys, and took & carried them away to his damage of, etc. the Defendant to the whole Trespass, except the entering and breaking of the Close called Sandy Heath, not guilty, and in Issue joined upon that, and as to the breaking the Close the plaintiff ought not to have his Action, for he said, that William Lord Russell, and Elizabeth his Wife, were, and yet are seized in Fee, in the Right of his Wife, in a certain piece of Heath, containing ten acres in Sandy close adjoining, & on every side separated from the place called Sandy Heath & that they, and all those whose Estate they have in part, in that piece of Heath, have used to have for themselves and Farmers of the said piece of Heath, and for their Servants a passage unto the said piece of Heath, and from the said piece, in, by, and through the said Close called Sandy Heath, in which, etc. the whole year at their pleasure to take and receive the profits of the said piece of Heath, and the Defendant further says, that long before the Trespass supposed to be committed, very many Coneys were wandering in the said piece of Heath, and divers Coney holes were there made, in which the said Coneys did delight to live in, and at the time in which, etc. they were in the said piece of Heath, eating the grass growing there, and the Defendant, as Servant to the Lord Russell, and by his command, the time in which, etc. in, by, and through, the said Close, in which, etc. towards, and unto the said piece of Heath, did walk over to hunt, and take the said Coneys, in the said piece of Heath, then being and feeding, as it was lawful for him to do, which walking in, by, and through the said Close, in which, etc. for the cause aforesaid, is the same breaking the Close, and entering thereof, whereof the Plaintiff complains, and avers that the place by which the Defendant walked for the cause aforesaid to Sandy Heath, in which, etc. was the next passage, by which he could go to the said piece of Heath; to which the Plaintiff demurs; and adjudged for the Plaintiff, for a passage, is properly a passage over the water, and not over Land, and the Defendant ought to have prescribed for the way, and not for the passage, for he ought to have observed the usual words, and such as are known in the Law for a prescription, and usage is for a way, and not for a passage, and see 32 Assis. 58. and 11 H. 4. 82. b. Secondly, the prescription is not good, because he doth not show from what place, nor to what place the passage or way is, for although a way be in gross, yet it ought to be bounded, and circumscribed to some certain place, especially when it appears to lie in usuage, time out of mind, for that ought to be in a place certain, and not in one place to day, and another to morrow, but constant and perpetual in one place. Thirdly, the Plea in Barr is not good, because he doth not show what manner of passage it was, whether a Footway, or Horse-way, or Cart-way, and therefore it is altogether incertain, and Judgement given accordingly. TRoughton against Gouge, Mich. 7 Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought, for entering into the Plaintiffs Close, called Wild Marsh, and for mowing and cutting five Loads of hay, to his damage of, etc. the Defendant saith, that the Close aforesaid did contain twelve Acres, whereof a long time before the Trespass done, and at the time the Mayor of, etc. of Lincoln were seized in Fee, and being so seized, Nota. Leased it to the Defendant for years before the Trespass committed, by reason whereof he entered and was posaessed until the Plaintiff claimed by Deed of the Mayor, etc. for life, whereas nothing passed and entered, and the Defendant the time aforesaid reentered as it was Lawful for him to do, the Plaintif replied, that the Close in which the Trespass is supposed to be done, contained one Acre, and three Roods, and abutts it East, West, North, and South, and one of the abutnals were upon the twelve Acres mentioned in the plea in Bar, and concludes it is another Close, the Close mentioned in the Plea in Bar, containing twelve Acres, whereupon the Defendant demurs, and the Court were of opinion at the first opening the matter, that the replication was not good, because it answers not to the matter supposed in the Bar, for when the Plaintiff in his Declaration gives the place a certain name as he hath, and the Defendant by his Plea in Barr agrees, the place as here he doth, to wit that the Close aforesaid, to wit, Wild Marsh, is the inheritance of the Mayor, etc. and he as Lessee to them for years makes a Title to himself, the plaintiff ought to answer to the Title, or avoid it, which he doth not by his replication, for the plaintiff by that endeavours to assign a new place, which he cannot do when they are agreed of a place before, and therefore he ought to have pleaded, that there were two Closes called Wild Marsh, the one containing twelve Acres, as the Defendant had alleged, and the other containing one Acre, and three roods, whereof the Plaintiff was seized, and that the Close where the Plaintiff supposed the Trespass to be committed, and the close called Wild Marsh, contained one Acre, and three roods, which mark: and see 21 E. 4. Loe against Atkinson and Brooks, Hill. 7. Jacobi. An Action of Ba●tery brought against the Defendants at London for assaulting the Plaintiff, to wit, in such a Parish and Ward, and beat, wounded, and evil entreated him, to his damage of an hundred pounds; the Defendant as to the force pleads not guilty, and as to the residue, that Atkinson the time in which, etc. at Gravesend in the County of Kent was possessed of a Gelding, and being so thereof possessed, the Plaintiff the time in which, etc. at Gravesend, etc. came to the Defendant to hire the Gelding for four shillings for two days, in which the Plaintiff would ride from Gravesend aforesaid to Nettlebed in the same County, and from thence to Gravesend within the said two days, by reason whereof the Defendant for the consideration aforesaid, the time in which, etc. lent the Gelding to the Plaintiff, who had it, and in a direct line road for the space of a mile to Nettlebed aforesaid upon the Gelding, until the Plaintif, the time when, etc. intending to deceive the Defendant of his said Gelding, went forth of his way to N. and road towards London, by reason whereof, Atkinson in his own right, and Brook as his servant, came to the plaintiff, and at the same time in which, etc. required the plaintiff then riding upon the said Gelding towards London, to deliver the Gelding, which he refused to do, by reason whereof Atkinson in his own right, and Brook as his servant, and by his command the time in which, etc. to repossess himself of the said Gelding, laid hands upon the plaintiff and took him from the Horse back, and would have taken the Gelding from the Plaintif, by reason whereof the plaintiff did by force and Arms assault the Defendant, and by strong hand kept the Gelding, by reason whereof the Defendant did defend the possession of the Horse against the Plaintif, as it was lawful for him to do: And further say, that if any damage happened to the plaintiff, it was of his own assault, and in defence of the possession of the Gelding, and Traverses that he was not guilty in London, or any where else out of Kent, etc. and the plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the plaintiff, for the Battery is confessed and did arise from the evil behaviour of the Defendant, for it appeared by their own Plea in bar, that the Plaintif had hired the Gelding for two days, and that they within these two days disturb the Plaintif of his possession of the Horse, and thrust him off his back, which was not lawful, for the Plaintif had a good special property for the two days against all the World; and although the Defendant pretends that the Plaintif had misbehaved himself in riding to another place than was intended, yet that was to be punished by an Action of the Case, but not to seize the Horse: Which observe. KNieveton against Roylie, Mich. 8. Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought for breaking the Plaintiffs Close called G. in Woodthorpe in the County of Derby, to the damage of, etc. The Defendant pleads that the Close was known as well by the name of G. as by the name of D. And that it was and had been, time out of mind, parcel of the Wigenworth, and pleads his freehold in the Manor: The Plaintif maintains his Declaration, and traverses that the place where, etc. was not parcel of the Manor, and upon this they are at Issue, and a Venire facias awarded of Woodthorpe only, and moved in Arrest of Judgement by the Defendant, the Verdict being for the plaintiff, and urged that it was a mistryall, for the Venire facias ought to have been as well of the Manor as of Woodthorpe, for although the parties be agreed, that the place where the Trespass was committed lies in Woodthorpe, yet that being supposed indeed to be parcel of the Manor of Wigenworth, the Venu of the Manor by intendment have a more perfect and better knowledge of it then the Villiage of Woodthorpe only, which was granted by the whole Court, and a new Venire awarded to try the Issue anew. DOwglas against Kendal, Mich. 8. Jacobi. The plaintiff declared, that the Defendant the 21. of January, 6. Jac. by force and Arms thirty Loads of Thorns of the Plaintiffs ready to be carried, in a place called the Common waist at Chippingwarden in the County of Norfolk, did take and carry away, to the Plaintiffs damage of ten pounds, the Defendant pleaded not guilty to all but to ten Loads; and as to them that the place where, etc. contained one Acre of pasture, and that one William Palmer was seized in fee of a Message and three quarters of a yard Land in C. aforesaid, and that he and those whose estate he had in the said Message, etc. time out of mind, were used to have for their farmers, etc. all the Thorns growing upon the said Acre of pasture to their use to be employed and spent upon the said Message, etc. as appurtenant thereunto; and the said ten Loads were growing and unjustly cast down by the Plaintif upon the said Acre of waist, and being ready for them to carry, the Defendant as servant to Palmer, and by his command, took them and carried them away and employed them upon the House, as it was lawful for him to do; the Plaintiff by protestation that Palmer and such, etc. time out of mind, had not the Thorns growing upon the said Acre of pasture parcel of the waist, and that Sir Richard Saltonstall was seized of the Manor of Chippingwarden, whereof the common waist was parcel in fee; and that he the 21. of January, the sixth year of K. James, granted licence to the plaintiff to cut and carry away thirty Loads of Thorns mentioned in the Plea in bar growing upon the Waste, by reason whereof they cut those ten Loads of Thorns, growing upon the wastes, and they were ready to be carried, by reason whereof they were possessed thereof until the Defendants took them away; and upon this Replication the Defendants demurred; and adjudged against the Plaintif, and there was a differance taken by the Court, where a man claims reasonable Estovers in another's Soil, and where a man claims all the Thorns in another's Soil, for in the first case if the Owner of the Soil shall cut down the Thorns first, he that hath title to the Estovers cannot take them, for the property and interest of all the Thorns continues If the Lord cut the Wood in which the Commoner hath Estovers, he shall have an Action of the Case, but not an Assize. in the Owner of the Soil, and the other hath only Common there, and if the Owner of the Soil cut them down all, he that should have the Estovers shall have an Action upon the Case only, and not an Assize, for when all the Wood is destroyed it cannot be put in seisin, as the Abridgement of the Assize is, fol. 21. And so it appears by Sir Thomas Palmers Case, Co. lib. 5. fol. 25. And if one grant an hundred Cords of Wood to be taken at the election of the Grantee, and the Grantor or an Estranger cut down the Wood, the Grantee cannot take the Wood but must supply his Grant out of the residue, for the Grantee hath but an especial interest in part of the Wood and not in all, but now in this Case the Defendant in right of Palmer claims all the Thorns, in the name of all the Thorns growing upon the said Acre of pasture, and if he hath all, Sir Richard S. cannot have any, and so by consequence cannot licence the plaintiff to cut any; and so the whole interest is in Palmer, and it is not in the nature of Estovers, for Estovers is but parcel of the Wood, and that to be taken to a special purpose; and in this case it was agreed, that although the Defendant had alleged an employment of the Estovers, yet since the Defendant had claimed all the Thorns and Trees, the employment is not traversable, for he that hath the general interest and property in Trees by custom or prescription, cannot be restrained but may use them at his pleasure; And see 10 E. 4. 2. and adjudged accordingly. MAssam against Hunt, Mich. 6. Jacobi. A Copiholder of a Message and two Acres in fee. The Lord grants and confirms the Message and Lands with the appurtenances to the Copyholder in fee: and whether he to whom the confirmation was made shall have by the usage as a Copyholder common in the wastes of the Lord, was the question, and adjudged he should not; for the Copyholder Nota. by that confirmation is extinct and infranchized, for the words, with the appurtenances will not create a common; for at first the Common was gained by custom, and annexed to the customary estate, and is lost and perished with that; for Common of its own proper nature is incident to a Copyhold Estate. FArmer against Hunt. Hilar. 8. Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought for chase the Plaintiffs Cattle in such a Close; the Defendant justifies taking damage pheasant in his freehold: The Plaintiff replies, and shows one grant of Common in the place where, etc. by the Defendant to the Plaintiff, and that afterwards the Defendant had erected a reek of Corn, and the Plaintiff put in his Beasts to use his Common, and the Defendant chased them: But note, that Nota. the Plaintiff in his replication in pleading the grant of the Common by Indenture, did omit the bringing it into Court. And by all the Judges the chase of the cattle by the Defendant is not lawful, for by such means he may defeat his own grant; for by the grant of common in such a place, the Grantee may use the whole Common: And then when the Grantor erects a Reek of Hay upon part of the Common he had granted, he will diminish the Common, and tend to the enfeebling of his Grant, which ought not to be; for the Beast ought to range over the whole place, and eat the Hay without doing any wrong; for the wrong did first begin in the Grantor, who is the Defendant, of which he shall never take advantage. And whereas he hath erected one Reek of Corn, he may erect twenty, and so the Beasts shall have no liberty of pasture there; but because the Plaintiff did not show to the Court the Indenture of the Grant, which is the ground of his title; for that very cause judgement was given against the Plaintiff. DVrant against Child, Hillar. 9 Jaco. An Action of Trespass brought for chase the cattle of the Plaintiff, and shows what cattle, and that the Trespass was done at B. to his damage of, etc. The Defendant justifies the chase in one Close called M. in B. which is his freehold, and that the cattle were there damage fesant. The Plaintiff replies and shows, that one B. is seized of one Close called Catley in D. in fee, and made a Lease thereof to the Plaintiff Nota. for years: and that the Defendant is seized of one Close called Fursey in Fee, which lies next adjoining to the Close called Catley; and that the Defendant, and all those whose Estate he hath in Fursey Close, have used time out of mind to repair the Fence and Hedges between Catley Close & Fursey Close, which Fursey Close doth next adjoin to the Close called M. where the cattle were chased, and shows that the Plaintiff put his cattle in Catley Close to feed the Grass there, which by default of enclosure escaped into Fursey Close as above; but he said that between Catley Close and Fursey Close, there is a little Brook; which Brook at the side of Catley close had a bank next adjoining to it; which bank the Lessor of the Plaintiff, and those whose Estate they have, etc. have used time out of mind, etc. to repair. And that the Brook at the side of Fursey Close had another Brook next adjoining, which the Defendant used to repair, and shows because the Plaintiff had not repaired the bank; on the side of Catley Close the cattle did escape into Fursey Close, and stayed in the Close called M. By reason whereof the Defendant chased them, as it was lawful for him to do; whereupon the Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the plaintiff; for the Defendant had pleaded a good Bar, and the Plaintif had replied a good replication, and had removed the fault from himself, and laid it upon the Defendant by his negligent enclosure between Catley and Fursey: and the rejoinder doth not confess and avoid the replication, but perplexes the matter by adding one point of prescription on the Plaintiffs part, that he ought to repair one bank between Catley and Fursey, upon which an issue could not be taken, for then two prescriptions should be an issue together, which cannot be, no more than two affirmatives, as the 5. H. 7. 12. And also the matter contained in the Records doth not answer the matter contained in the Replication, but by way of Argument only: And whether that be true, is no matter in evidence against the Plaintiff, who is bound to prove his Replication true. For the Plaintiff saith, that Catley and Fursey do lie together, that is, without any space between them. And the Defendant in his rejoinder saith, there is a bank between Catley and Fursey, which if it be so they do not lie together: but the Defendant ought to have traversed the prescription alleged by the Plaintiff, which had made an end of all the matter, which observe was by the opinion of the whole Court. SVtcliffe against Constable, Trin. 10. Jac. Ch. Constable 32. Eliz. was seized in fee of the Manor of East-hatfield in the County of An action will not lie for the counterpart of an Indenture without a special grant. York: and by his Indenture infeoffs H. Remingham, paying for certain Lands parcel of the Manor, 60 l. at two Feasts, with a clause of Distress, if it be behind by the space of 14. days. Ch. 43. Elizab. by Indenture bargains and sells the 60 l. Rent to the Plaintiff, which was enrolled, by reason whereof he was seized of the Rent for the life of Ch. and being so seized, loses that part of the Identure sealed by Remingham; which the said day, to wit, the 24. Novemb, 44. Eliz. came to the hands of the Defendant, who by Force and Arms teared the seal of the Indenture against the Peace, etc. to his damage of 400 l. The Defendant pleads that Ch. hath not granted the Manor of E. to Remingham, paying the rent, etc. in manner and form, and the Plaintiff demurs upon this Plea: And it was argued that the Bar was good, which is a direct traverse to the title of the Plaintiff, to destroy the ground of the Plaintiffs action; for if no rent were granted, than the Indenture concerning which the plaintiff complains, did not belong to the Plaintiff; for it passes not to the Plaintiff, but as an incident to the second Grant, of necessity to make good his title: As the Lord Buckhursts Case, Co. 1. & 7. E. 4. 30. in assize of rent, the Plaintiff made his title by deed of a rend charge, it was a good plea to say that nothing passed by the grant, because the issue is taken upon the special matter, and not the general; but in an Assize brought of an Office, it is no plea to say there is no such Office, for that amounts to no more but that he hath not disseised him, 45. E. 3. In trespass for taking away of writing, it is no plea to say that he never had such a writing, but must plead not guilty: So in an Action of Trespass for Goods, it is no Plea to say, that the property of them was to an Estranger, and not to the plaintiff, because by that plea he denies not but that the Plaintif was in posaession, which is sufficient to maintain the Action, 20. H. 8. 28. which books prove that the Plea in Bar is not good, for the Defendant destroys the Plaintiffs Action, but by way of Argument: And the rent by such Action is not demanded, but damages for tearing the Indenture, and so the Title of Rent is not in question, and exceptions were taken to the Declaration. First, the Action was brought for tearing the Counterpart, by which the Rent was not created: And the Indenture is not expressly granted to the plaintiff, but the rent of 60 l. only is bargained and sold; and by that the counterpart that pertains to Remingham, doth not pass to the plaintiff as an incident; for it is not the Original Deed by which at first the rent was reserved, which was granted by all but the Chief Justice, for he said that the counterpart waited upon the interest, and was good evidence for that: Secondly, the Plaintif had not averred that Ch. for whose life the Rent was granted, was alive at the time of tearing the Indenture; and if C. was dead, the Indenture pertained to the Defendant of right, as Heir of Ch. for so much appeared by the Plaintiffs own showing, which was granted. And thirdly, the Plaintiff showed not that ever he was posaessed of the Deed but by way of Argument, to wit, that he casually lost it, which is not sufficient; for none shall have trespass but he who is in actual posaession, which was also granted by the Court. Fourhly, the counterpart whereof the plaintiff complains, by the Plaintiffs own showing, contained as well a warranty as the rent reserved: And therefore without a special gift made of that Deed by Ch. to the Plaintiff, that Deed doth not pass by Law to the Plaintiff, as it is adjudged in Lord Buckhursts Case. Fifthly, if Ch. the Father be dead, than the writing hath lost his force, as to the rent; for by his death the rent is determined, and therefore of necessity the Plaintiff ought to aver the life of Ch. For no Action lies for a Deed that is determined, and for these reasons the Plaintiff did discontinue his Action. An Action of Trespass was brought for entering into a man's House, and continuing there divers days, etc. And after a Trial and verdict for the Plaintiff, Yeluerton moved in Arrest of Judgement, and showed for cause that the Plaintiff had declared with a continuando for breaking his house, which he could not do; for the entering is one act Nota. done and ended at the going out again: And therefore if he re-enter, it is a new Trespass, and the continuando is only alleged for the aggravation of damages, 2 R. 3. 15. 10. E. 3. 10. 16. E. 3. 24. That a continuando cannot be for breaking the House: but Doddridge and Haughton Justices, the rest being silent, were of opinion that it might be alleged, that a continuando; for although it might be that if he went forth, and reentered, it should be a new Trespass: but if upon his first Entry he continued divers days, it might be alleged with a continuando: And see for that Mich. 38. El. in the Common Pleas, fol. 118. If a Disseisee re-enter he shall have an Action of Trespass against the Disseisor with a continuando: And so is fitzherbert's Nabrevium 91. L. that a continuando may be laid as well for breaking a House as eating the Grass, and so is 10. E. 3. 10. and 20. H. 7. 30. by the opinion of Gapley. GEush against Mynne, Pach. 11. Jacobi. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by Force and Arms, the Close of the Plaintiff did break, etc. The Defendant justified, by reason there was a report A man cannot Justify the digging of a man's ground in hunting a Badger. that a Vermin called a Badger was found there to the great damage of the Inhabitants; by reason whereof he uncoupled his Beagles in the place where, etc. and hunted there, and found the Badger, and pursued him until he Earthed in the place where, etc. by reason whereof he digged the ground, and took the Badger, and killed him, and afterwards he stopped up the Earth again, which is the same Trespass, and demands Judgement; whereupon the Plaintiff demurs: And upon reading the Record, Scamber of the Inner Temple was for the Demurrer, and that the Defendant could not justify as this case was. And first, he was of opinion that the Common Law warrants hunting such noisome Beasts, although it be in the Lands of another, because it is good and profitable to the Commonwealth that such hurtful Beasts should be extirpated, according to the 8. E. 4. 15. And Fishermen may justify their Nets upon another's Land, 13. H. 8. 16. 22. H. 6. 49. A man may justify entering into a house to serve a Subpaena, 3. H. 6. 336. A man may justify the entering into another's Land with the Sheriff to help him to distrain, but otherwise it is for things of pleasure, as 38. E. 3. 10. B. You cannot justify the Entry when your Hawk hath killed a Pheasant in another's Land: and so for hunting of Hares or Coneys in the freehold of another: but although the Law allows and permits such Entries as aforesaid, yet the Law requires, that such things shall be done in an ordinary and usual manner, as 12. H. 8. 2. A Commoner cannot dig the Land to make Trenches, although it be for the benefit of another; and this is confirmed and explained by the Statute of 8. Eliz. cap. 15. For although that Statute gives reward for the kill of Vermins; yet the Statute further says, that it must be with consent, and with reasonable Engines and Devices, 2. R. 2. Barr. 237. Grant of Fish in the Pond; one cannot dig the Land and make a Sluice, but must take with them Nets: And so, if a man grant to me all his Trees in such a place, I I cannot grub up the roots out of the earth, if there be any other way to take them, but if there be no other way, than it is otherwise, as 9 Ed. 4. 35. a. A grant to put a Pipe in my Land, and afterward it is stopped, I may dig to mend it by the opinion of the Court, and therefore there being an Ordinary course, to wit, hunting, to kill the Badger, the digging for that is unlawful, and the Action will well lie Mich. 36. and 37 Eliz. 60. Nicholas Case expressly for a Fox, and Fenner held it was not lawful to break a Hedge in the pursuit. MIles against Jones, Pasch. 11 Jac. Miles brought an Action of Trespass against Jones, wherefore by force and Arms his goods, Nota. etc. The Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff, 5 Jacobi. acknowledged a Recognisance of 100 l. at Mich. at which day he did not pay it, and that two years after the Recognisance was extended upon his goods, because the moneys were not satisfied at the day, nor at any time after, the Plaintiff replies, that they were paid in the sixth year of James, and desires this, that it may be inquired only by the Country, and the Defendant likewise, and upon the Trial, it was found for the Plaintiff, and it was new moved in arrest of Judgement, by Goldsmith, that there was no Issue joined, for an Issue ought to be joined upon a thing alleged by the party, DOyly against White and Webb, Trin. 11 Jacobi. Doyly brought an Action of Assault, Battery, and imprisonment, of his wife, against White and Webb. The Defendant pleads a special Justification, to wit, that in November, 2 Jacobi, an Action of Trespass was brought in the Common pleas, by one A. against Julian Goddard, and upon the general Issue it was found for J. G. and Judgement given for her, and afterwards, and before Execution, J. G. takes to Husband the now plaintiff, and afterwards brings a Writ of Error in the King's Bench, and upon a Scire Facias against the said Julian, the Judgement in the Common pleas was reversed, and costs given to A. the plaintiff in the Writ of Error, and aftewards a Capias ad satisfaciend. was directed to the now Defendants to take the said I. G. by Force of which, the said Defendants took the woman of the now plaintiff, with an averment that the said I. G. and the Wife of the now plaintiff, were one and the same person, and the plaintiff demurs upon this plea, and Yeluerton moved, that this justification was not good for divers causes; first, when the Sheriff is to execute a process, he is to do it duly, and upon the right person at his peril, and for that see 11 H. 4. 90. b. If the Sheriff take the goods of another in Execution, Nota. he is a trespassor, 5 E. 4. 50. a. If a Capias be to take I. S. and there be two of the same name, he ought to look to take the right man at his peril, and as he ought to take notice, so he must pursue his authority, and for this see 10. E. 4. 12. b. if a Capias issue out against I. S. the Son of A. and he take I. S. the Son of B. false imprisonment lies against him, and in a Case when his Warrant is against I. G. there is no such J. G. for by her marriage with the Plaintiff she had another name, and he is therefore a Trespassor for the taking of J. Doyly, and his averment cannot help him, because it agrees not with his Warrant, and so cannot be intended to be the same person, but if the variance was in the name of Baptism only, it would be otherwise, and secondly, although the party had admitted her to have the same name, yet the Sherff in pleading had taken express Conusance of the contrary, and had made it appear to the Court, that it was not according to his authority, and therefore he shall be punished, but the whole Court was of a contrary opinion, for first, the Scire facias was according to the Judgement in the Common Pleas, and well then might all the subsequent Process be according in course of Law, but if the Husband had come upon the Scire facias, and showed how that she was covert, than the Action ought to be against both of them; and secondly, the parties themselves in all the proceedings throughout, have all admitted that she is the same person, and that she had the same name, and therefore this differs from the 10 E. 4. 15. and therefore they shall be concluded from saying the contrary, and although the Sheriff had showed the marriage, that was but a bare allegation, and suggestion of the Sheriff, and it appears not judicially whether it were so or no; and thirdly, it would be dangerous for the Sheriff to return a Non est inventus, for because the parties have admitted her name to be so in all the proceedings, the Sheriff shall be estopped also, as the 3 H. 7. 10. and then an Action of the Case would lie upon the false Return, or if the Woman should be in the company of the Sheriff, and the party show her to the Sheriff, she might escape. CArrill against Baker, Trin. 11 Jacobi. The Plaintiff borough an Action wherefore by force and Arms, he entered into his Warren, and digged his Land, and chased his Coneys, and took them, the Defendant pleads to all, except to the entering the Warren, chase the Coneys, and digging the Land, not guilty, and as to the entering of the Warren, chase of the Coneys, and digging the Land, he pleads an especial Justification, to wit, that he had Common there time out of mind, and because the Plaintiff stored the Borrows there with Coneys, and made new holes, by reason whereof the Defendants sheep feeding there, fell into them to their great damage, the Defendant did with a Ferret chase the Coneys, and stopped up the holes with the earth digged out, etc. and upon that Plea, the Plaintiff demurred, and George Crook was of opinion that it was not a good justification, and the Question was single, whether a Commoner might drive out Coneys which surcharged the Land, and he conceived he could not, for the Freehold and possession of the Land is in the Terr-Tenant only, and the Commoners cannot intermeddle with it, for a Commoner hath only the grass of the Land, and not absolutely neither, to do with it what he pleases, but only to take it with the mouths of his cattle, and for this see 12 H. 8. 2. a. and 27 H. 6. 10. and 13 H. 8. 16. the espleas in a Quod permittat is alleged in taking the grass with the mouths of his Beasts, and for that see 22 Assis. 48. 10. E. 4. 4. and 46 Ed. 3. 23. if a stranger put in his cattle, the Commoner cannot have an Action of Trespass, and 13 H. 8. 15. ruled, that if a Commoner dig the Land to make a trench, he is a trespassor, but he may drive out or distrain for doing damage, and 15 H. 7. 12. 13 H. 7. 13. and 12. H. 8. 2. a. because after a manner he hath interest in the grass, which is spoiled and consumed by the cattle of the stranger, but although he may drive out and distrain the cattle of an estranger, yet he cannot meddle with the Lords cattle, or the Terr-Tenants, although there be more than reasonable, as in fitzherbert's Na. brev. 125. D. and 8 E. 3. 30. if the Lord surcharge the Common, The Commoner may have an Assize against the Lord, and if he be a copyholder, he shall have an Action of the case, 9 Rep. 112. but the Lord may distrain H. 9 Ja. King's Bench, a prescription for a Commoner to kill Coneys of the Lords is not good, and he cited Pasch. 43 Eliz. King's Bench rotulo. 234. Belly and Laughorns Case, the Lord may use the Sale as he pleases, but as his Case is the Commoner although Tenant of the Land, cannot kill the Coneys with his Ferret, For a free Warren in such a precinct, is a charge upon the Land, in what hands soever it comes, but if he hath a Warren adjoining, and the Coneys come into the Lands of another, out of the Precinct, than he may kill the Coneys, and he cited Boslers and Hardies Case in the Common Pleas, and for an express authority he cited Old and Coney's case, Hill. 29 Eliz. and Sir Robert Fitcham he was against it, and he agreed he could not kill the Coneys, but as to the digging he took this difference, if a Commoner makes any thing de novo in the Land, he is a Trespassor as it is adjudged in the Case of a trench before, and the like; but if a commoner amends and reforms a thing abused, it is no Trespass, and therefore, if the Land were full of Mole hills, he may dig them down, 13 H. 8. and 42 Assis. if the Lord make a Hedge the commoner may pluck it down, 23 E. 3. 6. a. See if the Lord make a Pond in the Land, the commoners may dig and let the Water out, and therefore holes that were made long, in a hurt and Damage to the Land, the commoner may put the earth digged out, again into its place. Secondly, the Defendant hath showed that the Coney holes were made by the Plaintiff himself, and he shall never take advantage of his own wrong: and Thirdly, the Law will allow every man to preserve his inheritance, and it cannot be preserved any other way, for if he should bring his Assize, yet he in that shall recover but Seisin, and no Reformation of the Trespass, and wrong done, and the opinion of the Court seemed to incline for the Plaintiff, and Doddridge Justice said, that a Lord or his Feoffee may make new conie-Borrows lawfully, for they are necessary for the preservation of the coneys, but one fault found by Justice Haughton, in the pleading nothing was done, for the Plaintif declared for entering into his Warren, the Defendant pleads to all, but the Warren digging, and chase not guilty, and as to the digging and chase, he justifies for common here, but answers nothing as to the Warren, neither by confession or traverse, and therefore all was discontinued, as Herlackendons Case is, Co. 4. Rep. and to this the whole court, Fleming being absent agreed. WAldron against Moor, Trin. 11. Ja. The Plaintiff brought an Action of trespass against Moor, wherefore his Close called Gerleford at Rentesbury in the County of Devon, by force and Arms hath broken and entered, etc. The Defendant pleads that a long time before the Trespass was supposed to be done, one John W. was seized of three hundred Acres of Land in R. aforesaid, of which the place in question called G. is parcel, and that 30 H. 6. the said John Whithing, reciting that whereas N. de la moor, 31 E. 1. the Plaintiffs Ancestor, Son and heir of H. de la Moor, grants to William de la Moor, Corsum aque, which runs from W. thorough the middle of the Land of the said M. And shows further, that by mean descents it descends to the Defendant, &c, and so justifies: The Plaintiff replies if W. S. was seized of the place where, etc. and made a Lease thereof to him for years; and traverses that the three hundred Acres of Land were parcel, and Issue joined upon that, and found for the Plaintiff; and it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Defendant had not made any answer to the Plaintiff, and so no Issue joined; for the Plaintiff lays the Trespass in G. in L. the Defendant says he was seized of three hundred Acres, of which the place, etc. was parcel, but he conveys no title to himself, but by a course of water thorough the middle of the Land of M. but whose Land that was it doth not appear, and is another thing; and therefore an Issue upon that which the Defendant doth not claim is void, and although Issue be joined yet it is not helped by the Statute of Jeofailes of 18 Eliz. or 32 H. 8. for it is as no Issue when it is of a thing not in question, but if the Issue had been of a matter in question, although ill joined, yet it is aided as Nichols Case is, 5 Rep. 43. upon payment pleaded without Deed: And Doddridge and Crook, Justices agreed to that, but Haughton seemed to incline that it was an Issue, and so helped by the Statute. FVller against Pettesworth Knight, Mich. 11. jacobi. Fuller brought One Venu out of two places in the same County. an Action of Trespass against Pettesworth and his Servant, for breaking his Close, and taking one Cow in D. in the County of B. One of the Defendants plead not guilty, the Servant pleads that the Plaintiff holds of Sir Peter P. as of, etc. in the County aforesaid; and for services behind, by the command of his Master, he seized the Cow, etc. The Plaintiff traverses, etc. and one Venire facias was awarded out of both the Villiages, and being found for the Plaintiff, it was new moved in Arrest of Judgement by Finch of Gray's Inn, that two Venire facias ought to have been awarded, because the Issue is of things in several places, for if there be several Issues in one place, one Jury shall be only Impanelled, but if in several places for several things local, several Juries shall be, but the whole Court held that one Jury only should be impanelled, and one Venu only should be awarded out of both the places; and it is all one as if it had been in one place, but it had been otherwise if in several Counties, as 41 Eliz. DAme Petts Case, Mich. 11. jacobi. In an Action of Trespass brought by the Lady Petts, upon not guilty pleaded, the Jury being at Bar, the matters following came in question upon the evidence by Haughton and the other Justices: If A. be seized of a great Close, where, etc. and a Stranger enter and occupy part of the Close, yet notwithstanding A. continues the posaession of the residue, whether this shall preserve his possession in the residue; and he shall be judged to be in possession of that, because it is an entire thing, 5 E. 4. 2. and 8 E. 3. 13. Seisin of part of the services is the seisin of the whole, and so is Bettisworths' Case, 2. Rep. The possession of the House is the possession of the Land, for the Lessee against his Lessor of that which passes by one demise: But if a stranger enter and sever part by meats and bounds, nothing is wrought by the possession of the residue: Another question was this, A Lessee for years of ten Acres, paying twenty shillings Rend, the Lessee is outed of parcel, yet he paid all the Rent to him in Reversion; the Lessor having notice of the enter whether this protects the Reversion, so that nothing is gained by the entry but the interest of the Lessee, and shall be no disseisin: And Yeluerton at the Bar was of opinion, that it should be no Disseisin, Rithen, Sect. 590. saith, That so long as the particular Tenant continues his possession, so long is the reversion in the Lessor; for in such case as to the Lessor the Lessee shall be always deemed in possession by force of the Lease; and the reason why the Lessee shall be adjudged in posaession of all as to the Lessor, is, because the Lessor cannot have notice of the alteration of the posaession; for when the Lessee by his own Act or sufferance doth a thing in alteration of the posaession, of which by common intendment the Lessor cannot have or take notice, there the Law will not prejudice the Lessor: And see for that, Farmer's Case, in the third Rep. 79. If Tenant for life levy a Fine having Land in the same Villiage, this shall not bind the Lessor, if five years pass before he take notice of what Land the Fine is levied: And the same Law if Tenant for life make a Feoffment to one who hath land within the same Village levies a Fine, and in this case if the Lessee hath continually paid all his Rent, the Lessor cannot intend or suspect, but that the Lessee is absolute Tenant of the whole: and in Farmer's Case it is said, That if the Lessor levy a Fine, the Disseisee is barred without claim, for it is impossible but he to whom the wrong is done shall presently know it. But if he that hath the particular estate by Grant or trust reposed in him, shall secretly practise, although he pay the Rent and continue posaession, yet it is otherwise: But the Reporters opinion was, that if in the principal case no Rent had been reserved, than the Reversion had been devested by the entry, for there had been no act done to misled or hinder the knowledge thereof; and also although rend be reserved and all paid, yet if he had express notice thereof, the reversion had been devested, And secondly, if it should be a Disseisin a great mischief would follow, for if a descent should be, it would take away the Lessors entry and yet no fault in them, because in common presumption the Lessee always continued Tenant; but Cook of a contrary opinion, for he said, it could not be denied but that the Lessee is out of the posaession, and then it follows of necessity that the Lessor must be out of his reversion: And as to notice to make his claim, he must take notice at his peril, 4 M. Dyer, 143. b. But note, that this is when the Law intends that he may take notice, which it will not intend in this Case: Haughton was of opinion that it was a Disseisin, and Doddridge said, It would be mischievous if it should. Hill. 6. jac. In the Common Pleas, that if in the Common Bar, in Trespass the place in the Common Bar is alleged to be Blackacre, the Plaintiff may plead that it is his freehold: and then it was held by the whole Court, that an abuttall of one side is sufficient without alleging it of every side. Swain against Becket. An Action of Trespass brought for cutting Whether a Copyholder may lop the trees growing upon his Copyhold, and held he might. down of Trees: And upon a special verdict the question was, that whereas there is a Manor wherein are Copiholders' for life, which have used to lop Trees growing upon the Copy-holds for their necessary fire, and repairing of their customary Tenements; the Lord of the Manor maketh a Lease of the Manor for years, excepting the Trees: the Lessee of the Manor granteth a copy for life, the Copyholder loppeth the Trees growing on his Copyhold, whether by law he might do it or no was the doubt of the Jury. And it was held by all the Court that the Copyholder might lop the Trees, because he is in by the custom, which is above the Lords Estate after he is admitted, and that the copyhold doth not depend upon the Lord's interest: And that the Trees excepted, and the Soil remained parcel of the Manor, because the Lease was but for years: but if the Lease had The Copyholder is in by custom, which is above the Lords estate. been for life, it had been otherwise, because it had been severed from the Manor. And whereas it was objected, that the Tenant should not be in a better condition than his Author, it was answered that a Lord of a Manor at will, may grant a copy for life, or in fee, and it is good. If the Lord cut down all the Trees, so that the Copyholder can have no lopping, he may have his Action upon the Case against the Lord, as it was adjudged in Gosnolds case. If the Lord sell The Copyholder shall have trespass upon the Case against the Lord for cutting down of trees. away his waste, and the Copyholder die, and the Lord grant a new copy, he shall have his Common. If the Lord sell away the Trees, so that the Copyholder cannot have Estovers because the Bargainee felleth down the Trees, the Copyholder shall have his Action against the Bargainee: Common and lopping are incident to the copyhold, Judgement for the Defendant. HArris against Ap-John. An Action of Trespass brought; the Defendant pleads not guilty, and verdict found for the Plaintif. And in Arrest of Judgement it was alleged that the venire facias was de placito debiti: and so also was the habeas corpus, and it should have been de placito transgressionis: And it was amended by the whole Court. MYnwinnock against Bligh. Trin. 16. Jacob. rotulo, 1697. An action of Trespass brought for breaking the Plaintiffs Close, done Septemb. in the 13. year of King James: The Defendant pleads as to part of the Trespass in award, and that the Defendant submits himself to the award the 15. year: and that the Arbitrators in the 13. year, which was before the submission made the Award, and traverses that he was guilty of the Trespass after the award made: And the Plaintiff replies, that the Arbitrators the said day in the 13. year, made not any award, etc. And after Trial exception was taken, that the issue was ill joined, being of a thing that was void, yet notwithstanding Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, and they resembled to a payment upon a single Bond, and conditions performed at a Feast, not contained in an Obligation. Trin. 15. Jac. rotulo, 3044. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by force and arms his Goods and Chattels, to wit, a thousand posts, and forty rails took and carried away, and damages given entire, and after a verdict exception taken, because Rales was pretended to be no Latin word, nor to have any exception, but Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. DVncomb against Randoll, Hil. 9 Jac. rotulo, 2267. Three issues in Trespass: One issue was upon a prescription, to wit, that they had accustomed to have for himself his Farm and Tenants of the same Manor, common of pasture in the said, etc. for all his Sheep which are levant and couchant in and upon the Demesne Lands of W. which lie, and are in A. aforesaid every year: And exception was taken for the uncertainty, because it did not appear that those were demesne Lands which lie in A. for it was ill pleaded, and aught to be averred; but notwithstanding it was held good after a trial, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, and in this case an exception was taken to the venire facias, because it was of A. and of the Manor of C. and because it was made in this manner, to wit, de visu de A. and de visu manerij de C. but it was disallowed, because against the form used in the Common Pleas. Downs against Skrymsher, Trin. 9 jac. rotulo, 334. An Action of Assault and Battery brought, and there was a Demurrer upon the Evidence: And the case was, that the Defendant the day specified in the Declaration said, that the Plaintiff assaulted the Defenant, and in defence of himself justifies the beating; the Plaintiff replies that he did it of his own wrong, without any such cause: and in the Evidence the Defendant maintained that the Plaintiff beat him the day mentioned in the Declaration, and in the same place. And the Plaintiff perceiving that, gave in evidence that the Battery was made another day and place, to wit, etc. which was the cause of the special verdict; for if there be two Batteries made between the Plaintiff and Defendant at divers times, the Plaintiff is bound to prove the Battery made the same day in his Declaration, and shall not be admitted to give another day in evidence, by the opinion of the whole Court. HEydon against Mich. 8. Jac. rotulo, 839. An Action of Battery brought against three, two of them pleaded not guilty, and Judgement by non sum informat. against the third, and the two were found guilty for all: And the Jury gave damages severally, against one a 100 l. and against the other a 100 s. and what Judgement should be given was the question: and at first the Court was of opinion that the Plaintiff should not have Judgement at all; for where the Nota. Defendants are found guilty of all the Trespass, in this case, the damages shall be entire; but if one shall be found guilty of part, or at another time in this case, the damages shall be several, otherwise not. And they thought a Venire de novo ought to issue out, because the Jury had mis-behaved themselves in severing the damages; but afterwards, it was resolved that the damages that were given by the first Jury, to wit, one 100 l. should be recovered against all the Defendants in that Writ named: and that in Trespass the first Jury taxes the damages for the whole Trespass, and that shall bind all the Defendants, and therefore execution was given against all the Defendants for the hundred pounds, Trin. 9 Jam. rotulo. 1835. BAnks against Barker, Hill. 12. Jac. rotulo, 1979. In an Action of Trespass, the venire facias was well awarded upon the case of the venu in Westown, and of the Manor of D. and the Writ of Venire was mistaken, to wit, of the venu of Westown: and exception being taken after trial, the Court was moved for the amending of the venire facias by the roll; and it was denied, because the Jury Nota. did come of another venu then they ought by the Law of the Land to come, and therefore could not be amended: but afterwards the Court seemed to be of an opinion, that the awarding of the venu in the roll was mistaken, because it was of the venu of the Villiage and Manor: and it should have been of the Manor only, being to try a custom of the Manor. Forest against Headle, Hill. 13. Jac rot. 1123. An Action of Trespass brought, and a continuando of the Trespass unto the day of the showing forth the Plaintiffs Original, to wit, the 20. day of November, which day was after the showing forth of the Original: and because the Jury gave damages for the whole time, which ought not to be, it was proved that the Judgement upon the verdict might stay, Nota. but by the whole Court the videlicet was held idle, and Judgement given for the Plaintiff. Cock's against Barnsley, Hill. 10. jac. rotulo, 2541. An Action of Trespass brought, and a special verdict found, and the question was, whether Land held in ancient Demesne was extendable for debt, and an action of Trespass brought for that cause. And Justice Nichols held it was extendable; for otherwise, if it should not be extendable, there would be a fayler of Justice; for if a Judgement should be had against a man, that had no other Land but what was in ancient Demesne, Nota. and that it could not be extendable, there would be a fayler of Justice, which the Law doth not allow of: but an Assize, or a re-disseisin doth not lie of Land in ancient Demesne, because of the Seisin that must be given by the Common Law, and it would be prejudicial to the Lord, which the Law allows not: and Wynch and Hubbard were of the same opinion. For ancient demesne is a good plea, where the freehold is to be recovered, or brought in question, but in an action of Trespass it is no plea. And note, that by this execution, neither the freehold nor Possession is removed, but only the Sheriff enters to make execution upon a Judgement had in the Common bench in debt, which is a proper Action to be brought there. WRight and his Wife against Mouncton, Hill. 12. jac. rotulo, 43. An Action of Trespass brought, to which the Defend. pleaded not guilty: And the Husband only made a challenge, that he was servant to one of the Sheriffs, and prays a process to the Coroners; and the Defendant denies the challenge: and therefore notwithstanding the challenge, the Venire issued to the Sheriffs; and after a trial, Nota. exception was taken, because the woman did not join in the challenge: and it was held that the Husband and Wife should join in the challenge, although the cause of challenge proceeded from the Husband only; but after trial, it was helped by the Statute of jeofailes, and judgement given for the Plaintiff. BIde against Snelling, Hill. 16. jac. rotulo, 1819. An Action of Ejectment brought, and also a Battery in one, and the Writ: and after a verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, because the Battery was joined with the Ejectment. The damages were found severally, and the Plaintiff had released the damages for the Battery, and prayed Judgement for the Ejectment: Winch held the Writ naught, but Judgement was given for the Plaintiff notwithstanding. STeward and his Wife against Sulbury. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by Force and Arms the Close of the Wife while she was sole at D. hath broken: and the wood of the said D. to the value of 1005. there lately growing, hath cut down and carried Nota. away, and in his Count shows that he hath cut down two acres of wood: and exception was taken because he declared of so many acres of wood, and not of so many loads of wood, to wit, twenty, etc. loads, and held by the Court to be a good exception. BLackeford against Althin, Trin. 14. Jac. rotulo, 3376. An action of Trespass brought, wherefore by Force and Arms a certain Horse of the said Plaintiffs took away, etc. The Defendant conveys to himself a certain annuity, granted to him by one John Hit. The Plaintiff shows, that one William Hit, Father of the said john Hit, the Grantor was seized of Land in Fee, which Land was Gavel-kind Land, and devised it to his Wife for life, the remainder to john Hit the Elder, and john Hit the Younger his Son, and the Heirs of their bodies: And afterwards William died, and the Woman entered, and was seized for life; and the two sons entered, and were seized in tail, and being so seized, john Hit the younger had issue, john Hit, etc. and traverses without this, that john Hit the Father, at the time of granting the annuity was seized of the Tenements aforesaid, with the appurtenances in his Demesne, as of fee, as, etc. And the Defendant as before, saith, that the said J. H. the Father at the time of the granting the annuity aforesaid was seized, and after the trial it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, supposing it was mistried; because the issue was, that the said J. H. the Father, at the time of the grant, etc. And it doth not appear that the said J. H. was nominated Father, neither could it appear that the said J. H. was the Father, and so the word Father was idle, and the Court were of opinion, that it was helped by the Statute of jeofailes: and the word Father was idle, and judgement was given for the Plaintiff. A. brought an Action of Battery against the Husband and Wife, and two others; the Wife and one of the others without the Husband pleads not guilty, and the Husband and the other pleaded, seu assault demesne, and tried and alleged in arrest of Judgement, because the Woman pleaded without her Husband: and Judgement was stayed, and a Repleader alleged, and this case was confirmed by a case which was between youngs and Bartram. HArvy against Blacklole, Trin. 8. Jacobi. rotulo, 1749. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by force and Arms his Mare so strictly to a Gelding did fetter, that by that fettring the Mare aforesaid did die. If a stranger take a Horse that cometh and strayeth into a Manor, the Lord may have his action of Trespass. If my stray doth stray out of my Manor, and goeth into another Manor the day before the year be ended, I cannot enter into the other Manor to fetch out the stray: If I take an Horse as a stray, and another taketh him from me, the Action lieth not by the Owner against the second taker, because the first taker hath devested the property out of the Owner. The Defendant in this justified the taking of the Mare as a stray, and did not allege that he came as an estray, and the Plea was held insufficient, and the Court held they could not tie them together: And the Defendant said, that the Hayward took the Mare and delivered her to the Defendant; this was but not guilty, and Judgement for the Plaintiff. LVttrell against Wood and other Defendants, Pasch. 40. Eliz. An Action of Trespass brought, wherefore by Force and Arms he broke the Plaintiffs Close, and cut down his Trees. The Defendant in Bar to the new assignment, alleges that he is a Copyholder for life of the Manor of Mynehead in the County of Somerset: and that in that Manor there was a Custom that every Copyholder for life had used at his pleasure, to cut down all the Elms growing upon his customary Lands, and to convert them to his own use, when, and as often as he would, and so justifies, and a Demurrer upon the Bar: And the question was, whether the Custom was good and reasonable; and the later opinion was, that it was a good and reasonable Custom, but now it is otherwise held. Actions of Waste. IN Waste the Writ shall be brought where the Waste was committed: And the Process in this Action is Summons, Attachment, and Distress, peremptory by the Statute of Westminst. 2. But at the Common Law the Distress was infinite. And if the Defendant doth not appear upon the Distress, although a Nihil be returned, yet the Plaintiff shall have Judgement, and a Writ to inquire of damages of the Waste, and an Essoine lies, as in a Quare Impedit, and the Process shall be executed as in a Quare Impedit, and returned from 15 days to 15 days, and the Plaintiff in this Action shall not recover costs, but the value of the Waste found by the Jury shall be trebled by the Court; for costs shall not be recovered in such Actions as are given by the Statute, as in this Action a Decies tantum, and Quare impedit: And so Judgement is to recover the place wasted, and severance lies in this Action, Mich. 9 H. 4. rot. 104. And note, in the trial of the issue in Waste, if the Defendant by his Plea doth not confess the Waste, six of the Jury which are impanelled to try the Waste must have the view of the place wasted, to the intent that the Plaintiff may be put in possession of the place wasted by the view of the Jury: And if the Defendant confess the Waste, the Jury ought only to inquire of the value of the Waste, but not who committed the Waste: But upon a default upon the grand Distress, the Sheriff in his proper person shall repair to the place wasted, and there inquire what waste and spoil is done. And if he doth not return that he was there in his proper person, it is naught: But upon a Judgement by non sum informat. nil dicit, or in a Plea by which the Defendant confesses the waste, the Sheriff shall inquire only of the damages: And he is not bound to return upon that Writ, that he in proper person went to the place wasted: And when the Judgement is by default, the challenge lies against the Sheriff, and if it be denied it is Error: And if the Plaintiff do not take jungment upon the first distress, being returned, executed, but takes another distress, it is Error. And no receipt lies by the Wife upon the default upon the Distress at the return of the Writ to inquire of the waist, Trin. 6. H. 6. rotulo, 133. For if the Woman at the Assize before verdict, doth not pray to be received, she shall never be received afterwards in the Court, at the return of the Nisi prius. And note, that the Jury may give several values, and one joint value of the place wasted, but several values is the better way. If a Lessee for years makes a Lease of one moiety to one man, and of the other moiety to another man, and one of them commit Waste, the Action shall be brought against the two, for the Waste of one is the Waste of the other, if a Lease be made by three to one for life, and afterwards two release to the third, and the Lessee commits waste, he alone shall have a Writ of Waste, supposing that he demised only. If Waste be committed in two Villiages, and the Sheriff hath executed his Office naughtily in one Villiage and well in another, all shall be inquired of, De novo, because the whole in Inquisition was but one Inquest at one time; but if the Plaintiff assign the Waste in the Houses and Woods, and it doth not appear by the Count, that the Houses were demised; and upon a Nihil dicit, a Writ to inquire of the damages issues out, and the Jury find, etc. the Plaintiff shall have his of the Houses. BEdell against Bedell, Trin. 8. Jacobi, rotulo 3052. An Action of Waste brought; the Case was, There is a devise to two for one and twenty years, the Father and Son, and made the Son Executor, and he refuses to prove the Will, and take the term, and so no Waste committed. And if Lessee for life and his Lessor join in a Lease for years by Indenture, and the Lessee for life die, and waste is committed, the surviving Lessor shall have the Action of Waste, and shall count that he did demise it alone: If a Lease be made to Husband and Wife for life, and for twenty years after their deaths, and the Wife die, and Waste is committed, the Wife shall not be named in the Wri●, nor the term after her death. If Husband and Wife during the Coverture make a Lease, and Waste is committed, they both shall join in the Action of Waste: And if a Lease be made but for one year or for half a year only, yet the Writ shall be for a term of years, but the Count shall be special; if a Lessee for years or life grants Rend out of the Land he had for years, and afterwards commits Waste, if the Lessor recover the place wasted, the Land shall be charged: If a Lessee for a hundred years grants part of his term to another, and be commits Waste, the Action shall be brought against the first Lessee. If Tenant for life commits waste, and afterwards grants his estate to another, waste shall be brought against him in the Tenet; and after Judgement, a Scire facias shall issue to the Grantee, to show cause wherefore the Plaintiff shall not have Execution of the place wasted; and the like if Lessee for years commit waste, and grants over his Estate, Waste shall be brought against him in the Tenet. And if a Lease be made for life, upon condition that if the Lessee shall do such an Act, his Estate shall cease; and he doth commit such an Act, the Writ shall be brought against the Lessee in the Tenet, although his Estate be ended: And the like if a Lease be granted to a Woman so long as she shall live sole, or shall behave herself well, if she commit Waste, the Writ shall be brought in the Tenet ad terminum vite, and the Count shall be special: If Tenant in Dower grants over his Estate to a Stranger and commits Waste, yet the Action lies against the Tenant in Dower, but otherwise it is if the Heir grants over his Estate: And the like for Tenant by the Courtesy. If Waste be brought against two, and one appear upon the Distringas, and the other make default, the Plaintiff shall have a Writ to inquire of the Waste, but shall declare against him that appears, for a man shall not recover by moities in Waste, as one shall recover in a Precipe quod reddat against two, for in waste the Land shall not be lost by default, by an Action tried, and if a waste be committed between the Judgement and Execution, a writ shall be awarded to inquire of the waste, but Quaere thereof: If a woman while she is sole commits waste, and marries, the writ shall be, that the woman while she was sole committed waste, and if Tenant in Tail in remainder brings an Action of waste against Tenant for life, the writ may be, which he holds of the Tenant in Tail, although they hold of him in the Reversion in Fee, and so it was adjudged, Pasch. first James, that the writ was good. An Action of waste lies against Executors for waste, for waste committed by the Testator, and if a man have Land in the Right of his Wife, and waste is committed, and the woman dies, now no Action of waste lies against the Husband, after the death of the wife. In waste, if the Term be ended, and nothing be recovered but damages, there a concord with satisfaction is a good plea, and if the Lease for years determines, pending the writ, the Plaintiff shall recover nothing but damages, and not the place wasted. The Defendant may disclaim in his Action, if he that hath the fee, pleads no waste done, this is a forfeiture of his Estate; the Defendant may plead no waste done, and give in Evidence that the Tenements at the time of the Demise were ruinous, ancient Demesne is no Plea in Waste. If a Guardian in Socage, in the Right of his wife commits waste, the writ shall be brought against the Husband only, Mich. 27. Ed. 1. rotulo 329. If an Action of waste be brought against the Husband and wife, and the Husband appear upon the Distringas, and the wife maketh default, this shall be the default of both of them, Mich. 20. H. 4. rotulo 393. the Plaintif may abridge the waste assigned in part, so that he aabridges not the whole, as if writ be of waste in houses and wood, he may abridge part of the assignment in the houses and woods, but not the whole, and if Issue be joined for part, and demurrer for another part, the Issue may be tried before the Demurrer adjudged. If an Indenture to raise uses upon good consideration be made, and he that hath the Estate for life commits waste, he to whom the reversion is limited, by the same Indenture may have a general writ of waste, by saying generally, that he hath demised, it or a special writ at his pleasure, and Mich. 27 H. 7. it was held by all the Judges, that it is an ill return, for the Sheriff to return upon a writ to inquire that he hath commanded his Bailiff, because the Sheriff is both Officer and Judge, which power cannot be committed to the Bailif of the Liberty, and the writ is a Non omittas in itself, but Quaere, for there are divers Precedents against it, the Lessee may cut down Trees for the repairing of houses, when the Lessor is bound by covenant to repair, and doth not; and it is no good Plea, for the Lessee in waste brought against him by his Lessor, to say generally that he hath nothing in the Reversion, but he must show how the Reversion is not of him, but upon a grant of the Reversion, and waste be brought by the Grantee, nothing in Reversion is a good Plea. Upon no waste pleaded the Defendant cannot give in Evidence that the Tenements were sufficiently repaired before the writ brought. If an Issue arises i● a foreign County, the Jury shall not be examined of the view, and if the Jurors be not examined of the View when they should be examined, it is Error. If my Father leases Land for term of life, the writ of Waste shall be of houses, etc. which the said A. Father to him demised, and so in a Writ of waste, of a Lease made by my Predecessor, but if the Abot, or the Son himself bring the writ, it shall be of Houses, which he holds for a Term, etc. if waste be made (sparsim) in a Close or wood, the Plaintiff shall recover the whole Close or wood, and the treble value shall be levied by Fieri facias, or Elegit, and not by Capias, because a Capias lies not upon the Original, the Sheriff may take a Posse Comitatus to stay the Tenant from doing of waste upon an estrepment. Two Tenants in Common, one of them makes a Lease for years to the other. An Action was brought against Tenant for years, by him in the Reversion: the Case was, that the Lessorafter the Lease made, granted another Lease in Reversion for years, and this matter pleaded in abatement, pretending that the Lease in Reversion, was an impediment against the Plaintiff, inbringing his Action, but otherwise adjudged, for if a Lease be made for life, the Remainder for years, and waste be committedby Tenant for life, notwithstandingthe Lease for years in remainder, waste lies. Skeat against Oxenbridge and his wife, Trin. 12 Jac. rotulo 849. waste brought of Lands and Gardens, in L. of which E. K. was seized in his Demesne, as of Fee, and being so thereof seized, after the fourth of February, 27 H. 8. thereof enfeoffed E. S. and others to the use of the said E. S. dead, and of the said E. for Term of their lives, and the longest liver of them, and after the decease of the said E. S. and the said E. then to the use of the Heirs of the body of the said E. S. to be begotten upon the body of the said E. of which said E. S. dead, the now Plaintiff is Son and Heir begotten on the body of E. committed waste, and in the Declaration he showed the Feoffment made to the Feoffees, and the habend. to them and their Heirs, and because the word Heirs was omitted in the writ, exception was taken, but because it was in the Declaration, it was adjudged good; and note, in this Case the woman was received upon the default of the Husband, and pleaded to Issue. If the Feoffees have but an Estate for life than they cannot convey an Estate in Fee simple over. Sanders against Marwood H. 41. El. rot. 747. An Action of waste Waste in the Tenuit for digging of Sea coals. brought in the Tenuit against the assignee of the Term, by the assignee of the Reversion for waste committed in digging of Sea Coals: the Defendant pleads in Bar, that the first Lessee, opened the ground, and granted to him all his Interest in the Land, with all profits, except and always reserved to him his Heirs and Assigns, all the Title of the Coal-Mines in the said parcel of Land, and all Timber Trees, and avers that the Mine in the Land, at the time of the Grant made, was, and yet is open, and adjudged no Bar, for he had no power to intermeddle with the digging for coals, and to except with which he had no power to meddle, is void exception, and the Defendant was punishable for the waste by the whole Court. LAshbroke against Saunders, Pasch. 41. El. rotulo 1532. or 2592. in waste, the Case was in the Lease, there was this Proviso, to wit, povided that the Lessee shall not fallen the wood, the Defendant pleads the Proviso, and saith, he hath not demised it, and the Question was, whether these words, provided and agreed, are an exception, or no, and adjudged that the word provided is no exception, and the wood was demised. The End of the Book. An exact Table, Alphabetically pointing out the most necessary and pertinent matters of this Treatise contained, for the ●ase of the Reader. A. AVerrment, where necessary, 1. 13. Attorney called Champertor, where it is actionable, 15. Account, what process in it, 24. Account against a Bailiff local, 25. Account where the Writ abateth by death, 25. Account lieth not before a Sheriff, 25. nor against Executor, nor an Infant, ibid. Account, what is a Bar, 26. Account, where it lies not, but detinue, 26. Account, Judgement upon special verdict, 26. Accountant shall not wage his law, where, 26. Auditors, their Certificate, 25. Allowance to a Bailiff, where, 25. Action to be revived by Scire Facias, 25. Assize for the Office of Clock-keeper, 28. Assize in Costs upon nonsuit 29. Audita querela, 29. Audita querela, supersedeas denied, where, ibid. Administration dur. minor. 31. Attornment not necessary for acts in Law, 33. Assets, a difference, 34. Action upon penal Statutes, not upon the Statute of Jeofails, 36. Audita querela, bail put in, in the Chancery, and good, 38. Audita querela for a Purchasor, 39 Assumpsit upon marriage, 40. Alien borne, no plea in a Writ of Error, 42. Admiralty, its Jurisdiction, 42. Amendment after trial, 43. Ancient Demesne tryable by Doomsday Book, 43. Attorney put out of the Roll, 44. Attorney scandalised, 1, 2. Arrest for Felony good, where words importing a Felony actionable, 2. Attorney called bribing Knave, 6. Attornment of an Infant 47 Administration revoked, 92, 51. Action in England for service beyond Seas, 54. Attachment ad satisfaciendum, 54. Amendment after imparlance, 57 Action for non-performance of an Award, 58. Action upon the 24. H. 6. for Election of Burgesses, 59 Attachment foreign, pleaded, 60 Arbitrium nullum pleaded, 62 & 90. Award, where void, 63 Apprentice, when to be sent beyond the Seas, 65 Amendment of Imparlance denied after Error, 69 Award of a thing not in the submission, void 69 Appearance on another day saves the Bond, where 75 Assets, what shall be, 77 Acceptance doth confirm an Estate, where, 79 Appearance pleaded de novo, when nought, 92 Award void for incertainty, 93 Assurance devised to be made by the Plaintiff, 94 Abatement for not naming an Infant Executor, 102 Action, sur le Stat. 32. H. 8. pur. Rend arrear, 103 Action, sur le Stat. 32. H. 8. where it lies not, 103 Action lies, though a stranger doth carry away the Corn before severance, 124 Amendment of Original after trial, 130 Award where good notwithstanding all do not award, 112 Abatement how traversed, 144 Amendment in a writ of Error before the Record removed, 144 Avowry in a Rend charge, 169 Avowry for an Amerciament in a Court Leet, 170 Avowry amended after entry by consent, 174 Amends made by a Bailiff not good, 173 Avowry, exception too late after Judgement entered, 171 Avowry for damage pheasant, 177 Attornment, where it is of necessity, where not, 179 Annuity granted by Will, 182 Apportiament, where, 187 Agreement verbal where to be averred, where not, 191 Advowson will pass per concessionem Ecclesiae, 102 Ancient Demesne, whether extendible, 234 Annuity, 235 B. BArretor, where actionable, 11 Bankrupt Knave, where it is not actionable, 16 Breach assigned, 20, 81 Bar, where naught, 22 Breach, that one entered, and doth not show by what title not good, 23 Breach by nonpayment, 24 Bailement upon Habeas Corpus, where no cause is expressed, 44 Bastard, where it is actionable, 41 Baron chargeable for femes, clothes 47 Bond pleaded in satisfaction, 47 Bona notabilia, 62 Bond by the under Sheriff to the high Sheriff, where good, 63, 64 Breach assigned in Covenant, 73 Breach, what, 79 Bar, another action of the same nature pleaded, 82 Breach, when not specially to be alleged, 90 Bond joint or several at the Plaintiffs Election, 122 Breach upon award not good, where, 123 Breach not assigned, the Plaintiff shall never have Judgement though he have a verdict, 105. Bishop's Plea shall not prejudice the Incumbent, 164 Beasts of a stranger where they are distrainable 170. Battery 134. 195, 196. Barr where good, 222. Badger may be hunted but not digged for in another man's ground, 224 C. COunt incertain 13. Court where it may discharge one arrested, 15. Clerk's misprision helped 16. Common appurtenant cannot be divided, 17. Covenant against an Administrator, 19 Covenant and Debt where they differ, 19 Covenant against the first Lessee, after Assignment, 20. Covenant upon a void Lease, where it is good, 21. Covenant in Law how extendible, 22 Covenant against an Executor, 24. Covenant against two, to levy a Fine, various acknowledgement, 29 Covenant against more than did acknowledge the Fine amended, 29. Commander in trespass liable to Action, 31. Copyhold extendible upon the Statute of Bankrupt, 34. Charter of privilege pleaded, 36. Commission high the authority. 45 Conversion what makes it, 5. Collateral Consideration where good to maintain Action, 3. Count uncertain, 6. Consideration not valuable, 6. Conspiracy where it will not lie, 7. Costs where to be given, 46. Count insufficient 48. Creditor administering 52. Costs, none upon the Statute of perjury, 69. Custom special pleaded, 69. Contract usurious what not, 74. Costs omitted in the Roll, Error, 76 Costs, none against an Executor, 80 Costs to be considered multi fariam, 100 Challenge insufficient 128. Copyholder must act according to Custom, 133. Concord with satisfaction, good Plea in ejectment, 133. Court Roll of a Copyhold traversed, adjudged naught, 140. 141. Copyhold purchaser cannot surrender without admittance, 134 Chaplains privileged, 162. Court Baron incident to a Manor, 175. Common appendent need to be prescribed, 178. Common, when it's well found by a jury, 178. Challenge denied, 234. Copy-holders' their Privileges within the Manor, 231. Copy-holders' custom is above the Lords Estate, 231. Copyholder what Action he shall have, ibid. Capiatur upon a Judgement assigned for Error where, 211. Common appendent apportionable, aliter appurtenant. 180. Copyholder barred by a Fine, if not claiming within five years, 181. Cognisance as Bailiff. 181. Commoner may take the cattle of the Lord damage pheasant, where 187 Common in a field, and Acres unsown, sowing of parcel shall not destroy the Common, 189. Consideration to raise an use, 193. Challenge where it lieth, 194. 195. 196. Challenge, none against the Jurors returned by the Eslizors, 194. Commoner, what Actions he shall have and how, 227. Commoner may have an Assize against the Lord, 227. Common is incident to a Copyhold Estate, 220. Commoner cannot chase the Lords cattle, if they surcharge the Common, 208. Confession after Issue joined refused, 196. Commoner cannot bring an Action, but the Lord may, 197. Constable cannot detain one but for Felony, 198. Continuando, where proper, 223 224. 234. Cursus aque granted, 229. D. DOuble prosecution for one thing actionable, where, 12. Demand and denial makes a good conversion, 17. Denis age pleaded to a Bond 30. Distress where good, ratione concessionis, non posaessionis, 32. Devastavit may be by paying of money upon an usurious contract, 33. Distress in a Court Baron by prescription, 36. Devise Executory, where good, 41. Devise of Land in Tail conditionally, 45. Demand not necessary, 10. Debt, how, and where it lies, 50 Devastavit returned, where 50. Debt lies for money levied, 51. Debt against a Sheriff for an Escape, 51. Debt in Debet and detinet where, 56. Default of the clerk amended, 56. Demand alledgable, ibid. Debt for performance of covenants, 61. Debt upon Obligation in Italian, 62. Debt for non performance of award. 65. Damages from request. 70. Deprivation given in Evidence, 73 Damages where to be severed, 73 Debt lies not for fees of a Solicitor, 74. Debtee take Administration, 74. Demand necessary in nomine penae 76. Devise of the profits, good of the Land itself, 80. Debt against an Executor after full age for Devast. of an Admistrator, duravit minor aetate 81. Debt lies for him, for use money is delivered, 83. Debt upon the Statute of perjury, 83. 84. Debt against the Bailiff, 86. 87. Debt upon the Statute of Edw. 6, for Tithes. 87 Debt for Rend Arrear 89. Debt for Flemish money but demanded by English value, 91 Demand of Rent, where to be 97 Debt for Tithes, Plaintiff need not to be named Rector, 99 Debt for Tithes, the statute mistaken is not good, 101 Debt by a Bill for money received to anothres use, 104 Debt for non-performance of Covenants, 114 Devastavit, when it ought to be retained, 117 Debt upon a Lease made to an Infant, 121 Debt for Tithes after the toarm ended, 124 Demurrer to an action for non-performance of an Award, 125 Dower against the Heir or Committee, 127 Dower of Tithes, how, 172. Demand, when to the Parson, when to the Land, 135 Debt contingent cannot be discharged, where, 110 Deed of gift good against him who makes it non obstante, 13. Eliz. and against his Executors and Administrators, 111 Demand of Rent to avoid a Lease, where to be made. 138. Discontinuances, 155. Darraign Presentment, where, 159 160. Demurrer for doubleness of Plea, 164. Devise for years in confidence, 196. Demand not necessary in Replevin for Rent. 171. Distress of a thing entire by two, no return in Replevin adjudged, 171. Distress for Common Right, 177 Distress, where it is good for the Rent, but not for the nomine penae without demand, 179 Demand of Rent-service, how, 181. Demurrer to part of the declaration what it effects, 92 Disseisin of a Common, what, 197. Damages for Trespass local cannot be mitigated by the court, 204. Declaration shall not abate for false Latin, 206. Damages, none in partition, 209. Damage where it shall be entire, 233 Damage released for part 235. E. ELegit, how executed, 38. Elegit from the Teste binds Goods and Chattels, 38. Extent upon Extent, 39 Estovers, 44. Entry, Writ filled after the death of the Tenant 44. Error as to Costs, where, 3. Exception to a Declaration 8. Executor at what age, 46. Exceptions to an Award, 48. Exceptions to a Plea 51. Exception to a Venire facias 52. Estoppell 57 Error assigned, 65, 66. 59 Executor an Assign in Law, 78 Executor, de seu tort. shall not prejudice the rightful 79 Escape against a Bailiff of a liberty, 80 Executor, his election for part is not good, 83 Escape lies not against the Sheriff, where, 85. 119, 120 Executor, de seu tort. cannot retain money to pay himself, 104, 105 Election of Execution either against Principal or Bail, 122 Error lies not before 〈◊〉 value 〈◊〉 inquired of 〈…〉 Executor shall not pa●… 4. Jac. cap. 3. 107 Elegit to a foreign Sheriff upon a testatum in London, 107, 108 Ejectment doth not lie De aequae cursu, 142 Ejectment sufficient by a servant in present Relation, 143 Ejectoris in traverunt and after he did expulse in num. singulari, 149 Essoine lies by Writ of Journeys accounts, though allowed in the first Writ, 152 Essoine, where it lieth, 154 Extinguishment of Common by enclosure, where, 174 Exceptions to an Avowry, 179 Evidence what shall be given, 207 Enquiry of Damages, the Plaintiff not bound to prove the property of his goods taken, but the value only, 214 Estovers, if the Owner cut all the wood down, what remedy, 220 Exception taken for incertainty, 232 Estray how to be used, and the nature of it, 236 F. FRench Pox actionable, 11 Filching fellow not actionable, 13 Forsworn Knave, where it is actionable, 13 Forging Knave, where actionable, 16 Feme, where not bound to perform the Covenant of her Husband, 31 Fraud not ●●nended, 45 Feme Covert cannot convert, 3 Feoffment to uses, 60 Feme Covert cannot make a letter of Attorney, 134 Formidon in descender. 152, 153 Felony committed, is good cause for to arrest one suspected, but not to defame one, 2 Feme cannot plead without her Husband, 197 Free Warren, what, 228 G. GRant by the King, where good, 27 Grant not enlarged by a bare recital, 32 Guardian in socage, who, 40 Gift by Deed void, quoad chose, and Action, 40 Goods not saleable upon execution out of a Court Baron without Custom, 41 Guardian of the spiritualties, who, 43 General release pleaded, 54 Grantee of a Reversion, what action he shall have, 56 H. HAbeas Corpus to the marshalsea, 61 Hue and Cry, 155 Hundred charged in Robbery, 156 Hundred not chargeable after the year and day, 156 Hundredors' in a Jury, how many necessary, 193 Husband and Wife, where they shall be joined, and where severed in an action, 209 I. INcertainty in the Declaration, 10 Justification disallowed, 11 Indebilatque assumpsit, where good, 14 justification by the Sheriff, 17 Judgement arrested for default in the Declaration, 21. 23 Judges of the fact, who, 36 Inquisitions, where naught, 38 Juror appearing cannot be discharged, 41 Issue cannot be bastarded after death of Parent, 42 Imparlance, what plea after, 42 Judgement Arrested, 2 Judgement reversed, because the Sheriff was not named in the Venire facias, 3 judgement arrested, 5 Justification not good, where, 5 Justification amounting to a not guilty, naught, 5 Innuendo will not help the action, 7 & 9 Imparlance Roll supplied by the issue, 9 Juror committed, 44 Judgement upon a By-law, 48, 49 Judgement pleaded in Bar by Executor, 49 Judgement against Executors, 53 Imparlance amended, 53 Judgement arrested for improper words, Sans (Anglice) 82 Jeofaile, the statute not helping, where, 82 Judgement reversed by Error in the disjunctive, 88 Intendment upon a Will, 89 Judgement reversed in an inferior Court, why, 97 Judgement reversed for Error in the judgement 99 Judgement reversed for changing the Defendants addition, 100 Judgement priority considerable, 102 Judgement reversed for not showing in what Court a deed was enroled, 115 Judgement reversed for want of words in the Tales, 115, 116 Implication not allowed of in a surrender, where, 128 Judgement in an Eject. firmae, 129 Interest, what, 136 Judgement reversed by Writ of Error, non obstante, a verdict, & the Statute of 18. Eliz. 106 Imparlance, what is pleadable after 138 Jointure, what, 139 Interest in possession, and in future, the difference, 148 Implication not intended, where, 153 Judgement arrested, for that the plea was naught, 172 Jurors name mistaken, was amended upon constat de persona. judgement arrested for not showing in what place the Message did lie, to which Common did belong, 188 jury challenge, 194 judgement, it's nature, as to the Plaintiff and Defendant, 194 Issue helped by the Statute of Jeofailes, where, 200 judgement reversed, because the writ of Enquiry was before a wrong Officer, 203 Imprisonment justified by the commandment of the Mayor of London, naught, where, 204 Justice of Peace cannot command his servants to arrest in his absence without Warrant, 205. justification in Trespass for a way, 212. justification not good, where, 218. justification special pleaded in Battery, 226. Issue of things in several places, 229. K. KIngs Title not lost, 164 Knight ought to be returned in the Pannell, where, 193. L. LAw Gager lies not if the except be per manus proprias, 25 Lease to two, determined upon the death of one, where, 30. Lease of a Reversion sans Attornament, where good, 30. Legacy of Land not suable for in Court Christian, 32. Legacy of a Chattel suable for in Court Christian, 34. locality not to be made transitory, 35. Limitation is taken strictly, grant aliter 39 Lessee at will cannot grant over his Estate, 43. Law mistaken, where it is hurtful, 41. Letters of Administration ought to be showed, 9 Law waged, where, 53. Law wager by a false party, 55. Letter of an attorney where naught 94. 95. Law Gager lies not in debt for salary. 60. Law Gager where, 70. 65 Lessee at will, if he determine his Will, Devis. au. yet shall pay the entire Rent, 90. Lease to try a Title of Lands in the hands of many, 129. Lease to be executed by Letter of an Attorney, how, 129. Lease made to three for their lives, with a Covenant that the Land should remain to the survivor for 90 years, is a good Interest in the Survivor, 136. London, how houses pass without enrolment, 141. 142. Liberty to make Leases, 169. Lease for life to three, where it was naught, 175. Lord of Parliament not appearing shall forfeit 100 l. 193. Lunatic where an Action ought to brought in his name, 197. Levant and Couchant is certainly fufficient, 198. M. MIstryall, the Ven. fac. mistaken, 17 Mistake of the jury, 18 Misprision of the Clerk amended, 26 Monasteries dissolved, only those Regular, 39 Mistake by the Court no prejudice, 42. Mistriall, 7. Missworn fellow Actionable, 9 Medietas Linguae, where, 45. Master chargeable where, 64 Misprision of the Clerk amended after trial, 88 Manor by that name, what will pass, 155. Mistake of a day, of an Act by way of Bar not prejudicial, 196. marshalsea hath no authority to hold plea of Debt, except one party be of the household, 199 marshalsea no jurisdiction, 199. 200. Master cannot have an Action for the loss of Service if the Servant die of the beating, 205. N. NOtice not necessary, 10 Non est inventus where the party did escape, 12 Nuisance where it lieth. 4. Non damnificatus pleaded, 7 Noverint for non assumpsit. 8. Notice where needful, 46. Nul tiel Record pleaded to a Plea of Outlawry, 84. Non damnificatus pleaded, 118. Nisi prius, amended by the Roll, 133 Nonage tried where it is alleged, not where the Land lies, 150. 151. Non-tenure pleaded, 153. Nisi prius the Record amended upon motion 156 Nullum tempus occurrit Regi, 166. Negativum praegnans, 172. Non residency the Statute, 13 El. a general Law, 208. New Asignment where not good, 217. Bar to it, 236. Nihil dicit, 237. 238. Non omittas, 240. O ORdinary cannot make a division, 32. Ordinary his power, 45. Outlawry no Plea, where 55. Outlawry in the Testator, 55. Original want of it, after verdict no Error, 97. Obligation discharged why, 98. 99 Original against four, & count against three without a Simulcum adjudged naught, 130 Ordinary and Patron their several Rights, 202. P. PArdon general the effect, 10. Promise by an Infant, not good, 11 Papist to a Bishop actionable 12. Proviso implicit, where good, 14. Perjured knave actionable 15. Proviso, 18, 19 Piracy no excuse in an Action of Covenant, 21. Plea in abatement, 27 in Assize, 28. Praemunire in a Parson, 30. Pleas several cannot be in a joint debt or contract, 30. Proof, how far extendible 33 Where required and where not, 34. Pardon, crimen legitur, non tollitur, 34. Privilege from Arrest, where not to be allowed, 84 Prender and Render, the difference, 34. 35. Prescription, where good, 35 Property not altered upon a Scire facias, 41. Punishment corporal not to be imposed for the default of a deputy, where 45. Proviso Executory and executed, the difference, 8. Privilege respective, 47 Payment where peremptory, 49 Plea made good by verdict, 52 Payment when upon demand, 52 Pardon general pleaded, 56. Plea to a Bond taken by the Sheriff, 58. Payment to the Heir, and not to the exceutor where good, 64. Privilege of an University, where not to be allowed, 75. Plene adm nistravit no Plea, where 77, 78. Proprietor sufficient, 88 Privilege of Parl. pleaded, 92 Plea naught for want of traverse, 98. Primo deliberate. shall not be pleadded, sans traverse, 105. Propriety of goods cannot be in abeyance, 132. Prescription and custom do differ, how, 132. Process misawarded, where helped by the Statute, 134. Plea where it shall be in discharge, but not in Bar of an obligation, 109. Partition Process in it 156. For whom it lies, 157 Partition error in the first Judgement, 157. Partition in another Writ was pleaded. Presentment of a Clerk by words, good 162. Patrons 6 months, 165. Proprietate probanda, 167. Plea naught, 173. Pannell of hab. corp.. amended upon oath, 175. Parts ad finem nihil, etc. pleaded 179 Prescription for Common of pasture, 177. Prescription to distrain for amendment in a Court Baron must be not in a Court Leet, 183. Prescription in a good estate good for a thing incident, though it be in grant, 198. Prescription to be a justice of peace where good, how naught, 206. 207 Prescription good matter, and various, 215. 216 Possession how it enters, 230, 231. Posse Comitatus, where it may be raised. 240. Q. QVeen cannot be an Officer to the King, 28 Quantity in a Declaration may be destroyed by a per nomen, 145. Quare impedit, Process in it, 158 Quare impedit the Judgement in it, 158 Quare impedit, essoyn in it, how and for whom, 159. Quare impedit, judgement in it, where execution shall be by the Metropolitan, 159. Quare impedit several against several men 161. Quod permittat. 227. R. REquest, where it is necessary, 13 Release of Baron where it is no Bar 15 Rend arrear no plea in an action of Covenant, 19 Release where not to be given in Evidence, 24 Request upon a bond what is sufficient, 30 Rent reserved, where gone, 32 Rent proportioned, 33 Return of a Sheriff insufficient, 37 Return of 21 jurors, naught, 41 Rogue not actionable, 9 Rieus per deceit, 54 Release, how and where good, 62. & 63 Repleader awarded, 64 Release, where good, in respect of time, 70 Release of all demands, its force, 81 116. Request to make assurance generally good, 85 Release in Law, 91 Reversioner received for default of Tenant for life, 127 Return insufficient, why, 127 Replication not good, 131 Rent received at Michaelmas, or within ten days after, 105 Reservation of Rent how to be construed, 108, 109 Record removed unto the Exchequer, 145, 146 Resignation by fraud takes not away the King's Title, 161 Replevin, where, and how, 168 Replevin not within the Statute, 3 Jac. 172 Returno habendo, 173 Replevin place omitted, not good, 176 Resignation of a Benefice, 201 Release to Tenant at sufferance, void, 201 Recognizance sued, 225 S. SVit in Chancery is no disturbance, 23 Sheriff amerced for the false Re-return of another, 36 Summons & severance, where, 37 Statute preferred before a judgement, where, 37, 38 Supersedeas granted, where, 40 Subboth, where punishable, 44 Scandal for keeping a false Debt-book, actionable, 4 Suing in a wrong Court, where actionable, 4 Scandal for false measures, actionable, 4 Scandal for invocation of Spirits, 8 Sheriff, his authority in executions 50 Scire facias, for whom, 57 Satisfaction, what is not, 70. where it is held naught, 73 Steward of a Leet within the Stat. of Edward 6. 73 Successor not Executor, when he shall take benefit, 94 Supersedeas upon a Writ of Error, 153 Servant brought an Action, nomine proprio, part of the goods being his Masters, 155 Seisin of Rent within the time of limitation, not traversable, 170 Surrender of a Copyholder, how it works, 181 Sheriff, where his performance is good, where naught, 210, 211 Scire Facias, where it is proper, 226 Seisin of a part of service, is seisin of the whole, 230 Submission to Arbitrators, 232 Seu Assault Demesne pleaded in Battery, 233 T. TRover, where, 12 Trover against an Administrator good, where, 16 Tenant at the time of Writ purchased, where good, 27 Tenant at will and at sufferance do differ, 30 Tithes discharged, where, 31 Tithes, where not suable for by the statute, 31 Tithes in kind renewed, where, 32 Trees devised to pay Debts, 32 Tithes, where not of boughs, 33 Tithes not set forth, where action. 34 Tales prayed denied, where, 35 Term whole, adjudged as one day, 37 Trees in the highway, whose, 42 Trial, where, 49 Tenants in Common, 83 Tithe of what trees to be paid, 95 Tithes cannot be leased without Deed, 99 Trial upon Ejectment, good matter, vide. 147, 148 Tenant in tail, his death, where it determineth Estates by him granted, 161 Tenant in tail grants a rend charge, 179 Tales awarded, 183 Trespass, what process, 193 Trespass is joint or several at the Plaintiffs election, 196 Trespass laid in an Acre, and the jury found in a Rood, yet it is good, 210 Trespass▪ difference 'twixt it and Rep'evin, 214 Tort▪ Demesne, where good in issue, where not. 215 V. VAriance betwixt Count & the writ of Inquiry, 15 Venus misawarded, 23 View, to be there where an Office is performed, 27 Villainage within the statute of limitation, 38 Use, upon what, 40 Venire Facias mendable, where, 43 Usury what, where not, 52 Uncore Priest, where pleadable, 61 Verdict special, 75 Venire Facias misawarded, 76 Uncore Priest for to grant, where naught, 76 Venire Facias, the Defendants name mistaken, 79 Usurious contract pleaded, 86 Variance betwixt the specialty and Count, 96 Verdict special upon non demisit, 126 Venire Facias of the Parish adjudged good, 130 Venire Facias to the Coroners, ib. Verdict special in Ejectment, 131 Verdict precise sometimes makes the Declaration good, which otherwise would be naught, 137 Venire Facias, exception taken and overruled, 161 Usurpation upon the King, 163 Venire Facias, whence, 176 Usury, the statute pleaded, 180 Venire Facias de novo, 194. 204. 219 Venire Facias vicious, why, 209 Verdict finding substance, though not circumstances, yet good, 213, 214. Venire, one out of two places in the same County, 228 W. WHere arrant not actionable, 16 Words employed not actionable, 16 Will, good by notes, 44 Words actionable, 2, 3. Witch, not actionable, 2. 14 Warrant of Attorney, 46 Words after the Clause of his testatus, of what force they are, 59 Writ original, where abated by death. 64 Will must be certain, and according to Law, 130 Will not to be avoided by averment, 131 Will, mistakes in many cases tolerable, 132 Words void, rather than the Declaration, where, 146 Warranty Collateral pleaded in a Formedon, 153 Writ, another depending pleaded, 163 Withernam awarded, 167, 168 Words of double intendment how to be construed, 192, 193 Waste, where it lieth, for what judgement in it, 237, 238 Waste, inquiry of it, ibid. Waste, who shall join in the action, 238 Waste, against whom it lies, 239, 240 Waste, sparsim, ibid. The times when these several Officers of the Court of Common Pleas were admitted to their several Offices. Thomas Spencer, Ar. Pasch. 33. Eliz. Custodes Brev. Henery Compton, Miles balnei. Circa An. 5. Car. Jo. Glyn, serviens ad Legem. 5. Febr. 19 Car. Johannes Ford. 27. Jan. 27. Eliz. Capital. Prothon. Gulielmus Nelson. 15. Novem. 25. Eliz. Richardus Brownelow. 9 Oct. 32. Eliz. Thomas Cory. 9 Oct. 14. Car. Zacharias Scot 9 Oct. 27. Eliz. Sedi' Prothon. Thomas Crompton. 10. May 7. Jac. Johannes Goldesborough. 7. May 11. Jac. Johannes Gulston. 15. Oct. 16. Jac. Richardus Barnard. 9 Febr. 19 Car. Johannes Pynsent. Ult. May 20. Car. Laurentius Rardford. 30. Oct. 23. Elizabeth. Try ' Prothon. Hugo Browker. 28. November. 31. Eliz. Thomas Waller. 23. Jan. 5. Jac. Robertus Moyle. 7. May 3. Car. Geo. Farmer. 16. Oct. 14. Car. Gulielmus Anderson. 12. 1. May 1. Jac. Cliri ' Warr. Geo. Reading. 10. Oct. 6. Jac. Milo Hobert. 25. Dec. 13. Jac. Gulielmus Rolfe. 11. May 1. Car. Jo. Gulston. 23. Jan. 10. Jac. Cliri. argenti Regi. Henery Ewer. 2. Oct. 16. Jac. Antonius' Wright. 6. Dec. 18. Jac. Cliri. Error. FINIS. REPORTS: (A Second Part.) OF Divers Famous CASES in LAW, as they were Argued, as well upon the Bench, by the Reverend and Learned JUDGES, Coke, Fleming, Hobard, Haughton, Warburton, Winch, nichols, Foster, Walmesley, Yeluerton, Montague, Dodridge, and divers others, in their respective Places; as also at the Bar, by the then Judicious Sergeants and Barristers of special Note. Collected by RICHARD BROWNLOW Esq Prothonotary of the Court of COMMON PLEAS. Very beneficial for all such who are Studious to know LAW, in its Power, Act, and Limitation: Directiuè, and Useful for all Clerks, Attorneys, etc. In their Inter-Agendum's, or several Ministerial Functions. WITH A PERFECT TABLE SHOWING THE Remarkable matters Argued and Concluded in this Book. Protag. de Leg. lib. 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. LONDON, Printed by Tho: Roycroft, for Matthew Walbancke, at Grays-Inne Gate, and Henry Twyford, in Vine Court Middle Temple, 1652. TO THE READER. UPON the strict survey of Nature's Products, there is nothing to be found, whether in the bosom of its Causes, or in its Singularities, within the Convexity of the Universe, which being contemplated at an intellectual distance, beyond the Magnetic Effluvium of our Senses, doth not felicitate with more certainty, Nedum, probability, as more obsequious to the Prototype of its projection, than MAN: the very chronology of whose Errors doth compute his Existency, an ingrateful return for the dignity of his Essence, which unmolested and freed from the Procacity of his Junior and Inferior faculties, would have fixed him in the harmonious Orb of his motion, and have secured him, as well against the scandal of a Planetique, as the Eclipse of his native glory: But alas! the doom is past, Ex Athaeniis in Barathrum, he's now benighted with Ignorance, Phainomena's, and Verities; an Ignis fatuus, and a Linck-boy, are Eodem calculo; which condition imposes upon him something more than Metaphorically, the semblance of a Moth-flye, which is in nothing so solicitous, as in its own ruin: Nevertheless had Privation in his Judgement been the only loss, he could then have undergone; but his Po●o di matto, but his will, and too too cereous Potestatives, have Stigmatised him in all his habitudes, undiqueversum, with a more reproachful Sobriquet of Vellacazo teso, in which shameful state, forgetting his Constitutive Nature, and rudely breaking through his Divisive difference, he seems now to be lost, if perchance he is not found in the confused Thickets and Forests of his Genus; where measuring his actions (rather Ausa furosa) by the Cubit of his strength, he giddyes himself into a Maze of Inquietudes, shuffling the Malefactor and Judge into one Chair, to make up the Riddle of all Injustice, because all things are Just; Hence was the no less opportune, then needful Venu of Cicero's Vir magnus quidem & sapiens, Cic. lib. 1. de Invent. Rhet. etc. Hence the blissful emergency of all Laws, the limiting Repagula's of his Insolenoy, and the Just Monuments of his Depravity: But Hinc polydacrya, he is yet so unwilling to forgo his bainefull Appetite (Reasons too potent Competitor) that he is still persuaded he may safely act without controlment; though like a Partridge in a Net, he finds no other Guerdon for his Bustle, than a more hopeless Irretition: And as if he were damned to be a ●ury to himself, he will not admit that wholesome and thriving Council, That Obedience to Laws is a much more thriving piece of Prudence than Sacrifice; and as much differenced as innocency, and guilt ignorant of its expiation. Whence I conceive by a just title, to keep the World from Combats, and the reward of virtue from Violation, the wisest in all Ages have had the privilege, not only of prescribing, but of coacting the orders of Regiment amongst others, who by necessary Complot have engaged for observance; which something seems to repair the loss; yet so, as by our Dianoeticks, we have opportunity enough to see, and like the Satire in the Fable, to fear, our Idaeated Humanity, although in a more sublime contemplation, it may fall out otherwise, in respect that the Law of Essences are more certain, and of a far more facile direction, than those of existency; which is so necessarily entitled to infinite Incertainty, from Approximation of Accidents, that it would now be an equal madness for the Governor to think he can, or the governed to fancy he should, constitute Laws, Adequate to humane Velleity, since the wills of no two Sons of Adam did ever Mathematically concentre, nor were ever two humane Actions shaped with parallel circumstances; which, as it seems necessarily to import the deficiency of the Rule, so also to imply the evident reason of Debating and Reporting of Cases in our Law: And the denoting of Limitations in that of the Empire; which first, properly are, or (a notatione) at least should be, no other than Exceptions to the Rules general, from a due consideration of individuating circumstances. For the Expediment of which knowledge, this Gentleman, the painful Collector of these ensuing Relations, for his own benefit, whilst yet living, and for the good of others, who by nature's Decree should see his Pyre, did think it Tanti to make his Observations Legible: There now remains nothing, but thy Boni consul, in which thou wilt oblige the Publisher to continue thy Friend in all like Opportunities. R. M. Barr: A Table of the several Cases Argued and Adjudged. A. Admiral Court fol. 16, 27 Agars Case 36 Andrews against Ledsam 49 Airs Case 280 B. Butler against Thayre 29 Baxter against Hopes 30 Bushes Case 36 Blackdens Case ibid. Beareblock against Reade 39 Burdet against Pix 50 Bone against Stretton 51 Bedell against Bedell 58 Bearblock against Read 81 Burnham against Bayne 96 Barney against Hardingham 120 Brandon's Case 122 Baynall against Tucker 134 Bishop of Ely 137 Brook against Cob 150 Bicknell against Tucker 153 Browning against Stel'ey 165 Bard against Stubbing 167 barton's Case 215 Barwick and Foster's Case 220 Buckner against Sawyer 274 Bailie against Sir Henry Clare 275 Borough of Yarmouth 292 C. cradock's Case 37 Cartwright against Gilbert 48 Canning against Doctor Newman 54 Crogat against Morris 55, 146 Crane against Coal-pit 84 Cross against Westwood 108 Charnock against Currey 118 Crew against Vernon 152 Charnock against Corey 153 Case of Cinque-Ports 191 College of Physicians Case 255 Chamberlain against Goldsmith 280 Cholke against Peter 289, 322 Chapman against Pend'eton 293 Cesar against Bull 328 D. Daringtons Case 3 Dorwood against Brickenden 26 Doctor Conways Case 37 Doctor Husseys' Case 59, 91 Doctor manning's Case in the Starr-chamber 151 Downs against Shrimsh●w 182 Denis against More. 299 Dunmole against Glyles. 308 E. Enby versus Walcot 28 Earl of Cumberland and Hilton 108 Earl of Rutland against the Earl of Shrewsbury 229 Estcourt and Harrington 272 Earl of Rutland's Case 330 F. Ford versus Pomroy 9 Fetherstone's Case 168 Fleming and Jales 280 Freeman against Baspoule 309 Foster against Jackson 311 G. Glover and Wendham 10 Gaudey against Newman 38 Gargrave against Gargrave 52 Gravesend Case 177 Goodyer and Ince 208 Gittins against Cowper 217 Grimes against Peacock 222 Godsalls Case 270 H. Hurry against Boyer 8 Huntley against Cage 14 Hurry against Bowyer 20 Hamond against Jethro 97 Hamond Strangis Case 102 Hill againstVpchurch 121 Hall against Stanley 124 Holcraft against French 137 Higgins against Piddle 149 Hare and Savill 273 Heyden against Smith 328 I. Jones against Boyer 27 Jennings against Audley 30 James versus Read 47 Jacob against Sowgate 12● Ireland against Smith 166 K. Kenrick against Pargiter and Phillips. 60 Kemp and Philip his Wife, James and Blanch his Wife, against Lawrere and Trallop, and the Wife of Gunter 144 L. Linch against Porter 1 Legates Case 41 Lampit against Margeret Starkey 17● Lawry against Aldred and edmond's 183 M. Master, Brothers, and Governors of Trinity house againsi Boreman 13 Mallet against Mallet 133 Marstons' Case 167 Manley against Jennings 176 Marsam against Hunter 209 Miller and Francis. 277 Michelborn against Michelborn 296 Mors against Webbe 297 P. Parker's Case 7 Penns Case ibid. Priddle against Napper 25 Powis against Bowen 29 Parker's Case 37 Petty against Evans 40 Pyat against the Lady Saint-John 56 Portington against Rogers 65 Pits against Dowse 74 Petoes Case 75 Patrick against Lower 101 Prowse against Worthing 103 Peto against Checy and Sherman, and their Wives. 128 Peacock against S George Reynel 151 Proctor against Johnson 212 pain and Mutton 276 R. Robotham and Trevor 11 Reyner against powel 42, 76 Rolls against Mason 85, 192 robinson's Case 271 Rivit against Down 279 Read against Fisher 297 Rutlage against Clarke 308 S. Symonds against Greene 16 Sir William Chanceyes' Case. 18 Sir John Watts 29 Sir Edward Ashfeild 48 Styles against Baxter. 49 Sturgis against Deane 57 Sir Richard Bulkley against Owen Wood 100 Sir Ed. Puncheon against Legate 137 Sir Henry Rolls against Sir Robert Osborne and Margeret his Wife 169 Strobridge against Fortescue and Barret 190 Sammer and Force 208 Styles Case 216 Stydson against Glass 223 Simson and Waters 272 Smallman against Powes 291 T. Tey against Cox 35 Tresham against Lamb 46 Trobervill against Brent 97 Tyrer against Littleton 187 The Lord Rich against Frank 202 Trinity College Case. 243 The Town of Barwick 270 The Duke of Lenox Case 301 V. Vivion against Wild 290 W. Wagginer and Wood 9 weston's Case 11 Wallop against the Bishop of Exeter, and Murrey Clark 45 Wickenden against Thomas 58 Weeks against Bathurst 102 Water against the Dean and Chapter of Norwich 158 Warbrook and Griffin 254 Waggoner against Fish 278 Waggoner against Fish Chamberlain of London 284 Y. Yates and Rowles 207 THE SECOND PART OF BROWNLOWE'S REPORTS Containing divers excellent Cases and Resolutions in Law. Lynche against Porter. THE Plaintiff in Prohibition suggests that he Prohibition upon the statute of 23. H. 8. Chap. 9 inhabited in London, within the Diocese of the Bishop of London, and was cited to appear in the Court of the Arches, and was out of the Diocese of London, without licence of the Bishop of London, against the Statute of 23. Henry 8. And upon the first motion, the Court gave rule to the Defendant to show cause why the Prohibition should not be granted; and to hear the Civilians, and to confer with them concerning the practice and expounding of the Statute of 23. H. 8. Chap. 9 And at the day appointed, three several Civilians came into the Court, and were heard according to the former Order: and they say, that they use to city any Inhabitant that inhabits in London to appear, and to make answer in the Arches originally; for the mischief that the Statute of 23. H. 8. intends to prevent, was, that those which inhabit in Diocese remote from London, should not be sued here without licence from the Ordinary; but this mischief was not in this case. And Doctor Martin saith, that so it was used by the space of 427. years before the making of the Statute, and then was complaint made thereof to the Pope, and he was answered, that it was the use that any man might be cited to the Arches out of any Diocese in England: and also that the Archbishop may hold his Consistory in any Diocese within his Jurisdiction and Province: And also that the Archbishop hath concurrent Jurisdiction in the Diocese of every Bishop as well as the Archdeacon. And then, if the suit be first begun in the Court of the Archbishop, or the Bishop, or Archdeacon, it ought to be there determined where it had its beginning, and shall not be inhibited: And then it was objected by Cook, chief Justice, that the Statute of 23. H. 8. was affirmed by Canon 94. And this showeth the agreement of the Civilians with the said Statute. And to this Doctor Martin answered, that the said Canon was made in the vacancy of the Church of Canterbury, for the Sea of the Archbishopric was then void: and also he said, that the Archbishop of Canterbury prescribes to hold plea of all things, and of all persons in England: And the Pope hath no power to make Canons against the Law, nor against any Custom or Prescription; and for this it shall be void, and that shall not bind the Archbishop which is against the said prescription; and also it seems to the Civilians, that the exposition of the said Statute being the Ecclesiastical Statute appointed to them: And also it was said by them, that this detracts from the Arch-Bishops Jurisdiction against the custom of the Realm, and every Subject hath interest in that: And also that the Bishop takes notice, that they hold plea of the said cause, and took no exception, and that made a sufficient assent, and amounted to a licence in Law, and so concluded that a prohibition ought not to be granted in this Case. Coke, chief Justice saith, that the Mischief which the Statute of 23. H. 8. was not only to prevent the mischief that those which inhabited in places remote from London, should not be cited to come to the Court of the Archbishop, but also to give to them other privileges, which by the Law they ought to have, that is, the Appeal that they lose by the beginning of the Suit in the Arches; for they may appeal from the Ordinary after the suit begun here to the Archbishop; which benefit is lost if the suit be begun before the Archbishop originally: and for that the Inhabitants in London are as well within the Mischief as the body of the Act of 23. H. 8. And also that at the making of the said Canon, the Archbishop of Canterbury which late was, had the Jurisdiction of the same then committed unto him, he then being Bishop of London: So that upon the matter he was Archbishop of Canterbury, so that the unity of the Sea of Canterbury shall not be avoidance of the said Canon; and he agreed that a Canon against Statute Law, or Common Law, or any Custom, shall not bind the Subject; and agreed, that so it had been adjudged in this Court. But he denied that the exposition of any Statute belonged to the Ecclesiastical Court; for the Statute is mere temporal, though it concern spiritual things, and it shall be expounded according to the Rules of the common Law, see 5. Edw. 4. Keasors Case: And so concludes that this suit was against the Statute of 23. H. 8. For it ought to have its beginning in the Court of the Bishop of London. And this exposition of the Statute is made for the Defendant, 94. Canon, which was ex presly made against the Court of Arches, and inflicts suspension (by the space of three months upon the Judges which offend against it) from their Office, and awarded that Prohibition shall be granted, and with that agreed Warburton and Foster, Justices: but Walmsley Justice was of contrary opinion, that is, that no Prohibition shall be granted by the Court of Common Pleas, but in case where the Suit is there hanging. And this was objected also by the Civilians, And the opinion of the Judges of the King's Bench cited to prove it, but prohibition was granted that notwithstanding. And to the objection that the Archbishop of Canterbury may have a consistory in the diocese of every Bishop, this was denied but only where he was the Pope's Legate, and thenas Legate heshall have Jurisdiction of all the Diocese of England, & it was agreed that there were three sorts of Legates. First, Legates, a Latere, and these were Cardinals, which were sent, A Latere from the Pope. The second, A Legate born, and these were the Arch-Bishops of Canterbury, York, and Ments, etc. And these said Legates may cite any man out of any Diocese within their Provincial; then there is a Legate given, and these have Authority by special commission from the Pope. Daringtons Case. DAringtons Case, was cited before the high Commissioners Prohibition to the High Commissioners▪ of the King, for maintenance of the opinion of Brownism, and for slandering of one Mr. Eland a Minister, and also of the Judges of the Common Law, and was sentenced, that for the first he should make his submission before the said Commissioners, and also for the second that he should make submission to Mr. Eland, and confess his offence to him, and pray that he will forgive him; and so for the third also, that he should make submission, and that he shall be committed to prison until he perform the said sentence, and put in security that he will not here after make a Relapse in any of the said offences; and after he made submission for the first offence according to the sentence, and upon complaint to this Court, Habeas Corpus was awarded to the Keeper of the Prison, in which he was to bring in his Body, with the cause of his taking and detaining, and he certified the causes aforesaid, but not the Submission; and these were the causes of the taking and detaining of the said Darington, and it was prayed by Sergeant nichols, that he might be delivered, and Coke chief Justice said, that the Ordinary by the common Law, nor by the Statute, De circumspect aegatis, cannot imprison for any offence, though it be for Heresy, Schism, or other erroneous crime whatsoever, and then by the Statute of 5. R. 2. chapter 5. 2. Statute. It was awarded that Commissions should be directed to the Sheriffs and others, to apprehend such which should be certified by the Prelates to be Preachers of the Heresy; and the Favourers, Maintainers, and abettors, to keep them in strong Prison, until they will justify themselves by the Law of the holy Church: But this was repealed; by, 5 Ed. 6. 12. And 1 Eliz. 1. And also by the Statute of, 2 H. 4. 15. It was ordained that none shall preach or write any book contrary to the Catholic faith, or determination of holy Church, nor shall make any conventicles of such Sects and wicked Doctrines, nor shall favour such preachers: Every Ordinary may convent before him any person suspect of Heresy. An obstinate Heretic shall be burned in an open place before the People, and this Statute was also repealed by, 25 H. 8. And 1 Eliz. 1. By express words, and then by the Statute of, 1. H. 7. 4. Power is given to all Arch-Bishops, Bishops, and other Ordinaries having Ecclesiastical Jurisdictions, to commit Clarks, Priests, etc. To Ward and Prison for Adultery, Fornication, Incest, or any other fleshly Incontinency, there to abide for such time as shall be thought to their discretions convenient for the quality and quantity of their Trespass, and these were all the Statutes, which give Authority to the Ordinary to imprison any man. And when the Statute of 1 Eliz. 1. Repealed the first two Statutes of 5 R. 2. 5. and 2 H. 4. 15. It was not the intent that these offences should be unpunished, but the Queen would not leave and trust the Bishop, which was but a man, and when he is made Bishop cannot be removed with such general and uncontrollable Power, and Authority, and for that this power and Authority was transferred by the said Statute of 1 Eliz. 1. To high Commissioners, which the Queen might countermand at her pleasure, and appoint new, and so it was transferred from one to many, and this Stature did not intend to give other Authority to high Commissioners to imprison any man, which the Ordinary himself had not before the making of the Statute of 1 El. 1. And it was not the intent of the makers of the said Statute and Act of 1 Eliz. To alter any Laws, but to transfer the power of one to others, and it was resolved that for working upon holy days, the party shall not be punished before the high Commissioners, in Reimores Case, and it was also resolved in Symsones Case by the Lord Anderson chief Justice of the Common place, and Glanvile, they then being Justices of Assize in the same place, that a Pursuivant came with a Warrant of the high Commissioners to attach one by his Body for Adultery, in a lay man's house, and was s●ain, with great deliberation and conference had with the other Judges, that that was no Murder, but Manslaughter, for they could not attach the Body of any man, but aught to proceed by citation, and excommunication: But it was agreed that they might imprison for Brownism, for that was Herezie, besides he maintained that if the King do not govern his subjects as he ought, that his Subjects may and aught to depose him, and other such abominable opinions, and further that he might fine for that, and he said that one Elyas Brown was hanged for that in the time of the last Queen, & for that, that it doth not appear by the return that Darington hath himself conformed, they could not deliver him, for they ought to give credit to the return, according to 9 H. 6. 46. be it true or not, and if it be not true, the party may have his action against the officer which doth it, and it was adjudged in Fuller's Case in the King's Bench that the high Commissioners may imprison and impose a fine for Heresy and Schism, and it was also resolved that Polygamy before the Statute of the 3. of King James, was punishable before the high Commissioners, for this was an heinous crime, otherwise the Statute would not have made it Felony, and he said that it was agreed in the time of the last Queen Elizabeth, that the high Commissioners should not meddle with any thing but only those five, that is, Heresy, Schism, Polygamy, Incest, and Recusancy, and with no others, and it was moved that a Writ, De causione admittenda, lieth, for that they would not allow of the submissions. And the Justices would consider of that, and the Prisoner was remanded, and it was adjourned. And at an other day it was moved by nichols Sergeant, that the high Commissioners supposed, for that that the Statute of 5. El. gives authority to the Queen, and to her heirs and successors, to grant Commission to Visit, Reform, Redress, Order, Correct, and amend, all Errors, Heresies, Schisms, Abuses, Offences, Contempts, and Enormities whatsoever; and that the Commissioners may execute all the premises according to the Tenure and effect of the said Letters Patents, that by that they might fine and imprison at their pleasure. But Coke chief Justice said, that it appears by the preamble of the said Statute, that after the Statute was in the ●5. year of the Reign of King Henry the 8. by which the ancient Jurisdictions, Authorities superiorities, and Prehemenences, were united or restored to the Crown, and by means of the said Statute, his Subjects were continually kept in good order, and were disburdened of divers great and intolerable charges and exactions, before that time unlawfully taken and exacted, until such time as the said Statute of 25. H. 8. was repealed by the Statute of 1. and 2. of Philip and Mary, which said Statute of 1. and 2, of Philip and Mary, should be repealed and void, by which it appears, that the King's Subjects, were greviously burdened with grievous and intolerable charges and exactions, and yet in this time of usurped power of the Pope, doth not challenge that he might Commit, or Imprison, or Fine in any case, but in the cases especially mentioned in the last Case aforesaid, and for that all the usurped power was annexed to the Imperial Crown, the which he called the clause of annexing, the second was the clause of deputation, and this was the clause of the Statute, by which the Queen hath power to grant Commission to such persons being natural borne Subjects, as her Majesty, her Heirs, or Successors, shall think fit, to Exercise, Use, and Execute, under her Majesty, all manner of Jurisdictons, Privelidges, and Preeminences, in any wise touching or concerning any spiritual Jurisdiction in all her Majesty's Dominions, and to Visit, Reform, Redress, Order, Correct, and amend all such Errors, Heresies, Schisms, Abuses, Offences, Contemps, and Enormities whatsoever, which by any manner spiritual or Ecclesiastical power, authority, or Jurisdictions, can or may be lawful Reform, Ordered, Redressed, Corrected, Restrained: or amended, and the third he calleth the clause of execution, by which power and authority is given to the Commissioners to Exercise, Use, and execute all the premises according to the Tenure and effect of the said Letters Patents. And it seems it was not the intention of the Statute, to give any power to the Commissioners, which was not given to the Queen by this Statute, for the clause of deputation shall not be more ample than the clause of annextion, and then the clause of execution refers to the first too clauses, as it appears by the words of that (that is) to use and execute all the premises according to the said Letters Patents, and the premises are expounded by the first clauses, that is, Errors, Heresies, Schisms, etc. And the said Letters Patents, refer all Letters Patents before mentioned, where the persons are appointed to be natural borne Subjects, and the material manner of Jurisdictions, Privileges, and Preeminences, Ecclesiastical, Siprituall, and to Visit, Reform, Order, Redress, Correct, and Amend, all such Errors Heresies, etc. Which by any manner of spiritual or Ecclesiastical, Power, Authority, or Jurisdiction, can or may lawfully be Reform, Redressed, Ordered, Corrected, Restrained or Amended, etc. So that it cannot be intended that they may proceed in any other form, but only according to the Ecclesiastical power and Jurisdiction and no other, for otherwise they may Fine, Imprison, and ransom any man at their pleasures, which was never intended by the makers of the said Statutes. But only to transfer the Power and Authority, which at that time was in the Bishops, which then were Papists to the high Commissioners; the which the King may alter at his pleasure, and so he cannot the Bishops, for they are nor displaceable after their consecration. Michaelmas, 8. Jacobi, 1610. in the Common Place. A Man was cited before the High Commissioners for Polygamy, High Commission. which was agreed to be a cause examinable & punishable there: and upon examination of the Cause, the Defendant was acquit, and yet he was censured to pay costs, though that he was acquitted of the Crime: and this Court was moved for a Prohibition, and it was denied; for they may hold plea of Principal, and then Prohibition shall not be granted for the accessary: and the Lord Coke said, that they have just cause of lawfulness of punishing the offence, though they have not just cause of the Deed, and peradventure it was very suspicious that he was guilty, and for that he hath only God for his revenger. Parker's Case. THree were cited to appear in the Court at Chester for Tenths, Prohibition. and treble damages demanded: and also in the Libel it is suggested, that the Land is barren, and very unfruitful, and Prohibition Joint prohibitions and several Counts. was awarded against those jointly; and yet it was agreed, that they ought to count upon the Prohibition severally. Penns Case. Pen Parson of Ryton in the County of Warwick, sued for Tithes Prohibition upon the statute of Simony, upon the stat. of 31. Eliz. in the Ecclesiastical Court before the Ordinary, and the Defendant here pleads that the same Parson was presented upon a Symonicall contract, and for that his Presentation, Admission, and Institution were void, by the Statute of 31. Eliz. And the Simony was for that, that it was agreed between the said Parson and another man, that was Brother to the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry, who was Patron of the same Church; That if he should procure three several grants of three several next avoydances, to them severally granted, to surrender their said several grants, and procure the said Bishop to present him when the Church became void (that being then full of an old Parson being deadly sick) that he would make to him a lease of parcel of the Tithes of his Rectory: And the brother of the said Bishop procured the said Grantees to surrender their several grants accordingly (the Church being then full.) And also after when the Church became void, he procured the said Bishop to present him according to the first contract, and then the said Pen made a lease to him of the Tenths, and after sued others of his neighbours in the spiritual Court for tithes, who pleaded the said simoniacal contract, and here nichols Serjeant suggested, that the Judges Ecclesiastical would not allow of this Plea there, but the Court would not give credit to this suggestion, but said, that if the Ecclesiastical Court make exposition of the Statute of, 31 H. 8. Against the intent of it, that then they would grant a Prohibition, or if they should in verity deny to allow of this Plea, and for that advised him that his Client might offer this Plea another time to them, and if they denied to grant that, they would grant a Prohibition. Hurry against Boyer. IN Prohibition awarded in the spiritual Court for stay of a Suit Prohibition upon the Statute of, 32 H. 8. for the dissolution of the Hospital of Saint john's of Jerusalem. there for tithes of Lands which were the possessions of the Hospital of S. John's of Jerusalem, upon suggestion that the Prior of the said dissolved house of S. John's had this privilege from Rome which was by divers Counsels and Canons, that is, that the Lands of their Predecessors which by their own hands and costs they did till, they were tied to pay no tithes, and then by the Statute of 31 H. 8. chap. 18. Of dissolutions which was pleaded, but agreed that this Hospital was not dissolved by this Act but by a special act made, 32. H. 8. chapter 24. By which their Corporation and Order was dissolved, and their possessions given to the King, with all the Privileges and Immunities belonging to that, and the King granted that to the Plaintiff in the prohibition, and if he should hold them discharged of payment of Tithes, was the question; it was urged by Harris Sergeant that this Immunity was annexed to the corporation of the Prior and his Brethren of the said Hospital, and that that was determined by the dissolution of the said Hospital, and doth not come to the King, and he saith, that so it hath been adjudged in the King's Bench, against the Book of 10. Eliz. Dyer 277. 60. 2. Coke the Bishop of Winchester's Case 14. B. And the Archbishop of Canterbury's Case, 47. B. And 18. Eliz. Dyer 349. 16. And he said, that it was not given to the King by the Statute of, 31 H. 8. of dissolutions, for that was given by act of parliament, and this was not intended by the Statute of 31. H. 8. As it appears by the Archbishop of Canterbury's Case: nichols Serjeant argued to the contrary: And he cited a Cannon made by the Council of Mag. and another made by Innocent the third, In the year 1215. And divers others, and also the Statute of, 2. Hen. 4. 4. And 7 Hen. 4. 6. And he said that the Pope had Authority amongst spiritual men, and might grant to them freedoms of special things; and he saith, that if Land be discharged of payment of Tithes by prescription of not tithing, and this Land came to the King, yet this privilege remains, and also he urged, that these privileges are given to the King by the Statute of, 31 H. 8. Of dissolutions, by which all Hospitals, as well dissolved, lost, surrendered, granted, or, etc. To the King, as those hospitals which should be dissolved, lost, etc. And by this the possessions, lands, etc. are given to the King in the same plight and case, as they were in the hands of the hospitallers themselves; and he affirmed the Book of 10. Eliz. Dyer 277. 60. To be good Law, and the Archbishops of Canterbury's case 2. Coke 47. b. and the Bishop of Winchester's case 44. b. and 18. Eliz. Dyer. 349. 16. and also the words of the Statute of 32. H. 8. 24. gives to the King, not only the manors, houses, etc. but also all Liberties, Franchises, and Privileges, of what natures, names, or qualities soever they be, appertaining or belonging to the said Religion or the Professors thereof, by which he intends that this freedom to be discharged of tithes, and so concludes that the Prohibition shall stand, see the rest after, Easter 9 Jacobi. Ford versus pomeroy. UPon a Prohibition the case was this. An unmarried woman For not setting forth Tithes. being proprietor of a Parsonage, took to a Husband, a Parishoner within the Parish, set forth and divided his tithes, and those immeadiatly took back, and the Husband alone sued for the treble value, according to the Statute of the 2. Ed. 6. And two points were moved. First, if that were a setting forth within the Statute, and by the Court that it was not, and so hath been adjudged Husband sue only. in 43. and 45. of Eliz. and 1. Jacobi, If the Husband may sue for the treble value without naming his Wife, and to that the Court would be advised, for though, that the Husband may sue alone where a thing is personal, for which he sueth, as the books of 4. Ed. 4. 31. 7. Ed. 4. 6. 15. Ed. 4. 5. and 11. are; yet where the Statute saith, that the Proprietor shall have suit for the not setting forth, etc. The Husband is not intended Proprietor as the Statute intends, but the Wife, and for that the Wife ought to join, see more. Wagginer and Wood, Pasche 8. Jacobi, in the King's bench. WAgginer sued Wood in the Court of Requests, for that, that Prohibition to the Cort of Requests. Wood had estopped his way, and in the Bill of complaint, there was no express of the place, the County, nor to what place the way did lead, and for that it was demurred to the Bill there. And notwithstanding they ordered the defendant Wood to answer, and the Attorney came and moved the Court for a Prohibition, and it was granted to him, for they could not determine the right of a way. Glover and Wendham. HEndyn of Gray's Inn, moved the Court for a Prohibition, Against Forreiner for Ornaments for the Church and for Sexton's wages. and the case was this. A man dwelling in a Parish, that is, Dale, hath land in his occupation in the Parish of Sale, the Wardens of the Church of the Parish of Sale, and other the Parishioners there make a Tax, for the reparation of the Church, for Church ornaments, and for Sexton's wages, amounting to the sum of 23 l. And the Tax of the Church being deducted, cometh but to 3 l. only. And now the foreigner which dwells in Dale, is sued in the Court Christian, by the wardens of the Church of Sale, for his part of the Tax; and he prays Prohibition: and Hendyn saith he well agreed the case of Jefferies 5. Coke, that he should be charged if this Tax had been for the reparation of the Church only: for this is in nature real. But when that is joined with other things, which are in nature personal; as ornaments of the Church, or Sexton's wages, with which as it seems he is not chargeable, than Prohibition lies for all; Fleming chief Justice: and William's Justice, thought fit that he should not have a Prohibition: for as well the reparations of the Church as the ornaments of that, are merely spiritual, with which this Court hath nothing to do, and: Fleming said, that such Tax is not any charge issuing out of Land as a rent, but every person is taxed according to the value of the land, but Yeluerton and Fenner to the contrary, that a Prohibition did lie; for the same diversity which hath been conceived at the Bar; and also they said that he which dwells in another Parish doth not intend to have benefit by the ornaments of the Church, or for the Sexton's wages, and for that it was agreed by all, by the chief Justice; Williams, and the others, that if Tax be made for the reparation of Seats of the Church, that a foreigner shall not be taxed for that, because he hath no benefit by them in particular, and the Court would advise. Michaelmas, 8. Jacobi, in banco Regis. HEnry Yeluerton moved the Court for a Prohibition to the Admiralty Admiralty. Court: and the case was, there was a bargain made between two Merchants in France; and for not performance of this bargain, one libelled against the other in the Admiralty Court. And upon the Libel it appeared that the bargain was made in Marseilles in France, and so not upon the deep Sea; and by consequence the Court of Admiralty had nothing to do with it, and Fleming chief Justice would not grant Prohibition; for though the Admiralty Court hath nothing to do with this matter, yet insomuch as this Court cannot hold plea of that (the contract being made in France) no Prohibition; but Yeluerton and Williams, Justices, to the contrary; for the bargain may be supposed to be made at Marseilles in Kent, or Norfolk, or other County within England, and so tryable before us: and it was said, that there were many precedents to that purpose, and day Contract for retaining of Tithes. given to search for them. Note, upon a motion for a Prohibition; that if a Parson contract with me by word, for keeping back my own tithes for 3. or 4. years, this is a good bargain by way of retainer; and if he sue me for my Tithes in the Ecclesiastical Court, I shall have a Prohibition upon this Composition. But if he grant to me the Tithes of another, though it be but for a year, this is not good, unless it be by Deed, see afterwards. weston's Case. A Merchant hath a Ship taken by a Spaniard, being Enemy, and a month after an English Merchant with a Ship called little Richard, Admiralty. retakes it from the Spaniard, and the owner of the Ship sueth for that in the Admiralty Court. And Prohibition was granted, because the Ship was gained by Battle of an Enemy, and neither the King nor the Admiral, nor the parties to whom the property was before shall have that, according to 7 Ed. 4. 14. See 2. and 3. Philip and Mary, Dyer 128. b. Michael. 8. Jacobi. 1610. in the King's Bench. A Man sues an Executor for a Legacy in the Spiritual Court, Prohibition. where the Executor becometh bound by his deed obligatory to the party, to pay that at a certain day, before which this suit was begun in the Spiritual Court; and the Executor moved for a Prohibition, and it was granted, for the Legacy is extinct: but by Williams, if the Bond had been made to a stranger, the Legacy is not extinct, Fenner seemed that it was so. Hillary, 1610. 8. Jacobi, in the King's Bench. Robotham and Trevor. THe Bishop of Landaff granted the Office of his Chancellor-ship At the Archess discussed in right of Office. to Doctor Trevor, and one Griffin, to be exercised by them, either jointly or severally: and it was informed by Sergeant Nicols, that Dr. Trevor for 350. l. released all his right in the said Office to Griffin, so that Griffin was the sole Officer, & after died: and that after that the Bishop granted the same Office to one Robotham, being a Practitioner in the Civil Law, for his life: And that Doctor Trevor surmising that he himself was the sole Officer by survivor-ship, made Doctor Lloyd his Substitute to execute the said Office for him, and for that, that he was disturbed by Robotham, the said Doctor Trevor being Substitute to the Judge of the-Arches, granted an Inhibition to inhibit the said Robotham for the executing of the said Office, and the Libel contains, That one Robotham hindered and disturbed Doctor Lloyd, so that he could not execute the said Office. And against this proceeding in the Arches, a Prohibition was prayed, and day was given to Doctor Trevor to show cause for why it should not be granted: And they urged that the Office was spiritual, and for that the discussing of the Right of that appertaineth to the Ecclesiastical Courts: But all the Judges agreed, That though the Office was Spiritual, to the exercising of that, yet to the Right it was Temporal, and shall be tried at the Common Law, for the Party bathe a freehold in this, see 4. and 5. of Phil. and Mary, Dyer, 152. 9 Hunt's Case, for the Office of the Register in the Admiralty, and an Assize brought for that: and so the chief Justice saith, which was adjudged in the King's Bench, for the Office of the Register to the Bishop of Norwich, between Skinner and Mynga, which ought to be tried at the Common Law. And so Blackleeches Case, as Warberton saith, in this Court for the Office of Chancellor to the Bishop of Gloucester, which was all one with the Principal case. And they said that the Office of Chancellor is within the statute of Edw. 6. for buying of Offices. And Warberton also cited the case of 22. H. 6. where action upon the case was maintained, for not maintaining of a Chaplain of the Chamber in the private Chapel of the Plaintiff very well, though it was spiritual, for the Plaintiff hath inheritance in that. But if it had been a parochial Church, otherwise it shall be for the infiniteness of the Suits, for then every Parishoner may have his action. And so in manner of Tything, the prescription is temporal, and this is the cause which shall be tried at the Common Law, and Prohibition was granted according to the first Rule. Hillary 8. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. AN Attorney of the King's Bench was sued in the Arches for a Legacy, Prohibition. being Executor, as it seems, and it was urged that he inhabited in the Diocese of Peterborough: And for that, that he was here remaining in London in the Term time, he was sued here, and upon that a Prohibition was prayed, and it was granted accordingly; For as the Lord Coke said, Though that he were remaining here, yet he was resident and dwelling within the Jurisdiction of the Bishop of Peterborough, and he said that if one Lawyer cometh and remaineth during the Term in an Inn of Court, or one Attorney in an Inn of Chancery, but dwelleth in the Country in another Diocese, he shall not be sued in the Arches, Master, Brothers, and Governors of Trinity House against Boreman. THe Master, Brothers, and Governors of Trinity House sue in the Admiralty for staying ships for Ballast. Admiralty Court one Boreman, for that, that where Queen Elizabeth by her Letters Patents under the great Seal of England, bearing date the 36. year of her Reign, had granted to them the ballasting of all Ships within the Bridge of London and the Sea, and that no Ship shall take any ballast of any other but of them: And for that that the said Boreman hath received Ballast of another within the place aforesaid, he was sued in the Admiralty Court. And upon that Prohibition was prayed; and day being given to hear both parties, the Master of Trinity-house came into the Court, and the Judges demanded of him for what end the said Suit was there begun, if it were to have the Defendant in Prison, or to have recompense, or for other purpose. But he could not give any answer to that: & upon that the Judges saying, that the place being alleged to be at Ratcliff, is within the body of the County without question, and for that▪ for the place, shall be tried at the common Law. Secondly, the Great Seal and Letters Patents of the King shall be expounded according to the course of the common Law, and the Admiralty cannot punish by Imprisonment, pecuniary punishment, nor otherwise. Thirdly, the Letters Patents are void, for, for that one charge is raised upon the Subject for the private gain of this private house; for they would not ballast any Ship under 2 d. for every tun of Ballast: But if the Letters Patents have been made for public good, peradventure they had been good, but a Prohibition was granted. Note that the said Boreman was a Dutchman, and his two Ships were arrested and stayed by the Admirals Warrant out of the said Court, so that he was enforced to find sureties to answer to the said suit, before he could have his Ships at liberty. Huntley against Cage. HEnry Huntly was Plaintiff in the high commission Court against High Commissioners and their power in Ministering O●th and taking obligation. Mary Clifford Widow Defendant, Huntley pretends that he was contracted to the Defendant, and upon that complains to the high Court of Commissioners, and that she would marry herself to Cage, and upon that the Archbishop than did grant a Warrant to a Pursuivant to attach Cage, and the said Mary Clifford, and upon that they were arrested by force of the said Warrant, and upon that they were committed to Prison, and being imprisoned, an obligation of 2000 l. was taken by the said Commissioners of the said Mary Clifford, by which she was bound to the King with condition, that she should not marry herself, nor contract to any other, until the same suit was determined in the same Court, and also to appear before the Judge of the Arches within nine days, after notice of that given. And then being dwelling in H●lborn, after that Sir William Armstrodder obtained the said obligation of the King, pretending that that was forfeited; for that, that the said Mary Clifford had married herself to Cage, before that the said suit was ended and determined. And upon that the said Mary Clifford was another time cited before the high Commissioners, and a suit was there promoted against her (Ex officio) by Serle the King's Proctor, also had the 4th part of all fines and forfeitures which grew to the King by reason of the Ecclesiastical Courts; and then was articled against her; first, that she was married or contracted to Cage, & to that she refused to answer, for that, that it was the direct question upon which the forfeiture of the Bond depended, and then this Article was referred to some Doctors, who upon consideration seemed that the Article ought to be reform, and upon that the Article was made that she lived single and unmarried in a house with the said Cage, which was as much as the first, for she could not make any direct answer to that, without discovering whether the Bond were forfeited or not, and upon all this matter a Prohibition was prayed to the high commission Court, for the said Mary Clifford. And all the Justices, that is, Coke chief Justice, Walmesley, Warburton and Foster agreed that the Obligation was void, for that it was taken by duresse of imprisonment, for they can not imprison any. Secondly that they ought not to examine any man upon his oath, to make him to betray himself, and to incur any penalty pecuniary or corporal, and Foster cited a Judgement in the Exchequer, in Ralph Bows Case, where an English Bill was exhibited against one for bringing into England, Cards without licence, and one which had a Monopoly upon that exhibited the said Bill, and upon that the Defendant demurred in Law upon that, and it was agreed that the Defendant shall not be compelled to answer to that upon his Oath, for that, that he had then incurred the danger of a penal Statute. Thirdly that they cannot take any obligation, by which a man shall be bound to appear in another Court, but only in the Court where the obligation is taken, no more than the Judges of this Court may take obligation of any man to appear before the Council in the North: And Walmesley also seemed, that these high Commissioners ought to meddle only with things of the most high nature, and not of things which concern Matrimony, and the ordinary Jurisdiction, and Coke said that the high Commissioners cannot meddle with any civil causes betwixt party and party, as keeping back tithes, or not payment of a Legacy, and lawfulness of Marriage, but the causes with which they intermeddle aught to be criminal, for otherwise they dissolve all ordinary Jurisdiction, and by their sentence every man shall be concluded, for he cannot appeal nor have any other remedy, and also he said that in civil causes, the high Commissioners, cannot send a Pursuivant to arrest any man by his Body, for that was adjudged in Humptons' Case, 42. Eliz. By Anderson and his companion, Judges in their circuit in the County of Northampton, with conference had with all the Judges of England, where the case was, a Pursuivant having a warrant to arrest the body of one for Incontinency, and to have him before the high Commissioners, and a Constable came in aid of the said Pursuivant in Execution of his warrant, and was slain, and was adjudged as before, that it was no Murder, and the reason was, for that, that the high Commissioners cannot award any warrant or process to arrest the Body of any man, but if the warrant had been lawfully awarded, it was agreed that it should be murder, but as this case was, it was resolved to be but Manslaughter, and also he said they cannot take in civil causes, where they have no Jurisdiction, but in criminal causes where they have Jurisdiction, it seems they may take obligation as the case requires. But he would not dispute that nor affirm nor disaffirm it, but as the principal case was, the obligation was made by Duresse, and so it may be avoided, and also he seemed that they could not examine any lay man upon his Oath, But in causes Matrimonial and Testamentary, and he said that so was the common Law before the making of that Statute of Articulis cleri. as it appears by a Canon made by Ottoman which was a Legate A Latere from the Pope in the 22 H. 3. and Canonical, by which is recited, that where such were drawn in length, because that lay men were examined upon their Oaths, and therefore it was provided that lay men should be examined upon their Oaths, although it did not concern causes Testamentary nor Matrimonial, the custom of England to the contrary thereof notwithstanding, see Fitzherberts' Natura brevium 41. a. Cromptons' Justice of Peace fol. 59 b. Register 36, b. and Hinds Case 18. Eliz. or the Margin in Scrogs case Dyer 175. b. So also Lambert's Justice of Peace, that those things are to be given in Charge by the Justice of Assize, and Coke saith that the Writ in the Register was framed before the Statute of Articuli cleri. And also he cited one Lees Case, who was committed for hearing of a Mass, and refused to be examined upon that upon his Oath, and had a prohibition, and so he agreed that a Prohibition should be granted, and upon that it was awarded accordingly. Note that a Prohibition was granted to the high commission Court, for that, that they examined the lawfulness of a Marriage. Symonds against Greene. NOte one suit was before the high Commissioners, and 16. were brought by Pursivants before them, for that that they were High Commission Clandestine marriage. present at a Clandestine marraige, and it was urged, that this was not to be punished, by any inferior Ordinary, in any of their consistories; for the contract was made in the Diocese of the Bishop of Worcester, and the marriage in the Diocese of Gloucester, and the Priest which married them, inhabited in the Diocese of Oxford. And yet Prohibition was awarded, and the Justices were of the opinion, that every of them, for which the Pursuivant was sent, might have an action of false imprisonment against him, for they cannot use any other process but cytation only. Admiral Court. NOte that it was urged by Haugton, that the intent of the Admiralty Co●rt, if a thing done beyond Sea shall be there tried. Statute of 13, R. 2. chapter 5. Was not to Inhibit the Admiral Court, to hold Plea of any thing made beyond Sea, but only of things made within the Realm, which pertains to the common Law, and is not in prejudice of the King or common Law, if he hold plea over the Sea; and that this was the intent of the Statute appears by the preamble. But to this Coke saith, that the office of the Admiral was an ancient office, though it hath been otherwise conceived by some, for he hath seen Records and Libels and proceedings in the time of King john, where he was called Marina Anglie, in the time of Ed. 3. And also he said that the words of the Statute are in the negative. That is, that the Admiral nor his Deputy, do not meddle from henceforth of any thing done within the Realm, but only or things done upon the Sea; and he said that it was adjudged in one wright's case, that a thing made at Constanticople shall notbe tried in the Admiralty, for itought to be made upon the deep Sea, otherwise they shall hold no trial of that, see 48. or 50. of Ed. 3. 2 Ed. 2 F, obligation, and if a man be slain or murdered beyond Sea, the offender shall not be punished in the Admiralty: Walmesly and Warburton Justices, agree, that if a thing be done beyond the Sea, and may be tried by the common law, there the admiral Court shall have no Jurisdiction. But if an obligation bears date beyond Sea, or be so local that it cannot be tried by the common law there, if the Admiral hold Plea of that, Prohibition shall not be awarded, for it is not to the prejudice of the King, nor of the common law. But if the party can have his remedy by the common law, the common law shall be preferred. And if at the common law one matter comes in question upon a conveyance, or other Instrument made beyond Sea: according to the course of the civil law, or other law of the Nations where it was made; the Judges ought to consult with the Civilians or others which are expert in the same law; and according to their information, give Judgement, though that it be made in such form, that the common law cannot make any construction of it. Michaelmas 8. Jacobi 1610. in the common Bench. IF a Parson agree & contract withme, that I shall keep back my own Agreement by word ●…p back tithes. tithes if that be made after that I have sown my Corn, and for the same year only, this shall be good: and if the Parson sue in the spiritual Court for tithes, I shall have a prohibition; but if it be for more years than one or before the Corn be sowed, this shall not be good, by Coke and Foster against Warburton, and Coke said it was adjudged in the King's Bench in Parson Booths Case, that a contract made with a parishioner for keeping back of his tithes for so many years as he shall be Parson, was not good, and so it was Wellowes Case here also, but it was agreed by them all, that such a contract or agreement for the tithes of any other was void, but only of the party himself, which was party to agreement, and that ought to be made by way of keeping them back. See before, Easter 8. of James, See 20 H. 6. and the 21. H. 7. 21. b. Pasche 1611. 9 Jacobi in the Common Bench. THE question was upon a motion to have a Prohibition to the Where a Prohibition shall be granted without Action hanging. Precedent and Council of Wales, if that shall be granted without action hanging. And Coke chief Justice said, that the Record of the book of 38. H. 6. agreed with the Report, and is witness, John Prisott, and 2. Ed. 4. Is adjudged in the point; but yet he advised that there shall be information. Walmesley Justice said that this is no action. But Coke, Foster, and Warburton said, that it is an action fufficient, upon which a Prohibition shall be granted, and Coke said, that if they hold Plea of a thing, out of their Instructions; he would grant Prohibition without action hanging. But if they proceed in erroneous manner, in a thing which is within their Instructions, he would not grant Prohibition without action hanging, or Information. Sir William Chanceys Case. SIr William Chancey, was cited before the Ordinary of the Diocese of Peterbrough, and sentenced to do Penance for Adultery; and this he commuted, and after that he lived in Adultery High Commissioners Alimony, Adultery. with one in his house, and had two Bastards by her, and continued in Adultery with her for many years: and for that he was cited before the high Commissioners, and for that, that he would not allow his wife competent alimony; who had separated himself from her company, in respect that he lived in Adultery, as aforesaid; and for that, that he refused to become bound to perform the order and the sentence of the high Commissioners, he was committed to the Fleet, and he prayed Habeas Corpus for his Enlargement, and also a Prohibition to be directed to the high Commissioners; and it was moved by nichols that fining is not Justifiable by the high Commissioners no more than Imprisonment; he said that he was cited out of his Diocese against the Statute of 23. H. 8. The which Statute is commanded to be put in execution by the Stat. of 1 El. Secondly, the offence that is Adultery, is not an Enormious-crime, and for that shall not be punished by the high Commissioners, as it appears By the Statute of 1. El. But by the Ordinary. Thirdly, the high Commissioners by the Stat. of 1 El. aught to observe the same course and order in their proceedings, that the Ordinary used before the making of the Statute of 1. El. etc. That they could not fine nor Imprison. But he agreed that the Statute 1 H. 7 gives authority to the Ordinary to Imprison for Adultery, but then the person ought to be Ecclesiastical, so that he agreed, if Sir William Chancey had been an Ecclesiastical person, the Ordinary might Imprison him for Adultery, and for alimony they ought to give no remedy if the Husband would inhabit together with his wife; as he said Sir William Chancey desired. But if the Husband refuse to dwell together with his wife, or thrust her out of his house; and will not suffer her to dwell with him, than the Ordinary may compel the Husband to allow alimony for his wife; but the high Commissioners ought not to proceed upon that, for this is no erroneous crime, for by that the party shall lose his benefit of Appeal, which he hath from the Ordinary, to the Metrapolitan, for here the party cannot appeal to any, nor hath any remedy. If the Queen will grant Commission to reneve, and so he concluded that, for that these matters appear upon the return of the Habeas Corpus to be the causes of his commitment, he prayed that Sir William Chancey might be delivered out of Prison: and prohibition of staying the proceedings of the high Commissioners. Doderidge the King's Sergeant for the case of Sir William Chancey argued that the return consisted of two parts. That is, Adultery and alimony, and to the manner of the proceedings he would not speak; for he said that the Court had ajudged, that the high Commissioners by the Statute of 1. Eliz. Ought not to proceed upon any offences, but those which are Enormous; but he intended that the offence at the first was not Enormous, being but Adultery and alimony, yet when Sir William Chancey was sentenced for that before the Ordinary, and then commuted his penance, and after that lived divers years in Adultery with two several women, and had two Bastards; and then he became Incorrigible, and by consequence the offence is become Enormous, and is properly to be determined before the high Commissioners, and so prayed he might be sent back, and that no Prohibition should be granted; and at another day, Foster and Warburton said, that the high Commissioners ought not to meddle with these matters. Nor could not Fine nor Imprison for that: But Walmesley said that the Statute of 1. Eliz. Hath referred that to the discretion of the King, and the King by his Commission, hath given them power to meddle with that; and also he seemed that this was an Enormous crime for this is, against an express commandment, that is. Thou shalt not commit Adultery, and he intends there can be no greater offence than that, and it seems to him that the word Enormous ought not to be so expounded as it is expounded by the other Judges, that is, an Exorbitant crime, but Enormous is where a thing is made without a rule or against Law, for in every action ●f trespass the word is used (Et alia enormia ei intulit) and yet these are not intended Exorbitant offences, but other trespasses of the nature of them, which are first expressed particularly, and so the Statute hath been expounded for many years, and to the Imprisonment he said, that the high Commissioners have Imprisoned for the space of 20. years, and though that the Statute doth not give power to them to Imprison, yet this is contained within the Letters Patents, and the statute hath given power to the King to give to them what authority he pleaseth by his Letters Patents, and for that, that it hath been used for so long a time he would not suddenly alter that, but gave day till the beginning of the next Term for the argument of that. Coke chief Justice said, that it was agreed by all that the Imprisonment was unlawful: and if a Person be imprisoned which hath the Privilege of this Court, this Court may deliver him without Bail, for the King is the supreme head by the Common Law, as to the coercive power, and that the Letters Patents of the King cannot give power to imprison, where they cannot imprison by the Common Law, and so it was adjudged in sympson's Case, 42. Eliz, Which was cited before the high Commissioners for adultery with Fists Wife, and adjudged there that they cannot imprison for that; and he saith that an exposition with the time is the best, and for that see the ninth of Eliz. Dyer, and the 18 of Eliz. And also it appears by the Statute of 5. Eliz. that awards a (Capias excommunicatum) which could not be imprisoned before that, and upon this Sir William Chancey was bailed; and after by meditation of the Metrapolitan, he was reconciled to his wife, and this was the end of this Business. Pasch 9 Jacobi 1611. in the common Bench. As yet Urrey against Bowyer. HVtton Serjeant argued for the Defendant, the question is, if lands which were parcel of the Possessions of the Hospital of Saint john's of Jerusalem should be discharged of tithes by the statute of 31. H. 8. or 32. H. 8. in the hands of the Patentee, and he seemed that the privilege was personal and annexed to persons of the said order; for it is confessed, that it came by reason of the order of the Cestercians, as appears by the Canon: The words of which are; that they should hold their lands, etc. Also it appears by the statute of 2. H. 4. 4. That it is personal by which it was enacted, that the religious of the order of Cestercians, that had purchased Bills to be discharged, to pay tithes, should be in the state they were before; by which it appears that it is annexed to their persons, and not to their lands, so that their Farmers cannot take benefit of that, Secondly, the privilege was annexed to this order by canon, which is a thing spiritual, and hath no power to meddle with the lands of any man, but the proceeding of that aught to be by inhibition, or excommunication, see 11. H. 4. 47. 19 H. 6. 3. This privilege by the canon which gives that, shall be taken strictly. And so is the opinion of their own expositors, see Panormitan Canon 37. So that there is an apparent difference between that and the lands, which came to the King by the statute of 31. H. 8. For by that the King is discharged of payment of tithes, and so are his Patentees. It seems to me, that the construction of the Cannon may be in another course different from the rules of the common law as it was ajudged in Buntings case; that a woman might sue a Divorce without naming her Husband very well, and 11. H. 7. 9 The pleading of the sentence, or other act done in the spiritual Court, differs from the pleading of a temporal act done in temporal Courts, and 34 H. 6. 14. a, Administration was committed upon condition, that if the first Administrator did not come into England, that he should have the Administration, which is against the Common Law, for there one authority countermands another: and 42 Ed. 3, 13. A Prior which hath such privilege to be discharged of Tithes, makes a Feoffment, and his Feoffee pays Tithes to the Prior, and this was of Lands which were parcel of the possessions of Saint john's of Jerusalem, and upon that he inferred that this privilege is personal, and if it be so; it is determined by dissolution of the order as it is determined in, 21 H 7. 4. That all Parsonages impropriate to them, by the dissolutions are become prsentable and so of these which were annexed to the Templars, for these shall not be transferred to Saint john's, though that the Lands are 3 Ed. 1. 11. By Herle accordingly Fitz. Natura Brevium 33 K. and, 35. H. 6. 56. Land given in Frankalmaine to Templars and after transferred to Hospitallers of Saint john's, the privilege of the Tenure is paid, and so shall it be in case of Tithes, being a personal privilege that shall not be transferred to the King, and to the Statute of 32. H. 8. The general words of that do not extend to discharge the Land of Tithes, though that the Statute makes mention of Tithes, if there be not a special provision by the Statute that the Lands shall be discharged, and this appears by the words of the Statute of, 31, H. 8. where the general words are as general and beneficial as the words of this Statute, and yet there is aspeciall provision for the discharge of the payment of tithes, by which it appears that the general words donot discharge that, and so the general words of 1 Ed. 6. are as large and beneficial as the general words of the Statute of 31 H. 8. And yet this shall not discharge the Land of payment of Tithes, and this compared to the Case of the marquis of Winchester, of a writ of Error, that, that shall not be transferred to the King by Attainder of Land in tail for treason by the Statute of 26 H. 8. or 33 H. 8. And so of rights of action; and so it was adjudged in the time of H. 8. that if the founder of an Abbey which hath a Corrody be attaint of Treason, the King shall not have the Corrody; and he agreed that the Hospital of Saint john's of Jerusalem is a house of Religion for this is agreed by Act of Parliament, and the word Religion mentioned in the Statute more than seventeen times, and also it seems to him that the Statute of 31 H. 8 shall not extend to that, for this gives and establishes Lands which come by grant, surrender, etc. And that shall not be intended those which come by Act of Parliament, no more than the statute of 13 Eliz. extends to Bishops, 1. and 2. Philip and Mary, Dyer, 109. 38. The statute of Westminster the 2. chap. 41. Which gives (Contra formam collationis) to a common person, founder of an Abbey, Priory, Hospital, or other house of religion, without speaking expressly of a Bishop; and yet it seems that this extends to an alienation made in Fee simple or Fee tail by the Bishop, 46 Ed. 3. Forfeiture 18. But it is resolved in the Bishop of Canterbury's Case, 2 Coke 46, that the statute of 31 H. 8. shall not extend to these lands which come to the K. by the statute of 1 Ed. 6. to make them exempt from paying of Tithes, and to the Case in 10. Eliz. that is but an opinion conceived, and that the Prior hath this privilege from Rome, and that the Farmer shall pay Tithes, and the question was in the Chancery; and upon consideration of the statute of, 31 H. 8. It seems that the Patentee himself shall be discharged (as long as by his own hands he tills it) and the statute of, 32. H. 8. Upon which the state of the question truly consists, was not considered, and also it was not there judicially in question. And to the case of Spurling against Graves in Prohibition, consultation was granted, for that, that the statute was mistaken, and so the award was upon the form of the pleading only, and not upon the matter, and so he concluded, and prays consultation, Houghton Sergeant Houghton. to the contrary, and he agreed that it is a personal privilege: and if the Order of St. John's had been dissolved by death, that then the privilege shall be determined, and this appears by the Stat. of 2. H. 4. 4. before cited: and also the case of 10. Eliz. Dyer, 277. 60. did doubt of that: but he relied upon the manner & words of pleading; that is, that Hospitallers are not held to pay Tithes, & it is as a real composition made betwixt the Lord and another Spiritual person, of which the Tenants shall take advantage, as it is resolved in the Bishop of Winchester's case. Also as if a man grant a Rend charge, if the Grantee die without Heir, the grant is determined: But if the Grantee grant that over, and after dies without Heir, yet the Rent continues, 27. H. 8. Or if Tenant in tail grant Rend in fee, and dies, the grant is void. But if he after suffers a recovery, or makes a Feoffment, the Rent continues good till the Estate tail be recontinued, as it is resolved in Capulets case. So here the order of Templars hath been determined by death, the privilege hath been determined, but insomuch that the Land was transferred by Parliament to the King, this continueth. Also the words of the Statute of 32. H. 8. are apt, not only to transfer all the Interest which the Prior had in his Lands, but also his Privileges and Immunities to the King; and he agreed, it is not material if the words Tithes are mentioned in the Statute or not. But the word upon which he relies, and which comprehends this case, is the word Privilege, which takes away the Law; for where the Law binds them to pay Tithes, the privilege discharges them: And the words of the Statute are taken in the most large extent, that is, all Manors, etc. Privileges, Immunities, etc. of what nature, etc. be they Ecclesiastical, or Temporal, which appertain and belong, etc. by or in the right of their Religion; but the Privileges and Immunities they have in the right of their Religion, and these the Statute of 32. H. 8. gives to the King, and there is no cause that they should surmount, or that the Statute should give to them more favour than the former Statute hath given to those religious houses which were dissolved by the Statute of 31. Eliz. For the Hospitallers of S. John's were favourers and maintainers of the Pope's Jurisdictions as well as the others, as it appears by the Statute of 32. H. 8. Also the words of 32. H. 8. hath only the words of the King and his Successors, and doth not speak of his Assigns, which words are expressed in the Statute of 32. H. 8 But it is provided by 32. H. 8. that the King cannot use at his will and pleasure, which amounts to so much. Also the Statute of 31. H. 8. extends to all Religious houses by express words: and it shall not be intended, that the intent of the makers of the statute was to omit that which were to be of the Order of S. John's of Jerusalem, when the mischief was in equal degree. And it hath been agreed that they are religious persons, and that they were under the obedience of the Pope, for so they are described in the statute of 17. R. 2. by which the possessions of the Templars was transferred to them, so that on the matter they are religious, which shall not be intended so largely, as every Christian may be said religious, but Secular, and Regular, which vow Obedience, Chastity, and Poverty; and for the proof of this, he cited a precedent. Also it seems to him that the Statute of 30. H. 8. extends to those Lands which come to the King by the statute of 32. H. 8. And it is not like to the Archbishop of Canterbury's case, 2 Coke, 47. upon the statute of 1. Ed. 6. For that Statute gives the Lands to the King for other causes, and not for the same causes which are contained in the Statute of 31. H. 8. But the Statute of 32. H. 8. is for the same cause, and with the same respect to Religion. But if these Lands have come to the King by Exchange, or by Attainder, than they shall not be intended to be within the Statute of 31. H. 8. But if another Statute be made in 32. H. 8. by which all Religious houses have been given to the King, this shall be intended within the Statute of 31. H. 8. And the Judges before whom the cause depended judicially, ought not to be ignorant of that, and so he prayed that a Prohibition might be. Shirley Sergeant for the Defendant, at another day in Trinity Term 9 Jacobi, argued, that the question Shirley. only depended upon the Statute of 32. H. 8. upon which the Prohibition is founded with the Statute of 31. H. 8. by which the Lands of Monasteries are given to the King, do not extend to those Lands which are given after by Parliament. But he intented that the Constitution which discharges the Templars of the payment of Tithes is spiritual, and extends only to spiritual persons which may prescribe in not tything; see 38. Ed. 3. 6. 2 of Coke, the Bishop of Winchester's Case, 44. Also he intended when an appropriation was made to the Templars, that this is determined by dissolution of their Order. So upon the Statute of H. 5. of Prior's Aliens, which have Impropriations, or which have Rend issuing out of them; and after the Impropriation is dissolved, the Rent is gone, for the Impropriation is dissolved. Also he took exception to the pleading, for that, that it is only a branch of the Statute of 32. H. 8. And then by virtue of the premises he was seized, which is not good: and so he concluded, that it was a good cause of demurrer upon the Prohibition, and prayed consultation. Barker Sergeant for the Plaintiff seems the contrary, and Barker. yet he agreed, that he could not take benefit of the Statute of 31. H. 8. for that, that these Lands came to the King by another Statute, but he relied upon the words of the 32. H. 8. which was made only for the dissolution of the Hospital of St. John's of Jerusalem, Tithes are as ancient as any thing that the Church hath, and before that any Law was written, for Abraham paid Tithes to Melchisedeck, but it doth not appear that he paid the tenth part; but Tithes are due by the Judicial Law of God, and the King hath power to appoint what quantity shall be paid. But at the beginning there were Sacrifices, Oblations, and Tithes And it was ordained by Edgar, King of this Realm, that Tithes should be given to the Mother Church. Also Edmund, Ethelstone, William the Conqueror, and the Council of Magans specially provided that Tithes should be paid, but did not appoint when they should be paid. But the first Law which appointed the quantity was made in the time of Edw. 1. and this ordained when they ought to pay the Tenth with the fear of God. And it was resolved in Fox and Cresbrooks case in the Commentaries, after severance they are temporal, and Action lies against him which carries them away, as of Mortuary, as it is resolved, 10. H. 4. 1. 6. And before the Council of Lateran, every one might pay his Tithes to what person he would, and then were paid to Monasteries as Oblations: But of Tithes which are due to any by prescription, he which pays them hath no such election, but aught to pay them to him which claims them by prescription, 14. H. 4. 17. If a Parson of a Parish claim Tithes in another Parish as portion of Tithes due by prescription to his Rectory, he ought to show the place specially. So if Nuns prescribe to have a portion of Tithes, they ought to show the place, for it is a question if they are spiritual, or not; for their office is only to pray in their house, 24. Ed. 3. So the book of Entries, if a man claim Tithes to his Pupil, he ought to show in what place the Tithes lie, in the 17. Ed. 2. The order of the Templars was dissolved, and their possessions annexed to St. John's of Jerusalem: and they did not claim by any Bull of the Pope, nor other spiritual Canon but by prescription, which is privilege and private Common law, and this appears by the Statute of Westminster, 2 Chap. 47. That is, that they are conservators of his privileges. Also he saith, that the Statute of 2. H. 4. discharges Farmers without speaking of Privileges. And the Statute of 7. H. 4. 6. useth the same words which are contained in the Stat. of 32. H. 8. That is, that none shall put in execution any Bulls, containing any privileges to be discharged of payment of Tithes. And Mephams' Canon in time of Ed. 1. saith, Let the custom be observed with the fear of God. And another Canon, That custom of not Tything, or of the manner of Tything, if they paid less than the tenth part, see Panormitan upon that; seek of the Case between Vesey and Weeks in the Exchequer, upon the Statute of 27. H. 8. for the dissolution of small Monasteries. Also the Lord Darcy in quo warranto, was discharged of purveyance by Patent granted by the King Edward 6. of such privileges which such a one had, and by the same reason the King shall be discharged of Tithes by the Act of Parliament; also he remembered the Book of 10. Eliz. Dyer, 277. 60. to be resolved in the point: and also 18. Eliz. Dyer, the Parson of Pekerks case, 399. 16. upon the Statute of 31. H. 8. and so concluded, and prayed judgement for the Plaintiff, and that the Prohibition should stand, and it was adjourned. Trinity 9 Jacobi, Priddle against Napper. UPon a special verdict the cause was, The Prior of Montague was seized of an Advowson, and of divers acres of Land, and the 20. of H. 8. the King licenced him to appropriate that; and 21. H. 8. the Bishop which was Ordinary assented, and after that, the Church became void, that the Prior might hold it appropriate; and 27. H. 8. the Incumbent died, so that the Appropriation took effect, and was united to the possession of the Rectory Appropriate, and also of the Land out of which Tithes were due to the said Prior, in respect of the said Rectory, and then the Priory is dissolved, and the Impropriation and the Lands also given to the King, by the Statute of 31. H. 8. which granted the Impropriation to one, and the Lands to another. And if the Patentee of the Land shall hold it discharged of the payment of Tithes, in respect of that unity, was the question: And Harris, Sergeant for the Defendant, in the Prohibition, that the unity ought to be perpetual and lawful, as it was adjudged between Knightley and Spencer, 2 Coke, 47. a. cited in the Archbishop of Canterbury's case; and for that unity by, or by lease for years, or for two or three years, as in the case at the Bar, shall not be sufficient to make discharge of the payment of Tithes: and so it was adjudged, Pasche 40. Eliz. Rot. 454. between Child and Knightley, that is, that the unity of the possession ought to be of time, that the memory of man doth not run to the contrary. And in the argument of this Case it was said by Popham chief Justice, that if no Tithes were paid after the Statute, that then it shall be intended, that no Tithes were paid before the Statute, and so he concluded, and prayed Consolation, see 2 Coke 48. a. The Archbishop of Canterbury for the reason by which unity of possession is discharged of payment of Tithes, that is, for that, that some houses of Religion were discharged by Bulls of the Pope, and many were founded before the Council of Lateran: and for that it shall be infinite, and in a manner impossible to find by any searches, the means by which they are discharged; the unity is no discharge in respect of itself, for the reasons aforesaid, and none may know if Tithes were paid or not before the union: And if Tithes be not paid in time of memory by a house of Religion, and they lease of that for years, and receive Tithes, than the lease expires two years before the Dissolution of the same house, the King shall not be discharged of the payment of Tithes by the Statute of 31. H. 8. by Coke and Walmesley, against Warburton and Foster. Dorwood against Brikinden. UPon the Statute of 5 Ed. 3. a man libelled in the Spiritual Court for Wood cut, and a Consultation was granted; Yet the Defendant in the Court Christian might have a new Prohibition, if it appeared the first Consultation was not duly granted: So if a man libel for Tithes for divers years, and Prohibition is granted for part of the years, and after that a Consultation is awarded, yet the Plaintiff may have a new Prohibition for the residue of the time, notwithstanding the Statute of 50 Ed. 3. and that it be upon oneself same libel. Admiral Court. NOte that the Admiral cannot imprison for any offence; but if the Court hath Jurisdiction of the Original cause, and sentence Court of Admiralty's Jurisdiction. is there given, this sentence may be executed upon the Land, 19 H. 6. But no Ordinary may meddle out of his own Diocese, 8. H. 6. 3. 2. H. 4. The Parson of Salt-ashes Case; That this Court took notice of Jurisdiction of all Ecclesiastical Courts, and Ordinaries, for they write unto them for trial of Bastardy and Matrimony. And there are 3. Legates, First a born Legate, as the Archbishop of Canterbury and York, Rheims, and Pylazam. Second, a Latere, as all Cardinals. The third a Lagate given, as those which have their Authority, by commission, and Lynwood Provinc. saith, that the Archbishop of Canterbury, as Archbishop, cannot meddle out of his Diocese of Canterbury and his Peculiars, but as a Legate borne, which is in respect of his Office, he hath prerogative, and if a man inhabit in one Diocese, and aught to pay tithes to another which inhabits in another Diocese, there the Ordinary aught to prefer the suit to the Metrapolitan, but seek what Ordinary shall transfer it. Trinity 9 Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. Jones against Boyer. HEnry Jones Parson of Bishopton sued Bowen the Executor of Holland, the last Incumbent in the Arches for Dilapidations, upon which a Prohibition was prayed upon the statute of, 23. H. 8. for that, that it was sued out of his Diocese, which was Saint david's, but it appears that the Vicar general of the same Ordinary hath made general request to the Metropolitan, to determine that without showing any cause special, and if the inferior Ordinary may transmit any cause, but only for the causes mentioned in the statute of, 23. H. 8. And if the causes ought to be expressed in the Instrument, was the question: note that the general words of the statute of, 23 H. 8. chap. 9 Rastall Citation 2. are afterwards many particulars, or in case that any Bishop or any inferior Judge, having under him Jurisdiction in his own right and title, or by commission, make request or instance to the Archbishop, Bishop, or other inferior Ordinary or Judge, to take, treat, examine, or determine the matter before him or his substitute. And that to be done in case only where the Law civil or Canon doth affirm execution of such request or instance of Jurisdiction, to be lawful or tolerable, and for the better discussing of this question, the Judges had appointed to hear two Doctors of the Civil Law, which at this day attended the Court; the first Doctor Martin said, that these general words have reference to the Executor, and not to the maker of the request, and this request may be made for all causes, but aught to be made to him, which hath concurrent or immediate Jurisdiction to which appeal may be made, and that the Archbishop hath ordinary Jurisdiction in all the diocese of his Province; and this is the cause that he may visit, but this Jurisdiction is bound and tied up to the Ordinary, and when he will leave that at large, than the Archbishop may proceed, as he is Archbishop, and the cause of request need not to be contained in the Instrument, for when the power which was bound up is unbound and at large, than he may proceed: Doctor Talbot, that the request is referred to three, to the Bishop, Dean, and Archdeacon. And the persons to whom the request is to be made are three: The Archbishop, two Bishops, three, or superior Judge, and the Bishop and his Commissary are all one, and request made by the Commissary shall be as good, as request made by the Bishop himself. Also that the Precedent may transmit, and make request to the Emperor, as it appears in the Book of Justinian of the Laws, 2. Book. So Baldus in reference made of inferior Magistrates to Superior, doth defend, that the Archbishop is Judge of the whole Province, yet is bound. So Speculata in his Title of Relations, of which relation shall be made: So in the Council of Antioch, that the Metropolitan is mediate Judge in the first part of the Canon, and for that relation shall be made to him. Passonilis de officio, etc. disputes: If the Archbishop may have consistory in the Diocese of the Ordinary. Hostiensis, that the Ordinary may transmit a cause, though the parties be unwilling. Panormitan in capite pastoralis, 8. Question 6. decretals of the Canon Law. Philippus Francus upon the decretals of the Canon Law, That the Archbishop cannot meddle in the Diocese of any Ordinary without his assent. Dominicans upon the same Decretal: And so he concludes; that when the Ordinary makes a request to the Archbishop, he may meddle without the assent of the parties, and the stranger, when the parties assent. And they agreed, that generally the Archdeacon ought to transfer to the Bishop, and so the Bishop to the Archbishop: But they agreed also that here in England it was prescription and usage, that every Archdeacon hath used to appeal immediately to the Archbishop, and so ought the Request within this statute to be made accordingly. Also they agreed, that if a man inhabit in one Diocese, he hath cause to sue for Tithes in the same Diocese in which he inhabits: and in another Diocese, there he ought to sue in the Diocese where the Defendant did inhabit, and not where the Tithes are payable, nor where the Plaintiff inhabits, and the Principal case was ordered accordingly. Michaelmas, 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Enby, versus Walcott. THe Defendant was sued before the Ordinary in the County of Lincoln for defamation. And the Suit was begun before the last general pardon, ex officio, and the Costs taxed after the time limited by the pardon: and Prohibition was granted, in so much that all things promoted, ex officio, are discharged by the pardon; and in so much as the principal was pardoned, the Costs being but as accessary shall be also pardoned, notwithstanding that they were taxed after the pardon. Powis against Bowen. UPon consideration had of Instructions given to the Precedent and Council of Wales, it was resolved by all the Justices of this Court, that the Council there ought not to proceed upon English Bill, which contains title. But the form of that aught to be only, that the Plaintiff was in possession for three years: and that the Defendants, which ought to be always more than one, riotously, and with force have entered upon him, and so ought to be restored to his possession. And in so much that the Bill contains Title in this case, and that the Defendants have entered upon him, and disseised him in form of Assize, and doth not say riotously and with force, Prohibition was granted. Butler against Thayer. THe Lord Admiral granted a Commission under the Seal of the Admiral Court to Thayer, for measuring of all the Corn which shall be transported from one Town or place to another within the Creeks, which are within the first Bridges, and to have so much for every bushel measuring, and granted, that if any resisted, to arrest them, and commit them till they had found sureties to appear in the Admiral Court. And at Milton, and Raineham in Kent, Thayer endeavoured to put his Commission in execution, and Butler resisted him, and was for that arrested, and sued in the Admiral Court, and for stay of that prayed Prohibition, & it was granted, in so much that the Admiral hath not power to meddle with the first Bridges for civil causes, but only for Maims and death of men: but for causes made upon the high Sea, where the Mariners have the better knowledge in the Common Law, he cannot try that: See the time of Edw. 1. Avowry, 192. 8. Ed. 2. 45. Ed. 3. Stamford, 51. 7. R. 2. Statham Trespass. Sir John Watts. CErtain goods of a Subjects of the King of Spain's, were forfeited Admiralty. upon the high Sea, and after were brought here into England, & there sold to Sir John Wats: and the goods were attached in the hands of Sir John Watts by Process out of the Admiralty, and there a libel was exhibited against the goods remaining in the hands of Sir John Watts, and Sir John Watts was not made party to the Suit. And Sir John Watts prayed a Prohibition▪ in so much that-they bought them in open Market: And by this Suit in the Admiral Court, the property will be drawn in question there, where the Suit was prosecuted in the name of Awlenso de Valasco the Spanish Ambassador, Legier here. And Prohibition was granted. Michael. 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Jennings against Audley. PRohibition was prayed to the Admiral, and the Libel showed Prohibition. to the Court, which contained the Contract, was made in the straits of Mallico, within the Jurisdiction of the Admiralty, and doth not say upon the deep Sea. And it was agreed, that in all eases, where the Defendant admits the Jurisdiction of the Admiral Court, by pleading there, Prohibition shall not be granted, if it do not appear by the Libel, that the act was made out of their Jurisdiction; and that, though that Sentence was given, yet if that appears within the Libel, Prohibition shall be granted. Note that a man was sued before the Ordinary in the Diocese of Norwich, for infamous words, and after sentence there given, he appealed to the Arches: and the first sentence being there affirmed, he appealed to the Delegates; and before that the proceedings were transmitted, Prohibition was granted by this Court, in so much that the offence was pardoned by general pardon. But this notwithstanding the Register transmitted the proceedings: And after for his fees due for that, he exhibited a Bill in the Court of Requests, and Prohibition was prayed in this Court for to stay his proceedings there. And it was granted, in so much that the original ground of the Suit, that is, the infamous words were pardoned by the general pardon; and for this all the proceedings were erroneous, and their transmitting after. And afterwards the Prohibition received willingly; And for these causes Prohibition was granted to the Court of Requests. Thomas Baxter against Thomas Hopes. IN Prohibition the Plaintiff Suggests, that within such a Town was such a custom; that every Inhabitant which maintained a family, and dairy, for manuring his land, and maintenance of his family, have used of time out of memory, etc. to pay tithes of Corn, growing upon his Farm, in kind, and by reason thereof have used to be discharged of after crop, of the said land. And also that they have used to pay tithe milk, and tithe Calves in kind, and by reason thereof have been discharged of tithe of young and barren Beasts, and the Plaintiff suggested further, that he occupied a Farm and maintained a family, and dairy, for the manurance of that, and maintenance of his family; and hath paid his tithe Corn, and milk, and Calves, in kind: And for that aught to be discharged of tithes for the after crop, and for young and barren Beasts, and for the tenths of which, suit was begun in the Court Christian, and upon demurrer joined upon Prohibition, the custom was debated whether it were good or no, and it was moved first by Houghton Sergeant for the Defendant, that the custom was not good, insomuch that by that the Plaintiff was not to pay more, then by the Law he ought, for he ought to pay tithe Corn, and milk and Calves, in kind: And this is no more than the Law compels him to do, and this cannot be a consideration to discharge him of other things. For all things which renew aught to pay tithes, of Common Right, as after pastute, and barren cattle, and Corn, and milk. And all other things which renew; if it be not good custom to the contrary, which is grounded upon consideration; and then to consider how much consideration shall be valuable in other Cases, and what not: And to that it appears in 9 Ed. 4. 18. and 19; in Trespass upon the Statute of 5. Rich. 2. The Defendant pleads accord, that the Plaintiff entered into his land again, and agreed that that was not bar, insomuch as agreement without satisfaction is not bar, and entry into lands, is no more than he might do without the agreement, and for that it is not good for default of consideration; so in 12. H. 7. 15. a. in trespass for goods taken; the Defendant pleads arbitrement, that is; for that that the Defendant, hath taken the goods of the Plaintiff, and that he should deliver them to the Plaintiff, in full satisfaction: And agreed that this is no good award, insomuch that this cannot be satisfaction, for that that the goods were the proper goods of the Plaintiff: And although, that he hath his goods again; yet he is not satisfied for the taking. But if the award had been, that the Defendant should redeliver his goods, and carry them to such a place certain, at his own costs and charges, than it had been good: See 45. Ed. 3. accordingly. So in an action upon the Case, upon an Assumpsit made in consideration that the Plaintiff hath paid due debt, is not good, for this is no consideration, and so in the principal Case the Prescription is not good, insomuch that he hath not suggested more or other consideration, which by the Law he ought to do: But he agreed that if he had suggested, that the Plaintiff, had ploughed and manured the land, and disposed of the tithes of the Corn, for the benefit of the Parson, in other manner than the Law compelled him; then the first prescription had been good, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant: Hutton Sergeant for the Plaintiff, in the Prohibition seems the contrary, and that the Suggestion, and Prescription, and Custom, Contained in that are good: And to the Objection, that it is no consideration, that the Custom may be founded; he intended, that this is a ground upon immunity subsequent to the Consideration, as of things which are not tythable, as in the general Case of things, which are for the maintenance of the family; for Ploughing and Manuring of the land, shall not pay tithes, as in a suit for tithes for herbage, suggestion that they were depastured, by labouring cattle, which Ploughed and Manured the Land, of which the Parson had tithes, or small Wood, which are cut or employed for the fencing of a Farm, or fuel spent in the Farm, shall not pay tithes; insomuch that without that, the Farm cannot be Manured nor the Famaly sustained. And so by consequence the Parson shall not have any tithe Corn, insomuch that no Corn will grow without manuring; and also the Parson by those hath the more tithe Corn, and so he hath consideration in that, for the better that the Farm is fenced and manured the more tithe the Parson shall have: So the Farmer may be discharged of tithes, for Rakeing, insomuch that he Mows and Cocks the tithes for the Parson at his own costs, and this is sufficient consideration: And also he insisted upon the Statute of 2. Ed. 6. Which provides that tithes shall be paid in the same manner, as they were paid for 40. years before, and he cited one Jessopps case to be adjudged in Prohibition; Pasche 36. Eliz. Upon suit in Court Christian, for flocks, and locks of Wool: And the Custom was alleged, that the owner had wound the tithe for the Parson, and in consideration of that, aught to be discharged of tithes, of locks and flocks, if they be not made by Covin, to defraud the Parson; and these were demanded by the name of wool dispersed, and 18. Eliz; it was adjudged, that tithes shall, not be made for Brick, and in Prohibition; the suggestion was grounded upon the general immunity, and insomuch that it was made of land, for which no tithes are to be paid; insomuch that it doth not renew, that for this cause tithes ought not to be paid, for the Brick which is made of that, and so of Ours, and so Loppings, and Toppings, and bark of Trees shall pay no tithes: But are within the Statute of 40. Eliz. 5. of wood to be fall'n, as it is resolved in Soby and Molyns case in the Commentaries: And he agreed that for herbage the tenth gate, or profit of that aught to be paid, if there be not a custom to the contrary; but in the Principal case he intended that▪ that was paid in the Corn, and in that the Parson hath recompense and consideration as before, and so he concludes and prays Judgement for the Plaintiff: Dodrigde Sergeant of the King argued that the Custom is not good, as it is here suggested, for the consideration is of some things which ought to pay tithes in kind, and so upon the matter is no sideration at all, for he intended that tithes should be due by divine right, as due by the Manuring and Tillage of the occupier, in whose soever hands that the land cometh; if it be not in the hands of the Parson himself, 30 H. 8. 43. Dyer. 20. And for that a Parson shall have tithes against his own Feoffment, 43. Ed. 3 13 a. 1. Coke. Albanyes case, 111. a. 32 H. 8. B. Tithes the 17 accordingly, and unity of possession shall not extinguish them: And also he intended there are two manner of persons, which are discharged of payment of tithes. One Spiritual, the other Temporal, the spiritual in respect of their Order, and the temporal in respect of Custom and Prescription, and also by grant, as it is agreed in the Archbishop of Canterbury's Case, 2. Coke; but this is in the case of a spiritual man before the Statute of, 32 H. 8. which was capable of them in taking, and that he might prescribe in not Tithing, but a lay man cannot be discharged but for satisfaction and consideration, for he cannot prescribe in not Tithing, and for that in the case here the thing to be considered is, if it be sufficient satisfaction and consideration, and to that he intended that the payment of a duty, that is Tithe Corn and Tithe Hay, cannot be satisfaction & consideration for another duty, and this was the Reason of Piggot & Hernes Case, that the Lord of a Manor, in consideration of Modus decimandi. 20. Nobles yearly paid to the Parson, prescribes to have the tithes of a Hamlet, and in consideration of that, the Lord himself and his Tenants, were discharged of payment of Tithes, but there the consideration and satisfaction was the cause which made the custom good, see 2. Coke 45. a. And then he proceeded and examined the manner of the satisfaction in the principal case, which is, that the Plaintiff shall pay tithe Corn and Hay, and nothing for Milk and Calves, but by reason thereof shall be discharged, as if he should say, that because he payeth tithe Corn, therefore he shall pay no tithe Milk, and he intended that the nature of satisfaction is to give content to the party, as if the prescription had been, that the Plaintiff should pay so much Money, and in consideration of that, or that he shall make the tithe in Cocks, or rake it, or mow it at his own charge, this is a good prescription, aed there are divers precedents of that, but no precedent is of this form, as the case here is; for money shall be intended the greater value, and more beneficial for the Parson, than his Tithes in kind, and Money is the value of every thing, and may give contentment to the party which receives it, & he cited Books of, 9 Ed. 4. 19 and 12 H. 7. 15. and 2● H▪ 5. 2. a. To the same intent which were cited before by Haughton, that is, which agree in Arbitrement, and the Plaintiff entered into his own Land, or that the Defendant delivered to the Plaintiff, his own goods which the Defendant had taken from him, it is not good, for it cannot give contentment to the party, otherwise it is, if it be that the Defendant shall carry them to another place and there shall deliver them, for it cannot be satisfaction and contentment to the party, and for that, that here the Plaintiff hath not made more than the Law compels him, and that it was his own duty, and for that the prescription wants consideration, it shall not be good, and also by reason thereof it can be no good discharge, for this cannot be satisfaction, but he said, it was adjudged Pasch 20 Jacobi between Hall and Aubery, that Money was a good consideration and satisfaction for tithes, and so he concluded and prayed judgement for the Defendant; note that this cause was adjudged Hillary 8. Jacobi upon solemn argument by all the Judges with one voice, that the Prescription was good. Haughton Serjeant moved for a Prohibition, for that the Suit was begun in the Admiral Court upon Charter party made beyond Sea upon the Land, and Prohibition was granted, though it be for a thing made in Paris, or in another place beyond the sea, if it be not upon the Main Sea, but if the Defendant there admits the Jurisdiction of the Court and suffers sentence, than the Court will not upon a bare surmise grant a Prohibition, after the admittance of the party himself; if it be not in a thing which appeareth within the Libel, that is, that the Act was not made within the Jurisdiction of the Sea, and to this difference all the Court agreed. If a Court Baron divide a Debt of thirty pound in several parcels Prohibition to a Court Baron. under forty shillings, and so proceeds in several Actions, Prohibition shall be granted, see Fitzherberts' Natura brevium, and 19 H. 6. Hane was cited out of his Diocese into the Arches, and he pleaded to the Libel, and sentence is given against him for costs, and after that Prohibition was granted, and upon that consultation was prayed, for that, that the Defendant was the party greeved, and aught to have pleaded the Statute, insomuch that the Statute was made for his benefit, but if it appears by the Libel that the Court of Arches need not to have Jurisdiction, than it seems that the Prohibition was well granted, as in Sir Henry Vinors' Case, he began a suit in the high Commission Court, for the not serving of a Chapel, and the Court understanding that they had no Jurisdiction, remitted the cause to the Ordinary, and yet gave sentence against Sir Henry Vinor which was Plaintiff for Costs, and for that he prayed a prohibition and it was granted to his Petition notwithstanding that he himself was the party, who begun the suit there, as it was remembered by nichols Sergeant. A Woman sued in the spiritual Court for Defamation, and the words were, That thou mayest be an honest woman but thou playest too much with a thing, etc. And Prohibition was prayed, insomuch that these words were not Actionable; for in Spellmans reports Prohibition was granted, for that they proceeded there for calling a Minister Knave Priest, and also by these words, a white Cloak is more fitter than a black cloak for him, for action upon the case doth not lie for these words by any Law, but the Prohibition was not granted. Pasch. 11. Jacobi Prohibition. Tey against Cox. PRohibition was prayed, for that, that one was cited out of his Diocese before the Archbishop of Canterbury, as Keeper of the Spiritualties in time of the vacation of the Bishopric, and it was denied; but if he had been to appear before him as Metrapolitan, otherwise it should have been, insomuch that this is against the Statute of 23. H. 8. And also for his own Canon, but in this case the Statute of, 23 H. 8. And also their own Canon; but in this case the ArchBishop hath done as he ought, and for that the Prohibition was denied, see 17 Ed. 2. Fitz. Na. Bre. 822. and 41 Assis. The case was this, there was a custom that a Park hath paid two shillings a year, and the shoulder of every Deer which was killed for tithes, and in consideration of that, had been time out of mind, etc. Discharged of Tithes, and now the Park is disparked, and it was moved by Harris Sergeant, that this dissolves the custom, for when part of the custom is dissolved by the party himself, this determines the residue, for it is adjudged if the Land be discharged of tithes by real Composition, then if he sue for tithes in the spiritual Court, prohibition by the common Law was granted, without other suggestion, but only that he sued there for Lay Fee, and it was said that it was adjudged 5. Jacobi, that where it was a custom that so many of the bucks shall be paid for tithes in such a park yearly, and after the park shall be disparked, yet that remains discharged of Tithes, and the custom remains, and Coke chief Justice seemed that tithes are due by divine right, but not what part, for if the tenth part be due dy divine right, than all Customs are void. Trinity, 11. Jacobi, 1612. in the common Bench. NOte by the Statute of 50. Edw. 3. If a Consultation be once duly granted, no new Prohibition shall be afterwards granted upon the said Libel. But if it be apparent matter that the first was not duly granted, than a new Prohibition may be granted by the whole Court, and with this agreed the book of Entries in the Title of Prohibition: But this is to be intended to the Spiritual Judge; and it seems that the Admiral is out of this Statute, see 22. H. 7. Bushes Case. NOte that it was agreed in this Case, that if a Parsonage be impropriate, and the Vicarage be endowed, and difference be between the Parson and the Vicar concerning the endowment, that shall be tried by the Ordinary, for the persons and the cause also are spiritual: And there the Vicar sues the Parson for Tithes, and he suggests the manner of tithing, and prays a Prohibition, and it was granted, and after upon solemn argument, Consultation was granted, in so much that the manner of tytheing did not come in question; but the Endowment of the Vicaridg only, for that is the Elder Brother, as the Lord Coke said, and this was cited to be adjudged by Coke. Prohibition. Agar's Case. AGar of Kingston upon the Thames was sued in the Ecclesiastical Court for beating of his Wife, and for calling her Whore, and was sentenced by them to pay to his Wife three shillings a week for her Alimony, and divers Fynes were imposed upon him for not performing of that, and also provided that he should enter into a Recognizance for performance of that, and a Prohibition was granted, and also a Habeas Corpus to deliver Agar out of Prison: Michael. 8. Jacobi, Blackdens' Case. BLackden married one within age, and after disagreed, so that they might marry elsewhere; and the first Wife had Issue by other Husbands, and died, and Blackden was sued in the Ecclesiastical Court by an Informer, supposing he had married a woman, living his other Wife. And Blackden proves there the disagreement, by which he had sentence for him against the Informer, and yet he was taxed to give to the Informer twenty marks for costs, which he refused to pay, and moved to have a Prohibition, which was granted. For it was injustice to allow Costs to one which had vexed him without cause, and when they had given sentence against the Informer. Parker's Case, Michael. 8. Jacobi PArker being a Parson of a Church, was deprived by the High Commissioners for Drunkenness, and moved for Prohibition, but it was not granted; and he was directed to have action for the Tithe, and upon that the validity of the Sentence shall be drawn in question. Doctor Conways Case, Michael. 8. Jacobi. COnway and his Wife were sued before the High Commissioners, that is to say, the Wife for Adultery with Sir Michael Blunt, and the Husband for connivency to that, as a Wittol, and they were sentenced there for that, and costs taxed in July; and after the general pardon came, and pardoned all offences before the 9 day of November before, and upon that the Doctor moved for Prohibition, and had that, because the offences were not enormous crimes, and the Statute, and the Commission upon that is to give power to them to proceed upon enormous crimes, and to Fine and Imprison for them. Also resolved that the general pardon hath discharged the Costs, though that the Costs were taxed before the Pardon was in Print. And this by the relation that he had at the day before the Costs were taxed. cradock's Case, Michael. 7. Jacobi. CRadock bought divers things upon the body of the County, which concerned the furnishing of a Ship, as Cordage, Powder, and Shot, and the party of whom they were bought sued Cradocke for the money in the Admiral Court, and Prohibition was granted; for the Statute of Richard 2. is, that the Admiral shall not meddle with things made within the Realm, but only of things made upon the Sea, and that no Contract made upon the Land shall be held there. And here the Contract was at St. Katherine's stairs in the body of the County; for it was said that St. Katherine's is within London, and the Major of London hath jurisdiction upon the Thames as far as Wapping. And if a Murder be committed upon the Thames, this shall not be tried by the Admiral: and here Terry and Peacock's Case was cited, which is related in Binghams' case in the 2. Reports, and also in Sir Henry Constables Case in the 5. Reports, and it was cited to be adjudged, that if a Contract be made at Rouen in France, that shall not be tried in the Admiral Court, for that it was made, upon the Land, and not upon the high Sea. Pasche 8. Jacobi Regis, Common Eench. Gaudies case with Doctor Newman. THe Parishioners of the Parish of Alphage in Canterbury, prescribed to have the Nomination and election of their Parish Clark, and the Parson of the Parish by force of a Canon, upon avoidance of the place of the Parish Clark elected one to the Office; the parishioners by force of their Custom elected Cundy, the Parson supposing this election to be Irregular, for that it was against the Canon; sued Cundy before Doctor Newman Chancellor of Canterbury, and the said Cundy was by Sentence deprived of the Clarkship of the Parish, and the Clerk of the Parish admitted; Cundy moved for a Prohibition, and had it granted by all the Court, for it was held that one Parish Clark is a mere lay man, and aught to be deprived by them that put him in, and no others; and if the Ecclesiastical Court meddle with deprivation of the Parish Clark they incura Praemunire, and the Canon which willeth that the Parson shall have election of the Parish Clark, is merely void to take away the Custom that any Parish had to elect him. See the Statute of 25 H. 8. That a Canon against Common Law confounds the Royal Prerogative of the King, or Law of God, is void; and Custom of the Realm cannot be taken away but by act of Parliament. See 21 Ed. 4. 44. the Abbot of Saint Alban's hath a Charter of the King, to be discharged of Collection of tenths granted by Parliament or Convocation: The Clergy grants tithes in Convocation, there is a clause in the grant that no one of them who shall be chosen to be collector, shall be discharged of collection by colour or force of any Letters Patents, and after they return the Abbot of St. Alban's Collector, who pleads his Letters Patents in discharge of Collector, and resolved by the Court that the clause in the grant of tenths doth not take away the exemption of discharge by the Letters Patents granted. And it was resolved that if the Parish clerk misdemene himself in his office, or in the Church; he may be sentenced for that in the Ecclesiastical court to Excommunication, but not to Deprivation: And after Prohibition was granted by all the court, and held also that a Prohibition lieth as well after sentence as before. Trinity 8. Jacobi, Common Bench. ON was cited to appear in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury, which was out of the Diocese of Canterbury, and upon that he prayed Prohibition upon the Statute of 32. H. 8. Which willeth that none shall be cited to appear out of his Diocese, without assent of the Bishop, and Prohibition was granted: And yet it was said that in the time of H. 8; and Reign of Mary, that the Arch Bishops of Canterbury had used to cite any man dwelling out of his Diocese, and within any Diocese within his Province, to appear before him in the Prerogative Court, and this without the assent of the Ordinary of the Diocese: But it was resolved by the Court, that this was by force of the power Legantine of the Archbishop, that as Lynwood saith, aught to be expressed in the Prohibition, for the Archbishop of Canterbury, York, Pisa, and Reymes were Legati nati, and others but Legates a Latere. Hillary, 1610. 8. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Beareblock against Reade. IN an Action of Debt brought by Beareblocke against Reade, Administratrix to her Husband, upon a Judgement given in this Court: The case was this, the Plaintiff had Judgement against the Husband, and after sued him to an Vtlagary, and upon that he brought a Writ of Errors, and removed the Record into the King's Bench, and reversed the Judgement for the Vtlagary. But the first Judgement was affirmed; and then the Husband acknowledged a Statute, and died: And the Wife took out Letters of Administration, and then the Statute is extended against the Wife, and all the goods which she had of the Intestates taken in execution. After which Beareblock in the King's Bench sueth a Scirefacias upon the said Judgement against the said Administratrix, to have execution, and she pleads upon that, the said Statute in Bar, and the extent of that, and that more than that, she hath nothing to satisfy, and this was adjudged a good plea. And then the Plaintiff being not satisfied, he hrought an action of debt upon the said Judgement in this Court, and in Bar of that, the Wife pleaded all this matter in Bar, as aforesaid, upon which the Plaintiff demurred in Law, and the Judges seemed to incline that this was no Bar; for though that the Wife hath not any means to aid herself, or to prevent the extent of the Statute, yet it seemed to them that this should not prevent the execution upon the Judgement, and that the Wife might have Audita quaerela against the Connusee of the Statute; and so to make the extent void. It was not argued at this day, but the point only opened, see 3. Eliz. Dyer, 7. H. 6. See Pasche 9 Jacobi, the Residue. Petty against Evans. IN an Ejectione firm brought by the Lessee of a Copyholder, it is sufficient that the count be general without any mention of the Licence, & if the Defendant plead not guilty, than the Plaintiff ought to show the Licence in Evidence: But if the Defendant plead specially, than the Plaintiff ought to plead the Licence certainly in his replication, and the time and place when it was made: and in this case the Plaintiff replied, that the copyholder by Licence first than had of the Lord did demise, and did not show what estate the Lord had, nor the place nor time when it was made, and all the Justices agreed that it is not good: For the Licence is traversable, for if a copyholder without Licence of the Lord make a Lease for years. The lessee which enters by calour of that, is a Disseisor and a Disseisor cannot maintain an Ejectione Firm, and the Defendant cannot plead that the Plaintiff by licence did not demise, for this is a pregnant negative, also it ought to appear what estate the Lord had, for he cannot give licence to make a lease of longer time in the Tenancy than he hath in the signiory: And for that if he be Lessee for life of a Manor, and he licenses a copiholder to make a Lease for 21. years of a copyhold, and then the Lessee for life dies, the licence is for that determined, though that the copyholder be of Inheritance, for the Inheritance of the Lord is bound by that. And for that the Plaintiff replies, that the copyholder by licence of the Lord first therefore had, made the Lease, that is not good by Coke and Walmesley expressly, and though that the Defendant confess the Replication, by Implication, by pleading. Yet this shall not aid the Plaintiff, for that it is insufficiently pleaded, which note. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. IN action upon the case upon an Assumpsit, the Plaintiff counts that when he such a day at the special instance and request of the Defendant, lent to the Defendant the same day ten pound; And that the Defendant the same day in consideration thereof assumed and promised to the Plaintiff to pay the same sum of ten pound at an other day to come: And it was moved in arrest of Judgement, that the consideration was too general, and for that the action not maintainable, and all the Justices but Foster seemed the consideration was good, but Foster it seems was in some doubt of that, but Judgement was entered for the Plaintiff according to the verdict: And Coke chief Justice said, that such a like action was maintained against Kercher his Chaplain, as Executor of his Father, and it seems for good Law. Legates Case. ONe Legate was committed to Newgate Prison for arianism for denying of the Trinity, by the high Commissioners: and it was moved on the behalf of Legate to have a habeas Corpus and it was granted, and it was said by Coke chief Justice, that the Statute of 5. H. 4. Chapter 10. Inhibits Justices of peace to commit any man to any private Prison. And it seems if any do against this Statute, that an action of false Imprisonment lies: For every one ought to be committed to the Common Goal, to the intent that he may be delivered at the next Goal delivery, and also if any be committed to any of the Counters in London, unlessthat it be for debt, that an action of false Imprisonment lieth for that, for these are private Prisons, for the Sheriffs of London for Debt only. Note in Debt for ten pound the Defendant confesseth five pound, and for the other five pound pleads that he oweth nothing by the Law, and at the day the Plaintiff would have been nonsuited. And it was agreed by all, that if he be nonsuited, that he shall lose all, as well the debt confessed as the other. Note the year of the Reign of the King was mistaken in the Record of nisi prius, but the Record which remains in the Court was very well, and it was amended: For insomuch that it was a sufficient and certain Issue, this was sufficient Authority to the Justices of nisi prius to proceed, but nothing being mistaken but the year of the Reign, this shall be amended, for it is only the misprision of the Clerk, see Dyer 260. 24, 25. 9 Eliz. 11. H. 6. Note also if Tenant in Dower be disseised, and the Disseisor makes a Feoffment, the Tenant in dower shall recover a●l their damages against the Feoffee, for she is not within the Statute of Gloucester chapter 1. By which every one shall answer for their time. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1611. in the Common Bench. Reyner against Poell; See Hillary 6. Jacobi fol: IN second deliverance for copyhold in Brampton, in the County of Huntingdon; the case was, copyhold Lands were surrendered to the use of a woman, and the Heirs of her Body, and she took a Husband, the Husband and the Wife have Issue 2. Sons, and after Surrenders to themselves for their lives, the remainder to the eldest Son and his Wife in fee, the Husband and the Wife die, the eldest Son dies, the youngest Son enters, and Surrenders to the use of a stranger: And the sole question upon which they relied, if the Wife was Tenant in tail, or if she had fee simple conditional; and it was argued by nichols, that the Wife was Tenant in tail, and to prove that, he cited 2. cases in Littleton, where it is expressly mentioned, who may be Tenant in tail, see Sect. 73. 79. And who may have a Formedon, see in the discender, sect. 76. And he grounded that upon reason, for that, that it cannot be denied: But that fee simple might be of copyhold according to the custom, and as well as fee simple, as well it may be an estate tail, for every greater contains his less, and he said that this is grounded upon the reason of other cases, as if the King grant to one to hold Plea in his Court of all actions of debt, and other actions, and then one action of debt is given in case where it lieth not at the common Law, yet the Grantee may hold Plea of that: But if a new action be framed, which was not in experience at the time of the grant, but is given after by Statute, the grant shall not extend to that; and to the Objection, that copyhold is no Tenement within the Statute, of gifts, etc. As to that he saith, that that shall be very well intended to be within the Statute as it is used, and 4. H. 7. 10. A man makes a gift in tail by deed, the Donee hath an estate tail in the deed as well as in the Land, so Morgan and Maxells case, Commentaries 26. And so of Office, Honour, Dignity, and copyhold also; and Dyer 2 and 3. Phil: And Mary 114. 61. It is found by special verdict, that copyhold Lands have been devisable by copy in tail, and so it is pleaded 2 and 3 Eliz. Dyer 192. b. And when a lesser estate is extracted out of a greater, that shall be directed and ordered, according to the course of the Common Law; and for that the Wife shall have plaint in nature of a Cui in vita, and 15. H 8. b. Title Tenement by copy of Court Roll, it was said for Law that tail may be of a copyhold, and that Formedon may well lie of that in descender, by protestation to sue in nature of a Formedon in descender at the Common Law, and good by all the Justices; for though that Formedon in descender was not given but by Statute: Yet now this Writ lieth at the Common Law, and shall be intended that this hath been a custom, time out of mind, etc. And the Demandant shall recover by advice of all the Justices, and the like matter in Essex M. 28. H. 8. And Fitz. affirms, that in the chamber of the Duchy of Lancaster afterwards; and also he saith, that when custom hath created such Inheritances, and that the Land shall be descendable, than the Law shall direct the descent, according to the Maxims and Rules of the Common Law, as incident to every estate discendable, and for that shall be possessio Fratris, of a copyhold estate, 4. Coke 22. a. Brownes Case b. And there 28. a. Gravener and Tedd, the custom of the Manor of Allesley in the County of Warwick was; that copyhold lands might be granted to any one in fee simple: and it was adjudged that a grant to one and the Heirs of his Body, is within the Custom, for be that Estate tail, or Fee simple conditional, that is within the Custom: So he may grant for life or for years by the same Custom, for Estate in Fee simple includes all, and it is a Maxim in Law, to him that may do the greater, it cannot be but the less is lawful; and over he said, that in all cases where a man was put to his real action at the Common Law, in all these cases a copyholder may have plaint with protestation to prosecute in ●…re of the same action; and to the objection, that there cannot be an Estate tail of copyhold Land, for that, that the Tenant in tail shall hold of him in reversion, and shall not be Tenant to the Lord, to that he said that this Estate may be created as well by (Cepit extra manus Domini,) as by Surrender, and then there is not any reversion or remainder, but it is as if Rent be newly granted in tail; but he said there may be a reversion upon an Estate tail, as well as upon an Estate for life, and he did not insist upon the Custom, but upon this ground, that if the Custom warrant the greater Estate, which is the Fee simple, the less shall be included in that. And he did not argue, but intended that it would be admitted, that descent of copyhold Land shall not take away entry nor Surrender of that, nor shall make discontinuance, so prayed Judgement and ●…rne. Harris the youngest Sergeant argued for the Plaintiff, that it shall be a Fee simple conditional, and not an Estate tail, and he said that the sole question was if the Statute of Westminster 2. coneurted and changed Fee simple conditional of copyhold into an Estate tail, for if it be not an Estate tail within this Statute, it shall not be an Estate tail at all, for Littleton saith, before the making of the said Statute, these Estates were Fee simple conditional, and for that cannot be by prescription; also he said that copyhold Estate was so base an Estate, that at the Common Law a copy holder had no remedy but only in the Court of the Lord: But as to Littleton who saith, that he may have a Formedon in discender, to that he saith, that the Heir which hath Fee simple conditional may have it by the Common Law, for this was at the Common Law before the making of that Statute of Westminster 2. As it appears by 4. Ed. 2. Formedon 50. 10. Ed. 2. Formedon 55. And by Bendlowes in the Lord Barkleys' case, in the Commentaries 239. b. by Benlose where it is said by him, that a Formedon in discender was not at the Common Law, but in a special case; where an Assize of Mortdancester would not serve the Issue; that is, if a man had Issue a Sonn, and his Wife died, and after that he takes another Wife, and Land was given to him and to his second Wife, and to the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten, and they have another Sonn, and the Wife dies, and after the Father dies, and a stranger abates, there he saith that before the Statute, the youngest Soon could not have an Assize of Mortdancester, and for that he shall have a Formedon in discender, which was no other but a writ founded upon his Case, see 10 of Ed. 2. Formedon 55. And for that when Littleton speaks of an Estate tail of copyhold, that aught to be understood of Fee tail, which may be Fee simple conditional, and so Littleton may be reconciled, 〈◊〉 will well agree with himself; also it seems that Copyhold is ou●●f the intent and meaning of the Statute of Westminster 2. For at the common Law in ancient times, this was base Estate, and not more in reputation then villinage, and also if such an Estate than might be created of that which shall be perpetual and no means to bar it, for surrender of that doth not make any discontinuance, and Recovery was not known, till 12. Ed. 4. and he saith, that in ancient time the name of Copyholder was not well known, for in ancient time they were called Tenants in Villinage; and Tenants by copy is but a new term, see Fitzherberts' Natura Brevium 12. b. and the old Tenors fol. 2. and Bracton lib. 2. charter 8. In gifts made to servants calleth them Villains and Sokemen, and in the old Tenors it is said that the Lords may expel them, and upon this he inferred, that if it be so base● Tenure, though it be of Lands and Tenements, yet they shall not be intended to be within the intent of the makers of the Statute of Westminster 2. and also by a second reason, that is, that it was not the intent of the makers of the Statute that this should extend to any Lands but only to those which are free Lands, for the parties are called Donees and Feoffees, and the will of the Giver should be observed according to the form in the Charter of his gift manifestly expressed, by which it appears that it ought to be of such Land of which a gift may be made, and also the Statute provides that if the Donee levy a fine (that in right it should be nothing) by which also it appears as to him it seemed, that it ought to be of such Land, of which a fine may be levied. And also for a third reason, which was the great Inconvenience, which would ensue upon it, for then the Donees have no means to dispose of that, nor give that for the advancement of his Wife nor her Issues, and also the Lord shall lose his signiory, for the Donee shall hold of him in Reversion and not of the Lord, and it is resolved in Heydens' Case, 3 Coke 8. a. That when an act of Parliament, altars the service, Tenure, Interest of the Land, or other thing in prejudice of the Lord or of the custom of the Manor, or in prejudice of the Tenant, there the general words of such act shall not extend to Copy-holders', see the opinion of Manwaod chief Baron there, and he agreed, that admitting it shall be an Estate tail, that then Surrender shall not make discontinuance, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff his Client, see Hill and Vpchars' Case, which was adjudged in the King's Bench, and the principal case was adjourned until the first Saturday of the next Term, See Hillari 7. Jacobi in this Book in Replevin the Plaintiff was nonsuited between the same parties. See also Pasche 9 Jacobi 149. Hillary 1610. 8. Jacobi in the Common Bench. Wallop against the Bishop of Exeter and Murray Clark. IN a Quare impedit, the case was, Doctor Playford being Chaplain of the King, accepted a Benefice of presentation of a common person, and after he accepted another of presentation of the King, without any dispension, both being above the value of eight pound per annum, if the first Benefice was void by the Statute of, 21 H. 8. chapter 13. or not, was the question, for if that were void by the acceptance of the second Benefice without dispensation, than this remains a long time void, so that the King was entitled to present by Laps, and presented the Plaintiff, the Statute of 21 H. 8. provides, that he which is Chaplain to an Earl, Bishop, etc. may purchase licence or dispensation to receive, have, and keep, two Benefices with cure, provided that it shall be lawful to the King's Chaplains to whom it shall please the King to give any benefices or promotions spiritual, to what number soever it be, to accept and receive the same without incurring the danger, penalty, and forfeiture, in this Statute comprised, upon which the question was, if by this last Proviso, Chaplain of the King having a Benefice with cure above the value of eight pound per annum, of the presentation of a common person, might accept another Benefice with cure over the value of eight pound also of the presentation of the King without dispensation, the words of the Statute, by which the first Church is made void are, and be it enacted that if any parson or parsons having one Benefice withcure of Souls, being of the yearly value of eight pound or above, accept and take any other with cure of Souls, and be instituted and inducted in possession of the same, that then and immediately after such possession had thereof, the first Benefice shall be adjudged in the law to be void. See Holland's case 4. Cook 75. a. This case was not argued but the point only opened by Dodridge Sergeant of the King for the Plaintiff, and day given for the argument of that till the next term. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. Tresham against Lamb. LEwes Tresham was Plaintiff in waste against John Lamb, the Plaintiff supposed the Defendant had made waste in sowing and ploughing ancient meadow, the which he had let to the Defendant for years in Rushton in the county of Northampton, and sowed it with woad, and prayed Estrepement upon the Statute of Gloucester, chapter 13. And upon examination it appears, that the Lands let was pasture and Meadow, the Pasture was Ridge and furrow, but had been mowed and used for meadow for divers years, and that the Defendant ploughed and sowed that with woad, but this which had been ancient meadow, he used that as Meadow, and did not convert that to Arable Land, but the Judges would not grant any Estrepement to the Pasture, for that it was Ridge and furrow, and it was no ancient meadow, although that had been mowed time out of mind, etc. But to the ancient Meadow they granted a writ of Esterpement, but Foster seemed to be of another opinion, for that, that it was to sow Woade, for that that it is against common Right, and the fume and smell of that is offensive and infectious, but if it had been to sow Corn he agreed as above, and for the executing the Writ of Estrepement, they all agreed that the Sheriff ought to take, if need be, the power of the County against those which made the waste (hanging the Action) and may commit them if they will not obey him, for the words of the Statute are, that you shall cause to keep, which shall be intended in safety. But if Lessee for years trench or drain, that is no Waste, as it was now of late times adjudged, where if the Lessee takes any of the reasonable Boots that the Law allows, that it shall be no Waste nor Estrepement shall be granted, see Fitzherberts' Natura Brevium, 59 m. If a man devise Land to his Executors for years, this is assetts, but if he devise that his Executors shall sell his Lands, or devise his Lands to his Executors to be sold, this shall be no assets until the Lands are sold, and the money for which the land shall be sold, shall be assetts. A Record of Nisi prius, in an Action of Debt upon an obligation, with condition to pay such a sum of Money at such a Feast next after the date of the obligation, and the day of the date of the obligation was omitted in the Record of the Nisi prius, so that it doth not appear which shall be the next Feast at which the money ought to be paid after the date, and by all the Justices, that was no perfect Issue, and for that the Justices of Nisi prius have no power to proceed upon it, and for that it shall not be amended, otherwise if it had been a good Issue, though that another thing had been mistaken, see Dyer 9 Eliz. 260. 24. And see before the same Term here. The King pardoned a man attaint, for giving a false verdict, yet he shall not be at another time impanelled upon any Jury, for though that the punishment were pardoned yet the Gild remains. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. In the Common Bench. James versus Reade. THE case was, the King was seized of a Manor, where there were divers Copy-holders' for life, and was also seized of eight Acres of Land in another Manor, in which the Copy-holders' have used time out of mind, etc. To have common, and after the King grants the Manor to one, and the eight Acres to another, and a Copyholder puts in his beasts into the eight Acres of Land, and in trespass brought against him by the Patentee of the eight Acres, he prescribes that the Lord of a Manor, and all those whose estate he hath in the Manor have used time out of mind, etc. For themselves and their Copy-holders' to have Common in the said eight Acres of Land; and further pleaded that he was Copyholder for his life by grant, after the said unity of possession in the King, and so demanded judgement if action, against which the said unity of possession was pleaded, upon which the Defendant demurs, and all the Justices seemed that though that prescription was pleaded that the common was extinct, but it seems also to them that by special pleading he might have been helped and save his common, for this was common Appendent, see 4. Coke, Tirringhams' Case, 37. 6. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. In the Common Bench. Cartwright against Gilbert. IN Debt upon an obligation with condition to be and perform an Arbitrement to be made, the Arbitrators award, that the Defendant should make Submission, and should acknowledge himself sorry for all transgressions and words, at or before the next Court to be held in the Manor of P. And for the not performance of that Award, the Plaintiff brought this Suit, and the Defendant in Bar of this, pleads that at the said next Court, he went to the Court to make his submission and to acknowledge himself grieved according to the Award, and was there ready to have performed it, but further he saith, that the Plaintiff was not there to accept it, upon which the Plaintiff demurred; and it seems to Coke and Foster that the Defendant hath done as much as was to be done of his part; and for that, that the Plaintiff was not there ready to accept, the Defendant was discharged, for this submission is personal, and to the intent to make them friends, and for that both the parties ought to be present. But Walmesley and Warburton seemed, that it might have been very well made in the absence of the Plaintiff, as well as a man may submit himself to an Arbitrement of a man which is absent, for this is only to be made to the intent to show himself sorrowful for the Trespasses and words, which he hath made and spoken, and it was not argued but adjourned till the next term, and the Justices moved the parties to make an end of that, for that it was a trifling Suit. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610 In the Common Bench. Sir Edward Ashfeild. SIR Edward Ashfeild was bound in an obligation by the name of Sir Edmund, and subscribed that with the name of Edward, and in Debt brought upon that, he pleads (it is not his Deed) and it seems to all the Justices that he might well plead that, for it appears to them that he is not named Edmund, and the original against him, was, Command Edward, otherwise Edmund, and this was not good, for a man cannot have two Christian names, and if judgement were given against him by the name of Edmund, and the Sheriff arrest him by Capias, that false imprisonment lies against him▪ But if he have a name given to him, when he was christened, and another when he was confirmed, he shall be called and known by the name given unto him at the time of his confirmation, and not by the first, see, 11. R. 2. Grants 9 Ed. 3. 4. 12. R. 2 Feoffments 58. See Perkins fol. 8. b 9 a. Grants, 10. Eliz. Dyer, 279. 4. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610 In the Common Bench. Styles against Baxter. STyles brought an Action upon the case against Baxter for calling him perjured man, the Defendant justified that he was perjured in such a Court, in such a deposition and so pleaded that certainly, and it was found for the Defendant at the Nisi prius, and Judgement was given accordingly, and the Defendant afterwards▪ published the same words of the Plaintiff, upon which he brought a new Action for the new publication, in which the Defendant pleaded in Barr the first Judgement, upon which the Plaintiff demurred, and it was adjudged without any Contradiction; that it was a good Barr. Hillari 8. Jacobi 1610. In the common Bench. Andrew against Ledsam in the Star Chamber. ANdrewe exhibited his bill in the Star Chamber against Ledsam, the matter, Andrew being a rich Usurer, delivered to Ledsam being a Scrivener, one thousand pound to be employed for him▪ for Interest, that is, for ten pound for the use of every hundred pound for every year, Ledsam being a Prodigal man, as it seems, spent the Money, and delivered to Andrew divers several obligations, every of them containing three several persons, well known to be sufficient, being some of them Knights, others Gentlemen and Esquires of great Estates, and the other good Citizens without exceptions, were bound to Andrew in two hundred pound for the payment of one hundred sixty pound to Andrew at a day to come within six Months then next coming, as Andrew, had used before to lend his Money, and delivered the Obligations with Seals unto them, and the names of the parties mentioned to be bound by that subscribed, and his own name also subscribed as witnessing the sealing and delivery of them, as a public Notary, a● the good and lawful obligations of the Parties which were mentioned in them, where indeed the parties mentioned in them, had not any notice of any of them. But Ledsam had forged and counterfeited them, as he hath confessed upon his Examination, upon Interrogatories administered by the Plaintiff in this Court, and at the hearing of the Cause and sentence of that, it was moved if Ledsam sha●l lose both his Ears or but one, for if it be but one forgery, then by the Statute of 5. Eliz. Admitting that the Bill is grounded upon this Statute, he shall lose an Ear and pay the double damages and cost to the party greeved: And also if Andrew, being but the Obligee, and not any of the parties, in whose names the Obligations were forged, if he be such a party grieved, which shall have double costs and damages, and these doubts were resolved by Coke chief Justice of the Common Bench, where they were moved, and Fleming chief Justice of the King's Bench, that Ledsam should lose but one ear, for that shall be taken as one forgery, for that it was made at one time, and also that Andrew was the party grieved within the Statute, but Coke said that the Bill was general, that is against the Laws and Statutes of the Realm, and not precisely upon the Statute of 5. Eliz. For he said, that when a Bill is founded upon an Act of Parliament, that this aught to contain all the branches which are mentioned in the Act, the which wants in this Bill, but insomuch, that it was adjudged in Parliament what punishment such offenders shall have, they inflicted the same punishment which is appointed by the Statute, and added to that, that he should be Imprisoned till he found good Sureties for his good behaviour, and also that he shall be brought to every one of the King's Courts at Westminster with great Papers in his hat, containing his offence in Capital letters, but the Lord Chancellor expounded the double damages in such manner; that is, that they shall not be intended double Interest, but only the Principal Debt. Note, that if Execution be directed to a Sheriff, to Arrest any man, or to make Execution within a Liberty: And the Sheriff direct his Warrant to a Bailiff of the Liberty, for to make Execution of the Process, which makes it, and after is a Fugitive, and not able to answer for that, the Lord of the Franchise shall answer for that, and shall be liable to answer for his Bailiff, by all the Justices. Burdett against Pix. IN Debt upon a single Bill by Burdett against John Pix, as administrator of Freewen, the case was this; that is, Freewen was bound in an Obligation of thirty four pound to Burdett the Plaintiff, and was also bound to one William Pix in 80. l. Freewen died Intestate, and the Letters of Administration of his Goods were Committed after his Death, to the said John Pix, the Defendant and the said William Pix also made the said John Pix the Defendant his Executor and died, and the Defendant in this Action pleads, that the said Freewen was indebted to the said William Pix, and that he was his Executor, and that he had Goods of the said Freewens, sufficient to satisfy the said debt, the which he retained for the satisfaction of that, and that over that, he hath not of his to satisfy him, upon which the Plaintiff Dem●…or that, that the Defendant doth not plead, that he hath ●…is election to retain the said goods, for the satisfaction of ●…own said Debt before the Action brought, and by all the Justices, he ought to make his election before the bringing of the Action, otherwise he shall be charged with the other Debt. See Woodward and Darcyes' Case, Commentaries 184. a. and 4. Cook 30. Coulters' Case. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. Bone against Stretton. THe case was this, A man seized of two Acres of Land, makes a Lease for years of one Acre to one, and another Lease for years of the other Acre to another, and then he enters and makes a Feoffment, and several Liveryes upon the several Acres, and one of the Lessees being present, doth not assent to the said Livery, and the use of the said Feoffment, was not the use of his last Will, and then he declares his last Will; and by that recites the said Feoffment, and then declares the use of that to be to the use of himself for life, the remainder over to a stranger, and after the Tenant for years which did not assent to the Livery, grants his Estate to the Feoffor, and the Feoffor dies; and nichols Sergeant moved first: That this enures as a grant of a reversion; and that the grant of the particular Tenant enures, first as an Attornement, and then as a surrender of his Estate, as if it had been an express surrender, and all the Justices agreed, that this doth not enure to make Attornement and surrender as express surrender will, for an express surrender admits the reversion, to be in the Grantee to whom the surrender is made: But in this case before Attornement the Grantee hath nothing, and after Attornement the particular Estate being granted, it shall be drowned in the reversion, Harris Serjeant, the words of the devise are, that his Feoffees and all other Persons which after his Death shall be seized, shall be seized to the same uses before declared, and of one Acre he hath not any Feoffees; for of that the Feoffment was void, and yet it was agreed that the devise was good as Lyngies Case was in 35. H. 8, cited by Anderson, in Welden and Elkintons' Case, Commentaries 523 b. And he argued, that though, that when a conveyance may enure in several courses, yet it cannot enure for part in one course, and part in another course, and for that this devise enures as a devise of Land for one Acre, and declaration of the use of the Feoffment fo●…her Acre; for it is agreed in Sir Rowland Hayward's Case, 2. 〈…〉. a. 6. Coke 18. a. Sir Edward Clears Case, and also in this 〈◊〉 the devisor hath, made express declaration, that the Land shall pass by the Feoffment, and that the Will shall be but a declaration of the use of the Feoffment, and for that nothing shall pass by the devise, with which the Justices seemed to accord, and cited a case to be adjudged in the King's Bench, 40. Eliz. where the Father gives and grants Lands to his Son & his heirs with warranty, and makes a Letter of Attorney within the deed to make Livery, and adjudged, that that shall not enure as a Covenant to raise a use, for that, that it appears by the Letter of Attorney, that his intent was, that that should enure as a Feoffment, and not as any other manner of conveyance, see 14 Eliz. Dyer 311. 83. Master Cromwell's Case, and so it was adjudged accordingly. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench: Gargrave against Gargrave. Katherine Gargrave, was Plaintiff in a Replevin against Sir Richard Replevin. Gargrave Knight, and the case was this; The Father of Sir Richard Gargrave was seized of divers Tenements called Lyngell Hall in Lyngell Hall, and of a Moor called Kingstey Moor in another Town, and the Tenants of the said Father of Sir Richard, have used to have Common in the said Moor, and the said Father so being of that seized, demised the said Tenements to the said Katherine Gargrave for her Jointure, by these words, by the name of Hingell Hall, and certain Land, Meadow, and Pasture in certainty; and with all ●ands, Tenements, and Hereditaments to that belonging; or with that occupied and enjoyed, now or late in the Tenure of one Nevil; and Nevil was Tenant of the said premises, and had Common in Kingsley Moor, upon which the question was; if the said Katherine by this demise shall have Common in the said Moor or not. And Hutton Sergeant argued, that the said Katherine shall have Common in the said Moor, for he said, that the said demise shall be expounded, according to the intent of the party, 〈◊〉 as it is agreed in Hill and Granges Case, Commentaries 270. b. Where a man makes a Lease for years of a house, and all the Lands to that belonging, and though it is there agreed, that Land cannot be appurtenant to a house, yet this word appurtenant, shall be taken in the effect and sense of usually occupied with the Message or lying to the house, by which it appears that the words are transferred from the proper signification to another, to satisfy the intent of the parties, for it is the office of the Judges, to take and expound the words which the common People use, to express their intent according to their intent, and for that shall be taken not according to the very definition, insomuch that it doth not stand with the matter, but in such manner as the party used them: And for that this grant shall amount to a new grant of Common in the said Moor, for as it seems common or feeding for cattle may be granted, and pass by the name of Tenements & Hereditaments, or at least shall be included and comprised within the words Tenements and Hereditaments, and so shall be construed as a thing occupied and enjoyed with the said Messages, see Hen. Finches Case 39 Coke. And it was an express endorsment upon the demise, that the said Katherine should not have Common in the said Moor, but it was agreed by all, that this was vain and idle, and nothing worth; but he urged that this shall have a favourable construction, for that it was for Jointure, which shall have as favourable construction as Dower. And so he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff; and of the other part nichols Serjeant argued, that this shall not amount to a new grant, for he said that they are not apt words to receive such construction, for he said that this is no Tenement or Hereditament, no Common, but only a Feeding for the cattle of the Lessee, in the waist of the Lessor, see 20. Edw. 2. Fitzherbert, admeasurement, and it cannot pass as a thing used with the said house, for that was not in Esse at the time of the grant, and there is not any apt word to make a new grant, ●nd he cited 〈◊〉 judgement in Action of waist, between Arden and Darcy, where Ardon was seized of the Manor of Curball and also of Parkhall, and makes a conveyance of the Manor of Curball to divers uses, and at this time parcel of the Manor of Curball, was occupied with Parkhall as parcel of that, and after made another conveyance, of all his Lands in England, except the Manor of Curball: And adjudged that the Park▪ which is used with Parkhall shall not be within the exception▪ Coke saith, that it was only feeding, and not Hereditament, for the Inheritance of both was in the Lessor; but if it be granted of feeding it shall be intended the same like feeding, that the Tenant hath; as if the King grant such Liberties as the City of London hath, and that shall be good, and so it was adjourned. Hillary 8. Jacobi, 1610. In the Common Bench. Cannige against Doctor Newman. IN an Information upon the Statute of 21 H. 8. chapter 13. Of nonresidency, it was found by special Verdict, that Doctor Newman was Incumbent, invested in the Rectory of Staplehurst in the County of Kent, and that he was also seized of a house in Staplehurst aforesaid; situate within twenty yards of the said Rectory, and that the mansion house of the said Rectory was in good repair, and that Doctor Newman held that in his hands and occupation with his one proper goods, and did not let it to any other, and that he inhabited in the said Message and not in the Parsonage, the Statute of 21 H. 8 chapter 13. Provides, that every Parson promoted to any Parsonage, shall be personally resident, and abiding in, at, and upon his said Benefice, and in case any such spiritual Parson keep not residence at his Benefice, as aforesaid, but absent himself wilfully by the space of a month together or two Months, to be accounted at several times, in any one year, and makes his residence and abiding in any other places by such time, that then he shall forfeit for every such default ten pounds, the one half to the King, and the other half to the Informer; and if the said Doctor Newman was not resident, and incurred the penalty of this Statute was the question, and it was argued by Haughton, that he had incurred the penalty of the Statute, and was nonresident within the intent, and he argued that to some intent all the Parish may be said the Benefice of the Parson, for that, that he hath benefit out of it, and he is called Parlon of such a Town or Parish, but this is not the Benefice that the Statute intends, upon which he ought to be resident, as in the 29. Assize 55. If a Corrody be granted out of an Abbey, it shall not be intended out of the seat of the Abbey, out of the Book of 29. Assize 8. Where it is said, that if a Rent be granted out of a Priory, that all the possessions of the Priory are charged, as to that he saith, it was but (it was said) and not Judgement, and also the said Books may be well reconciled, for it is more proper that the seat of the Abbey shall be charged with the Corrody, and the possessions of the Priory with the Rent, and also he said, there were seven causes of making of the said Statute, whereof but two are to our purpose, the first is Hospitality, second relief of the Poor, and these are to be done in the Parsonage house, for this is the free Alms of the Church, and so it was adjudged, 34 of Eliz. in the King's Bench, Broome and Hudson, and in this Court also, and in this Court also in the 40 of Eliz. in the King's Bench betwixt Butler and Goodall 6 Coke 21 b. that he ought to be resident upon the Parsonage house and not other where, and he allowed and agreed, that imprisonment without deceit, and sickness are good excuses, but so it shall not be a prejudice, for the Parsonage house is in good repair: And so concluded that judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff: And for the Defendant, Barker Serjeant argued, that it appears by the special Verdict, that Doctor Newman held the Parsonage house in his own hands and occupation, and did not let it, upon which he gathered that his servants were resident upon it, and to the exposition of the Statute, he saith, that it appears by Heydons Case, 3 Coke 7. a. That the better means to expound Statutes, is to consider the mischief which was at the common Law before the making of that, and when it is intended to be reform by that, and this appears by the Preamble of that Statute, also he saith, that before the Council of Lateran a man might pay his tithes to whom he would, but by the same Council all the Parish is made the Benefice of the Parson, for he receives benefit by that, and yet he said, that before the said Statute, every spiritual man was bound and compellable by the Ecclesiastical Law to be resident, yet if he were in the King's Service or an Officer in the Chancery, he should be excused, as it appears in the Register, fol. 58. b. Though that he were Dean, the which Office merely requires his personal residence, as it is there said, and also he saith, that the Case between Butler and Goodall, was that the Parson demised all the Parsonage house but only one Chamber, and was not resident in that, but in a Copyhold within the Town, and so prayed Judgement for the Defendant, this case was compounded by the Lord Coke, but he intended this was no residence within the Statute, for this was not his Benefice, but the Tenants part of that, as he said hath been adjudged in the Exchequer. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610 In Banco Communi. Crogat against Morris THE Case was, A Commoner brought an Action upon the Case, against a stranger, for that his Beasts came in and fed upon the Common, and by Coke, Walmesley, and Warburton it lieth very well, Foster to the contrary, for then every Commoner may have the same Action, and then it would be infinite. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. In Bonco Communi. 〈◊〉 against the Lady Saint John, Postea, 269. SEE for the beginning of this in Michalemas term last, and that case was argued again by Hutton. Sergeant for the Defendant, that the parcelling of reversion destroyed the Covenant, it was agreed in Winter's case in case of condition, and he agreed, that that Covenant is within the Statute of 31. H. 8. chapter. 34. as well as condition, and for that Grantee of part of the Reversion shall not have an Action of Covenant, for than if there be twenty Grantees, every one of them shall have several Action, and this was not the intent of the Statute, and as to the Common Law before the Statute, a thing which gives action cannot be divided, and he urged, that when the Reversion of Fee simple was first granted, if he may by that have an action, then when the Reversion of the term was granted, he may have another action, and so a man may have two several actions for one thing, see, 29. Assize 23. Three Coparceners were, and Rent of five pound was allotted to two of them equally to be divided, that is, fifty shillings to one and fifty shillings to another, and they two joined in an Action, and it is doubted, if the Writ shall abate or not, and 44 Ed. 3. 34. b. The Abbot of Westminster● Case, the Abbot made a Lease of a Manor, except the Wood, and after by another Deed he let the Wood, and the Lessee made Waste in the Manor and the Wood, and he brought one Action of Waste and it is not good; and he agreed that one Formedon yeth upon two discontinuances, for there was but one discontinuance, and that is the cause of the Action, but a man cannot have a Writ of Warrantia Charte upon two Deeds, no more in the● principal case, for the Plaintiff hath his Title by two Deeds▪ and so concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Harris Serjeant argued of the other part for the Plaintiff, that an action of Covenant lieth very well, for the original Lease was but one entire Lease, and the Covenant was also entire, and for that the Grantee of the Reversion shall have advantage of that, and he agreed that in real actions, which always are grounded upon the title, and for that if it be grounded upon two titles, he ought to have 2. actions according to his title, but in personal actions where the action is grounded upon the deed, & another matter which comes (Ex post facto) which is the (wrong) which is the cause of the action, & for which damages I shall be recovered as it is said in Blakes Case▪ 44. 6, Coke, and this is the reason that a man may have an Action upon the Statute of Offenders in Parks for hunting in two Parks, 13 H. 7●12. and 8 Ed. 4. 〈◊〉 One Action of Trespass for Trespasses▪ made at several times, and so one Action of Debt for divers Contracts, 11 H. 6. 24. by Martin, 3 H. 6. Trespass, 3 H. 4. But he argued that in real or mixed Actions, as ravishment of Ward, for several Wards or one; Quare impedit for several Churches, this shall not be good, Fitz. Ward 52. 3. H. 6. 52. And also he said that the Statute of 32 H. 8. chapter 34. by express words gives the same remedy to Grantees of Reversions, that the Grantors themselves had, and the Grantor without question, may have an Action if he have not granted the Reversion, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and it was adjourned. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. In the Common Bench. Sturgis against Dean, see T. 65. A Man was bound to pay to the Plaintiff ten pound within ten days after his return from Jerusalem, the Plaintiff proving that he had been there, and the Plaintiff after ten days brought his Action upon the Obligation, without making of any proof that he had been there, and if that were good, or that he ought to make proof of that before he brings his Action, this was the question, and also he ought to make proof, than what manner of proof, and it was moved by Haughton, that when a thing is true, and is not referred to any certain and particular manner of proof, as before what shall be done, or how the proof shall be made, the party may bring his Action, and the other party may take his Issue, upon the doing of the thing which ought to be proved & the trial of that shall be proof sufficient, and in his count he need not to aver that he had been there, see 10 Ed. 4. 11. b. c. 15, Ed. 4. 25. 7 R. 2. Bar 241. And here also the proof, if any should, it ought to be made within ten days, the which cannot be made by Jury in so short a time, as it is said by Choke in 10 Ed. 4. 11. b. though that he agreed, that when a man may speak of proof generally, that shall be intended proof by Jury, for that, that this is the most high proof, as it is said in Gregory's Case, 6 Coke 20. a. and 10 Ed. 4. 11. b. But of the other part it was said by Shirley Sergeant, that true it is that proof ought to be made for the Defendant, as the Case is in 10 Ed. 4. 11. That then such proof should be sufficient, for the Plaintiff may bring his Action before that the Defendant may by possibility bring his Action, but where the Plaintiff ought to make the proof, there he ought to prove, that before that he bring his Action, and it shall be accounted his Folly, that he would bring his action before he had proved that, but all the Justices agreed, that the Plaintiff need not to make any other proof, but only by the bringing of his Action, but the Lord Coke took exception to the pleading, for that, that the Plaintiff hath not averred in his replication that he was at Jerusalem, but generally that such a day he returned from thence; and he said, that a man might return from a place, when he was not at the same place, as if he had been near the place, or in the skirts of Jerusalem, and upon that it was adjourned, see the beginning of that. Trinity 8. Jacobi 462. a. Mich. 13. 200. and 204. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. Wickenden against Thomas. THe Case was this, 2. Executors were jointly made in a Will, 2. Executors one refuses. one of them releases a Debt due to the Testator, and after before the Ordinary refuses to Administer, and it was agreed by all the Justices; that the release was Administration, and for that he hath made his Election, and then the Refusal comes too late, and so is void. Bedell against Bedell. IN waste the case was this, A Man seized of Lands makes his Will, Waste. 2. Executors, one refuses. and of that makes two Executors, and devises his Lands to his Executors for one and twenty years after his Death, upon trust, that they should permit A. To enjoy that during, and to take all the profits all the Term, if he so long lived, and if he ●ied within the Term, then that B. should take the profits, and so with others remained in the same manner, with the remainder over to a stranger in tail, one of the Executors refuseth to prove the Will, or Administer, and also to accept the Term, the other executor proves the Will, & Administers the Goods, and enters into the Land according to the Lease, and that assigns to A. according to the trust reposed in him, and after that he in reversion in tail brings an Action of waist against the Executors which proved the Will, and he proved all the matter aforesaid, and that before the assignment, and that before that no waist was made, and it seems to all the Judges, that this was a good Plea, for the waveing of one Executor is good, and though that he might after Administer, as the book of 21. Ed. 4. Is for that, the Interest of his Companion preserves his Authority, where are 2 or more. But if there be but one Executor and he refuseth, and the Ordinary grants Administration to another, he cannot then Administer again; and Coke chief Justice cited that one Rolls, made the Lord Chancellor which then was the chief Justice of England, and the Master of the Rolls, his Executors and died, and they writ their Letters to the Ordinary, witnessing that they were Employed in great businesses, and could not intend the performance of the said Will, and that for that, they desire to be free of that, and that the Ordinary would commit the Administration, of the goods of the said Testator to the next of blood, and this sufficient refusal. And upon that the Ordinary committed the Administration accordingly: And to the pleading, that no waist was made before the assignment, they all agreed that this was good, and so it was adjourned for this time. A man sold his Land upon a condition, and after took a Wife Bargain and sale upon Cond●… and died, the Heir entered for the Condition broken, yet the Wife shall not be endowed, so if the Condition had been broken before the Death of the Husband, if he had not entered, for he had but title of entry. Hillary 8. Jacobi 1610. in the Common Bench. As yet Doctor Husseys' Case: Moor against Doctor Hussey and his Wife and many others, Ravishment of Ward. in Ravishement of Ward. The case was, the Ward of Moor was placed at the University of Oxford to be instructed in the liberal Sciences, and was married by the Wife of Doctor Hussey to the Daughter of the said Wife, which she had by a former Husband. And for that Moor brought this Writ against Doctor Hussey and his Wife, and the Minister which married them, and all others which were present at the said marriage, or Actors in that. And upon Evidence it appeared, that Doctor Hussey was not present nor Actor in it; and for that the Jury found him not guilty, but they found all the other Defendants guilty of the said Ravishment, for upon the Evidence it appears, that the Wife of Doctor Hussey procured and provided the Minister which married them, and in the last Michaelmas Term this was tried here at the Bar, and the Jury assessed Damages to ten pound, and the value of the Ward to eighty pound, for so much Moor proved that he could have sold him for, and also the Jury found, that the Ward doth appear married being of the Age of 16. years at the time of his marriage, and exceptions were taken to that, for that it was not found of what age the Ward was at the time of the verdict, and it was urged by Dodridge that by the Statute of Westminster 2. chapt. 39 The precise age ought to be found at the time of the verdict. Secondly it was found that the Ward did appear married, and doth not say without Licence of the Guardian, and the Guardian may give his consent, where the Ward marries himself, and then there is no cause of action. The third and other exception was taken in the behalf of the Wife of Doctor Hussey, for that she being a married Wife was found guilty of Ravishment of Ward, against the Statute of Westminster the 2. chap. 39 And it was urged that it was not the intent of the Statute that provides, that he which did Ravish; not having right in the marriage, though he should restore the Boy naked and not married, or should satisfy for the marriage, he shall be punished for the transgression, by Imprisonment for two years, and if he shall not restore him, or shall marry the Heir, after the marrying years, and cannot satisfy for the marriage, he shall abjure the Realm, or shall have perpetual Imprisonment. And it was objected that a married woman, was not intended to be within this Statute, for it is apparent, that a married woman hath not wherewith to make satisfaction, and it shall not be intended that she shall have perpetual Imprisonment, or make abjuration, for this was to make separation between the Husband and his Wife, and so it was adjourned. And the Judges moved the parties to compound amongst themselves, see Michaelmas 8. Jacobi. Trinity 9 Jacobi. Pasch. 9 Jacobi 1611. in the Common Bench. Kenricke against Pargiter and Phillipps. Mich. 〈◊〉. Jacobi. Rot. 213. RObert Pargiter Gentleman, and John Phillipps were summoned Common of Pasture. to answer to Robert Kenricke Gentleman of a Plea, why they took the Beasts of the said Robert Kenricke, and those unjustly detained against Sureties and Pledges, etc. And thereupon the said Robert Kenricke by Thomas Pilkington his Attorney doth complain, that the said Robert and John the fourth day of August the year of the Reign of our now King seventh, at Kings Sutton in a certain place called Great Green's took Beasts, that is to say, one Gelding, one Mare, and one Colt of the said Robert Kenrickes, and do unjustly detain them against Sureties and Pledges, until, etc. By which means he saith he is the worse, and hath loss to the value of twenty pound, and therefore bringeth this suit, etc. And the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John Phillipps, by John Barton their Attorney, do come and defend the force and Injury when, etc. And the said Robert Pargiter in his own right doth well avow, and the aforesaid John Phillipps as Bailiff of the said Robert Pargiter, doth well acknowledge the taking of the said Beasts in the aforefaid place in which, etc. and justly, etc. Because he saith that the said place, in which it is supposed the taking of the said Beasts to be made, did contain and at the aforesaid time in which it is supposed the taking of the aforesaid Beasts to be made, did contain in it four Acres of Meadow in Kings Sutton aforesaid, which the said Robert Pargiter long before the aforesaid time in which, etc. and also at the same time in which, etc. was and as yet appeareth seized of one Message and one virge of land with the appurtenances in Kings Sutton, in his Demesne as of Fee, and that the aforesaid Robert Kenrick the aforesaid time when, etc. and long before was seized of a Message and four Virges of land with the appurtenances in Kings Sutton aforesaid, whereof the aforesaid place in which, etc. Is, and at the aforesaid time when, etc. and also at the time, to the contrary doth not appear in the memory of man, was parcel in his Demesne as of Fee. And the said Robert Pargiter and John Phillipps further say, that the said Robert Pargiter and all those whose Estate the said Robert Pargiter now hath, and at the aforesaid time when, etc. had in the aforesaid Message and one Verge of Land with the Appurtenances of the said Robert Pargiter, from time the contrary whereof doth not appear in the memory of man, had and have used to have, and were accustomed to have Common of Pasture in the aforesaid place, etc. For six Horses, Geldings or Mares, two Colts, six young Beasts called Steers, or young Beasts called Heifers, and two Mares called breeders, in and upon the said Message, and one Verge of Land with the Appurtenances, lying and rising in manner and form following, that is to say, every year, in and from the first day of August called Lammas day, until the feast of the purification of the blessed Mary the Virgin, than next following, as to the said Message and one Verge of Land with the Appurtenances, belonging, and the said Robert Pargiter and John Phillipps further say, that the aforesaid Robert Kenricke of the aforesaid Message and four Virges of Land with the Appurtenances whereof, etc. In the form aforesaid, appearing seized, the said Robert and all those whose Estate the said Robert Kenricke now hath, and at the aforesaid time in which, etc. had in the aforesaid Message and four Virges of Land with the Appurtenances whereof, etc. time out of mind, had and were used and accustomed to have the aforesaid place in which, etc. To their proper use in severalty every year, in and from the feast of the purification of the blessed Virgin Mary, until the first day of August called Lammas day then next coming, that by reason, and in consideration thereof, he the aforesaid Robert Kenrick, and all those whose Estate the said Robert Kenrick now hath, and at the time in which, etc. had in the aforesaid Message and four Virges of Land with the Appurtnances whereof, etc. time out of mind, have had and were accustomed to have every year from the aforesaid first day of August, called Lammas day, and from thence until the aforesaid purification, than next following, Common of pasture in the aforesaid place in which, etc. Only for three Mares or Geldings and no more, and because the Beasts aforesaid in the narration aforesaid, specified over and above the aforesaid other three Mares or Geldings, the aforesaid time in which, etc. were in the aforesaid place in which, &c the Grass then growing, there eating, and the Common of pasture of the said Robert Pargiter, overcharging, and doing damage to the said Robert there, the said Robert Pargiter in his own right doth well avow, and the aforesaid John Phillips as Bailiff of the aforesaid Pargiter do well acknowledge the taking of the Beasts aforesaid in the aforesaid place in which, etc. and justly, etc. they then doing damage there, etc. And the aforesaid Robert Kenrick saith, That neither the said Robert Pargiter for the reason before alleged, the taking of the aforesaid Beasts in the aforesaid place in which, etc. can justly avow, nor the aforesaid John Phillips as Bailiff of the aforesaid Pargiter, for the same reason the taking of the Beasts aforesaid, in the aforesaid place in which, etc. justly can acknowledge, Because by protestation that he the said Robert Kenrick, and all those whose estate the said Robert Kenrick now hath, and at the aforesaid time of the taking, etc. had in the said Message and four Virges of Land, with the appurtenances, whereof, etc. time out of mind, had not, nor used to have, or were accustomed, every year at the first day of August, called Lammas day, and from thence to the next Feast of the Parification than next following, Common of pasture in the aforesaid place in which, etc. only for three Horses, Mares, or Geldings, and not more, in manner and form as the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John Phillips above have alleged; for Plea the said Robert Kenrick saith, That he long before the time of the taking of the Beasts aforesaid, and also at the same time of the taking, etc. was seized of the Manor of Kings Sutton with the appurtenances in Kings Sutton and Astrop in the County aforesaid, whereof the aforesaid Message and four Virges of Land with the appurtenances, whereof, etc. are and at the aforesaid time of the taking, etc. and also time out of mind, etc. were parcel, in his Demesne, as of Fee; and the aforesaid House and four Virges of Land, with the appurtenances thereof, etc. and of the taking, and likewise time out of mind, were parcel of the Demesne Lands of the Manor of Kings Sutton aforesaid: And the said Robert Kenrick so of the Manor aforesaid, with the appurtenances in manner aforesaid appearing seized, the said Robert, before the said time in which, etc. put his Beasts aforesaid, which then were the proper Beasts of the said Robert Kenrick, upon the aforesaid House and four Virges of Land with the appurtenances, lying and rising in the aforesaid place in which, etc. to eat the Grafs there growing in the said place, in which, etc. called Great Greene's, parcel, etc. the Grass in the same then growing, feeding, and the aforesaid Beasts were in the place aforesaid, until the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John Phillips, the aforesaid fourth day of August, the seventh year aforesaid, at Kings Sutton aforesaid, in the County aforesaid, at Great Greene, parcel, etc. took the said Beasts of the said Robert Kenrick, and those unjustly detained, against Sureties and Pledges, until, etc. as he above against those complaines, and this he is ready to verify; whereof, and from which the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John Phillips, the taking of the aforesaid Beasts in the aforesaid place, etc. further acknowledge, the said Robert Kenrick demands Judgement and his damages (by reason of the taking and unjust detaining of those beasts) to be adjudged unto him, etc. And the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John Phillips say, that the aforesaid Plea of the said Robert Kenrick above in the Bar avowed pleaded, and matter therein contained, is very insufficient in Law, justly to avoid the said Robert Pargiter and the said John from just acknowledging the taking of the Beasts aforesaid, to have and shut up, and that he to the said plea in manner and form aforesaid pleaded, hath no need, not by the Law of the Land shall be held to answer, and this they are ready to aver, whereof for default of a sufficient plea of the aforesaid Robert Kenrick in this part, the said Robert and John, as before, demand Judgement, and Return of the Beasts aforesaid, together with their Damages, etc. To them to be adjudged, etc. And the aforesaid Robert Kenrick in respect he hath sufficient matter in Law, justly to avoid the said Robert Pargiter, and the aforesaid John from justly acknowledging the taking of the said Beasts to be shut out as above alleged, which he is reaoy to verify, which truly matter of the aforesaid Robert Pargiter and John do not answer according to their verifying, they altogether refuse to admit as before, and demand Judgement, and their Damages occasioned by the taking and unjust detaining of the said Beasts, to be adjudged to them, etc. And because, etc. Upon the plead the Case was thus, a Freeholder prescribs to have common in parcel of the Demesnes of the Manor for six Horses and other cattle in certain Land from Lammas to Candlemas, & that the Lord of the Manor hath used to have the said Parcel of Land in several to his own use, from Candlemas to Lammas, and in consideration of that, the said Lord hath used to have Common in the said parcel of Land for Horses only and not more, and the Lord unjustly puts in other Beasts than the said three Horses in the said parcel of Land, and surcharged the Common, and the Freeholder distrained them doing Damage, and the Lord brings a Replevin, and it was argued that prescription was not good, for that that Freeholder claims that as Common without number, in his several Soil, the Grantee cannot exclude the owner of the Soil, 12 H. 8. Brooke, so of him which hath Common Fishing in the several of another, he cannot exclude him which hath the several, 18 H. 6. 16. And it is not like to the Case of the time of Edward the first, prescription the 55. Where is Prescription that the Owner of the Soil shall be excluded from his Common for part of the year, for there the other claims all the Vesture of the Land, and so may well exclude the Lord, but not when he claims it but as Common, but it was agreed that by Laws by the Commoners consent they may order that their great cattle shall be put in in such Field only, until such a Feast, and after that for sheep and swine, and this is good, as it appears by 46 Ed. 3. 25. And Coke chief Justice said, that such prescription to have Common and to exclude the Owner of the Soil, is not good, and he saith that so it hath been adjudged between white of Shirland, 31 Eliz. And in Cletherwoods' Case of the Middle Temple, but he said that Prescription to have all the Vesture of the Land, is good for such a time, and at the first day of the Argument of this Case, Foster Justice seemed that the prescription was good, and might have reasonable beginning, that is by Grant, as if they have Common together, and they agree that one shall have all for one part of the year, and the other for another part of the year, and that shall be good, to which Coke answered, that that cannot be by Prescription to have that as Common, and at another day Coke, cited Shirland and Whites Case to be adjudged, 26 of Eliz. in the King's Bench, to be prescription to have common in the Waste of the Lord, and to exclude the Lord to have common in the place, and adjudged to be void prescription, and also he cited a case between Chimery and Fist, where prescription was to have common in the Soil of the Lord, and that the Lord shall have feeding but for so many cattle, and adjudged that the Prescription was not good to exclude the Lord, but a man may prescribe to have the first Crop, or the first Vesture of another's Land, and it is good, and with that agrees the resolution in Kiddermisters' Case in the Star-Chamber; Warburton justice said, that this prescription is not for the excluding of the Lord, but for their good ordering of their Lands, according to the Book of 46 Ed. 3 25. before cited, that the great cattle should have the first feeding, and after that the sheep: Coke said, that if it had appeared by the pleading, that all the Demesnes of the Lord ought to be common, and in consideration, that the Lord had enclosed part, and enjoyed that in several, the Freeholders' and Tenant's of the Manor which have Common over all the Residue, and exclude the Lord, and this shall be good by prescription, and it is adjourned, see 15 Ed. 2. Fitzherbert Prescription 51. And afterwards in Trinity Term 1612. 10. Jacobi, this case was moved again, and all the Justices agreed as this Pleading is, Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff, and they moved the parties to replead. Pasch. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Portington against Rogers. Trin. 8. Jacobi, Rot. 3823. MARY Portington brought a Trespass against Robert Rogers Trespass. and others Defendants, for the breaking of her house and Close, upon not guilty pleaded and special Verdict found, the Case was this, A man had Issue three Daughters, and made his Will in writing, and by that devised certain Land to the youngest Daughter in tail, the Remainder to the Eldest Daughter in tail, the Remainder to the middlemost daughter in tail, with Proviso, that if my said daughters or any of them, or any other Person or persons before enamed, to whom any estate of Inheritance in possession or Remainder, of, in, or to the said Lands, limited or appointed by this my last Will and Testament, or to the Heirs before mentioned of them or any of them, shall jointly or severally by themselves, or together with any other, willingly, apparently, and advisedly, conclude and agree, to or for the doing or execution of any Act or Devise whereby or wherewith the said Premises so to them entailed as aforesaid, or any part or parcel thereof, or any estate or Remainder thereof, shall or may by any way or means be discontinued, aliened or put away from such person or persons and their Heirs, or any of them, contrary to mine intent and meaning in this my Will, otherwise then for a Jointure, or shall willingly or advisedly commit or do any act or thing, whereby the premises or any part thereof, shall not or may not descend, remain, or come to such persons, and in such sort and order, as I have before limited and appointed by this my last Will and Testament, than I will limit, declare, and appoint, that then my said Daughter or Daughters, or other the said person or persons before named, and every of them, so concluding and agreeing, to or for the doing or execution of any such act or Devise as is aforesaid, shall immediately from and after such concluding and agreeing loose and forfeit, and be utterly barred and excluded of and from all and every such Estate, Remainder, and benefit, as she or they, or any of them should, might, or ought justly, to have, claim, Challenge, and demand, of, in, or to so much thereof, as such conclusion or agreement shall extend unto or concern, in such manner and form, as if she or they, or any of them, had not been named nor mentioned in this my last Will and Testament, and that the Estate of such person, etc. shall cease and determine, etc. And after that the youngest Daughter took a Husband, and then she and her Husband concluded and agreed to suffer a Recovery, and so to bar the Remainder, and upon that the Plaintiff being the eldest Daughter entered, and upon the Entry brought this Action: And Harris Sergeant argued for the Defendant, that this shall be a condion and not a limitation, and he said that Mews and Scholiasticas Case is not adjudged against him, see the Commentaries, 412. b. And it shall be taken strictly, for that, that it comes in Defesans of the Estate, and then admitting it is a condition it is not broken, for this conclusion and agreement is only the agreement of the Husband, and though that the Wife be joined, yet be that for her benefit or prejudice, that shall be intended only the Act of the Husband, and he only shall be charged, as in the 48 Ed. 3, 18. Husband and Wife join in Contract, and the Husband only brings Action upon that, and 45 Ed. 3. 11. Husband and Wife join in Covenant, and the Action was brought against them both, and it was abated, for that shall charge the Husband only, 24 Ed. 3. 38 The Husband and the Wife join in an Action upon the Statute of Laborers, and the Writ abated, and so in cases of freehold, as 15 Ed. 4. 29. b. The Husband and the Wife being Tenants for life, join in praying aid of a stranger, and this shall be no forfeiture of the Estate of the Wife, and 48 Ed. 3. 12. a. Statute Merchant was made to the husband and Wife and they joined in Defeasans, that shall not be Defeasans of the Wife, and 28 H. 8. Dyer 6. The Husband of the Wife Executrix, aliens the Term which was let to the Testator upon condition, that he or his Executors should not alien, and by Baldwin by the alienation of the Husband the Condition was not broken, for it was out of the words, so here the agreement and conclusion being made by Husband and Wife shall be intended the Act of the Husband only, and so out of the Words, and by consequence, out of the intent of the Condition, and shall be taken strictly, but he seemed that the Condition shall be void, for the Words (conclude and agree) are words uncertain, for what shall be said conclusion and agreement within the said Provision, and for that as it seems it is so uncertain as going about, but admitting that it is good, yet it shall be good but to some purpose, but not to restrain the Daughter which was Tenant in tail, to do lawful Acts, as to suffer a Recovery, or to levy a Fine, as it is resolved in Mildmayes case, 6 Coke 40. By which it appears that she hath as well power to dispose that by Recovery as of Fee simple, notwithstanding that the Reversion remains in the Giver, as it appears by 12 Ed. 4. 3. For all lawful Acts made by Tenant in tail shall bind the Issue, as 44 Ed. 3. Octavian Lumbards' Case, Grant of Rent for Release of right is good, and shall bind the Issue, for there are four incidents to an Estate tail, First, That he shall not be punished for Waste. Secondly, That his Wife shall be endowed. Thirdly, That the Husband of the Wife Tenant in Tail, shall be Tenant by the Courtesy. Fourthly, That Tenant in Tail may suffer common recovery. So that a Condition which restrains him so that he cannot suffer a common Recovery is void, for it is incident to his act, and it is a lawful Act, and for the benefit of the Issue as it is intended, in respect of the intended recompense, and he said that a Feoffment to a woman covert or infant, shall be conditional, that they shall not make a Feoffment during their disability, is good, for that the Law hath then made them disable to make a Feoffment, so a Lease for life or years upon condition that he shall not alien, is good, in respect of the confidence that was reposed in them by the Lessor, and so concluded that the Condition in this Case which restrains Tenant in Taile generally from alienation. First, was uncertain in respect of the words (conclude and agree) Secondly for that it was against Law & so void, and for that prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Hutton Sergeant for the Plaintiff, he argued that the verbal agreement of the Wife shall bind her, notwithstanding the Coverture, for that, that this is for her benefit, for in performance of the said agreement, she suffers a recovery to the use of herself and her Heirs, and so Dockes the remainder, and he agreed the cases put by the other part which concern freehold, but he said in cases of Limitation of Estates, as if Limitation be, if a Ring be tendered by a woman that the Land shall remain to her, and she takes a Husband, and after that she and the Husband tender the Ring, this shall be sufficient tender, and it shall be intended the Act▪ of the wife, and 10. H 7. 20. a. A man devices his Lands to a married woman to be sold, she may sell them to her Husband; And though that it be not any agreement of the Husband only, yet here is an act done, in a Praecipe brought against the Wife, and she vouches over, for that is not only an agreement, but an Act executed, upon which the Estate Limited to the eldest Sister shall take effect, and the 2. Coke the 27. a. Beckwiths Case. If the Husband and the Wife, join in a Fine of Land of the Wife, the Wife only without the Husband may declare the use of that. And he intended it was a Limitation and not a condition, and so it might be well at this day in case of devise, and then the Act shall be, that the Estate is Limited to have beginning, being made the Estate of the youngest Daughter which made the Act, shall be destroyed and determined, for if it be a condition, than all the Daughters shall take advantage of that, and this was not the intent of the Devisor, for they are the parties which should be restrained by the devise from Alienation. And also he cited Wenlocke and hamond's Case cited in Bractons' Case, 3. Coke 20. b. Where a Copyholder in fee of Lands devisable in Burrough English, having three Sons and a Daughter, deviseth his Lands to his eldest Son, paying to his Daughter and to his other Sons forty shillings within two years after his death, the Devisor maketh surrender according to the use of his Will and dieth, the eldest Son admitted, and doth not pay the money within the two years, and adjudged that though the word payment makes a condition, yet in this case of devise the Law construes that to a Limitation, and the reason is there given to be, for that, that is, it shall be a condition, then that shall descend upon the eldest Son, and then it stands at his pleasure, if the Brothers or Sister shall be paid, or not, and 29. Assis. 17. cities in Nurse and Scholasticas Case, Commentaries 412. b. where a man seized of Lands in Fee devisable, deviseth them to one for life, and that he should be Chaplain and single for his Soul all his life, so that after his decease, the said tenements should remain to the Commonalty of the same Town, to find a Chaplain perpetual for the same Tenements, and died, and adjudged that this shall not be a condition of which the heir shall take advantage, but limitation upon which the remainder shall take effect; and also he cited S. E. Cl●ers Case, 6 Coke 18. a. b. & 11 H. 7. 17. & Pennants' Case, 3 Coke 65. a. That if a man makes a Lease for years, upon a condition to cease, that after the condition is broken, grantee of reversion may take advantage of that; so he said in the case at the Bar, when the first Estate is determined and destroyed by the limitation, than he to whom the Remainder is limited shall take advantage of that, and not the Heir, for as he intended an Estate of Inheritance may as well cease by limitation of devise as term, as in 15 Ed. 4. Lands are given to one so long as he hath heirs of his body, the remainder over, and if he die without heirs of his body, the remainder over shall vest without entry, and the freehold shall vest in him; and 2▪ and 3. Phil. and Mary, Dyer 127. and 56. Fisher and Warrens Case. If a man devise Lands to one for life, the remainder over upon condition that if he do such an act that his estate shall cease, and he in remainder may immediately enter, there he in remainder shall take advantage though he be a stranger, for that that the Estate determines there without reentry: And he saith, that the Case of Wellock and Hamond, cited in Barastons Case, was a stronger Case than this, for there the limitation was upon Fee-simple, and here it is upon an Estate tail; and the Law hath favourable respect to devises, as in Barastones Case, is alteration of words for the better exposition of that, for Shall is altered to Should; and also see 16 Eliz. Dyer 335. 29. for the marshalling of absurd words in a Will for the expounding of that; and 18 Eliz. Cheeks Case, he cited to be adjudged, that if a man devise his Lands to his Wife, and after her death to his Son, and the remainder to his said Wife in Fee-simple, the Husband of the Wife having Issue, shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, for always the Judges have made such favourable construction of Wills, that if Estates devised by Will might be created by act executed in the life of the party, than it should be good by devise; and to the objection (that conclusion and agreement is uncertain, and so for that shall be void; he saith that it is not so uncertain, as going about, or resolve and determine an attempt or procure, as in Corbets Case, first of Coke 83. b. or as attempt or endeavour, as in Germain's and Arscotts Case there cited, fol. 285. a. See 6 Coke 40. a. Mildmayes Case, and also the words subsequent are repugnant, that the Estate tail shall cease, as if the Tenant in tail were dead, and not otherwise, which is absurd and repugnant, for the Estate tail doth not determine by his death, if he do not die without Issue: And also he said, that it is more reasonable that the perpetuity in Scholasticas Case, for here the limitation depends upon agreement, which is a thing certain, upon which the Issue may be joined; and also the condition doth stand with the nature of the Estate tail, and for the preservation of it; and Recovery is against the nature of it, for this destroys the Estate tail, and is only a consequent of it, and not parcel of the nature of the Estate, and this is the reason that Littleton saith, That an Estate tail upon condition that he should not alien, is good, for that preserves the Estate, and also preserves Formedon for him in reversion, if there be a discontinuance; and with that agreed 13 H. 7. 23. 24. and he said, that there was a Judgement in the point for his Client for another part of the Land, and he cited 31 Edw. 5. Fitz. Feoffment placito the last, and Fitzherberts' Natura brevium (Ex gravi querela) last Case; and so concluded and prayed judgement for the Plaintiff; and this Case was argued again by Shirley Sergeant for the Defendant, and he intended that the agreement is void to the Wife, and shall be intended the agreement of the Husband only, for a married Wife cannot countermand Livery, 21 Assis. 25. and if a Woman makes a Feoffment upon condition to enfeoff upon request made by her, and she takes a Husband, she cannot make request after coverture, 35 Assisarum: So that he intended that this shall be intended the agreement of the Husband only, and not of the Wife, and yet he argued that Declaration of a use by a married Wife, shall be good, according to Beckwiths' Case: But he said, That the reason of that is, for that that she is party to the Recovery, which is a matter of Record, and as long as the Record remains in force, so long the Declaration of the use shall be good; and also he argued, that if the condition being, that if the Wife conclude or agree to any act to make discontinuance, that then, etc. that that shall be intended unlawful acts, and Recovery is no unlawful act, and for that shall not be within the restraint of the Condition, as the Earl of Arundels' Case, 17 Eliz. Dyer 343. and admitting that it is a limitation, yet it shall be of the same nature as a condition, and as well as a condition, that Tenant in tail shall not suffer Recovery, is void. So also is such Limitation void, and so it was intended before the Statute of Donis Conditionalibus and it appears by the pleading, that the parties did not intend to take advantage of the agreement, for it is pleaded that at the time of the Recovery suffered, the youngest Daughter was seized of an estate tail, the which could not be if her estate were determined and destroyed by the (agreement and conclusion) so that the last words make the Forfeiture; for the first are not unlawful, and before the execution of the Recovery the estate tail is determined, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant, Barker Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff; It shall be intended a Limitation and not a condition, for a Will shall have favourable construction according to the intent of the Devisor, for a joint-tenant may devise to his Companion, 49. Ed. 3. and Fitz. Na. Bre. Ex gravi querela, last case. A man devices Land to his Wife for life upon condition, that if he marry, that it should remain over to his Son in tail, and the Wife marries, and the Son in remainder sues (Ex Gravi querela) by which it appears that it was a Limitation and not a condition, and 34, Ed. 3. devise was to one for life upon condition that if his Sonn disturbed him, that then it should remain over in tail, upon disturbance; he in Remainder in tail brings Formedon, by which it appears it was a Limitation, and with that agrees all the Justices in 29 Assisarum 17. And Wellock and hamond's Case cited in Barastons Case before, and 18. Eliz. Dyer If Land be limited to no third person by the Devise, than the Heir shall enter for breaking the condition, and also he said, that it appears by Littleton, and 13 H. 7 23. and 24, and 20 H. 7. and 17 Eliz. 343. the Earl of arundel's, case which conditioneth that Tenant in tail shall not alien, standeth with his Estate, but not with Fee simple, and so it is adjudged in News and Scholasticas Case, which is adjudged in the point, which as he saith cannot be answered, and the Words of the Condition are not that her Estate tail shall cease as if she had been dead, but as if she had not been named, which is not so repugnant or absurd as the other, and this compared to 34 Ed, 3. Where the Estate was limited till it was disturbed. And he also argued, that the agreement of the Wife shall be a forfeiture notwithstanding the coverture, for when the Estate is granted upon such condition, he which hath the estate shall take it subject to the condition; as if two Lessees are, and one Seals the Counterpart only, yet the other shall be bound by the Covenants contained in it; and 33 H. 6. 31. a Woman disavows to be Executor, notwithstanding that she was married, and if Praecipe had been brought against the Husband and Wife, the default of the Husband shall bind the Wife, and so she shall be punished for waste made during the coverture, and so concluded, and prayed judgement for the Plaintiff: Foster Justice, that an Estate of freehold shall not cease by agreement or conclusion without entry, for it is a matter of Inheritance and freehold, and it is not like to 33 H. 6. 31. which concerns Chattels and Goods; and Walmesley Justice accorded with him: Warburton Justice, it hath been adjudged in Scholasticas Case, that the condition was good, and therefore he would not deliver his opinion without argument; Coke chief Justice, that the agreement is void to a Woman married, for than she was married to a Husband, whom in her life she could not contradict, and a Devise upon Condition, that if she conclude or agree, as this Case is, is void, for it is a bare communication, upon which the Inheritance doth not depend, and so he said, it hath been twice adjudged, 6 in Corbets Case, and Germain's Case, and Arscots' Case, and Richells Case in Littleton, it was upon condition that he should not alien, and this was adjudged to be void; but yet if the condition were if he alien, and not if go about or intend, or conclude, or agree as in the case at the Bar, for there is no such case in all our Books as this. Secondly, For that, that the Words are, if they do any act, that then the Estate shall cease, and this is repugnant, for when the Act is done, than the Estate tail is Barred, and cannot cease, but if it had been but a Feoffment, than the right had remained, and he said that such a condition had been void before the Statute of Donis Conditionalibus, when it was but Fee simple Conditional, be it a Condition or a Limitation, and he said that Scholasticas Case is of Fine which is only discontinuance till the Proclamations are past, and if dead before may be avoided by Remitter, in Germain's and Arscotts Case, the Condition was, that if he go about or endeavour, and this was adjudged to be void, though that it be in devise in respect of the uncertainty, and he said that the (agreement or conclusion) is so uncertain, and may be well compared to that, for here the Estate shall cease by the agreement, as well as it may cease by the going about, also he seemed that the Freehold cannot cease without entry, for if use cannot cease without entry as he intends, much less a freehold cannot, though it be by Devise, and he seemed that it shall be no limitation, but a Condition, and Judgement accordingly, if cause be not showed the next Term, and in Trinity Term than next ensuing this Case was argued again by Dodridge Sergeant of the King for the Plaintiff, and he said that there are three questions to be disputed. First, If it be a good limitation. Secondly, If the recovery be a breach of that. Thirdly, Admitting that it may be broken, if the agreement of the Husband and the wife shall be said to break it, and to the first he seemed that it is a limitation and not a condition, and such a Limitation that well might be with the Law, and that it is a Limitation it is agreed in Scholasticas Case, Commentaries, and the reason of the Judgement there is, that if the intent of the Devisor appears, that another shall take benefit of that and not the Heir, that then it shall be but a limitation and not a Condition, and he in remainder shall take benefit of that, and for that in the principal case Mary the Eldest Daughter, to whom the Remainder was limited, shall take benefit of that, and with this agrees the case of Fitz. Na. Bre. Ex gravi querela last case, that if a man devises Lands to his Wife for life, upon condition that if she marry that the Land shall remain over, and after she marries, and he in Remainder sues by (Gravi querela) by which it appears that it is a limitation and not a condition, and with this agrees 2. and 3. P. and M. 127. Dyer, Jasper Warrens Case, where a man devices land to his Wife for life, upon condition to bring up his Sonn, Remainder over, and agreed to be a limitation and not a condition, and so he concluded this first point, that it is a limitation and not a condition. Secondly, that it is a lawful limitation, for there is not any repugnancy in that, as it is in Corebts before cited, for there are no words of going about, for he agreed that this is absolutely uncertain and void, and so is Germin & Arscots' case, where there is not only a going about, but repugnant going about for he ought to go about and before discontinuance, and then his Estate shall be void from the time of the going about and before discontinuance, but here it is upon (conclude and agree) plainly and apparently, and conclude and agree is issuable, and a Jury may try that, and it will not invegle any man, but the Law will not suffer Issue upon such uncertainty as going about or purposing, but Attornements and Surrenders are but agreements, and yet are Issuable: And so in the principal case, and in Mildmayes Case 6 Coke it is agreed that a condition that a Tenant in tail shall not suffer a Recovery is void, for Recovery is not restrained by the Statute of Westminster 2. but here it is not so but in general, that he shall not conclude or agree to alien or discontinue, but that which cannot be a condition good in the particular, may be good in the general, as Littleton's Case, gift in tail upon condition that he should not alien is good, otherwise of Fee simple, with which 10 H. 7. 11. and 13 H. 7. 23. 24. accordingly. Thirdly, That it is a breach of the limitation, Condition, that alienation and discontinuance be by Recovery, which is a lawful act, and it is a privilege incident to the Estate tail, and though that the agreement was made by the Husband and the Wife during the Coverture, and so should be if the Husband and the Wife had levied a Fine, see 10 H. 7, 13. Condition, that if the condition had been expressed that they should not levy a Fine had been void, and here this verbal agreement betwixt the Husband and the Wife and the third person shall be for Forfeiture of their Estates, for this is the agreement of the Wife as well as of the Husband, as it appears by Becwithes' Case 2. Coke before cited, where the Husband and the Wife agree to levy a Fine, and that the Fine shall be to the use of the Connusee, this is good declaration of the use, though that it be of the Land of the Wife and during the Coverture, and cannot be avoided by the Wife after the death of her Husband, for it was the agreement of the Wife, though it be not by any Indenture to declare the use of the Fine, so many acts in the Country made by the Husband and the Wife, shall be intended the act of the Wife, as well as of the Husband, as in the 17 Ed. 3. 9 The Abbot of Peterboroughs Case, the Husband and Wife granted Rend for equality of partition, and this shall bind the Wife after the death of the Husband, for it is her act as well as the act of the Husband, and shall be intended for her benefit, and so here by the Recovery the Wife shall be Tenant in Fee simple, which was Tenant in tail before, and 34 Ed. 3. 42. feoffment to a married Wife upon condition to re-enfeoff, and she with her Husband makes the re-enfeoffment it is good; so a Woman being Lessee for Life, and with her Husband attorn upon a Grant of Reversion, is good, and shall bind the Wife after the Death of the Husband, 3 Ed. 3. 42. 4 Ed. 3. Attornment 12. 15 Ed. 3. Attornment, also this Estate was made to the Wife when she was sole, and for that it shall be accounted her folly, that she would take such a Husband that would forfeit her Estate, but with that agreed the reason of the Book of 20 H. 6. 28. Where a woman Tenant was bound by the ceasing of her Husband, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and so it was adjourned, see another argument of this case in Michaelmas Term 9 Jacobi 1611. by Haughton and nichols Sergeants. Pasch. 9 Jacobi, 1611. In the Common Bench. Pitts against Dowse. IN an Ejectione firm upon not guilty pleaded, The Case was this, Ejectione firmae. A man makes his Will, by these words, I bequeath all my Lands to my Son Richard, except my Chauntery Lands. And I devise all my Chauntery Lands to be divided amongst all my Children, men and women alike, except my Son Richard. And if Richard die without Issue, the remainder to A. My second Son, the remainder to B. My third Son, the remainder to C. My fourth Son, the remainder to my next of blood, and so from Heir to Heir. And so likewise I would to be done upon my Chauntery Lands and Tenements, in case all my aforesaid Children die without Issue. Then I would the one half of my Chauntery Lands to remain to the next of kin, and the other half to the Hospital of M. And the question was, what estate the Heir of the eldest Son shall have in the Chauntery Lands, and it was argued by Dodridge the King's Sergeant, that the Heir of the eldest Son shall have estate tail in the Chauntery Lands, the Devisor devices no estate to Richard his eldest Son in the Chauntery Lands, nor limits any estate of that in certain, and for that he seemed that the youngest Sons and Daughters shall be Tenants in Common for life, and by this manner of Interpretation, every part of the Will shall be, for first he excludes Richard himself, so that he shall have nothing in that, and then by the Limitation to the younger Children to be equally divided between them, makes them Tenants in Common, see 28. H. 8. 25. Dyer 155. And he cited Lewin and Coxes Case, to be adjudged, Michaelmas 41. and 42. of Eliz. Pasche 42. Eliz. Rot. 207. Where a man devises Lands to his two Sons to be equally divided, and adjudged that they are Tenants in Common; so devise to two part and part like, and equally divided, and equally to be divided is all one, and for that there is no other words to make an estate of Inheritance, it shall be an estate for life, and the remainder shall be directed according to the estates limited of the other Land. And he seemed that the words in the last sentence, all my aforesaid Children, shall extend to Richard his eldest Son, as well as to the others, and so all the Will shall stand in his force, which may be Objected that Richard the eldest Son shall be excluded out of the Possession, and for that see 6. Eliz. Dyer. 333. 29. Chapman's Case, and also he cited one case to be adjudged, Trinity 37. Eliz. Rot. 632. between Bedford and Vernam, where a man deviseth all his lands in Alworth, and afterwards purchaseth other Lands in the same Town, and afterwards one comes to him to take a Lease of this Land newly purchased, which the Testator refused to Let. And said, that these Lands newly purchased should go as his other Lands. And upon his Death bed adds a Codycell to his Will, but saith nothing of his purchased Lands, and adjudged that the purchased Lands shall pass, and so concluded and prayed Judgement: Harris Serjeant, that it is a new Sentence, and Richard is excluded and it shall be a good Estate tail to the youngest Children, and foresaid Children shall be intended them to which the Chauntery Lands are limited, see Ratcliffes' case 3. of Coke adjudged, that they shall be Tenants in Common by the devise to he equally divided, and thall not be surviving, but every youngest Children shall have his part in tail, though that the first words do not contain words of Inheritance, yet the last words, in case all my Children die without Issue, declares his intent that they should have an estate tail, see the 16. of Eliz. Dyer 339. 20. Claches Case, that when he hath disposed of part devised to Richard, then disposeth of the residue, and the sentence begins with (And so likewise) and that shall be intended in the same manner as he had disposed of the Lands devised to Richard, for he hath devised the remainder otherwise, that is, to an Hospital, and so concludes and prays Judgement accordingly, Coke chief Justice saith, that it was adjudged between Coke and Petwiches 29. Eliz. that if a man devise a house to his eldest Son in tail, and another house to his second Son in tail, and the third house to the third Son in tail, and if any of them die without Issue, the remainder to the other two equally, this shall be but for life, for this enures to the quantity of the Land, and not to the quality of the Estate: And he said that Richard is excepted without question, for it is but a Will, and every of the youngest Sons therein shall have the Chauntery Land one after another, and Richard shall have no part, and the Chauntery shall have nothing till they all are dead, and he likened that to Frenchams Case, where Lands were given to one and to his Heirs Males, and if he died without Issue, the remainder over, the Issues Females shall not take, though that it be if they die without Issue, for express it makes to cease only, and so it was adjourned. Petoes Case. PEto suffers a common Recovery, to the use of himself for life, the remainder to his eldest Son in tail, with divers remainders Common Recovery. over, to the intent that such Annuities should be paid as he by his last Will or by grant declares, so that they did not exceed the sum of sixty pound, and if any of the said Rents be behind, then to the use of him to whom the Rent shall be behind, till the Rent be satisfied with clause of distress: Rend of twenty pound was granted to his youngest Son for his life, the grantee distrains for the Rent, and in Replevin avows, the Plaintiff replies, that by the non-paiment the use riseth to the youngest Son, by which it was objected that the Rent shall be suspended; Quere if without demand, or if the distress shall be demanded, or that the use shall not rise till after the distress, and to the distress well taken, and agreed by all that the Plaintiff shall take nothing by his Writ, and that the eldest Brother hath nothing in the Land. Judgement was had against a Defendant in Debt, and Capias to Judgement in Debt. satisfy awarded, and (Non est inventus) returns, and Scire facias awarded against the Bail, and upon the first Scire facias, the principal Defendant yields his Body in execution, and it was very good, for before that the Bail had no day in Court, and in the King's Bench if the Defendant yields his Body upon the second Scire facias it shall be accepted; And if a man be Bail upon a Writ of Error, if the Judgement shall not be reversed, he shall be in execution again: It was objected by Hutton Sergeant, that the Scire facias is against the Bail, to know why the execution shall not be awarded against the Bail, and that ought to be delivered to the Sheiriff, before the day of the return, or otherwise it shall be Erroneously awarded, and then the party may yield his Body to Prison at any time, and discharge his Bail, and agreed that Bail in this Court may be released. Account doth not lie for any sum certain. Account. Pasch. 9 Jacobi 1611, in the Common Bench. John Reyner against powel. See Hillary 8. Jacobi, 136. HAughton Serjeant argued, that there shall be a good Estate tail of a Copyhold, and that by the custom after the making of the Statute of Westminster 2. And he agreed that at the Common Law, all estates were Fee simple absolute or conditional, and that the estates tail were created by the Statute of Westminster 2. And do not exclude customary estates, as it appears by Littleton, who saith, that Tenant at will by copy of Court Roll by custom may be in Fee simple, and so of estate tail, and with this agrees many other Authors, 15 H. 8. b. Tenant by Copyhold of Court Roll resolved in the point, and that a Formedon in the discender lieth for that, and as the Statute of Westminster 2. divides estate tail and Fee simple, So may custom of a Manor as well as custom make an estate at will, which is personal and determines by the death of any of the parties to descend, and as well as the custom of London (of not moving things fixed) is created by custom, as well may Formedon be created by Custom, and also the Statute is, that gives Cui in vita, extends to a Copyhold, so the Statute of Limitation, as it appears by Brook, Limitation, 5 Ed. 6. And with this agrees also Heydons Case, and though that the words are, Voluntas Donatoris in the Charter, etc. Yet the estate tail may be created by devise. So that the Statute shall not have such literal construction, and as well as a Lease for a hundred years may be within the Statute of 11. H. 7. Which speaks only of discontinuances, as it appears by Sir George Brownes Case, 3. Coke, So may a Copyhold estate which is but an estate at will be within the Statute of Westminster 2. and it is confessed by the other part, by pleading that he was seized in tail according to the custom of the Manor, and it is not pleaded that he had Issue at the time of the Alienation, and the other party claimed by the Alienation, the which was not good, if he had no Issue at the time of that if he had but Fee simple conditional, and so concluded and prayed Judgement, etc. Dodridge Sergeant of the king saith, that the reputation of the estate consists upon two parts, first the name, secondly the nature of the estate tail, and for both the makers of the Statute of Westminster 2. bad no intention that this should extend to Copyhold, and first for the name, which gives the being, he cited Fitz. Natura Brevium. 12. C. where it is said, that Copy-Tenants, or Copy-holders', or Tenants by copy, is but a new Term found, for of ancient times they were called Tenants in Villeinage or of base tenure, as this also appears by the old Tenors, by which it appears that then they were called and named Tenants, which held in Villeinage or of base tenure, and Bracton, book 2. chap. 8. in the end speaks of that, and calls them Villains, Sokemaines, and that if such a Tenant will transfer his Tenement, let it be delivered into the hand of the Lord or his Steward, and he wrote immediately before the Statute of Westminster 2. and agreed with Fitz. Na. Bre. And also Bracton, book 4. fol. 209. Saith, that such Tenants have used to Blow the Demesnes of the Lord, and calls and names them as before; and 4. Ed. 1. He is called Customarius; So that Custom doth not make the certainty of his estate if he hath any, and he said that 42. Ed. 3. 25. is the first in Law; in which is any mention of these Lands, and there they are called Neists Lands, and 14 H. 4. 323. a. they are called Sokemaines by base Tenure, and Lambert calls it Folkland, by which and several names he saith, that the baseness of the Estate appears, And to the estate he saith that originally it was but at the will of the Lord, though that it be according to the Custom of the Manor, So that the Lord cannot put him out if he perform the services. And the Register doth not respect him, for he hath not framed any Original for him, to give him remedy by the Common Law, but only in the Court of the Lord, though that erroneous Judgement be given: Also he cannot prescribe but in the name of the Lord, as it appears by 18. Ed. 3. Fitz. prescription, that such estates which are incident to Fee simple, as Dower, not Tenants by the Courtesy cannot be derived out of this without Custom, nor that warranted. So that his reputation appears by his name and also by his nature: Also he intended that the makers of the Statute of Westminster 2, did not intend that the Statute should extend to this, for it is, Oppositum in Objecto, for Custom is without time of memory. And the Statute of Westminster 2. was made 13. Ed. 1. the beginning of which every one knows. Also the Statute of Westminster 2. doth not extend to any Lands, but those which the Tenant might have aliened before the Statute. But the Copyholder had not any power to alien, for the Lord ought to be his Instrument and hand, as Bracton saith, to alien, transfer he cannot, but by the hands of the Lord, and it must be restored to the Lord, the words of the Statute are, The will of the giver in the Charter, etc. So that the Statute intends such Lands which may pass by Deed and Fine, and devise his Deeds, and the Deed extends to them, for a Fine is Chirograph, and devise to be made by copy of Court Roll is not so, for that is only of Acts made in the Court of the Lord, it cannot be within the Statute, for Copyhold ought to be held of the Lord, and Tenant in tail shall hold of the giver, and so cannot a Copyholder, which hath so base an estate. And if this shall be so, these mischiefs will ensue. That is, that this base estate should be of better security, than any estate at the Common Law, for Fine shall not be a Bar of that, for it cannot be levied of that, also Recovery cannot be suffered of that, for there cannot be a Recovery in value neither of Lands at the Common Law, neither of Customary Lands, for they cannot be transferred but by the hands of the Lord. And to Littleton he agreed, and also, 4 Ed. 2. which agrees with this, where it is said that at Steben●eath, a Surrender was of Copyhold Lands to one and the Heirs of his Body, but he said, that that shall not be an Estate tail, for then the Estate hath such operation, that this settles a Reversion and Tenure betwixt the Giver, and him to whom it is given, but this cannot be of Copyhold Land, for this cannot be held of any, but only of the Lord, and to the others, this Estate doth not lie in Tenure, and yet he agreed that of some things which did not lie in Tenure, Estate Tail may be, but Land may be entailed, but Copyhold Estate is so base, that an Estate tail cannot be derived out of it, so that though that custom may make an Estate to one and the Heirs of his Body, yet this cannot be an Estate tail but Fee-simple conditional, and also he agreed that they might have Formedon in Discender, but it is the same Formedon, which was before the Statute, as if Tenant in Fee-simple conditional before the Statute, would alien before issue, but it was no Estate tail, with the privileges of an Estate tail before the Statute, and to the other matter of Surrender, that is the admittance of the parties which is an Estate tail, that doth not conclude the Court, as it appears by the Lord Barkleys' Case in the Commentaries, where the Estate pleaded severally by the parties is not traversed by any of them, and so concludes, and prays Judgement, etc. And this case was argued again in Trinity Term next ensuing by Montague the King's Sergeant for the Defendant, and he said, that there are three questions in the case. First, If Copyhold land may be entailed. Secondly, Admitting that it may be entailed, if Surrender makes discontinuance. Thirdly, If it shall be Remitter; and to the first, he seemed that it might be entailed and that it shall be within the Statute of Westminster 2. And first for the Antiquity of that, he said that Littleton placed that amongst his Estates of freehold, and hath been time out of mind, and is a primitive Estate, and not derived out of the Estate of the Lord, and the Lord is not the Creator of that, but the means to convey that after that it is cerated, and what is created then shall have all the privileges and Benefits which are incident to it, and shall be nursed by the custom, and is time out of mind, and the Law always takes notice of it, and he cited, 24 H. 4. 323. by Hankf. Bracton, Fitz. Na. Bre. 12 C. and Brownes Case 4. Coke, which is not simply an Estate at the will of the Lord, but at the Will of the Lord according to the custom of the Manor, and when it hath gained the reputation of freehold, than it shall be dircted according to the rules of the Common Law, and 2. and 3. P. and Ma. Dier 114. 60. allow Copyhold Estate to be entailed, and he saith, That no Statute hath more liberal exposition than the Statute of Westminster 2. 45. Ed. 3. Encumbrance shall not charge the Issue entail, also a Copyholder shall have a Cui in vita, also a Copyhold is within the Statute of Limitation; and so upon the Statute of buying of pretenced rights: And it is always intended when a Statute speaks of Lands and Tenements, that Copyhold Lands shall be within that: And he saith, That all the Objections which have been made of the contrary part are answered in Heydons Case, but he relied upon that, that every real Inheritance is within the Statute of Westminster 2. 4 Ed. 2. Formedon lieth of Copyhold Land, 25 Ed. 3. 46. Estate tail is of a Corrody and office, which proves, that Copyhold is a real Inheritance, and for that shall be within the Statute, 46 Ed. 3. 21. gavelkind Land may be entailed, 6 Rich. 2. Avowry 2. 8. Rich. 2. 26. Copyholder shall be charged with Fees of a Knight at Parliament, 22 and 23. Eliz. Dier 373. 13. Lands in ancient Demesne were entailed, and he said that the reason is, that for that it is Inheritance and time hath applied them to an Estate, and so concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Hutton Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff, that Copyhold Lands cannot be entailed, for that is but a customary Estate; and the Law doth not take any notice of it, but only according to Custom, for there were no Estates tail before the Statute, for then all were Fee simple absolute or conditional; that is, either employed, or by limitation, which cannot be of an Estate tail, which is not within the Statute of Westminster 2. for no Actions are maintainable by that, but those which are by the Custom, and a Writ of false Judgement: See fitzherbert's Natura brevium, 12. 13 Ed. 3. F. Prescription 29. that it hath no Incidents, which are incident to Estates at the Common Law without Custom, as Dower: See Revetts Case, and so is Tenancy by the Courtesy, and there shall be no descent of that to take away Entry, and so of other derivatives: And he seemed that it is not within the Statute for three reasons apparent within the Statute. First, That it is hard that Givers shall be barred of their reversions; but in case of Copy-holds, the Giver hath no remedy to compel the Lord to admit him after the Estate tail spent, but only Subpena, and in this Case the Lord may relieve himself for the loss of his services, for that the Statute provides no remedy for him. Secondly, That the Statute doth not intend any Lands, but those of which there is actual reversion or remainder, and those which pass by Deed; so that the will of the Giver expressed in the Charter, may be observed, and of which there may be a subdivision, as Lord, Mesne, and Tenant, for there shall be always a reversion of the Estate tail, and the Donee shall hold of the Donor and not of the Lord. Also it seems that the Statute doth not intend to provide for any, but those for whom the Writ in the Formedon ordained by the Statute lies, and agreed that for Offices and such like, Formedon lieth, if the party will admit Estate tail to be discontinued. Also the Statute intends those things, of which a Fine may be levied, for the Statute provides, that (the Fine in his own right should be nothing) but by Copyholder Fine cannot be levied, and for that he shall not be within the Statute, and if the Words do not extend to that, than the Equity of the Statute shall not extend to that, and he said that Copyhold is not within any of the Statutes, which are made in the same year, as the Statute which gives Elegit, and such like, and to Littleton that an Estate by copy, is where Lands are given in Fee-simple, Fee-tail, and that Formedon lies for that with which agrees 10 Ed. 2. Formedon 55. It seems that the Estate tail here mentioned, shall be intended Fee-simple conditional at the Common Law, and the Formedon in Discender which was at the Common Law, for alienation before Issue: And so Littleton shall be intended, For the Estate is within time of memory; see Heydons case, that a Copyhold Estate is an Estate in being within the Statute of 31 H. 8. And Manwood there said, that insomuch the Estate of that is created by custom, and the Estate tail is created by Statute, yet it shall not be within the Statute, and he said that the case of 15 H. 8. B. Copy of Court 24. is repugnant in itself in the words of Formedon, for he saith, though that Formedon was given by Statute, and was no otherwise in Discender, yet now this Writ lies at the Common Law, and it shall be intended, that this hath been a custom there, time out of mind, etc. And so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Pasche 9 Jacobi 1611. in the Common Bench. Yet Bearblock and Read. SEE the beginning before Hillary 8. Jacobi, this Case was argued See the beginning. fol. by Hutton Sergeant, that the Plaintiff in the Action of Debt ought to Recover, for if Executor may pay Debt due by the Testator by Obligation, before Debt due by Judgement, this shall be a (Devastavit) as it is resolved in Trewinyards Case, 6. and 7. Edward 6. Dyer 80. 53. And he shall be charged for the judgement with his own goods. And so it was adjudged between Bond and Hales 31. Eliz. that Judgement at the Common Law shall be first satisfied before the Statute, which is but a Pocket Record, and Medium redditer in invitum. Also it was adjudged in Harrisons Case, 5. Coke 28. b. That Debt due upon an Obligation shall be first paid before Statute with Defeasans for performing of Covenants, the which Defeasens is not broken, and also it is adjudged between Pemberton and Barkham here cited, that Judgement shall be satisfied before Statute Merchant or Staple or Recognizance, though that the Statute be acknowledged before the Judgement had by the Testator. See this Case in Harrisons Case, 5. Coke 28. b. and in 4. Coke 60. a. Saddler's Case, upon which he infers, that if an Executor first satisfy a Statute or a Recognisance before a Judgement, that this shall be a Devastavit, as well as if he satisfies an Obligation, first as in Trewynyards Case, and that when the Plaintiff which hath Judgement, the Executor may aid himself by Audit a querela by this matter subsequent: Quere of Doctor Druryes Case, as in 7 H. 6. 42. in Detinue against Gamishe, and Judgement had for the Plaintiff. If the Judgement be reversed, restitution shall be made to every one which hath loss. So here by Audita Querela, if the Executrix hath not more than was taken in execution by the Statute, and it seems to him that the Judgement in the Scire Facias shall not be a Bar in this Action, for the Judgement remains, Executrix and the Plaintiff may have Action of Debt upon that. But of the contrary, if the Plaintiff had brought Action of Debt upon the Judgement and had been barred, then shall be barred in Scire Facias also; But the Plaintiff this notwithstanding, may have Scire Facias upon surmise, that there are new assets, come to the hands of the Executor, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. nichols Sergeant for the Defendant relies only upon the Judgement had upon the Scire Facias, and that till that he Defeated, the Plaintiff cannot maintain Action of Debt, for the Action of Debt is nothing but demanding of Execution, and for that till the first Judgement be Defeated the Plaintiff hath no remedy at the Common Law. All things which bar the Execution of the Judgement in Scire Facias, these shall be Barrs in an Action of Debt, as in Baxter's Case here last adjudged, in an Action upon the Case for slanderous words, the Defendant pleads that he had justified the speaking of these words, at another time in another Action brought against him, and had a verdict and Judgement upon that, and so demands Judgement, and adjudged a good Plea, till the first Judgement is reversed, for Judgement is the saying of the Law, and 13. Eliz. Dyer 299. 34. in Debt for Costs recovered in a Writ of entry, the Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff hath sued an Elegit, which was Executed, and a good Bar in an Action of Debt, and so 1. and 2. P. and M. Dyer 107. 24. In Debt for Damages recovered in Assize, the Defendant pleads in Bar, that after the verdict given and before Judgement, the Plaintiff entered into the Land, and there no Judgement is given. But it seems if the Plaintiff fail of Course that the Common Law prescribes, that then he shall not have Execution, (for of those things which rightly are Acted let there be Executions) but if the Defendant in the first Action had pleaded a release, and Judgement was given upon that against him, he cannot plead that again, (for it runs into the thing Judged,) 34. Ed. 3. in Debt against an Executor, and part of the assetts found, the Plaintiff cannot have new Scire Facias without Averrment that there are new assetts, and 34. H. 6. Action with averment that there are assets, and Judgement good both ways, and precedents showed of both Courts. And he intended that the Executor could not have helped himself by Audita Querela, unless he fears to be impleaded, but after Execution he cannot have Restitution, and so concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Coke chief Justice, that there cannot be a Devastavit in the Wife, unless that it be voluntary payment by her, for the Statute of 23. H. 8. gives present Execution of a Statute Staple without Scire Facias. So that the Wife had no time to plead the Judgement, and for that this unvoluntary Act, shall not be a Devastavit, for she is no agent, but only a sufferer. And at the Common Law if the Plaintiff hath Judgement in an Action of Debt after the year he hath no remedy, but new Original, and this mischief was remedied by the Statute of Magna Charta, which gives Scire Facias in place of new Action. But it seems to him that the Bar in the Scire Facias shall remain good Bar, till it be reversed, as in 2 Rich. 3. A man hath election to have action of Detinue, or action of Trespass, and he brings his action of Detinue, and the Plaintiff wages his Law, and after brings an action of Trespass, and the first Nonsuit pleaded in Bar, and adjudged a good Bar, 12 Edw. 4. accordingly: Foster, Walmesley, and Warburton, agreed without any doubt, but they said, that if the first execution had been had by Covin, than it should have been otherwise. In Debt upon buying of divers several things, the Defendant▪ Debt by Executor. confesseth part, and for the residue the action being brought by an Executor in the Detinet only, the Defendant pleads, he oweth him nothing; and upon this Trial was had, and Verdict for the Plaintiff, and after Verdict it was moved, that this misjoyning of Issue was aided by the Statute of Jeofailes; but it was resolved by all the Justices, that it was not aided, for it was no misjoyning of the Issue, but no Issue at all; but if there had been Issue joined, though that it were not upon the direct matter, yet this shall be aided, and at the end the Plaintiff remitted the part that the Issue was joined, and prayed Judgement for the residue, and this was granted, but if the Plaintiff had been nonsuited that would go to all. Administrators during the minority had Judgement in debt, and Administrators during the minority of the Executor. before execution sued, the Executor came to his age of seventeen years, and how this execution shall be sued comes the question, for the power of the Administrator was determined by the attaining of age of 17. years by the Executor, and the Executor was not party to the Record, and for that he could not sue execution; but it seems that the Executor may sue special Scire facias upon the Record, and so sue execution in his own name: See 27 H. 8. 7. a. Action upon the Case for these words (He hath stolen forty Staure Action upon the Case for words. of Lead (meaning Led in Stauce) from the Minster, and resolved by all, that action doth not lie, for it shall be intended that the Lead was parcel of the Minster, and the (Innuendo) shall not help that. Pasche 9 Jacobi 1611. In Common Bench Crane against Coal-pit. THomas Crane Plaintiff in Replevin against Bartholemew Coal-pit, Replevin, Attornement of Tenant, being under age of 21. years. the only question was, if Tenant by descent of the age of twenty years and more, aught under one and twenty years to attorn to a Grant of the signiory or not, and it was adjudged that the Attornement is good for three reasons. First, For that he gives no Interest, and for that it cannot be upon condition; for it is but a bare assent. Secondly, His Ancestors held the same Land by the payment of the Rent and making of their Services, and it is reason that the Rent should be paid, and the Services performed, and for that though that he shall have his age for the Land, yet for the Rent he shall not have his age, and though that it is agreed in 32 Ed. 3. That he shall have his age (In per que servitia) yet after his full age the Grantee shall distrain for all the arrearages due from the first, so that the Attornement is no prejudice for this Infant, and he is in the number of those which shall be compellable to attorn, see 41 Ed. 3. age 23. 26 Ed 3. 32. 32 Ed. 3. and 31 Ed. 3. Per que servitia, 9 Ed. 3. 38. 32 Ed. 3. Infant of the age of three years attorned, and good, and 3 Ed. 3. 42. Husband attornes, and that shall bind the Wife, 12 Ed. 4. 4. 18 H. 6. Attornement of an Infant is good to bind him, for that it is a lawful act. Thirdly, The Attornement is a perfect thing, of which the Law requires the finishing, that is, the grant of the signiory which is not perfect, till the Tenant attorn, and Foster Justice said, that so it had been adjudged in this Court in the time of the Reign of Elizabeth, in which Judgement all the Justices agreed with one voice, without any contradiction, See 26. Ed. 3. 62. Pasch. 9 Jacobi, 1611. In the Common Bench. As yet Rolls against Mason, see the beginning, Michaelmas 8. Jacobi. DOdridge Sergeant of the King argued for the Plaintiff, he saith that there are two Copies, first that a Copyholder for life under a 100 l. may nominate his Successor. Secondly, That such Copyholder after such nomination may cut down all the Trees growing upon his Copyhold and sell them, and he saith that it hath been adjudged that the custom that Copyholder for life may sell the Trees growing upon his Copyhold is void, between Popham and Hill, Hillary 45 Eliz. in this Court, so if the first custom doth not make difference by the nomination, the second is resolved to be void, and it seems to him that the first custom doth not make difference, and to the objection that the first custom hath been adjudged to be good between Bale and Crab, he saith that the custom adjudged, and this custom as it is found differs in many points. First, It was found that every Copyholder for life solely seized without Remainder, but here is sole Tenant in possession, and this may be where there is a Remainder, so that uncertainty in this makes the custom void, as in 6 Ed. 3. custom that an Infant at the age of discretion may alien is void for uncertainty, also in the case here it is found, that the Copyholder may name who shall be next Tenant to the Lord, and doth not say to whom the nomination shall be made, but in the first case the custom is found to be, that the nomination ought to be to the Lord▪ in the presence of two Copy-holders', also in the first it is found, that if they cannot agree of the Fine, that the Homage shall assess it; but in this custom here found there is not any mention of that he ought to seek to be admitted, and doth not say at what court, the which ought to be showed in certain, as it is resolved in Penimans' Case, 5 Coke 84. Where custom that a Feoffment ought to be enrolled, is expressed, shall be enrolled at the next court, also in the first case to be found that after the Fine is paid or offered, he which is named shall be admitted, and here is not any mention of that, so that he concluded that this is a new custom, and not the same custom which was in question between Bail and Coal-pit, also it is found that the trees were cut immediately after nomination of a new Tenant, and before any admittance or Fine paid for him; so that insomuch that the Benefit was not equal as well as to the Lord as to the Tenant, as in 2 Ed. 4. 28. and 22 Ed. 4. 80. For ploughing and turning upon the Land of another, for that the custom shall be void. And to the second custom also it seems, that that is void and unreasonable. First, for that when any is alleged in the custom, that is inconvenient, though that it be not mischievous, yet the custom shall be void, as in 4. Assisarum 27. in Assize brought against an Abbot, which pleads custom, that all the houses of the South side of the street shall be devisable, and he claims by force of a Devise made according to that custom and adjudged that the custom is not good, for it is inconvenient that in one self same ancient Town one house shall be devisable and another not, and upon that the Plea was amended, so here, custom that a Copyholder may sell all the Trees is inconvenient, for it doth not appear that this Custom extended to any other but to him: Secondly this Custom is against the Common Wealth, for every Custom ought to have preservation and maintenance, and that shall not be here, for when one Copyholder hath sold all the Trees, the Successor shall not have any Boots nor Fire, and so by the same reason he may pull down the house. And so this tends to destruction, and rests in the will of a man if he will destroy or not. And this is inconvenient that such power should be given to one, which hath but an estate for life, as in 14. Ed. 3. Bar 277. Copyholder pleads Custom of a Manor, that that Copyholder which comes first after a windfall fall'n, shall have it, and resolved to be void Custom, for that it rests in the will of a man if he will find that or not. So in 5. H. 7. 9 Custom that if one find Beasts doing Damage that he may distrain them, and have four pence for his Damages, and adjudged void Custom, for the Damages are nncertaine, and for that it is no reason that the Fine shall be certain, and 19 Eliz. Dyer 358. 46. Custom that all Devises and Leases, granted for more than six years are merely void forthwith, is a void Custom, because contrary to common reason, and the liberty of one which hath Fee simple. So 2 Hen. 4. 24. Custom that the Tenants of the Manor shall not use their Common till the Lord put in his Beasts, is void, for it should not depend on the Will of the Lord; So in the principal case the Lord cannot grant Copyhold Estate in reversion, for it depends upon the Nomination of his Tenant, and for that the Custom shall be void. Thirdly, The Copyholder hath prescribed to do a thing which is contrary to his Estate, and doth not cohere with his Estate, that is, that Lessee for life shall cut the Trees, for he hath but a special property in that, and not the ●bsolute property, and it is like to a Case in 19 Ed 3. Feoffments 68 and 19 Assize 9 Where Commander of an Hospital prescribes, that he and his Predecessors, which have had the same office, have used to make Leases for lives, and in an Action brought by the Prior it was adjudged that the custom is void, and so by consequence the Lease was void, for the Commander hath no Estate to make it, so in Fors● and Hemlings Case, 4. Coke, and 3 Ed. 3. F. Dat. Custom that a married Wife may make a Will is void, for it doth not stand with the quality of her person, so here it is not with the quality of the Estate, but it may be objected that it is a greater Estate, than an Estate for life, for it is perpetual freehold; to that it may be answered in this case, it is no greater Estate then for life, for the Copyholder hath only made nomination, but he which was nominated was not admitted, so that the Tenant hath no greater Estate, nor the Lord hath granted greater Estate then for life, but admit that he be Tenant for life, with a Remainder for life to him to whom the nomination is made, yet he cannot do such an act, and for that the cutting down of the Trees shall be a forfeiture of his Estate by custom, by which the Estate is created, and copyhold Lands are not as other Lands, which if they were let for Life at the common Law, the Tenant were dispunishable for waste, till the Statute of Gloucester, for it was the Folly of the Lessor to make a Lease to such a person, which would make waist, and for that, as the benefit and Privilege of the copyholder remains, so the benefit of the Lord shall not be abridged, and so he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Haughton Sergeant seemeth the contrary for the Defendant, and he agreed that Customs ought to be reasonable, and if they be generally inconvenient, they cannot be reasonable; and to the first exception, to prove that it is a new Custom; that is, that it is found that he is only Tenant in possession, without saying, Without Remainder, as it was in the first Case; to that he thought if it were true, that the Copyholder hath such privilege that he might nominate his Successor, it is not material, and to the lessening of the Fine, that is found very certain, for he that is nominated at the first requires admittance, and if the Lord refuse that he shall be admitted, for such a Fine that the Homage Assess, and so it is found, and that is very certain, and the rather for that, that this is a special Verdict. Also he agreed as before, That Custom ought to be reasonable, and if it be generally inconvenient, though it be not mischievous, yet it shall not be good; and to the Case of 40 Assis. 37. Custom to devise the Tenements on the South side of the Street, is not good, for that, that Custom cannot be in one particular place certain; and also he agreed the Case of Windfall, for that tended to charge the Lord, 3 Eliz. Dyer 299. 57 58. Custom to have Herriot the best Beast, and if that be put out of the way before seizure, than the Lord may seize and take the Beast of any other man's there arising and lying down; to his own proper use, and the custom held void and unreasonable: So the custom in 20 H. 7. to have so much for every Pound-breach is void; but this custom is merely between the Lord and Tenant, and the custom hath made that discendable Inheritance, and also may have reasonable beginning, and the Lord hath benefit for that; that is, his Fine for the admittance of him which is nominated; and custom hath created other Estates, as Grant to him and his, is good by the custom, and so the Cases of 21 Ed. 4. and 22 Ed. 4. before cited, for the turning of Plough upon the Land of his Neighbour: So the custom if the Lord feed the Beasts of his Tenant that he may Fold them; and so he concluded that the first custom to make nomination is good; and to the second custom, he agreed that bare Copyholder for life, could not Prescribe to cut and sell all the Trees, no more than custom that Tenant for life may devise, as 35 H. 6. But here the Tenant hath perpetuity in his Estate, and may nominate his Successor, and as well as the Common Law allows Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct, to make waste; so may custom allow Tenant for life with such nomination, power to cut and sell the Trees: Also he intended, admitting the custom not good, that yet the Copyholder hath nor forfeited his Estate, for the Trees and the Manor are granted by several Grants, and for that, though that they are by oneself same Deed, yet by that the Trees are severed from the Manor, and the Trees are the cause of the forfeiture, and they are no parcel of the Manor, as in 31 Edw. 3. Assis. 441. by sale of a Castle the services are extinct. So here the forfeiture cannot accrue to the Manor, when that cometh by reason of Trees, which are severed by reason of several Grants; and he thought that the Grant shall be taken more strong, against him which made it; as if a man in the Premises give Fee-simple, to have in tail, the Estate tail shall be precedent, and the Fee-simple depending upon that; so if a man have the next avoidance of a Church, and the Church becomes void. and after he purchase the Advowson, yet the Presentation remains as it was before, for that is the best thing, and so it is resolved in Herlackendens Case, 4 Coke 63. b. That if a man makes a Lease for years of Land, except the Trees, and after grants the Trees to the Lessee, that the Trees are not reunited to the Land, and so he concluded that it shall be no forfeiture, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant; and this Case was argued again, Michaelmas, 9 Jacobi, by Shirley for the Plaintiff, Shirley. that the first custom was void, insomuch that he claimed to do a greater thing than his Estate would warrant, as in 35 H. 6. Custom that if one Pawn the Goods of another, that he which hath them Pawned may keep them whosoever they were, is not good, as Custom that the Tenant in tail may devise, is void, for his Estate will not warrant it, and it is prejudice to the Tenant in reversion: So Custom that Copyholder shall have Common, and another Custom, that none shall put in his Beasts till the Lord put in his, 2. H. 4. 24. Also there is no Fine Limited to be tendered by the Tenant, or to be demanded by the Lord: And if a Copyholder refuse to pay his Fine it is a Forfeiture, and if the Custom do not provide for the Fine of the Lord as for the Copyholder, the Custom shall be void: Also here cannot be admittance, for Littleton saith, that the sole means to transfer Copyhold is by Surrender. And here if the Custom should be good, the copyhold should be transferred by Nomination only, and so the Lord should be Defeated of his Fine, and it seems also that the second Custom is void, for it is contrary to the Estate of a copyholder, to sell all the Trees, but he agreed that he might have Estovers for houseboote and hedgboote, as it was adjudged in Swain and Becketts Case, and he cited the 19 assis. Where a Commoner made a Lease for life, and void, for that that the Estate would not support it, 9 H. 6. 56. and 11. H. 6. 40. Prescription to sell Estovers is void, for Estovers are appropriate to a house: And also it was adjudged in this Court between Poltocke and powel, that a copyholder for life cannot prescribe to sell the Trees, for it is contrary to his Estate, as if a Custom be, that if a Feoffor die his Heir within age, that he shall be in Ward, as 8. H. 6. And he thought that the Nomination was no alteration, for he to whom the Nomination is made, hath only an Estate for life, when the Nomination is made, and that doth not warrant the sale of the Trees, and to the third it seems that the Lord of the Manor bargain and sells the Trees, and after lets the Manor to the bargainee for years, and then copyholder makes waste, he thought that the Trees were not severed from the Manor, as in 33. H. 8. 48. Dyer 2. if a man bargain and sell a Manor, and after in the same Deed makes a bargain and sale of an Advowson appendent, this remains appendent: So if a man bargain and sell a Manor, and also the Trees do not pass till Livery be made of the Manor, So if Lessee for years, gives and grants the Land, and makes a Letter of Attorney to make Livery, the term passes without Livery, and then it is a Forfeiture: And here the Lessee shall have the benefit of Shade and Burrough, and the Trees themselves during the Term, as parcel of the Land, and then when the copyholder hath done more than his Estate will warrant, this is a forfeiture, and the Lessee shall take the advantage of it, and so he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff: Harris for the Defendant that the Customs are good, but admitting that so, yet the Plaintiff shall not take Harris. advantage of it, and he argued that Custom ought to have two properties; first reasonable, secondly ought to have time to make that perfect, and then shall be good, as it appears by the examples of Littleton, f. 37. of Burrough English and Gavelkind, and custom may be against common right, but not against common reason, which is the common Law, 8 Ed. 4. 18. 21 Ed. 3. 4. And he intended here that the second custom is good, if the first be good, for than it is perpetual freehold, and Copyhold Estate of Inheritance is but an Estate at will at the Common Law, and yet such Copyholder may dispose the Trees, as well as custom may create the Estate, as well may it give such privilege, as custom may warrant the taking of Toll for passing over the soil of another, 22 Assize 58. And so custom to have the Foldage of the Beasts which feeds upon his soil is good, but custom for paying the Goods of another is not good, for there is not any recompense, but fishing in the Sea and to dig the soil adjoining for landing of his Nets is good, for this is for the public good, 8 Ed. 4. 23. So the custom for turning upon head-land of another is good, and is for the preservation of Tilling, and also it is between Lord an Tenant, and shall be intended to have a reasonable beginning for consideration, etc. That this continues, for he hath Fines and other Services, and yet 3 Eliz. 199. Dyer. If the Lord claim Harriot of his Tenant, and if it be Esloyned, allege custom, that he may take the Beasts that he found upon the Land in Withernam; and this was adjudged unreasonable custom, so 20 H. 7. 13. Custom to have three shillings of a stranger for pound-breach is void, but of a Tenant is otherwise, for it shall be intended to be a lawful beginning, 11 H. 7. 40. So here the beginning shall be intended to be lawful and for valuable consideration, and for this it shall be good; and to the second custom it follows by consequence to be a good custom, if the first should be good, and then to the third he agreed that Copyholder cannot make waist, and if he do it shall be a forfeiture of his Estate, as it is said by Hull, 9 H. 4, Wast 59 but this aught to be such Wast that is prejudicial to the Inheritance, as it is agreed in Herlackendens case, 4 Coke, Where it is agreed that the Bargainee hath several Interests in the Land and in the Trees, and by the Writings, by the making of the Lease of the Manor they are not reunited and annexed to the freehold again, and then the cutting and selling is no prejudice to him in reversion, and so no Waste to make forfeiture, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant and is adjourned, see the beginning, fol. Trinity 9 Jacobi 1611. In the Common Bench. As yet Doctor Hunfreys' Case, see Hillary 8. Jacobi. IN the Writ of Ravishment of Ward, between Francis Moor Esquire Plaintiff, against Doctor Hussey and Katherine his Wife, Robert Wakeman Clark, and many other Defendants, Dodridge the King's Sergeant argued for the Defendant Doctor Hussey, that a married Wife is not within the Statute of Westminster 2. chapter 35. By which the Writ of Ravishment of Ward is given, that which before the Statute was only Trespass, is by the Statute altered in manner and form of proceedings and in penalty of Judgement, and he thought that this Writ being form upon the Statute doth not extend to a married Wife, for by the Statute if the Defendant, cannot satisfy for the marriage he must abjure the Realm, or shall have perpetual Imprisonment, which goes near to every man next unto his Life, the love of his Country and liberty, and those the makers of the Statute did not intend against a married Wife, and he grounded his argument upon these words of the Statute, by which it appears that the makers of the Statute; did not intend any person which had no property in any Goods nor power to make satisfaction. For first the Statute provides, that if he be able to make satisfaction, that then he should satisfy, if not that then he shall abjure the Realm, by which it appears that the Statute intends those that have property, and by possibility may satisfy, but a woman cannot, for her marriage is a gift of all her goods personal to her Husband, see for that Fox and Girtbrookes' Case Commentaries. Secondly, The Statute provides new form of proceedings, for if the Ward or any of the parties die hanging the Writ, the Writ shall not abate, but it shall be revived by Resummons, by or against the Executors of him that is dead, by this it appears that he which hath no power to make Executors, shall not be intended to be within the Statute, and a married Wife cannot make a Will, and by consequence cannot make Executors, see Coke 6. a. Forse and Hemblins case, 3 Ed. 3. Devise 13. 4 H. 6. 6. and if the Executors have no assets, than the statute gives remedy against the Heir. Thirdly, The Statute intends to give action against him which may have possession of the ward, the which a married Wife cannot have, for her possession is to the use of the Husband, and by the words of the statute, he against whom the Action is given aught to be made Fidei possessor, and to the objection, that though that the Wife married cannot by any possibility have sufficient to make satisfaction according to the intent of the statute, yet if the Husband hath sufficient, he shall answer for his Wife, as in 48 Ed. 3. 26. and 17 H. 6. A married wife shall be attached by the Goods of the Husband, he saith that there the reason is, that the Wife is answerable by the Husband, but this is only to make him to appear, but he against whom the action is given, by this statute ought to have property, and in such cases a married Wife shall not be punished, as in the same Parliament Westminster 2. chapter 25. Is provided, that if a Disseisor fail of Record that he shall be imprisoned, in Assize, for this is the speedy remedy, but if a married wife pleads a Record and fails of that to the Jury; she shall not be imprisoned, though that the Assize was brought against the Husband and the Wife or against the Husband, and the wife is received, see 1. 3 Ass. 1 44 ass. 3. 17. as. 19 11 H. 4. Also the statute of Conjunctim Feoffatis, fol. 99 Which was made in the time of the said King Ed. 3. in which time the statute of Westminster 2. was made, and is contemporary with the same statute, by which it is provided, that if any plead joint-tenancy, which is found against him in the Assize, that he shall be imprisoned by the space of a year, and 16 Assize 8. Husband pleads joint-tenancy with his wife, and maintains the Exception which is found against them, and resolved that the Wife should not be imprisoned by this statute, 21 Assize 28. 31 Assize a. accordingly, and he said there was not any precedent nor Book of Record, by which it appears that a Writ of Ravishment of Ward, was maintained against a married Wife, for Ravishment after the Coverture, but for Ravishment before the Coverture, see 6 and 8. Ed. 3. and to the Objection that the Plaintiff hath election if he will have the sufficiency come in question, may but admit the Defendants to be sufficient, and then the imprisonment, nor the abjuration shall not be inflicted, as it seems to be some opinion, 8 Ed. 3. 52. and to that he saith, that the admittance of the parties cannot alter the Law, for if it were not the intent of the makers of the Statute that this should extend to the Wife, the admittance of the parties will not make that extend over the provision of that, also it seems to him that the Verdict is not perfect, for that it is not found by whom the Ward was married, but only that he appeared married, and it ought to be without the consent of the Plaintiff, and for that it might be that he was married by the Plaintiff, and then there is no cause of action, nor to have the value of the marriage, and it appears by 22 R. 2. Damages 130, that they ought to inquire by whom he is married, and also the value of the marriage, and if it doth not appear whether he be married or not, than the Verdict shall be conditional and the Judgement also, and all the Precedents are, he appears married without the assent of the Plaintiff, and so he concluded, and prayed that the Judgement might stand: Harris Sergeant for the Plaintiff prays Judgement, and he supposed that it is in the choice of the Plaintiff what Judgement he would Harris. have, for he ought to have Damages and the value of the marriage, and it remains in the discretion of the Plaintiff, what judgement he will have (that is) upon the Statute, for to have the corporal punishment, or allow the Defendants to be sufficient, and so to have judgement for the Damages, and the value of the Marriage, without any Imprisonment or Abjuration; as in 29 Ed. 3. 24. and 8 Ed. 3. 52. where the question was demanded of the Plaintiff, and in 22 Rich. 2. Damages 130. Hankford demanded the question, if the Jury ought to inquire if the Defendants were sufficient or not, and it was resolved that they need not; and in 34 H. 8. Trinity, Rot. 347. there is a Precedent accordingly, where the Husband and the Wife were found guilty; and the Action was founded upon the Statute, and Capias awarded against them both, and to the failing of the Record, it is reason that the Wife should not be imprisoned, for the Pleas are the Pleas of the Husband and his acts, and in the 11 H. 4 51. and 21 Assis. 4 in Assize the Wife was received, and voucheth a Record, and failed, and no judgement upon that against the Husband, and the Wife was imprisoned; and so upon Allegation of joint-tenancy, the Wife was imprisoned; and so he concluded, and prayed judgement for the Plaintiff; and at another day the Case was argued again by Montague the King's Sergeant for the Defendant, Montague. that a married Wife was not within the Statute of Westminster 2. Chap. 35. And he said, that the true course for understanding the Statute, is to consider three things: First the Common Law before the making of that Statute: Secondly the mischief that the Statute intended to remedy: Thirdly against what persons the Statute intended to remedy such mischiefs: And to the first he intended that at the Common Law, before the making of the Statute, the Remedy for Ravishment of Ward, was an Action of Trespass, as it appears by Fitz. Na. Bre. And then it was questioned if the Plaintiff should recover the Body without Damages, or Damages only without the Body. See 9 Ed. 4. 48. Ed. 3. 20. 27. H. 6. And then there was no greater punishment, nor other remedy for the taking of the Ward, then of other goods, and for the remedy of that, the Statute of Westminster 2. chap. 35. was made, by which it is provided, that if the Ravisher restore the Ward unmarried, than the Plaintiff shall recover only Damages for the Ravishment, and not the value of the Ward: But if the Ward be married, than the Guardian shall recover the value of the marriage, and if he shall not satisfy, than he shall abjure the Kiugdome, or have perpetual Imprisonment, and the punishments inflicted by the Statute, being so penal: Then the persons which are within the Statute are considerable, for in all penal Laws, the persons and the penallties are the things to be considered, and to the persons this Statute saith, that one for another's Fault is not to be punished, and he said, this is referred to Damages, as well as to Imprisonment, and it is not a lost case, and the Plaintiff without remedy, for Action of Trespass lies against the Husband at the Common Law, for, for all Trespasses at the Common Law done by a married Wife, the Husband shall be punished by payment of the Damages and costs which are recovered: See 14. H. 8. and 9 Ed. 4. But to the Statutes which are penal and inflict corporal punishment there otherwise, and as the Statute of 23. Eliz. made against Recusants for not resorting to Church, should forfeit twenty pounds for every month; and resolved that this shall extend to a married Wife, and for that the Husband shall be liable to action: But by the third of Jacobi, there is special provision, that the Woman shall not be subject to twenty pounds a month, but other punishmrnt provided for her; and he supposed that where a statute gives Imprisonment and Damages, and a married Wife offends the statute, and shall be imprisoned, but the Husband shall not pay the Damages, as in 8 H. 8. 18. Upon the statute of Westminster, a Woman was Imprisoned for false appeal, for the death of her Husband, who was brought into the Court and living; and in the 11 H. 4. 54. It is marvel that the statute of Westminster 2. gives the action to the Heir, insomuch that Interest appears to the Executor: And for that Hill saith, That the statute was not made by those which were skilled in the Law, but he spoke ill, saith the Reporter: Also the words of the statute, If the Ravisher cannot satisfy, he shall abjure the Realm, or have perpetual Imprisonment, and the Wife cannot, by any possibility; make satisfaction, for she cannot have any Goods; so as this Case is, the statute would make perpetual separation, either by abjuration or perpetual Imprisonment, if this shall extend to a married Wife, as in 6 H. 7. was the question, whether a married Wife shall be Attached for that, and she had no Goods, as it is 48 Ed. 3. 2. the Sheriff returns (Nihil) against a Monk, for that that he had no Goods, for all his Goods are the Goods of the Abbot, and it is impossible that a married Wife should have any Goods, and the Law doth not compel to impossible things: See 3 Ed. 4. 4 H. 6. Also the Statute saith, That if the Ravisher die, hanging the Writ, let the Law proceed against hi● Executors by resummons, and a married Woman cannot make Executors; and to the like cases, he thought that a married Wife was not within the Statute of Offenders in Parks, and this gives the same punishment that the Statute gives, as it is resolved, 13 Assis. So if a married Wife fail of a Record in Assize, she shall not be imprisoned, and the Husband is joined only for conformity, and for no other cause; and to the Precedent of 34 H. 5. which hath been cited here against the Husband and Wife, and Judgement by default against both, and upon this, Capiatur is awarded against them both, but this is only for the Imprisonment but not for the Damages; and also this Case differs from that, for here the Husband is found Not guilty: Also it seems that the Book of Entries, 366. 15. lies against Husband and Wife, and there they both plead, but if the Wife only be condemned, the Husband shall not pay the Damages recovered against her, 44 Ed. 3. 25. As a Lease is made to the Husband and Wife, the Husband makes waste, and an Action of waste is brought against them both, and the Husband dies, and the Writ abates, for the wrong dies with him, and the Wife shall not be punished; and so prayed that the judgement might stay, and Doctor Hussey not punished. Hutton Sergeant for the Plaintiff prayed that the Judgement Hutton. might be entered, and first ●ee considered the Common Law, and after that the Statute, and at the Common Law he agreed that a Trespass lies against the Husband and the Wife, for Ravishment made by the Wife, and in this he should recover Damages against the Husband and the Wife, and the Husband shall be charged with the Damages, though it be but for words proceeding from her tongue, or any other Trespass, and if the Husband make default, his body shall be imprisoned, so that it appears that there was remedy at the common Law by action of trespass, and that the Husband was subject to that, then by consequence it was intended, that all persons which were chargeable by the common Law shall be chargeable by the Statute, and by the action which is form upon that, and by the common Law the Husband was chargeable, and by consequence shall be chargeble by the Statute; and he intends that there would be difference between actual wrongs, and others which are come by omission, and if the Wife be the person which did the wrong, than she shall be punished as well by Statute, as she was before by the common Law, also she shall be outlawed, and it hath been agreed that Ravishment of Ward shall be maintainable against the Husband and the wife, if they both are Ravishers, and also if the wife be Ravisher before marriage, and after takes a Husband, the Husband shall be charged with the damages, and his Body shall be imprisoned, and by consequence shall be abjured, also she may make an Executor by the consent of her Husband, but admitting that she could not, than the remedy is given against the Heir, and she shall be within this Statute as well as other Statutes made in the time of the said King, as the Statute of Westminster 1. 37. And shall be a Disseisor with force, and shall be imprisoned, whether the Husband join with her or not, as it is adjudged 16 Assize 7. for all Statutes which provide for actual wrong, a married Wife shall be intended within them, as it is 9 H. 4. 6. But the pleading of joint-tenancy, there the Plea is the act of the Husband, and so failing of Record, upon the Statute of 34 Ed. 3. as it is 16 Assize 8. for the Husband propounds the exception, but if the Wife propounds the exception, than she shall be within the Statute and shall be imprisoned, 21 Assize: So if a married Wife make actual disseisin with force she shall be imprisoned, 9 H. 4. 7. b. 8 Ed. 3. 52. 22 Ed. 2 Damages 20. 27 H. 6. Ward 118. And so the Precedent, Trinity 33 H. 8. Rot. 347. in a case between Thomas Earl of Rutland against Laurence Savage and his Wife in Ravishment of Ward, at the Nisi prius the Defendants make default, and the Judgement was, that the Husband and the Wife should be taken, and upon that he inferred, that the Husband should be subject and charged with the damages, and so it is taken upon the statute of 35. Eliz. That the Husband shall be charged with Debt for the Recusancy of the Wife, and shall be imprisoned for the not payment of it, as to the verdict it seems that this is good, and it shall be intended the Ward was married by the Defendants, as in 33 Ed. 3. Verdict 48. It is found by verdict, that Mulier enters, and resolved that this shall be intended in the life of the Bastard, or otherwise it is nothing worth, and in Fulwoods' case 4 Coke, the Jury found that the Defendant acknowledged himself to be bound, and that shall be intended according to the statute of 23 H. 8. and so here though that it be not found, that the Ward was married by these Defendants, yet it shall be so intended, notwithstanding that nothing is found, but only that he appeared married, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. This case was solemnly argued this Term by all the Justices, that is, Coke and Walmesley, Warberton and Foster, and upon their selemn arguments, Coke and Walmesley were of opinion that a married wife is not within the statute, and Warberton and Foster were of the contrary opinion, and so by reason of their contrariety in opinion, the Judgement was stayed. Trinity 9 Jacobi 1611. in the Common Bench. Burnham against Bayne. THE case was, A Man seized of divers Lands, the half of them were extended by Elegit, and before Judgement was had against him, a new Elegit Awarded, and if all the half which remains, or but the half of that which was the fourth part of all should be extended was the question: And it was agreed by all the Justices, that but the half of that which remains, and not the half of all, which he had at the time of the Judgement: But the half of that, which he had at the time of the Elegit: And if all which remains be extended, the Extent shall be void, by all the Justices, see 10. Ed. 2, Execution 137, 16. E. 2. Execution 118. And here the principal case was, A man hath a Rent of forty pound, reserved upon a Lease for years, and two Judgements in Debt were had against him at the Suit of Sir Thomas Cambell, and three Judgements at the Suit of the Plaintiff, the half was first extended by Elegit, upon the first Judgement had, at the Suit of Sir Thomas Cambell, and after upon the Judgement had at his Suit, the half of the residue was extended and after upon the Judgement at the Suit of the Plaintiff all the residue was extended, and all the Justices agreed that the Extent was void, for they ought to extend but the half of that which remains, and that was but the fourth part. Trinity 9 Jacobi, 1611. In the Common Bench. Trobervill against Brent. THE Case was, A man makes a Lease for years rendering Rend, Surrender after Statute acknowledged. and after grants the Reversion for life, to which Grant the Lessee for years' attornes, the Grantee acknowledgeth a statute, and after surrenders his Estate, the Conusee extends the Statute and distrains for the Rent, and in Replevin avows for the cause aforesaid, and adjudged that the Avowry was good. Agreed that Creditor may sue the Executors, and the Heir of Executors sued and also the Heir. the Debtor also, but he shall have but one Execution with satisfaction, see the Statute of 23 H. 8. for such course in the Exche quer. Note, that no Court of Equity, may examine any matter of Equity, Court of Equity. after Judgement which was precedent the Judgement, see the Statute of 4 H. 4. chapt. 23. Trinity 9 Jacobi 1611. In the Common Bench. Hamond against Jethro. THe case was this, Edward Hamond was Plaintiff in Debt upon a Bill against William Jethro, and the Bill was made in this manner, Debt upon a Bill. Memorandum, that I William Jethro do owe and am indebted unto Edward Hamond in the Sum of ten pound, for the payment whereof, I bind myself, etc. In witness, and after the (in witness) it was thus subscribed, Memorandum, that the said William Jethro be not compelled to pay the said ten pound until he recovers thirty pound upon an obligation against A. B. etc. And in the Count was no mention made of this Subscription; but this appears when the Defendant prays, hearing of the Bill, the which was then entered Verbatim of Record, and upon that the Defendant demurred in Law. Harris Sergeant for the Plaintiff agreed, that if it had been Harris. in the Body of the Bill, it ought to have been contained in the Count to enable the Plaintiff to his action, but that which is after (in witness) is no parcel of the Bill, and for that it need not to be contained in the Count, 9 H. 6. 15, 16. A thing which doth not entitle the Plaintiff to action, need not to be contained in the Count, 36 H. 6. 6. If the condition, be endorsed or subscribed, it need not to be contained in the Count; but if it be contained before the (in witness) than it ought to be contained in the Count, 21 Ed. 4. 36. If a man be bound to pay ten pounds when the Obligee carries two hundred load of Hay to his House, there the condition is precedent, and it ought to be contained in the Count, 22 Ed. 4. 42. accordingly: so here the matter is subsequent to the (in witness) and there is not any other matter upon which the action is founded, nor contained in the body of the Bill, nor to be performed by the Obligee, and for that he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Shirley Sergeant for the Shirley. Defendant, that the sealing is immediately after the Proviso, and is adjoining to the Bill in writing, and for that be it to be performed of the part of the Plaintiff or Defendant, it ought to be mentioned in the Count, for this entitles the Plaintiff to his Action of the case in 36 H. 6. 6. It is a condition subsequent, and there need not to be showed; but if the condition be precedent, and contained in the writing before the insealing there, it ought to be mentioned in the Count: and in this principal case, this is either a condition Precedent or nothing, for it is, that he shall not be compelled to pay the said ten pounds until he had recovered thirty pound, and if he never recover, he never shall pay the ten pound; and it is a condition of the part of the Defendant, and it is adjudged in Vssards' case, that where a condition is precedent, there it ought to be contained in the Count, but where it is subsequent, otherwise it is. So 15 H. 7. 1. Grant, that when the Grantor is promoted to a Benefice that he ought to give to the Grantee ten pound, this is precedent, but in the principal case it is a Condition or Covenant: and though that it be subsequent, yet it may stay the Suit as well as an acquittance, which is to be an acquittance if he be vexed, otherwise not, but a condition that he shall not sue the Bill is void, for it is contrary to that, and bars him of all the fruit of that, and precedent condition may be placed after the (in Witness) as well as before, so he prayed Judgement for the Defendant: Coke chief Justice said, that this which is after (in witness) is not part of the Deed, but may be a Condition or Defeasance; but if it be not (in witness) in the Deed, than it shall be parcel of the Bill; but though that this be put after the (in witness) yet it shall have his force as Defeasance, but it need not to be contained in the Count; for in Bonds and personal things, there need not such strict words as in other Deeds, and for that this shall be a good Condition or Defeasance; but then the Defendant ought to have that so pleaded, and not demur, for this makes the Bill conditional. Warberton and Foster agreed, Walmesley did not gainsay it, and for that it was adjudged for the Plaintiff, if the Defendant did not show cause to the contrary, by such a day, which was not done. Note, It was adjudged by all the Justices, that fealty gives seisin Fealty gives Seisin of all annual Services. of all annual services sufficient to make seisin in avowry, but not in Assize, but of accidental services, this gives seisin in Assize, and a man cannot take excessiive distress for that, for this is more sacred service, as Littleton saith of Homage, the most honourable: See 42 Ed. 3. 26. 11 H. 4. 2. Note, Two retain an Attorney, both dye, the Executor or Administrator of the survivor shall be only charged, and not the Executors Attorney brings Action of Debt for Fees. of them both, for a personal contract survives of both parties, otherwise of real contracts, as warranty: See 16 H. 7. 13. a. 3 Coke, Sir William Harberts' Case, 30 Ed. 3. 40. 17 Ed. 3. 8. The Attorney brought an Action of Debt against both, and the Executors of both the parties which retained him for his Fees, and both pleaded jointly, that they detained nothing, and it was found for the Plaintiff, and upon motion in arrest of Judgement, the Judgement was stayed, insomuch that the Executor of the survivor was only chargeable, notwithstanding the pleading and admission of the Parties. Note, That it was agreed by all the Justices, that by the Law of Merchants, if two Merchants join in Trade, that of the increase Survivor doth not hold amongst Merchants to have all. of that, if one die, the other shall not have the benefit by survivor: See fitzherbert's Natura brevium, Account, 38 Ed. 3. And so of two Joint Shopkeepers, for they are Merchants; for as Coke saith, there are four sorts of Merchants, that is, Merchant Adventurers, Merchants dormants, Merchants travelling, and Merchants residents, and amongst them all there shall be no benefit by survivor. Jus accrescendi inter Mercatores locam non habet. Note, That Arbitrators awarded, that every of the parties should pay only five shillings for writing the award to the Clerk, and agreed Award void. that the award was void to that part, and good for the residue, for they cannot award a thing to be made to a stranger. Action upon the Case was brought for these words, He is a Cozening Action upon the Case for words. Rogue, and hath cozened Richard Wood of thirty pound, and goeth about to do the like by me, and agreed that the action doth not lie: So for Rogue or Cozener, for it is without aspersion and gentle, and words shall be taken in the gentlest sense. Devise that Executors shall sell Land with the assent of J. S. Devise that Executors shall sell Land. if J. S. dies before that he assents, the Executors shall not sell; notwithstanding the death of J. S. was the act of God, and in the life time of J. S. they could not sell without his consent, and so it was agreed in the Case concerning Salisbury School, where the under Schoolmaster was to be placed by the head Schoolmaster with the assent of two chief Bailiffs, and it seems the head Schoolmaster cannot place without their consents. Note, it was said to be adjudged that the Inhabitants of a Town A Town incorporated with the consent of the greater part. Action on the Case for slander. cannot be incorporated, without the consent of the major part of them, and incorporation without their consent is void. In action upon the case, the case was this, The Brother of the Defendant spoke these words to the Plaintiff, that is, Thou Thief, thou Goal whelp, thou hast stolen a piece of Silver from my Master Hocken; and the Defendant said as ensued, that is, That which my Brother spoke is true, I will justify it, and spend a hundred pounds in proof thereof; and it seems to the Court, that the Action doth not lie against the Defendant, insomuch that it doth not appear by the Court, that he had notice of the words which his Brother spoke; but that this aught to be specially averred, and the Count contained that the Defendant justified the aforesaid scandalous words to be true, as in these English words following, That which my Brother, etc. and it seems that this was not sufficient. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Sir Richard Buckley against Owen Wood NOte, It was said to be adjudged between these parties, that if Action upon the Case for suing one in a Court which hath no Jurisdiction. a man exhibits a Bill in the Srarr Chamber, which contains divers slanderous matters, whereof the Court hath no Jurisdiction; that an Action upon the Case lieth; so if the Plaintiff affirm his Bill to be true, action upon the Case lieth upon that, as it was adjudged upon that, as it was adjudged in the same Case. Michaelmas 9 Jacobi 1611, in the Common Bench. Patrick against Lower. IN Trespass the Defendant justifies, for that, that he was seized Prescription for Common for Beasts without number. of a House with the Appurtenances, and prescribes to have Common in the place, etc. for all manner of Beasts, Levant & Couchant upon the said House, and good prescription, notwithstanding it doth not contain certain number, and it shall be intended for so many of the Beasts, which may be rising and lying down upon the said House, and if he put in more they may be distrained, doing Damage; and so is the usage and prescription in all Burroughs; that is, to prescribe to have the Common by reason of the House, but the matter upon which nichols the Sergeant which moved it insists was the uncertainty, that is, what shall be said rising and lying down upon a House, for he thought beasts could not be rising and lying down upon a House, unless that they are upon the top of the House, but to that it was resolved, that infomuch that here the common was claimed to the House, it shall be intended that it was a curtillage belonging to the House, and if it be not; that aught to be averred of the other party, and then the Beasts shall be intended to be rising and lying upon the Curtladge, and if it had been alleged, yet it shall be intended so many of the Beasts which may be tied and are usually to be maintained and remaining within the House, for it was agreed that (rising and lying down) shall be intended those Beasts which are nourished and fed upon the Land, and may there live in summer and winter, and also Beasts cannot be distrained if they be not rising and lying down upon the Land and receiving food there for some reasonable time, but some thought that beasts could not be rising and lying down upon a house without a Curtilage. Note that it was agreed that all proceedings in inferior Court, Privilege out of higher Court. after a Writ of Privilege delivered out of this Court are void (and before no Judge) and if they award Execution, this Court will discharge the party of Execution. Note that a Fine was levied between Charles Lynne and Walter Fine amended. Long, and the Foot of the Fine was Longle, and it was amended▪ Michaelmas 9 Jacobi 1611. In the Common Bench. Hamond Strangis Case. THe Father for a valuable consideration infeoffs his eldest son and Feoffinent to a Son and Heir for a valuable consideration. Avowry. Heir, and adjudged that this was not within the statute of those, who infeoff their eldest Sons, nor a valuable consideration. In Avowry, the Defendant avows upon the person of the Plaintiff, in a Replevin, and the Plaintiff traverses the Tenure, upon which they are at issue, and at the Nisi prius it is found for the Plaintiff, and agreed that this was aided by the Statute of jeofailes, for this is out of the statute of 21 H. 8. and as it was at the common Law; or if the Defendant avow upon the person of a stranger, the stranger hath no plea, but out of his fee, which was mischievous, the which was aided by the statute of 11 H. 8. 19 for he thought he would have traversed the Seisin. The Teste of a Venire facias was the twelfth of June returnable, tres Teste of a Venire facias amended after verdict. Trinitatis, which was the same day that the Teste was, and after Verdict it was moved to be amended, and to be made according to the Roll, the which was done accordingly, see 7 Ed. 4. for returning of Distring as which was amended after Verdict, and Crompton one of the Prothonotaries said, that a Venire facias bare date in the vacation after the Term returnable in the Term before, and it was amended according to the Roll, and the principal case was, the Roll was upon the entering of the issue, therefore you shall cause to come here twelve good and lawful men, who neither, etc. within three weeks of Michaelmas, and the return of the Venire facias was made accordingly. Michaelmas 9 Jacobi 1611. in the Common Bench. John Weeks Plaintiff, Edward Bathurst Defendant. ALSO in Ejectione Firm, upon the Joining of the Issue, Ejectione firm. the Defendant pleads not Guilty, and it was entered, and the aforesaid Lessor, likewise, where it should have been, and the aforesaid Plaintiff likewise, and it was amended: See this Case afterwards here the Case was, the Defendant pleads, that he is not guilty as the aforesaid Weeks, which was the Lessor, above against him hath declared, and upon this he puts himself upon the Country, and the aforesaid Weeks likewise, where it should be the aforesaid John likewise, and after verdict upon solemn argument this was amended by Coke, Warburton, and Foster, and Foster cited 11. H. 7. 2. 26. H. 6. to be directly in the point; and 14. Ed. 3. Amendment 46. Ed. 3. Amendment 53. and Warburton seemed that first, that is weeks for the aforesaid weeks, etc. Is not material, and the last shall be amended, insomuch that this doth not alter any matter of substance, Coke seemed that this was amendable the same Term by the Common Law, if it were before Issue, see 5 Ed. 3. 7 H. 6. Which was immediately before the statute of 22 Ed. 4. but in another term it was not amendable by the Common Law, nor the statute of 14 Ed. 3. doth not extend to that, for this doth not extend to a Plea Roll, 46 Ed. 3. 13. accordingly, but the statute of 8 H. 6. extends to any misprision, in the Plea Roll, or in the Record, and makes that amendable, 26 H. 6. Amendment, 32. 9 and 10. Eliz. Dyer 260, 261. And the difference is, where there there is an Issue that gives power to the Justices of Nisi prius to try that, than another Misprision shall be afterwards amended; and he said that it was adjudged between Sir William Read & Lezure in the Exchequer, that a Commission of these words (and the aforesaid Plaintiff likewise) shall not be amended, but in the principal case here, they all agreed that it shall be amended, and it was amended accordingly. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Prowse against Worthinge. Leonard Loves Case. IN an Ejectione firm, special Verdict, the case was this, Leonard Ejectione firm. Loves the Grandfather, was seized of a Manor held in chief, and of other Manors and Lands held of a Common person in socage, and had Issue four Sons, Thomas, William, Humphrey, & Richard. And by his Deed 12 Eliz. covenants to convey these Manors and Lands to the use of himself for his life, without impeachment of waist, and after his disease to the use of such Farmers and Tenants, and for such Estates as shall be contained in such Grants as he shall make them, and after that to the use of his last will, and after that to the use of William his second son in tail, the Remainder to Humphrey his third Son in tail, the Remainder to Richard the fourth Sonn in tail, the Remainder to his own right Heirs, with power of Revocation, and after makes a Feoflment according to the covenant, and after that purchases eight other acres held of another common person in socage, and after makes revocation of the said Estates of some of the Manors and Lands which were not held by Knight's service, and after that makes his Will, and devises the Land that he had purchased as before, and all the other Land whereof he had made the Revocation to Thomas his eldest son, & the Heirs Males of his body for 500 years, provided that if he alien, and die without Issue, that then it shall remain to William his second son in tail, with the like proviso as before, and after died; and the Jury found, that the Lands whereof no revocation is made, exceeds two parts of all his Lands, Thomas the eldest son enters the 8. Acres, purchased as before, and dies without Issue male, having Issue a Daughter, of whom this Defendant claims these eight Acres, and the Plaintiff claims them by William the second Son. And Dodridge the King's Sergeant argued for the Plaintiff, intending Dodridge. that the sole question is for the 8. acres purchased; and if the devise of that be good or not by the Statute of 34. H. 8. And to that the point is only, a man which hath Lands held in chief by Knight's service, and other Lands held of a common person in Socage, conveys by act executed in his life time, more than two parts, and after purchases other Lands, and devises those, if the devise be good or not. And it seems to him that the devise is good, and he saith, that it hath been adjudged in the self same case, and between the same parties; And this Judgement hath been affirmed by writ of Error, and the devise to Thomas, and the Heirs males of his body for 500 years, was a good estate tail, and for that he would not dispute it against these two Judgements. But to the other question he intended that the devise was good, and that the Devisor was not well able to do it by the Statute of 34. H. 8. And he intended that the statute authoriseth two things. 1. To execute estates in the life time of the party for advancement of his Wife or Children, or payment of his debts, and for that see 14. Eliz. Dyer, and that may be done also by the common Law, before the making of this statute. But this statute restrains to two parts, and for the third part makes the Conveyance void as touching the Lord: But the statute enables to dispose by Will a parts, where he cannot dispose any part by the Common Law, if it be not by special Custom, but the use only was deviseable by the common Law, & this was altered into possession by the statute of 27 H. 8. and then cometh the statute of 32. and 34. H. 8. and enables to devise the Land which he had at the time of the devise, or which he purchased afterwards, for a third part of this Land should remain which he had at the time of the devise made; and if a third part of the Land did not remain at the time of the devise made, sufficient should be taken out of that; but if the Devisor purchase other Lands after, he may those wholly dispose: And for that it was adjudged, Trin. 26. Eliz. between Ive and Stacye, That a man cannot convey two parts of his Lands by act executed in his life time, and devise the third part, or any part so held by Knight's service; and also he relied upon the words of the statute, that is, having Lands held by Knight's service, that this shall be intended at the time of the devise, as it was resolved in Butler & Baker's Case; That is, that the statute implies two things that is property, and time of property, which ought to be at the time of the devise. But here at the time of the devise, the Devisor was not having of Lands held by Knight's service, for of those he was only Tenant for life, and the having intended by the statute ought to be real enjoying, and perfect having, by taking, and not by retaining, though that in Cars Case, cited in Butler and Baker's Case, rend extinct be sufficient to make Wardship, yet this is no sufficient having to make a devise void for any part. Also if the Statute extend to all Lands, to be after purchased, the party shall never be in quiet, and for that the Statute doth not intend Lands which shall be purchased afterwards; for the Statute is having, which is in the Present tense, and not which he shall have, which is in the Future tense; and 4. and 5 P. and M. 158. Dyer 35. A man seized of Socage Lands, assures that to his Wife in jointure, and 8. years after purchases Lands held in chief by Knight's service, and devises two parts of that, and agreed that the Queen shall not have any part of the land conveyed for Jointure, for this was conveyed before the purchase of the other, which agrees with the principal case, and though to the Question, what had the Devisor; It was having of Lands held in Capite, insomuch that he had Fee-simple expectant upon all the estates tail; he intended that this is no having within the Statute, but that the Statute intent such having, of which profit ariseth, and out of which the K. or other Lord may be answered, by the receipt of the profits, which cannot be by him which hath fee-simple expectant upon an estate tail, of which no Rent is reserved: and also the estate tail by intendment shall have continuance till the end of the world: and 40. Edw 3. 37. b. in rationabili parte bonorum, it was pleaded, that the Plaintiff had reversion descended from his Father, and so hath received advancement. And it seems that was no plea, in so much that the reversion depends upon an estate tail, and upon which no Rent was reserved, and so no advancement. So of a conveyance within this Statute, ought such advancement to the youngest son, which continues, as it is agreed in Binghams' Case, 2 Coke, that if a man convey lands to his youngest son, and he convey that over to a stranger in the life time of his father for good consideration, and after the Father dies, this is now out of the Statute; for the advancement ought to be continuing until the death of the Father: And so he saith also it was adjudged in Butler and Baker's Case; that if a man devise Socage Lands, and after sell to a stranger for good consideration, his Lands held by Knight's service, this devise is now good for all, for he hath not any Land held by Knight's service at the time of his death, and so he concluded that the devise was good, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Houghton Houghton. Sergeant for the Defendant, he thought the contrary, and he argued that before the statutes of 32. and 34. of H. 8. men were disabled to devise any Land, and for that they cannot provide for their Wives, Children, or for payment of their Debts, and for remedy to that, Feoffments to uses were invented, and then to dispose the use by their Wills: and then experience finds that to be inconvenient, and then the statute of 27. H. 8. transfers the use into possession, and then neither use nor land was deviseable without special Custom, and then this was found to be mischievous, after five years' experience, and then was the statute of 32. H. 8. made, and where by the statute of Marlebridg, of those which did enfeoff their begotten sons, a Feoffment by the Father to his son and Heir was void for all. Now by this statute this is good for 2. parts, and void only for the 3d part, & that for the good of the Lord; but as to the party that is good for all, as it is agreed in Mights' case, 8 Coke. Then to consider in the case here, if all things concur that the statute requires; and to that here is a person which was actually seized of Land held by Knight's service in 12. Eliz. So that it is a person which then was having within the statute. 2. If here be such conveyance for advancement of his children, as is intended within the statute; and to that he seemed that so, notwithstanding that it may be objected, that here is no execution to the youngest children, insomuch that it is first limited to such Farmers and Tenants, etc. But he intended that this is no impediment. Secondly, also there is a limitation to the use of his last Will. Thirdly, also there is a limitation to the use of such persons to whom he devices any estate by his Will. But these are no impediments, for the last is no other but a devise to himself and his heirs, and there is not any other person known, but merely contingent, and it is not like to a remainder limited to the right heirs of I. S. for there the remainder is in Abeiance, but here it is only in contingency, and nothing executed in Interest, till the contingency happen, and the not having of a son at the time shall not make difference, as in 38. Edw. 3. 26. in formedon in Remainder, where the gift was in one for life, the remainder to another in tail, remainder in fee to another stranger; and he in remainder in tail dies without Issue in the life time of the Tenant for life, he in remainder in fee may have formedon in remainder without mentioning the remainder in tail. But here he intends that the devise shall be void in respect of the Lands first conveyed, which were held in chief by Knight service; for the words of the statute are by act executed, either by devise, or by any of them, and they are conjoined: and it is not of necessity that the time of the Conveyance shall be respected, but the time of the value. And notwithstanding that the Testator doth not mention any time; But in so much as the provision of the statute is to save primor, seisin, and livery to the King, as if the man had 20 l. by year in Socage, and one acre in chief, and makes a conveyance of all that, it shall be void first to the livery, and pri●or seisin to the third part: So if he make conveyance of the 20 l. by year, and leave the said acre held in chief to descend, and after that purchase other Lands to the value of the third part of all the conveyance of the 20 l. land, notwithstanding which, for the advancement of his Wife, Children, or payment of his Debts, for he had a full third part at the time of his death, which descended. And he supposed that the having of a dry reversion depending upon the estate tall, is sufficient, having within the words and letter of the Statute, and yet he agreed the ease put in Butler and Baker's case; that if a man devise his Socage Lands, and after alien his Lands held in chief by Knight service to a stranger, bonafide, this is good. So if he had made a reservation of his Lands held in chief to himself for his life, in so much that his estate in that ended with his life, and he remembered the case cited in Bret and case, Comment. That if a man devise a Manor in which he hath nothing, and after he purchaseth it, and dies, the devise is good, if it be by express name. But when a man hath disposed of two parts of his Land, the Statute doth not enable him to devise the Residue; but he hath done all, and executed all the authority which the Statute hath given to him. But he agreed also, that the reversion is not such a thing of value, which might make the third part descend to the Heir; but it is uncertain, as a hundred, and the other things of uncertain value contained in Butler and Baker's Case. And also he intended, that the remainder could not take effect, insomuch that the condition is precedent, and it is not found that the eldest Son hath aliened, and then dead without Heir male, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. In Replevin the Defendant avows for 9 s. Rent, the Plaintiff pleads a Replevin, Grant without date. Deed of feoffment of the same Land made before the Statute of (quia emptores terrarum) by which 6 s. 8 d. is only reserved, and demands Judgement, if he shall be received to demand more than is reserved by the Deed; See 4 Ed. 2. Avowry, 202. 10. H. 7. 20. Ed. 4. 7. Edw. 4. Lung, 5 Ed. 4. 22 H. 6. 50. This Deed was without date, and it was averred that it was made before the Statute of (quia emptores terrarum) which was made in the 18. of Edw. 1. And also it ought to be averred to be made after the beginning of the Reign of Richard 1. For a writing after the beginning of his Reign checks prescription. But if a man hath a thing by grant before that, he may claim by prescription, for he cannot plead the grant, insomuch it is before time of memory, and a Jury cannot take notice of that, and for that the pleading before with the said averments was good. If debt be due by Obligation, and another debt be due by the same Obligation. Debtor to the same Debtee of equal sum, and the Debtor pay one sum generally, this shall be intended payment upon the Obligation. Earl of Cumberland and Hilton IN an action of Account, the (Venire facias) was returned by the Account. Coroners; (The execution of this Writ doth appear in a certain Pannell fixed to this Writ) and the Pannell and names of the Jurors between the Earl of Cumberland, Plaintiff, and Thomas Hilton Defendant, in a plea of Debt, where it ought to be in a plea of Account, and yet after Verdict day was given to the Coroners, to amend their Return, which was done accordingly. Michaelmass, 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Ferdmando Cross, Informer, against Westwood. IN Information upon the Statute of 5. Ed. 6. Chap. 14. exhibited by Information. Cross against Westwood, for that the Defendant had bought in gross, and gotten into his hands by buying, and not by Lease, 40. quarters of Wheat meal, price of every quarter 40. shillings, to the intent to put that in water, and after of that being dried again, then of that to make starch, against the form of the said Statute, and so demanded fourscore pounds for the King and himself, according to the Statute; and upon this the Defendant demurred in Law, upon the Information this case came in question: And it was argued by nichols Sergeant for the Defendant, that there was not any Law against Engrossers known, what was engrossing before the making of this Statute, which declares and describes who shall be an Engrosser: Then he considered, if the Engrosser described in the Information, be such an Engrosser which is intended by the Statute, and he seemed that no, for he said, the Engrosser contained in the Information, is not one which bought Corn growing in the field, nor Corn, nor dead Victuals, which are the words contained in the Statute; but he is charged for buying of wheat meal, and it seems that that is not within the words of the Statute. Also Engrosser intended within the Statute, aught to buy that, to sell the same again, and so is not the Engrosser in the Information charged, and if he be not within the words, he shall not be within the punishment; for it is a penal law, and shall not be taken by equity, and so much the more, because it inflicts corporal punishment upon the Offender. And then to consider the words of the Statute, he supposed that Wheat meal is not within the words, Corn growing, nor Corn; but the question is, if it be within the words, dead Victuals: and to that he said, that it hath been adjudged, that a Costermonger which buys Apples to sell again, is not within the words (dead Victuals) and he said, that Flower and Meal are things of which Victuals are made, and not Victuals themselves. But there ought to be another thing done to them by the industry of man to make them Victuals; As if a Baker buy Wheat, and make that into Bread, this is out of the provision of the Law, and not aided by the Proviso, which provides for Fish-monger, Poulter, and Butcher, which buys such things which concern their Faculty, Craft, or Mystery, if it be not by forestalling, but this doth not extend to all Crafts. But he supposed that when the nature is altered, that is out of the purviewe, and is another thing, and shall not be replevied, notwithstanding that Replevin lieth of Sow and Pigs, where the Sow only was imparked, but not of Leather made in Shoe. Also he seemed that the Defendant is not charged that he had an intent to sell the same again: And if a man buy Corn for the provision of his house, this is out of the Statute, notwithstanding that it be by Engrossing. And so if a man buy Barley, and make that into Malt, and sell it again in Malt: Or if a man buy Oats, and convert that into Oatmeal, or other Flower, and then sell it again, this is out of the statute: and if so it be, then upon this he inferred, that this is not so much as if he had sold that afterwards, when he had altered it in nature, as in making of Wheat-meale into starch; for in the cases before cited, things bought are of another nature: So if a man hath many Farms or Grounds sowed with Corn, and he sells them to another, this is no forestalling within the statute, if it be not driving to Market: and he saith, that Regrater is defined by the statute, to be him which buys in one Market, and sells that in another Market within four miles, and he is an Engrosser, and Regrater also: So if a man buy Wheat, and makes Cakes of that, this is out of the statute: Or if a Merchant buy Corn beyond Sea, and sell that here, this is is out of the statute, for it ought to be bought and sold also within the Realm; so if Corn reserved for Rent be sold again, this is out of the statute, and so concluded; First, that the buying of Wheat-meale is not buying of Corn growing, Corn, nor dead Victuals, and the sale of that in starch, is not the sale of the same thing again, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Dodridge Sergeant of the King, for the King, and the Informer supposed the contrary, and to him it seemed, that there are three Dodridge things considerable, upon the Statute: That is, the Scope, the Letter, and the offence, and to the offence, he intended that it is the offence which is contained in the Information which is provided to be punished by the Statute, and he said that the offence is confessed by the Demurrer: And he said there were divers good Laws against Engrossers before the making of this Statute: But it was not defined who was an Engrosser, and this was the Evasion that such Malefactors escaped without punishment. And he said, there are three notable Enemies to the Common Wealth, first Forestallers, secondly Regraters, thirdly Engrossers: And forestaller is he which prevents the Sale in open market, Engrosser is he which engrosseth in his hands, and Regrater is he which sells again, and he which will be an Engrosser, will be a Forestaller also, and so of the contrary, and these offences make Dearth, and for that their gain is called a (wicked gain:) See the Statute of 31. Ed. 1. Rastall Forestallers 1. And they are basely to be esteemed, which merchandise of Merchants, because they cannot gain unless at least they lie: And this Statute hath given a livery to those Malefactors by which they may be known, for he hath them described and defined, and this is the scope of the Statute; thirdly he considered the Letter, and for the better intelligence of that he consi ered the Body and Proviso of the Statute, and tie himself to an Engrosser, and would not meddle with the other offences contained in the Statute, the words of which are, whatsoever person or persons shall engross or get into his or their hands by buying, etc. (other then by Lease, etc.) and Corn growing in the fields, or any other Corn or grain, etc. or other dead victuals whatsoever, shall be accepted, reputed, and taken an unlawful engrosser, etc. And it hath been objected that it is a penal Statute, and for that shall not be taken by equity, and also is declaratory, and for reason also shall be taken strictly: But he supposed, that admitting that the offender contained in the information be out of the Letter of the Statute, that yet he shall be within the equity, and that the Statute shall be taken by equity, but he intended first, what was within the Letter of the Statute, for Wheat made into meal is Wheat, and Barley made into Malt is Barley, and so it is contained in the information, that is, that he hath bought Wheat made into Meal, and allowing that Corn is victual, than a fortiori, meal is dead victual, for it is a degree nearer to the use of man and to sustenance●; and by the same reason that it is not victual, insomuch that another thing ought to be made to it, before it may be used, by the same reason flesh shall be no victual, for that ought to be boiled or roasted, which is another thing also before it can be used: and he said that meal is the staff of sustenance, and of all dearths, the dearth of Meal and Corn is the most greatest, and he which wants bread, wants all other victuals, for all others without this breeds diseases, and for that Corn is the victual of victuals, and so he supposed this remains Corn, and admitting that not yet it is within the words (dead victuals) Also he intends that the Statute shall be taken by equity, notwithstanding it be penal, insomuch that it is for public good, as the Statute of 25. Ed. 3. of petty treason, contains the Master only: And yet if a Servant kills his Mistress, that shall betaken within the Statute: And so if the Servant kills his Master after that he is departed out of his service, upon malice conceived during the time that he was in his service, this shall be also within the Statute, and yet is not within the words of the statute, and so of the statutes of 13. and 27. Eliz. of fraud upon taking by equity, and yet all these statutes are penal: But insomuch that they are made for the public good, and for punishment of offences which tend to the contrary, they shall be out of the general rule; But he intended that the same thing which was bought was sold again, for it is confessed by the information, that he hath sold Meal, and it was not the thing that was first bought, and if it were sustenance before that the water was put to it, the putting of water to it doth not make alteration, and is contained in the information, that the Defendant sold the same meal that he had bought by the name of Starch, and this is confessed by the Demurrer, and by that if meal be victual, than he hath sold meal victual by the name of Starch, and to the objection, that it is not the same thing, insomuch that the Replevin doth not lie, for the meal after that is made in Starch, he saith Replevin doth not lie for the Corn itself if it be not in bags, and if the meal were in bags, notwithstanding that water were put to it, yet Replevin lies, and it is reason that this shall have a large and beneficial construction, insomuch as it appears by the preamble, that this is made against the Caterpillars of the Common Wealth: And to the objection that the Statute is Declaratory, and for that it shall not be taken by equity, if this rule shall be observed, than all the questions in the Court of Wards, and in Butler and Baker's Case 3. Coke they have been in vain. And yet it appears that equity was there taken for equity. But in these cases the exposition may be besides, but not contrary to the words, and also he intended that the Proviso expounds the Body of the statute, and by the Proviso it appears, that the buying of barley and converting it into Malt, and the Sale of that afterwards, and the buying of Oats and the converting of that into Oatmeal, and the sale of that afterwards should be within the Statute, if it had not been excepted by the Proviso; and yet there is an alteration of the thing which is bought: And if a man buy Barley by forestall, and make that in Malt, and then sell that again, this is within the Statute, and there is no difference betwixt this Case and Malt, for the Barley is put into water and dried again, and so it is here, the Meal is put in water and dried again, and yet that is within the Statute: And the manner and nature of offence, every one which hath a Household and Family knows, for the finest Wheat Meal makes sustenance for the Master of the Family, and the other makes several sorts for the residue of the Family, and the Brann makes Bread for Horses; so that the virtue of that is, that it feeds both Man and Beast, and all this is prevented by making that new devised vanity, and the quantity of Wheat which is employed is incredible, and may feed many, and if the makers of that have gained the name of an occupation, this is worse, for this furthers vanity, and takes away the sustenance of many, and inhanceth the price of Wheat, and is so new aninvention that there is not a Latin word for it, and so he concluded that he is an Offender, and within the scope of the letter of the Law, and that the Preamble and Proviso hath been so expounded, and that as to mean occupations, as Tanners and such like which bought Hydes and sold them again, and he said that they did them further for the use of man, and made that more apt and fit for use, and without that a man could not use them, but in this Case the Starch-makers further the abuse, and prayed Judgement for the King, and for the Informer. And at another day this case was argued again by Haughton for Hanghton. the Defendant, that the statute is penal for forfeiture of Goods, as for coporall punishment, and for that it shall not be taken by Equity, nor by interpretation, but strictly according to the Letter, as in Reniger and Fogassas case, Commentaries 18. By Pollard, it is a principal in Law, that a penal statute shall not be taken by Equity, as in the statute of Westminster 1. chapter 35. Gives an attaint in real action, and notwithstanding that perjury be an offence against both the Tables, and in attaint it is of necessity that it be perjury in the petty Jury, and yet this doth not extend to personal Actions, 5 Ed. 3. 6. 34 Ed. 4. 7. 1 Ed. 3. 6. Gives attaint as well for Damages excessive, as for the principal, and this shall be taken strictly, also as it is said by Fineva, 14 H. 7. 14. a. and in 27 H. 6. 8. General penal Statutes shall be limited to certain times as the statute of Westminster 2. chapt. 11. Which gives power to Auditors which find accountants in Arrearages, to commit them to prison, but it ought not to be forthwith, and this for the favour of the Defendants, and this is the reason also of the Judgement in Fogassas Case by the statute of Agreements, that every agreement shall be taken within the statute, and so the Statute of 23 H. 6. Provides that the Sheriff shall not let out his County, and 20 H. 7. 21. It is agreed that the letting out of a Hundred is not within the Statute, and it is also agreed in Partridges case, Com. 87. that the statute of 32 H. 8. of buying of Tithes, shall not be taken by Equity, and the reason is there given, insomuch that it is a penal Law, and if it be so that the statute shall not be taken by Equity he considered if it be within the words, and to that he intended that it is not Corn which is bought, for it is changed into another thing, and also it is not dead Victual, for it is not Victual till another thing is made of it, also the same thing that was bought aught to be sold again, or otherwise it shall not be within the Words of the statute, and by consequence out of the penalty, as if a man buy Corn, and make that into Meal, Bread, or Puddings, this is not within the statute, so the buying of Apples and selling of them again, it is no victuals within the statute, so Butcher which buys cattle, and those kill and sells again is not within the statute, and he says that Starch is good Food when it is dry again, which proves that this is another thing then the Meal which was bought, and so out of the Letter of the statute, and to the Proviso which excepts Barley that is bought and made in Malt, and Oats, made in Oatmeal and sold again, it seems that this is an idle Proviso and surplusage, as in Porter's Case, 1 Coke 24. 6. in the statute of 27 H. 8. Proviso to except good uses out of the statute, enables men to devise to such uses, and so the statute of 5 Ed. 6. chapter 16. the Body of which extends only to Offices, Covenant, Administration of Justice, or the Revenue of the King, as Receiver, Controller, etc. And yet a Keeper of a Park is excepted out of this, more for the satisfaction of the ignorant Burgesses then for any necessity, and so he concluded and prayed judgement for the Defendant. Montague Sergeant of the King, for the King and for the Informer Montague. argued to the contrary, that as to the objection that Costermongers are not within the statute, he saith, that that is a thing of Delicacy, and not victuals within the statute, but he saith it was adjudged in the Exchequer, that the buying of Meal and the selling of that again was within this statute, and in this case the Information is that the Defendant had bought Meal and sold the same again by the name of Starch, which is confessed by the Demurrer, and for the exposition of the statute, he considered the mischief before the making of that, the remedy which is provided by the statute, and the Office of a good Judge, that is to advance the remedy and suppress the mischief, and he intended that this was punishable by the Common Law in another form, as Waste, notwithstanding as Action doth not lie, yet Prohibition lies at the Common Law, and by the statute of 27 Ed. 3. Justices in Oyre, aught to inquire of all greivances and oppressions to the People, and there cannot be greater grievance or oppression then that is which deprives them of their food, and for that, he is called the Oppresser of the Poor, and Fleta calls him Wolf which ought to be hunted from place to place, and 43 Assize. was punished by Fine and Ransom, and yet then the offence was uncertain, but now it is made certain by defining it by this statute, so that this is a statute of Definition only, and the statute of 31. Ed. 1. inf●icts the punishment, and to the objection, that it is not the same thing which is sold, which was bought, he said it is the same in intent, for it produceth the same mischief. Secondly, It is the same substance, and the same form, that is the formal substance which gives the being, but not an accedentall form, and he saith, that if a man have Corn, and another by wrong takes it from him, and doth convert it into Meal, he may take that back again; otherwise of Iron made into an Anvil, but trees made into Timber, and plate altered in fashion, may be taken back again, otherwise if it be converted into Coin, and so upon the Statute of 21 H. 8. If a Servant sells the Goods of his Master, and steal the Money, that is out of the Statute, but if the Servant carry Corn to the Mill, and this is converted into Meal, and then the Servant steals it, this is within the statute, for this is the same thing, 28 H. 8. A man pleads (he appearing seized to the same use) it shall not be intended the same, but such uses, and Browning and Beestons' case in the Com. A man is bound to pay twenty pound at Michaelmas, and also afterwards to pay twenty pound at the same Feast, and that was intended the same Feast in another year, and not in the same year, so that the word (same) shall not be so precisely taken, but as Patent of the King for making of a thing, of which a man hath made new invention is good, if it be limited for certain time only, as Hastings hath a Patent for making of Frisado only, as a thing newly invented by him, but insomuch that this varyes only in the form of making of that, and not in substance, the Patent was adjudged void, so a Patent made to a Cutler for Gilding, insomuch that this varies only in form, this was not allowed to be a new invention, so a Patent made to Johnson for new casting of Lead, insomuch that that varies only in form, and not in substance, this agreed with the ancient, this was also void, and if the starch made be another thing then the Meal which was bought, than it ought to be another in nature and quality, but this is not, for starch is used for Victual in Spain and other Countries, as Ryce is used, see 46 Assize 8. 27. and he intended that the Proviso made that clear and without question, for there cannot be a difference made between that and Malt, and if Malt had not been within the Body of the Act, this would not be exempted by special Proviso, and so the statute of 25 H. 8. chapter 2. for transportation of Victual in Ireland, except Meal, which proves also that Meal is included within the words, dead Victuals, and which hath been within the Body of the statute if it had not been excepted, and to the Objection that it is penal Law, and for that shall have strict opposition, and not by equity, but he saith that this rule fails as to the interest of the Commonwealth, that is, when the Commonwealth is intervenient; and to the Objection that this is a thing invented after the making of the statute, he answered that, with the case of Saint-John, 5 Coke 71. b. Which inhibits Hand-Guns, and it is there adjudged that Dags and Stone-bows, which are of later Invention shall be within the statute for they are their invention, and their form of the things which are inhibited, and so Vernons case, 4 Coke, if he to whose use infeoffs his Son and Heir, this shall be taken within the statute of Marlebridge, and yet he to whose use cannot make a Feoffment, nor uses were not known till many years after the making of this statute, and Baker furthers the Meal for the use of man, and for that he may sell it in Bread without any punishment, and then he said it was the Office of a good Judge to suppress the mischief, and to advance the remedy as the Lord Anderson saith in Brownes' Case, 3. Coke: And so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the King and the Informer. And note that this case was solemnly argued by all the Justices of this Court, and it was adjudged, that this was engrossing within the statute by Warburton, Foster, and Winch. But the Lord Coke agrued the contrary, Walmesley being absent that Term. The same question was argued the same Term in the Exchequer upon an Information there exhibited by one Collins an Informer, and it was there argued by Hitchcocke of Lincoln's Inn for the Defendant, and he argued that the Starch was not the same thing which was bought, no more than if it had been made in Bread, and he cited the Book of 5 H. 7. 15. 16. Where it is agreed that if a man takes Barley and makes Malt of that, that he from whom it was taken, could not take the Malt, for that, that there the thing is altered in another nature, and he intended that the Starch is not the same in number nor quality, but he agreed, that if wheat be only ground, that this notwithstanding is within the Statute, but if it be made into Bread, then sold, it is not within the Statute, for than it is another Body, and other things added to it, and the form is also altered, and the form gives the being and the name, and if Water be turned into Wine, it is no Water, though it be by miracle; so if a Parson be made Bishop, he is not the same person, for Honours change Manners, and this is his reason that the Writ shall abate, for it is newly created, as of nothing, 7 H. 6. 15. 22 R. 2. Bre. 93. b. 2 R. 3. 20. Also the Statute of 21 H. 8. Which provides that the party from whom any Goods are stolen, after that the Felon is indicted, shall have restitution of the same goods, but if Corn be stolen, and converted into Meal, the Owner shall not have restitution, for it is not the same which was stolen, but if Plate be stolen and altered in other form, yet the owner shall have restitution of that as he said, which was adjudged for the King, 40. Eliz. But where restitution upon a Writ of Error, where the Judgement is the same thing shall be restored, that if yet term be sold by fieri facias, and after the Judgement is reversed by Error, he shall not be restored to the Term but shall have the money for which it is sold, also he saith it is not the same in number and substance, for the 1 thing was corrupt, and the corruption of that was the beginning of the new, and the Wheat is the matter of which, and also Water is, and fire and the heat of the Sun, and after that it is made in Starch, it will not be dissolved and made into victual, no more than Bread, and the worst Wheat will make the best starch, also he intended, that it is not in the same condition nor similitude, also he objected that (Ligamen) which is the word contained in the Count, is no Latin word at all, but (Legumen) is the latin word, and that is latin for Pulse, and that not being any latin word, the english which is added will not help it, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Dodridge the King's Sergeant for the King and for the Informer, Dodridge. argued that the starch is the same (Numero) in number, quality, and substance, not in likeness, and that the statute, is no law of explanation but of definition of three severals, which make dearth without want, and the forestalling prevented the punishment of Law before the making of this Statute; but now these are in several degrees, that is forestall is commonly engrossing and regrating, and Engrosser is always Regrator, and that the Defendant in this case is Engrosser of Victuals, that is victuals which is the staff of man's health, and the want of that is more grievous than the want of all other things, and the dearth of that is the most pinching dearth which may be, and the gain of that is a base gain, and they which basely buy of Merchants that they may straightways sell not any thing unless they may get great gains or save in the measure, & they are called Regrators, as Grators of the faces of the People, and if this Statute had been executed, this had prevented many Dearths, and to the objection, that it is a penal Law, and for that shall be taken strictly, and there is a general rule, and as true as it is general, but it is true if it be not within the exception, that is, if public good doth not intervene, and here it concerns the Commonwealth, as much as the lives of men, and many other penal Statutes have been taken by Equity, as the Statute which makes that to be petty Treason if the Servant kill his Master, and in the 19 H. 6. It is agreed that if the Servant after he is departed out of the service of his Master kill him upon any malice conceived during the time that he was in his Service, this shall be taken within the Equity of the statute, and so the statute of 33 H. 8. Was made precisely, against Hand-Guns and Daggs, are taken to be within the Equity of that, notwithstanding that they were invented after the making of that Statute, and were not known at the time of the making of that, for they are the same in intention, as it is resolved in Streches Case, in Coke 71. b. And to the words of the Statute (who shall sell the same) it intends that starch is the same in all, but only in similitude; for a thing which is of the same similitude is not the same, but like the same (for no like is the same.) Also he intended that it is the same both in number and form, and he agreed (that form gave the being) for that is not the accidental as here it is, but it is the substantial form, and every one knows that Meal of Wheat, is the same as Pepper beaten in a Mortar, and Pepper and all other Spices, so that it is the same in number, existence, substance, and essence, and he intended also the same in intention, for Meal is Victual, and is dead Victual, be it Corn or Meal; and Corn ground, and made in Meal, then sold, yet that remains dead Victual, and Meal is the same dead Victual, though that it be not the same Corn; and to prove that Corn is Victual, he cited the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. 5. Stat. Chap. 7. Which provides that no Forester shall make any gathering of Victuals by colour of their Office; and he intended, that Corn was within this statute, and so also of the statute of the 3. P. and M. Chap. 15. Rastal, Universities which provides, that to the Purveyor, Bargainor for any Victuals within 5 miles of any of the Universities of Oxford or Cambridg, where Grain and Victual are joined together. So the Statute of 25 H. 8. Chap. 2. abridged by Rastall, Victual, 15. which inhibits the transportation of Victual, if it be not of Meal and Butter into Ireland, by which it appears that Meal is dead Victuals: And he said, that Victuals is that which refresheth men, and Victuals are those things, which to the use of eating and drinking are necessary. So that Meal is the same in number, though that the Corn were turned into Meal. And he cited Peacock and Reynolds Ca●e to be adjudged 42 Eliz. That if a man buy Corn, and convert that into Meal, and so sell it, it is within this Statute: And he said, that if a man be made a Knight, hanging his action, that this shall abate his action, but yet he remains the same person, but his name is changed, which is the cause of the abatement of his action, 7 H. 6. 15. Also the Defendant is concluded by his demurrer upon the Information, to say that it is not the same thing, for this is confessed by the Demurrer; and though that the name be changed, this is not material, if the substance be the same; and he agreed, that a Baker which buys Wheat, and makes it into Bread, is not within the Statute, for he furthers that to the use of man, as a Currier makes the Leather more fit and apt for use; but so doth not he which makes it into starch, for he furthers the abuse; for it is no lawful Occupation, but idle and frivolous furtherance of vanity of men. And in 35. H. 6. 2. If a man enter into the Land of another man, and cut Trees, and that square, and make into Board's, yet if the Owner enter, he may take them: But if it be made into a House, otherwise it is, for there it is mingled with other things, as it is 5 H. 7. 15, 16. So Iron made in Anvil: But of Leather made in Shoes otherwise it is, insomuch that it is mingled with other things, 12 H. 8. 11. a. A dead Stag is not a Stag, but is a certain dead thing, and flesh. As a man dead is not a man; but agreed the Book of H. 7. 15. and 16. That Corn converted into Meal cannot be restored, nor reprized, no more may that if it remains in Corn, if it be not in Baggs; And he said, that upon the Statute of Merton, the Re-disseisin after the Recovery in Assize, if the same Disseisor makes Re-disseisin, the Sheriff may examine that, etc. And it is agreed in 27 H. 6. That if Tenant in tail be disseised, and recover in assize, and is put in possession, and after his Estate is altered, and he become Tenant in tail after possibility of Issue extinct, and then the Disseisor makes Re-disseisin, that this is aided by the statute, not that it is alteration of the Estate: And also he saith, it appears more fully by the Proviso, by which it is provided, that Barley turned into Malt, and Oats turned into Oatmeal, if it be by Engrossing, it is within the purview of the statute. So if it be by way of Forestalling; or if they sell them again before that they are converted, shall be Regrators; And to the Objection, that other things; that is, Water and Fire are added to that, he saith that none of them remains; for the Fire dries the water, and the fire also goeth out, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the King, and the Informer, and it was adjourned. Michaelmass, 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. IN Dower against Infant which makes default upon the grand Cape Dower. returned, and agreed by all the Justices, that Judgement shall be given upon the Default, for the Infant shall not have his age, and so it was adjudge upon a Writ of Error. Charnock against Currey, Administrator of Allen. IN debt upon an Obligation against the Defendant, as Administrator as above, he pleads Judgement had against him in an action of debt, Debt against Administrator. and over that hath not to satisfy, to which the Plaintiff replies, that this Judgement was for penalty, and the condition was for a lesser sum; and that the Plaintiff in the first action had accepted his due debt, and had promised to acknowledge satisfaction of the Judgement at the request of the Defendant, and at his charges: and the Administrator which was the Defendant, did not make request upon fraud and Covin, to avoid the Plaintiffs action: Upon which the Defendant hath demurred, and so confesseth the matter of the Plea. But Foster seemed that the Plaintiff ought to aver, that the Plaintiff in the first action hath offered to acknowledge satisfaction, and that otherwise he should be put to his action upon the Case; but Coke and Warberton intended that the Replication is very good without such averment; for it shall be intended, that the Plaintif will perform his promise: But further, this Demurrer which was only for part, was also for another part, an Issue joined for the other part, which was to be tried by the Country; and which shall be tried of the Issue, or of the Demurrer, was the question; and it was agreed by them all, that the Issue, or Demurrer shall be first at the discretion of the Court, see 11 H. 4. 5. 38. Ed. 3. Commission is granted to the Council in Wales, of which the Precedent, Commission to the Council in Wales. Vice-president, or Chief Justice to be one; And the question was, if they might make a Deputy, and it was agreed that a delegate power could not be delegated, but they might make an Officer to take an account in any such act. Note that a Caveat was entered with a Bishop, that he should not Caveat to a Bishop. admit any without giving notice, that the admission, this notwithstanding is good; but if he admit one which hath no right, he is a disturber, but otherwise the Caveat doth nothing, but only to make the Bishop careful what person he admits. Foster Justice seemed, that if the Ordinary now after the statute of If administraon to the next of blood cannot be repealed. 21 H. 8. grants administration to one which is next of Blood, that he cannot repeal it; but Coke chief Justice seemed the contrary, and that he incurred the penalty of the statute only. And if an Administration be granted to one which is next of Blood, upon which the first Administrator brings an action of debt, & hanging that, upon suggestion that the first Administration is void, another Administration is granted; and it seems that this second Administration granted upon this suggestion shall be repealed from the first, though it be general, and without any recital of it. But if the second be declared by sentence to be void from the beginning, than the first remains good. Action upon the Case was brought for these words, that is, thou Action for words. hast killed I. S. And it seems that the action doth not lie, for a man may kill another in execution, and as Minister of Justice, or in War, in which things killing is justifiable. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench: George Barney against Thomas Hardingham. IN Trespass for breaking the House, and taking of a Cow, the Trespass for breaking a House and taking a Cow. Defendant pleads that the King and all those whose Estates he hath in the hundred, have had Turn, and at the Court held such a day it was presented, that the Plaintiff hath encroached upon the high Way, for which he was amerced, and the amercement was affirmed by two Justices of peace, according to the Custom of the Turn aforesaid: And that he being Bailiff of the hundred, by virtue of a Warrant to him in due manner made and directed, hath entered the said house, and taken the said Cow for distress, for the said amercement, and carrying it away, which is the same Trespass, and so demands Judgement, upon which Plea the Plaintiff Haughton. Demurred: And by Haughton Sergeant for the Plaintiff, the Plea in Barr is not good, and first he conceived that it was not good, insomuch that the King hath made his Prescription by whose Estate, and he intended that he could not make his Prescription by whose Estate, insomuch that this lies in grant, as it is 12. H. 7. 15. where it is agreed that by nothing which lieth in grant, a man may Prescribe, (by whose Estate.) Also the Plea is that the King was seized in his Demesne as of Fee, where it ought to be in Fee only, insomuch that it is a thing only in Jurisdiction or Signiory and not Manurable, as in 8. H. 7. 7. H. 4. 30. assis. In an Action of Debt upon Reservation made upon Lease of a Manor and hundred, it is agreed that the hundred is not in Demesne nor Manurable: Also the Plea is not good, insomuch that it is not Pleaded, before whom the Turn shall be held: And always when a man claims a Court by Patent, he ought to show before whom his Court shall be held, otherwise it shall not be good, so of Conusance of Pleas, otherwise it is if it be in a Turn, for that shall be intended a certain ancient Court. See 44. Ed 5. 17. 1. H. 4. 6. 6. H. 4. 1. Also the Statute of Magna Charta, chap. 35. requires that it should be held in the accustomed place, and so it ought to be alleged, or otherwise it is against the Statute, and for that it shall not be good, for it is of the nature of Sheriffs Turn and derived out of that: See the book of Entries in Replevin 2. Also the Statute of Magna Charta, chap. 14. appoints that the officers shall be the Sheriff, and this is not pleaded but generally by two Justices of Peace upon their Oath: And also it is not pleaded to what Sum the amercement was made. Also it is pleaded that he being a Bailiff of the Hundred, by virtue of a Warrant to him in due manner directed and made, hath taken the distress, and doth not plead the Warrant certainly nor the place where it was made, And for that the Plea is not good: Also he pleads that he took and led away the Cow, in name of distress, and he ought to say that he took it and impounded it, for that (he took it and carried it away,) imports that he took it to his own use, 9 Ed. 4. 2. 20. Ed. 4. 6. And so he concluded that the Bar is not good, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff: And Barker (Sergeant for the Defendant) conceived that the Prescription for the Hundred (by which the Estate) was very good, and for Barker. that, See 12. H. 7. 17. a. 8. H. 7. 13. H. 7. Also he intended Barr not good. that the title to the Court is very good, notwithstanding that it is expressed, before that it shall be held, insomuch that the Law takes notice of the Turn of the Sheriff, and that he is Judge of that, and that the Affirance is very good, insomuch that this is according to the Custom of the Turn aforesaid: And the Warrant of the Bailiff is very well pleaded, and more is pleaded then need, for it is the duty and appertaineth to his office to gather the amercements, and he might do that without Warrant by force of his office: But if it be upon plaint between party and party, otherwise it is, and for that see the book of Entries 553. And also the charge in the Action is for that, that he took and carried away, and of that he made Justification, and he cannot Plead otherwise, and to the (whose Estate, etc.) That a man cannot Prescribe to have a thing by (whose Estate) which lieth merely in grant, without showing of a Deed, yet when that is appurtenant to another thing, as here the Court is to a Hundred, it may very well that do, and 33. H. 8. B. Leete, when the penalty is Presented by the Jury itself, there needs not any affirance: And so he concluded that the Plea in Barr is very good, and prayed Judgement upon that for the Defendant: And Coke chief Justice said, that Turn of the Sheriff is derived of Turner, which signifies to ride a Circuit, and so of that is derived Turner, and of that the Turn of the Sheriff, and of this is derived the Hundred, and from this the Leete: And it seems to him, that he ought to plead, before that the Court shall be held, insomuch that it is against Right, and so it was adjourned. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Hill against Upchurch. NOTE that Coke chief Justice saith, that it was adjudged in Copyhold entailed. 27. of Eliz. For the Manor of Northhall in the County of Essex, that admitting that a Copyhold may be Entailed by the Statute, that then Custom that a surrender shall be a Bar or discontinuance of such Estate tail is good, for as well as the Estate may be created by Custom, as well it may be Barred or discontinued by Surrender by Custom. Brandon's Case. NOTE if a Manor or other signiory be extended upon a Statute, Extent upon a Statute. and a Ward falls which is a sufficient value to make satisfaction of the Extent, yet this shall not be any satisfaction in tender to satisfaction: Insomuch that this is only the fruit of Tenure, and not like to cutting of Trees, nor to digging of Cole or other Ore: And so Coke chief Justice, that it hath been adjudged, and with this agreed the book of 21. Ed. 3. 1. The manner to make Summons in Dower, if the Land lieth in one Summons in Dower County, and the Church in another County: Then upon the Statute the Sheriff ought come to the next Church, though it be in another County, and there make Proclamation, asthe Auditors in Account ought to commit the Accomptants found in arrearages to the next Gaol, and there ought to be committed though that they are in another County. The words of a Patent of a Judge of the Common Bench are as Patent of a Judge of the Common bench. follows, that is to say, James by the grace of God, etc. Know that we have constituted Humphrey Winch Sergeant at Law, one of our Justices of the Common Bench, during our good pleasure, with all and singular Vales and Fees, to the same office belonging and appertaning, In Witness of which, etc. Michaelmas 1611 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Jacob against Stilo. Sowgate. IN an Action upon the Case for slanderous words: The declaration Action upon the case for slander was, that the Defendant said of the aforesaid Plaintiff, that he is perjured, to which the Defendant pleads, that the Plaintiff another time hath brought an Action in the King's Bench against the same Defendant for that, that he the said Plaintiff was perjured, and had cozened John Sowgate, and that the Defendant had pleaded to all besides these words, (Thou art perjured) not guilty, and to the words (thou art perjured) he Justifies that the Plaintiff was perjured in making an Affidavit in the Star-chamber, and this Issue was Joined, and it was found for the Defendant, but it was not pleaded that any Judgement was given upon it, And Haughton Sergeant Haughton. for the Plaintiff, which had Demurred upon the Defendants Plea: Argued that the Plea is insufficient, for if it shall be intended by that, that the Plaintiff was afore times barred, if it be in a real Action, it ought to be averred, that it is for the same Land, and if it be in a personal Action it ought to be averred that it is the same Debt or Trespass, and if it be pleaded by way of Justification, than he ought to have averred also, that the Plaintiff hath taken a false and untrue Oath, upon which Issue might have been taken: But here nothing is pleaded but the Record, and nothing averred (in Facto) So that the Issue cannot be taken upon it, for the pleading is only of Record, and that the Defendant for the cause aforesaid in the Record afore said mentioned, spoke the said words, and this is not good, for there is not contained any cause of Justification, as in Quare▪ Impedit, in the 15. and 16 H. 6. The Defendant pleads that he was Incumbent by the cause aforesaid (and without that:) But this was no good Plea, for he ought to plead his Title specially. And also it is not pleaded as Estoppell, for than he ought to have relied upon that precisely, as 35. H. 6. in Replevin the avowant relies upon descent, 30. assis. 32. 2. H. 7. 9 Also Estoppell it cannot be, insomuch that Judgement was not given in the first Action; Also it is not pleaded as Estoppell for the Plea is concluded Judgement if Action, where he ought to have relied upon the Estoppell, and peradventure also the Trial was void by unawarding of Venire Facias, or other Error; So that without Judgement it can be no Estoppell, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Barker Serjeant argued for the Defendant, that the Barker. Declaration is very good, and notwithstanding that the words are general; that is, he is perjured, yet this may be supplied very well by the (Innuendo) as it appears by James and Alexander's Case, 4. Coke. 17. a. And also that Estoppell by the Verdict is good without Judgement, as in Action of Debt, release was pleaded, and Issue joined upon that, and found for the Defendant, and after another Action was brought for the same Debt, and agreed that the first Virdict was Estoppell, 2. Ed. 3. 19 b. c. And he cited Baxter and Styles Case to be adjudged in the point, that the Estoppell is good, and also Vernons Case, 4. Coke where the bringing of a Writ of Dower, Estopped the Wife to demand her Jointure, and so concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant: Coke, the Count is good being of the aforesaid Plaintiff, and may after be supplied by (Innuendo) though that the words after are general; But if the words were general, that is, He is perjured, without saying that the Defendant spoke of the aforesaid Plaintiff, these English words following (Videlicet) he (Innuendo) the Plaintiff) Perjured Actionable. is perjured, this is not good, and shall not be supplied by (Innuendo) and he said that another time convicted is a good Plea in case of life without Judgement, but this is in favour of life, but in trespass it ought to be averred, that it is the same Trespass, and also there ought to be Judgement, and the Defendant ought to rely upon that as an Estoppell, and agreed by all that Judgement should be●given for the Defendant, if cause be not showed to the contrary such a day, etc. Michaelmass, 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Hall against Stanley. IN Trespass for Assault and Imprisonment, the Defendant justifies, Trespass for imprisonment insomnch that the Action upon the case was begun in the marshalsea for a Debt upon an Assumpsit made by the Plaintiff, and that upon that Capias was awarded to this Defendant being a Minister of the said Court to Arrest the Plaintiff to answer in the said Action, and that he by force of that Arrested the Plaintiff, and him detained till the Plaintiff found sureties to answer to the said Action, which is the same assault and Imprisonment: To which the Plaintiff replied, that none of the parties in the said Action were of the King's household, and so demanded Judgement, upon which the Defendant Demurred in Law: And Dodridge the King's Sergeant for the Dodridge. Defendant, that the Court of marshalsea may hold Plea of Actions of Trespass, by the parties or any of them of the King's house or not, and he intended that the Jurisdiction at the Common Law was general, and then they have Jurisdiction of all Actions as well real as personal, and though that their Jurisdiction be in many cases restrained, yet in an Action of Trespass there is not any restraint, but at this day they have two Jurisdictions: That is, in Criminal cases, and also in Civil causes, within the Verge: See Fleta book the second and third, where he discribes the Jurisdiction of all Courts, and amongst them the Jurisdictions of this Court, and also Britton which wrote in the time of Ed. 1. lib. 1. chap. 2. which saith it was held before Bygott who was then Earl of Norfolk and Martial, and their Authority and Jurisdiction was absolute and their Judgements not reversable unless by Parliament, and this appears by the Statute of 5. Ed. 3. chap. 2. that they might hold Plea of things which did not concern them of the household, and also the words of the Statute of Articuli super chartas chap. 3. 28. Ed. 1. provides that the marshalsea shall not hold Plea of free hold of covenant, nor of any other contract made between the King's people, but only of Trespass made within the King's house or within the Verge, and of such Contracts and Covenants which one of the house made with another of the house and within the house and in no other place, where Trespass is Limited to the King's house or within the Verge, but no restraint that the parties shall be of the King's House, or otherwise it shall not be intended which shall be only those which are of the King's House, insomuch that the Trespass is limited to be made within the Verge, also he said it was a statute made 30 Ed. 1. which provides, that if any causes arise amongst the Citizens of London only, that this shall be tried amongst the Citizens; but if it be between them of the House, it shall be tried by them of the House, by which it appears that they may hold plea between Citizens of London, where none of the parties are of the King's House, also the statute of 6 Ed. 3. chapter 2. provides that in Inquests they shall be there taken by men of the Country adjoining, and not men of the King's Household if it be not betwixt men of the King's Household if it be not for Contracts, Covenants and Trespasses made by men of the King's Household of one part, and that the same House which refers to the statute of Articuli super chartas before cited, and this expounds, and so the Statute of 10 Ed. 3. chapter 2. provides that in Inquests they are to be taken in the marshalsea, that the same inquests shall be taken of men the Country thereabouts, and not by People of the Kings, House, if it be not of Covenants, Contracts, or Trespasses made by people of the same House, according to the Statute made in time of the Grand Father of the said now King, and according to that the use hath been, that is, if none of the parties of were the King's house then the trial had been by the men of the country adjoining. And if one of the parties be of the house, and another not, than the trial is by party Juries: and if both the par●ies be of the house, than all the Jury hath used to be of the house; and if the Cause be between Citizens of London, than the trial hath used to be by Citizens of London, and in the Book of Entries, the same plea was pleaded in false Imprisonment, 9, 10. and the Register, fol. 1 1. A. in action upon escape in Trespass, and to the Books of 7 H. 6. 30. 10 H. 6. Long, 5 Ed. 4 19 Ed. 4. 21 Ed. 4. He saith, that none of these Books are in action of Trespass but one only, and that is mistaken in the principal point, and so may be mistaken in one by case: And the Book of 10 H. 6. 30. is directly in the point; but Brook in abridgement of that saith, that the practice and usage of the Court was otherwise: But it may be objected that this is (Indebitatus assumpsi●) which is in nature of an action of debt, and founded upon contract; he said that Fitzherbert in his Natura Brevium said, that there are two sorts of Trespasses, that is, General, and upon the Case, and Trespass is the Genus, and the other are the Species, and that the action is founded upon breach of promise, which is the Trespass, as for not making of a thing, which he hath promised to do, and it is Majesteale breve, and not breve formatu●, and so is an action of Trover and Conversion, or Assumpsit, are Writs of Trespass; but admit that no, yet action of false Imprisonment doth not lie, for he ought not to dispute the authority of the Court; for the duty of his Office is only to be obedient and diligent, for otherwise he should be judged of the Judge: And who by the appointment of the Judge doth any thing, doth not seem to do it deceitfully, because it is of necessity he should obey; and 14 H. 8. 16. a Justice of Peace awarded a Warrant to arrest a man for suspicion of Felony, where his Warrant was void, and yet the party to whom it was directed, justifies the making of the Arrest by force of that. And 12. H. 7. 14. Capias was awarded to the Sheriff without original, & yet it was a sufficient Warrant to the Sheriff: and 22 Assis. 64. Court awarded a Warrant, where they had no Jurisdiction, and yet it was a sufficient Warrant for him to whom it was directed. And so in Mansells' case, if the Sheriff execute an (habere facias sesinam) awarded upon a void Judgement, this is a sufficient Warrant for him. So in this case allowing that the Court hath no Jurisdiction, yet the Plaintiff cannot be retained by this action, but is put to his Writ of Error, or to his action upon the Statute, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Hutton Sergeant for the Plaintiff argued to the contrary, and he Hutton. intended that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff, for the matter, and also for the Parties, and that the Judgement, and all other proceedings in the marshalsea were merely void; and he denied that they had originally such absolute jurisdiction, as Fleta pretended, for originally that was only for the preservation of the peace, as it appears by the stile of the Court, and also by the diversities of the Courts, and that Criminal causes which require expedition, are there only tryable, and that civil causes are encroached of later times, and it was necessary to be restrained and reform by Parliament: And it appears by the Statute of Articuli super Chartas, that they have encroached to hold plea for freehold; and for that the Court which is mentioned in Fleta, cannot be otherwise intended then the King's Bench, which then followed the Kings Court. And also that they have not encroached only upon matters, as to hold plea for Free-holds, but also to persons and place where Contracts and Trespasses were made, and this was the cause of the making of the said Statute. And to this action of Trespass for indebitatus assumpsit there begun, he intended that it is for another thing, of which they could not hold plea, and it might be criminal; for Civil is that which begun by contract, and it is part of the commutative Justice, for which is recompense given by one party to another, and is not founded upon the Contract, but is translated to an action of Trespass, which manner of Trespass is not within the Statute: and so he intended, that for the matter it is not within the Statute: and then for the persons also, he intended that it is not within the Statute, and this appears by the words of the Statute of 28. Edw. 1. Articuli super Chartas, and to that 10. H. 6. 130. it is adjudged that Judgement in such case there given is void, and Coram non Judice, so 7 H. 6. 30. expresses the cause to be, insomuch that none of the parties are of the household of the King, 4 H. 6. 8. 19 Edw. 4. 8. 5. Edw. 4. 32 H. 6. Rot. 27. And he cited also Michelburns Case to be adjudged upon a Writ of Error, in the King's Bench, 38 Eliz. That they could not tender a Plea in Trospasse for Trover and Conversion, if none of the parties were of the King's house: and further he said, that when a Court hath Jurisdiction, and errs in matter of proceedings, or in Law, there the Execution made by force of their Process shall be lawful. But where the Judgement is void by default of Jurisdiction, as in this Case, there it is otherwise, as 10 H. 6. 13. Recovery of Land in the Spiritual Court is void; so Formedon commenced, & Judgement given upon that Coram non judice. before the Judges of Assizes void. So 36 H. 6. 32. Recovery of Land in Wales in this Court is void; and 8 Edw. 4. 6. Recovery of Land in ancient demesne is avoidable by Writ of Deceit: But in the other cases before, the Judgement and Recovery is absolutely void, and (Coram non Judice) for default of Jurisdiction: So in 9 H. 7. 12. b. Recovery of Land in Durham, Chester, or Lancaster, here is void for the same cause: And in this case also the said Statute makes that void by express words, see the statute of Articuli super Chartas, Chap. 3. Judgement void. And to the case of 14 H. 8. before cited, of Warrant awarded by Justice of Peace; he agreed, that insomuch that the Justice of Peace had Jurisdiction of causes of Felony, and erred only in the form and manner of his proceedings, and so in all the other cases which were put of the other part. And also he agreed that a Writ of Error may be well maintained, if such Judgement which is void, as it was in Michelburns case, for the party may admit the Judgement to be but voidable if he will. And to the exceptions to the pleading, that is, that the authority is not prosecuted, 1 Postea, that is, such a day, which was before the Judgement, and yet it seems good; and that in the first the authority was very well prosecuted in the 2 Postea was sufficient, and the other words, that is, (such a day) is but surplusage; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and it was adjourned. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Peto against Checy and Sherman and their Wives. Tri●. 9 Jacobi, Rot. 1151. IN Trespass and Ejectione firm, the Defendants pleaded, that one of the Defendants made agreement with the Plaintiff for the said Trespass and Ejectment with satisfaction, and demands Judgement, if action, upon which the Plaintiff demurred in Law; and it was argued by nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff, that the agreement was no plea, though it be said by Keble in the 11. H. 7. 13. That though it be a Plea in Ravishment of Ward, quare Impedit, and quare ejecit infra terminum, insomuch that they are actions personal: But Wood denied that, insomuch that Inheritance is to be recovered, and in Ejestione firm term shall be recovered; and for that it shall not be spoken, and of this is Wood expressly in the 13. H. 7. 20. b. That in Ejectione firm agreement shall not be a plea, insomuch that the term is to be recovered, which is the thing in demand. And there also it is agreed, that in Waste brought against Lessee for years in the Tenet, agreement is good plea, and so Vavasor intended, if it be in the Tenet, but not if it be brought against Lessee for life: And also he intended that by Recovery in Ejectione firm, more shall be recovered then the term only, for by that the reversion shall be also reduced, and for that the Inheritance is drawn in question; and it is said in 11. H. 7. 13. that it shall not be a plea in Assize, insomuch that there the freehold is to be recovered, and by the same reason he intended that shall be no plea, insomuch that more is to be recovered then in Assize, for there the Tenant only shall recover the freehold, and his damages; but here the Term and the Inheritance also are reduced and revested: And this is the reason also which is given in 11. H. 7. 13. b. by Fisher: That if a man make a Lease for years, rendering Rend, and after brings Debt for the Rent behind, the Defendant cannot wage his Law, notwithstanding that the action is personal: But this is more high in his nature, as it is there said, and yet there nothing shall be recovered, but only damages, for which a man may have satisfaction. Also he intended that it was not well pleaded; that is, that such agreement was had between the Plaintiff, and one of the Defendants, and betwixt those shall be intended those two only, and also Ipsum and Alios by his command●ment, and doth not show that this was made by the other two by his commandment, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Shirley Sergeant for the Defendant, that the Plea is good, and that Shirley. the nature of the Action is only Trespass by force and arms, and differs from a Quare ejecit, but Ejectione firm differs from predict. infra terminum, and lies against the immediate Ejector; but Quare ejecit lieth against him which hath title, as he in reversion, 7 H. 4. 6. b. Ejectione firm was brought by Executors of Land let to their Testator for years, upon outing of the Testator by the statute of 4 Edw. 3. Chap. 6. which gives action for the Executors of goods taken out of the possession of their Testator: and it seems to him also that process of Outlawry lies in an Ejectione firm, but in Quare ejecit infra terminum only summons. So it is 11. H. 7. 13. There is a great difference between Waste and this, for there the Process is Distress, and other special Process: But so is it not here, but only the Process which is in other general actions of Trespass, and so is the express opinion of Keble, in 11. H. 7. 13. That in ravishment of Ward, Quare Impedit, and quare ejecit infra terminum, that agreement is a good plea, and yet all these trench upon the Realty; and in ejectione firm, if the term expire, hanging the action, this shall not abate the Writ; but the Plaintiff shall have Judgement for his damages, otherwise in a Quare ejecit infra terminum. And it was resolved 20 Eliz. That if an ejectione firm be brought at the common Law of Lands in ancient Demesne, that this shall not alter the tenure, insomuch that it is merely personal, and the damages are the principal which are to be recovered; and in 21 Edw. 4. 10. b. the difference is showed between ejectione firm, and quare ejecit infra terminum, for one lies against the Lessor, or other Ejector immediately, and the other lies against the Feoffee of the other immediate Ejector, and the first is by force of arms, and the other not, and it always lies against him that is in by Title, and the first against him which is the wrong doer; and he intended that the agreement with one of these Defendants is good, for it is satisfaction, and discharges the action as release, the which every one which hath it may plead; and here it is pleaded with satisfaction, that is obligation, upon which the Plaintiff may have action, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendants. Wynch Justice argued this case, notwithstanding that he had not Wynch. heard any argument at the Bar, this being the first case that he argued after he was made Justice of this Court, and he delivered his opinion that the agreement was a good Bar; and he said, that the difference is where the thing to be recovered is in the Realty, and where it is in the Personalty, as it is agreed in Blakes Case, 6 Coke 43. b. So that here the only question is if this action be in the Realty, or in the Personalty, and it seems to him that it is in the Personalty, and that it is of the nature of Trespass, and the term is not anciently to be recovered, as it is 6. R. 2. Fitz. Na. Bre. and it is within the statute of 4 Edw. 3. Chap. 6. which gives action to Executors for goods carried away in the life time of the Testator, as it is 7 H. 4. 6. b. And to objection, that ancient Demesne is a good plea, and for that is in the Realty, and he said, and so it is in Account, and Account is not in the Realty; and the reason why it shall not be a Bar in Assize, is in so much, that there the freehold shall be recovered, but this fails here: so in Waste also this toucheth the Inheritance; but here the Inheritance doth not come in question, but the term only; and it doth not appear to the Court, that it concerns Inheritance, for it may be betwixt the Lessor or another which claims under him, and the Lessee. And if a Husband which hath a term in right of his Wife, submits himself to Arbitrement, this shall not bind the Wife, but shall bind the Husband, and shall be a Bar, if the Wife hath not Interest, and so he concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Defendants, and that the agreement is a good Barr. Foster Justice intended that the agreement is a good Bar in an Ejectione▪ Foster. firm, etc. And it seems that it is no question but that the action is personal, and yet he agreed that ancient Demesne is a good plea. So in debt, receipt of part hanging the Writ abates all the Writ. And 21 Ed. 4. 10. b. Two Tenants in Common were of a Term: and 7 H. 4. 6. b. Executors shall have an action upon Entry made in the time of their Testator by the statute of 4 Edw. 3. Chap. 6. and in this the Plaintiff shall recover his Term; but he denied that the reversion is reduced by the recovery, nor revested in the Lessor till the Lessee enter. And to the Objection that the Realty and Inheritance may come in question in this, that is not to the purpose, for so it may in an action of Trespass. And he intended there is no difference between agreement and Arbitrement, and agreed that none of those is a plea where the Inheritance or freehold comes in question. And he conceived that Arbitrement for freehold is not good, unless the submission be by Deed indented; for by Obligation with Condition is not sufficient, 11 H. 4. 44. b. and it is not in difference, 14 H. 4. that in ravishment of ward submission may be without Deed, insomuch as it is in the personalty, and he intended that there is no difference between that and Ravishment of Ward, and Ward is but Chattel, so is term which may be sold by word, as well ●s the possession may be sold by word, so may the right of that be extinct by word. And as if a may be bound to pay a certain sum of money at a certain day, and the Obligee accept parcel in satisfaction before the day, and that is very good: So in this case acceptance of a sum of less value may be a satisfaction of such personal thing, 4 H. 8. Dyer 1. 8 Edw. 6. Dyer, 19 H. 6. 9 H. 7. And so he concluded, that for that nothing is to be recovered but Chattel, that for that the agreement shall be good plea. Warburton Justice agreed that the agreement should be good in Ejectione Firm, insomuch that this is merely personal: And he argued that it is no Plea in assize insomuch that this is real, and there the freehold is to be recovered, and this is the reason that waging of Law lieth in Debt upon arbitrement, insomuch that the seal of the Arbitrators is not annexed unto it, and for that to him it is but only matter in Deed, 13. Ed. 4. And he intended that agreement Arbitrement: with satisfaction is as much as Arbitrement, for a personal thing cannot be satisfaction for a real thing, and that is the cause that it cannot be a Bar in Debt upon arrearages of account, insomuch that that is founded upon Record, and is a thing certain: And in waste it is no Plea, insomuch that this is a mixed Action, if it be against a Lessee for life, otherwise if it be against a Lessee for years, for a Term is taken in 7. H. 4. 6. b. to be within the word (Goods,) and an Executor may have an Action upon that, (of goods carried a way in the life of the Testator) And though that the Entry abate the Writ, yet this doth not prove that it is more than a Term, and though that the Term determine hanging the Writ, this shall not abate the Action, but the Plaintiff shall recover Damages; and in Ravishment of Ward, Summons and Severance lies, and the Body of the Heir shall be recovered, and so in Quare Impedit Summons and Severance lies, and the presentment shall be recovered and Damages, and yet the principal is but presentmemt, which is but a Chattel, and for that agreement shall be a Bar, and so he concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Defendant, and that the agreement is a good Plea, Coke chief Justice agreed that the agreement is a good Plea: & he thought that that savered of Realty, for that, that the Term is to be recovered, and of the personalty in respect of the Damages, which are to be recovered, and that in all Actions, where money or Damages are to be recovered, (agreement) is a good Plea, as in 47. Ed. 3. 24. and 10. Ed. 3. in Debt upon a Lease for years, concord is a good Plea, and 7. Ed. 4. 23. in Detinue for charters it is a good Plea, and in 6. Ed. 6. Dyer 75. 25. it is a positive rule, that in all Cases and Actions, in which nothing but amends is to be recovered in Damages, there an agreement with an execution of that is a good Plea, and for that in Detinue it shall be a good Bar: So in Covenant it was adjudged in Blakes Case, 6. Coke 43. 6. As where an Obligation is with a Condition, to pay money at such a day, the payment of another thing is good, if the Obligation be to pay a certain Sum of money: But if a man be bound in a Sum of money, to make another Collateral thing, the acceptance of an other thing Collateral shall not be a Bar, for money is to the measure, and the price of every thing, if a man be bound in two Horses to pay one, acceptance of another thing shall be no Bar: But the acceptance of such a Sum of money in satisfaction is good Bar, for this is the just Estimation and measure of every thing, see 12. H. 4 Where a man was bound in an Obligation with Condition, that he shall make acknowledgement of the Obligation of twenty pound to the Obligee before such a day, etc. And agreements are much favoured, for it is a Maxim and Interest of the Commonwealth, that there be an end of suits, for by Concord small thing increase, and by Discord great things are consumed, and the beginning of all Fines is, Et est Cordia talis, etc. and the 11. of Rich. 2. Barr. 242. In Debt upon a Lease for years, the Defendant pleads that by the same Deed by which the Land is let, the Plaintiff grants, that the Defendant ought to repair the houses let, when they are ruinous, at the costs of the Plaintiff, and he retains the Rent for the repair of the houses being ruinous and a good Bar: And if it be a right of Inheritance or freehold that cannot be barred or extinct by acceptance of another thing, though it be of other Land, as of another Manor, as it is agreed in Vernons Case 4. of Coke: A woman accepts Rend out of the Land of which she is not Dowable in recompense of her Dower, this shall not be a Bar, 5. Ed. 4. 22. 3. Eliz. Dyer, and he said that the book of 11. H, 7. 13. is misprinted, insomuch that it is reported to be adjudged: But in truth this was not adujdged, for than it would not say in 13. H. 7. 20. the residue before 11. H. 7. 13. And in the 16. of H. 7. warranty, it is agreed that in waist against Lessee for years. Agreement is a good Plea, otherwise if it be against Lessee for life: And if they have adjudged, 11. H. 7. 15. which was so small a time before, they would not have adjudged the contrary in 16. H. 7. and Hillary 6. Ed. 6. Bendlowes in waist against Lessee for years in the Tenet: Agreement is affirmed to be good Bar: And in the book of Reports in the time of H. 7. printed in time of H. 8. the year of the 11. of H. 7. there was no print at all: And he then upon that infers, that as well as a man might agree for Trees, so well might he agree for Term; and to the book of 9 H. 5. 15. a. That release of one Plaintiff in an Action of waist is a good Bar, he said that this is to be understood in waist of the Tenant, and then it shall be a good Bar, see in the 12. of Ed. 4. 1. a. Two join in an Action of waist, and the one was summoned and severed the other recovered the half of the place wasted; and in the 26. H. 6. 8. Agreement is a good Bar in an Action of waist, and he intended that in all Actions by force and Arms, where a Capias lies at the Common Law: Agreement or Arbitrement are good Pleas, as Ravishment of Ward which is given by Statute in lieu of Trespass, for taking of a Ward, where a Capias lies at the Common Law, and Agreement was a Bar, and for that now Agreement shall be a Bar in Ravishment of a Ward: And he intended that an Ejectione Firm which is Trespass in his nature, and the Ejectment is added of later times: And in all their Entries, this is entered Trespass, and severs the Trespass from the Ejectment, and the Ejectment will vanish, and the Statute of 4. Ed. 3. chap. 6. which gives Action to Executor, of goods carried away in the life time of the Testator, extends to that which proves this to be Trespass, for by the Statute the Executors may have Ejectione Firm for Ejectment made to their Testator, notwithstanding that ancient Demesne is a good Plea in that, and in the 44. Ed. 3. 22. That is called an Action of Trespass, and so all the Entries are De Placito Transgressionis, and in the book of Entries, in Mayhme it is cited to be adjudged 26. H. 6. Trin. Rot. 27. that concord is a good Plea in an appeal of main 35. H. 6. 30. But in an Action in the realty it is no Plea, otherwise in Quare Impedit, for there nothing is to be recovered, but that which is personal, and he intended that Agreement by one of the Defendants in personal Action is a good Bar, as in 36. H. 6. Barr, concord made by the friend of one of the parties was a good Barr Statham, Covenant accordingly, and 35. H. 6. 〈◊〉 7. H. 7. One of the petty Jury in Attaint, pleads agreement and good, and in an Ejectione Frime, Lease made to try Title is not within the Statute of buying of Titles, if it be not made to great men, but to a Servant of him which hath the Inheritance; and cannot maintain or countenance the Action, and Bracton. fol. 220. Lessee for years hath three remidies if he be evicted, that is Covenant, Quare Ejecit infra Terminum against the Feoffee of the Ejector, or an Ejectione Firm against the Immediate Ejectors, and in Ejectione Firm the Term shall be recovered, as 12. H. 4. 1. H. 5. and 11. H. 6. 6. Non-Tenure is a good Plea in Ejectione Firm; ergo the Term shall be recovered, 7. Ed. 4. 6. 13. H. 7. 21 and 14. H. 7. It is adjudged that the Term shall be recovered in Ejectione Firm, and so he concluded, that the agreement shall be a good Bar, because Wise men seek peace Fools seek strifes: And that Judgement shall be given for the Defendant, which was done accordingly. M●hcaelmass, 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Mallet against Mallet. LANDS were given to two men; and to the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten, and the one died without Issue, and the remainder of the half reverted to the Donor, and he brought an Action of waist against the surviving Donee of houses and Lands to him demised, and agreed that the Writ was good, but it was a question if the Count shall be general, or of a half only, notwithstanding that both the parties were Tenants in Common of the reversion. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Ralph Bagnall against John Tucker. after 83. TRINITY 9 or Micaelmasse 8. Jacobi, Rot: 3648. The Case was, Copyholder for life, remainder for life purchaseth the Frehold and levies a Fine with Proclamations made five yeares-passe, and then he died, if the remainder were bound by the Fine or not, was the question, and it seems that it shall not be Bar, for he is not turned out of possession in right. So if a man hath a Lease for remainder for years and the first Lessee for years purchase the freehold, and levy a Fine with Proclamations, and five years pass, this shall not bar the remainder for years, insomuch that this was Interest of a Term, and remains an Interest as it was without any alteration, and it was not turned to a Right. And yet it was agreed that the Statute of buying of pretenced rights extends to Copy-holds: See Lessures Case 5. Coke 125. See Pasche 1612. for the Judgement. Note if an Attorney of this Court be sued here by Bill of Privilege, he ought not to find Bail: But if he be sued by Original, and comes in by Capias, than he ought to find Bail. In covenant upon a Lease made by the Dean of Norwich, Predecessor Lease by the Dean and Chapter of Norwich. to the Dean that now is, and the than Chapter of the Foundation of Ed. 6. King, for enjoying of Land devised to the Plaintiff for three Lives discharged of all encumbrances, and also to accept surrender of the same Lease, and to make a new, and for breaking of covenant, the same Dean and Chapter in such a year of the Rain of H. 8, had made a lease for years not determined, by which the lands devised were encumbered, upon which the Defendant demurred. And Hutton. Hutton Sergeant for the Defendant argued, that the Lease was by the Statute of 13 of Eliz. as to the successor of the Dean which made it, for that it was a Lease for years in being at the time of the making of that, as it is resolved in Elmers' Case upon the Statute of 1 Eliz. if a Bishop makes a Lease for years, and after makes a Lease for life▪ the Lease for life is void to the Successor, and so it is in the case of Dean and Chapter, and though that the words of the Statute are generally that such a Lease shall be void to all intents, purposes, and Constructions, yet he intended that it shall not be void against the Bishop himself, as it was resolved in the case of the next Advowson by the Bishop in Singletons' Case, cited in Lincoln College Case 3. Coke 59 b. And he intended if the Lease be void against the Successors that then the covenants also are void, as it is agreed in the 28 H. 8. 28. Dyer 189. 190. and he cited one Mills case to be adjudged in the 29 and 30. Eliz. in the King's Bench, that if a Parson make Lease and avoid by nonresidence, the Covenants also are void as well as the Lease, and also he intended that the Lease for life was void, insomuch that it was to be executed by a Letter of Attorney, and the Attorney had not made livery till after two Rend days were passed, and for that the Livery was not good, for when a man makes a Lease for life rendering Rend, with Letter of Attorney to make livery, here is an employed condition, that Livery shall be made before any day of payment be incurred, and it is as much as if a man had made a Lease for life, without any Letter of Attorney to make Livery before such a day there, if the Attorney do not make Livery before the day, but after the Livery is void, insomuch as it is contrary to the Condition, so in the case here, for if Livery made be after a Rend day, it may be made after twenty, and so immediately before the end of the Term, and if the Rent be void, for this cause the Covenants also are void, and if a man bargain and sell his Manor, and the Trees growing upon it, the Trees do not pass without enrolment, insomuch that it was the intent of the parties that it should so pass, and for that they do not pass without the Manor, also he intended that the Count is repugnant, insomuch that that contains that the last Lease for life was made in the time of Ed. 6. and after by the Dean and Chapter of the foundation of Ed. 6. and after that contains that the same Dean and Chapter have made a former Lease in the time of H. 8. Which cannot be if the Dean and Chapter were of the Foundation of Ed. 6. and for that the Count ought to have contained the alteration of the foundation, as in case of prescription, as in Tringhams' case, 4. Coke 38. Wyatt Wild's Case 8 Coke 79. 2. and 3. Phil. and Mary Dyer 124. A good Case, and he intended that a declaration ought to have precise certainty, as in 8. and 9 Eliz. 254. Dyer, for a thing which cannot be presumed, shall not be intended, as it is agreed in Pigotts Case 5▪ Coke 29. a. otherwise of Plea in Bar, for that is sufficient if it be good to common intent, also he intended that there is variance between the Count and the Covenant, for the declaration is that the Dean and Chapter covenanted with the Plaintiffs, the Covenant is general, that is, that the Dean and Chapter covenant, and doth not say with who, and for that the Count also shall not be good, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Haughton Sergeant for the Plaintiff, intended that the Covenants Haughton. shall not be void, notwithstanding that the Lease itself be void, & he intended that a lease made by a Parson shall be good against himself, but it shall be void by his death to the Successor, but a Lease made by a Dean and Chapter shall be void to the Dean himself, and the Covenant shall be in force, notwithstanding that the Lease be void, insomuch that the Covenants are collateral, and have not any dependence upon the Lease, but to the inherent Covenants, which depend upon the Lease and the Estate, as for Reparations and such like shall be void by the avoidance of the Lease, but he intended that Covenant to discharge the Land from encumbrances, doth not depend upon the Interest, but it is merely collateral, and for that it shall not be void, and with this difference he agreed, all the Cases put of the other part, as in 45 Ed. 3. 3. Lease was made to the Husband and Wife, the Husband dies, the wife accepts the Land, and shall not be charged with collateral Covenants, notwithstanding that she agrees to the Estate, insomuch that they do not depend upon the Estate, and to the Livery made after two Rend days incurred, he intended that Livery is good, that notwithstanding for the deferring of the Execution of a letter of Attorney shall not defeat the Lease, or other mean act which amounts to a Command, for the Less●r takes the profits in the mean time, and it is not like to Littleton's case, that if a man devise his land to his Executors to be sold, and they take the profits and do not make Sale, that the Heir may enter, insomuch that the Executors have not performed the Condition, and it was not the intent of the Devisor that they should take the profits in the Interim to their own use, and he intended that the declaration was not repugnant, for it is of the aforesaid Church, and not of the Dean and Chapter aforesaid, and also there need not such congruity, as it were the Foundation of the Action, insomuch that this is only Allegation of the truth of the matter, see 1 H. 7. 18. For variance upon showing in Deed, and 17 Ed. 3. 33. b. and here the aforesaid show, that it is the same in substance though it vary in words, and though that the name is altered, yet are the same persons in substance and the same Body, and though that it be as it is intended to be of another part, yet it is but name, and the Foundation than is not Issuable, as if the King H. 8. had been the Founder and made special provision in the Foundation, that after the Time of Ed. 6. it shall be said to be the Foundation of Ed. 6. this shall be good, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, see after adjudged. Michaelmas 9 Jacobi 1611. In the Common Bench. The Bishop of Ely. THE Bishop of Ely granted an Office with the Fee for the exercising Office granted by a Bishop. of that, if it be an ancient office, it is a good grant, and if the Fee be newly increased, yet Foster Justice thought that the Grant shall be good for the Office, and for so much of the Fee as hath been anciently granted with the Office. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi in the Common Bench. Holcroft against George French. IN an Action upon the Case upon an Assumpsit, if the consideration be Executory, than the Declaration ought to contain the time and place where it was made, and after it ought ro be averred In Facto, when it was performed or executed accordingly, but if it be by way of Reciprocal agreement, than the Plaintiff may count, that in consideration that he hath promised for the Defendant, the Defendant hath promised to do another thing for him, there he need not that the Declaration contain time or place for the consideration, or otherwise that it is performed and executed. But if in the first case, where it is executory, that is also an averment that it is executed there, if the Defendant plead Non Assumpsit generally, and do not plead the special matter, he cannot after take exception to that Count for the Default aforesaid, where he pleads specially to that, as in an action of Trover the Conversion ought to be averred to be in a certain place, and so in submission and Arbitrement, they are contained in the declaration, it need not to express any time or place certain, but if the Defendant, pleads that the Arbitrators made no award, or that the parties have not submitted themselves to their award, there the Plaintiff may reply, that the Arbitrement or Submission was made at such a place, and this was agreed by all the Justices. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench: Sir Edward Puncheon against Thomas Legate. IT was adjudged in the King's Bench, and affirmed upon a Writ of Error in the King's Bench, that an action upon the case upon an Assumpsit made by the Testator is very well maintainable against Assumpsit. the Executor, and this was for Money borrowed, and so the Count special, but not upon general, Indebitatus Assumpsit, but is good without any averment, that the Executors have assets over the payment of Debts due by specialty and Legacies, and he said, that the Record of the Case of 22 H. 8. with this agrees, and that the book in this is misprinted, and so Coke chief Justice who publicly reported this Judgement in the Common place, said, which was adjudged in the 11 H. 8. in this Court. Wilt of Right. Note that Land of which a Writ of Right Close lieth, shall be assetts in a Formedon, and it is a freehold and not a Copyhold, and so are all Lands in ancient Demesne, 3 Ed. 3. 14 H. 4. It is no matter what is known to the Judge, if it be not in the form of Judgement. Pasche 1611. fol. 50. HAughton Sergeant for the Defendant, argued that the entry of him in Remainder is not lawful, insomuch that he intended it is Haughton. not any forfeiture of the Estate tail, and first he argued that the condition is not good, but repugnant to Law, and for that void, and yet he agreed that Tenant in tail may be distrained from making unlawful Acts, but here the condition tends to restrain him from doing of things which are lawful as if a man makes a Gift in tail, upon condition that the Wife of the Donee shall not be endowed, or that the Husband of the Donee shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, or that a Feoffee shall not take the profits of the Land, though that the profits may be severed from the Land, as in 16 Ed. 3. Formedon was brought of the profits of a Mill, yet the condition is void, insomuch that it is against the nature of an Estate tail, or in Fee-simple to be in such manner abridged, so if a man makes a gift in tail upon condition, that the Donee shall not make waste, the condition is void, for the making of waist is a privilege which is incident to an Estate tail, and for that the condition restrains the Tenant in tail of a thing which the Law enables him to do, the condition is yoyd, so a Donee in tail upon condition, that he shall not make a Deed of Feoffment or Lease for his own life, as it is agreed in Mildmayes Case, so here when the condition restrains Tenant in tail of concluding and agreeing, the which in him is not any wrong no more than if a man should make a gift in tail upon condition that the Donee should not bargain and sell the Land, this is void, insomuch that he doth not make any wrong or discontinuance: So in the case here, for the thing which is restrained, that is (concluding & agreeing) is in itself a lawful act, and also this is only the affections and qualities of the mind, that they cannot make an Estate conditional, if an open act be not annexed unto it, but he agreed that if a man make a gift in tail, or a Lease for life of white acres, upon condition that the Donee or Lessee shall not take the profits of Black acre, this is a good condition, for this doth no wrong, nor is repugnant to the Estate given, or leased. And secondly, he argued, that admitting it is a good condition, yet here is no act done to operate (conclusion or agreement) which might make a forfeiture, for he said that Mildmayes case was an express condition, that Tenant in tail should not suffer common recovery, the which he might lawfully do at the common Law, and he was not restrained by the Statute of Donis conditionalibus, which was doubted till 12 Ed. 4. but here he intends that the (agreement and conclusion) in this case shall make no forfeiture, in respect that the Wife in whom the Estate, was married at the time of the making, and then when her Husband joins with her, it shall be said the agreement of the Husband, and not the agreement of the Wife, and yet he aagreed the case in, 20 H. 8. b. Dyer 1. that if a man makes a Lease for years upon condition, that the Lessee his Executor or Assigns shall not alien, and there if the Wife executrix, and her second husband alien, that this shall be forfeiture, insomuch that there the condition follows the Estate, and is inherent to it, but here the agreement is collateral and personal, and this depends upon the Estate, as if condition be that a woman shall not beat J. S. and she takes a Husband which beats him, this shall not be forfeiture, for the condition is annexed to the person of the wife, and for that the beating of the Husband shall be no breach of the condition, but the waist of the Husband is the Wast of the Wife also, for that follows the Estate and is not personal, so he agreed that acts made by a Wife married, the which she is compellable to do are good, as partition between Coparceners, as it is said by Littleton, or Administration of Goods by Executor or Administrator, or to make attornement, so of things made for her benefit, as accepting an Obligation, or the bringing of an action of Waste upon a Lease made by him are also good, but here the agreement and conclusion made by her and her Husband, are for the disadvantage of the Wife, and for that they are merely void, as to the Wife, as in 3 H. 6. 19 50. Contract is made with the Husband and Wife and they join in debt upon that, and the writ abated, insomuch that the contract to the Wife is void, and shall be intended to be made with the Husband only, and so in russel's case 5 Coke 27. b. It is agreed that a married Wife cannot do any thing as Executrix to the prejudice of her Husband, so in 45 Ed. 3. 11. Lease was made by Husband and wife, and they covenanted to make sureties, and after the Husband dies, and the Wife accepts the Rent, and she shall not be bound by her Covenant, insomuch that this was Colaterall to the Estate, and if it be so that the agreement made by the married Wife is void to her, than it is no agreement and by consequence no forfeiture of the Estate: Also he intended that the conclusion of the condition, for the words of the condition depends only upon the agreement and conclusion, and not upon any Act made: So that the suffering of any Act, doth not make any matter in the case, nor is to the purpose, and also the Replication relies only upon the agreement, so that the Recovery is not material: And he intended that it is a condition, and that it cannot be Limitation, insomuch that the words are, that the Estate shall cease, as if such person had not been named in the Will, and so that the Estate shall cease, as if he had been dead, which are words of Defeasance only and not of Limitation, for he doth not appoint the Estate to continue so long: And also the words are repugnant, for it cannot make the Estate void as if he had not been named, for this is only the office of an Act of Parliament to make a man to be dead to one, and to be alive to another purpose; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant: nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff argued, nichols. that it is a matter sufficient upon which Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff, and he first considered the words of the Condition; that is, if the devisees by themselves or by any other, shall make any conclusion or agreement, etc. This shall be a forfeiture; as in 28, H. 8. 13. Dyer 65. Where a Lease was made to the Husband and Wife, Proviso that if they are disposed to sell and alien the Term, that the Lessor shall have the first offer, and agreed, that if that be a Condition, and the Wife survive the Husband, notwithstanding that it was not her Deed, but the Act of the Husband, she shall be bound by that, insomuch that her Estate is bound with that, and this was the pleasure of the Lessor, and she cannot hold it otherwise then it was given, and 47. Ed. 3. 12. If a man makes a Lease for years to the Husband and Wife, and after outs them, they shall join in a Covenant, and so 48. Ed. 3. 18. They join in a Fine, yet there the Husband only brings Debt for the money, notwithstanding that it be the Land of the Wife which was sold, and 38. Ed. 3. 9 If the Husband and the Wife join in Covenant: See 45. Ed, 3. 11. b. Where they join in Lease, and also to make further assurance, and the Husband and the Wife also charged with that, and so in the 20. H. 6. 25. Feoffment was made to a woman sole upon condition, and after she takes a Husband, which breaks the Condition, so in 35. assis. 11. A woman sole makes a Feoffment upon condition to re-enfeoff upon request, and after takes a Husband, and then makes request and good, and if it be so in these cases, then in this case the Wife shall not be received, to say the agreement was made against her will, and for this, see the Statute which gives Cui in vita to the Woman, where the words are, to whom she in her life could not contradict. And after this agreement, if the Husband give warrant of Attorney to suffer Recovery this is sufficient, as it is agreed in 4. Ed. 3. and in 6. Coke 41. Mildmayes Case is agreed: That if a man make a Feoffment to a Husband and a Wife upon condition that they shall not alien, it is good to restrain alienation, by which it appears that if they Join in Feoffment, that this shall be forfeiture, and yet this is the Feoffment of the Husband only, So here the agreement of them, notwithstanding it is the Act of the Husband, yet insomuch that it is against the express words of the Condition, this shall be breach of the Condition, and he intended that the words of the Condition amount to as much, as if he had said, that neither the Daughter sole, nor the Daughter with another Daughter, or with another person shall make agreement, and the other person of necessity shall be intended her Husband, and so this agreement by the Husband and the Wife is within the words of the Condition: And also he saith that it is argued in Becwiths' Case 2. Coke that a married Wife may declare a use of a Fine which is levied of her Inheritance, and if the Husband declare uses, the Wife may control them: And if an Estate be conveyed with power, that the Husband with the assent of his Wife may revoke that, the assent of the Wife to such revocation is good: So if Proviso be, that a married Wife only without her Husband may make revocation of uses and declare new this is good, and revocation made by the Wife, and declaration of new uses are very good, and he agreed that in matters of Record, the Husband cannot prejudice the Wife without her consent, as Warrant of Attorney upon a Quid Juris Clamat, or Per que servitia, or other Act which concerns her Inheritance, as in 9 H. 6. 52. 46. Ed. 3. 11. 43. Ed. 3. 5. and 27. H. 8. If a married Wife join with her Husband in a Feoffment of her own Land, rendering Rend, and after the Husband dies and the Wife accepts the Rent, this shall bind her, which proves that it was her Feoffment as well as the Feoffment of the Husband. Secondly he considered the words of the Condition, which are: (Conclude and agree) &c, the which he intended not to be so uncertain, as going about, but they are Issuable and triable, as it is agreed in 5. Ed. 4. 6. Com. 56. a. Wyrbish and Taylbois Case, consent to a Ravishment within the Statute of 6. R. 2. is Issuable and triable, so of consent and agreement within this Condition, for though that the words are consent and agree, yet it ought to be otherwise an Act subsequent, that is, reconvey, suffer, or other such Act or agreement shall not be forfeiture, for to make Elopment which shall be a forfeiture of Dower, there ought first to be consent, but that is not sufficient, but there ought to be also departure from the Husband and then the Law adjudges upon all the Act: So here when it is an agreement, and another Act subsequent, which is executed, than the Law shall judgeupon altogether: and for that this agreement consists of two parts, first when the Wife upon the motion of the Husband concludes and agrees to do the Act, which is the beginning of the agreement, and then when the Husband and the Wife upon that join in Deed indent, as in this case, this is a consummation and makes a breaking of the condition, and this is not like the condition in Myldmaies Case, where every going about aught to break that, as if he go to Council to be advised upon his Estate: Thirdly he inten●ed that the condition is not repugnant to the Estate, in respect that an other thing is to be done before the forfeiture, and after the concluding and agreeing, for the Wife remains in Seisin after the agreement, till the Recovery or other Act be executed: And also he argued that before the Statute of 4. H. 7. of Fynes: Tenant in tail might be restrained of alienation of his Estate, for until that he could not Barr the Issue in tail. So at this day he intended that a gift in tail upon condition that he shall levy a Fine without proclamations this is good, and out of the power which is given to Tenant in tail to Bar the Estate tail by the levying of a Fine: And levying of a Fine without proclamations is only a discontinuance, and so tortuous, so when a Condition doth not extend to all acts, but only to all unlawful acts, and for that it doth not extend to a Recovery, for that is a lawful Act, as it is agreed in Scholasticas Case 10. H. 7. 10 11. H. 7. 6, 7. 21. H. 7. and 28 H. 8. Leomans' Case: If an ecclesiastical person hath a Term with this condition, that he shall not alien, and after comes the Estate, which inflicts punishment upon him for keeping of a Farm, and yet it seems it is a good condition: But so upon the Statute of 4. H. 7. of fines, If aman hath agift in tail with condition that he shall not alien: And after the Statute of 4. H. 7. is made which enables him to bar the Estate tail by fine, yet he intended that the condition should restrain him from all unlawful Alienations: And he intended as well as such a condition annexed to a Lease for life is good, so is it being annexed to an Estate tail; for as well as it is in one case for the preservation of the reversion: So is this in the other case, and as in 6. Eliz. Dyer 227. Grant of Rent, Proviso that it shall not charge the person of the Grantor, shall not extend to the Executors of the Grantor, but shall be determined by the death of the Grantor: And so as a condition that a married Wife or an Infant shall not alien is good, insomuch that this is wrong, so he intended that if this were a good condition at the Common Law, that Tenant in tail shall not alien the Estate by 4. H. 7. and 37. H. 8. doth not enable Tenant in tail to make alienation against such condition: And it hath been agreed that if a man make a Feoffment in fee of the Manor of D. And after makes a gift in tail of the Manor of S. upon condition that the Donee shall not alien the Manor of D. this is a a good condition, and in the 21. H. 7. 12. it is agreed that if a man make a Feoffment Causa Matrimonij Prol●cuti, and after Divorce is sued, there the freehold shall be devested out of the Husband without entry: And also he intended that a man might make a thing by devise, the which he could not make by Act executed, as Authority to sell his Lands to his Executors it good, and yet in all cases of Authorities by Acts executed the Authority shall cease with the life of the party: And for that there shall be one Law of devises, and another Law of Acts executed by the party in his life, as 29. assis. 17. and Fitz. Na. Bre. in ex gravi querela last case, the particular Estate being created by devise, ceases, and remainder takes effect: And then to the exception, that the estate shall cease and remain to him which had the next remainder, the which is repugnant, as it was intended, and so is Jermy and Arscotts Case: But here the words are that the Estate shall cease, as if the party to which that is limited were dead without Issue from the time of the Contract and agreement, and the remainder to him which hath the next remainder, and not the Issue of him which made the forfeiture, and also this Remainder from the time of the agreement and conclusion, and not from the time of the Act executed, for than it would be too late, for then the Estate is transferred to another, as it was in the cases put by Anderson in Corbetts Case: But here all the Estate limited to him which made the forfeiture shall be determined, and also he intended that the Reason that the Replication contains, that the parties being in actual possession are only to satisfy the words of the Condition: And so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. In dower the Demandant recovered Dower of tenths of Wool and Dower of tit●e of Wool. Lamb, and how execution shall be made was the question: And the Justices intended that the Sheriff might deliver the tenths of every 3 yard land, and assign the Yard Lands in certain: B●t after it was conceived that this would be uncertain and unequal, and for that the Sheriff was directed to deliver the third part of all in general, and yet the first was agreed to be good; but only in respect of Inequalities, as in dower of a Mill, the third Toll dish, and of a Villain the third day's work, as in 23 H. 8. And it was also agreed that the Sheriff may assign this dower without a Jury. It was moved, if an Attachment be granted against a Sheriff for Attachment. contempt after he is removed out of his Office; and the Justices intended that not, insomuch that now he is no Officer, and for that he cannot be now fyned, and without fine they did not use to Imprison, but the Judges would be advised to see the Precedents of the Court in such a case. M●chaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Kemp, and Philip his Wife, James, and Blanche his Wife, Plaintiffs, against Lawrere and Trollop, and the Wife of Gun●er, Executrix, during the minority of the Wives of the Plaintiffs. THe case was, An Executrix during the nonage; for so it was, and not Administratrix, that is, she was ordained Executrix, till Executrix during nonage. the Wives of the Plaintiffs came to their full age, or were married, and then they should be Executrixes. And this Executrix during the minority, brought an action of Debt, and recovered; and before Execution the women Executrixes took Husbands, and brought Scirefacias upon the Record, to have Execution upon the Judgement against these Defendants as Ter-tenants, which pleaded specially that they had nothing in the freehold, nor in the Land, but only a lease for years, and that the freehold was in another stranger, upon which Plea the Plaintiffs demurred in Law. And nichols Sergeant nichols. for the Plaintiffs, that there is the difference betwixt this Executor and an Administrator during the minority, as in 26 H. 8. 7. a. if an Administrator have Judgement, and dies before Executors or other have sued out their Letters of Administration, they shall have no execution of this Judgement, insomuch as he comes in paramount the first Administrator, and as immediate Administrator to the first Intestate, as it is agreed in Shelleys case. So the Administrators of one Executor shall not have execution of a Judgement given for the Executor, as it is resolved in Brudenels' case, 5 Coke, the 9 b. And in 21 Edw. 4. It is agreed, if two are made joint-executors, and one of them dies, the other shall be sole Executor to the Testator: and if he make his Executor, and dies, his Executors shall be Executors to the first Testator: And also there is in Fox & Gretbrooks Case in the Com: that one may be Executor for certain years, and another after, and this differs from the other cases; for in this case all these Executors were in privity one to another: but in the other case one comes paramount the other. But here they are all made by the first Testator and the Will: And he cited the 2 Case in the Lord▪ Dyer, and 18. and 32, Edw. 3. there cited, where a Purchasor brought a Writ of Error, and was not privy to the first Record. And Grantee of a Reversion brought a Scire facias against Conusee of a Statute-Merchant, alleging that he had received satisfaction. So if a Parson of a Church recovers an Annuity, and after the Church is appropriate to a house of Religion, the Sovereign of the said house shall have a Scire facias. And so if union be made of two Benefices, and yet in all these cases there was no privity to the first Judgement: so he in reversion shall have Error in Attain● upon Judgement against his Lessee for life, and the Reason is given in Brudenels' Case, that is, they which may have prejudice may have scire facias, and it is not like where two joint-tenants are, and one makes a Lease for years, and dies, the other shall have the Rent, insomuch that he comes in by survivorship, and not in privity. But here the Executors come in in privity, as in case of two Executors are jointly, one ●yes, the other which survives shall have Execution of Judgement given for them; for Administrator during the nonage is only to the use, commodity, and profit of an Executor, and of a Testator: so that he being Executor to the Testator, he shall have execution. And to the second, that is, that the Defendants have nothing but for years, and that the freehold is to a stranger, he intended that this is not good, & yet he agreed that in scire facias where a freehold is to be recovered, special non-tenure is a good plea, as in 8 Edw 4. 19 and 8 H. 6. 32. but not of the contrary, and there also general non-tenure is no plea: But here where the freehold is not to be recovered, nor one nor the other is a Plea; for it may be averred that the Defendant hath a release from him that hath the reversion: and as in 14 H. 4. 5. in scire facias to account against an Executor who pleads that the Testator was never his Bailiff to give an account, and yet it is agreed that this hath been a good plea for the first Defendant, and this is the reason that it was not taken, nor was allowed for a good plea in the 11 H. 4. 11. Insomuch that this amounts to non-tenure; and in 44. and 45. Eliz. Mich. Rot. 834. it was adjudged in Scire facias, where the Defendant pleads that he was not Tenant of the freehold, and adjudged no plea: And so he said it was adjudged in the case of All-soules College, in Scire facias to have execution of a Judgement in Ejectione firm: and the Defendant in the Scire facias pleads, that he was but Lessee for years, and adjudged no Plea, insomuch that nothing was to be recovered but only the term, and not the freehold, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff in Scire facias. Harris Serjeant argued Harris. to the contrary, and he intended that the Return of the Sheriff is void, insomuch that the Writ commanded him to give notice to the Tenants of the Land in Fee-simple, and he did not return, that those which he had returned were Tenants of the Land in Fee-simple, and so these words of the Writ are not answered, and so no Tenant is returned at all. And it is not like to the Case in 2 H. 4. for there the Return was according to the Exigent of the Writ, but here it is not so. And to the first matter he intended, and agreed, that an Executor of an Executor may sue execution had by the first Executor, insomuch that he comes in in privity. But he said, that so it is not in this case, and that there is no difference betwixt this case, and the case cited in Shelleys case, that is, that Administrator of Administrator shall not sue execution, insomuch that he comes in peramount Administrator, and accords with this Case, 2 Eliz. in the Lord Dyer: If two joint-tenants are, and one makes a Lease for years, rendering Rend, and dies, the Survivor shall not have the Rent, insomuch that he cometh in peramount him; and to the other he intended, that the special non-tenure is a good plea, as well in Scire facias to have execution of damages, as of freehold, as in 24 Edw. 3. 31. and 5 H. 5. 1. and 9 H. 5. 11. It is resolved, that in Scire facias special non-tenure is a good Plea, and the books of 8 H. 6. 31. cited before, there is joint-tenancy pleaded to one part, and special non-tenure to the other part by Lease for years, and the question is if it might be pleaded a part: And in 8 Edw. 4. 14. Is Scire facias upon Recovery by Writ of Right Patent in base Court, and that the Defendant cannot plead release of the Lessor, and so the joining of the Mice may be forfeiture of his Estate: And he said that it was adjudged in 16 Edw. 3. Scire facias 5. that scire facias to have execution of a Fine shall not be sued against a Lessee for years, but against him which hath the freehold; but where Debt or Damages are to be recovered, there it may be sued against him which hath only Lease for years, insomuch that the possession is to be charged; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendants, and it is adjourned. Michaelmas 1611. 9 Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Crogate against Morris. THe case was this, Copyholder prescribes to have common in the Waste of the Lord, and brings action of Trespass against a stranger Copyholder. for his Beasts depasturing upon the Common there, and Harris Harris. Sergeant argued that this action is not maintainable for two causes. First, insomuch that he is a Commoner; for as it is said by Brook Justice, 12. H. 8. 2. a. Commoner cannot have an action of Trespass, for the Common is not Common, but after the Commoner hath taken that, and then before that he hath taken that he hath no wrong nor damage, but the damage is to the Tenant of the Land: As if a Lessee for years be outed, and he in reversion recovers in Assize, he shall not have damage, insomuch that the damage was made to the Lessee, and the 22 Assis. 48. 15 H. 7. i 2. b. agreed that Commoner cannot maintain action of Trespass, nor no other but the owner of the Soil, but 13 H. 8. 15. by Norwich, 15 H. 7. 6. 5 H. 7. 2. 24 Edw. 3. 42. Commoner may distrain and avow for doing damage. 2. He intended that this action is not maintainable, insomuch that every other Commoner may also have the action of Trespass, for if it be wrong to one, it is wrong to every one of them, and so the stranger shall be infinitely punished, as in William's Case, 5 Coke, 72. b. where it was adjudged an action of the Case doth not lie for the Lord of the Manor to prescribe, that a Vicar ought to administer the Sacraments in his private Chapel, to him, his Man-servants and Tenants within the Precincts of the said Manor, and adjudged that it doth not lie, insomuch that then every of his Tenants might also have action, and so the Vicar shall be always punished: So in 27 H. 7. 27. a. A man shall not have an action upon the Case for nuisance made in the high way; so it is 5 Ed. 4. 2. for trenching in the high way, see 33 H. 6. 26. a. accordingly; and so he concluded that the action is not maintainable, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Dodridge the King's Sergeant, to the exception which hath been Dodridge. made by the other party, that the Plaintiff ought to aver that he hath Beasts which ought to Common there, and that his Beasts have lost their Common, that need not to be averred, but it shall be pleaded by the other party; for if he have distrained the Beasts of a stranger, doing damage, he need to aver no more in this action, and to the other matter, and the two Objections which have been made by the other part: First, that the Commoner hath no right to the Common, till he have taken it by the mouth of his Beasts; to that he said, that the Commoner hath right to that before that it be taken by such mouths of his Beasts: and notwithstanding that it seems by the time of Ed. 1. That Commoner cannot grant his Common till he have Seisin of that, yet 12 H. 8. is otherwise, and that a Commoner may have an action the name implies, for he hath Common with others, and a stranger which is no Commoner cannot do wrong, but this is damage to him; and he cited Bracton, 430. that there are two forms of Writs, 1. Cursitory Writs, 2. Commanding Writs: The first of those which are form, and are of course, and the others such of which there is no form, but are to be form by the Masters of the Chancery, according to every particular Case: So that there is not any Case, but that the Law affords a Writ and remedy for that, as in 28 Edw. 4. 23. Action upon the Case was framed against an Officer, which gave privilege to one as his servant, which was not his servant: and it is not like to the Case in 11 H. 4. 47. a. where a Schoolmaster brings an action upon the Case against another for erecting of a School in the same Town to his damage, but this was damage without Injury. But here the Commoner hath received wrong and damage; but yet he agreed that the Commoner could not have action of Trespass why he broke his Close, for that is proper for the owner of the Soil. But it hath been agreed to him, that he might distrain them, doing damage; and the reason of that is, insomuch that he hath received damage, and amends may be tendered unto him in recompense of his damages, without any regard to other Commoners, as it is agreed in 24 Edw. 3. 42. And to the Objection, that if one Commoner may have action, than every Commoner may have the action, and so the stranger shall be infinitely punished. And to that he said it is a Public loss and private; and when the public wrong includes private damage to any man, there he to whom the private damage is done may have action: And he said, that the Register contains many Writs for public wrong, when that is done to private men, as fol. 95. A man fixes a pale, cross a navigable River, by which a Ship was cast away, and the Owner maintained action of Trespass: And fol. 97. A man brought Trespass against one which cast dung into a River, by which his Meadow was drowned; so if the River be infected with watering Hemp or Flax, he which hath fishing there may maintain action of Trespass: and 2 H. 4. 11. Action of Trespass by one for ploughing of Land where one had a common way; and so it is 13. H. 7. 17. One brings an action of Trespass against another for erecting a Lime Kill where many others are annoyed by that: So by an assault made upon a servant, the Master and servant also may have several actions; and so in the other cases many may have actions, and yet this is no reason to conclude any one of them, that he shall not have his action, for in truth those are rather actions upon the Case, than actions of Trespass, for the truth of the Case is contained in the Writ. Also in this case it doth not appear that there are any other Commoners which have Common there, and for that this Objection is not to the purpose: and it appears by Heisman and Crackesoods Case, 4 Coke 31. That Copyholder shall have Common by prescription in the demesnes of the Lord, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Coke chief Justice said, that it was adjudged in this Court, Trinity, Coke. 41▪ Eliz. Rot. 153. b. between Holland and Lovel, where Commoner brings an action upon the Case, as this Case is, against a stranger which pleads not guilty, and it was found by verdict for the Plaintiff, and it was after adjudged for the Plaintiff, for insomuch that the Plaintiff may take them damage pheasant that proves that he hath wrong, and this is the reason that he may distrain (doing damage.) And by the same reason, if the Beasts are gone before his coming, he may have action upon his Case, for otherwise one that hath many Beasts may destroy all the Common in a night, and do great wrong, and sha●l not be punished: and it is not like to a Nuisance, for that is public, and may be punished in a Leet; but the other is private to the Commoners, and cannot be punished in another place nor course: and he also cited one Whitehands case to be adjudged, where many Copy-holders' prescribe to have Loppings and Toppings of pollard's, and Husbands growing upon the Waste of the Lord, and the Lord cuts them, and one Copyholder only brings his action upon the Case, and adjudged that it was very well maintainable, notwithstanding that every other Copyholder may have the same remedy. And he said also, that so it was adjudged in the King's Bench, Hillary 5 Jacobi, Rot. 1427. in George England's Case: And 2 Edw. 2. b. Covenant 49. If a man Covenant with 20. to make the Sea banks with A. B. and every one of them, and after he doth not do it, by which the Land of two is drowned and damnified, and they two may have an action of Covenant without the others; Quere, for it seems every one shall have an action by himself. But Foster and Wynch Justices seemed that the Plaintiff ought to sue in his Court, that the Beasts of the stranger escaped in the Common, or were put in by the Owner, for it may be they were put in by the Lord which was owner of the Soil, or by a stranger, in which cases the Owner of the Beasts shall not be punished: But Coke and Warburton seemed the contrary, and that this aught to be averred and pleaded by the Defendant in excuse of the Trespass, as in action of Trespass (why he broke his Close) And so it was adjourned, see Gosnolds case, 490. see Judgement. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Henry Higgins against George Biddle. IN Replevin the Defendant made Conusance as Bailiff to Sir Thomas Leigh, and Deign Katherine his Wife, intimating that Isabel Bradburn Replevin. was seized of the place where, etc. in their demesne as of Fee, and so seized the first of June, 15 H. 8. gives this to the Lord Anthony Fitzherbert, and Maud his Wife, and to the Heirs males of their bodies, which have Issue Thomas Fitzherbert, Knight, John Fitzherbert, and William Fitzherbert, Anthony and Maud died, and the said place where, etc. descended to Sir Thomas Fitzherbert as Heir to the Donees to the entail: and the said Thomas Fitzherbert the 5. of April, 6 Edw. 6. of that enfeoffed Humphrey Swinnerton, Ralph Cotton, and Roger Baily; to the use of William Fitzherbert, and Elizabeth his Wife for their lives, and after to the use of Sir Thomas Fitzherbert, and the Heirs of his body; the remainder to the use of the right Heirs of the said William Fitzherbert: William Fitzherbert died, Sir Thomas Fitzherbert disseised the said Elizabeth, and the said John Fitzherbert had Issue, Thomas, and died, & Sir Thomas Fitzherbert died without Heir of his body, and the said place where, etc. descended to the said Thomas as Cousin & Heir of the said Sir Thomas, and Son and Heir of the said John Fitzherbert, which enters, and was seized to him and to the Heirs Males of his body, as in his Remitter. And the said Thomas Fitzherbert, 4 of Novemb. 39 Eliz. by Indenture of Bargain and Sale enroled in the Chancery within six months, bargained and sold the said Land to Sir William Leighton & his heirs, and Sir William Leighton, 5 of Novemb. 43. Eliz. by Indenture enroled within six months for 4000 l. bargained and sold the said land where, etc. to Sir Thomas Leigh, and Dame Katherine, as aforesaid, and so avowed the taking for doing damage. And the Plaintiff for Bar to the said Avowry; pleads, that well and true it is, that the said Sir William Leighton was seized of the said place where, etc. in his Demesne as of Fee, as it was alleged by the Defendant: But further he saith, that the said Sir William Leighton so being thereof seized, 1 Decemb. 44 Eliz. enfeoffed the Plaintiff in fee, and by force of that the Plaintiff was seized, and put in his Beasts into the said place where &c. without that, that the said Sir William Leighton bargained and sold the said Land in which, etc. to the said Sir Thomas Leighton, and Katherine his Wife, as in the Conusance hath been alleged by the Defendant, upon which the Defendants join Issue; and it was agreed by all the Justices, that notwithstanding this admission of the Parties, is an Estoppell by the pleading, yet as well the Plaintiff as the Defendant were admitted to give another evidence to the Jury against their own pleading; that is, that Sir William Leighton was not seized, and so nothing passed by the bargain and sale; and also that Sir Thomas Fitzherbert had the possession by acceptance of the surrender of the estate conveyed to William Fitzherbert and his Wife, notwithstanding it was admitted by pleading, that he had that by Disseisin: And all the Justices agreed, that the Jury shall not be concluded by the pleading of the parties, insomuch that they are sworn to speak the truth. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Brook Plaintiff, against Cobb. IN Waste the Plaintiff assigns waste in cutting down of 20. Oaks in such a Close, and 40. Oaks in such a Close, etc. Upon the Evidence Waste. it appears that the said Oaks were remaining upon the Land for standils, according to the statute; at the last felling of that, and they were of the growth of 16. or 20. years, and that tithes were paid for it. And it was agreed by the Lord Coke and all the Justices, that this was no Waste, insomuch it was felled as Acre wood: And it was said by the Lord Coke, that though it be of the age of 20. or 24. years, yet if the use of the Parties be to fallen such for seasonable Wood, this shall not be Waste; and if Tithes be paid for that, it appears that it is no Timber. Doctor manning's Case in the Star-chamber. ONe Golding as an Informer, and not as party grieved, exhibits his Bill in the Star-chamber against Doctor Manning, Chancellor Informer. to the Bishop of Exeter, for Extortion, Oppression, and other offences. It was resolved, that when a Bill contains any particular offences, and after the same Bill contains general words, which includes many offences of the same kind; And the Plaintiff proves the particular offences, he may examine other particular offences also included within these general words, in supplement and aggravation of the particular offences contained in the Bill; and if they be proved, the Court will give the greater and high sentence against the Defendant in respect of them, notwithstanding that they be not particularly expressed in the Bill. But if the Plaintiff hath not proved any of the offences particularly expressed in the Bill, the Defendant shall not be censured by the particulars grounded upon the general words of the Bill. And if a man which is not party grieved, exhibit Bill for offence made to another person, as against whom the offence was committed, he shall not be allowed as Witness, insomuch as he is party grieved, and by that he should be a witness in his own Cause. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. William Peacock Plaintiff, against Sir George Raynell. IN the Sar-chamber the Plaintiff exhibits his Bill against the Defendant Libel. for Libelling and Infamous Letters, the which was in this manner, The Plaintiff being Heir general to Richard Peacock which was of the age of eighty six years, and had Lands of Inheritance to the value of 8. or 900. pound per annum, and the Defendant had married the Daughter of Sir Edward Peacock, which was a younger brother of the said Richard Peacock, and the said Defendant perceiving that the said Richard Peacock, had purpose to settle his Inheritance upon the said Plaintiff, and intending to remove the affection of the said Richard from the Plaintiff, and to settle that in himself, writes a Letter to the said Richard Peacock, containing that the Plaintiff was not the Son of a Peacock, and was a hunter of Taverns, and that divers women had followed him from London to the place of his dwelling, and that he did desire to hear of the death of the said Richard, and that all his Inheritance would not be sufficient to satisfy his Debts; and many other matters concerning his Reputation and Credit, to that subscribed his name, & this ensealed & directed to the said R. Peacock: And it was agreed that this was a Libel, and for that the Defendant was Fined to two hundred pound, and Imprisonment according to the course of the Court: And the Plaintiff let loose to the Common Law for his recompense for the Damages he hath sustained: But if the Letter had been directed to the Plaintiff himself, and not to the third person, than it should not have been a Libel, or if it had been directed to a Father, for Reformation of any Acts made by his Children, it should be no Libel, for it is not but for Reformation, and not for Defamation; for if a Letter contain scandalous matter, and be directed to a third person, if it be Reformarory and for no respect to himself, it shall not be intended to be a Libel, for with what mind it was made is to be respected: As if a man write to a Father, and his Letter contain scandalous matter concerning his Children, of which he gives notice to the Father, and adviseth the Father to have better regard to his Children, this is only Reformatory without any respect of profit to him which wrote it: But in the first case the Defendant intended his profit and his own benefit, and this was the difference. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Randall Crewe against Vernon. IN the Star-chamber it was resolved: That if the Defendant do not perform the Sentence of the Court, as here he was to make acknowledgement of his offence committed against the Court of Exchequer at Chester, and this acknowledgement was to be made at the great Assizes at Chester, and he did nor perform the Sentence, and yet the Defendant could not be fined for this contempt, but only Imprisonment, and for that he was committed close Prisoner till he performed it: But he could not be fined, insomuch there was not any Bill, upon which this Sentence should be founded. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Charnocke against Corey, See before. IN Debt against Administrator: The Defendant pleads two Debt against Administrator. Recognizances acknowledged by the Intestate, which were not satisfied, and that he had not any Goods or Chattels of the said Intestate, unless Goods and Chattels which did amount to the Debts due by the said Recognizances: And it seemed to all the Justices, that the Plea was not good: But that the Defendant ought to plead according to the Common form, that is, that he hath no Goods besides or beyond the Goods to satisfy the two Recognizances, or that he hath no Goods to such value, which do not amount to the said Sums due by the two Recognizances: And in these cases this manner of pleading is Implied, confession that he hath Goods of such a value, and so they should be assets if the Recognizances be discharged, or remain of Covin and fraud to deceive Creditor. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench: Bicknell against Tucker, see before 75. THE Case was: A Copyhold Estate was granted to one Copyhold. for life, remainder to another for his life, the first Copyholder for life, accepts a Bargain and Sale of the freehold from the Lord, and after that levies a Fine with proclamations, and five years pass, and then he dies,, and if this Fine shall be a Bar to him, which hath the Copyhold Estate for life in remainder was the question: And it was argued by Harris Sergeant, that the Estate of Fines in the body of that binds all persons, but only some which have Infirmities, and by the saving Rights, Titles, Claims, and Interests are saved: But Title comes in the conditional perclose of saving, that is, so that they pursue their Title, Claim, and Interest, etc. By way of Act or lawful Entry within five years' next after the said proclamations had and made: So that in this case the principal matter to be considered is, what thing is operated by the acceptance of the Bargain and Sale, for if by that the remainder of the Copyholder be turned to right, then ensues that the Fine shall be a Bar: And it seems that this determines the first Estate for life, and he agreed that it cannot be a surrender, insomuch that there is a mesene remainder, as it is 37. H. 6. 17. b. 4. H. 7. 10. But this Lease to commence at a day to come cannot be a surrender, but shall be determined and extinct by acceptance of a new Lease, as it is there, and in 22. H. 7. 51. a. agreed and so it was adjudged in Hillary 30. Eliz. between Wilmottand Cutler's Case, that if a Husband which was seized of a Copyhold Estate in right of his Wife, accept an estate for life, this determines the copyhold Estate which he hath in right of his Wife in possession: So if Lessee for years accept an estate of one which hath no Estate, yet this determines his Term, as it was adjudged Hillary 31. Eliz. Rot. 1428. b. That if Lessee for years of a Lease made by the Ancester accept an estate of Guardian in Soccage, this determines his Lease, which he had of the Ancestor, and upon that he concluded, that in this case the acceptance of a Bargain and Sale, turns the Copyholder in remainder to a Right, and then it appears by Saffins' Case 5. Coke 125. That he shall be bound though that he hath only Interest, and so of Title also, and he said that it appears, by Kite and Quarintons' case, 4. Coke 26. a. that a Right or Title may be of Copyhold Estate, for it is there said by Wray chief Justice, that it shall be with in the Statute of 32 H. 8. chapter 9 of buying of Titles; and so concluded. Dodridge the King's Sergeant agreed, that the sole question is if any thing be here done to turn the Copy-hold-Estate in remainder into a right, for than he agreed that this shall be barred, otherwise not, and to that he intended, that the first Estate for life shall be said to be in Esse, notwithstanding the acceptance of the Bargain and Sale, as to all estrangers, and especially when it is to their prejudice, as if Tenant grant Rend, and after surrenders his estate, now between the parties, the Lease shall be extinct by the surrender, but to the Grantee of the Rent it shall be said to be in Esse, and if during his life, he in Remainder also grants a Rent, he shall hold the Land subject to both the Rents, though that the grants be both to one self sameperson, so if he in Reversion grants his Reversion with warranty, and after the Tenant for life surrenders, and the Grantee be impleaded, he shall never vouch during the life of the Tenant for life, 5 H. 5. Comment. 24 Ed. 3. And here also is a custom which preserves the Copyhold Estate in Remainder, and their particular Tenant cannot that prejudice, and for that also it shall not be turned into a right, as if a Copyhold Estate be granted to one for life by one Copy, and after the Lord grants another Estate for life by another Copy to another, and then the first Copyholder commits forfeiture, he which hath the second estate cannot take advantage of that, but the Lord shall hold it during the life of the first Tenant, for no act made by the particular Tenant shall prejudice him in Remainder, for otherwise many Inconveniencies would ensue upon that, as by secret conveyances, or as if a grantee of a Rend charge, grant that to the Tenant of the Land for his life, the Remainder over, the Remainder shall be good, notwithstanding that the particular Estate be extinct and drowned, also he intended that the Copyhold Estate is another thing, than the land itself, and for that the Fine shall not be a Bar, no more then in Smith and Stapletons' Case, Com. Where a Fine levied of Land shall not be a Bar of Rent, insomuch that it is another thing, so in this case he intended that the fine shall not be a Bar of the Copyhold Estate, and concluded, etc. Wynch Justice was of opinion that the Fine shall not be a Bar to the Copyhold Estate in Remainder, for the acceptance of the Bargain and Sale doth not determine the first Copyhold Estate for life, as to him in Remainder but only to the first Tenant and the Lord, and between those he agreed that the Copyhold Estate is determined, as in Heydens' Case, by acceptance of a Lease for years, and for that the Remainder shall not be turned to a Right, and by consequence shall not be barred, and for that he supposed that the reason that the Fine was a Bar in Saffins' Case 5 Coke 123. b. was insomuch that the Lessor entered, made a Feoffment and after levied a Fine, and it is there agreed that the Feoffment turns the Estate of the Lessee to a Right, and for that the Fine shall be a bar, and also there the Lease was by limitation of time to have a beginning, but if a man makes a Lease for years to begin at a day to come, and before the beginning of that makes a Feoffment or is disseised, and Fine with proclamation is levied, yet he which hath future Interest shall not be barred, for this is not turned to a Right, and it was not the intent of the Statute of Fines to make a Bar of right, where there was no discontinuance or Estate at least turned to right, and this was the cause that at the Common Law, Fine with Nonclaime was no Bar, but where they make alteration of possession, and he cited Palmer's case to be adjudged, that a Fine of Land shall not be a bar for Rent, where the case was, Lessee for life, Remainder for life of Rent: The first Lessee for life of the Rent, purchaseth Land and levies Fine of that, and adjudged that this shall not bind them in Remainder of the Rent, no more, if he in remainder levy a fine that shall not prejudice the particular Tenant, and so he concluded in this case, that the Ramainder shall not be barred and that the Plaintiff shall have Judgement. Warburton Justice accordingly, and he argued that the Statute of Fines contains two parts. The first, to bar those which have present right, and they ought to make their claim within five years after the Fine levied, or otherwise they shall be barred. And the second those which have Right, title, or interest accrued, after the Fine levied, by reason of any matter which preceded the Fine, and in both cases the Estate which is barred aught to be turned into a right, or otherwise it shall not be barred, the which cannot be here, for the estate is given by the Custom, and it is to have his beginning after the Death of the first Tenant, and though that the first Tenant commit Forfeiture, yet he in remainder cannot enter, for his time is not yet come, as in 45 Ed. 3. is a collateral Lease with warranty to the Tenant for life in possession, this shall not be a bar, insomuch that it is made to him which hath possession, so if a man make a Feoffment upon condition, and the Feoffee levy a Fine with proclamations and five years pass, and the condition is broken, the Feoffee may enter at any time, otherwise if the Fine had been levied after the condition broken, and so if the Lord be entitled to have Cessavit, and Fine is levied by the Tenant and five years pass, he shall be barred, and this was the cause of the Judgement in Saffins' case, insomuch as the Lessee had present interest to enter, and this was altered into a Right by the Feoffment, and then the Fine was a Bar, but here he in Remainder hath no right till after the Death of him which was the first Tenant, and then his right to the possession begins, and then if a Fine had been levied with proclamation this shall be a Bar, and so he concluded, that Judgement should be entered for the Plaintiff. Coke chief Justice accordingly, and he agreed also that the sole Coke. question is, if by acceptance of a Bargain and sale by the first Tenant for life, the Remainder be turned into a right, and he said, that right sometimes sleepeth, but it never dies, but this shall be intended (the right of the Law) and not right of Land, for that may be barred by Writ of Right at the Common Law, and he intended that Copyholdes are within the Statutes of Fines, be they Copyhold for life, years, in tail, or in fee, for the third part of the Realm is in Copyholdes, and two parts in Lease for years, and if these shall not be within the Statute, than this doth not extend to three parts of the Realm, and it is agreed in Heydons case 3 Coke 8. a. That when an act of Parliament doth not alter the Tenure, Service, Interest of Land, or other thing in prejudice of the Lord or of the custom of the Manor, or in prejudice of the Tenant, there the general words of such act of Parliament shall extend to Copy-holds, and also it is resolved to be within the Statute of 32 H. 8. Of Maintenance, and also it is within the express Letter of this, which contains the word Interest, and Copyholder hath interest and so also of Tenant by Statute Merchant, than the question will be, if the acceptance of a Bargain and sale turns that to a right, and he intended that his Estate for life remains, though that it is only passive in acceptance of Bargain and sale, and for that it shall not be prejudice more than if Tenant at will accepts a Bargain and Sale, for his Estate at will, this notwithstanding remains, but if Lessee for years or life, accepts a Fine upon conusance of right, this is a forfeiture, insomuch that it is a matter of record, and it shall be an estoppel to say that he did not take Fee by that, & doth not admit the Reversion to be in another, also insomuch that the Bargain and sale was executed by the Statute for this cause it shall not be prejudice, as it was adjudged in the Lady Gresham's case in the Exchequer, 28 Eliz. Where two several conveyances were made with power of Revocation upon tender of ten pound, and adjudged by act of Parliament that a revocation was good, and also that no licence of alienation shall be made, insomuch that it was by act of Parliament, which doth no wrong, and it is for the Trespass, for which the Revocation of Uses. party ought to have licence, and if it be not Trespass there need no licence before hand nor pardon afterwards: So if a man makes a Lease for years, remainder for years, the first Lessee accepts Bargain and Sale, this shall not turn these in remainder to prejudice. Thirdly it seems to him also, that notwithstanding the acceptance of the Bargain and Sale, the first Copyhold Estate for life remains in Esse, and is not determined. For this differs from an Estate of Land, for it shall not be subject to a Rent granted by the Lord: the first Estate remains, till all the remainders are determined, for the first tenant for life cannot surrender to the Lord, also it is customary estate, for by the Common Law this being granted to three successively, this shall be determined and extinct for the third part, for they three take into possession, and the word successively, shall be taken as void, but here the Custom appoints, that the remainder shall not have his beginning, till the death of the first-Tenant, and that they should take by succession, and for that there is a difference between this customary Estate, and other Estates at the Common Law, and other surrenders, for if a Copyholder surrender to the use of another for life, nothing passeth but for life only, the Lord hath not any remainder by this Surrender, and if this Tenant for life commits forfeiture, he in reversion shall not take advantage of that, and if at the Common Law Tenant for life, remainder for life or in fee be, and the first Tenant for life makes a Feoffment, and after levies a Fine, and resolved that he in reversion should not be bound till 5 years are incurred after the death of the 1. Tenant for life, for then his title of Entry first accrues in apparancy, and before that is in secrecy, of which he in remainder is not held to take notice, and so in this case he in remainder shall not be bound till five years are incurred after the death of the first Tenant, and the rather insomuch as the first Estate remains, for that that the first Tenant was only passive and not active, and so he concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff, insomuch that the Fine was no Bar, and upon this concordance of all the three Justices in opinion, no other Justices being present this Term Judgement was entered accordingly. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Danyell Waters against the Dean and chapter of Norwich. IN covenant, The case was this in 37 H. 8. the then Deane and Chapter of Norwich made a Lease to one Twaits for fifty years, which ended 35 Eliz. in time of Ed. 6. The then Dean and Chapter surrendered all their possessions to the King, which those newly endowed, and incorporated by the name of Deane and Chapter of the foundation of Ed. 6. and in the 8. Eliz. Salisbury then Deane and the than Chapter made a Lease to Thimblethorpe for 99 years to begin after the said Lease for fifty years made to Twaits: And it doth not appear by the pleading; that Thimblethorpe entered: But the succeeding Dean and Chapter in the 42. Eliz. made another Lease to Waters the Plaintiff for three lives, rendering the ancient Rent quarterly, with warrant of Attorney to make livery, and it was not executed till after the end of three quarters of a year after the Sealing of it, and when the time of three rend days were Incurred: And in this Lease the Deane and Chapter covenanted with Waters to acquit and save harmless the Lessee and the premises during the Term, etc. By reason of any Lease made by them, or any of their Predecessors or by the Bishop: And then the Plaintiff in his Court, conveys the Lease made by Thimblethorpe to Doylye, and that he intered and disturbed the Plaintiff, and so assigned breach of covenant, upon which this Action was founded, upon which the Defendants demur in Law: And this was agreed by Dodridge. Dodridge the King's Sergeant for the Defendants. First that the Lease made to Waters was void, and then the Covenants do not extend to charge the Defendants: And he supposed the Lease to be void, insomuch that the Attorney did not make Livery; until three Rend days were incurred, and the Lease was made as well for the benefit of the Lessor, as for the Lessee, for if the Lessee is to have the profits and the Lessor is to have the Rent: And insomuch that the Livery was not made before a Rent incurred, this tends to the prejudice of the Lessor, and for that the Authority is countermanded, and the Livery made after void, for when a man hath a Letter of Attorney to make Livery, he ought to make that in such manner, as the Feoffer himself would make it, and the Lessor cannot make that after a rent incurred, for than he should lose that Rent: Also Authority ought to be strictly pursued, as in 36. H. 8. Dyer 62. 24. Letter of Attorney was made to three jointly and severally to make Livery, and re●…ved that two cannot do it, see 11. H. 4. For it ought to be made jointly or severally, so here the Attorney ought to make the Livery as his Master will, and that ought to be made before any Rent incurred: And for this cause he intended the Lease to be void: And then as to a Collateral Covenant, which is in effect no other, but that the Plaintiff shall enjoy the Land during the Term, which is of an Estate which is nothing, for if the Lease be void, the Estate is nothing, and the Lessee hath not any Term or Estate in the Land: And he agreed that in the Record of Chedingtons' Case, 1 Coke 153. b. And in the Commentaries, Wrotsleys Case 198. And 2. Eliz. Dyer 178. There is a difference between Tirminum Annorum, and the time or space of years, or the life of such a man, but there is not any difference between a Term and an Estate: Also he supposed that the words of the Covenant extend only to save the Plaintiff harmless of Leases made by these Defendants or any of their predecessors, and this Lease was made to Twaits in time of H 8. Which was before their Corporation, for they have been but named a Corporation in the time of Edward 6. and not before: And then a Lease made in the time of H. 8. is not made by them nor by their Predecessors, and so the Covenant doth not extend to that, as it appears by 8. Ed. 4. in case of prescription, if Corporation be changed in manner and form, and the substance of their name remain, yet they ought to make special prescription, than a fortiori in this case, where the substance is changed; and so he concluded, nichols. and prayed Judgement for the Defendants. Nichols Sergeant for the first argued, that the Liurey was well made, for these Defendants shall be intended Occupiers, and to have the profits of the Land till the Lessee entered or they waved the possession, and so no prejudice, and the Lessee shall not be charged with Rent till he enters, or the Lessor wave the posaession, as it was resolved in Bracebridges Case Com. 423. b. and in the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury's Case there cited: And for that the Livery shall be good, and the Lessor not prejudiced by the deferring of it, and then to the second, that is the Covenant, he agreed that if the Estate be created, and Covenant in Law annexed to it, if the Estate cease, the Covenant also shall cease: But if express Covenant be annexed, than the Covenantor ought to have regard to perform it, or otherwise an Action of Covenant lies against him, notwithstanding that the Estate be avoided: But here he intends it against him notwithstanding that the Estate be void: But here he intends the Estate continues till Thimblethorp entered: But admitting that he had entered, yet the covenant shall bind the Covenantor, as in 12. H. 4. 5. a. Parson makes a Lease for years, and after is removed; an Action of covenant lies against him, and 47. Ed. 3. and 3. Ed. 3. If Tenant in 〈…〉 makes a Lease with express covenant and dies, and the Issue outs the Lessee, the Lessee shall have an Action of Covenant against the Executors of the Tenant in tail, and 9 Eliz. Dyer 257. 13. Tenant for life, the Remainder over in Fee, by Indenture makes a Lease, without any express covenant and dies, Lessee cannot have an Action of covenant against his Executors, otherwise if there had been an express covenant: See the book and many Authorities there cited to this purpose, and also he cited one Rawlinsons' Case to be here adjudged, that if a man which hath nothing in land makes a Lease, and an express covenant for the enjoying of that, if he which hath right enters, by which the covenant is broken, Action of covenant lies upon the express covenant: So that admitting that the Lease is void, yet the covenant is good and shall bind the successors; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and this case was argued at another day by Dodridge the King's Sergeant, by special Dodridge. appointment of the Judges, and now he supposed, that the Count contains that the same Dean & Chapter which made the lease to Twaits in 37 H. 8. also made the Lease to Thimblethorp in the 18 El. which cannot be, insomuch that the corporation was changed in the time of E. 6. & for that cannot be the same Dean and Chapter, for if a Prior Covent be translated into a Dean and Chapter, and the Dean and Chapter will make prescription, they ought to make that in special manner, and not generally as Deane and Chapter, as it is resolved 39 H. 6. 14. 15. and in 7. Ed. 4. 32. In Trespass against the Abbot of Bermondsey, it is agreed that the Prior was not Predecessor to the Abbot, as it appears by 10. and 11. Eliz. Dyer 280. 11, 12, 13. That the Dean and Chapter of Norwich made a surrender in the time of Ed. 6. and then newly incorporate▪ So that he which made to Twaits in the 37. H. 8. could not be Predecessor to the Dean and Chapter which made to Thimblethorp in 18. of Eliz. for he could not then be any Predecessor, and for that the Lease to Thimblethorp void, and then there is no Eviction, but wrong to the Plaintiff, for which he may have an Action of Trespass, and then he cannot have an Action of covenant, as it appears by 22. H. 6. against the Lessor: But admitting that the Lease to Thimblethorp were good, than this hath his beginning in the 38. of Eliz. and makes the Lease for three lives to the Plaintiff void by the Statute of 13. Eliz. insomuch that the aforesaid Lease for years was then in beginning, and the Statute is expressly that it shall be void, as the grant of next avoidance of a Church in the case of the Bishop of Lichfeild and Coventry against Sale cited in Lincoln College Case 3. Coke, as if a Parson makes a Lease for years, and is Nonresident, the Lease is void by the Statute against the Parson himself, and then if the Estate be void, all covenants which depend upon that are also void: Also he supposed that there is not any good conveyance of the estate of Thimblethorp to Doyley, which is intended to be the disturber to make the Covenant to be broken; and then when Doyley entered without title, the Covenant cannot be broken, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendants. Nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff agreed, that if there be an alteration Nichols. of Corporation, and title is to be made by prescription, it ought to be so specially showed as it hath been said of the other part by Dodridg. But here it is not so, for the same Dean and Chapter which made the Lease to the Plaintiff, made the Lease to Thimblethorp, and this appears by the pleading; and the Lease made to Twaits is not mentioned, but only to show the beginning of the Lease to Thimblethorp: And then the Dean and Chapter which made the Lease in 18 of Eliz. to Thimblethorp; were the same Dean and Chapter which made the Lease in 42. Eliz. to Welters. And he supposed the Covenant being expressed, this remains; otherwise if it had been a Covenant created only by the Law, as it appears by the Books of 9 Eliz. Dyer, 257. 13. and 32 H. 6. 32. And also when a Covenant is created by Law, the Covenantee cannot have Covenant, if he be not outed by one which hath title, 26 H. 8. 36. otherwise of express Covenant, as it is agreed in the 12 H. 4. 5. So in 47. Edw. 3. Covenant lies against Executors: and 38 Edw. 3. Covenant lies against Heir being made by Tenant in tail, if the Lessee be outed after his death; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Wynch Justice supposed that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff, and that he had good cause of action; and he intended that Wynch. the Livery and Seisin by the Attorney, after Rent incurred, was good. Secondly, That the Covenant shall extend to the Lease made to Thimblethorp; for it doth not appear, but that it is the same Dean and Chapter, which was in time of H. 8. For it is not pleaded that it was founded by Ed. 6. but had his name by him. And also it is confessed by the Demurrer, that it is the same Dean and Chapter, but admitting that it is not, yet it may be answered, as it hath been by Nichols before, that is, that the Dean and Chapter which made the Lease in 8 of Eliz. to Thimblethorp, is the Dean and Chapter which made the Lease to the Plaintiff in the 42 of Eliz. are all one: and the Lease to Twaits is showed only, to show the beginning of the Lease made to Thimblethorp. Also he supposed the conveyance of Thimblethorps' Estate to Doyley to be good; and it doth not appear but that the Dean and Chapter were in possession at the time of the making of the Lease for 3 lives: So that this hath a good beginning, and continued till it was avoided by the Entry of the succeeding Dean, for this remains good against the Dean that made it: But Thimblethorp also may avoid it during his Term, and now here is eviction by the Assignee of Thimblethorpe, before that the Lease be avoided by the succeeding Dean and Chapter, where the Dean himself could not avoid it, for he is the party which made it: Also here is express warranty against the Lease made to Thimblethorp, and for that also action of Covenant lies, otherwise if it had been only warranty in Law, as if Lessee for life had made a lease for years, and died: Upon the covenant in Law action doth not lie, for the Law doth not constrain to Impossibilities, as in the 40. Ed. 3. Covenant that the wind shall not pierce nor break the Trees: and 2 Ed. 4. 12 Ed. 4. Action of Covenant lies upon express Covenant, though that a stranger enters without title, and he cited one dorman's case to be adjudged, that where a man borrows money upon a usurious contract, and the principal gives security to the Surety that was bound with him by collateral Obligation: and the Surety being arrested, takes advantage of the Counterbond, notwithstanding that the principal Obligation was void by the Statute of Usury. So here, notwithstanding that the estate was void, and that is the principal: Yet the Covenant being expressed, and collateral, shall bind the Lessor, and so he concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff. Warburton Justice to the contrary, and yet he agreed that the livery Warburton. was good, notwithstanding that it was made by the Attorney, after three Rend days incurred, and he seemed that it might be made at any time during the term and the lives of the parties. And also he agreed that the Corporation shall be intended the same Corporation, and yet Corporation had no Predecessor nor Successor: but the Statutes say, Predecessors, Antecessors, and Progenitors of the King, as 39 H. 6. 7 Ed. 4. 2 H. 6. But he did not insist upon that, but agreed that: But the matter upon which he insisted, was, that the Lease to the Plaintiff was void against the succeeding Dean and Chapter, insomuch that the lease to Thimblethorp was in Esse at the time of the making of that, and this by the Statute of 13 Eliz. And it appears that the Dean which made the Lease to the Plaintiff is dead, for he is named in the Count, the late Deane; and then when the Covenants depend upon the estate, be they expressed, or in Law, these determine and end with the estate, as in Lemons case, 28 H. 8. Dyer 28. 189. resolved, that where the statute of 21 H. 8. makes Leases being in the hands of Spiritual persons void, this avoids these Covenants also which depend upon the Lease. So if a Parson make a Lease and Covenant that he will not be nonresident, and binds himself for the performance of that, if the Covenants be released, the Obligation also is released. So if the Lease be avoided, the Covenants also are avoided: And as an action of Covenant doth not lie for the not enjoying of Land after a surrender, so Covenant doth not lie after the estate is avoided, see 4 H. 7. And to the case put by Wynch of counter-bond, where the Principal was void by the staiute of Usury: he said that there the Obligation was not void, but voidable by plea. But here it is, the estate is made void by the express words of the statute: and he intended that this difference between express Covenant, and Covenant in Law, but that the one determines with the estate as well as the other, and yet he agreed that express Covenant shall extend to charge the Covenanter upon Entry by a stranger, which hath no title; but yet this doth not charge the Lessor after the estate determined, and so he concluded that Judgement ought to be given for the Plaintiff. Coke chief Justice accorded with Wynch that Judgement shall be given [Coke.] for the Plaintiff: And he supposed that the livery was well executed by the Attorney after the 3 Rend days incurred: and yet he agreed that it had been a probable objection made against that: But he supposed that the Lessor was not prejudiced, insomuch that the Law intends that they had the possession and the profits of the Land till livery made, and the Attorney is only as a servant to the Lessor: And he said, that this is not like to Cromwel's and Andrews Case, of grant of a Manor upon Condition to re-grant Advowson or Rent, in which cases the Advowson or Rent ought to be re-granted, before that the Church becometh void, or the Rend day be incurred, insomuch that they are followers of the thing granted, notwithstanding that the Feoffee hath time during his life to make the re-grant, if it be not hastened upon Request. 2. He supposed that the express Covenant shall bind the Lessor, though it be referred to the term; for term includes Estate and Interest, but this is when it is Term; but when it is no Estate, than it shall be intended during the continuance of the years, as it appears by the Rector of Chedingtons' Case: and this he held clear, and so of promise also, as if a man makes a Lease for years, and before that the Lessee enters, makes a lease to another, and promises that the second Lessee shall enjoy during the term, if the first Lessee enter, the second Lessee may have an action upon the promise, and he said that it was adjudged in the King's Bench, Hill. 35 Eliz. between Foster and Wilson, Plaintiffs, and Mayes, Defendant; where the case was, A man made a Lease of a Rectory for years, and covenanted with the Lessee to save him harmless against one Blunt Parson of Dole, which entered and outed the Lessee, which brought Covenant against the Lessor, and resolved that it lies notwithstanding that it doth not appear whether he had Interest or no: So that be the Lease good or void: yet when there is an Eviction, Covenant lies, though the Lease be originally void, yet till it be avoided, it shall be intended a good Lease: And if a Covenant of Dean and Chapter do not bind them, none will take Lease of them, so they shall be compellable to plow the Land themselves, and also he supposed that the Lease was good against the succeeding Dean and Chapter, till it be avoided by Entry, as it was adjudged, Trin. 30 Eliz. between Elmer and Page, where a Bishop made a Lease for years, and dies, the Successor makes a Lease for 3 lives, the Lease for years not determined: And it was resolved that the Lease for 3 lives was void, notwithstanding that the Bishop might make a concurrant Lease for years, which is not made void by the Statute of 1 Eliz. insomuch that the Statute is in the definitive, that is, Leases for 3 lives, or 21 years, and so they cannot make both, for then the Lessee for life should have the Rend reserved upon the Lease for years, which is settled in the Lessee for 3 lives, by the regress of the Lessee for years: and so he said also, notwithstanding that the statute of 18 Eliz. made void all Leases made by Deane and Chapters, where there are more than 3 years in being; he agreed that a Lease for years, where there are so many years in being is good: but if there be but two years in being, that makes the Lease for life void. And he agreed that notwithstanding the statute, yet any Lease shall be good against the Dean himself, insomuch that he is party to that, and hath a negative voice in the making of that: And he seemed that the Proviso in the statute of 18 Eliz, did not extend to Leases in possession, but to Leases in reversion, which are dormant, of which a stranger cannot take notice, insomuch that they are invisible; and for that, if a Dean and Chapter procure surrenders of them, and within 3 years, that shall make another Lease good, and so they shall save their Covenant; and for that the Lease here made to the Plaintiff had been good, if the Defendants had procured the Lease made to Thimblethorp to be surrendered within 3 years after the taking of that. Also he cited the Case betwixt the Bishop of Lychfield and Coventry, and Sale to be adjudged, Michaelmass 32. and 33. Eliz. That a grant of the next avoidance is good against a Bishop himself that granted it, and not made void by the Statute of 1 Eliz. as to him, but to all Successors only. And so in this case he said, they all agreed that the Lease was not void which is made to Waters against the Dean himself which made it, but only against the Successor. And he said also, Covenant in Law extends to lawful Evictions, and to estates in being, and not where an estate is determined, as if Lessee for life makes a Lease for years, and dies, the Lessee shall not have an action of Covenant upon Covenant in Law, as it is agreed in 9 Eliz. Dyer, and 38 H. 6. before cited. So also he supposed to express real Covenants which extends to freehold, or Inheritance, as Warrant and Defend, upon which a man cannot have an action, if he be not outed by one which hath title; and as in 3 Edw. 3. 7. and 21. A man makes a Feoffment with warranty, nonfeoffavit, is a good Plea; for if the Feoffment be avoided, the Warranty also is avoided, for that depends upon the Feoffment. But if a man makes a Lease for years, and covenants that he will warrant and defend the Land to the Lessee, if the Lessee be outed by one which hath title, or without title, he may have an action of Covenant, for the Lessor hath the Evidences, and aught to defend the possession of his Lessee, and the right also, and damages are only to be recovered; and so is the difference between a Lease and Inheritance, though that the words of the Covenant are all one. And also he said that it may be objected, that the Incorporation (was not well pleaded) by Edw. 6. Insomuch that he doth not say after the Conquest, for Ed. 3. was Ed. 6. in truth, sor there were 3 Edward's before the Conquest, and he was the third after: And he saith that he hath known many exceptions to be taken to that, but hath not known any of them to be allowed, and for that he will not insist upon it. But the principal matter upon which he insists, was, that it doth not appear by the pleading, that the Dean which made the Lease was dead: and it appears by the pleading, that he entered in 4 Jacobi and was seized, and then of necessity ought to be living; and such averment of his life is sufficient, as it is agreed in the 13 Eliz. Dyer, where a Parson made a Lease for years, and the Lessee brought an Ejectione firm, and in pleading it was said; that the Parson is seized of the reversion, and this was allowed to be good without other averment of his life, for he cannot be seized if he be not living: and then if the Dean shall be intended to be living, than they all agreed that the Lease shall be good against him; for it was adjudged in this Court between Blackeleech and Small, that if a Bishop makes a Lease for years, and after makes a Lease for life, the Lease for years being in Esse, and dies, and the Successor accepts Rend, this shall bind him: and by this it appears that the Lease was good against the Dean himself which made it, and also against the Successor, till he enter and avoid it, and then by consequence the action of Covenant shall be very well maintainable, and so he concluded also that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff, which was done accordingly. Pasche, 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Browning against Strelley. MIchael. 2 Jac. Rot. 531. In debt, the Margin of the Count contains Nottingham, and the Count itself contains that the Obligation was made at the Town of Nottingham, which is a County of itself, and the Defendant pleads non est factum, and the view was of the Town of Nottingham, and it was tried by the Jury of the County of Nottingham, and this was moved in arrest of Judgement after verdict for the plaintiff, by Nichols Sergeant. And it was agreed by all the Justices, that Judgement shall be given accordingly to the verdict, insomuch that notwithstanding that the Town of Nottingham is a County of itself, yet it may be that some part of the Town may be within the County, and for that possibility they would not arrest the Judgement. Ireland against Smith. IN action upon the Case for these words, the Plaintiff counts that he was, and is Proctor in the Arches: and in communication between one Morgat and the Defendant of him, the Defendant said to the said Morgat, You take part with Ireland against me, who is an arrant Papist, and hath a Pardon from the Pope, and can help you to such an one if you will: And after verdict it was moved by Hutton Sergeant in arrest of Judgement, that the action doth not lie; and he saith, that it hath been adjudged in this Court, 3 Jacobi, Rot. 7031. between Kingston and Hall, that an action doth not lie for like words, he is an arrant Papist: And it were good that he and all such as he is were hanged, for he and all such as he is would have the Crown from the King's head if they durst: And it was adjudged that an action doth not lie for these words, which are more strong than the words in this action: but of the other part it was said by Haughton Sergeant that he did not insist upon these words, that he is a Papist, but that he had obtained a Pardon from the Pope, the which by the Statute of 13 Eliz. is made High Treason, and then notwithstanding that no time was limited when the Pardon should be procured, that is before the Statute or after, yet it shall be intended such a Pardon which is against the Statute; for the presumption of the Law shall be taken in the worst sense, and not like to the Case, where a man saith to another, that he hath the Pox: And also it is alleged by the Count, that the Plaintiff is not above the age of 40. years, so that he cannot obtain a Pardon before the Statute of 13 Eliz. And for that he supposed that the action is very well maintainable. Coke chief Justice said, that it was adjudged in the King's Bench in the time of Catlyn chief Justice there; that an action upon the Case doth not lie for calling a man Papist. And Winch Justice said, that if a man call a Bishop or another man which is trusted with government of the Church, and Ecclesiastical causes, that he thought the action lies, otherwise not. Also he supposed that the Pardon might be for Purgatory, or other matters which are not within the Statute of 13 Eliz. And also the Pardon may be procured by another, and come to his hands by delivery over afterwards that it had passed two or three, and the averment is not sufficient, for it is only Implication and Inference, Coke and Warberton Justices said, that a Papist is one that errs in his opinion, and though that the Papists are Authors of many Treasons, yet the Law doth not intend so, and so of Heretic, which is always in a fundamental point of Religion, and yet an action doth not lie for calling a man Heretic, also the Pope is a temporal Prince in Italy, and for this cause also may pardon, and this is out of the statute of 13 Eliz. and so they all agreed that the Action doth not lie for these words. Pasche 1612. 10 Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Marstones' Case. IN a common Recovery the Tenant appears by Attorney, and Common Recovery. vouches one which is present in Court, which appears, and vouches the common Vouchee, and the Attorney hath a Warrant of the party acknowledged before a Judge, but this was not entered of record, and this was in Hillary term 16 Eliz. And it was moved by Dodridge the King's Sergeant, that the Warrant of Attorney might be now amended and entered upon the record, and Coke supposed clearly that it shall not be entered, insomuch that it is a want of a Warrant of Attorney, but if there had been a misconstruing of the Warrant of Attorney, otherwise it is, for this seems to be within the Statute of 27 Eliz. Chapter 5. Concerning amendments. In Debt upon an obligation with condition to perform Covenants Obligation to perferme Covenants. in an Indenture of Lease the Defendant pleads, that after and before the original purchased, the Indentnre was by the assent of the Plaintiff, and the Defendant canceled and avoided, and so demands Judgement if action, and it seems by Coke clearly, that the Plea is not good without averment that no Covenant was broken before the cancelling of the Indenture. Pasch. 12. Jacobi, 1612. In the Common Bench. Bard against Stubbing. IT was moved in arrest of Judgement, that the Venire facias Arrest of Judgement wants these words, Et habeas ibidim nemina Juratorum, but the words, Venire facias duodecim, etc. were inserted, and it seems by all the Justices that it was good, and that the first words, are supplied in the last, and they are aided by the statutes of Jeofai es, after verdict, and so it was adjourned. In Audita querela sued by the sureties upon an escape made by the principal, they being in execution offered to bring the Money into Audita querela. the Court, or to put in sufficient Sureties to the Court, and so prayed that they might be bailed, and it was agreed, that if Audita querela be grounded by specialty or other matter in writing, or upon matter of Record, Supersedeas shall be granted before that the party be in Execution, and if he be in execution he shall be bailed, but if it be founded upon a matter in Deed, which is only surmise, he shall not have Supersedeas in one case, nor shall be bailed in the other case, and so was the Opinion of all the Justices. In an Action of Waste for digging of earth to make Brick, Estrepement Wast. was awarded, and upon Affidavit; that the Writ of Estrement was delivered to the Sheriff, and that he gave notice of that Estrepement awarded. to the party, and he notwithstanding that continues to make waste, attachment was awarded. Pasch. 12 jacobi, 1612. In the Common Bench. Fetherstone's Case, Trinity 1612. IN Ejectione firm, The Plaintiff had Judgement, and an Habere Ejectione firm. Refusal. facias possessionem to the Sheriff of Coventry, which returns that he had offered possession to the Plaintiff, and he refused to accept it, and it seems that the Plaintiff cannot have Habere facias possessionem, insomuch that it appears by the Record, that he hath refused to have the possession. The case was, A Dean and Chapter being Lord of a Maunor, parcel Lord of a Manor enclose the Demesnes adjoining to the Common. of the Demesnes of the Manor being several, adjoined to the Common, which was parcel of the waist of the Manor, and one Copyholder which had Common in the said Waste, puts his Beasts into the said waste to take his Common, and they for default of enclosure escape into the said Demesnes, by which the Lord brings his action of Trespass, and upon this the Defendant pleads the special matter, and that the Lord, and all those whose Estate he had, in the said place where the trespass is supposed to be made, have used to fence the said place which is parcel of the Demesnes of the said Manor, against the Commoners which have Common in the said Common, being parcel of the waste, and also of the demesnes of the said Manor, and that the Beasts of the said Defendant, escaped into the said place in which, &c for default of enclosure, and so demands Judgement, upon which the Plaintiff demurs in Law: In the agreement of which, it was agreed by Hutton and Haughton the Sergeants which argued it, whether a man by prescription, is bound to make fence against Commoners, as it is agreed in the 22 H. 6. 7. 8. 21 H. 6. 33. But the doubt which was made in this case by Haughton which demurred was, for that that the Lord which by the prescription ought to enclose is owner of the soil also, against which he ought to enclose, and so he ought to enclose against himself, and for that he supposed that the pleading should have been, that there is such a custom there, and of time out of mind that the Lord shall enclose against the Common, insomuch that by that the Copyholder would bind the Lord, and upon that it was adjourned, etc. Pasch 12 Jacobi, 1612. In the Common Bench. Sir Henry Rolls against Sir Robert Osborne and Margeret his Wife. IN Warrantia Charte, the case was, Sir Robert Osborne and his Warrantia Charte. Wife levied a Fine of the Manor of Kelmersh, with other Lands in Kelmersh, to Sir Henry Rowles, against all persons, and this is declared for the Lands in Relmersh to be to the use of Sir Henry Rolls for life, with divers Remainders over, and for the Manor no use was pleaded to be declared at all, and then a Writ of Entry in the Post was sued against the said Sir Henry Rolls which vouched Sir Robert Osborne, and his said wives; and this was declared for the said Lands to be to the use of the said Sir Henry Rolls for his life with other Remainders over, which were declared upon the Fine of the Lands in Kelmersh only, and of the Manor of Kelmersh no uses were declared, upon the Recovery also, and upon this Recovery pleaded in bar the Plaintiff demurred, and it was argued by Dodridge Sergeant of the King for the Plaintiff, that the Plea in Dodridge, Barr was not good, insomuch that it doth not appear that the warranty which was executed by the Recovery was the same warranty which was created by the Fine, and also the Fine was taken for assurance against the Issue in tail, and the Recovery to Barr the remainders, and so one shall not destroy the other, and for the first he said, that a man may have of another several warranties, and several causes of Voucher and all shall be together, for warranty is but Covenant real, and as well as a man may have several Covenants for personal things, as well he may have several real Covenants for one self same Land, as if the Father infeoff one with warranty, and the Sonn also releases to the same Feoffee with warranty, or if the Father infeoff one with warranty against him and his Heirs and the Sonn release with warranty against all men, the Feoffee may vouch one, and Rebut against the other, so of Warranty of Tenant in tail and release of an Ancestor collateral with warranty in Law, and express warranty, as it is agreed in 31 Ed. 1. Fitzh. Voucher 289. And upon that he concluded that a man may have several warranties of oneself same man, and the one may be executed and the other remain, notwithstanding that it be for oneself same Land, and he supposed the effect of these warranties are as they are used, for if that may vouch generally, and bind himself upon the Fine or upon his own warranty, or upon the warranty of his Ancestor, notwithstanding that the voucher be generally, as it is 31. Ed. 3. Warranty of Charters 22. So if he be vouched as Heir, though that it were special, but if he be Heir within age otherwise it is, for that is a good Counter Plea that he was within age, and so prayed (that the word might demur) during his nonage, 17. Ed. 2. Counter Plea of voucher 111. 21. Ed. 4. 71. Then he supposed here was general warranty which is executed, and also another warranty which remains, notwithstanding any thing which appears to the Court, for he hath not demanded any binding, 10. Ed. 3. 15. a. b. Also the warranty in the Fine is the warranty of all the Conusees, and the warranty upon which the voucher is, is only the warranty of Sir Robert Osborne, which cannot be intended the same warranty which is contained in the Fine which is by two, as it is resolved in 10. Ed. 3. 52. But admitting that it agrees in all, that is the voucher and the warranty in the Fine, that is, in number of persons and quantity of land and all other circumstances, yet it shall be no Bar, for the Common Recovery is only as further assurance, for it is for forfeiture if it be suffered by Tenant for life, as it is resolved in pelham's Case 1. Coke: Also he supposed that notwithstanding that the Fine was levied hanging the Writ of entry, and ●o Sir Henry Rolls made Tenant, yet this is good being by purchase, but not if it be by descent or by recovery upon elder Title: And he supposed that if the recovery and the warranty might be together by any possible means, they shall not be destroyed, insomuch that this is the common case of assurance, and for that shall be taken, as in Pattenhams Case 4. and 5. Phil. and Mary Dyer 157. and 2. Coke. Cromwell's Case 77. b. where a man makes a Feoffment upon condition rendering Rend, and after suffers common recovery, and yet this notwithstanding the condition and Rent remains: And so it seems that in this case the warranty remains notwithstanding the Recovery; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. nichols Sergeant for the Defendant, and he seemed that the nichols. warranty is destroyed, first insomuch that the Recovery was to other uses, and the Fine was when proved that there was no further assurance, also he supposed, that insomuch that it doth not appear to what use the Recovery was for the Manor of Kelmersh, that for that it shall be intended to the use of Sir Robert Osborne himself, and then for that also the warranty is destroyed, insomuch that part of the Land is reassured to Sir Robert Osborne, as in 40. Ed. 3. 13. The Father enfeoffs the Son with warranty, which re-enfeoffes the Father, this destroys the warranty: So if they make partition by their own Act, as it is agreed in the 34. Ed. 3. Also he supposed that the Tenancy in Sir Henry Rowles is destroyed before that the Fine was Levied, insomuch that this was Executed by voucher, and so he did not purchase hanging the Writ, for this is also conveied from him by the Recovery in the value before that the Fine is levied, and it is all one with the case, where a man recovers upon good Title hanging a Writ, and he agreed, that the recovery had been for further assurance, that then it shall be as it hath been objected by the other party, and the warranty had remained, but this he supposeth, it was not, insomuch it was to other uses then the Fine was, and he intended that if the Estate to which the warranty is annexed be destroyed, the warranty also shall be destroyed, 19 H. 6. 59 21. H. 6. 45. 22. H. 6. 22. and 27. So if the Estate be avoided the warranty is destroyed, if it be by the Act of the parties named, also he supposed that the warranty is executed, and that it shall be intended the same tye upon which the warranty is created as it is 10. Ed. 3. 51. Mauxells case Com: if he demand no tye but enter generally into the warranty, there shall be execution of all warranties and shall bind all his rights, for otherwise all the Estates tail cannot be bound by that: But where the (Lieu) is demanded as where there are three several Estates tail limited to one man, and upon voucher he enters generally into the warranty, all the tails shall be bound, but if he demand the Lieu's which he hath to bind him to warranty, there shall be a Bar of that only, upon which the voucher is, and the remedy is, that if he be impleaded by the party, that hath made the warranty, he shall be rebutted by his own warranty: But if he be Impleaded by a stranger he shall vouch him that warranted that, and if warranty be once executed by voucher and Recovery in value, though that the Land recovered in value be a defeasable Title, yet the party shall not voucheat another time by the same warranty, as it is 5. Ed. 3. Fitz. voucher 249. and 4. Ed. 3. 36. And for that in this case, insomuch that the warranty was once executed, he shall not vouch again upon the same warranty: Also it is not alleged in the Count that the Plaintiff was Impleaded by Writ of Entry in the Post, but in the Per, in which he might have vouched, and so shall not have this Action, where he might have vouched: And also he supposed that Sir Henry Rowles shall not have benefit by this warranty without praying aid of those in remainder, insomuch that he is but Tenant for life, but he supposed that it was no Remainder but reversion, for otherwise they are but as an Estate, and he may have advantage of the warranty, as it seems without aid praying: But not where there is Tenant for life with the reversion expectant; And so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant: And he cited one Barons Case, where Tenant in tail levies a Fine with warranty, and after suffers Recovery: And it was agreed by all the Justices, that yet the Recovery shall be a Bar to the Remainder, notwithstanding that the Estate tail be altogether barred and extinct by the Fine, but Coke chief Justice said; that Rays chief Justice would not suffer that to be argued, insomuch that it was of so great consequence being the common course of assurances: But it seems that the Recovery shall not be a Bar● for the Remainders for the causes aforesaid, and he said that he was of council in barton's Case, and thought this Objection to be unanswerable, and of this opinion continued. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Richard Lampitt against Margeret Starkey. EJECTIONE Firm upon special verdict, the case was this; Devise of a Lease. Lessee for five hundred years, devised that to his Father for life, the remainder and residue of that after the death of his Father to his Sister, the Devisor dies, the Sister which hath a remainder takes a Husband, the Husband at the request of the Father grants release, and surrenders all his Right, Term, and Interest, to the Father which had the Possession: And the question was; if by that the remainder of the Term should be extinct or not: And it was argued by Dodridge for the Plaintiff, that the remainder remains Dodridge. that notwithstanding, insomuch that this is a possibility only, which cannot be granted surrendered or released, and yet he agreed, that if Lessee for life grant or demise the land, all his Estate passeth without making of any particular mention of it, as it is agreed in 10. Eliz. Dyer. And for that when the Lessee hath devised the Lands to his Father for his life, that which remains is only a possibility, for it doth not appear for what years the Sister shall have it, and for that merely uncertain, 7. Eliz. Dyer 244. The King Ed. 6. appropriated a Church to the Bishop to take effect after the death of the present Incumbent, the Bishop after that makes a Lease for years to begin after the death of the Incumbent, and void for the uncertainty, for the Bishop hath no perfect. Estate, but future Interest, which is merely impossibility, and with that agreed Locrofts Case, in the Rector of Cheddingtons' Case, 1. Coke where Lessee for years makes assignment of so many of the years as shall be to come at the time of his death, and void for the uncertainty, insomuch that it is merely possibility, for that which may be granted or surrendered, aught to be Interest Termini at least: And he supposed it could not be released, insomuch that he to whom the release is made, hath all the Term if he lived so long; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Harris Sergeant for the Defendant; argued that the first devisee Harris. had two Titles, one as Executor and another as a Legatee, and before entry, and after that he had entered also the Law doth adjudge him in as a Legatee, and before that he enter he may that grant over, notwithstanding that he hath not determined his Election, Assent to a Legatee. for the Law vests the property and possession of that in him, before any entry, but to make an election there ought to be some open Act done, as it is agreed in Welden & Eltingtons' Case, where that the first devisee which was Executor, also made express claim to have the Term as Legatee and not as Executor, and so vested the remainder also, see Com. 519. b. And so in Paramore and Yardlies' Case, Lessee for years' devises his Term to his Executor during his Remainder of a Chattel. life to educate his Issues, the which the Executor doth accordingly, and this open act was resolved to be a good election, and in manning's case, 8 Coke 94. b. The Executor which hath the 1. Estate devised to him, saith, that he to whom the Remainder was limited shall have it after his Death, and this resolved to be a good Execution and election, and it is there resolved, that such Election made by the particular Devisee is a good Execution for him in remainder, but here is not this Election to have this as Legatee nor Executor, for there is not any overt Act made by which this may be done. Secondly he conceived that this is no remainder, but Executory devise, as it is agreed in manning's Case, and that this may be done by Devise which cannot be done by the party by act Executed, and for that he conceived that there is no possibility, but an Estate Executed and vested in him which is Executor, though there be no election made nor Execution of the Legacy, and admitting that it is but a possibility, yet he conceived that it is Propinqua possibilitas, insomuch that the Term is longer, than it may be intended, that any man might live, insomuch that Adam lived but 950. years, and this is five thousand years, which is longer than any man in the world ever lived, and he said that it is agreed in Fullwoods' Case, that possibility may be released to a possession, and with this agreed the opinion of Strange, in the 9 H. 6. 64. And so warranty may be released which is merely in contingency, as it is agreed in Littleton, and power of revocation may be extinct by release of him that hath the possession of the Land, and so he concluded and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff, conceived that the Remainder is in Esse, and not determined by the Release. And first he conceived that the Remainder was executed, insomuch that the Release was made at the Request of the Father, which was the first Devisee, for this shows his assent, and implies that he took notice of his Remainder, and assented to it, and he said, it was adjudged in Doctor Lawrences' Case, that the speaking of these words by the Executors, that is (that they were glad of the Devise) was a good Execution and assent of the Legacy. Secondly, He conceived that it is only possibility, and for that cannot be released or granted, and he saith that the Law hath great respect of possibilities that Estates may revert, and for that it is adjudged in the 13 of Richard 2. Dower 55. If Tenant for life grants his Estate to him in remainder in tail for his own life, the Tenant enters, takes a Wife and dies, she shall not be Endowed, but the Tenant for life shall have it again, and it shall be as it had been let to a stranger, and to this purpose also he cited, 18. Ed. 3. 8. Counter-Plea of voucher 8. And it was adjudged in Middleton's Case 5. Coke 28. a. that an Executor before probate of the Will may release a Debt, but not an Administrator before Administration granted, see Com. 277, 278. Fox and Greisbrookes' Case, and in 6. Ed. 3. Lessee for another's life, rendering Rend, the Rent was behind and the Lessor releases to the Lessee all Debts, he For whose life dies, and there the Release determines and discharges the arrearages, for it is a duty, and Debitum is Latin as well for Debt as for duty, also release bars the Lord and Writ of deceit for reverser of a Fine levied of land in ancient Demesne, as it is 7. H. 4, and yet Littleton saith, that release of a futrue thing shall not be a bar, and for that if Conusee of Statute Merchant, release all his Right in the land yet he may extend the Statute 15. assis. And so if a mad man release, and after come to his wits and dies, Quere if the Heir may have a Writ of non compos mentis: And he said that it was adjudged in the 25. of Eliz. If an Infant levy a Fine, and after he levies another Fine, this shall be a Bar in a Writ of error for the reversing of the first, otherwise of a release: And here to the principal case to a release made by the Son in the life time of his Father without warranty: And so upon all these cases he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Shirley Sergeant for the Defendant argued, that the acceptance of Shirley. Release by the first Devisee, shall not be execution of the Devise, as it was adjudged in Barramores and Yardleys' case by the Education of the Issue, or a Devise upon condition to pay money, and the Executor pays it, this is a good execution: But here the thing which makes the execution is only release, which enures as Release. And for that the accepting of the release, it cannot be execution of a Legacy. But if the Executor, to whom the first Devise was made, had had any Co-executor, and he would not have suffered him to join in occupation with him, that had been full Declaration of his Intent, that he took it as a Devise, and not as an Executor, as it is agreed in the 10 El. 277. Dyer 50. And he said also, that it hath been agreed to him, that it is such a possibility that cannot be granted, as it is agreed in Fulwoods' case, 4 Coke, 66. b. And he said it is not like to Harveys & barton's case, where two joint-tenants for life were, and one made a Lease for years to begin after his death, and died, and his companion survived him, and agreed to be a good Lease against the Survivor, notwithstanding the Contingency. And he conceived that this might be released, and that it is not like to contingent actions, insomuch that it is a release of right in Lands, see 5 H. 7. 31. b. Colt's Assize, where it is said, if Lord, Mesne, and Tenant are, and the Mesne is forejudged by the Tenant, and after the Lord releases to the Tenant, and after by Parliament it is enacted that the fore-judger shall be void, yet the release shall be good against the Lord, and so of actions by Executor before Probate: and 14 Ed. 3. Barr, Release of Dower by Fine doth extingush it: and Althams' case 8 Coke, if it be made to the Tenant of the Land, that shall be a Barr. And 21 H. 7. fol. the last, Release to a Patron in time of Vacation shall be a Bar in annuity brought against the Incumbent: and if the Lessee for years be outed, and the Disseisor makes a Lease for years to a stranger, and the first Lessee release to them both, this is good, as it is 9 H. 6. and yet regularly such release is not good without privity: But insomuch that it is of right to the Land, and to one which hath possession, it is very good. So Release by Copyholder, extincts his Copyhold right, as it is resolved 4 Coke, amongst the Copyhold cases, and yet he agreed that some possibilities cannot be released, as in Albayns case, power of Revocation, if it be not to the Tenant of the Land, insomuch that this is a mere possibility. So if an annuity depend upon a condition precedent; but where the returning of the estate is to the party himself, as in Diggs case, 1 Coke 174. a. And also the release in this case is the more strong, insomuch that the estate in this is recited, as in the case of 44 Ed. 3. in release of Aid. And so he concluded, that admitting there be no election and execution of the Legacy by the acceptance of the Release, than the title of the Defendant is good, and if it be a good election & execution: Yet he conceived that all the term remains in the first Devisee, and that the remainder is destroyed by the release, and so prayed Judgement for the Defendant, and so it was adjourued. Pasche 1612. 10. Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Manley against Jennings. IN Debt upon an Obligation, with Condition to perform, observe, Debt by Obligation. fulfil, and keep, all Covenants, Grants, Articles, Payments, contained in a Lease, etc. The Lessee doth not pay the Rent at the day, and the Plaintiff without making of any request, begins a Suit upon the Obligation; and upon this matter pleaded in Bar, the Plaintiff replied Request is necessary for his Rent, though that he have a bond for performing Covenants. that he was not demanded, and upon this the Defendant demurred: And Harris Sergeant for the Defendant argued, that when any penalty is annexed to a payment of the Rent, be that annexed to the estate, or otherwise, yet it ought to be requested, and without request to pay it, no penalty sha●l be incurred, as in 22 H. 8. 57 a. b. by Newton, Ashton, and Port, where a difference is taken between an Obligation taken for payment of Rent generally, without any relation to a Lease, and where it is only for performance of Covenants, and Issue taken upon the request, and after demurrer joined, and the question if the Lessee ought to tender it, 14 Edw. 4. 4. accordingly: And in 21 Edw. 4. 6. a. b. Pigott and Bryan agreed that there shall be no penalty nor Obligation forfeited, without request, where the Obligation is for performance of Covenants, and not precisely for the payment of Rent, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff, conceived that the Lessee ought Nichols. to make tender upon the Land to save the penalty, and this shall be sufficient: and the Lessor need not to make request, and this is the Obligation for performance of Covenants, for this doth not alter the nature of the Rent; but if it be for payment of Rent precisely, there the Lessee ought to seek the Lessor, or otherwise for not payment, he shall forfeit his Obligation, for there tender upon the Land shall not excuse him. And for that if a man makes a Lease for years, rendering Rend at Michaelmass, with nomine poene, if it be not paid within 10 days after Michaelmass, and within the 10. days, and these differences appear, and are agreed in 22 H. 6. 57 and 6 Edw. 6. Brooke tender 20. And he conceived that the Books of 14 Ed. 4. 4. 20. Ed. 4. 6. and 11 Ed. 4. 10. depends upon these differences, that is, that a man▪ shall not distrain for Rend charge without Request, insomuch that it is as a Debt which is due upon Request, and admit that the case were that a man made a Lease for years, the Lessee covenants to pay the Rent at the day with a nomine pene in default of payment of that, and after the Lessee assigns his Interest to one which Covenants to pay the Rent, and perform all the Covenants in the Lease, he demanded in this case who shall make the request, that is, the first Lessor or the Lessee, insomuch that it is penal to the Assignee of them both, and so many Suits may arise upon that, and also he said, that it was ruled here upon a motion in arrest of Judgement, that in Debt upon an Obligation to perform Covenants there need not to be alleged demand, upon Solvit or non Solvit put in Issue, for it may be pleaded that it was tendered or paid, and so he said it is confessed by the Demurrer, that the Obligation is forfeited, and for that he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Coke cited Miles and Dragles Case, where a man was bound for performance of a Will, he need not to pay Legacy devised by that for which is no day assigned without request, so if the Obligation be for payment of Legacy expressly and no day assigned, and so it was adjourned. Trinity 1612. 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Gravesend Case. IN Debt, the case was this, that is, the Port-reeve, Jurates Debt▪ and Inhabitants of Gravesend, brought Debt against one edmond's a Water man, which plied the Ferry betwixt Gravesend and London, and counts that Gravesend and Milton are ancient Towns and next adjoining to the River of Thames, and that the Inhabitants of these Towns have had time out of mind, etc. ancient passage from thence to London, and have used to make By-Lawes, and constitutions for the Government of that passage, and have provided Watermens, Steer-men, and Rowers for the said Passage, the which used time out of mind, to take of every Passenger and his fardel two pence, and that for their maintenance, and aught to hold the Passage, if their benefit at this rate amounted to four shillings, or more, and that the Queen Elizabeth by her Letters Patents under the great Seal of England, incorporated the said Inhabitants by the name of Port-reeus, Jurats, and Inhabitants of Milton and Gravesend, and this was in the tenth year of her Reign, and also that they enjoyed the said Ferry without any Interruption, and that they held the tide and Ferry, and that the Port-Reeve, Jurat, and twelve of the Inhabitants had power to make By-Laws and Coustitutions for the government of the said Ferry, and that every Waterman should observe his turn, and also to impose Fines for the not observing of them, and that in the thirty seventh year of the said Queen Elizabeth, a Constitution was made by the then Port-reeve, Jurats, and twelve of the Inhabitants of the said Towns, insomuch that many Watermens ply poor Passengers, before that the Barge was furnished, and so that many other Passengers were enforced to lose their passage by the Barge, insomuch that the passage did not amount to four shillings, so that they did not hold their tide, so that the Barge which had such pre-eminence, that is, that no Watermens shall ply any Fair or passenger till the Barge had received so many of their passengers, by which they might receive four shillings at the Rate aforesaid, and be removed from the Bridge at Gravesend unto the Land mark, and that if the Tiltboate, or any other Waterman received any passenger before that the Barge be so furnished, that he should pay the said Port-reeve, Jurats, and Inhabitants for the maintenance of the said Barge for every passenger so received two pence, and so assigned breach of the By-Law in the Defendants, and that he had received so many of the passengers before the Barge was furnished, which amounted to as much as is demanded, by which Action accrued to the Plaintiff to demand it, to which the Defendant pleads that he oweth nothing to the Plaintiffs in manner and form as they have demanded it, and by the Jury at the Bar it was found for the Plaintiffs, and after that upon motion in the behalf of the Defendant, the Judgement was arrested, and now at this day Judgement was prayed for the Plaintiffs. By Dodridge Sergeant of the King, and he conceived that the custom was good, notwithstanding that it was alleged in the Inhabitants, and he said it was no prescription but Custom, and it is declared to be a good and laudable custom and usage by the Statute of 6 H. 8. Chapter 7. Rastall Passage 8. and he agreed that Inhabitants cannot prescribe to have matter of benefit, but to have matter of Ease, he conceived they might very well, as it is 15 Ed. 4. 29. 22 H. 6. Prescription 46. 18 Ed. 4. 2. 18 H. 8. 1. Secondly, As to the Objection, that the living of the other Watermen which are not employed in the Barge is by that abridged, and that when the Waterman is willing to carry, and the Passenger to be carried by him, it is no reason that a By-Law should abridge this voluntary act of a man, upon which his livelihood depends, he said that so it is not, for nothing is challenged by the By-Law, but only pre-eminence, and that provision be made for the Poor, which is for the public good, for every one may go with any that he will paying two pence to the Barge or after the Barge is furnished paying nothing, and he conceived that the Liberty of the subject ought to be so abridged, but not altogether abolished, as it is agreed in the Archbishop of York's Case in the Register in the Writ of Trespass fol. 105. b. c. 8 Coke 125. a. Wagoners Case, 8 Ed. 3. 37. a. 3 Ed. 3. 3. Where the Bishop of York claims in the Manor of Ripon such liberty, that is, that he and all his Predecessors time out of mind, etc. have had a custom that none in the said Town ought or had accustomed to use the office or mystery of a Dyer, without Licence of the said Archbishop or his Bailiff of the said Town: And also he cited a case in the Register, where the Abbot of Westminster prescribed to have a fair in Westminster upon Saint Edward's day, and for ten days after: And that no Citizen nor other in London, during that time should sell any thing in London, but in this fair, and after the Abbot remitted this privilege, and had of the Citizens of London for that; one thousand five hundred pound: And so it was adjudged in Sir George Farmer's Case, for a bakehouse in Tossiter, and that none shall bake any Bread to sell, but in his bakehouse and good: And so he conceived that Custom may be restrained all passengers till the Barge be furnished, as in 2. Ed. 3. 7. Gran● that all Ships, laded and unladed in such a Haven, shall be laded and unladed in such a place, and a good grant, notwithstanding that it restrains all people to a certain, and if this be good by grant, than a Fortiore shall be good by custom▪ and to the other objection, that this custom shall only bind the Inhabitant and not strangers, he conceived that custom might tie strangers that came into the said Town very well, as it is agreed in 22. H. 7. 40. So the By-Law shall bind strangers, when it is only for Acts to be made within the Town and for the public good, as it is agreed in the 44. Ed. 3. 13. and 8. Ed. 2. assis. 413. ordinance against him which estops passage by water and good, and so he agreed in the Chamberlain of London's Case, that By-Law made in London shall bind all, as well strangers as Citizens, which sell any Drapery in the Hall there, though that they Inhabit in any place out of the City: And also he said that the Bardge-men which have the loss, shall have the benefit, for they shall have the two pence for every one that passes otherwise, before that they are furnished, and this is recompense for them which are tied to perpetual attendance, and he conceiveth that the demand is very well made, notwithstanding that the duty accrues from many times, for he hath carried so many men at one time and so many at another, the which in all amonnts to the sum demanded: And so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiffs. Wynch Justice, that the Count is not good, for the Plaintiffs have Wynch. not alleged that they have used time out of mind, etc. To maintain Ferrey, but only that they have used to make Constitutions, Secondly, it is not alleged that they only have used to maintain Ferrey, and if they cannot prescribe in the sole using of that, and to exclude others, than others may use that as well as they, being for the public good, for how shall they be punished, if that they do not use and maintain; at the Common Law the Inhabitants of a Town shall be punished for not repairing of a Bridge, or high Way, the which may be maintained by the Inhabitants together, and if they do not do it, than others may do it, as well as others may repair high Ways or Bridges, as those which have used to repair them, as a common Host shall be punished in Eyre if he refuse to lodge any man, and yet he which he refused to lodge, may have an Action upon the Case for the refusal: Also the Patent gives the forfeiture to the Port-reeve, but the By-Law doth not make any mention who shall have it, and he conceives that it shall not be as upon the Statute of 2. Ed. 6. Which gives penalty for not setting forth of Tithes, but doth not appoint who shall have them: and this was adjudged to be to him which ought to have the Tithes, but this cannot be so here, insomuch that it is against the Grant, and agreed that a stranger shall be bound by By-Law, where it is for the public good, but not otherwise, and also the custom that these Bardge-men shall have the pre-eminence, may be good, as well as custom that the poor of such a Parish shall have common in such a place till such a day, and then the others, and so in this case; and so he concluded that Judgement shall be Arrested. Warburton Justice conceived that the Count is good, and that Warburton. the Inhabitants may prescribe very well, as 47. Assis. four Towns were charged for the repair of a High way, and so may the two Towns for the Ferrey, that he intended to be high way upon the water, and also he conceived that this is inquirable in Eyre, and also by the Justices of the King's Bench, and now by the Justices of Assizes by Indictment by the name of Inhabitants: The which may be as good an Action upon the Statute of Winton against the Inhabitants of the Hundred, and so he conceived, that in this case the Inhabitants of Milton and Gravesed may be punished by Indictment if they do not repair the Ferrey, and that the King there this day may erect a Ferrey in place where it is necessary, for the King may erect office which is for the benefit of the Common Wealth, but not to charge the Common Wealth. And that if any will pass in his own Ferrey, without carrying of another, this is no breaking of the By-Law; and so he concluded, that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiffs. Coke chief Justice seemed the contrary, for he conceived it is not showed in the Count to whom the Ferrey belongs, for the owners of that are not mentioned, the which it ought: And yet he agreed that a Ferrey may be without owner, as it is agreed 12. Ed. 4▪ 8. Insomuch as this is local and need not any Agent, but out of Leete and Ferrey otherways it is, for there aught to be Agent, or otherwise the Ferrey should be of no use, and for that there ought to be an owner. Secondly it is alleged that Infra Eastern Towns, there is such a custom that the Inhabitants may make constitutions, and that the Inhabitants shall maintain a Ferrey, but not that there was a Ferrey, but that he conceived it might be good, insomuch that it is not traversable. Thirdly what Action the Inhabitants may have, if they be disturbed of it, for this is no easement, and they have no Estate of Inheritance, and for that the Prescription by the name of Inhabitants is not good, for they cannot have Estate, and to the Statute of 6. H. 6. chapter 7. Which saith, it is a laudable custom and usage that a Barge shall be maintained, but not that Inhabitants shall maintain that, nor those incorporate, so that the Statute doth not make them capable of such a thing, for which a Writ of right, and assize by the Statute of Westminster 2. lies. Fourthly, That the custom and the Patent are repugnant, for by the custom the Barge hath not any pre-eminence nor precedence, but equal liberty was to all watermens to carry what passengers that they could, and with that also agreed the Statute of 6. H. 6. And then if the custom were not so, this cannot be made by the grant of the Queen, nor by the By-Law, for this is the liberty of the Subject, the which cannot be abridged nor restrained by them, for if the King may grant such pre-eminence here, so may he do in all other Ferreis and places, and also in the practice of the Law, to have preaudience in this Court, and in all other Courts of Justice: And so should it be also of Butchers and Bakers, and all others which used buying and selling: And he said that the King hath preemtion of time in some places, but this is not by his prerogative, but by the custom of the place; And he agreed that custom in subject may have preemption, but not by the Kings grant, for the King cannot grant that to another that he himself hath not by his prerogative, and perchance he which hath such grant, will not come to Market, till all the Market be ended, and he conceived that the River of Thames is so public, that the King cannot restrain that by his grant, no more than he can grant pre-eminence to a Coachman to carry people into the Streets of London: The which is adjudged upon the matter in the 50. of Ed. 3. Toll. 2. Where the King grants Toll for every one which passeth by a Common way: And agreed that it was not good if it be in a Common Way, or in a Common River, for as it is resolved in the 22. assis. 93. Every common River is as high Street, and Common Ways and the passengers Way as the water increases, and the Thames is a branch of the Sea and a common Street, as it appears by Bracton fol. 8. 5. The Plaintiffs have brought their Action by the name of Corporation of Port-reeve, Jurats, and Inhabitants of Milton and Gravesend, and they are incorporate by the name of Port-reeve, Jurates, and Inhabitants of Gravesend, possessors of Ships, the which words are left out in the name, by which the Action is brought, so that the By-Law is not made by the same name, by which they are incorporate, nor the Action brought by the same name: And yet he agreed that they might make a By-Law according to the grant, without calling all the Inhabitants to it. Sixtly, He conceived that the constitution is not pursued, for the constitution is; that if any Waterman carries any passenger willing to go by the Barge, that such Waterman shall pay for every such passenger two pence. And it is not averred that the passengers which the Defendant hath carried, were willing to be carried by the Barge, and so not pursued. Seventhly, The Constitution is further that no Wherry-man shall carry any passenger, before the Barge be fully dismissed and transmist, and this is not good, for it may be the Barge will not pass to London at all this Tide, and for that it ought to be averred that the Barge departs in convenient time after that it is furnished, for otherwise custom that none shall put his Beasts into such a place, till the Lord hath put in his Beasts is not good, for it is resolved in 2. H. 4. 24. And the reason is, insomuch that it may be, that the Lord will not put in his Beasts at all: And to the objection that the By-Law shall not bind a stranger, he conceives that if all other circumstances had been concurrent; that had been very well, insomuch that it was within the place where they had power to make By-Lawes, and also for the public good, and this as well as the custom of Foreign bought, and Foreign sold, the which is only for strangers: And to the objection, that they are several owners of several Bardges, and for that ought not to join in this Action, he saith this doth not appear by the Count, but it is said that they were possessed, and for that they shall be intended Joint Owners; and so he concluded, that Judgement shall be arrested. Trinity 10. Jacobi, 1612. in the Common Bench. Downes against Shrimpshaw, Trin. 9 Jacobi, Rot. 334. IN action of Trespass for Assault and Battery, the case was this: The Plaintiff in his Count supposeth the Trespass to be made the first day of May, 8 Jacobi, at such a place. The Defendant pleads that the Plaintiff the same day would have assaulted and beaten him, and that the Defendant laid his hands upon him to defend himself, and if any hurt came unto him, it was by his own wrong, the which is the same Trespass for which the Plaintiff hath complained him. The Plaintiff replies, of his own wrong without such cause, upon which Issue was joined; and at the Nisi prius for Justification, the Defendant produced Witnesses, which proved an assault to be made by the Plaintiff upon the Defendant long time, that is, by the space of a year before the day contained in the Count, and that at this time the Defendant to defend himself, hath assaulted the Plaintiff: And upon this Evidence the Plaintiff demurred, insomuch that this proves an assault made at another day than is contained in the Count, and the Defendant by pleading hath confessed an Assault and Battery made upon the Plaintiff, the day contained in the Count, and now upon Evidence proves his Justification at another day: and if this Evidence were sufficient to prove his Justification, was the question. And if by this pleading the day be made material, in which it was agreed by the Court, and Council also, That if the Defendant had pleaded not guilty, the day had not been material. But the Plaintiff might have given in Evidence any Battery before the day contained in the Count, or after before the action brought, and this is sufficient to prove his Declaration: but the Parties, that is, the Plaintiff by his Count and Replication, and the Defendant by his Justification, have agreed of the day: And for that if they may now vary from that it was moved, and so it was adjourned. Trin. 10. Jac. 1612. in the Common Bench. Laury against Aldred and edmond's. IN Debt against the Defendants, as Executors of William Aldred, Debt against Executors. dead, upon an Obligation made by him in his life time, of 50. l. The case was this, one of the Defendants confessed the action, the other pleaded that the Testator died such a day, and that he intending to have letters of Administration, caused the Corpse of the Testator to be buried, and his goods safely to be preserved and kept, and that after administration was granted to him by the Archdeacon, and that after that one Harnego brought action against him as Administratrix by letters of Administration committed to her by the Commissary of the Bishop, being Ordinary there, and recovered, and averred that this was a true Debt, and that he had no goods which were the Testators, besides the Goods and Chattels which did not amount to the said Debt, and so demanded Judgement if action, and upon this the Plaintiff demurred in Law. Davis Serjeant argued for the Plaintiff, that the Defendant ought Davis. to have confessed and avoided, or traverse the point of the action, and not conclude Judgement if action: See 1 Eliz. Dyer 166. 10. When intermeddling made men Executors of their own wrong, that is, when he meddles without any colour of title or authority, as receiving Debts, and disposing the goods to his own use. But if a man administer about the Funerals, or be made a Coadjutor, or Overseer, What acts do make an Executor, De son tort, what not. this shall not make him Executor of his own wrong, or by reason of a Will which is after disproved by probate of one Letter: and in these cases, if he be charged as Executor, he ought to plead special matter, without that, that he administered in other manner: and in 20. H. 7. 27. a. 28. b. adjudged in Debt against one as Executor, which had Letters, ad Colligendum bona definisti only, which pleaded the special matter, without that, that he administered any other way, and other manner was out of the pleading; for he did not administer in any manner with Intermeddling by the letters ad colligendum: and 9 Ed. 4. 33. b. If an action be brought against an Executor of his own wrong, and after administration is committed to him by the Ordinary, this shall not abate the action: upon which Books he inferred, that the Defendant ought to have traversed, that he administered as Executor, and insomuch that he hath pleaded that he hath not so pleaded, the plea was not good; and also insomuch that he hath pleaded, that he hath no goods of the Intestate besides goods which do not amount, etc. And this is uncertain, and not good, for he ought to have showed what goods he had in certain, and the value of them, insomuch that they remain as Assets in his hands, and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Barker Sergeant for the Defendant, argued, that though that the Barker. action in which Harnego recovered, was begun after the action now hanging, yet insomuch that judgement was first had in that: now that shall be preferred otherwise before Judgement, for till Judgement the elder action shall be preferred. And he conceived, that if the Writ was abateable, and the Defendants would not abate it by plea, that shall not prejudice the Plaintiff which is a stranger, and doth not know if these Defendants are Executors, or Administrators, as it is said by Danby, 9 Edw. 4. 13. And he conceived that the plea is good, that the Defendants have not goods, besides the goods, which do not amount, etc. And divers precedents were cited by him to this purpose, as Trin. 18. Eliz. Rot. 1405. between Blanekson and Fry. Hillary, 40 Eliz. Rot. 902. Smalpeeces case: and Trin. 44 Eliz. Rot. 1900. between Goodwin and Scarlet, in all which the plead were all one with the plea in question, and no exceptions taken to that: and infinite other precedents may be showed in the point, for which cause he demanded Judgement for the Defendants. Coke chief Justice seemed, that in an action brought against one as Executor, he may plead that Administration was committed to him for such intent that the dead died Intestate, and demands Judgement if action without traverse, that he was Executor, and with this agreed, 1 Ed. 4. 2. a. 20 H. 6. 23. And so if the Ordinary be charged as Executor, he may plead that he administered as Ordinary without traverse, that he was Executor, but only showed that the party died Intestate, and the Plaintiff ought to reply, that he made a Will, and the Defendant proved that, and traverse that he died Intestate, and with this agreed 9 Edw. 4. 33. and 1 Edw. 4. 11. And if an action be brought against Executor of his own wrong, he may plead that administration is granted to such an one, and the Party died Intestate, and demand Judgement if action, for he shall not be charged for more goods than came to his hands: But if a man administer of his own wrong, and after rightful administration is committed to him, yet he may be charged as Executor of his own wrong, insomuch that Right of action is attached in him. But this seems for the goods that he hath administered before rightful administration committed unto him. And he cited 14 Eliz. Dyer 305. b. where in debt brought against one as Executor, which pleads never Executor, nor ever administered as Executor; and the Plaintiff replies, that he administered as Executor of the Will, etc. and so to Issue. And in Evidence the Defendant shows Letter of administration to him committed of goods of the dead, by which he administered them, and before that he did not administer, and this seems there to be good Evidence, but the Book was Quere of that, and for that he would rather plead that in abatement of the Writ, and so the Book inclined also. And he conceived here, that the meddling with the goods here by the Defendant, as Administrator, made him Executor of his own wrong, insomuch that it was for Funerals, and when it is a work of Charity, and the other is to preserve them. And the Defendant hath not conveyed himself to be Executor, insomuch that he said, that administration was committed to him by an Archdeacon, and he doth not say that Administration of right belonged to him to commit, insomuch that he hath but a sub-ordinate Jurisdiction: And the Common Law doth not take notice, that he, nor no other but the Ordinary hath such power, and for that the power of all which have such subordinate and peculiar Jurisdiction is pleaded, that aught to be showed, as it seems by 1 Ed. 4. 2. a. b. 22 H. 6. 23. And the rather when this is pleaded by the Administrator himself, which ought to have notice of that, and make title to himself; and if so it be, than he conceived that the Recovery by Hornego was void, and so all the goods confessed, remain as Assets. Also he conceived, that if the Executor allow a Writ to suffer Judgement to be had against him, upon a Writ which is abateable, he shall not have allowance of that, but this shall be returned as Devastavit, as in 10 Edw. 3. 503. a. If the Tenant vouch when he might have abated the Writ, he shall lose the benefit of his Warranty: So here and Com. Manwells case, 12. a. 22 H. 6. 12. 〈◊〉 Also he conceived, if a man be charged as Administrator where he is no Administrator, he cannot plead that he never administered as Administrator, but he ought to traverse the Commission of Administration, as it appears by 21 H. 6. 23. And it seems also to him, and by 9 Edw. 4. 33. that if a man be an Executor of his own wrong, and after administration is committed to him, and he is charged as Executor, after administration committed, that the Writ shall abate, otherwise if administration be committed, hanging the Writ. So if a man be made Executor, and he not knowing of that, Iues letters of Administration, he shall be named Administrator, and if after when he hath notice of the Will, he proves it, than he shall be impleaded by the name of Executor; for in such manner as the power is given to him by the Bishop, he shall be charged: and it seems though that he plead where he is Administrator, and is sued as Executor, or otherwise in such manner, that he might have abated the Writ, or suffer Judgement, yet the Writ shall abate: and he intended also, that Executor of his own wrong, might pay debts due to another, and shall be discharged, and shall not be charged with more than he hath in his hands. And if two Executors are jointly sued, and one confess the action, this shall bind him and his companion also for so much as he hath in his hands. But if an Executor of his own wrong confess the action, this shall not prejudice him which is rightful Executor, and so he conceived that judgement ought to be given for the Plaintiff. Warburton Justice conceived that the Bar is good, notwithstanding Warburton. that he did not show, that the Archdeacon had power to grant Administration, insomuch it is no Inducement and the Defendant doth not rely upon it, as Littleton saith, in Trespass where the Defendant pleads that it was made by two, and the Plaintiff releases to one, and if the Defendant pay due Debts it is not material, whether he have Authority or not, though that it be in another respect: As if a man be Indicted of manslaughter and aquitted, and after is Indicted of Murder by the same man, he may plead another time aquitted, insomuch that these are matters of substance: But here it is but of form, and then if it be not showed it is not material: But the matter upon which he, relied was, insomuch that the Action was brought against two Executors, and one hath confessed the Action: And he intended without question, that if this shall bind his companion, and for that he will not dispute the other questions, but declares his opinion clearly, that the Plaintiff ought to have Judgement against both these Defendants upon the confession of one, and this shall bind his companion: Wynch Justice conceived Wynch. that the Plea is good by Administrator without traverse, insomuch that it is to the Writ, as it appears by 9 Edw. 4. 33. 37 H. 6. 32 H. 6. 1. Ed.. 4. 2. 50. Ed. 3. And he conceived that the burying is not any Administration, nor the taking of the goods into his custody to preserve them, no more then in Trover and Conversion, when a man takes the goods for to preserve them: And he agreed that where a man entitles himself to goods by Administration committed by any but by the Bishop, he ought to plead specially, that he which committed it had power to do it: But here it is not so, but only conveyance, and for that need not here such precise pleading of that, insomuch it is only execution of Administration, and for that it is good without intitleing the Archdeacon: And he agreed that an Executor of his own wrong may pay Debts due to another, and shall be discharged: And he agreed also that the Confession of one Executor shall bind his Companion, and that Judgement shall be given upon that for the Plaintiff: And they all agreed that the pleading, that the Defendant hath no goods, besides the goods which do not amount, etc. it was not good, and for these causes they all agreed that Judgement ought to be given to the Plaintiff. Trinity 10. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Tyrer against Littleton 9 Jacobi, Rot. 299. IN Trespass for taking of a Cow, etc. Upon not guilty pleaded Trespass. by the Defendant, the Jury gives special Verdict as it follows, that is, that the Husband of the Plaintiff was seized of eighty Acres of Land, held of the Defendant by Harriot service, Harriot. that is, the best Beasts of every Tenant which died seized, that he had at the time of his death, and that the Husband of the said Defendant, long time before his death, made a Feoffment of that Land in consideration of marriage and advancement of his Son, to the use of his Son and his Heirs, with such agreement, that the Son should redemise to his Father for forty years, if he so long lived, and that after the marriage was had, and the Son redemised the Land to his Father, and the Father enjoyed that accordingly, and paid the Rent to the Lord, and after died, and that the Plaintiff had no notice of his Feoffment, and that the Husband at the time of his death was possessed of the said Cow, and that the Defendant took it as the best Beast in name of Harriot, and also found the Statute of 13. Eliz. of fraudulent conveyances to deceive Creditors, and so prayed the direction of the Court, and this was agreed by the Plaintiff aforesaid. nichols Sergeant, first that all conveyances made upon good consideration nichols. and Bona Fide are by special Proviso exempted out of the Statute of 13. Eliz. chap. And he conceived that this is made upon good consideration, and Bona Fide, and for that it is within the said Proviso, and also he said, that as upon the Statute of Marlebridge there is fraud apparent and fraud averrable, as it appears 12. H. 4. 16. b. Where in ward the Tenant pleads that his Father levied a Fine to a stranger, the Lord replies that this was by Collusion to re-enfeoff the Heir of the Tenant at his full age, and so averred that to be by Collusion to out the Lord of his Ward, and this is fraud averrable: But if the Tenant had enfeoffed his Tenant immediately in Fee-simple, this is apparent without any averment, and the Court may adjudge upon it: And so upon the Statute of 27. Eliz. chap. 4. it appears by Burrells Case, that the Fraud ought to be proved in Evidence, or confessed in pleading, or otherwise this shall not avoid conveyance, for it shall not be intended, 6 Coke 78. a. and see 33. H. 6. 14. b. Andrew Woodcocks case, upon which he inferred, that this is but a fraud averrable, if it be a fraud at all, and of this the Court could not take notice, if it be not found by the Jury, and he said upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. Of Devisees, as it appears by Knight's Case, 8 Coke, and 12. Eliz. Dyer 295. 8, 9, 10, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17. And so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Harris Sergeant for the Defendant; argued that the Circumstances Harris. which are found in the special Verdict are sufficient to satisfy the Court that it is fraud, for as well as the Court may give direction to the Jury upon Evidence that it is fraud and what not, as well may the Court Judge upon the special matter, being found by special Verdict at large, as in 9 El. Dyer 267. and 268. that is, the special matter being found by special verdict at large, as in 9 El. Dyer 267. 268. that is, the special matter is found by Inquisition upon Mandamus, and leave to the Court to adjudge if it be fraud or not, and in 12 El. 294. and 295. 8. the special matter was found by Jury upon Eligit directed to the Sheriff, and by him returned to the Court: And in Trinity 27. Eliz. between Saper and Jakes in Trover the Defendant pleads not guilty and gives in Evidence as assignment of a Term to him with power of revocation: And the Court directed the Jury, that this was fraudulent within the Statute of 27. Eliz. to defraud a purchasor, and in Burrells Case 6. Coke 73. a. before the fraud to the Court upon Evidence to the Jury, and the Court gave direction to the Jury that it was fraud, and that upon the Circumstances, which appears upon the special Evidence: And so in this case he conceived, that insomuch the circumstances appear by the Verdict, that the Jury may very well adjudge upon it; and so he concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. Coke chief Justice that the Statute of 13. Eliz. Doth not aid Coke. the Defendant, insomuch that the Feoffment was made for good consideration, and for that shall be within the said Proviso, for if that shall be avoided at all, that shall be avoided by the Statute of Marlebridge, which is only affirmance of the Common Law, and this is the reason, that not withstanding the Statute speaks only of Feoffment by the Father to his Son and Heir apparent, yet a Feoffment to a Cousin which is Heir apparent, is taken to be within the Statute, and in the 24. of Eliz. in Sir Hamond Stranges' Case: It was adjudged that if the Son and Heir apparent in the life time of his Father, purchase a Manor of his Father for good consideration, this is out of the Statute, and so it was adjudged in Porredges Case; also he said that the Law is an Enemy to fraud, and will not intend it being a conveyance made for consideration of a marriage to be fraudulent, no more than if the Father had made a Feoffment to the use of a stranger for life, the remainder in Fee to his Son and Heir, the which is not within the Statute of Marlebridge, as it is agreed in Andrew Woodcocks Case, 33. H. 6. 14. b. Also he conceived, that the Feoffment in consideration of marriage, natural love to his Son, and that the Wife of the Son shall be Endowed, and that the Son should redemise that to his Father for forty years, if he so long lived, and that the Father should pay the Rent to the Lord, these he intended to be good considerations, and for that should be within the said Proviso of the Statute of 13. Eliz. otherwise if it had been to defraud Creditors: 253 Eliz. Dyer 193. a. Wrensfords case accordingly. But if it had been to such intent, that is to defraud Creditors, this shall not be extended to other intent, that is to defraud the Lord of his Harriot: And in the 28. of Eliz. it was adjudged in the King's Bench, if a man make a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself for life, remainder to his Son in tail, with divers Remainders over, with power of Revocation, and after bargains and sells to a stranger upon condition, and after performs the Condition, that yet the first conveyance remains fraudulent, as it was at the time of the making of it: But this is only as to the purchasor and not as to any other, And in Goodhers' Case, 3. Coke 60. a. In debt against Heir which pleads nothing by descent day of the Writ purchased, the other joins Issue, and gives in Evidence fraudulent conveyance, and upon special Verdict adjudged that it was very good: See also 4. Coke 4. b. c. Vern●ns Case, the Collusion to have Dower and Jointure also: And so he concluded that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff. Warburton Justice agreed that the fraud shall not be intended if Warberton. it be not found, no more than if a man grant an Annuity to another, Quam diu se bene gesserit, in Annuity, for that he need not to aver that he hath behaved himself well, for this shall be intended, if the contrary be not showed of the other party: So here insomuch that it is not found to be fraudulent, it shall be intended to be Bona fide: And he agreed that if it had been fraudulent at the first: If the Son had made a Feoffment over in the life of the Father, as it is agreed in Andrew Woodcocks Case, 33 H. 6. 14. that then the fraud is determined: So here when the Son hath made a Lease to his Father, this determines the fraud if any be, and so he concluded that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff. Wynch Justice agreed, insomuch that it is express consideration Wynch. found by the Verdict, and for that other consideration shall not be intended, and also that it shall not be intended that the Conveyance was made to defraud or to deceive the Lord of such a Peccadell as Harriot is, which is of small consequence; but if it be a fraud within the Statute of 27 Eliz. apparent; that is, if it contain power of revocation, which is declared to be apparent fraud by the Statute, the Court may take notice of that without any averrment; And he saith, That in the 2. and 3. Eliz. Dyer, Wainsfords Case, 193. a. and 9 Eliz. Dyer 267, 268. there is no averrment of fraud, but express Issue joined upon the Fraud, and for that he need not any other averrment: And so he concluded also that judgement should be given for the Plaintiff, and so it was Ruled accordingly, if the Defendant did not show other matter to the contrary at such a day, which was not done. Trinity 10. Jacobi 1612. In the Common Bench. Strobridge against Fortescue and Barret. IN a Replevin the case was this, A man seized of Lands in Fee Release. devices Rend out of it with clause of Distress and dies, his Son and Heir enters and dies, the Rent is behind, the Son of the Son dies, and his Son enters and makes a Feoffment to the Plaintiff, and the Devisee of the Rent, releases all Actions, Debts, and Demands, to the Feoffor, and after distraynes the Beasts of the Feoffee, for the Rent behind, before the Feoffment, and it seems the Release is not good, insomuch that the Devisee had no cause of Action at the time of the Release made, against him to whom the Release is made, nor Demand against him, otherwise if the Release had been made to the Feoffee, for he was subject to the distress, and this is a demand. Trinity 10. Jacobi. 1612, In the Common Bench. Case of Cinque Ports. NOTE that Coke said, that it hath been adjudged by three Cinque Ports. Judges against one in a Case of Cinque Ports, that the Cinque Ports cannot prescribe to take the Body of a Freeman in Withernam, as they use for another; for this is against the Statute of Magna Charta, Quod nullus liber homo Imprisonet●r nisi per Legate Judicium, and also against the liberty of a Subject, but they more inclined that they might take the Goods of one in Withernam when another is arrested, and them retain, and this seems the more reasonable Custom and Prescription. The Case was, Tenant for life, the Remainder for life with warranty, Tenant for life with warranty. the first Tenant for life was impleaded, and he vouches him in Reversion, but he first prays in aid of him in Remainder, and if this aid prayer shall be granted this was the question. And it seems by nichols Sergeant, that it shall not be granted, nichols. see 11 H. 4. 63. Where it is agreed that if a man makes a Lease for life, Remainder for life, Remainder in fee, and the first Tenant for life hath aid of him in remainder for life, and he in Fee jointly, and 44 Edw. 3. 20. in Trespass against a Miller which takes Toll where he ought to grind Toll-free; the Defendant saith that J. had the Mill for life, and that he is his Deputy, the reversion to W. in Fee, and prays aid of the Tenant for life, and of the Tenant in reversion, and had it of the Tenant for life, and not of him in reversion, and this for default of Privity, as it seems to Brook, Aid 30. Haughton conceived that it should be granted for Tenant for life, Haughton. notwithstanding that he may plead any Plea, yet he doth not know what Plea to plead without him in reversion, but by the aid, praying all the Estate shall be reduced into one, and the warranty shall come; and for that he conceived, that the first Tenant for life shall have aid of him in remainder for life. Wynch Justice conceived that aid shall not be granted against the Wynch. first Tenant for life, against him in remainder for life, for he conceived that aid is always to be granted, when the defects of him and his Estate which prays it, are to be supplied by him which is prayed; that this is the reason that he may have aid of his Wife, and where there are many remainders, the first Tenant may have aid of them all; otherwise where he is Tenant for life, the remainder for li●e, and the reversion expectant, for the Tenant for life cannot supply his defects; and with this agreed the express Book of 11 Edw. 3. Fitz. Aid 32. and so he concluded that it should not be granted. Warburton Justice doubted, and insomuch that the granting of Warburton. aid where it is not grantable, is no error, but otherwise of the denying of that where it ought to be granted, he would be advised: But he conceived that the cause for which aid is granted, is not the feebleness of the Estate of him which prays it only, but to the intent that they may join together, and one defend the other, for Tenant for life may plead some Plea, which he in reversion may plead, saving the joining of Issue in a Writ of Right, and he had Aid granted. a Manuscript of the 11 Rich. 2. where Tenant for life, the remainder for life, the remainder for life was, and the first Tenant for life had aid of them both in remainder, and so concluded. Coke chief Justice that aid ought not to be granted in this Case, insomuch Coke. that he which is the first Tenant hath greater Estate than he in Remainder, for his Estate in Remainder is more Remote and uncertain, and to the Book of 11 R. 2. He agreed, that the aid was granted of all in Remainder, but there they in Remainder had Estate tail, and he said that aid is to be granted in two Cases, in personal Actions to maintain Issue, and when Tenant for life prays in aid of him in Remainder or Reversion, without which they cannot answer nor plead, nor Issue cannot be deduced, but so it is not here, for the first Tenant for life may answer and plead to the Issue, as well without him in Remainder for life, as with him, for if Tenant for life, Remainder in tail, Remainder in fee, if the first Tenant for life be impleaded he shall have aid of him in Remainder in tail, otherwise if the Reversion had been to the first Tenant for life, with a mesne Remainder in Tail, 41 Ed. 3. 42 Ed. 3. 10 Ed. 3. And 11 Ed. 3. Receipt 118. Tenant for life, Reversion for life, Remainder in fee was, he in Reversion for life shall be received upon default of the first Tenant for life, and if he will not, than he in Remainder in fee shall be received, and yet he shall not have Wast, as it appears by 24 Ed. 3. for this destroys the first Estate; but the receipt maintains and preserves it, and he said, that the 11 Ed. 3. Aid 32. before cited, rules this case, and so of 4 H. 6. And so he concluded, and insomuch that Warburton doubted of it, it was adjourned. Trinity 10. Jacobi 1612. In the Common Bench. Yet Rolls against Mason, See before 57 WINCH Justice argued that the Defendant is not guilty, and that the Plaintiff shall take nothing by his Writ, for he conceived Wynch. that the verdict is uncertain, insomuch that it is not found that Livery and Seisin was made upon the Lease for three lives of the Manor, but only one Memorandum, that it was made in the house of the Lord, but it is not found that this House was parcel of the Manor, but after it is found that the Lessee by force of this was Verdict uncertain. seized, by which it is employed that it was very well executed, and this being in special verdict, would be very good, he conceived, there were two principal matters in the Case. First, Upon the Bargain and Sale of Trees, if they be reunited to the Manor, or remain undivided. Secondly, Upon the two customs, the which he conceived depend upon a question, for the first warrants the second. And to the first, When a man devices a Manor for three lives, and by the same Deed in another clause, bargains and sells the Trees, and then ensues the Habendum, and this is of the Manor only, and limits Estate of that for three lives without mention of the Trees, he conceived that the Trees pass before the Habendum absolutely, and it is not like to a Bargain and Sale of a Manor with Trees, or Advowson appendent, and here the purpose and intent appears, that they shall pass together and as appendent: But in the first case they shall pass as a Chattel immediately upon the delivery of the Deed before any livery made upon this to pass the Manor, and if Livery had never been made, yet he shall have the Trees, see 23 Eliz. 379. 18 Dyer, Where a man devises and grants a manor and trees, Habendum the Manor for one and twenty years without mention of the Trees, and yet by Windham, Periam, and Meade, against Dyer, the Lessee cannot cut and sell the Trees, for there was all in one sentence, that is, the grant of the Trees and the Demise of the Manor, see the 8 Coke Pexells Case, how a Grant shall be construed, and where that shall be intended to pass Inheritance, and where to pass but a Chattel, where a man grants a Chattel and ten pound yearly to be paid, and in 7 Ed. 4. If a man hath Inheritance and a Lease in one Town, and he by one and the same Deed, gives, Grants, Bargains and sells all to one, Habendum, the Inheritance to him and his Heirs, this is no forfeiture of the Lease, insomuch that the Fee doth not pass of that, so in the Principal Case, Feesimple passeth in the Trees, and freehold in the Manor, and he conceived that by the Demise over, the Land and Trees are not reunited, and this he collected out of Herlackendens Case 4. Coke and 12. Eliz. Bendlowes, a man made a Lease for another's life, and bargain and sold the Trees to him for whose life Lessee dies, he for whose life becometh occupant of the Land, he shall have several Estates, one Estate in the Land, and another Estate in the Trees, and so in Ives Case, 5 Coke 11. a. Lessee takes a Lease first of Land except the woods, and after takes a Lease of the Woods and Trees, and they remain distinct and though that after there are general words in the Lease, that is, of all Meadows, Pastures, Profits, Commodities, etc. That is not material, for these shall be referred to all such things which belong to the Land, and so he concluded this point, that the Trees remain several from the Land, and do not pass to Hoskins by the Demise of the Copyhold only, and so he cannot take advantage of the forfeiture, otherwise he did not doubt but that the particular Sum might take advantage of the forfeiture. Secondly, for the customs, he conceived that the first, that is, that the Copyholder for life might nominate his Successor, and is good, and so for the second, that such Copyholder may cut and sell all the Trees growing upon his Copyhold, and he conceived that the validity of the custom, aught to be adjudged by the Judges, and the Truth of that by the Jury, and when it is found true by a Jury, and that it hath such antiquity that exceeds the memory of man, than this obtains such privilege as the Prerogative of a Prince, and is part of Law, and stands with it, and this is reasonable custom, and so it hath been adjudged in the King's Bench, the reason is, insomuch that the custom is the life of the Copyhold, upon which that depends, and the party is but a Conduit to nominate the Tenant, and when he is nominated and admitted than he takes by the Lord, and that stands with the rules and reasons of the Common Law, that is, that a man devises that a married wife shall sell his Land, and she may sell notwithstanding the Coverture, for she upon the matter nominates the party, and he takes by the Devise, and by this reason, she may sell to her Husband as it is agreed by the 8 of Assizes. And also by devise that Executor shall sell, Executor of Executor may sell, notwithstanding that he is not in Esse at the time of the Devise, and so a Lease for life to one, Remainder to him that J. S. shall nominate is good after nomination, and then he takes by the first Livery, as it is agreed in 10 H. 7. and J. S. Only hath the nomination, and nothing passes to him, and with this also agrees 43 Ed. 3. 19 H. 7. So if a man makes a Feoffment to the use of himself for life, with divers Remainders over, and power to himself to make Leases for three lives, this is good, as it is agreed in Mildmayes Case and Whitlocks Case, 8 Coke, and yet the Estate doth not pass from him but out of all the Estates, and he upon the matter hath only the nomination of the Lessee, and of the lives, for all the estates apply their forces to make that good, and the 2 El. Dyer 192. 23. Custom that the Wife of the Copyholder for life shall have her Widows Estate, is allowed to be a good custom, and there an Estate for life upon the matter is raised out of the estate for life, and annexed to it, and this is by the Custom, and the reason he conceived to be for that that Women should be encouraged to marry with their Tenants, and by that the marriage with the Tenant, and the custom in this Case doth bind the Lord, and so 4 Coke, there are divers customs by which the Lord is bound, and the 8 Coke Swains Case, where the Copyholder by custom hath the Trees, in Case where the Lord himself hath them not, so if the Lord sell the Waste, yet the Copyholder shall not lose his Common in that, notwithstanding that the Estate of the Copyholder be granted after the Wast is severed from the Manor, and it is agreed in Waggoners Case 8 Coke, that custom is more available than the Common Law: And for that this cnse hath been adjudged in this point between Crab and Varney by three or four Judges, he would not further question it. And for the second custom, he agreed that one bare Tenant for life, could not meddle with the Sale or falling of the Trees, but here is a Copyholder for life which hath Aut ority given by the Lord, and the Custom to dispose the Trees; and he saith that Bracton and the old Laws of England calls Copy-holders' Falkland, and saith they cannot be moved, but in the hands of Falkland, What is so called. the Lord they ought to surrender, and agreed that this is within the Rules of the Common Law, for Consuetudo privat communem legem and the Law doth nor give reason of that, for this is as a ground, and need not to be proved, for the reason of every custom cannot be showed, as it was said in Knightly and Spencer's Case, and he said, that Manors are divided into three sorts of Tenors. The first holds by Knight's Service, and this is for the defence of the Lord, and they have a great number of Acres of Land, and pay less Services. The second holds by Socage, and this for to plow and manure the Demesnes of the Lord, and they shall pay no Rent nor do other services, and this was at the first to draw such Tenants to inhabit there, and for that they have Authority to dispose and sell the Trees growing upon their Tenements. The third, holds by base Tenure, and these were at the Will of the Lord, and these were to do Services, and then these in many Cases have liberty for their Wives in some cases to dispose that for another life, and to dispose the Trees, and so it is in Ireland at this day, where some give more and greater privilege than others, to induce Tenants to inhabit and manure their Land, for there every day is a complaint made to the Council for enticing the Tenants of the Lord, and 14 Ed. 3. Bar 277. The Tenant preseribes to have the Windfalls, and if the Lord cut the Trees, that he may have the Lops, and 11 H. 6. 2. The Keeper of the Wood prescribes to have Fee, and 46 Ed. 3. is prescription to stint the Lord in his own Soil, and all these are for the Encouragement of Tenants to inhabit upon the Land, and time of Ed. 1. Prescription 75. A stranger prescribed to have all the profit of the Land of another, for a great part of the year, and to exclude the giver of the Soil, & 6 Ja. It was adjudged in the King's Bench between Henrick and Pargiter, that the Lord may be stinsted for Common in his own Laud, and in the Book of Entries 563. It appears that by Custom Copyhold granted, Sibi & suis, was a good Fee-simple, and the reason of all this is showed in the 4. Coke, amongst his Copyhold Cases, where it is agreed that the Life of a Copyhold Estate is the customs, and then if the Custom gives life to the Estate, this gives life also to all the Privileges which are incident to the Estate, and the Lord is but the means to convey the Estate from one to another, and as in 38 Ed. 3. A man hath a House as Heir to his Mother, and after a stranger grants Estovers to him and his Heirs to be burnt in the same House, these Estovers shall go to the Heirs of the Mother, insomuch that they are incident to the House, so of Privilege incident to a Copyhold Estate by the Custom, and at the Common Law, if Tenant for life hath cut the Trees, he: hath not forfeited his Estate, for he was trusted with the Land, and was not punishable till the Statute of Gloucester, and at this day if there be a mesne Remainder for life which remains in Contingency, and that shall prevent that the Tenant shall be punished for this waste, and to make innovation of this custom, will be dangerous, and for that he concluded that the Plaintiff shall be barred. Warburton Justice agreed: And the first Custom, that is, for Warburton. the nomination of the Successor, he conceived that it is good, and that it is good by the Common Law, and good by Custom by the Common Law, as a Lease for life, remainder to him which the Tenant for life shall name: So by Custom as the Custom, that if a Copyholder will sell his Copyhold Estate, that he which is next of blood to him shall have the refusal, and if none of his blood, than he which Inhabits in the nearest part of the part of the ground shall have it before a stranger, giving for that as much as a stranger would, and the Lord shall have him for his Tenant, whether he will or no, for it shall be intended, that so it was agreed at the first, and it is reasonable; and if it had not been ruled and adjudged before, yet he conceived it might now be a rule and adjudged, insomuch that it is so reasonable and good, and for the second custom, that is for the custom of cutting of Trees, by such Copyholder which hath such privilege, he conceived also that it was good: But he agreed that a bare Tenant for life cannot be warranted by custom to do such an Act, as it was here adjudged between powel and Peacock: But here he had a greater Estate then for life, for he hath power to make another Estate for life, and shall have as great privilege as Tenant after possibility, etc. which is in respect of Inheritance which once was in him, and he may do it for the possibility which he hath to give to another Estate, as it is agreed in 2. Ed. 4. that a Lease foe a hundred years is Mortmain, in respect of the continuance of it, so here, for the Estate may continue by such power of nomination for many lives in perpetuity, and that as when at the Common Law they have in reputation and opinion of Law a greater Estate, may cut and sell Trees, so here insomuch that the Estate comes so near to Inheritance, he conceived that he might cut the Trees by the custom, and that the Custom is good; and so he concluded, that Judgement should be given, that the Plaintiff should be barred in respect of Customs; and then to the third, that is, when a man lets Land, and by the same Deed, grants the Trees to be cut at the will and pleasure of the grantee, there the Lessee hath distinct Interest: But if the Lessor by oneself same clause had demised the Land and the Trees, there the Intendment is: But notwithstanding that there are several clauses, and that he hath distinct Interests, yet he conceiveth that the Trees remain parcel of the Inheritance and freehold till they are cut and are severed only in Interest, that is, that may be felled and divided by the Axe, for Tithes shall not be paid for them if they exceed the growth of twenty years, not it shall not be Felony for to cut those and burn them: And it is not like to an Advowson, for that may be severed, and for that he conceived that if the Custom had not warranted the Cutting and Selling, that the Copyholder had forfeited his Estate, and that the Lord might very well have taken advantage of it, and 29. assis. 29. A man sells Trees to be cut at Michaelmas ensuing, and before Michaelmas Hawks breed in them, the seller shall have them, by which it appears that the property is not altered: So that though they are not parcel of the Manor, yet they are parcel of the freehold, insomuch that they are not severed in Facto: And he agreed that Lessee for years of a Manor shall take advantage of Forfeiture, and need not any presentment by the Homage, and Littleton fol. 15, saith, that the Lord may enter as in a thing Forfeited unto him; and so for attainder of Felony: And if a Copyholder makes a Lease for years, by which he forfeits his Copyhold Estate: And after the Lord grants the Manor for years, the Lessee of the Manor shall take advantage of this Forfeiture made before he had any Estate in the Manor without any presentment by the Homage: But here in this case the Custom warrants the cutting of the Trees by the Copyholder, and for that he concluded all the matter as above, that the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ. Coke chief Justice agreed, and he said that Fortescue and Littleton, Coke. and all others agreed, that the Common Law consists of three parts. First Common Law. Secondly Statute Law, which corrects, abridges, and exp'aines the Common Law: The third Custom which takes away the Common Law: But the Common Law Corrects, Allows, and Disallows, both Statute Law, and Custom, for if there be repugnancy in Statute; or unreasonableness in Custom, the Common Law Disallowes and rejects it, as it appears by Doctor bonham's Case, and 8 Coke, 27. H. 6, Annuity: And he conceived that there are five differences between Prescription and a Custom: And all those as pertenent to this cause. First in the beginning, Pugnant ex Diametro, for nothing may be good by prescription, but that which may have beginning by grant, and also prescription is incident to the Person, and Custom to some place, and holds place in many Cases, which cannot be by grant; as in 11, H. 4. Lands may be devised by Custom, and so descent to all the Sons, as in Gavelkind, and to the youngest Son in Eurrough English, and others like, which cannot have their beginning by Grant, but prescription and Custom are Brothers, and aught to have the same age, and reason ought to be the Father. and Congruence the Mother, and use the Nurse, and time out of memory to Fortify them both. Secondly they vary in quality, for prescription is for one man only, and Custom is for many, if all but one be not dead. Thirdly they vary in extent and latitude, for prescription extends to Fee-simple only, but Custom extends to all Interests and Estates whatsoever, as appears by pleading, for Tenant in tail, for life or years cannot prescribe in what Estate, nor against the Lord in his Demesnes, but they ought to allege the Custom, and against a stranger they ought to prescribe in the name of the Lord, and for that prescription b. Copyholder of Inheritance may sell the Trees, is not good, but such Custom is good, and 5. Ed. 3. 24. And the old Reports 196. One Tenant being a Freeholder prescribes to have Windfalls, and all Trees-which are withered in the Top and if the Lord makes them in Cole, to have so much in money: And so if they sell, and this for Sale, and this was not-good, insomuch that it is alleged in the person as prescription, but if it had been alleged as Custom, and to be burnt in his house, than it shall be good as appendent, and 14. Ed. 3. Bar 227. Wilby saith to be adjudged that prescription to have Turbary to be burnt in his house is good, but not to sell; and 11. H. 6. 17. accordingly, by which it appears that this may be very well by Custom, and cannot be by prescription. Thirdly he conceived that where a man may create an Estate without nomination, there he may create that by nomination: And also that which may be done by the Common Law, m●● be done by Custom, and that an Estate may be created by such nomination, it appears by the case, where a Remainder is Limited to him, which the first Tenant for life shall nominate, and it is very good, and to prove that the Custom is good, he remembered the custom of Millam in Norfolk, where he was borne, that is, that if any Copyholder will sell his Land and agree of the price, that at the next Court when a surrender is to be made, the next of his blood, and if he will not any other of his blood may have the Land, and so every one shall be preferred according to the nearness of his blood, and with this also agreed the levitical Law, as it appears, Leviticus 25. chap. verse 15. which appoints this to be at the year of Jubilee, and the Common Law within one year after the Alienation, and upon this he infers, that if Custom may appoint Heir in the life of the party, than a Fortiore, he may appoint Successor after his death, and he conceived that at the beginning, the Copy-holders' might have had absolute Fee-simple of the Lord, and they rather made choice to have such Estate, insomuch that they did not know, if their Children would be towardly or not, and for that content themselves with the nomination of a Successor only, and so is the Custom at Hamm also in Middlesex, if any Copyholder will sell, the next Cleivener, which is he that dwelleth next unto him, shall have the refusal, giving so much as another will, and he which Inhabits one the East part first, and the South and the West, and last the North shall be preferred, is the only way in his course, and there the Successor is nominated by the Heavens, and by the quarters of the Earth, and so is the custom in Gloucester: And if any Husband hath an Estate for twelve years, his Wife shall have it for twelve years also, and so ad Infinitum, and this makes nomination, and so of freehold, and so if it be good without nomination, it shall be good by nomination: And if the Estate determine by the Death of the Tenant, without nomination when the Lord revives the Copyhold Estates, the privilege also shall be revived: But he conceived that the Tenant cannot nominate part to one and part to another, nor that divided in fractions: And he saith that this point hath been adjudged in the King's Bench by four Judges against Popham 5. Jacobi between Ball and Crabb: And so he concluded this point, and to the second custom he said, he would speak to that Transitive, but not Definitve, and that it hath been adjudged 45. Eliz. between powel and Peacock that bare Copy holder for life, could not prescribe to cut and ●ell the Trees, otherwise of Tenant in Fee-simple, for he hath them cherished and fostered: And it is against common reason, incongruent and against the Common Law, that a Copyholder for life may cut and sell the Trees, and custom ought to have reason and congruence, for 10. Ed. 3. 5. Leete cannot be belonging to a Church, insomuch that it is Incongruent, and so in Writes Case 2. Coke Tithes cannot be appurtenant to a Manor, insomuch that it is incongruent; and a spiritual thing shall not be pertinent to a temporal, and so è Converso: And so in the 5. Assis. 9 and Hill and Granges Case, Com. Turbary cannon be appurtenant to Land, insomuch that it is incongruent, but it ought to be to a house; so in time of Ed. 2. Tenant of the Manor prescribes to have free Bull and Bare, and it is not good for the reason aforesaid, otherwise it is of the Lord of a Manor, and 9 H. 5. 45. custom in Leete to present common, and adjudged that it it is not good, insowch that it wants congruity, for it is not proper to the Court, and upon this he concluded that bare Tenant for life cannot prescribe to cut Trees, for it is not congruent that such an Estate shall have such a privilege, and this for three reasons. First insomuch that Trees growing are parcel of the Inheritance. Secondly in respect of the perdurablenesse of them, for it shall be intended that they will endure forever, and so will not his Estate, for this is as a shadow as Job said, and 'tis absurd that shadow should cut down the Tree: And also it is for necessity of habitation and Blow and Husbandry: And it is for the Common Wealth, that Copyholder of Inheritanc might cut them by such custom, for otherwise he would not be incurraged, to plant and preserve them: And notwithstanding that in this Case the custom be general, that the Copyholder may cut down all, yet that shall have a reasonable construction, and that this notwithstanding he leave sufficient for Houseboot; as if a man grants Common without number, yet the Grantor shall not be excluded, but shall have his Common there, for excess shall not be allowed. As if a man which distrains another for Rent he shall not take excessive distress, the Lessee for life excessive Tallage of villains, nor upon excessive Fines of Copy-holders', and so it was adjudged in Heyden and Sir John Lenthorps' Case, that the Lord shall not take all; but leave sufficient for reparations, and so was the opinion of Wray chief Justice in the 33 of Eliz., In evidence to a Jury, but here he is in nature of Tenant in Fee-simple, and it shall be intended that he hath cherished the Timber, and every Copy-holders' Estate granted is as a new Grant, and hath affinity with Tenant in Fee-simple, and he agreed that if Lessee for life, the Remainder for years, Remainder for life be, and the first Lessee for life makes a forfeiture, he in Remainder for years shall take advantage of that, and that it hath been adjudged; that the Lord of the Manor shall take advantage of forfeiture made by the Copyholder, without presentment made by the Homage, and in one Bacon and Flotsims Case, and so Lessee for years of a Manor shall take advantage of Forfeiture, notwithstanding the imbicility of his Estate, but the principal matter upon which he relied was, that the Trees were severed from the freehold, and if the Lessee dy, his Executors shall have them, insomuch that they are mere Chattels, and this. First in respect of the Words of the Lease, that is, demise, and to farm let the Manor, but bargain, sell, give, and grant the Timber Trees to be felled and carried away at his Will: As if a man makes a Lease for years, except the Wood, and after grants the Trees, the Lease determines, the Lessor shall not have the Trees again. Secondly, They are in two divided Sentences, and also in respect of divided properties, for the Executor of the Lessee shall have them; and Quando duo Jura, concurrunt in una persona, equum est ac si esset in diversis, also past at several times, for the Trees pass by the delivery of the Deed, and the Land doth not pass till Livery and Seisin be made. Also the intent of the parties is not that they shall pass together, for if the intent were otherwise the Law would not divide them, as it was adjudged Hillary 15. Eliz. in the Lord Cromwell's case, where Tenant in tail was of a Manor, with the Reversion to his right Heirs, and he by his Deed gives and grants the Manor, and the Reversion of that, and includes Letter of Attorney within the Deed to make Livery, but Livery was not made, and yet the Reversion doth not pass, for his intent appears that it should pass by Livery and Seisin, and not by grant; and also in Androwes' case, the Advowson appendent to a Manor shall not pass without inrolment of Bargain and Sale, yet there were words there, that that might pass by Grant, for this was against their intent, otherwise if a man makes a Lease for life or years of a Manor, and grants the Inheritance of the Advowson by the same Deed, and so of the case of 23 Eliz. Dyer 374. Lessor deviseth, Grants, and to farm lets the Manor and the Trees, and they pass jointly; and the Reason is insomuch that it is but a Joint sentence, and not several as it is here, also he intended, that the life of the Lessee for life is not averred, and for that he shall be intended to be dead, and for that it is a several grant of the Trees of the freehold, for the Interest of them is settled in his Executors, for if he had made Sale of them before that the Copyholder had cut them down, then that had not been forfeiture, see 5. H. 7. 15 Ed. 4. 14 Eliz. Dyer And then the Case is this, Tenant for another's life of a Manor, makes a Lease for years of the freehold, of which an Estranger hath a Copyhold Estate for life in Esse, Lessee dies, and he conceived that the Copyholder shall not be an occupant, for it ought to be Vacua Possessio, and this was the reason of the judgement in Adam's Case in 18 Eliz. Where a man makes a long Lease for years, and after intending to avoid this Lease, makes a Lease to another old man for another's life, to the intent that the Lessee for years should be occupant, when the old Lessee died, and so drowned his Term, and after the Lessee died, and resolved that the Lessee for years shall not be an occupant, insomuch that there was not Vacua Possessio, and for this it seems to him that if Lessee for another's life, makes a Lease for years and dyes, that the Lessee for years shall not be an occupant, notwithstanding that he made special claim, and that for the reason aforesaid, but he agreed that a Lessee for another's life makes a Lease at will and dies, there the Lessee at Will shall be an Occupant, insomuch that his Estate is determined, and yet there is not Vacua Possessio, according to 38 H. 6. 27. But he did not say there should be an occupant in these cases, but cited Bracton fol. 8. that if the Sea leave an Island in the midst of that, the King shall have it, and not Occupanti conceditur, and so Quod non occupantur conceditur. he concluded that the Plaintiff shall be barred, and that Judgement shall be entered for the Defendant, which was done accordingly, and it was afterwards agreed, upon motion in this case, whether it would not make difference if the Trees were cut by the Copyholder before that he hath made his nomination or not, notwithstanding it was objected, that when he hath made his nomination, than he was only bare Tenant for life, and the Privilege executed, and he in Remainder was also Tenant for life only, for he cannot nominate till he comes to be Tenant in possession, but this notwithstanding, insomuch that they had power to make nomination, that is the first Tenant again, if the second died in his life time, and the second if the first died in his life time, and so the Peiviledge continues, all the Justices continued of their opinions, and according to that Judgement was entered for the Defendant, and that the Plaintiff should be barred, and should take nothing by his Writ. Trinity 8. Jacobi 1610. in the King's Bench. The Lord Rich against Franke. THE Lord Richardo brought an action of Debt against Frank Administrator Debt against Administrator for Rent in the Debet and Detinet. of one Frank, and this was for a rent reserved upon a Lease for years, made to the Intestate, and the Action was brought in the Debet and Detinet, for rend due in the time of the Administrator, and verdict for the Plaintiff, and after moved in Arrest of Judgement by the Council of the Defendant, that this Action ought to be brought in the Detinet only, and not in the Debet and Detinet; and Chibborn of Lincoln's Inn conceived that the Chibborne. Action was well brought in the Debet and Detinet, and to that he said that Hargraves case 5 Coke is so reported to be adjudged, but he saith that he hath heard the council of the other part insisted upon that, that this Judgement was reversed, and for that he would under favour of the Court speak to that. And he conceived that the Action so brought, is well brought; for three Reasons. The first shall be drawn from the nature of the Duty, and to that the Case rests upon this doubt, that is, if the Administrator is now charged for this Rent, as upon his own duty, or as Administrator, and it seems to him not as Administrator, but as upon his own duty, for he saith, that it is not Debt nor duty till the day of payment, as Littleton takes the diversity in his Chapter of Release, between Debt upon an obligation and a Rent, and the day not being incurred in time of the Intestate, this cannot be his duty, therefore that aught to be duty in the Administrator, and to the cases of 19 H. 8. 8. Where the Executor of a Lessee for twenty years, which had made a Lease for ten years rendering Rend, brought action of Debt against the Lessee for ten years, for rend incurred in the time of the Executor, and this is in the Detinet only, and the Case of 20 H. Detinet only. 6. 4. Where an Executor brings an action of Debt upon Arrearages of Account of an Assignment of Auditors by themselves in the Detinet only, and he said that in these Actions, the Executors were Plaintiffs, and in all actions brought by Executors where they are Plaintiffs, and the thing recovered shall be Asset, the Action shall be brought in the Detinet, but in our case they are Defendants, and so the diversity, and to the Objection, that may be made to this Contract out of which this duty grows and arises, it was made by the Intestate, and not by the Administrator himself, and so this is a duty upon the first Privity of the contract, he answered that there is great difference, when a thing comes due by the Contract of the Testator alone, and aught to be paid in his time, in which the Executors are to be char●ed merely as Executors, there the Writ shall be in the Detinet, but when the thing grows due in part upon the contract of the Intestate, and part by the Occupation of the Administrator, as in our case, there it shall be brought in the Debet and Detinet, & he cited a Case which was adjudged 26 El. in the Common bench between Scrogs & the Lady Gresham, where it was resolved that the Lady Gresham, was made chargeable to the Debts of her Husband by act of Parliament, and Action of Debt brought against her in the Debet and Detinet, and debated if this were well brought, and after Argument, adjudged that it was well brought in the Debet and Detinet, for though she was not chargeable for the Debts of her Husband, upon his own Contract, yet where an act of Parliament hath made her chargeable, and a Debtor, and for that reason the Action shall be brought against her in the Debet and Detinet, and to the principal case he cited the Case of 11 H. 6. 7. Where it it said by Babington & Newton that if a man be Lessee for years, and is in arrears for his Rent, and makes his Executors and dyes, and the Executors enter into the Land and occupy, in this case for the Arrearages due in time of the Testator, Action shall be brought against them in the Detinet, but for Rent due in their own occupation, the action shall be brought in the Debet and Detinet, for that it rises upon their own occupation, and with this agrees 20 H. 6. 4. And he said that he would demand this case of the Council of the other part, that is, a man hath a Lease for years as Administrator, and Rent incurs in his time, and he makse his Executors and dyes, and Administration of the Goods of the Intestate is committed over to another, against whom shall the Action be brought for the Rent, that is, against the Executors of the first Administrator, or against the second Administrator: and it seems clearly to him, against the Executors of the first Administrator, for their Testator had taken the profits, which case proves that they shall not be charged merely as Executors or Administrators, but as takers of the profits, etc. And Occupiers of the land. And this was his second reason of the nature of Profits, insomuch that they were raised by the personal labour of the Executor or Admistrator, 2. and are their Goods, as he said, and they have them not merely as Executors or Administrators, and for that the Action is well brought as it is, and he said, that the Heir for Debt of the Father shall be charged in the Debet and Detinet, and yet this was the contract of his Father, but he is charged in respect that he hath Heir charged in Debet and Detinet. the land, and the occupation and profits of that, so here insomuch that the Executors have the profit of the Term, by the same reason they shall be charged in the Debet and Detinet, and he resembled the case to a case put in Fitz. Na. Br●… In his Writ of Debt, where a woman sole hath a lease for years, and takes a Husband, and the Rent incurs, and the wife dies, the Husband shall be charged in the Debet and Detinet for this rent, and the reason is, because he hath taken the profits, so here the Administrator hath taken the profits; and is not answerable for the Profits, unless they amount to more than the rent is. And by the same reason the action is well brought against him as it is. The third and last reason, was for the Inconveniency; and to 3. that he said, if this Action be brought in the Debet and Detinet, there is no inconvenience, but if it should be brought in the Detinet only, then should the Administrator be charged but of the Goods of the dead, where if he be not charged of his own proper Goods, peradventure he shall not be so careful to pay his rent; but would stop the Lessor in his Action, which should be trouble and vexation, and so by this reason also he concluded the Action well brought in the Debet and Detinet, and this was gainsaid by Towse, George Crook, Towse, Crook, and Harris. and Harris of the other part, and it seems to them that it should be in the Detinet only, insomuch that the cause of this Action grows of the contract of the Testator, and the Term is Assets in their hands, and the Administrator hath the Term as Administrator, and by the same reason the Occupation shall be as Administration: and by consequence he shall be charged as Administrator, and not otherwise, and then the Action shall be brought against him in the Detinet only, and that he shall be charged as Administrator they cited the Book of 14 H. 4. 28. Where it is said, if a man hath a lease for years and makes his Executors, and the rent incurs in their time, and action of Debt is brought against them, and they make default, he which first 〈◊〉 all come by distress shall answer according to the Statute of 9 Ed. 3. chapter 5. which Book proves directly as they say, that they are charged as Executors, and not otherwise, and then it follows that the Action should be in the Detinet, so it seems to them that in all Actions, where they are named Executors or Administrators, that the Action shall be brought against them in the Detinet only, but in this action they ought to be named Executors or Administrators, for he doth declare of a lease made to the Intestate, and for that it seems it shall be brought in the Detinet only, and this was the reason of Yeluerton Justice, which was of their opinion only against the other Justices, and to that which was said that an Action shall be brought against the Heir in the Debet and Detinet for the Debt of his Ancestor they answered, that this is now become the proper Debt of the Heir, but it is not so in the case of an Executor or Administrator. And it seems to Towse, that if an Administrator hath a Lease for twenty years, and makes a Lease for ten years rendering Rend, and brings an Action for this Rent, that the Action shall be brought in the Detinet only, for that this is a new contract made by the Administrator, and he hath gained new Reversion, because it was derived out of the Lease for twenty years, and so this shall be of the same nature, and the Rent shall be Assets in his hands, and in proof of this he cited the book in 17. Ed. 3. 66. Where an Executor sold the Goods of the Testator, and the Vendee made an Obligation to them for the money, and the Executors brought an Action of Debt upon the Obligation; and this was brought in the Detinet only: And the exception was taken, because it was duty of their own contract, and for that the Writ should be in the Debet and Detinet, and yet the Writ awarded good, because it comes in Lieu of Goods which they had as Executors, and shall be Assets in their hands as the Goods should have been, and for that it is well brought in the Detinet only: And they said that in the principal case it shall be mischievous if the Action shall be brought in the Debet and Detinet, for it may be the Rent reserved, is of more worth than the Profits of the Land will amount unto, and that the Executors or Administrators have no other Assets, now shall be the Executor or Administrator be charged with his own proper Goods, which shall be mischievous, and the case of 10. H. 7. 5. and 6. that is direct in the point was often times cited, and all these three things which were of council with the Defendant, informed the Court that they were of Council with Hargrave when the Judgement given in the King's Bench was reversed for Error in this very point, and for this cause, because the Action was brought in the Debet and Detinet, where it should be in the Detinet only: And so they prayed that the Judgement should be hindered: But by the whole Court except Yeluerton: And so it was adjudged, that the Action was well brought as it is, and especially for the reasons given in Hargraves Case 5. Coke 31. And to that which hath been said by Yeluerton Justice, that in all cases where Executors are charged by the name of Executors or Administrators, that there the Action shall be against them in the Detinet only: Fleming chief Justice answered, that ●rue it is in all personal things, where they are named as Executors, Action shall be in the Detinet: But as it is an Action of Debt for Rent reserved upon a Chattel real, and an Executor is as an Assignee in Law, and so charged as privy in Estate, and not merely as Executor, and if he have no more Assets then the Rent, which he is to pay, he may plead nothing in his hands against all the World, and to that, that hath been said, that the Executor hath been charged of his own Goods: If the profits be not more than the Rent, or the Rent more than the profits, to this he said that in this case where the Executor hath the Term, and hath not any other Assets, that they may wave this Term: And in Action of Debt brought against him for the Rent may plead to the occupation, and that recover: The reason of the diversity between this case and the case of 28. H. 8. Dyer 14. is plain, for in an Action of Debt against the Termor himself; Non habuit nec occupavit, is no Plea, for there was a contract between them, and for this privity of contract is the Lessee charged, though he did not occupy: But in the case of an Executor the privity of the contract is gone, and so may be a difference: But yet it seems if he have Assets sufficient to pay the Rent he cannot wave it: And to the case 14. H. 4. 28. that hath been cited that doth speak nothing, how the Action should be brought: And the Justices have seen the record of Hargraves case, and the reversal of that: And they said the same error which was in Hargraves case, is in this case, and for that bring your Writ of Error in the Exchequer chamber if you will, for we so adjudge: And then it was moved that the Lord Richardo was Tenant in Tail, of part of the reversion, and Tenant in Fee-simple of the other part, and so it seems that he ought to have two Actions, because he hath as two reversions: But it was resolved by all the Court, that if a man have a reversion of part in Fee-simple, and of the other part in tail, and makes a Lease for years rendering a Rent, he shall have but one Action, both being in the hands of one: But otherwise it had been if the reversion had been in several hands they should not Join in Debt, and for that Fenner put this case; two Coparceners are of a reversion and they make partition, now the Rent is apportioned, and they shall sever in Debt: But if one dies without Issue, and the part descends to the other Parcener, now he shall have but one Action of Debt again, and so it is if a man makes a Lease of two Acres rendering Rend, and after grants the reversion of one Acre to J. S. and of the other Acre to J. N. now they shall sever in Debt for this Rent, but if J. S. and J. N. Grant their reversions again to the first Lessor, he shall have but one Action of Debt, and so the exception disallowed by all the Court, and the Judgement given for the Plaintiff, according to the Verdict. Yates and Rolls. THe case was this, J. S. covenants by Indenture with J. N. I. D. Joint Covenant shall survive. and A. B. to enter Bond to pay ten pound to J. N. and J. N. dies, and his Administrator brings a Writ of covenant, and the question was insomuch that this ten pound was to be paid to J. N. if his Administrator shall have Action of Covenant, or if the Action shall survive to the other two, and it was moved by Stephens, that the Action shall be well brought by the Administrator, for this shall be taken as a several covenant, and this now is in nature of a Debt, and enures only to him which shall have it, also the payment of the money which is the effect of the covenant shall be to him only, Ergo the Damages for the not performing of it shall go to him also, and by consequence to his Administrator: But it was adjudged insomuch that this was a joint covenant, that this shall survive to the others, and not well brought by the Administrator: So also resolved that insomuch that the words are, that he would enter Bond, and doth not say to whom, that this shall be intended to the covenanties, and though that the Solvendo is but to one of them, yet that is very good, as an Obligation made to three Solvendum to one of them is good, by Fenner and by Williams, Obligation to two, Solvendum ten pound to one, and ten pound to another, both aught to join in Debt upon this Obligation, and Judgement for the Defendant. Sammer and Force. THe Case was this, The Lord of a Copyhold Manor where Copy holder's are for life, grants Rent-charge out of all the Copyholder shall hold charge. Manor; one Copyhold Escheats, the Lord grants that again by Copy; the question was, If the Grantee shall hold it charged or not; and by the whole Court but Fenner, he shall not hold it charged, because he comes in above the Grant; that is By the custom; the same Law of Statutes, Recognizances, or Dowers; but the 10. of Eliz. Dyer 270. by the whole Court, that he shall hold it charged; but this hath been denied for Law in a Case in the Common Bench, between Swain and Becket, which see Trinity 5. Jacobi: But to Coke Justice it seemed, that if a Copyholder be of twenty Acres, and the Lord grants Rend out of those twenty Acres, in the tenure and occupation of the said Copyholder (and name him) There if this Copy hold Escheat, and be granted again, the Copyholder shall hold it charged, for this is now charged by express words. Trinity 8. Jacobi, 1610. In the King's Bench. Goodyer and Ince. GOodyer was Plaintiff in a Writ of Error against Ince, and the Case was this, Ince brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation Error. in the Common Bench against Goodyer, and had Judgement to Elegit. recover, and by his execution prayed an Elegit to the Sheriff of London, and another to the Sheriff of Lancaster, and his request was granted, and entered upon the Roll, after which went out an Elegit to the Sheriff of Lancaster upon a Testatum, supposing that an Elegit issued out to the Sheriff of London, which returned Nulla bona, and Quod Testatum sit, etc. That the Defendant hath, etc. in your County, etc. upon which Elegit upon this Testatum, the Sheriff of Lancaster extended a form of the Defendants in a gross sum of a hundred pounds, and delivered this to the party himself, which sold that to another; and now the Defendants brought a Writ of Error, and assigned for Error, that this Elegit issued upon a Testatum, where no Writ of Elegit was directed to the Sheriff of London, and so this Writ issued upon a false supposal, and upon that two Testatum where no Writ had issued. points were moved in the Case: First, As this Case is, if this were Error in the Execution or not. Secondly, Admit that it were Error, if the Plaintiff shall be restored to the term again, or if to the value in Money; and it was moved by Davenport of Gray's Inn, that this was no Error; and to that he took this difference, That true it is, when a man brings an Action of Debt in London and hath Judgement, that without request of the Plaintiff he is to have his Elegit to the Sheriffs of London, where originally the Action was brought; and in such Case he cannot have Elegit to the Sheriff of another County, without surmise made upon the return of the first Elegit, and the surmise ought to be true, or otherwise it is Error; but where upon the request the Elegit is granted to both Counties at the first, and so entered upon the Roll: It seems to him that insomuch that he may have both together, that if the surmise be false, that this is but a fault of the Clerk, which shall be amended, and shall be no Error; and to that he cited the Case of 44 Edw. 3. 10. Where an Elegit issued upon a Recognizance of a hundred Marks, and the Writ of Extent was a hundred pounds, and the Sheriff extended accordingly of the Land of the Defendant, and he came and showed this to the Court, and prayed that the Writ should abate, and a new Writ to the Sheriff, that he might have restitution of his Term, and Thorp said this is but a misprision of the Clerk, and the Roll is good, and he shall have the Land, but till the hundred marks are Levied, and after this you shall have restitution of the Land, which case proves as he conceives, that if the Roll warrant a writ in one manner, and the Clerk makes it in another manner, that this shall not be Error, and so in this case the Roll warrants an Elegit originally to the Sheriff of Lancaster, and though that this is made upon a Testatum, this shall not be Error, because warranted by the Roll: And to the second point he would not speak, for if that were no Error, the second point doth not come in question. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. in the King's Bench. Marsam against Hunter. IN Trespass the case was this, Copyholder of a Manor, within Confirmation to a Copyholder, destroys Common. which Manor, the custom was that the Copy-holders' should have Common in the waist of the Lord: The Lord by Deed confirms to a Copyholder to have to him and his Heirs with the appurtenances, and the point was insomuch that his Copyhold was now destroyed, whether he shall have his Common or not: And Davyes of Linclones Inn, argued the Common is extinct, and his reason was, that this Common was in respect of his Tenure and the Tenure is destroyed, Ergo the Common, and he cited the case of 5 Ed. 4. fol. ult. Where the office of the King of Herraulds was granted to Garter with the Fees and profits, Ab Antiquo, and also ten pound for the office, and there it is resolved if the office be determined, the Annuity is determined also, and the case in 7. Ed. 4. 22. b. Where an Annuity was granted to John Clark of the Crown, and for Term of life, and after he was discharged of the office, and the opinion of the Justices than was, that the annuity was determined, and in 19 Ed. 3. Assis. 83. 12 Assis. 22. A man gives Land to his Daughter and I. S. within the years of marrying, in frankmarriage, the Husband sues Divorce, the marriage being dissolved, the Wife from whom the Land first moved shall have the Land again, so in the principal case, insomuch that this common was in respect of Tenure, the Tenure being destroyed, the common is gone, and this was all his argument, and he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and another day Brautingham of Gray's Inn seemed that the common remains for three reasons. First of the nature of a prescription, and to that there are three manner of prescriptions. First personal prescription, and in that Inhabitants may prescribe, as for a way or matter of ease, as it is said in 7. Ed. 4. 15. Ed. 4. and 18. Ed. 4. and 6. Coke, Gatwoods' case. Secondly real prescription, and this is Inherent to the Estate, and this is where a man prescribeth that he and all those whose Estate he hath, etc. Thirdly, local prescriptions an that is, where a man prescribes to have a thing appendent or appurtenant to his Manor, and this is so fixed to the Land, that whether soever the Land goes, the prescription is concommitant unto it, and it seems to him that this common is annexed to the Land by prescription and so local, and cannot be separated but always shall go with the Land, into who soever hands that comes, (but Dixit non Probant:) And for this he supposed that the custom of Copyhold is that the Copyhold shall descend to the youngest Son, if the Copy holder purchase the freehold and the Fee-simple of the Copyhold, so that this is made freehold, this shall descend to the youngest Son; so if a Copyholder by custom is discharged of payment of Tithes in kind, so the office of the master of the Rolls hath many liberties pertaining to it, and this is granted but Durante placito, yet if the King grant that in Fee as he may, yet he shall have all the Fees and Privileges annexed to that, and so it seems to him that this common being annexed to the Land, though that the Estate be increased, yet the common remains, his second reason was of the manner of conveyance, and that was by confirmation, and if that conveyance had been by Feoffment, peradventure the common had been gone: But a confirmation enures always upon an Estate precedent, and though that this sometimes enlargeth the Estate, yet this doth not alter the Estate, as to any privileges annexed to it, his third reason was of the matter of the confirmation, and that is; that he hath confirmed it with the appurtenances, and this seems to him, admitting that the common had been extinct, yet these words with the appurtenances amount to a new grant of a common, as in the case of Corody, in 22, Ed. 4. 17. and 18. If the King grant to one such a Corody as I. S. had, he shall have so much bread and beer as I. S. had, so here when he grants and confirms that with the appurtenances, this is with all such privileges as I. S. had; so here when he confirms with the appurtenances, this is with all the privileges that the old Estate had, and so this should be a grant of such common as was annexed to that, and so it seemed to him for these reasons that the common remains; to which it was said by Davies of the other part, that he agreed all the manners of Prescriptions, but he denied that it was a local Prescription, that is to Land, but only to an Estate, and this proves well the words of the Prescription, for the Copyholder ought to prescribe, that is, that every customary Tenant within the Manor, etc. So he hath his common in respect that he is customary Tenant, and this is in respect of the Estate which he hath by the Custom, and not in respect of the Land, and that this shall not enure as a new Grant, he cited a case to be adjudged Michaelmas 43. and 44. Eliz. in the King's Bench, Rot. 367, Where in Trespass, the Defendant justifies the lopping of Trees in the waist of the Lord, where the custom was that every Copyholder might shride the Trees in the waist of the Lord, and that he was a Copyholder there, and the Lord granted to him the Inheritance of his Copyhold, with all such Lands, Tenements, and Commons of Estovers pertaining to the Copyhold, and adjudged that insomuch that the Customary Estate was destroyed, this custom was not now annexed to the Land, but being determined with the Estate cannot be said appertaining to it, and for that the Justification ill; and it seemed to him to be all one with the principal case and it was adjourned, and after in Michaelmas Term 8. Jacobi, It was adjudged that the Common was extinct and not revived. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. In the King's Bench Proctor against Johnson THE Case hath depended seven years in this Court upon a Express Covenant qualifies Covenant in Law. Writ of Error, was this; Two Joint Tenants for years of a Mill, one grants his Estate severally to another and dies, the Grantee doth not enter yet: The other reciting the Lease to him made and to his companion jointly, and that his companion died, so that all belonged to him as Survivor (as he intended) grants all the Mill to Johnson, and all his Estate, Right, and Interest in that: And covenants that the Grantee there shall continue discharged and aquitted of all Charges and Encumbrances, or other Act or Acts done by him, and after binds himself in a Bond to perform all Grants, Covenants, and Agreements, contained in the Indentures, according to the intent and meaning of the parties, and after the Grantee of his companion entered into the half, and the question was, If the Bond were forfeit or not; and it was adjudged in the Common Bench that the Obligation was forfeited: And the matter was argued this Term in this Court by Yeluerton of Gray's Inn, that the Bond shall not be forfeited, for the Bond was with Condition to perform all Grants, etc. According to the true intent and meaning of the parties, and then let us see what was the intent of the parties, and surly this appears by the recital in the Indenture, and for that he said that all appears to him as survivor (as he conceived) so that he was doubtful of that, and for that his meaning was, that if he had all, then to grant all; and if he had but a moiety, then to grant but the moiety, and this proves well the words subsequent, where he saith that he granted the Mill (and all his Estate, Right and Interest in that,) so that he did not intend to grant more than his Estate, and these words subsequent qualify the general words precedent, and so it seems to him that the Obligation shall not be forfeited. And Sir Robert Hitcham the Queen's Attorney to the contrary, and that the Bond was forfeited, for he hath bound himself to perform all grants, and he hath not performed his Grant, for he granted all the Mill, and then though but a moiety passeth yet he shall forfeit his Bond, if the moiety be evicted, and for that if a man which hath nothing in the Manor of D. makes a Lease by Deed indented to J. S. and binds himself to perform all Grants, though that nothing passes, yet if he enter and be ejected he shall have Debt upon his Obligation, and he cited one yelverton's Case to be adjudged, but did not tell when, where a man which hath nothing in the Manor of Dale, covenants with J. S. to stand seized to the use of him and his Heirs at Michaelmas, and before Michaelmas he purchases the Manor of Dale, and it was resolved that no use shall be raised at Michaelmas, for he had not the Manor at the time of the Covenant, and also it was resolved that no Action of Covenant lies upon the Covenant, but he said that it is a clear Case, that if he had entered into a Bond to perform all Covenants in the Indenture, that the Bond shall be forfeited, though that he could not have action of Covenant upon the Covenant, and also he said, that he well agreed the Case of the Lady Russell, which was adjudged also (but Nescio quando) where a man made a Lease for years of the Manor of Dale except one Acre, the Lessee binds himself to perform all agreements, and after the Lessee enters into the Acre, this shall be no breach of the condition, for this exception is no agreement, for nothing shall be said an agreement in an Indenture but that which passeth in Interest, and so he said that though that the Lessee cannot have an Action of Covenant in the principal Case, insomuch that this is so special, yet the Bond shall be forfeited upon these Words, grants, and agreements, and the Covenant special doth not qualify the general express grant; and after four Justices, that is Fleming the chief Justice, Willams, Yeluerton, and Crook, were of opinion that the Bond is forfeited, and this for the generalty of the Grant, & his Intent was clearly to pass all, but Williams, if he had said, Totum Molendinum suum, or all his Estate in the Mill, there paradventure it should have been otherwise; and so a difference where he saith he grants the Mill and all his Estate in that, and where he grants all his Estate in the Mill, for in the first case all passes by the Grant of the Mill, and these words which are after, are but words explanatory, as ●rooke said; and it was adjourned. And after in Easter Term next ensuing, Hitcham the Queen's Attorney, came again, and prayed that the Judgement be affirmed, and Yeluerton of Gray's Inn said, that he hath considered of Nokes Case 4. Coke, and this was all one with this case, for the case was thus, A man lets a House in London by these words, demise, Grant, etc. That the Lessee should enjoy the House during the Term without eviction by the Lessor or any claiming from or under him, and the Lessor was bound to peform all Covenants, Grants, Articles, and Agreements, as our case is, and there by the whole Court, that the said express Covenant qualifies the generalty of the Covenants by the Words Demise and Grant, which is all one with our case, for first he granted, Totum Molendinum, and after covenant that he should enjoy, etc. against himself, and all which claim, in, by, from, or under him, and after binds himself to perform all Grants, Covenants, Articles, and Agreements, and so it seems to him, that it is au express Covenant, in this Case as well as in other, and qualifies the general Covenant, employed by the word (Grant) and then the Grantee being outed by a title Paramount, no Action of Debt upon such Obligation, and prayed that the Judgement be reversed, and the Justices said they would consider Nokes Case, and the next day their opinions were prayed again, and the chief Justice said that he had seen Nokes case, and said, that there is but a small difference between the cases, but he said that some diflemay be collected. For first in our case, is a Recital of the Estate of the Grantor, that is, that all belongs to him as Survivor, and for that this was a manner of Inducement of the Grantee to be more willing, and forward to accept of the Grant, and to give the more greater consideration for it, but in Nokes case there is no recital, and so this may be the diversity. Secondly, In Nokes Case, the Term past all in Interest at the first, and the Grantee or Lessee, had once the effect of this Lease in Interest of the Lessor, but in this case when two Tenants in Common, and one grants Totum molendinum, there passes but a half at the first, and so the grant is not supplied for the other half, and then if the special Covenant shall qualify the general, etc. The Grantee shall not have any remedy for a half at all, and this may be the other diversity, but admitting that none of these will make any difference, than he said that all the Court agreed, that this point in Nokes Case was not adjudged, but this was a matter spoken collaterally in the case, and the case was adjudged against the Plaintiff for other reasons, for that that he did not show that he which evicted this Term had title Paramount, for otherwise the Covenant in Law was not broken, and for this reason Judgement was given against the Plaintiff, and not upon the other matter, and so the whole Court against Nokes Case: And the chief Justice said, that to that which is said in Nokes case, that otherwise the special Covenant shall be of no effect, if it cannot qualify the generalty of the Covenant in Law, he said that this serves well to this purpose, that is, that if the Lessor dies, and any under the Testator claim the Estate, that the Action of Covenant in this case lies against his Executors, which remedy otherwise he cannot have, for if a man makes a Lease by these words (Devise and Grant) and dies, Action of Covenant doth notly against his Executors, as it is said in the 9 Eliz. Dyer 257. But otherwise upon express Covenant, and then this express special Covenant shall be to this purpose. And also it seems to him that if a man devise and grant his Land for years, and there are other Covenants in the Deed, that in this case if the Lessor binds himself to perform all Covenants, that he is not bound by his Bond to perform Covenants in Law, and he cited that to this purpose the Books of 22 H. 6. and 6 Ed. 6. B. Tender, that if a man makes a Lease for years rendering Rend, this is Covenant in Law, as it is said, 15 H. 8. Dyer, and a man shall have Debt or Covenant for that, and yet if a man binds himself in a Bond to perform all Covenants where there are other Covenants in the Deed, and after doth not pay the Rent, no action of Debt lieth upon this Obligation, nor the nature of the Debt altered by that, and he said that the Monday next, they would pronounce Judgement in the Writ of Error accordingly, if nothing shall be said to the contrary, and nothing was said. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. In the King's Bench. barton's Case. THE Case was this, A man was taxed by the Parish for Reparations Prohibition. of the Church, and the Wardens of the Church sued for this Taxation in the spiritual Court: and hanging this Suit, one of the Wardens released to the Defendant all Actions, Suits, and Demands, and the other sued forward, and upon this the Defendant there procured a Prohibition, upon which matter showed in the Prohibition was a Demur joined, and Davenport of Gray's Inn moved the Court for a Consultation, and upon all the matter as he said the point was but this, If two Wardens of a Church are, and they sue in the Court Christian for Taxation and one Release, if that shall bar his Companion or not. And it seems to him that this Release shall not be any Bar to his Companion or Impediment to sue, for he said, that the Wardens of a Church are not parties interested in Goods of the Church, but are a special Corporation to the Benefit of the Church, and for that he cited the Case in 8 Ed. 4. 6. The Wardens of the Church brought Trespass for goods of the Church taken out of their possession, and they counted, Ad damnum Parochianorum, and not to their proper damage, and the 11 H. 4. 12. 12 H. 7. 27. 43 H. 7. 9 Where it is said expressly, that the Wardens of the Church are a corporation only for the Benefit of the Church, and not for the disadvantage of that, but this Release sounds to disadvantage of the Church, and for that seems to him no Bar, also this Corporation consists of two persons, and the Release of one is nothing worth, for he was but one Corpse, and the moyity of the Corpse could not release, and for these reasons he prayed a consultation, and Yeluerton to the contrary, and he took a difference, and said, that he agreed, that if the Wardens of the Church have once possession of the Church, there in Action of Trespass brought for these Goods, one Warden cannot release, but this tax for which they sue is a thing merely in Action of which they have not any possession of that before, and there he cannot sue alone, and for that this release shall bar his Companion. And the Court interrupted him, and said, that clearly consultation shall be granted, and Fleming chief Justice, we have not need to dispute this release, whether it be good or not, and there is a difference where a suit is commenced before us, as if Wardens of the Church brought Trespass here for Goods of the Church taken, and one Release, than we might dispute if this release were good or not, but when the matter is original begun before them in the spiritual Court, and there is the proper place to sue for this Tax and not any where else, we have nothing to do with this Release, and for that by the whole Court, a consultation was awarded. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the King's Bench. Styles Case. UPon a Motion made by Yeluerton on the behalf of one Styles, the Case was this, Styles had a Judgement in Ejectione firm, and Defendant reenters after Possession delivered by Habere facias possessionem. was put in possession by the Sheriff, by an Habere facias possessionem, and after the Defendant enters again, within the two weeks after Execution, and the Writ was returned, but not Filed; and Yeluerton moved the Court for another Writ of execution; and by Williams he could not have a new Writ of Execution, but is put to his new Action, and the Fyling of the Writ is not material, for it is in the election of the Sheriff, if he will File or return that or not; but be said, if the Execution had not been fully made, as he said there was a Case, where the Sheriff made an Execution of a House, and there were some persons which hid themselves in the upper Lofts of the House, and after the Sheriff was gone, they came down and outed those that the Sheriff had put in possession before; and in this Case a new Writ of Execution was awarded; but there a full Execution was not made, and so the difference: But the chief Justice said, That if the Sheriff put a man in possession, and after the other which was put out enters in forthwith, that in this Case the Court may award an Attachment against him, for contempt against the Court. Hillary 7 Jacobi, 1609. In the King's Bench. Gittins against Cowper. Custom of one Manor was, That if any Copyholder within Custom among Copy-holders'. the Manor committed any Felony, and this be presented by the Homage, that the Lord may take and seize the Land; a Copyholder committed Felony, and this was presented by the Homage, and after the Copyholder was Indicted, and by Verdict acquit, and the Lord entered, and if his entry were lawful or not, was the question: The points were two. First, If the Custom were good. Secondly, Admitting the Custom to be good, if this Verdict and acquittal shall conclude the Lord of his entry. And Walter of the Inner Temple argued that the Custom was good, and that the Lord was not concluded by this Verdict: And to the first point he said, That it was a good Custom; First insomuch it might have a reasonable beginning, and for that he cited the Book of 35 H. 6. where it is said, that such Customs which might have reasonable beginning should be good, and to that he cited a Case which was adjudged, as he said, in 27 Eliz. and was one Delves Case, and the Case was this, A Quo warranto issued against Delves, to know Quo warranto he held a Leet, to which he pleaded, that he was seized of such a Message, and that he, and all those whole Estate he hath in the said Message have used always to have and hold a Leete there within the Message: If this prescription, that is to have a Leete appendent to a single Message was good or not, was the question: And it was adjudged insomuch that by reasonable intendment it might be that this house was the Scite of a Manor, and the Lord granted that with the Leet, the Prescription adjudged good; and he said that many Customs are grounded upon the nature of the place, and for that he said that this Manor was adjoining to great Woods, and it might be that the Copy-holders' committed Felonies and outrages, and after fled into the Woods, and there lived, and yet enjoyed the benefit of their Copy-holds, and for that it was reasonable for the Lord to annex such a restraint and condition; that is, if they committed any Felony, this should be a forfeiture of their Copyhold, and this should be a means to bridle them to commit such heinous and odious offences: And that Customs ought to have a respect to the place, he cited the Case of 12 H. 3. where the Custom of the Isle of Man was, That if any man stole a Hen or a Capon, or such small matter, that should be Felony, but if he stole a Horse that should not be Felony, for a man may privily convey away a Hen or might consume it, but for the smallness of the place, and being compassed with the water, he could not so do with a Horse; So in 39 H. 6. That the married Wife of a Merchant in London, may sue and be sued by the Custom, and the reason is that London is the chief City and place of Merchandise within the Realm of England, and it is conceived that the Merchants cannot be always resident there but sometimes beyond Sea, or other where about their business and Affairs, and for that it shall be reasonable that his Wife shall sue and shall be sued in his absence, and in time of E. 1. Title Prescription, the custom of Hallifax, that if any Felon be taken with the manner, he shall be forthwith beheaded, and this was as it seems for the better suppressing the common Felonies there committed, and so he concluded for this Reason, that this custom might have such reasonable beginning, and in respect of the place that should be a good custom. His second Reason was, that this might begin at this day lawfully, Therefore this shall be good, and for that he cited the case of 10 H. 7. 11. That if a man make a Feoffment upon condition, that the Feoffee shall not commit Felony, that this is a good condition, but he said, that he supposed that if the Feoffee commit Felony, and the Feoffor enter into the Land, and after the Feoffee is attaint of this felony, that now the Lord shall enter by Escheat, and his reason was, that the Statute of Westminster 3. De quia emptores terrarum, prohibits any man to make a Feoffment, to the prejudice of the Lord, to his Wardship or Escheat. His third reason was, that this was a good Custom, insomuch that this was annexed to an Estate created by custom, and for that he cited one Skeggs case to be adjudged in 24 year of Eliz. and was thus, that is, The custom of a Manor was, that a married wife Copyholder might surrender to the use of her last will, and after might devise to her Husband, and it was adjudged, insomuch that this was annexed to her Estate which begun by custom, this was a good custom, and the 3 of Ed. 3. At the common Law such custom is void, and after he cited a Judgement in the point given in this Court, 23. of Eliz. Rot. 5014. or 504 or 5004. that the same custom was adjudged a good Custom: after he answered some objections which might be made against this custom, that is. First for the uncertainty of the time when the presentment shall be by the Homage, and to that he said that the Lord may make that when he will, and the time doth not take away the offence, and no prejudice upon that descends to the Heir, but is to his advantage. Secondly, Because no number certain of the Homage, and that every trial must be by twelve, and to that he answered, that we are not now in point of Trial, but only for the information of the Lord. Thirdly, this is against the nature of a Courtbaron to inquire of Felonies, and to that he said, there is not any inquiry made here, but only to inform the Lord, and such a thing is not against the nature of the Court which enlargeth this. Fourthly, The offence is against the King, and a common person shall not have the punishment of that, to that he said the King shall not have any benefit of it, for he shall not have any Escheat of Copyhold lands for Treason or Felony. Fiftly, This is against the King's Prerogative, to that he said, that Custom may be against the Prerogative of the King, as if a man claim Waife or stray by prescription, these are things given to the King by his Prerogative, and yet Prescription for them is good, and so he concluded this first point, that the custom was good. To the second point he conceived, that this verdict and acquittal shall not conclude the Lord, and for that he said, that at the Common Law, if a Verdict had been given and no Judgement upon it, the party was not concluded to bring the same Action, 18 Ed. 3. 35. Then comes the Statute of 2 H. 4. And this outs nonsuit after verdict, Nonsuit after▪ Verdict. and yet if verdict be imperfect, or finds a thing not in Issue, there nonsuit may be after verdict, as it is said in 22 Ed. 4. 10. And if verdict be given in the point, and Judgement upon that, doth not conclude the party to have action of more high nature, as it is said in 3 Ed. 3. and 3 Assize 1. and Hudsons' ease in the 4 Coke, and as it is in Trials of Land, so it is in trials of life, as 2 R. 3. 14. 7 H. 4. 34. Then if the party himself shall not be bound by verdict, A fortiori, a stranger shall not be, also every Estoppell there ought to be a matter of estoppel, for the Jury is not sworn to give their verdict according to the truth in Deed, but according to the evidence to them given, and then if faint evidence or no evidence be given, it shall be hard that this shall conclude any of his right, also there is no party to be estopped because a stranger as is aforesaid, also the acquittal is in such manner, that is, that he hath not committed the Felony in manner and form as in the Indictment is alleged, and this doth not answer the Custom, because general, so it seems to him, that this shall not be any conclusion to the Lord, and so for both points the entry not congeable. And Stevens to the contrary, and it seems to him briefly that the custom was not good, and he denied the Rule, that is, that this might have reasonable beginning by agreement of parties shall make a custom good, and for this Littleton saith in his chapter of villainage, that if the Lord of one Manor will prescribe to have Fine, if any of his Tenants marry their Daughters without his licence, this is a void custom, and yet it may be such agreement between the parties at the first, and it seems the custom not reasonable, for it is too general, that is; if any Tenant, and this doth not exclude Infants. Secondly, if any Felony be committed, and this includes petty Larceny, and Maim by involuntary means, for these are Felonies, and for that see, 13 H. 7. 19 6 H. 7. That in Appeal of Maim, a man shall count Felony, and yet it shall be hard that a man shall lose his Land for these Felonies. Secondly, Homage cannot inquire of the fact of Felony, but of the conviction of Felony, and so it seems to him the custom ill, and to the other point it seems that the Lord shall be concluded, and to that that hath been objected that the Lord is a stranger to the verdict, and for that cause shall not be estopped, he said that the Lord is no stranger, for in this case every man is party, and every man may give Evidence for the King, and he cited the case in the time and title of Mortdancester, where the case was, where a man was as principal for the Death of J. S. and another as accessary in receiving the Principal, after the principal was outlawed, and the Accessary hanged, and the Lord seized the Land of the Accessary for Escheat, after came the principal and reversed the Out-Lawry, and was found not guilty, and the Heir of him which was hanged, entered upon the Lord, and adjudged, insomuch, that there cannot be an Accessary, unless there be a principal; that the entry of the Heir was lawful in this case, so he said in this case, insomuch that the Copyholder is acquitted by verdict and found not guilty, and seems to him that the entry of the Lord should not be lawful, and by the whole Court the custom was good, but they did not deliver any opinion upon the second point, for they moved the parties to Composition. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. In the King's Bench. Barwick and Foster's Case. A Man made a Lease for two years at Michaelmas, rendering two Reservation of Rent, Michaelmas, or ten days after. shillings yearly during the Term, at the Feast of the annunciation of our Lady, and Michaelmas or ten days after, at the Feast of Saint Michael in the last year the Rent is not paid, the question was what remedy the Lessor hath for his Rent of this half year, and the opinion of Fleming chief Justice, and Williams was, that he hath no remedy. And first they said, as this case is, the Lessee hath election to pay either upon the Feast or upon the tenth day after, and that is for the benefit of the Lessee, than he hath made his Election not to pay that at the Feast of Saint Michael, than it is clear that the Lessor hath no remedy by way of distress, for the Term is ended before; and by Action of Debt upon the Contract, he hath no remedy as it seems, as this case is, for the Contract is that the Rent shall be paid yearly during the Term, then when the Term is ended, the contract is determined, and for that the chief Justice said, That if a man makes a Lease at Michaelmas for a year, rendering Rend yearly at our Lady day, and the ninth of October which is after Michaelmas, that the Lessor hath not any remedy for the Rent of the last half year, for that is not reserved to be paid yearly, according to the contract: And Yeluerton Justice agreed that the Lessee hath election as above, but he saith, when that is behind the tenth day after Michaelmas, than the Lessor shall bring his Action of Debt, and declare that the Rent was behind at the Feast of Saint Michael, and shall not make mention of the ten days after; and Coke Justice said, That it seems to him that the Lessee shall not have the benefit of these ten days after the last Feast, for the words of the Lease are (rendering Rend yearly) during the term at the Feasts aforesaid, or ten days after; so that the Lessee shall have the benefit of these ten days during the term, but not after, than he shall not have these after the last Feast of Saint Michael, for than shall the term be ended: And after in Trinity Term, 8 Jacobi, The Case was moved again; and than Fleming chief Justice conceived, That the Lessee shall not have ten days after the last Feast, and this upon construction to be made reasonably, for otherwise the Term being ended, the Contract should be determined with the Term, and so the Lessor should be without remedy for his Rent, and he said, that reservations are not taken so strictly, according to the letter. And for that he cited the case of Hill and Granger in the Com. fol. 171. Where a man makes a Lease for a year: And the Lease was made in August, rendering Rend yearly at the Annunciation of our ●ady and Michaelmas, upon condition of Reentry: In this case the first payment shall be at the next Michaelmas after the making of the Lease, and not at the Annunciation of our Lady, though this is first in words, and this by reasonable construction, for otherwise this word (Yearly) shall not be supplied, and of this see the Action, and so he said in this case, Rent is reserved yearly during the Term, at the Feasts of the Annunciation of our Lady or Michaelmas or ten days after, he shall not have ten days after the last Feast: But Williams held his old opinion that the Lessor hath no remedy for the last half years Rend, and it was adjourned. Hillary 7. Jacobi, in the King's Bench. Grymes against Peacocke. IN Terspasse for his Close broken, The Defendant justifies, Grant of Common extinct. that it was used within the Manor of D. that every Farmer of such a house (and averred, that that had been always let to Farm,) had Common in the Lords waste: The house came into Exposition of Usage. the hands of the Lord in Possession: And he granted the house and the waist to J. S. in Fee, J. S. Bargains and Sells the house to J. N. with all Commons, Profits, and Commodities, used, occupied, and pertaining to the same: And after grants the waist to another: If the Grantee of the house shall have Common in the waist was the question: And Yeluerton argued that the Common was gone, for if he shall have Common, this shall enure as a new Grant of a Common, but this cannot so enure for two reasons. First, when a man will grant a Common, he ought to show the place in certain where the Grantee shall have this Common, or otherwise the Grant is void; But here no place is showed, and for that it cannot enure as a new Grant of a Common. Secondly, If that be a new Grant, yet this hath reference to the usage, that is, Quod Vsitatum est, etc. And this Vsitatum is void, for it seems to him that Lessee for years cannot allege a usage, for every (Vsitatum) ought to go in oneself same currant, not interrupted as in this case of a Copyhold: But here every new Lease, is a new contract, and so the usage is interrupted, and then the Grant having the reference to the usage, and that is void usage, nothing shall pass by this Grant, and for that in Long, 5. Ed 4. 40. If a custom be against Law: And that is confirmed by the Act of Parliament, this is void confirmation, for it hath reference to a void custom, so here this Grant hath reference to the usage, and for that it seems to him that the Common is gone. Hutton Sergeant to the contrary, and that the Grantee of the Message, shall have common, for this usage is not a thing by strictness in Law appertaining to the Land, but this hath gained his reputation, that that shall pass very well in a conveyance by apt words: And for that it will not be denied, but if a man makes a Lease for years to one, and grants him Common for all his Kine, etc. And after this Lease expires, and he makes a new Lease, and grants such Commons as the first Lessee had, that this shall be a good grant of Common to the Lessee: So he said in this case, this grant of the house with all profits and commodities used, occupied, and appertaining to the said Message, shall be said a grant of such Common, which other Lessees of this Manner have used, and this by reasonable construction in Law, to make good the conveyances of Laymen, according to the common speaking, for Benign sunt Faciende Interpritationes Chartarum, etc. and for that he cited the case of Hill and Grange in the Comment: Where the case was: That a man made a Lease for years of a house and a hundred Acres of Land appertaining to that, though the Land be not appurtenant to the house, yet insomuch that this hath been usually occupied with the house, this shall pass as appertaining to it, and so 26. Assis. 38. A man makes a Lease for life rendering Rend, and after grants over the Rent to J. S. and dies: The Heir grants and confirms to the Grantee and his Heirs, the same Rent with clause of distress, and the Tenant for life dies, now is the Rent reserved upon the Estate for life determined, and yet this shall enure as a new grant of another Rent in quantity: So in Sir Moyle Finches Case, the case of uses, and Durham in Ejectione Firm: A Lease was pleaded of a Manor, whereof the fields in which, etc. Were parcel: And Issue was joined, Quod non Demiset Manerium: And upon this Issue found it was, that there were not any Freeholders', but divers Copy-holders', and this was always known by the name of a Manor, and it was adjudged that this shall pass for him which pleads the demise of the Manor: Then if in Judicial proceeding the Law makes such favourable construction to make that pass by a Manor which is no Manor in truth, because it hath been usually known by the name of a Manor, than it seems to him, a Fortiore, that no more beneficial construction shall be made in conveyances, which always shall be construed to the intent and meaning of the parties, and so it seems to him that the Common remains, and Crook, Yeluerton, and the chief Justice Fleming conceived that in reason he shall have the Common, but they did not give any absolute opinion as to that: But William's Justice to the contrary, and that the Lessee for years cannot have more, than he contracted for in his Lease, and then the Vsitatum void, and the Lessees have taken that by wrong: And this Grant having reference to a void and wrongful usage, is not good, and it is adjourned. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. In the King's Bench. Stydson against Glass. Stydson brought an Ejectione Firm against Glass: and upon special Ejectione firm. Verdict the case was this: that is, That one Holbeame was seized of the Land in question in Fee, and made a Lease for life to Margaret Glass, and after covenanted with John Glass Husband of the said Wife Lessee, that before such a day he would Levy a Fine to A. B. and to the Heirs of A. of the same Lands, which Fine should be to the use of the said Glass for sixty years, to begin after the death of the said Margeret Glass, with Proviso within the same Indentures, that if the said Holbeame at a certain day should pay to the said John Glass a hundred pounds, that then the Lease should cease, and then of that the Conusees should stand seized to the use of the said John for his natural life, and after the said Holbeame disseised the said Margeret Glass the Lessee, and made a Feoffment to the use of himself and one Alice, with whom he intended to marry, and to the Heir of their two bodies begotten, the remainder to the right Heirs of the Feoffor, and after the said Feoffor and Alice intermarried, and after the said Holbeam tendered a hundred pound to the said John Glass the Lessee for years, and after the said John Glass assigned over his Term, and after the said Holbeam by Deed indented and enrolled, bargained and sold the said Land to the said John Glass and his Heir, and after john Glass died, and the Inheritance descended to the said Margeret Glass Lessee for life, the Conusor dies, his Wife enters, and lets to the Plaintiff, the Defendant enters upon him, and the Plaintiff reenters and brings Trespass against the Defendant, which justifies as servant to the Assignees of the Term, and if upon all the matter, etc. And it was argued by nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff, and he moved three points in the case. First if by this feoffment upon such condition as this is, had been Extinct at the Common Law, or remains to the Feoffor notwithstanding the feoffment, for if he have interest in the Land, than it is extinct by the Livery, for it is given of the Feoffor and past out of him, and yet the Feoffee cannot have, and for that it is extinct, but if it were but Authority, as in 15 H. 7. Authority to sell the land of the Devisor, than the Authority remains, and is not extinct by the Feoffment of the land, so power of Revocation to a stranger which is but authority is not extinct by a feoffment: Albans case Coke 112. a. But if it be right in Interest, than it is extinct by the feoffment, as power of revocation to the Party himself, resolved to the point in Albains' case, so of Title to a Writ of Deceit, 38 Ed. 3. So of a title to be Tenant by the Courtesy, 9 H 7. 1. But by 42 Edw. 3. by a Feoffment made by a Parson of Land of his Rectory, the Tithes of that Land are not extinct, but remains notwithstanding the Feoffment, for that it was collateral to the title of the Land, as the Cases of Authority are, which were put before; then if this power to alter a Lease by payment of a hundred pound be not any right nor Interest, but a collateral power, and the authority not extinct by the Feoffment, but remains; but admitting that it is in nature of an ordinary Condition, and that before the Statute it should be extinct by the Feoffment, for that it is the gift of the Feoffor, and yet it is not transferable to the Feoffee: If now by the Statute of 32 H. 8. which enables Grantees of reversions to take advantage of Conditions, if the condition be not transferred to the Feoffees, and so over, to he to whose use, that then by consequence this remains to the Feoffor, which was the he to whose use, and then the tender of the money after, well may alter the Lease; it seems that so, for before the Statute if a Lease for years had been made upon condition to cease, and after the Lessor enters upon the Lessee and makes a Feoffment, and the Lessee re-enter, and breaks the condition, the Feoffee shall take advantage of that condition, being by way of ceasing of an Estate; so after the Statute, the Feoffee of the Lessor shall take advantage of the condition of Reentry, and of every other condition annexed to the reversion, as well as of one condition to cease, before the Statute, and as well that every Grantee shall do since the Statute, for though that he comes in by Feoffment, which is wrong to the Lessee, yet after the reentry, the Lessee is in nature of a Grantee: And he cited the Case of Clyfford Error, 7. Ed. 6. to be, that Lessor entered upon his Lessee and made a Feoffment, if the Lessee re-enter, the Rent and the Condition are revived again and the Feoffee shall have both, see Clifford's Error, 7. Ed. 6. Dyer the last case, and 1. M. Dyer 96. 43. but there is not any such matter, and for that it seems that he hath another report of this case of Clifford's Error, or otherwise he meant some other case and not Clifford's Error, so is our case the condition being inherent to the reversion shall pass with the reversion, be that by grant or feoffment; and when the reversion is revived by the entry of the Lessee, the condition shall be revived also, and it is the more strong, insomuch that the Condition is, that upon the payment of the money the Lease for years shall cease, and not that the Lessor shall re-enter, that such Feoffee shall take advantage of a condition by way of ceasing of that at the Common Law: 2. point, and for the second point he would not argue against that, that he took to be clear, and for that he conceived the Law to be against his Client in this point, though that after the Disseisin and Feoffment the freehold could not accrue. Thirdly, The third point was, that after the disseisin of the Tenant for life, he that had future Interest of a Term to begin after the death of the Lessee for life (during the disseisin) assigns over all his Interest, if this assignment be good or not, and he argued that not, for by him the disseisin of the Tenant for life, the future Interest to commence after the death of the Tenant for life, is converted into a Right, and Right of a Term cannot be transferred over, for though that Lessee for years to begin presently, may grant over his Interest before his Entry, and it is well for that, that it is an Interest forth with, yet if before his Entry the Lessor be disseised by a stranger, yet by him now, he cannot grant his Interest over for that, it is converted into a Right of a Term, but he ought to re-enter before that the Lessee may grant over his Term, so in our case, though that before the disseisin of the Lessee for life the future Interest was transferrable over, for that, that it was Interest, though that it was not a Lease in posaession, yet when the Tenant for life was disseised then his Interest of a Term was turned into a Right of a Term, and then it is not transferable over till the reentry by the Lessee for life, and he said that it was resolved by the 2. chief Justices in the Star-chamber as he hath heard, that if Lessee for years be, and before his entry a stranger enters, and disseises the Lessor, that now the Lessee cannot grant his Term before that the Lessor hath entered, or he himself hath gained the Term in posaession: And so it seems to him, that the future Term doth not pass by this assignment, and then it is extinguished by the purchase which cometh after, and then the Justification of the Defendant as Servant to the Assignees not good: And so upon all the matter he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. William's Justice said, that it was clear, if a man have a Lease for years, to begin after the death of a Lessee for life, as is the case at the Bar, that though that the Lessee for life be disseised, yet the Interest remains good Interest to the Lessee, and is not turned into a Right of a Term, and for that he may grant it over, notwithstanding the disseisin, and so is Sapphins' case 5. Coke 104. Otherwise if the Lessee for years had been any time in posaession by force of his Lease, and it is Adjourned. At another day the same Term the case was argued again by Yeluerton of Gray's Inn of the other part, that is for the Defendant, and first he said that the Plaintiff which claims under the Wife, of Hlobeame hath not any right to one Moiety clearly, for the Husband and the Wife were joint-tenants before the coverture: So that they take by Moyties and not by Intirities, and when the Husband bargains and sells all, that is a separation of the joint-tenancy, and his Moiety is gone for ever, as it appears by 3. M. Dyer 149. 82. So that for one moiety it is clear, that the Plaintiff hath not any right any way, how ever the case prove, for the other Moiety, and this Moiety which was conveied by the Husband is descended to the Defendant, which hath no special outer found by the Verdict: But only that he entered which he well might, having the other half, and then no Trespass found by the Jury, and also the Damages found by the Jury are Entire, and then being no cause of Damages for part, there shall be no Judgement for the residue: And the first point that he moved was, if after this disseisin and feoffment over, the Feoffor might tender the money to cease the first Estate, and it seems that not, for the freehold cannot accrue, as it seems to him by any tender after his disseisin, and so it hath been agreed to him as he said by the Council of the other part, and then by him this condition consisting of two parts, this is Disseisin of one Estate and Accrueing of the other Estate, if by this desseisin the condition be destroyed, for the accrueing of the Estate, it seems also that it shall be destroyed as to the ceasing of the first Estate; for if a condition be destroyed in part it shall be destroyed in all, for it is Entire and cannot be apportioned, and by consequence if one Estate cannot accrue, the other shall not cease: And he resembled it to the case in the 14. H. 8. 17. And Perkins, condition being in the Coppulative one part being dispensed with the other, was a discharge, so when a man hath election to do one of two things, if one be discharged (though that it be by the Act of God) as by death, etc. Yet the other shall be discharged by the Law, as it was in Langtons' Case 5. Coke 22. a Fortiore when one is discharged by the Act of the party, also by him if he had made any Feoffment after this desseisin, yet the very disseisin would destroy the accrueing of the Estate, for though that he do not gain Fee by the disseisin but only Estate for life, and retains his old reversion in him, according to 9 H. 7. 25. Yet the Fee and the freehold are so conjoined by descent of that Estate altars an entry, as it appears by 3. Ed. 3. Entry Congeable 58. And if he in reversion disseise Tenant for life, the Contingent uses shall never rise, by Chidleys' Case first of Coke 158. Condition that he retain his old remainder, no more of the accrueing of the Fee in our Case, for by him it appears by 10. Assis. and nichols Case Com. That Estate ought to accrue upon posaession, or at least upon an Estate in being, and not upon a right of an Estate only: And for that he cited 6. R. 2. Pleasingtons' Case, Lease for years upon condition, that if the Lessee be outed he shall have Fee, though that he be outed yet he shall not have Fee, for that, that at the time of the condition performed he had but a right of Term, and no Term in posaession, so is our case after the disseisin, he having but right the Estate cannot accrue. Secondly if the Grantee, or he to whose use, may perform the Condition, either by the Common Law, or by Statute Law: And he conceived that none of these might perform that, for first at the common Law, though that Grantees of reversions may take advantage of a Condition by way of cesser of Estates, upon the condition performed, yet this is only when the condition was to be performed of the part of the Lessee, and so was the case cited by Sergeant nichols of 11 H. 7. but if the condition were of the part of the Lessor, otherwise it was, as the Book is in 26 H. 6. Entries. And then a Fortiori here, the Assignee of a Disseisor cannot perform the condition, which may be performed of the part of the Lessor. But he agreed the case of Littleton, that an Assignee of an Estate may perform a condition in preservation of an Estate, otherwise of an Assignee of a Reversion, in destruction of an Estate, so at the Common Law it is clear, that the Feoffee cannot perform the condition, and by him it is clearly out of the Statute of 32 H. 8. for this Statute doth not extend to a collateral condition, as it appears by Spencer's case 5. Coke, and so hath been many times after this adjudged, and this is a collateral condition, Ergo, etc. And so concluded, and prayed Judgement for the Defendant. nichols Sergeant to the contrary, and that this Disseisin hath not suspended the condition, but that he may pay the Money, and make the Estate to cease notwithstanding the Disseisin, for-that, that the condition is collateral, like to the 20 of Ed. 4. and 20 H. 7. That where a Feoffee upon a collateral condition takes back an Estate for years, yet this shall not suspend the condition, but it may be performed or broken, notwithstanding the Lease, for that that it is collateral, so in our case, for suppose that the condition had been if he marry Mistress Holbeam, that then his Estate shall cease, and as well it shall be upon the Tender of the Money here, and he said that this case was late in the Common Bench. This feoffment was made to the use of the Feoffor for life, Remainder to another for life, the Remainder to the third in tail, the Remainder to the right Heirs of the Feoffor in fee, with power of Revocation, and after the Feoffor lets for years, and during the Term he revokes the mesne Remainders, and it seems to the Justices that well he may, for that that the Lease for years goes only out of the Estate for life, as he said, and for that the power of Revocation as to the Mesne Remainders was not suspended, Quere of the truth of this case in the common Bench, for perchance it is not truly collected, but so entered, and so he prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Fleming chief Justice said, that the point of the principal case would be, if by the wrong of the Lessor the Estate of the Lessee shall be prevented to accrue, than he might perform the condition to determine the ancient Estate, that is, the Lease for years, and it is adjourned, Pasch. 8. Jacobi 1610. In the King's Bench. Earl of Shrewsbury against the Earl of Rutland. IN a Writ of Error, the Earl of Rutland brought an Assize of Error. Novel Disseisin against the Earl of Shrewsbury and four others, and the Plaint was of the office of the keeping of the Park of Clepson, and of the veils and fees of the said Park, and of the Herbage and Paunage of the same, and the Demandant made his title, and alleged that the Queen Eliz. was seized of Clepsam Park in fee in right of her Crown, and that she being so seized by her Letters Patents under the great Seal, granted unto one Markham the keeping of the Park of Clepson; with the veils and fees; and the Herbage and Paunage of the same Park for his life, after the Queen Eliz. reciting the Grant made to Markham, and that Markham was alive, gave and granted by her Letters Patents, to the Earl of Rutland the Office of the keeping of the said Clepson Park, with the Fees and Wages to that appertaining; to have and to hold to him for his life, after the death of Markham or after the surrender, or forfeiture of his Letters Patents, and further granted the Herbage and Paunage to the said Earl of Rutland for his life, and doth not say when this shall begin, after which the Queen Eliz. died, and the Eee-simple descended to our Lord the King, which-now is as lawful Heir to the Crown of England, which granted that to the Earl of Shrewsbury, after which Markham died, and the Earl of Rutland entered, and was seized till the Earl of Shewsbury with four others entered upon him, and dissersed him, and to that the Tenants alleged no wrong no disseisin, and when the Assize was to be taken in the Country, the Array was challenged by the Tenants, for that that one of the Tenants in the Assize, had an Action of Trespass hanging against the Sheriff, and this challenge was not allowed, and the Assize being perused at large for the Herbage and Paunage, they found, that the said Queen Eliz. was seized of Clepson Park as aforesaid, and by her Letters Patents as afore is rehearsed, granted the Keeping of this to Markham for his life, and further by the same Letters Patents granted to him the Fees and Wages to that belonging, and further granted by Letters Patents, and doth not say (Easdem) to him, the Herbage and Paunage of the said Park, and that the Queen after the reciting the Grant made to Markham, and that Markham was alive, granted to the Earl of Rutland the keeping of the said Park and veils and fees, to have and to hold after the death, surrender, or forfeiture of the Letters Patents of Markham for his life. And further by the said Letters Patents, she granted the Herbage and Paunage of the same Park to him for his life, as more fully appears by the Letters Patents, and it was not expressed, as to the Herbage and Paunage when that began, and they found the death of Markham, and that the Earl of Rutland put two Horses into the said Park to take seisin of the said Herbage and Paunage, and they found further the grant of the King to the Earl of Shrewsbury of the fee-simple, and of that prayed the advice of the Court, and to the keeping of the Park they found the seisin and disseisin of that, and of the fees and wages to the Damages, etc. And this being adjourned into the Common Bench, was remanded into the Country, and there Judgement was given for all for the Demandant, and after this it came into the King's Bench by Writ of error, and the Errors assigned by the council of the Tenants, and argued at the Bar were four. The first was that the Earl of Rutland himself, between the verdict and the Judgement hunted in the Park and killed a Buck, and took a shoulder of that for his fee, and so he hath abated his Assize, and so the Judgement was given upon a Writ abated, and therefore they cannot plead that in abatement, insomuch that it was mesne betwixt the Judgement and the verdict, they assigned that for error. The second was, because the principal challenge was not allowed, where that aught to have been allowed, and the challenge was, that one of the Tenants had an Action or Trespass hanging against the Sheriff before the Assize. The third was, Because the Jury have found the Letters Patents made to Markham, and that the Queen granted to him by her Letters Patents the custody of the Park of Clepson in Clepson. And further by the same Letters Patents granted the veils and fees, etc. And further granted the Herbage and Paunage, and have not found that this was granted by the same Letters Patents, and then if this be not granted by the same Letters Patents, than there is not any grant of this to the Earl of Rutland, because there is no receitall of the Patent by which the Herbage and Paunage was granted to Markham. The fourth error was, that they have erred in point of Law, and to that the point is but this, the King grants the Herbage and Paunage of a Park to one for life, and after reciting that grant, and that the Patentee is alive, grants that to another, and doth not say when that shall begin, and it seems to them that the Argument for the Plaintiffs in the Writ of error, that this was a void grant, and so the Judgement erroneous, but I have not the Report of the Arguments of the Councillors at the Bar, but only of the Judges, which moved two other errors in the case, not moved by the council at the Bar, and Crook Justice rehearsed the case as before. And to the first error he conceived that this is no error, and that for two reasons, First, He took a difference between a thing which abates the Writ by Plea, as if a man brings an Assize against another, and Abatement of a Writ by entry. mesne between verdict and Judgement, the Plaintiff dies, this matter shall abate the Writ without Plea, and for that if Judgement be given upon such verdict, the Judgement is erroneous, but in our case an entry doth not abate the Writ without pleading that, and now as this case is, this cannot be pleaded, being between Verdict and Judgement, and for that it shall not be assigned for Error, see 19 Assize 8, Where this difference is taken, and agreed. Secondly, Admit that this entry might have abated the Writ in Facto without Plea, yet there is no such entry alleged, which might abate the Writ in Facto without Plea, for the entry is alleged that the Earl of Rutland entered to hunt, and killed a Buck, and took a shoulder of that for his fee, and it seems that this is no such entry that shall abate the writ, for he hath now entered to another purpose to hunt, the which he could not do, but the entry ought to have been alleged that he entered to keep, for in every entry the intent of the Entry is to be regarded, and to this purpose he cited the case of Assize of Freshforce, Com. 92. and 93. Where entering into the Seller hanging the Assize of that, to see the Antiquity of the House, there was no Entry to abate the Writ and the case of 26 Assize 42. where the Disseisee, hanging the Assize comes and sets his foot upon the Land, but takes no profits, and adjudged that he should recover notwithstanding, so in this case the intent is not showed, that is, that he entered to keep possession but to hunt, nor was it such entry which should abate the writ, and to that which is said that he killed a Buck, and took the shoulder of that for his fee, this doth not help, for if that had been a Buck which he might to have killed by virtue of his Office, he ought to have showed his warrant, for otherwise a Parker cannot kill a Buck if not that it be for his fee, and then he shall have the Buck, and not a shoulder only, also it is alleged that he took a shoulder, and doth not say the best shoulder or the right shoulder, and this aught to be showed in certain. And so for he first Error he couceived that this is no cause to reverse the Judgement, and to the challenge he said, that he would speak to that at the last, and for that he now spoke to the errors supposed in the grant. And first to Markham's Grant, where the Jury found the Queen Eliz. granted to him the keeping of the Park, and by the same Letters Markham's Grant. Patents grant the fees and Wages, and further granted by her Letters Patents, and doth not say (Easdem) the Herbage and Paunage, it seems to him that this is very well, for two reasons. First, insomuch that there is a copulative, which is this word (Et) and also a Relative, which is this word (Vlterius) and this word conjoins the matter precedent with the subsequent, and the word (Vlterius) hath necessary relation to the same Letters Patents, and so Ex precedentibus & subsequentibus, the jury hath well found the matter. Secondly, these words are supplied in the second Patent, for there the Jury have found that the Queen hath granted that to Marham by the same Letters Patents, and so for these two reasons he Earl of Rutland's Patent. concluded that this is no Error to reverse the Judgement: And to the Patent made to the Earl of Rutland, it seems to him also, that this is very good, and all that he said in effect was, that in construction of the Patents of the King, such exposition is to be made, that if any reasonable meaning may be conceived, they shall not be defeated but shall stand good: And so he said in our case, that it is necessarily intended that this was also to begin after the Estate of Markham determined, and for that good: And he said that a man ought not to make a curious and captious interpretation of the King's Patents, for Talis Interpretatio injure Reprobatur: And to the Challenge. challenge, that seemed unto him a principal challenge, and this not being allowed, where it ought to be allowed, this is an error, as it is said 8. of Assizes 23. and for this error it seems to him that the Judgement shall be reversed, and to that he said he relied much upon the book of 11 H. 4. 25. which takes a difference between Debt and Trespass for battery, for the book saith that a man may demand his Debt, without giving occasion of any malice: But Battery is an evil Action, and there the book is resolved, that it shall be a principal challenge, and so he saith in Trespass, this being with force and Arms, that, etc. And in 8. H. 5. in a Assize, the Tenant challenges the array, because he had an Action of Trespass hanging against the Sheriff: And there the array was affirmed because it appears that the Defendant had brought this Action by Covin against the Sheriff, which case proves, as he said, that if there be not any Covin this is a principal challenge, and 38 H. 6. 7. accordingly, and the case 28. Assize 11. where the Defendant in Assize challenged a Juror, because he had an Action of Trespass hanging against him, and was outed by award, and in 21. Ed. 4. 12. it is said where there is an apparent favour, or apparent displeasure, there shall be principal challenge, and certainly though the Law may intend, that a man may lawfully demand his right, and without malice, yet it appears that the nature of men is perverse and froward, and few Actions are begun without apparent displeasure, especially Actions of Trespass, Pedibus Ambulando, and vexation plainly appears, when Actions are begun upon such slight occasions, and in Actions of Trespass there issueth a Capias for a Fine, and so the Defendant shall be Fined and Imprisoned, and sure to be deprived of his liberty is a thing distasteful. And it cannot be but that displeasure shall be between them, which endeavour to restrain one the other of their liberty; and so he concluded that this was a principal challenge, and not being allowed this is error, and so for this cause he reversed the Judgement: Also it seemed to him as this case is, there is no seisin found of the Paunage, for the Jury have found that the Earl of Rutland hath put in two Horses, and it seems to him that Horses cannot take seisin of Paunage, which is properly meat for Hogs, and so for this reason also, insomuch that there is no seisin found of the Paunage, and the Jury ought to find of necessity a Seisin and Desseisin, it seems to him that this is error, and so the Judgement ought to be reversed, and at the same day William's Justice rehearsed the case as before, and in his argument he spoke. First, to Grants. Secondly to the challenge. Thirdly to the abatement of the Writ; And it seems to him, that none of these matters were sufficient to reverse the Judgement, but yet he conceived for two other causes that the Judgement shall be reversed. And first concerning Markham's Patent, that the Jury have found very good, though that they have not said by the same Letters Patents, but he said that it had been more proper if they had found that the King had granted that by the same Letters Patents, and for that he cited the case of Information of Mines in the Com. And the plead before the case, there the Letters Patents of the King are pleaded, and where the King grants divers things, it is there said, that the King by the same Letters Patents granted, and so the case of Grendon against the Bishop of Lincoln, where the King by his Letters Patents, granted to a Dean and Chapter that they should hold an Advowson to their proper use, and further granted by the same Letters Patents, etc. And so he said in this case that this had been more properly found; if it had been found that the King (Per Easdem Litteras Patentes) granted, yet this is very good as it is, and this as he said by the Intendment, for it cannot be otherwise intended, and for that he cited the book of Entries in Title Covenant: That where a man brings a Writ of covenant, and counts upon an Indenture, that is, that the Defendant covenanted to do such a thing, and further covenanted, and doth not say by the same Indenture, yet this is very good because it cannot be otherwise intended, but when that is by the same Indenture, and where things shall be taken by Intendment, he cited the case of 5. Assis. 2. Where in Assize of Common, the Plaintiff made him Title, that is, that he was seized after the Coronation of King H. this shall be intended H. 3. See Brooke Limitation 4. and the Case of 17. Eliz Dyer 342, Where these Letters H. R. A. F. shall be intended Henricus Rex Angliae Franciae. etc. And he cited the case of 21. H. 7. 32. Where a man pleads a release made in Villa de West. the County of Middlesex, and doth not say secondarily, In Predicta Villa: And there these Justices held that good, and it shall be intended the same Town, so he said in this case, this shall be intended that Grant by the same Letters Patents (though that (Easdem) be left out: And to the Grant to the Earl of Rutland, he held that good, also though that it is not expressed as concerning the Herbage and Paunage when that Earl of Rutland's Patent. should begin, and he said that this is also for the intent, and also he said that this is not in prejudice of the King, nor in deceit of the King, nor to the double Intendment, and for that good: And he put the case where the King made a Lease for one and twenty years rendering Rend, and doth not show when that shall begin: That shall begin from the Date of the Letters Patents, because it cannot be otherwise intended, so in the principal case the grant of the Herbage and Paunage depends upon another Grant: That is, the custody of the Park which was to begin after death, surrender, or, etc. of Markham, and having relation to that by this word (Vlterius) that shall be necessarily intended to begin at the same time, and he well agreed the books of 3. H. 7. fol. the last, and 6. H. 7. 14. 8. H. 7. 1. 9 Eliz. 259. 7. Ed. 6. Dyer 80. That there is no reversion of an office: But yet the King may grant an office after the first Grant determined, and this shall be good: And so shall be in our case of the Herbage and Paunage, and he cited the case of 8 H. 7. 12. 13. where the King was Founder of an Abbey, and he had granted a Corody to another for life, and after he released that, and granted it to the Abbot, this shall not be a good release presently, because another hath the possession for present of it, but this shall be good after the death of him which hath this granted for his life: And he cited the case of the Lord Chaundois 6. Coke, where the King grants the Manor of Dale in tail, and after grants the Manor to another, this shall pass the reversion, for this is all that the King can pass: So he said in this case, this shall pass in such manner as it may pass, by which he concluded the Grant to the Earl of Rutland good: Also to the challenge, it seemed to him it is no principal challenge, Challenge. and for authority he cited the case in 11. H. 4. That hath been cited of the other part, which was for him as he said, for this takes the difference between Debt and Battery, and 38. H. 6. a. Juror was challenged because one of the parties had an Action of Trespass hanging against him, and this was not any principal challenge, unless it be Trespass of Battery, and to the book of 20. Assis. 11. Where a Juror was challenged, because he had Trespass against him before the Assis. he said it did not appear by the book, what Trespass that was: So it shall be intended Battery, and he concluded with this difference, that if such an Action be hanging which tends to the utter undoing of him, against whom it is brought, then if the Defendant in such Action make the array, this shall be a principal challenge, but if it be but such an Action in which a man shall recover but his Debt or Damages or such lawful duties; there to say that such Action is hanging between them, at the time of the array made shall be no principal challenge: And for that he cited the book of 24, Ed. 3. Where a Tales was returned by the Sheriff of Middlesex, and the party challenged the Jury, because he sued the Sheriff for the death of his Servant, and this was a principal challenge, for in such case his life was in question; the same Law in case of Maintenance and Champerty, for the Law hath inflicted great punishment upon such Offences, so these matters tend to utter subversion of his Estate and life, but otherwise in Actions of Trespass, and so he concluded no principal challenge: To the abatement Abatement. of the Writ it seems no Error. First he conceived that there is no entry, and for the reason that Crook had given before, that is, because he entered to hunt, and not to keep possession, and hath not showed any Warrant to kill the Buck, and he cited the book of the 5. of Ed. 4. fol. 60. Where Babington brought an Assize of the house of the Fleet, and hanging the Assize, Babington came to the Jury within the house (when they had the View) with his Council to show Evidence for the view, and this was not any entry to abate the Writ, and so the entry to hunt is an entry for another purpose then an entry to keep possession (not being by warrant as it is not found) and for that no entry to abate the Writ: But admitting that this had been an entry to abate the Writ, yet being a thing which doth not abate the Writ without Plea, and that cannot be pleaded as the case is, he conceived was no Error, but if it had been a thing which abated the Writ in Facto without Plea, then to give Judgement upon a Writ abated is Error: As if the party die hanging the Writ, or if a woman sole brings an Assize, and takes a Husband hanging the Assize, Error? or if the Plaintiff in a Assize be made Judge of Assize, as the 15. of Assize, in all these cases the Writ is abated in Facto without Plea: But entry shall not abate the Writ without Plea, and so it seems to him no error: But he conceived that there were two other errors, for which he reversed the Judgement. The first was, that this Assize was the Libero Tenemento in Clepson, Variance. and the plaint was of the keeping of the Park of Clepsom and of the Herbage and Paunage of the Park aforesaid called Clepsom, and made his Title for Herbage and Paunage of the Park of Clepsom, and so he conceived that there is variance between the Plaint and the Title and Park of Clepsom, and Clepsom cannot be intended one, without special averment, and for that he conceived it to be error. And to that he cited the case of twelve Assizes two. Where in attaint the first original was of the Manor of Austy, and the Attaint was of the Manor of Auesty, and yet for that that the Attaint is founded upon the Record, and not upon the Original, and the Record was of the Manor of Auesty, this was very good, but the Book saith, that this variance between the Original and the Record, was sufficient to reverse the Record for error, and the case in 42 of Ed. 3. Where Scire facias was brought of Tenements in Eastgrave, and the Fine was of Tenements in Deepgrave, and for the variance the Writ abated; and in the case of 5 Coke 46. Formedon was brought of the Manor of Isfeild; and the Tenant pleads in bar a recovery of the Manor of Iffeild, and this shall not be amended unless it appear that this is a misprision of the Clerk or by other averment, he cited also the case of 3 H. 4. 8. Scire facias upon garnishment in a Writ of Detinue of writings, the Original name John Scripstead, and the Scire facias was made john Shiplow, and therefore agreed that he shall sue a new Scire facias, so he said in the Principal case the Plaint being of Herbage and Paunage of Clepson Park, and the title being at Clepsom Park, these shall not be intended to be the same Park without averment, and there in no averment in our case, and for that such variance is such error, that shall reverse the Judgement. The second error for which he reversed the Judgement was that which was moved by Justice Crook that the Jury have not found any seisin of the Paunage, for it seemed to him that a Horse could Seisin. not take Seisin of paunage, and for that he defined paunage, and he said that Linwood title-Tithes saith, the Paunagium est pastus Porcorum, as of Nuts and Acorns of trees in the wood, and Crompton saith, that this is, Pastus Porcorum, and he saith that Paunagium is either used for Paunage, or the Paunage itself, and the Statute of Charta de Foresta, saith; that every Freeman may drive his Hogs, into our royal Wood, and shall have there Paunage, but he doth not say Horses or other Beasts, but he conceived that if the Earl of Rutland had right in the Park, that this had been sufficient seisin of Herbage and Paunage also, for Hogs will feed upon grass as well as upon Acorns, and he cited the Book of 37 H. 6. saith that Seisin to maintain an Assize, ought not to be of a contrary nature to the thing of which seisin is intended to be given, but in one case only, and that is where the Sheriff gives seisin of a Rent by a Twig or by a Clod of Earth, and this is in case of necessity, for the Sheriff cannot take the Money out of the purse of the Tenant of the Land, and deliver seisin of that, and for that he cited the case in 45 Ed. 3. Where Commoner comes to the Land where he ought to have Common, and enters into the Land, and the Lord of the Waste or the Grantor of the Common outs him, he cannot have an Assize of his Common upon this outing, for this was not any seisin of the Common: so it is in this case, the Horses cannot take Seisin of the Paunage, and so there is no seisin or disseisin found by the Jury, and then no Assize, and this being after Judgement no abridgement may be of the Plaint, and so for these last reasons he reversed the Judgement. And at another day the case was rehearsed again and argued by Abridgement of the Plaint in Assize. Yeluerton. Fenner. Yeluerton and Fenner Justices, but I did not hear their Arguments, insomuch that they spoke so low; but their opinions were declared by the chief Justice, and Yeluerton affirmed the Judgement in all. First he held that this entry shall not abate the writ. Secondly admit that it is abated, yet being between Verdict and Judgement shall not be assigned for error. Thirdly, he held that no principal challenge. Challenge prin. Fourthly, he held both the grants good. Fifthly, that Clepsam and Clipsam are all one, and not such variance that shall make Error. And lastly, that a Horse may well take Seisin of Paunage, and Fenner agreed in all, but he held that this was a principal challenge, and not being allowed this was Error, and for this cause and another exception to the Record, which was not much material, he reversed the Judgement. And at another day Fleming chief Justice rehearsed the case, and this argued; and to the first matter he conceived. First, That it is no such entry that abates the Writ. Fleming. Secondly, Admitting that it were yet this cannot be assigned for Error. And to the first matter he took this ground, That every entry which may abate a writ ought to be in the thing demanded, and for that he said, if a man brings an Assize of Rent or common, and hanging this Assize, he enters into the Land, this is not any Entry, which will abate the Writ, and he said that the Park, and the keeping of the Park are two distinct things, and for that the entry into one, that is, the Park will not abate the Writ for the keeping of that, and to that which is said that he took a Fee, that is, a shoulder of a Buck, that doth not make any matter, for two reasons. First, he hath not showed a Warrant he had to kill the Buck. Secondly the taking of the fee is no entering into the Office, but the excercising of that, but admit that this were an entry, or the thing itself, yet he said every entry into the thing shall not abate the Writ, and to that he said, that if this entry of the Earl of Rutland to hunt was no such entry that shall abate the Writ, for his office was not to hunt, and for that his entry being to another purpose, it shall not be said an entry to abate the Writ; and for that he cited a case, which hath been cited, as he said, by Justice Yeluerton, that if a man have Common in the Land of J. S. between the Annunciation of our Lady, and Michaelmas, and the Commoner brought an Assize of his Common, and at Christmas▪ put in his Beasts and this shall not be any entry to abate his Writ, for it cannot be intended for the same Common, which case is agreed to be good Law, and he cited the case put by Brook in Assize of Freshforce before remembered Com. 93. Where hanging a Formedon, the Tenant pleads in abatement of the Writ, that the Demandant hath entered after the last continuance, and upon the evidence it appears, that many were cutting wood upon the Land, and the Demandant comes into the Land to them, and warns them upon the peril that might ensue to them, that they should do no more than they could do by Law, and this was found no entry: Also the case of 26. Assize before cited by Justice Crook, and he said that the Statute of Charta de Foresta, chapter 11. willeth, that every Archbishop. Bishop, Earl, or Baron, coming to the King by his command, and passing by his Forest, etc. Was licenced to take one Beast or two by the sight of the Keeper; etc. Put case then, that the King had sent for the Earl of Rutland, and he had passed through this Park, and had killed a Buck, had this been an entry to abate this writ, Quasi diceret non, for this was entry to another purpose, so he said in the principal case the entry to hunt, and so no entry to abate the Writ, but admitting that this had been an entry, which would abate the writ, then let us see if this entry hath so abated the writ, being Mesne between the Verdict and the Judgement, it cannot be assigned for error, and to that he agreed the diversity before taken What matter shall be assigned for Error after Judgement. by Crook and Williams, where the writ is abated by Plea and without plea, and he cited a Judgement in the King's Bench, between Jackson and Parker 2 Eliz. where in Ejectione firm the Plaintiff entered Mesne between Verdict and Judgement, and this was assigned for Error in the Exchequer Chamber, and the Judgement notwithstanding affirmed, and he said that if Memorandum had been Variante. made of it, or if a Jury had found it, and it had been prayed that that might be Recorded, yet this had not been material, and that that be not assigned for Error. And to the matter moved by my Brother Williams, that there should be a variance between the plaint and the Title, he conceived that there is no such variance, that shall make the Judgement errronious, and to that he examined the matter. First that the Assize was of a freehold in Clepsom, and his title is made of the park of Clipson, that that cannot be otherwise intended, but that of necessity it ought to be the same park. For first there is but one park by all the Record. Secondly, the plaint saith, De parco predicto, which hath reference to Clepsom park, and there is but one park put in view by all the record. Fourthly, It shall be so taken according to the common speaking. Fiftly, when he hath made his plaint of the custody of the park of Clepsom, and of the Herbage and paunage of the park aforesaid called Clepsom, these words (called Clepsom) are but Idle and Trifles, and that which is but Surplusage shall not annoy. Also he said that J. and E. are letters which do not much differ in pronunciation, and they are all one as I and he shall be pronounced as high; and he cited the Book of 4 H. 6. 26. Where in Debt, variance was taken between the writ and the Obligation, that is, Quatuordecem pro Quatuordecim, and this variance was not material, but that the writ was awarded good, and so he conceived that in this case the variance of Clepsom and Clipsom shall not be such a material variance, that shall make the Judgement erroneous, and to the title. First to Markham's grant, that is, where the Jury have found, Quod ulterius concessit, etc. And doth not say, Per easdem, he held that good without scruple, and this for the necessary relation, that this had to any thing before granted, for he said that this should be a strange and marvellous patent which begun in such a manner, that is, Et ulterius Rex concedit, etc. And there was not any thing granted before. And for that he cited the case of 11 Ed. 4. 2. where Debt was brought upon an Indenture against the Abbot of Westminster, and the Indenture was between the Abbot of the Monastery of the blessed Mary of Westminster, and rehearsed divers Covenants, for performance of which Covenants, the Abbot of Westminster bound himself in twenty pound, and doth not say that the aforesaid Abbot, and yet good, for it shall be intended the same Abbot, for he is party to the Deed, and the case of 10 H. 7. 12. Where in Assize of Common the plaintiff makes his plaint of Common appurtenant to his freehold in D. and shows for Title, that he was seized of a Message, and of a Carve of Land in D. to which the Common is appurtenant, and that he and his Ancestors, and all those whose Estates, etc. have used Common of pasture with ten Beasts, and exception taken to the title, because he saith that he was seized, and not saith, that he is, and yet good by this word (Fuit) for that shall be intended that he continues seized, so he said that things which are necessarily to be intended, though they be not so particularly expressed, yet shall be good by Implication, and so he concluded that this is no Error, for which the Judgement shall be reversed. And to the challenge, he conceived that this is not any principal Challenge. challenge, and to that he put this difference, that if a man brings an Assize of certain Land, and hath an Action of Trespass hanging against the Sheriff for entering into the same Land, there shall be a principal challenge to the Array, but if it be for entry into other Land not in demand, otherwise it is, and what is principal challenge, and what not, he cited the Books of 3 Ed. 4. 12. 6 Ed. 4. 1. 21 Ed. 4. 67. 14 H. 7. 1. 21. Ed. 4. 10. And to the point in question, he cited the Books before remembered by Crook and Williams and no others, and for that I omit to recite them, and he agreed also that in actions which concern life, Honesty, Maim, Battery, to say that he hath such action hanging against the Sheriff, shall be a principal challenge, but Trespass for entering into Land not, for in Trespass there is no Land to be recovered, also no damages but to the value of the Trespass. And in Debt a man shall recover more then in Trespass: And yet it is agreed that this is no principal Challenge to say, that he hath an Action of Debt hanging against the Sheriff, as the Book of 11 H. 4. is, which hath been remembered, and for this I conceive it no Seisin. principal challenge: And to the seisin of the Paunages, if a Horse may take seisin of that, it seems that yea, for I conceive that the taking of seisin doth not consist in the eating or not eating of that, of which the seisin is to be taken, and for that he cited, that if a man grant to me the Herbage and Paunage of his Park, and I come into the Park and take the Grass and Herbs into my hands, or if I gather Acorns, this is sufficient seisin for me to have Assize, though that I do not eat the Grass, nor the Acorns, and for that, let us put the case that a man hath Herbage granted to him, and he puts in his Beasts, and before that they eat the grass, they are driven out, none will deny, but that, that shall be good seisin, for so is the Book of the 22. Assize 84. Where a man hath Common granted to him, and he takes the Beasts of a stranger: and puts them in, and them forthwith drive out, that shall be a good seisin of the Common to have Assize, so that he said, that the eating is not to purpose, also he said Horses will eat Acorns, as well as Cows: And he saith that in the Country where he inhabits being a Wood-land Country, they will not suffer the Beasts to go into the Woods at a certain time of the year, and this is when Crabs are ripe, for then their Beasts will eat Crabs, and set their teeth an edge, and then not being able to chew Acorns do swallow them whole, and then those Acorns being swallowed whole, will grow in the Maw of the Beast, and so kill them: And he saith that though that Horses be not so proper Beasts, to take seisin of Paunage as Porkes are, yet being put in for the same purpose, if they are disturbed that shall be Seisin and Disseisin, and it seems to him that when things are granted to one, that it shall not be strange to say, that seisin of one shall be seisin of both, and for that if a man grants all his arable Land, all his Meadow, and all his Wood, Livery and Seisin in one suffices for all, but I conceive that this is in respect of the soil which passeth, and so are all of one self same nature, and so he conceives that this is sufficient Seisin and Disseisin found to have Assize. And lastly to the Title of the Earl of Rutland, he said that this was good, and to the Grants of the King he said two things are necessary in all Grants of the King, that is, a Recital, and a certainty, and when a recital shall be necessary and when not, and he said that in all cases, when a common person makes a Lease for years or for life, and the reversion is conveied to the King, if the King will make Estate to another, he shall not recite this Lease, for this not being of Record, the King cannot take notice of it, and so he shall not recite: But in all cases when the King makes a Lease for life, or for years, and after will make a Grant to another, he ought to recite the first Estate, because that is of Record: And Justice Yeluerton as I heard of those which were next unto him, put this case: That if the King grants a Lease for years rendering Rend, and after the King reciting the Lease grants that to another for years, or grants the reversion to another, and doth not recite the Rent which was reserved upon the first Lease, that this second Grant shall be void for the not recital: And the chief Justice cited one Phillpotts Case to be adjudged in the 2. of Eliz. That where the King made a Lease for one and twenty years, and after reciting the said Lease, grants the reversion to another, and before that the second Letters Patents were sealed, the first Lessee surrendered: And said that the second Grant was adjudged void, for the King intended to pass a reversion, and now he shall have a Possession, and all that which is said to be in case of Land: Now let us see how it shall be in case of office, and for that if a common person hath ●n office in Fee, and grants that for life, and after grants the Fee simple to the King, and the King will grant that to another, there he ought to recite the common persons Grant, as well as if it had been his one Grant, for there is not properly a reversion of an office, as the Book cited by my Brother Williams said. Secondly if the office be recited in Esse, and be not in Esse, the Grant is void, as Blanyes Case is in the Lord Dyer 3 Eliz. 197. 47. And this sufficeth for recitals: Then for certainty of the Kings Grant, it is said in the 2. R. 3. it is said that the Grants of the King ought to be made in certain, and for that where the King there Grants to Sir John Spencer that he shall not be Sheriff, this was void, for the incertainty of the place: But if the Grant had been of such a County, or such a County, the Grant should be good: Also there ought to be certainty of Estates, as it is in 18. H. 8. Where the King gives Lands to one and his Heirs Males, this is void for uncertainty of the Estate, than it is so averred in our case if there be not sufficient recital and certainty, and to the recital that is good without question, for she recites that she hath granted that to Markham for if●, and Markham is yet alive, and so the recital good: Then for the certainty he said, that the rule is, that if the certainty be declared by express words, or if the King may reduce that to a certainty, the Grant of the King shall not be defeated, and for that he cited the case of Information of Mines Comment. But if the King grant to me all Mines in the Land of J. S. There I shall have all Mines Royal, for the Law saith, the King cannot have other Ours in the Soil of a Subject but Mines Royal, and so there the Law supplies the Grant, so that they be Mines Royal, though not expressed in the Grant in certain, so he said in the principal case, that the Queen hath expressly recited, that she hath granted the Herbage and Paunage for life to Markham, and that Markham was yet alive, and after grants that to the Earl of Rutland, and doth not say when that shall begin; the Law saith that shall begin after the death of Markham, for before that it cannot begin: But if the Queen had expressed in the Letters Patents, that this shall begin forthwith, than this had been void, as the Lord Gaudy said in Altonwoods' Case, 1 Coke fol. 51. And so he concluded the Title of the Earl of Rutland good: So he affirmed the Judgement in all: But Williams was very peremptory for the conceit of Paunage that it was not good Seisin: But after Crook Justice recanted his opinion of that, and insomuch that there were three which concluded for the reversing of the Judgement: And yet for every point there were three against two: It was doubted if this Judgement should be reversed or not: And they said that they would advise with the rest of the Judges, and after that it was moved again by Sergeant nichols in the next Trinity Term, and Yeluerton and the chief Justices would have the Judgement affirmed, but Williams, Fenner, and Crook, to be reversed, and note well this Precedent, where Judgement was reversed, and yet for every point there were three Contra two, or four Contra one, see the first Judgement in the Common Bench Michaelmas 6. Jacobi afterwards. Termino Pasche 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the King's Bench. Trinity College Case. THE Case was this; King Henry the eight Incorporated the Misnaming of a Corporation. Scholars of Trinity College in Cambridge by the name of Masters, Fellows, and Scholars: Collegij Sanctae et Individuae Trinitatis, in the Town and University of Cambridge, and in the 6. Ed. 6. They made a Lease by the name of Master, and Fellows of Trinity College in Cambridge, leaving out the University: And if this Lease were good or not was the question; And Yeluerton argued that this was not a good Lease, and that for the misnaming of the Corporation: And to that he said, to every Corporation, two things were incident: That is, name and place: and if any of those fail and be not certainly recited in a Lease, the Lease shall not be good: And he conceived that this Corporation is founded upon two places, and that one of them: That is, the University is left out, and for that cause the Lease is nothing worth, for if a Corporation hath two names, one of them cannot be omitted, as it is in the first of Mary Dyer 96, 97. and 4. Mary 140. and 150. 11. Eliz. Dyer 278. 35. H. 6. 5. and 6. No more than when it consists of two places one of them may be left out: And for that, if they had been incorporated by the name of Master and Fellows of Trinity College in Norfolk and Suffolk in a Lease, they could not leave out Norfolk or Suffolk, but both the places ought to be inserted: And by him in the principal case, if the Lease had been made by the name of the Master and Fellows of Trinity College in the Town, and leave out the University of Cambridge, without question, this shall be void, so here this being impliedly omitted shall be as strong, as if it had been by express words excluded, so in the making of every Corporation, the intent of the Founder is to be considered, and for that it seems the intent of the King in placing that in both places, was first to erect a College, and that to grace the Town, and then he hath placed them in the University, and this was for the instruction in good Arts and Learning, and so for these benefits they have of both these places, nor one nor the other may be left out: And if the King had been incorporated by the name of Master and Fellows of Trinity College in Cambridge, and in the Market place of Cambridge: There though that the Market place was parcel of the Town of Cambridge, yet it seems to him that this cannot be left out, for peradventure the Founder hath a special reason to place that there, that is, to have all things necessary for them more near unto them: Also where any stranger demands any possession of them in Precipe Quod Reddat, or such like, he ought to ensue them certainly and precisely: Then a Fortiore where they depart with their possessions by their own Act, there they shall not be unknowing of their one names: And Walter of the inner Temple argued to the contrary, and he conceived Walter that the Lease is good, and first he argued the ground which hath been taken of the other part, that is, that every corporation ought to be in a certain place, and he conceived that there is a certain place in this place, that is, the Town of Cambridge: And to that, that is said that this Corporation is founded upon two places, he denied that all together, for no more than one material Body, may be but in one place Simul and Semel, no more may it be in a Body Corporate, which hath always his resemblance to a Body natural, and for that he denied the case, which hath been put of the other part, of Norfolk and Suffolk: And he cited the opinion of the Lord Popham in Buttons Case, in which the Lord North was Interested, that a Corporation cannot be limited to a County, as Probos Homines of such a County, or Trinity College in such a County, but it ought to be restrained to some certain place, or one County, or a Town: But admit that the Corporation may be founded upon two places, yet he faith that a University is not Local, but Personal: And to this purpose he cited two Records one, in 48 H. 3. Which was this: King H. 3. Intending to keep a Parliament at Oxford, and knowing that the place was not sufficient to contain all those, which should be there assembled, and the Scholars together, sent his Writ which was directed to the Chancellor and University of Oxford, commanding them that they should remove the University to such a place, till the Parliament should be ended: And after he sent his Writ to them again, which was directed to the Chancellor and University, by which he willed that they should return again, the Parliament being ended, by which Writ he conceived that it appears that the University was not Local: And this for two reasons. First insomuch that this Writ was directed to the Chancellor and University, and every Writ is directed to a person and not to a place. Secondly the Writ that he should move and remove the University, which is a thing impossible to do if it should be a place: The other Record was 49. Ed. 3. And this declares, that there was contention between the Scholars of Cambridge and the Townsmen there, and the Scholars went to Northampton, and there they made a Petition to the King, that they might erect a University, and the King sent his Writ to the Mayor, commanding him that he would not suffer the Scholars to remain there, and that he would there erect a University, which proves that a University may be erected at the King's pleasure, and so cannot a place, then admitting that a Corporation may consist upon a place, yet the University not being a place, that shall not be any prejudice to omit it: And he cited a case which was adjudged as he said, in the 26. of Eliz. which was thus; The Dean and Canons of Windsor made a Lease for years by the name of Deane and Canons of new Windsor: And this was adjudged no variance, and the case of 5. Ed. 4. 5. of the Abbot of Saint mary's in York which see there, and he said the Lord Norths' Case was thus: That Christ Church in Oxford was incorporate by the name of Deane and Canons of Christ Church in Oxford: And they made a Feoffment by the name of the Dean and Canons of Christ Church in the University of Oxford, and adjudged a good Feoffment: And he said that in the argument of this case it was said by Gaudy, that if a corporation were made of Dale, and after Dale is made into a City, they may make a Lease by the name of a City of Dale, and the Lord Popham (as he said) put these cases: That is, that if a Corporation be founded of Oxford: And that they made a Lease by the name of, etc. In the Precincts of Oxford, this shall be a good Lease, yet a thing may be within the Precincts of another place, and not in the place, and in the 32. Eliz. was the case of one Jermin and Wylles, that if a Corporation be made, by the name of Deane and Chapter of Saint mary's in Exeter is good: But they agreed in this case as he said, that if it appear that they cannot be intended alone, otherwise it should be, and he conceived in the principal case, that it is not necessarily that it should be intended the same place, and for that he conceived in all those cases that the Lease shall be good, and he said that there were near two hundred Leases upon the same Title, for which, etc. And after this it was argued in Michaelmas Term 1609. 7. Jacobi by the Justices: And the opinion of Crook and Williams Justices was, that the Lease was good: But Fenner and Yeluerton to the contrary, and Fleming chief Justice argued that the Lease was not good; but he said this should not be absolutely his opinion, but moved a composition betwixt the parties: But insomuch that the matter was not compounded, in the same Michaelmas Term, Judgement was prayed: And William's Justice brought into the Court a decree out of the Court of Wards concerning the Case which is put in 7. Eliz. Dyer and 1. Coke Porter's Case: And upon the decree appears, that an Information being exhibited there against the Master and fellows of Trinity College in Cambridge concerning certain Land they made Title to, by a Devise made to them, by the name of Masters, Fellows and Scholars, of Trinity College in Cambridge, and this Devise was made, four and five of Phil. and Mary, and the Decree recited, that upon this were two great Doubts and Questions conceived. First, If this Devise were good, and also by the Statute of 1. and 2. Phil. and Mary, which enabled to devise to spiritual Corporations. And the second point was, That where they were incorporated by the name of Master, Fellows and Scholars De sancta and Individua Trinitate, in the University and Town of Cambridge, if this devise made to them by the name of Master, Fellowes, and Scholars of Trinity College in Cambridge was good, and the Decree rehearsed, that the opinion of all the Justices in England was. First, That it was a good Devise within the Statute of one and two Philip and Mary, as it is reported in the Book before cited. Secondly, That this was not such a mis-naming of the Corporation which made the Devise void, and William's Justice produced this Record, as he said to fortify his opinion: And he conceived no difference between a Grant and a Devise, nor no difference when an Estate or conveyance made unto them, and conveyance made by them, and for that he cited the Case in the 19 H. 8. in Dyer, where if a man devise Land to the Abbey of Saint Peter, where the foundation is Saint Paul, this is a void devise, and so in a grant. And Crook Justice, to the same Intent. Yeluerton Justice to that Yeluerton. Decree showed by my Brother Williams, I conceive a great Difference. First a Will and a grant, for in case of a Will, it sufficeth if they be described by a name, by which the Intent of the Devisor may be sufficiently known, and a man is intended to be Inops consilij at the time of the Devise made, and for that that he hath not any to instruct him o● the precise name of the Corporation for which, etc. And Fenner Justice to the same intent, and if a man devise to one, Fenner. and his Assigns, as it is a Fee-simple in case of a Devise, so it is not in grant, and so devise to one and his Children, is an Estate tail in case of Devise, but not in a grant: Fleming chief Justice to the Fleming. same intent, and to the Decree he said, that this is as good Law, as ever he heard in his life, but yet he conceived also, that there is a great difference between a Grant and a Devise, as if a man devise to a Monk the Remainder over, this is a good remainder, so devise to one the Remainder over, and the particular Tenant refuse, this is good in a Devise, contrary in grant, and to the case which is put by my Brother Williams out of the 19 H. 8. Dyer, there is a great difference, where there is not any such person at all to take, there the Devise shall be void, as where the Devise to the Abbot of Saint Peter, where the foundation is of Saint Paul, and where it is a person certain, but all the name is not so precisely recited, and to that which is said by my Brother Williams, that no difference between conveyance made to them and by them, I agree to him with this difference, that is, if conveyance be made to them, of what by presumption in Law they are knowing, and are parties as a Fine levied to them, and such like, but of a Devise it is not presumed, that they have knowledge of that till the Death of the Devisor, and he conceived that the Lease is void, and this Decree showed, hath not changed his opinion, but he moved the parties again to an agreement, and would not as yet give Judgement. Hitcham the Queen's Attorney, moved the Court for a Prohibition, Prohibition. and the case was this, two Merchants covenanted by Deed with their Factor to allow him ten pound a Month for his Wages, and one Merchant sealed the Deed in England and the other sealed that upon the Sea, and the Factor came and sued the Merchants in the Admiralty for his wages, and by the Court insomuch that one of them sealed it upon the Land, this is not any thing done upon the Deep Sea, and for that Prohibition was granted to him. Upon a Motion made by Wincolt of the Middle Temple to dissolve Prohibition. a Prohibition granted to the spiritual Court, upon a Libel for Tithes, there the Court took this rule, that when a Consultation is lawfully granted, there a new Prohibition shall not be granted upon the same L●bell, and yet they qualified that with this difference, that is, when a Consultation is granted upon any fault of the Prohibition in form by the Misprision of the Clerk, or by mis-pleading of any Statute in that, or such like, there a new Prohibition may be granted upon the same Libel, but if Consultation be granted upon the right of the thing in question, there a new Prohibition shall not be granted upon the same Libel, see the Statute of 5 Ed. 3. Pasch. 9 Jacobi 1609. In the King's Bench. BRomehead and Spencer Plaintiffs, Roger's Defendant, where an Action of Debt was brought by the Plaintiffs against the Defendant as Administrator during the minority of one J. S. and the Plaintiffs show in their count, that the said J. S. at the time of the Writ brought, was, and yet is within age of one and twenty years, and verdict passeth against the Defendant, and Crewe moved in arrest of Judgement, that the Declaration was insufficient, for they have declared that the Executor was within the Age of one and twenty years, and the Administration during the nonage shall cease when the Infant comes to the Age of seventeen years, so that he may be of the age of 17. 18. 19 or 20. years, and yet the Administration ceaseth, and so of Action against Administrator, and so was the Opinion of all the Justices, and the Judgement was stayed upon that, according to the resolution of Piggotts Case 15. Coke 29. a. PLomer against Hockhead, the Plaintiff declares in Ejectione firm, A married Wife cannot make a Letter of Attorney. upon a Lease made to him by three Husbands and their wives, and that the Defendant ejected him, and at the Issue upon not guilty, and in evidence to prove this Lease, and the delivery of that, was showed a Letter of Attorney made by the Husbands and their wives, and the council of the Defendant takes exception to the Declaration, for they have declared upon a Lease by three Husbands, and their Wives, with a Letter of Attorney to make delivery, and a married Wife cannot make a Letter of Attorney: And so this is not a Lease of the Wives, and so the Plaintiff had declared upon no Lease: And the opinion of all the Court was, that a married Wife could not make a Letter of Attorney. And William's Justice compared this to the case of an Infant, as if an Infant makes a Feoffment or a lease, and delivers that with his hand, this is not, but voidable: But if it be executed by Letter of Attorney, that is a disseisin to him, but by Flimming and Williams, if the Plaintiffs had declared upon a Lease made by the Husband's only; this had been very good. Thomas Malin Plaintiff in Replevin against Thomas Tully, the case was; The Queen Mary was seized of a Park called Eestwood Replevin. Park in her Demesne as of Fee as in Right of her Crown, and so being seized by her Letters Patent's, let the said Park to two for their lives, and after died: And the Queen Elizabeth by her Letters Patents reciting the said Lease for lives, and that the said Lessees were alive, granted the said Park to Humphrey Lord Stafford and his Wife, and to the Heirs of the said Lord Stafford of the Body of the said Wife lawfully begotten: And by the said Patent the same Queen by these words, Ac de Ampliori et Vberiori Gracia, Nostris Volumus et Declaramus, quod si Predictus Dominus Stafford, Solvat seu Solvi faciat prefacto Dominae Reginae 20 s. ad tal●m Diem, Tunc Concedimus, quod predictus Dominus Stafford habebit revertionem predictam sibi et Heredibus suis: And the Lord Stafford paid the said sum of twenty shillings according to the said Letters Patents, and if he shall have Fee-simple or not was the question. And it was objected that he shall not have it, for the words of the Patent are; that if the Lord Stafford pays the money, Tunc concedimus, the which words seem that the Grant shall take effect, in futuro, and it was not a present Grant, but when the money shall be paid than she granted, but it seems to the Justice, that it was a good Grant immediately to take effect upon the payment of the money, and the condition was precedent, till that be performed the reversion remains in the Queen Eliz. And the Queen might grant by oneself same Patent as by divers: See 10. Assize 13. 7. Ed. 3. 8. Ed. 2. Feoffments, and that the reversion shall not extinguish the Estate tail, but they may well be together, but otherwise it is of an Estate for years or for life. Warburton Justice, that the King is specially favoured in the Law, Warburton Justice. and for that he shall not be enforced to attend in case, as other persons ought to make attendance: And for that in case where a common person may make a good Grant, the King also may make a good Grant, and in the case at the Bar, if the Grant had been made by a common Person, it had been good without question: But the first objection that hath been made was, that where a man hath made a Lease for life or for years, upon condition to have Fee, there the particular Estate shall be drowned upon the increasiing of the Estate, but the Statute of Westminster 2. preserves the Estate tail that it shall not be drowned, and that the Fee in this case doth not vest till the condition be performed, for if the Lessee for years or life, surrender before the performance of the condition, the Fee doth never increase, as it is 14. H. 8. 20. and the Lord Chandois Case, 6▪ Coke: But the Estate tail remains after the condition performed, and then hath the Fee dependant upon the Estate tail, and that there is a necessity that there shall be an office, as it was in nichols Case in the Come because of the right and that after the condition performed then the Fee shall vest, Ab Initio, and this corporates together partly by the Letters Patents, and partly by the performance of the condition, and so it is in Butler and Baker's case that it is not a Grant in futuro, but one immediate Grant to take effect In futuro, see 2. H. 7. for the execution of Chantrey and Grendons Case in the Com. and 2. H. 7. If the King grant Land to J. S. for life, the remainder to the right Heirs of J. R. which is in life, the remainder is good, as well as in case of a common person, and so he seemed that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff. Walmesley Justice agreed, that it shall be remainder and not reversion, Walmesley. as if Lands begin to the Husband and the Wife and to the Heirs of the Body of the Husband, the Husband dies, this is a remainder, in the Heirs Males and not a reversion, for it cannot grow higher, and it was not in the King as one distinct Estate, before the Grant, and Formedon in remainder lieth for it, and though it be misrecited yet it shall be good, and aided by the Statute of Misrecitalls, and grant of a thousand is suffered to convey the reversion of a thousand by the common Law; and if the recital were that it was a reversion depending upon the Estate tail, it was good without question, and the King may grant five hundred reversions if he will, and that the last (Damus) is ex certa scientia et mêre motu nostris, Damus et concedimus, that if the Patentee pay twenty shillings, Tunc sciatis, quod nos de ampliori gracia ea certa scientia et mero motu, nostris concedimus, etc. and that the word Volumus will amount to a Covenant or a Release, as 32. H. 6. The King by his Patent by these words (Nolent) that he shall be impleaded, and this amounts to a release, and so words which intends expressly words of Covenant may be pleaded as a Grant in case of the King, as it is 25 Ed. 4, So is a common person licence another to occupy his Land, this amounts to a Lease of Land if the time be expressed, so if a man grants to another that he shall have and enjoy his Land to him and his Heirs, that by that Fee passeth: And if the King grant reversion to begin at Michaelmas, the Grant is void, for that it is to begin totally at Michaelmas, and doth not look back to any precedent thing: But if it relate to any precedent Act, then that shall be good by relation, and shall pass ab Initio; see Com. Walsinghams' Case 553. b. that in such case the performance of the condition divests the Estate out of the King, and there is no difference in this case betwixt the King and a common person, and agreed in the case of Littleton: Where a man makes a Lease for years upon condition to have Fee, that the Fee shall not pass till the condition be performed, and with this agrees 2. R. 2. But if a man makes a Charter of Feoffment, upon condition, that if the Feoffee enjoy the Land peaceably for fifteen years, that the Feoffment shall be void: In this case the Fee-simple determineth by the performance of the Condition, and in this case the Fee passeth, ab Initio, by the Livery as in 10. Assize 18. Assize 1. 44. Assize 49, Assize. And he agreed that the words Habeat et Teneat the Reversion passes, and this is good Fee-simple, and this refers to the first Damus et Concedimus, and so concluded that he seemed that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff. Coke chief Justice accordingly, and he conceived that there are two questions upon the substance of the Grant. And to the first objection, that hath been made, that is, that reversion was granted, and increase of an Estate cannot be of a reversion, and in all these cases which have been put they are of an Estate in possession, and so is the case of Littleton also, and he agreed that it shall not be good, if it be not good, ab Initio, that though there be not other words then Reversionem predictam: That it shall be good. And to the second point upon the former: He conceived that the Grant is but a Grant, and that the condition is but precedent Limitation, when the Estate of Fee-simple shall begin, and so it is said by Montague, in Colthurst and Brinskins Case in the Com. And further he saith that there are four things necessary for increasing an Estate. First, that it ought to be an Estate, upon which the increasing Estate may increase. Secondly, the particular Estate ought to continue, for otherwise it is grant of a reversion in Futuro. Thirdly, That the Estate which is to increase aught to vest by the performance of the Condition, for if there be disturbance that it cannot then vest, than it can never vest. Foutthly, that both the Estates as well the particular Estate as the Estate which is to increase aught to have their beginning by one self same Deed, or by divers Deeds delivered at one self same time. And to the first and to prove that he cited 44 Ed. 3. Attaint 22. Lessee for years upon condition to have Fee, grains his Estate, the Fee doth not increase upon the performance of the condition, for than it shall pass as a Reversion, and so the particular Tenant surrenders his Estate, as it is said 14. H. 8. For if the Privity be destroyed the Fee will never increase, but there is no such ●ycity, but that if the substance of the Estate remains, though it doth not remain in such form, as it was at the first Reversion, the Estate may well increase, as if Lands be given to the Husband and wife and to the Heirs of the Husband, upon the Body of the Wife to be begotten, the Wife dies, and the Husband is Tenant after possibility of Issue extinct, yet he may well perform the condition, for the Estate remains in substance, and with this agrees, 20 H. 6. Aid; and so it is if a Lease be made to two for years upon condition to have fee, one dies, the other may perform the Condition, and shall have Fee-simple, as it is agreed by 12. Assize 5. the reason is that the privity remains and the Estate also in substance. Thirdly, As to that also, it seems that it ought to vest upon the performance of the condition, which is the time limited for the beginning of the Estate, and if it do not vest then, it shall never vest, and if it do not vest without Office in this case, it shall never vest at all, but it is for the Honour of the King, that his grant shall have his effect, and 49 Ed. 3. 16. Isabella Goodcheaps case, she devised her Lands to her Executors to be sold, and dies without Heir the King hath that by Escheat, yet the Executors may sell it, and for that divest the Estate out of the King, and so was the Lord L●vells Case, and the reason is for the necessity, for the Prerogative of the King shall do no wrong, and there need no continuance of the Estate of the part of the Lessor, but of the part of the Lessee, and for that if the Feoffor make a Feoffment, or grant his Estate, this shall not make prejudice or alteration of the Estate, and for that if the King refuse to receive the Money▪ yet if it be tendered the Fee-simple shall vest in the Patentee, and the simple upon that shall shall increase, see 31 Ed. 1. Feoffments and Deeds B. 32. Quid juris Clamat be. And to the fourth it seems also, that both the Estates ought to be created and granted by one self same Deed, or by divers delivered at one time, Quia quae in continenti fiunt pro uno habeantur & reputentur, as if a man makes a Lease for years upon Condition to have in tail, upon condition to have in Fee, this second condition is void, for it ought to be all one Crant, and cannot be entire, upon the privity of the first grant, and it is not material though that the first Estate be drowned upon the performance of the condition, as if the King makes a Lease for life, the Remainder in tail upon condition, that if the Tenant for life pay twenty shillings, that he shall have Fee, this shall be a good Grant, and the Fee well vested by the performance of the condition, though that the particular Estate for life shall not be drowned. And to the second point, that is, that the Grant of the King shall not be good, for that that it is by the words, Reversion aforesaid, he agreed that if the King makes a Grant to one intent, that shall not enure to another intent: But this shall enure to the intent for which it is made, Vt res magis vale et quam periat, and it is for the dishonour of the King, to make an unconscionable Grant. And to the Objection which is made, that the King is not understanding of Law, to that he answered, that the King is (Caput Legis) and for that shall not be intended to be ignorant of it, and for that if a grant may have two intendments, one to make the Grant good, the other to make the Grant void, it shall be intended, and expounded in the better sense, that is, to make the Grant Good, and not to make the Grant void, for this was Iniquae expositio, and also he said that the Grant shall be good for the first word (Concedo) though it had not been subsequent also, as if a man grant a Rend charge, and if it be behind, that the Grantee may distrain for the first Grant, and the Grant is not of a Reversion In futuro, but grant that if the condition be performed that then the Fee doth pass In futuro, and it seemed to him, that it was a good devise to prevent that the Estate tail should not be discontinued by Fine nor otherwise, until the Condition were performed, and so of recovery also; for if the King grant an Estate tail, and after grants the Reversion in tail, this second entail is within the intent of the Statute, and when the Issue of the first Tenant in tail shall not be barred, the Estate of the Tenant in tail in Remainder shall not be barred, see the Lord Barkleys' case in the Com. fol and 7 Ed. 4. and as to the pleading he said, that when the Issue is offered, which depends upon matter in Law, there is no necessity to take travers upon the matter in Law, for it doth not belong to lay men to decide the matter in Law, and for that he concludes, that the Grant in substance is good, and in form exquisite, and that the Issue in tail in Reversion shall not be barred, for Quod non in principio valet, non valebit in accessario, and that Judgement ought to be for the Plaintiff, which was done accordingly. IN Ejectione firm against Gallop, after Verdict and Judgement for Reentry after possession executed. the Plaintiff a Writ of Habere facias Possessionem was awarded and executed, and returned and filed, and after the same Defendant reentered and outed the Plaintiff, and Attachment was awarded, and it seems that if the Writ had not been returned, that then a new Writ shall be awarded, and the Attachment was awarded upon Affidavit. IN Action upon the case against Trotman, the words were, Thou Slander of Attorney. sayest thou art an Attorney, but I think thou art no Attorney, but an Attorneys Clerk in some Office, but if thou be an Attorney I will have thee picked over the Bar the next Term, and thy Ears nailed to the Pillory, and it seems that these words are not Actionable. IN waging of Law of Summons in Dower, In petit Cape, there Grand Cape Petit Cape. ought to be two summons only, and if it be Grand Cape, than there ought to be two Summoners and two Veiwers, and Summons upon the Land is sufficient to give notice of the Demandant, of the thing demanded, and the day in Court. That in Waging Law, the Waging Law. Lord Coke said, that the Defendant himself ought to swear, De fidelitate, and elev●n others, which are named in the Statute of Magna Charta, chapter, Testes fideles ought to swear De credulitate. IF Tenant for life be the Remainder in tail to another; the Remainder in Fee to the Tenant for life, and the Tenant for life releases Release. to the Tenant in tail, the Release is good to pass the Remainder in Fee to the Tenant in tail, for to this purpose the Tenant in tail hath sufficient possession, upon which the Release may enure, but it shall not be good to pass the Estate for life, and 19 H. 6. and 9 H. 7. If Tenant in tail in Remainder, Disseise Tenant for life, he doth not gain Fee-simple by Fulthorp, but if there be Grandfather, Father, and Sonn, and the Father makes a Feoffment the Grandfather dies, the Father dies, the Sonn is barred, so if the Sonn had levied a Fine being Tenant in tail, 33 and 39 H. 6. 43. a. 21 Ed. 4. Discontinuance. Pasch. 7 Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Warbrooke and Griffin. BEtween Warbrooke and Griffin, a Guest brought a Horse into an Inn in London to be kept, the which stayed there so long, till Innkeeper in London. he had eaten out his Worth, and then the Innkeeper caused the said Horse to be prised, and then sold him according to the custom of London, and it seems well he might do it, and that the Sale was lawful, for the Innkeeper, as to the Person of his Guest ought to receive him, and he is compellable to do it, as it is 5 Ed. 4. 2. and 22 Ed. 4. And for his Goods he ought to keep them safe, and of the other part the Guest ought to pay the Innkeeper, as well for the meat of his Horse as for his own, as it is 28 H. 6. And it should be inconvenient that he should be put to his Action for, etc. And for preventing this mischief, the Innkeeper may detain the Horse of his Guest, till he be satisfied, and it seems to Coke chief Justice, that an Innkeeper is not chargeable with the Goods of any, which is not lodged in the Inn, and the Goods must be lost by default of the Innkeeper, and that the Innkeeper is not compellable to receive the Horse of any, if the Master be not lodged, and if a Neighbour of the Innkeeper come to the Innkeeper he shall not answer for the Goods, for he is not lodged, but as a Tipler, and so if an Innkeeper invite any to his House Ad Praudendum aut Caenandum, the Innkeeper shall not be charged, as it 35 H. 8. For it was agreed that the Guest ought to aver that he was lodged in the Inn. And Foster Justice said, that it was adjudged in the case of one Perin of the Black Swan in Holborn, that by the custom of London, an Innkeeper may sell a Horse which remains with him to be Kept, and hath eaten more than he is Worth, and so it was said by Foster, that where a Haberdasher of London came to an Inn, and there sold divers Hats, and after went to a Fair, and left divers other Hats in the Inn, the which in his absence were stolen, and the Innkeeper should not answer for them, for that that the Haberdasher was not lodged in the Inn at that time, and this was the Case of one Coley in the 25. of Eliz. But Sir Edwin Sands lodged in an Inn and there left a Trunk, and went to meet the Kiug, the Trunk remaining in the Inn, in his absence it was stolen, and the Innkeeper was charged, Quere the Difference, if the Owner desire that his horse should go to grass, the Innkeeper shall not answer, but if an Innkeeper receive the horse, and of his own head puts the horse to grass, and he is stolen, there the Inn Keeper shall be charged, and though the Innkeeper deliver the Key of the Chamber to the Guest, yet the Innkeeper shall answer for the goods which are stolen, for it is an employed promise of every part, that is, of the part of the Innkeeper, that he will preserve the Goods of his Guest, and of the part of the Guest, that he will pay all duties and charges, which he caused in the house, and that the Innkeeper may retain (without custom, by the Common Law, the Horse of the Guest as a pledge till he be satisfied of all deuce, and so a Tailor, and Goods taken in Withernam, But the Innkeeper cannot work the horse of his Guest in such a case, nor sell his Goods though that they be Bona peritura. Trinity 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. College of Physician's Case. THOMAS Bonham brought an Action of false Imprisonment Action of false Imprisonment. against Doctor Alkins and divers other Doctors of Physic: The Defendants justified, that King H. 8. Anno Decimo of his Reign, founded a College of Physicians, and pleaded the Letters Patents of their Corporation.: And that they have Authority by that to choose a Precedent, etc. as by the Letters Patents, etc. and then pleads the Statute of 32 H. 8. chapt. 40. And that the said Doctor Alkins was chosen Precedent, according to the said Act and Letters Patents, and where by the said Act and Letters Patents it is provided, that none shall practise in the City of London or the Suburbs of that, or within seven miles of the said City, or exercise the faculty of Physic, if he be not to that admitted by the Letters of the Precedent and College, sealed with their common Seal, under the penalty of a hundred shillings, for every Month (that he not being admitted) shall exercise the said faculty, further we wiland grant for us and our Successors, that by the Precedent and College of the Society for the time being, and for their Successors for ever, that they may choose four every year, that shall have the overseeing, and searching, correcting, and governing, of all in the said City being Physicians, using the faculty of Medecines in the said City, and other Physicians abroad whatsoever using the falculty of Phisicking by any means frequenting and using, within the City or Suburbs thereof, or within seven miles in compass of the said City, and of punishing them for the said offences, in not well executing, making, and using that: And that the punishment of those Physicians using the said faculty, so in the premises offending, by Fines, Amercements, Imprisonments of their Bodies, and by other reasonable and fitting ways shall be executed: Note the preamble of these Letters Patents is, Quod cum Egregij officij nostri munus arbitremur, ditionis nostrae, Hominum selicitati omni ratione Consulere: Id autem vel inprimis fore, si improborum conaminibus tempestave occurramus, apprime necessarium fore duximus, improborum quoqur hominum, qui medicinam Magis avaritiae snae causa, quam ullius bonae conscientiae fiducia profitabuntur undi Rudi et credulae plebi plurima incommoda oriuntur, audaciam compescere. And that the Plaintiff practised in London, without admission of the College, and being Summoned to appear at the College, and examined if he would give satisfaction to the College according to the said Letters Patents and Statute, he answered that he had received his decree to be Doctor of Phi●ck by the University of Cambridge, and was allowed by the University to practise, and confessed that he had practised within the said City, and as he conceived, it was lawful for him to practise there, that upon that the said Precedent and Commonalty fined him to a hundred shillings, and for not paying of that and his other contempt, committed him to Prison, to which the Plaintiff replied as aforesaid, and upon this demurrer was joined: And Harris for the Defendant, saith, that Sergeant Harris the younger. this hath been at another time adjudged in the King's Bench, where the said College imposed a Fine of five pound upon a Doctor of Physic which practised in London without their admission, and for the non payment of that, brought an Action of Debt, and adjudged that it lay well, and that the Statute of 32. H. 8. extends as well to Graduates, as to others, for it is general, and Gradiots are not excepted in the Statute, nor in the Letters Patents, and all the mischiefs, intended to be redressed by this, are not expressed in that, and the Statute shall not be intended to punish Impostors only, but all other which practise without examination and admittance, for two things are necessary to Physicians, that is, learning and experience, and upon that there is the proverb, Experto credo Roberto: And the Statute intends that none shall practise here but those which are most learned and expert, more than ordinary: And for that the Statute provides, that none shall practise here without allowance and examination by the Bishop of London and the Dean of Paul's, and four learned Doctors: But in other places the examination is referred only to the Bishop of the Diocese, and the reason of the difference is, for that, that London is the hart of the Kingdom: And here the King and his Court, the Magistrates and Judges of the Law, and other Magistrates are resident, and with this agreed the government of other well governed Cities in Italy and other Nations, as it appears by the preamble of the said Letters Patents: and it appears by the Statute, that this was not intended to extend to Impostors only, for that that the word Imposter is not mentioned in the Statute: And the Statute provides that they shall be punished, as well for doing and using, as for ill using: And also it is provided that the Statute of 1. Marry 1. Parliament, chap. 9 That the Guardians, Gaolers, or Keepers of the Wards, Goals, and Prisons within the City and precinct of that, shall receive into his Prison all such person and persons so offending which are sent or committed to them, and those safely shall keep without Bail, till the party so committed, shall be discharged by the said Precedent, or other person by the said College to that authorised, by which it appears, that the Gaolers, Keepers of Prisons, have power to retain such which are committed: That then the Precedent shall have power to commit, for things Employed are as strong as things Expressed; as it appears by the Com. Stradlinge and Morgan's Case: And also in the Earl of Leicester's Case, where it is agreed, that Jointure before Coverture cannot be waved, and this is employed within the Statute of 27. H. 8. And so the Statute of 2. Ed. 6. Provides that after seven years' Tithes shall be paid, by which it is Collected by Implycation, that during seven years, Tithes shall not be paid; and so he prayed Judgement for the Defendants. Dodridge Sergeant of the King, for the Plaintiff said, that the Statute of 24▪ H. 8. chap. 5. and the Letters Patents gives power to four Censors to punish for ill executing, doing, and using the faculty of a Physician, and the Plaintiff was not charged for ill executing of it, doing or using: But it is averred, where Revera the Plaintiff was nothing sufficient to exercise the said Art, and being examined, less apt to answer, and thereupon they forbade him, and being sent for and not appearing, was amerced five pound, and order that he should be Arrested, and being Arrested, upon his appearance, being examined if he would submit himself to the said College, he answered and confessed, that he had practised within the said City, being a Doctor of physic as aforesaid, as well to him it was lawful, and that he would practise here again, for which he was committed to Prison: So that he was amerced for his contempt in the using of the said Art, and committed to Prison for his answer upon his examination: And he conceived that there are two questions considerable. First, if the College may restrain a Doctor of physic of his practice in London. Secondly, admitting that they may, then if these are the causes for which they may commit by their Letters Patents; the first reason is drawn from the Letters Patents, and the said Statutes, in which he said that the intent of the King was the end of his work: And this intent shall be expounded for three reasons apparent Walter in the words contained in the Grant. First, Intempestive Conatibus occurrere. Secondly, Improborum Hominum, qui medicinam Magis avaritiae suae causa, quam ullius bonae Conscientiae fiducia profitebantur, audaciam Compescere. Thirdly, which would invite learned men to practise here, and for that would, quoth Collegium prefectum Doctorum et graviorum virorum qui medicinarent in urbe nostra Londino et suburbibus infra septem millia passium in urbe quaq●● versus, publice Exerceant institui volumus et imparamus: And further he said, that there are three sorts of men, which meddle with the Body of a man. First, is the learned man which reads all Books extant, and his knowledge is speculative, and by that he knew the nature of all simples. And the second is practive, the knowledge of which is only his experience, he may give Probatum est: But the ignorance of the cause of the disease, and the nature of the things which he applies for the cure of that. And the third is an Imposter, which takes upon him the knowledge which he hath not, and every of them the College may punish, for Male utenda, faciendo vel exequendo, by what way they will: And this was not the first care which was had, for in the 9 H. 5. was a private Act made for Physicians, by which there is great regard to them which are learned and educated in the University: And for that the Act provides that they shall not be prejudical to any of the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, and with this agrees 3. H. 8. 11. and the privileges of them, and the Docti et graves homines, mentioned in the Letters Patents, are the learned men mentioned in the Act, for the Statute provides that they shall punish according to these Statutes, and late edicts: And by the former Laws the Universities, that their privileges were excepted, and by their former Statutes, the Letters Patents ought to be directed, for it is referred to them: Also the Statutes of this Realm have always had great respect to the Gradiats of the Universities, and it is not without cause, for Sudavit et Alsit, and hath no other reward but this degree which is Doctor, and for that the Statute of 21, H. 8. prefers Graduates, and provides that Doctors of Divinity or Bachelors shall be capable of two Benefices with Cure without dispensation: And so 13. Eliz. provides that none shall be presented to a Benefice above the value of thirty pound per annum, if he be not a Doctor or Bachelor of Divinity: And to the objection, that none shall practise in London or seven miles circute of it without licence, that this clause shall be expounded according to the matter, and to that he agreed, for the other branches of the Statute are made to cherish grave and learned men, and for that it shall not be intended, that this branch was made for the punishment of those, but of others which the Statute intended to punish. And to the second objection, that every Doctor is not the learned and grave man intended within the Statute, for the knowledge of many of them is only speculative without practice, to that he answered, that all their Study is practise, and that if they have no practice of themselves, than they attend upon others which practice, and apply themselves to know the nature of Simples. And to third objection, that in London ought to be choice men, for the Statute appoints that they shall be examined by the Bishop and Deane and four others at least, and for that there is a more strict course for them, then in other places, to that it is agreed: But he said that in the University there is a more strict course then this, for here he ought to be publicly approved by many after that he hath been examined and answered in the Schools, to divers questions, and allowed by the Congregation house: And 35. H. 6. 55. Doctor is no addition, but a degree, (quia gradatim et progress●one Doctrine provenit, to that, and that Doctor is teacher, and that he was first taught by others as Scholars, afterwards he is Master, and Doctor dicetur a docendo, quia docere permittitur, and they are called Masters of their faculty, and that the Original of Doctor came of the Synagogue of Jews, where there were Doctors of Law; and it appears that they had their ceremonies in time of H. 1. And when a man brings with him the Ensign of Doctrine, there is no reason that he should be examined again, for than if they will not allow of him, he shall not be allowed, though he be a learned and grave man, and it was not the intent of the King to make a Monopoly of this practice. And to the second point that he propounded, it seems that the Justification is not good, which is, Quia non comperuit, upon Summons, he was amerced, and ordered that he shall be arrested, and being arrested, being examined if he would submit himself to the College, he answered that he was a Doctor, and had practised and would practise within the said City, as he conceived he might lawfully do, and for that showing of this case he was committed to prison, and he conceived two things upon the Charter. First, That it doth not inhibit a Doctor to practise, but punisheth him for ill using, exercising, and making, and may imprison▪ the Empiric and Imposter, and so prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff, and after in Hillary Term, in the same year, this case was argued by all the Justices of the Common Bench, and at two several days, and the first day it was argued by Foster, Daniel, and Warburton Justices, at whose Arguments I was not present, but Foster argued against the Plaintiff, and Daniel and Warburton with him, and that the Action of false imprisonment was well maintainable. And the second day the same case was argued again by Walmesley Justice, and Coke chief Justice, and Walmesley argued as followeth, that is, Walmesley. that the Statute of 3. H. 8. was in the negative, that no person within the City of London or seven Miles of that, take upon him to exercise or occupy, as Physician or Chirurgeon, etc. And he doth not know in any case where the words of the Statute are negative, that they admit any Interpretation against that but one only, and that is the Statute of Marlebridge chapter 4. Which provides that no Lord shall distrain in one County, and the beasts distrained drive into another County, in which case though that the words are vegative, yet if the Lord distrain in one County, he may drive the Beasts to his Manor in another County, of which the Lands, in which the distress was taken were held, but it is equity and reason in this case, that the Statute should admit such exception, for it is not of malice, but for that, that the Beasts may remain within his Fee, but in the principal case there is not the like reason nor Equity, And also the King H. 8. in his Letters Patents recites as followeth, that is, Cum Regij officij nostri munus arbitremur, ditionis nostri hominum felicitati omni ratione consulere, id autem vel imprimis fore, si Improborum conatibus tempestive occurremus, apprime necessarium duximus improborum quoque hominum, qui medicinant magis avaritiae sue. causa quam ullius. bonae conscienti● fiducia profitebantur, etc. By which it appears, that it is the Office of a King to survey his Subjects, and he is as a Physician to cure their Maladies, and to remove Leprosies amongst them, and also to remove all fumes and smells, which may offend or be prejudicial to their health, as it appears by the several Writs in these several cases provided, and so if a man be not right in his Wits, the King is to have the Protection and Government of him, lest he being infirm, waist, or consume his Lands or Goods, and it is not sufficient for him that his Subjects live, but that they should live happily, and discharges not his Office, if his Subjects live a life, but if they live and flourish, and he hath care as well of their Bodies as of their Lands and Goods, for Health for the Body is as necessary as virtue to the mind, and the King H. 8. to express his extraordinary care of his Subjects made the said Act, in the third year of his Reign, which was the beginning of his Essence, to that purpose, and by the Common Law, any Physician which was allowed by the University might practise and exercise the said faculty within any place within England, without any dispensation, examination, or approbation of any, but after the making of the said Act made in the third year of King H. 8. none may practise, exercise, or occupy as Physician or Surgeon within theCity of London and seven miles of that, if he be not first examined, approved, and admitted by the Bishop of London, and the Dean of Paul's for the time being, calling to them, four Doctors of Physic or Surgeons, etc. And that no practiser may occupy or exercise the said faculty out of the said Precincts, if he be not first examined, approved, and admitted by the Bishop of the Diocese, or in his absence, by his Vicar general, every of them calling unto him such expert persons in the said faculty, as their discretions thinks convenient, and the reason of this difference as he conceived, was for that that in this City, and the said Precincts, the King and all his Council, and all the Judges and Sages of the Law, and divers other men of quality and condition, live and continue, and also the place is more subject unto Infection, and the Heir more pestiferous, and for that there is more necessity, that greater Care, diligence, and examination be made of those which practised here in London and the precincts aforesaid, then of those which practise in other places of the Realm, for in other places the People have better air, and use more exercise, and are not so subject to Infection, and for that there is no cause that such care should be used for them, for they are not in such danger, and in the Statute there is not any exception of the Universities nor of those which are Gradiats there, and for that they shall be tried by the said Act, and the Statute of 14 H. 8. chapter 5▪ Only excepts those which are Gradiats of Oxford or Cambridge which have accomplished all things for the form without any Grace, and if this Exception shall be intended to extend to others, than all the University shall be excepted by that, and such exception was too general; and over he said, that the Plaintiff gave absurd and contemptous answer, when he being cited before them, said that he would not be ruled nor directed by them (being such grave and searned men▪ & for that that he hath practised against the Statute he was worthily punished and committed, for it should be a vain Law if it did not provide punishment for them that offend against that, and Bracton saith, Nihil est habere Leges, si non sit un●s qui potest Leges tueri, and for this here are four grave and discreet men to defend and maintain the Law, and to punish all Offenders against that, according to the Statute, by Imprisonment of their Bodies and other reasonable ways, and the said four men have the search as well of those men, as of other Mediciners, and the Statute of 1 Marie provides that the Keepers of Prisons, shall receive all which committed by the said four grave and learned men, and though there be great ●are committed to them by the said Statute, and the said Letters Patents, yet there is a greater trust reposed in them then this, for we commit to them our lives, when we receive Physic of them, and that not without cause, for they are men of Gravity, learning, and Discretion, and for that they have power to make Laws, which is the Office of the Parliament, for those which are so learned may be trusted with any thing, and for the better making of these they have power to assemble all the Commons of their Corporation, and the King allows of that by his Letters Patents, for it is made by a Congregation of Wise, learned, and discreet men, and the Statute of 1 Marie inflicts punishment upon Contempts, and not for any other offences, and they held a Court, and so may commit as every other Court may for a contempt of common right, without act of Parliament, or Information, or other legal form of proceeding upon that, as it appears by 7 H. 6. for a contempt committed in a Leet, the Steward committed the Offender to Prison, and it was absurd to conceive that the Statute will allow of commitment, without cause, and it is a marvellous thing that when good Laws shall be made for our health and Wealth also, yet we will so pinch upon them, that we will not be tried by men of experience, practice, and Learning, but by the University, where a man may have his Degree by grace without merit, and so, for these reasons he concluded that this Action is not maintainable. Coke chief said, that the Cause which was pleaded for, that Coke. the Plaintiff was committed, was for that that he had exercised Physic within the City of London by the space of a Month, and did not very fitly answer, for which it was ordained by the Censors that he should pay a hundred shillings, and that he should forbear his practice, and that he did not forbear, and then being warned of that, and upon that being summoned to appear did not appear, and for that it was ordained, that he should be arrested, and that after he was summoned again; and then he appeared, and denied to pay the hundred shillings, and he said that he would practise, for he was a Doctor of Cambridge, and upon that it was ordained that he should be committed, till he should be delivered by the Doctors of the College, and upon this was the Demurrer joined, and in pleading the Plaintiff said, that he was a Doctor of Philosophy and Physic, upon which the Lord took occasion to remember a saying of Galen, that is, Vbi Philosohpia desinit, ibi medicina incipit, and he said the only question of this case depends not upon the payment of the said hundred shillings, but upon the words of the Letters patents of the King, and the said two Statutes, the words of which are, Concessimus eidem presidenti, etc. Quod nemo in dicta Civitate, aut per septem milliaria in circuita ejusdem exerceat dictam facultatem, nisi ad hoc, per dictum presidentem & communitatem seu sucscires, eorum qui pro tempore fuerunt, admissus sit, per ejusdem presidentis & Collegij titeras sigillo suo commui sigillat as sub paena centum solidorum pro quolibet mense quo non admissus eandem facultatem exercuit, dimidium inde nobis, & heredibus nostris & dimidium dicto presidenti & Collegio applicandum, & preteriá volumus & concedimus pro nobis, etc. Quod per presidentem & Collagium communitationem pro tempore epistentium, & eorum successores in perpetuum, quatuor singulis annis per ipsos eligantur, qui habeant supervisum, scrutinium, & correctionem & gubernationem omnium & sigulorum dictae Civitatis medicorum utentium facultate, medicinae in eadem Civitate, ac aliorum medicorum, fornisicorum quorumcunque facultatem illam medicinae, aliquo modo frequentantium & utensium infra eandem civitatem & suburbia ejusdem sibi septem milliarea in circuitu ejusdem Civitatis ae putationem eorundem pro delectis suis, in non bene exequendo, faciendo & utendo illa, nec non supervisum & scrutinium hujusmodi medicorum & eorum receptionem, per predictos medicos sive aliquem eorum hujusmodi legeis nostris pro eorum; Infirmitatibus curandis & suavandis, dandis imponendum & utendis quoties & quando opus fuerit, probo modo & utilitate eorundem legiorum nostrorum; Ita quod punitio hujusmodi medicorum utentium dicta facultate medicinae sic in premissis de linquentium, per Fines Amerciamenta, Imprisonamenta corporum suorum & per alas vias rationabiles & Congr●as exeqnantur, as it appears in Rastal Physicians 8018. 392. So that there are two distinct Clauses. The first, if any exercise the said Faculty by the space of a Month without admission by the Precedent, etc. shall sorfeit a hundred shillings for every Month be that good or ill, it is not material, the time is here only material, for if he exercise that for such a time, he shall sorfeit as aforesaid. The second clause is, that the Precedent, etc. Shall have Scrutinium Medicorum, etc. & punitionem eorum pro dilictis suis in non bene faciendo▪ utendo & exequend●, etc. And for that the Precedent and the College may commit any delinquent to Prison: And this he concluded upon the words of the Statute, and he agreed with Walmesley, that the King hath had extraordinary care of the health of the Subjects. Et Rex censetur habere omnes Artis in sermo pectoris, and he hath here pursued the Course of the best Physicians, that is, Removens & promovens, removens Improbos illos, qui nullis bonae conscientiae fiducia profitabantur & audaces, & promovens ad sanitatem: And for that the Physician ought to be profound, grave, discreet, grounded in learning, and sound Studied, and from him cometh the medicine, which is removens & promovens. And it is an old rule, that a man ought to take care, that he do not commit his Soul to a young Divine, his Body to a young Physician, and his Goods or other Estate to a young Lawyer, for in Juveni Theologo est Conscientiae detrimentum in Juveni Legislatori bursi detrimentum et in Juveni Medico Cimitorij incrementum, for in these cannot be the privity, discretion, and profound learning which is in the aged: And he denied that the College of Physicians is to be compared to the University, for it is subordinate to that, Cantabrigia est Academiae nostrae nobilissima totius Regni occulus, et sol ubi humanitas et doctrina simul fluant: But he said, when he names Cambridge he doth not exclude Oxford, but placeth them in equal Rank: But he would always name Cambridge first, for that was his Mother: And he saith that there is not any time, Pro non bene faciendo, utendo et exequendo for this, non suscipit Manus et Minus, for so a man may greviously offend in one day, and for that in such a case, his punishment shall be by Fines, amercements. Imprisonments of their Bodies and other ways, etc. But if practise well, though it be not an offence against the Letters Patents and the Statutes yet the punishment shall be but pecuniary, and shall not be Imprisoned, for if he offend the Body of a man, it is reason that his Body shall be punished, for Eodem modo quo quis delinquit, eodem punietur, but if a grave and learned Doctor or other, come and practise well in London by the space of three weeks and then departs, he is not punishable by the said College, though that they be without admission, for peradventure such a one is better acquainted with the nature and disposition of my Body, and for that more fit to cure any Malady in that then another which is admitted by the College, and he said that it was absurd to punish such a one, for he may practise in such manner in despite of the College, for all the Lords and Nobles of the Realm, which have their private Physicians, which have acquaintance with their Bodies, repair to this City, and to exclude those of using their advice, were a hard and absurd exposition, for the old verse is, Corporis auxilium medico committe sodali: And also he said that the said Precedent and College cannot commit any Physician, which exerciseth the said faculty without admission, for the space of a Month, nor bring their Action before themselves, nor levy that by any other way or means: But aught to have their Action or exhibit an Information upon the Statute, as it appears by the Book of Entries, for they ●ught to pursue their power which is given to them by the Statute, for otherwise the penalty being given, the one Moiety to them, and the other to the King, they shall be Judges in Propriacausa, and shall be Summoners, Sheriffs, Judges, and parties also; which is absurd▪ for if the King grant to one by his Letters Patents under the great Seal, that he may hold Plea, although he be party, and if the King doth not appoint another Judge, than the Grantee which is party, the Grant is void, though that it be confirmed by Parliament, as it appears by 8. H. 6. 44. Ed. 3. The Abbot of Readins Case, for it is said by Herle in 8. Ed. 3. 30. Tregores Case, that if any Statutes, are made against Law and Right, and so are these, which makes any man Judge in his own cause, and so in 27. H. 6. Fitz. Annuity 41. that the Statute of Carlisle will that the order of Cistertians and Augustine's, which have Covent and Common Seal, that the Common Seal shall be in keeping of the Prior, which is under the Abbot, and four others which are the most Sages of the house, and that any Deed sealed with the Common Seal which is not so in keeping shall be void, and the opinion of the Court that this is a void Statute, for it is impertinent to be observed, being the Seal in their keeping, the Abbot cannot seal any thing with it, and when that it is in the hands of the Abbot, it is out of their keeping, ipso facto: And if the Statute shall be observed, every common Seal shall be defeated by one simple surmise, which cannot be tried, and for that the Statute was adjudged void, and repugnant: And so the Statute of Gloucester which gives Cessavit after Cesser by two years to be brought by the Lessor himself, was a good and equitable Statute: But the Statute of Westminster 2. chap. 3. which gives Cessavit to the Heir for Cesser in time of his Ancester, and that, that was Judged an unreasonable Statute in 33. Ed. 3. for that, that the Heir cannot have the arrearages due in the time of his Father, according to the Statute of Gloucester, and for that it shall be void: And also the Physicians of the College, could not punish any by Fine and also by Imprisonment, for no man ought to be twice punished for one offence, and the Statute of 1. Mariae doth not give any power to them to commit for any offence which was no offence within the first Statutes, and for that he ought not to be committed by the said Statute of 1. Mariae: But admitting that they may commit, yet they have mistaken it, for they demand the whole hundred shillings, and one half of that belongs to the King: And also they ought to commit him forthwith, as well as Auditors which have Authority by Parliament, to commit him which is found in arrearages: But if he do not commit him forthwith, they cannot commit him afterward, as it appears by 27. H. 6. 9 So two Justices of the peace may view a force and make a Record of that, and commit the offenders to Prison, but this aught to be in Flagranti Oriente: And if he do not commit those immediately upon the view, he cannot commit them afterwards, and the Physicians have no Court, but if they have, yet they ought to make a Record of their commitment, for so was every Court of Justice: But they have not made any Record of that: And Auditors and Justices of Peace, aught to make Records, as it appears by the Book of Entries: So that admitting that they may commit, yet they ought to do it forthwith, but in this case they cannot commit till the party shall be delivered by them, for this is against Law and Justice; and no Subject may do it, but till he be delivered by due course of Law, for the commitment is not absolute, but the cause of that is traversable, and for that aught to justify for special cause, for if the Bishop returns that he refuses a Clerk, for that he is Schismaticus Inveteratus, this is not good, but they ought to return the particular matter: So that the Court may adjudge of that: Though it be a matter of Divinity and out of their Science, yet they by conference may be informed of it, and so of physic: And they cannot make any new Laws, but such only which are for the better government of the old; and also he said plainly, that it appears by the Statute of 1. Marie: That the former Statutes shall not be taken by equity, for by these the Precedent and Commons have power to commit a Delinquent to Prison, and this shall be intended, if they shall be taken by equity, that every Gaoler ought to receive him which is so committed: But when it is provided by 1. Marry, specially that every Gaoler shall receive such offenders: That by this appears, that the former statute shall not be taken by equity: And so he concluded, that Judgement shall be entered for the Plaintiff, which was done accordingly. Trinity 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. IN Debt upon escape brought by John Guy an Attorney of the Privilege. Common Bench, by an Attachment of privilege against Sir George Reynell Kt. Deputy Marshal of the Prison of the King's Bench, the Defendant pleads his privilege, that is, that he was Deputy Martial, and he ought not to be sued in other Court, then in the King's Bench, according to the ancient Custom, and Jurisdiction of the said Court, upon which the Plaintiff demurred, and upon argument of both parties, it was adjudged that the Defendant should not have his Privilege, and the principal reason was, for that the Plaintiff was an Attorney, and aught to have his privilege in the Common Bench, and for that that this Court was first possessed of the Suit, it shall not be stayed, because of the Privilege of the Defendant in another Court, see 9 Ed. 4. 53. the last case, where it is agreed, that one of the Courts may send Supersedeas to another, for there it is agreed that if an Accountant in the Exchequer be sued in the Common Bench, he shall send Supersedeas to them to surcease, and if he be sued in the King's Bench, these of the Exchequer will show the Record that he is accountable, for they cannot make Supersedeas to the King, and the Plea is there held Coram Rege, etc. And he shall be dismissed, for he may be sued in the Exchequer; and also 10 Ed. 4. 4. b. It appears that if one which hath cause to have privilege in the Common Bench sue an Attachment, as our case is, against a Clerk of the King's Bench, such Writ shall not be allowed, for that that the Common Bench was first seized of the Plea, by their Plea, and the Privilege of the common Bench is as ancient as the Privilege of the King's Bench, and one Court is as ancient as the other, for every of them is before time of memory, and it is by prescription. Walmesley said, that the Possessory shall be preferred, Quia melior est conditio possidentis, but he agreed that if the privilege of one Court be not so ancient as the other, than the most ancient shall be preferred, and it was agreed that though there be Difference in respect of parties, or though that the attendance of one be of more necessity than the other, as it was objected in this Case; that the Defendant ought to attend, otherwise he shall lose his office; to that it was answered, and resolved that the cause of the Suit in the Common Bench was voluntary, and the attendance of the Attorney or Clark more necessary, then of the Defendant, for he may exercise his Office by a Deputy, but a Clerk or an Attorney cannot, for their office is Opus Laboris, But the Office of the Defendant is only Opus Labrum, and he is to deal with Gyves and Irons and such like, so that in this Case the Office and place of a Clerk or Attorney is to be preferred before the Office of Martial, but admitting that one Inferior Officer of the Common Bench, which is to have his privilege sue a superior Officer of the King's Bench which is also to have his Privilege there, this shall not make any difference: And so was the opinion of all the Court, and upon this, Judgement was given that the Defendant should answer over. Trinity 7. Jacobi 1609. in the Common Bench. IN Assize between William Parson alias Chester Plaintiff, against Assize. Thomas Knight alias Rogue Cross tenant for the office of one of the Heralds called Chester, the Recognitors of the Assize had view at a View. Funeral at Westminster, where the Officer ought to attend, and it was objected that this was no good view, for it was not in any place certain, where the Recognitors may put the Demandant in Possession, and the Disseisin was alleged to be at Westminster at the said Funeral, and it seems that the view was good, but admitting that it were not good. It seems to Coke chief Justice, that the Assize in this case well lies without view, for the Office is universal, as Coke. the Office of the Clerk of the Market, and an Assize for Tithes, and the Office of the Tennis Court, these are universal, and not annexed to any place, and for that an Assize well lies for them without view, but for an Office in the Common Bench, view may well be made in the Court, for the Court is always held in a certain place, but for an Office in the King's Bench, Quere, Inquit Coke, for this aught to follow the Court of the King by the Statute of Articuli Cleri, Chapter 3. But Walmesley Justice, that this Court cannot be sitting in Clouds, Walmesley. but in some place or other, and for that the view ought to be here made, and then Coke said, by the same reason the Office of the Herald cannot be exercised in the Clouds, but at Funerals, and by this the view ought to be made there also, but the Opinion of all the Court was, that the view was well made: the Tenant in Assize also challenged divers of the Recognitors, for that they were of a Challenge. former Jury upon the same question, and this was agreed to be a principal cause of challenge, but the Court would not allow of that without showing the Record, but allowed that to be a cause of challenge for favour, and for that they were tried by their Companions, being sworn to speak the Truth, and they were found to be indifferent, and for Seisin for the Demandant in the Assize, it was showed that divers Fees were due to the said Office, as seven pound for every day that he attended upon the King's person, and for the Dubbing of every Knight, and that divers of those Fees were received (and this office being litigious) were delivered to be detained in Deposito, and to be delivered to him which was Officer, and the plaintiff brought an Action by the name of Chester as Officer and recovered those Fees, and this was resolved good Seisin, and also that Seisin after the grant of the Office, and before the investing of the Patentee by the Marshal was good, for the Investing was but a ceremony, it was also resolved that where an office extends to all the parts of England, and that here an Assize doth not lie in any County, though that the dissesin were made in one County, but the Assize be borough for the profit of the office in one County and not for the office itself, 43. Ed. 3. Feoffments and Deeds: That by Grant of the profits of a Mill and Livery, the Mill itself passes, so that taking of the profits is dissesin of the office, also it was objected that the Demandant was no officer, for though that he hath a Patent of it, yet he was not Invested nor Installed in the office, which appears to the Marshal, and for that he was no Officer, and so hath no cause to have Action: And that this is an office which is incident and annexed to the office of Earl Martial, and though that he be not Earl Martial, yet there are Commissioners have his power and authority, and for that the Investing and Instalment of the Plaintiff in the said office appears to the said Commissioners; but it was resolved clearly by all the Justices, that the Demandant was Officer by the Kings Grant, without any Installation or Investing, and that this without that, all the Fees and Profits of the office appertaining to him, and that the Investing and Installation, was but a ceremony, in the same manner as if the King hath a Donative, and gives that to another, the Donee shall be in actual possession by the gift, without any Induction or other ceremony: But admitting that the office were annexed to the office of Earl Martial, than it was agreed that the Commissioners cannot give it, as the chief Justice of the Common ●ench hath divers offices appertaining to his place, and he may dispose of them; But if he die, the King in time of vacancy, nor the most ancient Judges cannot give or dispose of any of them being void, as it appears by Serrogates Case, Eliz. Dyer: And so the chief Justice is made, and always hath been made by Patent, and so are the other Justices, and for that they cannot be made by Commissioners, and so the chief Justice of England, hath all times been made by Writ, and for that cannot be made by Patent, nor by Commission: And so in the case at the Bar, though that the Commissioners have the power and authority of the Earl Martial, yet they are not Earl Martial, it was also objected that the Fees were not due to the Plaintiff, for that he did not attend: But to that it was answered and resolved, that the Fees were due to the office, and for that non attendance of the office, was no forfeiture of the Fees: And upon these resolutions the Recognitors found for the Demandant, according to the direction of the Court. Trinity 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the King's Bench. Godsall. GOD'S ALICE and his Wife: The Proclamations of the Fine Error in a Fine. were well and duly entered in the Original remaining with the Chirographer: But in the Transcript with the Custos brevium was error, and it seemeth that this notwithstanding the Fine was good, but the Transcript was amended. Trinity 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the King's Bench The Town of Berwick. THE King which now is, by his Letters Patents, Incorporated Barwick. the Mayor, Bailiffs, and Burgesses of Berwick, and granted to them the execution of the Return of all Writs: And after Return of Writs. a Writ of Extendi facias was directed to them, and they made no return of that, and upon this was the question, if that shall be executed by them, or by the Sheriff of Northumberland: And it seemed to nichols Serjeant, that argued for the Plaintiff in the extent that desired execution and the return of that, that they ought to make execution and return, for it seems to him that this was English, and that this appears by the Act of Parliament, by which the Incorporation was confirmed, and so it appears also by the Letters Patents of the King, by which the Incorporation is made, for if it were not English, neither the Letters Patents nor the Act of Parliament are sufficient to make Incorporation of that, and also they certified Burgesses to the Parliament of England: And the King's Bench sent Habeas Corpus to it, and for the not return of that inflicted a Fine upon the Corporation: See 21. Ed. 3. 49, and 1. Ed. 4, 10. But Hutton Serjeant seemed to the contrary, and that they ought not to make execution, for he said it is a part of Scotland, and not part of England, and it was conquered from that, and it was a Sherifwicke, and hath the same privileges of ancient times, which they now have by their new Grant: See 24 Ed. 1. and 2. Ed. 2. Obligation, etc. That one Obligation dated there shall not be tried in England, and also that it is not within the County of Northumberland, nor part of it, nor the Sheriff of Northumberland cannot meddle in it, see 2. H. 7. 31. 26. H. 6. 23. and it is adjourned. It seems that Jacob and James are all one name, for Jacobus is-Latine Idemptitas nominis. for them both, but Walmesley conceived that if he be Christened Jacob, otherwise it is, as if one be Christened Jacob, and another James, than they are not oneself same name. Note that Coke chief Justices said, that if Commissioners by force Fine. of Dedimus potestatem, take a Fine of an Infant▪ that they are Fynable Infant. and ransomable to the value of their Lands, and that this shall be sued in the Star chamber. Trinity 7. Jacobi, 1609 In the Common Bench. Robinson. Robinsons' Case: A man devises Lands to his Wife for life, Tail. the remainder to his Son, and if his Son dies without Issue, not having a Son, that then it should remain over, and it seemed that this it a good Estate tail, and it was adjudged accordingly. If a man makes a Lease for three years, or such a small Term, Maintenance. to his Son or Servant to try an Ejectione Firm, or if it be made to another Inferion by a Superior, which cannot countenance the Suit, it shall not be intended Maintenance, nor buying of Titles, which shall be punished. Trinity 7 Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. NOte, an Attorney of the Common Bench was cited before the Habeas Corpus. High Commission and committed to the Fleet, for that he would not swear upon Articles by the Commissioners ministered, and Habeas Prohibition. Corpus was awarded to deliver him, and a Prohibition to the Court of high Commission, see 1. and 2. Eliz. Scroggs case 175 b. Dyer, and there in Margery Hynds case, who 18 Eliz. Noluit jurdre coram Justiciarijs Ecclesiasticis super articulos pro usura, and Leyes case 9 and 10. Eliz. Michaelmas Rot. 1596. and it is written in the Book of the Lord Dyer but not printed, the case was, Ley being an Attorney of the Common Bench was committed to the Fleet, by the Bishop of London and two others of the high Commissioners Ecclesiastical, for that that he was present at a Mass, and he refused to be examined upon his oath upon Articles administered by the high Commissioners, see also 5▪ Edw. 4. Keysers' case upon the statute of 2. H. 4. chapt. Which gives authority to the Archbishop to imprison, etc. And see the Register fol. 36. b. The form of an Attachment against the Bishop, which cited Aliquos Laicos, ad aliquas cognitiones faciendas, vel sacramentum prestandos nisi in casibus matrionalibus & Testimeutarijs, etc. But it was urged that the Judges of the Common Law, shall not have the exposition of the statute of 1. Eliz. because it was an Ecclesiastical Law, but it was resolved by all the Justices, that it belongeth to the Judges of the Common Law to expound this, for the Statute was temporal merely, and with this 4. Ed. 4. 37. b. c. upon the Statute of 5 H. 5. chapt. Which provides, Quod libellus sit deliberatus parti in casu, ubi per legem deliberandus est, & hoc sine difficultate, And though that this Act be mere spiritual, yet the Exposition of that lies open to the common Law. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Tench. Estcourt and Harrington IN Trespass upon the Case between George Estcourt Plaintiff, and Trespass for Slander. Sir James Harrington Knight Defendant, for that, that the Defendant said that the Plaintiff was a forsworn and perjured man, which the Defendant justified, for that that the Plaintiff exhibited and English Bill, in the Marches of Wales, before the Precedent and Council there, and in the same suit made an Affidavit, upon which an Injunction was granted for the possession of Land in question between them, for the said Plaintiff, and that the said Affidavit was false, and the Plaintiff hath committed perjury in that, and this was allowed good Justification, the Jury was of the Counties of Gloucester and Salop, and the words of the Distringas were Party Jury of two Counties. ordinary till towards the end, and that was Ad faciendam quendam Juratum simul cum aliis Juratoribus comitatus nostri Salop, and this was the Distringas directed to the Sheriff of Gloucester, and so Mutatis mutandis in the Distringas directed to the Sheriff of Salop; and note that the Jurors were sworn one of one County and another of another County, Alternis vicibus, and 24. were returned of every County. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. Simpson and Waters. SYmpson against Waters in an Action of Trespass upon the case for Action upon the Case for Slander. Slander, that is, thou art drunk, and I never held up my hand at the Bar, as thou hast done, and agreed that an Action doth not lie for these Words, for peradventure he intended buttery Barr, And by Foster Justice, if he had said for Felony, that the Action doth not lie, for many honest men are arraigned, but if he saith he was detected Action doth not lie, but if he saith he was convicted for Perjury Action lieth as seemed to him. In Trespass the Original bore Teste 3. january 6. jacobi and in the Count the Trespass is supposed 20 january 6. jacobi, which is after Error. the Teste of the Original, and agreed that this shall not be aided by the Statute o● Jeofailes, but if it were original otherwise it is. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench, Hare and Savill. IN Covenant by John Hare and Hugh Hare against John Savill, the Plaintiffs made a Lease for years to the Defendant, rendering Covenant for Rent. Rend at two Feasts, or within ten days after every of those, at the Temple Church, and the Defendant covenanted to pay the Rent according to the reservation, and for the non payment these Plaintiffs brought an Action of Covenant, to which the Defendant pleads levied by distress, and upon this the Plaintiffs demurred, and adjudged with the Plaintiffs accordingly, for that the Defendant for his Plea, hath confessed that it was not paid according to the reservation, for the Plaintiffs cannot distrain, if it were not behind after the day, and it was agreed, that where a Rent is reserved to be paid at such a Feast or within twenty days, that the Lessee in this case shall have Election if he will pay that at the Feast; or at the end of twenty days, for he is the first Actor, and the Lessor cannot distrain nor have action of Debt, till the twenty days be past, and it was agreed, that the Covenant shall not alter the nature of the Rent, but that nothing behind, or payment at the day, were good Pleas. Defendant in Debt pleads to the Law, and was ready at the Bar Continuance. to wage his Law; and it was resolved by the Judges upon conference with the Prothonotories that it might be continued, but the Court would advise. IN Action upon the Case upon Assumpsit, the Plaintiff counts, that divers Goods were delivered to him in pawn, and that in consideration Assumpsit. Consideration. that he should deliver them to the Defendant, the Defendant assumed and promised to pay to him the Debt for which the Goods were pawned, and it was objected that the Count was not good, for that it doth not contain the certainty of the Goods which were pawned; and delivered to the Defendant, but to that this difference was agreed, that when Goods are to be recovered and Damages for them, and are in demand, the certainty of the goods ought to appear in particular, as if a man pleads, that he was never Executor, nor administered as Executor, it is a good Plea, for the Plaintiff that he administered Diversa bona in such a place, so if he plead that he hath Diversa bona natabilia in other Diocese, it is good i● both cases without showing what goods in certain, see 11. H. 7. 29. Ed 3. Also it was objected that the consideration was not sufficient, and then it shall be Nudum pactum ex quo non oritur actio, for the Plaintiff hath not any Interest in the Goods, and they were delivered him to keep, and not to deliver over, so that the delivery was vicious, and for that it shall be no good consideration, and of this opinion was Foster Justice: But Coke, Wraburton, Danyell, and Walmesley being absent, it seems that the condition was good, as if a man in consideration that another will go to Westminster, or cure such a poor man, or marry a poor Virgin, assume to pay to him a sum of money: And though this consideration were not valuable, yet it seems good: And he that pawned hath a property in the goods, and may have them again. In debt against three Executors, two of them are outlawed, and the third pleads and Verdict against him, and it was resolved that the Debt against Executors. Judgement shall be against all by the Statute of 9 Ed. 3. for they all are but one Executor, and the Cost shall be against him which pleads, if the others confess or suffer Judgement by default: And there shall be but one Judgement and not divers, see 17 Ed. 3. 45. b. 11 H. 6. Upon a Venire Facias awarded, the Sheriff returns but 21. and Error. Ve. fa. & hab. Carpus. the Habeas Corpora was against 21. only, and this was also returned, and upon that ten appeared, and upon this Tales was awarded, and trial had, and but ten of the principal Pannell sworn: And this was Error, but if twelve of the principal Pannell had appeared and served, it seems that it shall not be error, for so it was resolved in Graduers case, where twenty three were returned, but twelve appeared and tried the Issue, and this was resolved to be good and no error. Michaelmas 7, Jacobi, 1609. In the common Bench. Buckmer against Sawyer. A Man seized▪ of Land in Gaelvelkind hath Issue three Daughters, that is, A. B. and C. deviseth all his Land to A. in tail, the remainder of one half to B. in tail, the remainder of the other Formedon in Remainder. half to C. in tail, and if B. died without Issue, the remainder of her Moiety to C. and her Heirs, and if C. died without Issue, the remainder of her Moiety to B. and her Heirs, the Devisor dies A. and B. dies: And the question was, if C. shall have a Formedon in remainder only, or several Formedons for this Land: And it seemed to all the Justices, that one Formedon lieth well for all, for that, that it was by oneself same conveyance, though that the Estate come by several deaths, and this Action was to be brought by the Heir of C. after the death of C. See the three and four Phil. and Mary Dyer. Note that after appearance of a Jury, and after that divers of Challenge. them were sworn, others were challenged, so that it could not be taken by reason of default of Jurors: But a new Distringas awarded, and at the day of the return of that, these which were sworn before appeared, and then were challenged: But no challenge shall be allowed, for that, that they were sworn before, if it be not of after time to the first appearance. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609: In the Common Bench. Bailiff against Sir Henry Clare Partition. BAILIFF against Sir Henry Clare, the Writ was of two parts, without saying in three parts to be divided: And it seemed to nichols Sergeant which moved this, that it was not good, but error: But the opinion of the Court was that it was good: See 17. Ed. 3. 44. 19 Ed. 3, brief 244. 17. Assize with this difference, that if there are but three parts and two are demanded, there it is good without saying in three parts to be divided, for when parts are demanded it is intended, all the parts but one, and that it is only one which remains, see the Register fol. 16. 12. Assize: And it was adjudged in the King's Bench in the case of one Jordan, that demand of two parts where there are but three parts is good, see 39 H. 6. Salford against Hurlston in Formedon which demanded two parts where there is but three, and so of three parts where there is but four, it is good without saying, in three or four parts, to be divided: But if a man grant his part, this shall be intended the half, for Appellatio partis dimidium partis contenetur, and a Writ of Covenant ought to be of two parts without saying in three parts to be divided, for so is the form, and if in such case in three parts to be divided be inserted, the Writ shall abate, see Thelwell in his digest of Writs, 146. and by Coke if a man bring Ejectione Firm for ten Acres, and by evidence it appears that he hath but the half Ex vigore Juris it shall not be good, but he said he would submit his opinion, to the Judgement of ancient Judges of the Law which have often time used the contrary. Note that the Husband may avoid his Deed, that he hath Sealed Dures. by the duresse of Imprisonment of his Wife or Son: But not of his Servant, and so Mayor and Commonalty may avoid a Deed sealed by duresse of Imprisonment of the Mayor, for it is Idemptity of person, between the Husband and the Wife: See 21. Ed. 4. and 7. Ed. 4. A man may avoid Se●sin for payment of Rent by coersion of distress but not his Deed. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. pain and Mutton. IN an Action upon the case by pain against Mutton, the plaintiff Action upon the case for slander. counts that the Defendant called him Sorcerer and Inchantor: And agreed by all the Justices that Action doth not lie, for Sorcerer and Inchantor are those which deal with charms, or turning of Books, as Virgil saith, Carminibus Circes socios mutavit ulissis, which is intended Charms and Enchantments, and Conjuration is of Con et nico, that is to compel the Devil to appear, as it seems to them against his will, but which is that to which the Devil appears voluntarily and that is a more greater offence than Sorcery or Enchantment, which was adjudged that Action doth not lie for calling a man Witch, and said that he bewitched his Wear that he could not take any Fishes: Dodridge the King's Sergeant saith that an Action lieth for calling a woman, gouty pockye Whore, and said that the Pox had eaten the bottom of her Belly out, and so it was adjudged that it lieth well for these words, get thee home to thy pokey Wife the Pox hath eaten off her Nose: But for the Pox generally Action doth not lie: But if he saith that he was laid of the Pox, than Action well lieth, for than it shall be intended the great Pox. Note that in Prohibition and Replevin, the Defendant may have nisi prius by Proviso without default of the Defendant, for he himself Prohibition. is re vera Defendant, and there are two Actors, that is the Plaintiff and Defendant: But the Court appointed that Precedents should be searched, the Plaintiff is not bound to prosecute Cum Effectu in this Court, as he is in the King's Bench: And it was agreed that the manner of Pleading was agreement, as for Returno Habendo, in the Replevin and Pro consultatione habenda in the Prohibition. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench Miller and Francis. miller Plaintiff in Replevin against Thomas Francis, the Will. case was, Richard Francis was seized of Land held in Socage, Devise. and deviseth that to John his eldest Son for a hundred years, the Remainder to Thomas his second Sonn for his life, and made his four other youngest Sons his Executors, and after made a Feoffment to the said uses, the Remainder to the said John his eldest Son in tail; Proviso that if the said John disturbed the Executors of taking his Goods in his House, that then the said use and uses limited to the said John Francis and his Heirs shall cease, and after declared that his intent was, that in all other points his Will should be in his force, and it was pleaded that john did not suffer the said Executors to take the said Goods in the said House, and if his Estate for years, or in tail, or Fee-simple shall cease was the question, and it seemed to the Judges that the Condition shall not be Idle; but shall have hi● operation, as it appears by Hill and Granges case and the Lord Barkleyes' Case in the Comment. and the Lord Cheneyes Case, Coke, And it seems also, that it shall not be referred to Estate in Fee simple, for than it shall be void, and it shall not be referred to a Term, for it is limited to an Estate limited to the said john and his Heirs, but it seemeth it shall be referred to an Estate tail only, as it is 2 and 3. P. and Mary Dyer 127. 55. 11 H. 7. 6. But the case was adjudged upon one point in the Pleading, for it was not pleaded that john Francis had notice of the Devise, nor that he had made any actual disturbance, and peradventure he entered as Heir and had no notice of the Condition, and when the Executors came to demand the Goods which were belonging to the Heir, and annexed to the House, and he said that it doth not appear to them to prove that an express notice was given in this case, the Books of 43 Assize where a man was attaint and after was restored by Parliament, and a Writ being directed to the Esceator, the Escheator returns, that he was disturbed, and upon Scire facias the disturber pleads, that he had no notice of the said act of restitution, and for this he was excused of Disturbance: And see 35. H. 6. Barr, 162. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Waggoner against Fish. WAGGONER brought a Writ of Privilege, supposing Privilege. Postea 218. that he had a suit depending here in the Common Bench, which was directed to the Mayor and Sheriffs of London, and upon the return it appears, that 4. jacobi an Act of Common Council was made that none should be retailer of any Goods within the same City, upon a certain pain, and that the Chamberlain of the said City for the time being, may sue for the said penalty to the use of the said City, at any of the Courts within the said City, and that the Defendant hath retailed Candles, and held a shop within the said City being a stranger, and against the said Act, and for the said penalty, the Chamberlain hath brought an Action of Debt within the said City, according to the said Act of Common Council, and upon the return it appears, that by their Custom the Mayor and Aldermen with the Assent of the Commoners of the said City, may make By-Laws for the Government of the said City, and that the said custom, and all other their Customs, were confirmed by Act of Parliament, and upon this it seems, that though there be not remedy given, for this penalty in another place then in London, that yet if it be against Law he shall not be remanded, and if a Corporation hath power to make By-Laws, that shall be intended for the Government of their ancient Customs only, and not to make new Laws, see 2 Ed. 3 john De Brittens Case, but it seems if this By-Law be for the Benefit of the Commonwealth, that it shall be good, otherwise not, and it was Adjourned, see Hillary next ensuing, for than it was adjudged, that he shall not be remanded, see afterward Michaelmas 7. jacobi, It was adjudged. NOte that this Term was adjourned until the Month of Michaelmas Adjournment of Term by reason of the Plague, and upon the adjournment this ensued, and was moved by Yeluerton and Crook at the Bar, and the Case was this. Michaelmas 7. jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. POynes being an Infant levies a Fine, and in Trinity Term last passed brought his writ of Error in the King's Bench, and assigned for Infant levies Fine brings Error Error, that at the time of the Fine levied was, and yet is within age, and prayed that he be inspected, and insomuch that he had not his proofs there, he was not inspected but Dies datus est usqu● Octabis Michaelis Proximas, at which time came the said Poynes the day which was wont to be the day of the Essoyn, and prayed Justice Crook (which was there to adjourn the Term) to inspect him; and to take his proofs, who did inspect him accordingly, De bene esse, and now before the Month of Michaelmas the Infant came of full age, and if this inspection were well taken, and what authority the Judge had upon that day to adjourn, was the question. And Fleming chief Justice said, that the day of Essoyn is a day in Term, and that the Court was full though there was but one Judge, and if the inspection had been the day of the Essoyn, and before the fourth of the Post, he had come of full age, this shall be very good, but the doubt rose as the case is, if upon the day of Adjournment the Judge had power to do any thing but to adjourn the Term, and for that it was appointed to be argued, and for the Argument of that, Quere of my Author Lane. Michaelmas 7. jacobi 1609 In the Common Bench. Rivet Plaintiff, Down Defendant. IN an action upon the case upon an Assumpsit, the case appears to be this, Copyholder makes a lease for a year according to the custom of the Manor the Lord distrains the Farmer of the Copyholder for his Rent, and the Copyholder having notice of that, comes to the Lord, and assumes that in consideration, that the Lord should relinquish his Suit against his Farmer, touching the same distress he would pay the Rent by such a day, the Lord delivers the Distress, and for default of payment at the day, brings an Action upon the case, and upon Non Assumpsit pleaded, Verdict passed for the Plaintif: And Barker Sergeant came and moved in arrest of Judgement. First that a man cannot distrayn a Copyholder but he ought to seize, but William's Justice and others to the contrary; and by him if a man makes a Lease at will Rendering Rend he may distrain for this Rent, 9 H. 7. 3. The case of Rescous. Secondly, He moved that when the Lord distrains, that now the Tenant hath cause of Action, that is Replevin, and for that it cannot be said Sectam suam, and so the consideration fails, but all the Court against that, and that this was a good consideration, and by Fleming chief Justice, Distress is an Action in itself, because this is the cause of a Replevin, and when the Tenant brings his Replevin and the Lord avows, now is the Lord an Actor, and so it is secta sua, and by him secta is not only an Action hanging, but that which is cause of an Action, And Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the common Bench. Action upon the Case. Fleming and Jales. ACTIONE upon the Case for these words: Thou hast Action upon the Case. stolen my Goods, and I will have thy neck, and maintainable. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. Ayres Case. ACTION upon the Case for these words; Ayer is an arrant Thief, and hath stolen divers Apple Tres out of J. S. Garden, and the Action well maintainable, otherwise if he had said, for he hath stolen, etc. for than it should not be Felony to steal Trees, and the word (For) shows the reason why he called him Thief, but the word (And) not. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Bryan Chamberlains Case against Goldsmith. IN Debt upon an Obligation, in which the under Sheriff was bound to the Sheriff, for the performing of divers Covenants Debt for Obligation. contained in an Indenture made between them for the exercising of the said Office, and the Plaintiff assigned breach of Cevenant, by which the under Sheriff hath Covenanted, that he would not execute any process of execution without special warrant and assent of the Sheriff himself: And the sole question was, if this Covenant be a good and lawful Covenant or not, and it was argued by Hutton Sergeant for the Defendant, that counted that the Sheriff is a public Officer, and may execute the office by himself, Hutton. yet when he hath made an under Sheriff, he hath absolute authority also, and it is not like to private authority, but it is as if a man make an Executor, provided that he shall not administer, his debts above the value of forty pound: And as if an Obligation with Condition, that if an Obligor shall keep the Obligee without damages for four Beefs taken in Withernam, that the Obligation shall be void, or as if a man takes an Obligation of his Prentice, with Condition that he shall not use his Trade within five years, or within ten miles of such a place, or as a Steward takes an Obligation of another man with Condition that he shall not sue in other place but where he is Steward, or in the Common Bench, this abridges the subject of his right, and that the under Sheriff is a public officer and mentioned in many Statutes, though he shall not be an Attorney the same year in which he is under Sheriff: And the Statute of 23. H. 8. restrains the under Sheriff, that he shall not let any prisoners to Bail, but in the same manner as is contained in the Statute, and further he said, that all Obligations which have Impossible conditions are good, and the Condition void, but if the Condition be against Law, the Obligation and Condition also is void: And so he concluded that the under Sheriff is a public Officer, and that his office cannot be apportioned, and that the Condition was performing of a Covenant which was against Law and void, and so by consequence the Obligation void: And so prayed Judgement for the Defendant: And for the Plaintiff is was argued by Dodridge Sergeant of the Dodridge. King, that the Obligation is good and not void: And he said that there are two Officers to all the Courts of the King, which are to execute all Writs, and that these Officers are Sheriff and Bishop, and the Law doth not take any notice of under Sheriff, or Warden of spirituallties, for the Sheriff himself shall be amerced and not the under Sheriff, which is but his substitute, and it appears by 3. H. 7. 2. b. That all Writs shall be directed to the Coroner, and by him aught to be executed, and 10. H. 4. 42. The Sheriff was merced for an Arrest made by a Bailiff of a franchise, and and though that the Warden of Westminster Hall is an Officer to the King's Courts to some purpose, yet no Writ shall be directed to him, as it appears by 8 Ed. 4. 6. Also he agreed that the power of the Sheriff is double, that is Ministerial and Juditiall, and some times he executes both together, as in Redisseisin, for of that he is Judge and also is Minister to the Court of the King, and yet he is but one man, for the Law doth not take any notice of under Sheriff, nor intends, that he shall supply any of these Offices, for the under Sheriff is but servant to the Sheriff, and to execute his Ministerial power only, and if it be so, he may limit his Authority at his pleasure: And if the Sheriff make a false return, or otherwise retard, or make an uncertain return, he himself shall be punished by Action, for the Law requires knowledge and intelligence of the Sheriff, and the ancient Statutes made in the old time, make mention of Sergeants at Mace, and yet they make not any mention of under Sheriff, which is but servant. And he agreed that an Obligation taken with Condition, against Law is void, but he said that this is not against Law, for the under Sheriff is a person of whom the Court doth not take any notice, for he is but servant of the Sheriff, and for this case, and removable at his pleasure, and he may exercise his office by himself when he pleases, and also he argued that the authority which may be totally countermanded, may be countermanded in part, and that the under Sheriff hath Derivata potestas, quae semper talis est qualis committitur: And by 35. H. 6. A man may make two Executors, one for his Goods in Middlesex, and the other to administer the Goods in London, and this is good between them: But not against a stranger, for he ought to sue them both, and he shall not be prejudiced by that, and so 32, H, 8. Brook Executor, 155. A man made two Executors Proviso that one should not administer in the life of the other, and 36, H. 8. 61. Feoffment and Letter of Attorney to make Livery to three or to any of them, Livery cannot be made to two, and also he said that there is no difference between power derived from a private person, and power derived from the public, when this power comes to execution: And admitting that the Sheriff may limit the authority of his under Sheriff for a time, as it seems that he may, then of this it follows, that he may always abridge and apportion his authority: And he agreed that when an under Sheriff is made, divers Statutes have been made to punish him if he offend: But the Sheriff is not compellable to make under Sheriff: And as to the Obligation, that if an execution be delivered to the under Sheriff, against one which is in his presence, that he ought to execute it, he saith that the Law is not so, for the party ought to deliver the execution to the Sheriff himself, for it doth not appear that he hath an under Sheriff: if he have received a Writ of discharge or not: And also the Office of the Sheriff is of charge to the King and to the Common Wealth, and the execution of Writs may be prejudical and penal to the Sheriff himself: And for that he may well provide, that he shall have notice of every execution which are most Penal: And also in all the Indenture now made, he doth not constitute him to be his under Sheriff, but only for to execute the Office, and for these reasons he seemed the Obligation is good, and demands Judgement for the Plaintiff: But it seems to all the Court, that Court. the Covenant is void, and so by consequence the Obligation, as to the performance of that void, but good to the performance of all other Covenants: And Coke chief Justice said, that the Sheriff at the Common Law was elligible as the Coronor is, and then by the death of the King his Office was not determined, and also it is an entire Office, and though the King may countermand his Grant of that, entirely, yet he cannot that countermand by parcels, and also that the under Sheriff hath Office which is entire, and cannot be granted by parcels, and this Covenant will be a means to nourish bribery and extortion, for the Sheriff himself shall have all the benefit, and the under Sheriff all the pain, for he is visible, the under Sheriff and all the Subjects of the King will repair to him, and the private contracts between the Sheriff and him are invisible, of which none can have knowledge but themselves. And Warburton said; that in debt upon escape, etc. are against the Sheriff of Nottingham, he pleaded Nihil debet, and gives in evidence, that the Bailiff which made the Arrest, was made upon condition, that he should not meddle with such executions, without special warrant of the Sheriff himself, and his consent, (but it was resolved (this notwithstanding) that the Sheriff shall be charged in: and in the principal case, Judgement was given accordingly, that is, that the Covenant is void Note that the Sheriff of the County of Barks, was committed to Sheriff committed to the Fleet. the Fleet, for taking twenty shillings for making of a warrant upon a general Capias utlagatum, for all the Justices were of opinion, that the Sheriff shall not take any Fees for making of a warrant or execution of that Writ, but only twenty shillings and four pence, the which is given by the Statute of 23. H. 6. for it is at the Suit of the King: But upon Capias utlagatum unde convictus est, which is after Judgement, it seems it is otherwise. A man grants a Rent to one for his life, and half a year after to Grant of a Rent. be paid at the Feasts of the Anunciation of our Lady, and Michael the Archangel by equal portions, and Covenants with the Grantee, for the payment of that accordingly; the Grantee dies 2. Februar●…, and for twenty pound which was a moyity of the Rent, and to be paid at the anunciation after, the Executors of the Grantee brings an Action of Covenant, and it seems it is well maintainable. And Coke chief Justice said, That if a man grants Rend for another's life, the Remainder to the Executors of the Grantee, and Covenant to pay the Rent during the Term aforesaid, this is good Collective, and shall serve for both the Estates, and if the Grantee of the Rent, grant to the Tenant of the Land the Rent, and that he should distrain for the said Rent, this shall not be intended the same rent which is extinct, but so much in quantity, and agreed that when a Rent is granted, and by the same Deed the Grantor covenants to pay that, the Grantee may have annuity or Writ of Covenant at his Election. Michaelmas 7. Jacobi, 1610. In the Common Bench. Waggoner against Fish, Chamberlain of London. JAMES Waggoner was arrested in London, upon a Plaint entered Privilege of London. in the Court of the Mayor in Debt, at the suit of Cornelius Fish Chamberlain of the said City, and the Defendant brought a Writ of Privilege; returnable here in the Common Pleas, and upon the return it appears, that in the City of London there is a custom, that no foreigner shall keep any shop, nor use any Trade in London, and also there is another Custom, that the Mayor, Aldermen, and Commonalty (if any custom be defective) may supply remidy for that, and if any new thing happen, that they may provide apt remedy for that, so if it be congruae & bon● fidei consuetudo rationi consentiae & pro communi utilitate Regis, civium & omnium aliorum ibidem confluentium, and by Act of Parliament made 7 R. 2. All their customs were confirmed, and 8 Ed. 3. The King by his Letters Patents granted that they might make By-Laws, and that these Letters Patents were also confirmed by Act of Parliament, and for the usage certified, that in 3 Ed. 4. and 17. H. 8. were several acts of Common Council, made for inhibiting Foreigners to hold any open shop, or shops or Lettuce, and penalty imposed for that, and that after, and showed▪ the day in certain was an Act of Common counsel, made by the Mayor, aldermans, and Commonalty: And for that it was enacted, that no Foreigner should use any Trade, Mystery or occupation, within the said City, nor keep any Shop there for retailing, upon pain of five pound, and gives power to the Chamberlain of London for the time being to sue for that by Action, etc. in the Court of the Mayor, in which no Essoyn nor wager of Law shall be allowed, and the said penalty shall be the one half to the use of the said Chamberlain, and the other half to the poor of Saint Bartholomewes' Hospital: And that the Defendant held a shop and used the Mystery of making of candles the seventh day of October last, and for that the Plaintiff the ninth day of the same month than next ensuing, levied the said plaint: And upon this the Defendant was Arrested, and this was the cause of the taking and detaining, etc. And upon argument at the Bar by Sergeant Harris the younger for the Defendant, Harris. and Hutton for the Plaintiff, and upon solemn arguments by all the Justices, Coke, Walmesley, Warburton, Danyell, and Foster, Hutton. it was agreed: That the Defendant shall be delivered, and not remanded: And the case was divided in to five parts. The first the custom. Secondly, the confirmation of that by Act of Parliament. Thirdly, the grant of the King, and the confirmation of that by Act of Parliament. Fourthly, the usage and making of Acts of common council according to this. Fiftly, the Act of common council upon which the Action is brought, and upon which the Defendant was Arrested. And to the first, which is the custom, it was also said, that this consists upon three parts: That is, first if any custom be difficult. Secondly, if it be defective. Thirdly, if Aliquid de novo emergit, The Mayor, aldermans, and Commonalty: Possunt opponere remedium, and that there are four incidents to that remedy. First it ought to be Congruum Retione. Secondly, 〈◊〉 one fidei consonum. Thirdly, consentaneum rationi. Fourthly, Pro communi utillitate regis, civium & comodum aliorum ibidem confluentium: But all the question was upon the remedy, for it was agreed that the custom shall be good: But it was doubted by Foster and Danyell that there was no good return, for it was but as recited; and it was not averred and positively said, that there was such a custom, and to prove that the case of 28 H. 6. was cited, where in debt upon an Obligation, the Defendant demands Oyer, and upon the view saith, that it appears by the said Obligation, that two others were jointly bound with him not named, Judgement of the Writ, and 24. Ed. 4. Where it was pleaded, as it appears by the Letters Patents of one King, and in 11. H. 4. in return of a Sheriff: But Coke answered and took a difference between return upon a Writ of privilege, and upon which no Issue may be joined, nor demurrer, and that it is but for an Informer of the Court, and other pleads: And for this it seems to him, that it is good as to that, and he conceived that by the Grant of the King the custom is destroyed, for the King by his Grant cannot add nor diminish any thing of the custom, no more then of Prescription, and exceptance of Grant shall be extinguishment of one as well as of the other, as it appears by 8. H. 4, 25. H. 7. 5. 38. H. 8. B. Prescription, 7 R, 2. But to this the Lord Coke gave no answer, and for that it seems they were no Grants, but confirmation rather of customs, and they further denied that the customs are confirmed by the Statute of 7. R. 2. for this is only for the confirmation of Magna Charta, and of all former Statutes, and of Charta de Foresta, and the liliberties of the holy Church, and there is not any mention of the customs of London, but to this the Lord Coke answered, that they ought to credit their return, and for that it seems, that it is a private Act, and they ought to adjudge of that as it is made, as 7. H. 6. 6. And if it be false the party grieved may have an Action upon the case, so it was agreed that the custom, that no foreigner shall hold any shop, nor sell in any shop by retail, and that they may make By-Lawes, for the ordering of their ancient customs, are good customs without any confirmation by Act of Parliament, or Grant of the King or otherwise: And if any thing happen De novo, that they can apponere remedium with the restrictions aforesaid, for the Lord Coke saith that London is Antiqua civitas, and was of great fame and reckoning, amongst the most ancient Cities, for it was said by Anianus Marcellinus which wrote 1200. years past, that London was then Opidum vetustum, and Cornelius Tacitus in vita Neronis saith, that then there was under the Romans Government, there was here Negotiorum copia, & commercia maximorum celebris, and he well knew for he was here seven years, and married the Daughter of Agricola, who was ancient Guilda Mercatoria, and for that it was well governed and continued in good Order, for Vbi non est ordo, ibi est infirmium & sempiternus Horror & confusio, and Gilda is a Saxon word, and is the same for Fraternitas, and Northfolk and divers other places in the Country the name continued, but this is another sense, for Gyld fignisies to pay, and for that it is sometime demanded if a man inhabit in a place gildable or within Franchise, and the Place gildable is subject to scot and Lot, and all other charges, but the Franchises are places exempt, but no person which is of a Gyld or fraternity, may be exempted not by the Grant of the King nor otherwise, but shall be subject to all the charges of the Gyld, and Fraternity, and the King cannot make any man free of their guilded when that is created, for there are but three ways to make a man free of that. First, by Birth which is the most eldest. Secondly, by Service which is of merits. Thirdly, By redemption which is power which only remains in the Mayor, and the Court of Aldermen, in this case in London, and such Gyld can never have beginning but by Grant, but by prescription, as the custom of gavelkind, that a man may devise his Lands, or that the Land shall descend to the youngest Son, and that the King cannot make, any stranger free of such Gyld or Fraternity appears in Rotulo patentium, 32 Ed. 3. Where the King by his Letters patents granted to one john Faulchon, that he should be frank and free of the City of London, and that he should keep an Apothecary's shop there, but the Patentee could not have his Freedom by this grant, and for that the King wrote his Letters to the Mayor and Aldermen, and requested them to make the said Faulchon free of the said City, and upon that it was done accordingly, but not upon the Grant, and so it was adjudged in Darcies' case 44. Eliz. Trinity, that if the King grant to one the sole making of Cards in England, and that none shall bring any Cards into England to be sold but the patentee, and it was adjudged that though none may may have Park or Warren, and such other matters of Pleasure without the Kings Grant, and though that playing with Cards be but a matter of Pleasure, yet the making of them is a matter of profit, and the bringing of them into England is a matter of Trade, and the inhibition of that is hindrance of Trade, and makes a Monopoly, that the Grant was void, and 3 Ed. 3. 3. john of Sudfords' Case, where the Case was, a Freeholder levied a fold upon his Soil, and Freehold of his own, and the Defendant spoiled it, and broke it, aed upon that the Plaintif brings a Writ of Trespass; the Defendant justifies that he was Lord of the Town, and there had been a usage there, and had been of time out of memory, etc. That no man of the same Town ought to levy a fold without the agreement and leave of the Lord: And for that that the Plaintif had done it, the Defendant pulled it down as well to him it was lawful, and it seems a good custom, and with this agrees 5 Ed. 3. john de Hayes case, and 10 and 11 Eliz. Dyer 279. 10. prescription, by the Mayor Sheriff, and Citizens of York; Goods foreign bought and foreign sold shall be forfeited, and that he may seize them it was adjuged a good prescription, but the King by his Letters Patents, cannot give such power to them. And Coke was clearly of opinion, that the case was not within the Statute of 9 Ed. 3. chapt. 2. 25 Ed. 3. 11 27 Ed. 3. 11. And it was agreed by them all, that a Merchant or any other man may sell Goods in gross, as he may sell a hundred tun of wine, or pieces of Cloth, and one Tun of Wine to one man, or a piece of Cloth to one man, and another to another man, till he hath sold all, that this was not retailing, but they cannot sell by the yard or keep a shop, but it was also agreed that some goods a man might sell as well in their Market, if he do not keep a shop here without any offence, and it was objected that this By-Law was not good, for that it was for private good, and also the penalty which was to be inflicted was too great. For first the Mayor, Aldermen, and Citizens, make the Law, the suit for the penalty ought to be before the Mayor, and the Mayor and Citizens ought to have part of the Penalty, so that the Mayor shall be Judge in his own cause, which also was one of the Reasons of the Judgement in the Chamberlain of London's case 5. Coke for that that the penalty was so small, that is a penny for every cloth which shall be sold in Blackwell hall, and this was for public good, for here shall be search if it were good and merchantable, but it was agreed by all, that every Town may make a By-Law, which is pro bono publico, without any prescription or custom, and this shall be good, and being made by the greater part shall bind the residue, but if it be for private good, as for the ordering of the common or such like, shall not be good to bind any man without his assent, without special custom, according to the Judgements in the Chamberlain of London's Case, and Clerks case 5. of Coke in his cases of By-Lawes: But Coke is clear that the remedy, that is, the By-Law was good and agreeing to the custom in every point, and that the penalty was fit and good, and for quantity and quality, and that to the quantity he agreed, that they could not inflict confiscation of Goods nor Imprisonment, but may inflict pecuniary punishment, as it appears by Clerks Case, and the Action may be brought for that, so that for the quality it was good: And so as to the quantity which was Secundum quantitatem dilicti, for he conceived it was a greater offence, to hold a private shop then public, for this is not in view nor subject to search & reformation, as well as if it were public, and for an old Act of Common Council, he which keeps a public shop shall forfeit ten shillings, and clam delinquens punietur magis quam palam, & now the ounce of silver is increased in value, for it is worth five shillings four pence, and then it was worth but three shillings four pence, and so for quantity and quality Et congruum & ratione causarum: And it seems to him that it is not Bona fide, that a Foreigner should hold a private shop, but Dissentaneum, for London is a Market overt, every day in the Week, but Sunday, as it appears by 11 H. 6. 19 And in Dunstable, the Prior brought an Action against a Butcher, for that that Dunstable was an ancient Town, and that this was a market overt two days in the Week, and the Defendant sold flesh in an inward room, the Defendant pleads custom to warrant that, and adjudged that it was not good, for the usage of Trade in such Corners is not, Bonae fidei consonant, and after he pleaded that he sold the flesh in an open shop in the Market, and this was allowed to be a good Plea, and if it be so in Dunstable, a fortiori, it shall be so in London, and for the same reason also it shall not be Rationi Consentaneum, to hold such inward shops, and also it is for Communi utilitate, that is, of the Citizens of the King, and of all others, that Foreigners shall not hold any shops in London, for it appears by the return that Foreigners shall not be subject to Scot and Lot in London, and shall not be Officers which are matters of great charge, so that if it shall be so they should be preferred before Free men, and without question it is discomodious for the Citizens, that any Foreigner should use any Trade here, and it would be a destruction to Citizens, that a Foreigner should not be subject to their charges, and yet should take benefit of the Trade within the City. Secondly, And for the Benefit of others that strangers should not be received to use any Trade within the City, for this is the cause of Depopulation, depradation, and destruction in all other Towns and Burroughs in England, which is prejudice to all others. Thirdly, it is prejudicial to the King, that such a company of Inhabitants should be resident in London, which is Camera Regis, for this is the cause of jufection of the Air and sickness, so that the King and all the State is prejudiced by it, but the sole doubt which was conceived by Coke, was for that that it doth not appear by the return, that the Defendant had used the Trade of Tallow Chandlor nor sold any Candles, but only that he kept a shop, and used the mystery of making Candles, but if the return had been that he used the Trade of Tallow Chandlor, this had been good, for that implies Tantamount, for that had been, that he had sold, for Trade is in Tradendo, which is to deliver over, and the Intent of the act is not that he shall be punished for making of Candles, if he do not sell them, for the sale is the wrong, and so the Servant of every Noble man or other which makes Candles or other thing for his Master, or for his own use, should be within the penalty of the Act, and with this agreed Foster and Daniel, and for this cause only it was resolved that he should be delivered and not remanded. Hillary 7. Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Cholke against Peter. THE Case was this, The Lord Rich being seized of the Chase of Where the Owner of Wood may Inclose. Hatfeild, granted and sold to Sir Thomas Barrington Knight, and his Heirs, all the Wood growing, and to grow upon a part of that, and excepted the soil, and further that he might enclose every sixteen Acres of that, and this to hold in several for the Prservation of the spring, according to other Statutes of the Realm, and this Grant was confirmed by a private Act of Parliament, and that the Grantee might hold it in several without suit of the King's Officers, with a saving of the right of all strangers, and a Commoner put in his Beasts to take his common in one parcel of that which was enclosed, against whom the Grantee, brought an Action of Trespass, and in this the only question was, if this Grantee of the Trees, which had not any Interest in the Soil, might enclose against a Commoner by the Statute of 22. Ed. 4. chap. 7. was the question, for it was agreed, that if a man grant Trees growing and to grow, to one and his Heirs, and except the Soil, the Grantee hath Fee-simple in the Trees, but hath nothing in the Soil, according to the 14. H. 2. and 3. H. 6. 45. Ives case, 5. Coke 11. So if a man make a feoffment of land except the Woods, all woods are except by that, and if Woods be cut, and after grow again in the same place, this is also excepted; But if woods after grow in another place this shall not be excepted, for it was no wood in Esse at the time of the feoffment, so if a man grants to another to dig Coals in his Soil, this is but to take profit, and the Soil doth not pass, as it is agreed in 11. Eliz. Dyer 245. And it was said by Hutton Sergeant that he had seen an Ejectione Firm brought upon a Lease Hutton. of Vsura terra: But it was agreed by Coke chief Justice and Foster, that the Statute of 22. Ed. 4. chap. 7. was repealed by the Statute of 35. H. 8. for this is the negative, and for that is repeal of a former Statute, but if the last had been in the affirmative otherwise it should be, and it was also agreed that this was not within the Statute of 35. H. 8. for that appoints of what age the wood shall be when it shall be enclosed, and by this recompense is given to the Commoner; but here it is not averred by pleading of what age this wood was which was enclosed, and for that it was adjudged that the Action is not maintainable against the Commoner, see Pasche 8. Jacobi for another argument at the Bar, and also by the Judges. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Vivion against wild. A Man was bound in an Obligation to another with Condition, to stand to, abide, and perform the award of two Arbitrators, Arbitrement. Submissior. Revocation. and before the award, by his writing the Obligor revoked the authority of one of the Arbitrators: And it was agreed by all, that this Obligation is become single without Condiion, and yet it was not pleaded that the Arbitrator had notice of the revocation before the award made: And yet for that it was pleaded, that Revocavit, it was agreed that that implies notice, for without notice it is no revocation: But it was agreed that if a man submit himself to the award of another, and after he revokes his authority: But before the Arbitrator had notice of that he makes the award, the award is good and shall be performed; so if a man make a Feoffment and Letter of Attorney to make Livery: And before Livery made he revokes the power of the Attorney: But before notice the Attorney makes Livery, this is good, but if the Feoffor makes a Lease or feoffment to another before the Livery made by the other, this is a Countermand in Law, and shall be good without notice, for Fortior est dispositio legis quam hominis: But where a man makes actual revocation of the authority, and before notice the other executes his authority, and in pleading the other pleads; Quod revocavit, the other party may reply, Quod non revocavit, and give in evidence that he hath no notice of that before the execution of his authority, and this is good, for without notice it is no revocation, where revocation is the act of the party. The case is entered Trinity 7. Jacobi Rotulo 2629. Vivion against Wild. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Smallman against Powys. A Man made a Lease for life rendering Rend, and after the Lessor Devise and grant tenors to bargain and Sale. by Indenture in consideration of fifty pound, deviseth and granteth the Reversion, to have from the day of the date for 99 years rendering a Rent also, which was less than the first Rent, and the Grantee of the reversion destraines for the rend reserved upon the Lease for life being behind: and the sole question in this case was, if the reversion shall pass without Attornment, and it was said, that in all cases where a use may be raised by the Common Law, and that it shall be performed by order of Chancery, that in these cases, the use shall be executed by the Statute Harris. of 27. H. 8. of uses; and one case was cited by Harris Serjeant 14. and 15. Eliz. where the Brother was Tenant in tail, the remainder to his Sister in tail, the Brother by Deed which was Indented in parchment, but made in the first person, and no mention of Indenting in the Deed, and the Deed was Enrolled with●… three months, and after Livery and Seisin was made, and it w●… adjudged that the Deed enures as a Bargain and Sale, and that nothing passes by the feoffment, so that it was no discontinuance, but that the Sister might enter after the death of her Brother without Issue. Coke chief Justice said, that it was a good Bargain and Sale, though that the words Bargain and Sell were not in the Deed, but he conceived if a Letter of Attorney be inserted in the Deed, so that it may appear that the intent of the parties is, that it should not enure as a Bargain and Sale, but as a feoffment, there it is otherwise, so if a man covenants to stand seized to a use, if it be in consideration of money, and the Deed is enrolled: there this shall enure well, as Bargain and Sale, as it was adjudged in Bedels' case 7. Coke 40. a. but the Statute of 27. H. 8. of inrolments doth not extend to a Term, for the words of the Statute are, that no freehold shall pass, etc. But it seems in the principal case, that the Statute of uses, executes the use which is raised by this Grant, and that the Grantor shall stand seized, etc. And all the Justices insisted strongly upon the Limitation of the Estate, from the day of the date of the Grant and the Reservation of the Rent immediately, and upon this concluded, that it was the intent of the parties that the Grantee should have the Rend reserved upon the first Lease; and should pay the Rent reserved upon his estate, and that when words of divers natures are inserted in one conveyance, the Grantee hath election to use which of them that he will, as it appears by Sir Rowland Hayward's case, and by Danyel, if a man makes a Bargain and Sale in english, and makes Livery, Secundum forma Chartae, this shall not be good: But if it be in Latin otherwise it is, for this word Vendo is compounded of Do, and it is an apt word for Sur. that Livery might be made: And agreed all that the reversion passes well without Attornment, and that these words Demise and Grant shall be taken and enure to a Bargain and Sale, and Judgement was given accordingly. A man made a Lease for years, to two if they lived so long, Lease to determine upon Limitation. and it was resolved by the Court, that this determines by the death of one of them, according to the resolution in Bradwells Case 5. Coke 9 a. and Judgement was given accordingly, and there the case of Trupenny was recited, which was this; Lands was let to one for one and twenty years, if the Husband and wife, and the Issue male of their Bodies so long live, and it was there adjudged, that the Lease doth not determine, during the lives of any of them, for in this disjunctive, it is referred to an Inti●e Sentence, and is as much as if he had said, if the Husband or the Wife, or the Issue of their Bodies so long live. Hillary 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. Borough of Yarmouth. THE King John by his Letters Patents granted that the Burrow of Yarmouth should be incorporated, and the grant is made Grant of the King that the Burrow should be incorporated. Burgensibus without naming of their Successors, and also he granted, Burgensibus teneri placita coram balivis, and in pleading it was not averred that there were Bailiffs there, and it was objected that the Burrow cannot be incorporated, but men which inhabit in that, but to that it was resolved that the Grant is good, and the Lord Coke said, that he had seen many old Grants, to the Citizens of such a Town and Good, and so that the Grant Burgensibus, that the Borough should be incorporated, being an old Grant should have favourable construction, but the doubt was, for that that it was not averred that there were Bailiffs of Yarmouth; and if a Grant to hold Pleas, and doth not say before whom, the Grant is void, according to 44 Ed. 3. 2 H. 7. 21 Ed. 4. and for that it was adjourned: But the opinion of all the Court was that the Grant made Burgensibus was good without naming of their Successors, as in the case of Grant civibus, without more. Note that Executors or Administrators shall not find special Bail for the Debt of the Testator, though that the debt be for a great sum bail. as three thousand pound or more, for it is not their Debt, nor his Body shall not be liable to execution for that. 43 Ed. 3. Suit was commenced, hanging another Writ, it is a Suit begun, hanging another Writ. good Plea, though that the Writ was returnable in the Common Bench, and the last Suit was begun in a Base Court, but if so be, and doth not appear to this Court, that the Plaintiff begun suit in a base Court, for the same Debt, for which the Suit is here begun Attachment shall be awarded, see 2 H. 6. 9 H. 6. but this aught to appear to the Court by Affidavit, etc. Hillary 7 Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. Chapman against Pendleton. IN second deliverance, the case was this, A man seized of a house Casual entire Services. and fifty Acres of Land held by Rent, fealty, and Harriot service, enfeoffs the Lord of three Acres parcel of the Land, and after infeoffs the plaintiff in this Action of three other Acres, and upon this the sole question was, if by this Feoffment to the Lord of parcel Harriot service is extinct or not. Harris Serjeant conceived that the Harriot remains, for he said Harris. that it is reserved to the Reversion of the Tenure, but it is not as annual Service, but casual, and it is not like to rectify, for that it is incident to every service, And by 43 Ed. 3. 3 It is no part of the service but Improvement of the service: And Bracton in his Tractate De Relevijs 2 Book 2, 7. saith, that Est alia prestatio vocata Harriot etc. Que magis fit de gratia quam ex Jure, and it is not like to a relief, see the Book at large, and he agreed that if the Tenant had made fifty several Feoffments to fifty several men, that every of them shall pay a several Harriot, as it appears by bruerton's Case, 6 Coke 1. a, 34. Ed. 3. Harriot 1. 2 Ed. 2 Avowry 184. 〈◊〉 Ed. 2. Ibidim 206. 11 Ed. 3. Avowry 101. 24 Ed, 3. 73. a, 34 Assize 15. 22. Ed. 4. 36. 37. 29 H. 8. Tenors 64. But he grounded his Argument principally upon Littleton 122. 223. Where it is said, that the reason why Homage and Fealty remain, if the Lord purchase part of the Tenancy is for that that they are of annual Services, and it seemed to him, that Littleton is grounded upon 7 Ed. 4. 15. Extinguishment 2. 8 Ed 3. 64. 24. Ed, 3, B. Apportionment last case, which accords the reason, and upon this he concluded, that for that that the Harriot is not annual, it shall not be extinct by the Feoffment but remains, but he agreed if a man makes a Lease for years rendering Rend, and parcel of the Land comes to the Lord, the Rent shall be apportioned if it be by Lawful means, as it appears by 6 R. 2. F. Quid Juris clamat 17. Plesingtons' Case, and 24 H. 8. Dyer 4. 1. Rushdens' case, by which, etc. nichols Sergeant, that it hath been agreed that it is entire service, nichols. and that then he concluded upon that that it shall be of the nature of other entire services, as it apperrs by 2 Ed. 2. Avowry 184. and 34 Ed. 3, F. Harriot 1. 5. Ed. 2. Avowry 206. And he agreed that in the case of Littleton the Homage and Fealty remain, and the escuage shall be apportioned, but this is not for the reason alleged in Littleton, that is, for that that they are not annual services, but for that that the Homage is incident to every Knight's service, and as the Lord Coke said, fealty is incident to every service in general, and the Tenant shall make Oath to be faithful and loyal to his Lord for all the Tenements which he holds of him, and the reason for which the Escuage shall be apportioned, is for that that it is but as a penalty which is inflicted upon the Tenant for that that he did not make his services, as it appears by the pleading of it, and shall be apportioned according to the Assessment by Parliament, and by 22 Ed 4. It appears that this purchase by the Lord, is as a release, and if the Lord release his services in part, this extincts the services in all, and he said there is no difference where an entire service is to be paid, every third or fourth year, and where it is to be paid every year as to that purpose, and yet in one case it is annual, and in the other it is casual, and yet in both cases if the Lord purchase parcel of the Land of the Tenant, all the entire services shall be extinct and gone, though that they are to be performed every third or fourth year, by which, etc. Foster Justice, that the Harriot is entire service, and for that Foster. though that it be not annual, it shall be extinct by purchase of parcel of the Tenancy by the Lord, as if a man makes a Feoffment with warranty, and takes back an Estate of part, the warranty is extinct, as it appears by the 29. of Assize; so if a man hold his Land by the service to repair parcel of the fence of a Park of the Lords, and the Lord purchase parcel of the Tenancy, the Tenure is extinct, as it appears by 15 Ed. 3. And it is agreed in the 21 H. 7, In Kellaways Reports by Frowick, that there is no difference between Harriot and Relief, and Relief shall be extinct, and so he concluded that the Harriot is extinct. Daviell. Danyell Justice accordingly; and he said that this purchase shall be as strong as release: And if the Lord hath released the service entire for part, it shall be extinct for all, and if Tenant holds by Suit to the court of the Lord, and the Lord purchase parcel of the Tenancy the Suit is extinct, as it appears by 27. H. 7. and Fitz. Na. Bre. And so concluded that the Harriot service is extinct by the purchase aforesaid. Warburton accordingly: And saith that in Littleton's Case, the Homage and Fealty shall remain, for they are personal services, Warburton. and for that shall remain entire, and of Rent shall be an apportionment by the Statute of Westminster 3. De quia emptores terrarum: But for other entire services by the purchase of the Lord, be they annual or casual, and they are extinct, and 21, Edward 4, was a Suit for a Hawk, which was kept back twenty years, and so for Suit if the Tenants make a feoffment to divers, they shall make but one Suit, but they all shall make contribution to the Suit, but if the Lord purchase parcel, he cannot make contribution: And though that the Homage and Fealty are personal services, the Horse and Hawk are of the nature of land, so the Harriot is of his goods, and if the Tenant hath no goods, the Lord shall lose it, and for that he concluded as above. Walmesley accordingly: And he said, if a Tenant hold by entire Walmesley. services of two Lords, and one purchase parcel of the Tenancy, all the entire services shall not be extinct, but the other Lord which did not purchase, shall have them, for Res inter alios acta, nemini nocere debeat: To which Coke chief Justice agreed, and he said if Harriot custom be due, peradventure it shall not be extinct by purchase of parcel of the Tenancy, for that is personal, and it is not Issuing out of land, but for entire services, which are Issuing out of land, he said there is no difference betwixt annual services and casual services which are entire, and so he concluded, as above. Coke chief Justice accordingly, and he said there is no difference Coke. between annual entire services and casual, so that they are services to be paid at the death or alteration of every Tenant, or otherwise, but he said there is no doubt, but that Rend service shall be apportioned, though that the Lord purchase parcel, be that in the King's case, or of a common person, and this by the common Law without the aid of any Statute, for there is not any Statute that shall aid that, if it be not remedied by the Common Law, and he said that some Entire services may multiply, as if a man holds by payment of a pair of gilt Spurs, or of a Hawk, or a Horse, or others such like, and makes a feoffment of parcel, the Feoffee shall hold by the same entire services: But if the Tenant hold by personal services, as to cover the Table of his Lord, or to be his Carver, or Sewer at such a Feast, or such like, these personal services cannot multiply, if the Tenant makes a feoffment of part, for by this the Lord may be prejudiced, for peradventure at his house he will not include them, but he may distrain every of them to make the service: And he saith the reason for which Knights service shall be apportioned, is for that it is for the public good, and for the good of the Common Wealth▪ But so are not the other personal services, and in the principal case he conceives, that if the Tenant had made a feoffment first to a stranger, and after the stranger had enfeoffed the Lord, that by that all the entire service shall not be extinct, for by the feoffment of the estranger, was severence of the services, and he holds by a Harriot as well as his Feoffor, and for that nothing shall be extinct, but the Harriot due by that parcel, of which the estranger was enfeoffed; and he agreed with Walmesley, that a Harriot custom shall not be extinct, where the custom is that every Tenant shall pay a Harriot, for there it is paid in respect that he is Tenant, and custom shall not be drowned by unity of Tenancy and Signiory: And for that he concluded that the Harriot for that, that it was entire service though that it were casual and not annual, that yet it shall be extinct, and Judgement was given accordingly. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Michelborne against Michelborne. UPON a motion made for consultation upon Prohibition awarded: It was said by the Lord Coke, that no Subject of Trade with Infidels without, Licence. the King, may trade with any Realm of Infidels, without licence of the King, and the reason of that is, that he may resinquish the Catholic faith and adhere to Infidelisme, and he said that he hath seen a licence made in the time of Ed. 3. where the King recited that he having special trust and confidence, that his Subject will not decline from his Faith and Religion, licenced him ut supra) And this did rise, upon the recital of a licence made to a Merchant to trade into the East Indies. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Read against Fisher. IN debt the Defendant exhibits his suit in the Court of Requests, Prohibition to the Court of Requests. and there the Plaintiff in that Court denied, that the debt was paid, and the Court of Request awarded an Injunction, and upon Information of that, this Court awarded a Prohibition to inhibit the Suit there. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Mors against Webbe. IN Replevin the case was this; A man was seized of two Virgates Approvement of Common. of Land, and prescribed that he and his Ancestors, and all those whose Estates he hath in the said Virgates of Land, have used to have common in the fields, etc. That is, when the fields are fallow all the year, and when they are sown with Corn or otherwise several, when the Crop is mowed and removed, for two Horses, four other Beasts, and a hundred and twenty Sheep, as appertaining to the said two Virgates of Land: The Defendant traverseth the prescription, and upon this they are at Issue, and the Jury found that there is such prescription: But further they say, that the Plaintiff made a Lease of six Acres parcel of the said two Virgates of Land in one of the fields of, etc. with the Common of that thereunto belonging for the Term of ten years, and the Beasts for which the Replevin was brought, were in another field of, etc. And if the prescription be suspended or remains, they prayed the advice of the Court, and it was agreed that common appendent and appurtenant was all one to the severance, for if such a Commoner grant parcel of that Land to which the Common is appurtenant, or appendent, the Grantee shall have Common, Pro Rata, but if a commoner purchase parcel of the Land, in which he hath Common appurtenant, that this extincts all his Common: And it was agreed that Common may be appendent to a Carve of Land, as it appears by the 6 Ed. 3. 42. and 3. Assize 2. as to a Manor, but this shall he intended to the Demesnes of the Manor, and so a Carve of Land consists of Land, Meadow, and Pasture, as it appears by Tirringhams' case 4. Coke 37. b. And Common appendent shall not be by prescription, for then the Plea shall be intended double, for it is of common Right, as it appears by the Statute of Morton chap. 4. And the common is mutual, for the Lord hath Right of Common in the Lands of the Tenant, and the Tenant in the Lands of the Lord: And it was urged by nichols Sergeant, that the Common shall be apportioned as if it were Rend, and that the Lessee shall have Common for his Lease, and then the Lessor hath no Common appurtenant or appendent to the two Virgats of Land, and for that the Prescription was not good. Coke chief Justice, if it had been pleaded, that he had used to have Common for the said Beasts Levant and Couchant upon the said Land, there had been no question but it should be apportioned, for the Beasts are Levant and Couchant upon every part, as one day upon one part, and another day upon another part, and for that extinguishment or suspension of part shall be of all, as if a man makes a Leaf of two Acres of Land, rendering Rend, and after bargains and sells the reversion of one Acre, there shall be an apportionment of the Rent, as well as if it had been granted and attornment: And he agreed that if a man have Common appurtenant, and purchase parcel of the Land in which he hath Common, all the Common is extinct, but in this case common appendent shall be apportioned for the benefit of the Blow, for as it is appendent to Land, Hyde, and gain: And in the principal case there was common appendent, for it was pleaded to be belonging to two Virgats of Land, and for commonable Beasts: And he conceived also that the prescription being as appertaining to such Land, that this shall be all one, as if it had been said Levant and couchant, for when they are appurtenant, they shall be intended to Blow, Manure, Compester, and Feed upon the Land: And also he conceived that the right of Common remains in the Lessor, and for that he may prescribe, for after the end of the Term shall be returned, and in the intermin he may Bargain and sell and the Vendee shall have it, and shall have common for his Portion. And Walmesley Justice agreed to that, and that during the Walmesley. Term the Lessor shall be excluded of his Common for his proportion. Foster Justice agreed, and that the possession of the Lessee is the Foster. possession of the Lessor, but he conceived when the Lessor grants to the Lessee six acres of Land in such a field where the Land lies, and then the Beasts were taken in another field: And so they agreed for the matter in Law, and also that the pleading was ill, and so confess and avoid the prescription: But upon the traverse as it is pleaded, the Jury shall not take benefit of it, and Judgement was given accordingly. Termino Pasche 7. Jacobi 1609 In the Common Bench. THOU art a Jury man, and by thy false and subtle means hast Action upon the Case for Slander. been the Death and overthrow of a hundred men, for which words Action upon the case for slander was brought, and it seemed to Coke chief Justice that it did well lie, if it be averred that he was a Jury man, and so of Judge and Justice, for Sermo relatus ad personam intelligo debet de qualitate person, as Bracton saith, and in the like Action brought by Butler, it was not averred, that he was a Justice of Peace, and resolved that an Action upon the case doth not lie. But Walmesley Justice conceived that an Action doth not lie, for one Juror only doth not give the Verdict, but he is joined with his Companions, and it is not to be intended that he could draw his Companions to give Verdict against the truth, and false and subtle means are very general. Warburton Justice agreed with Coke, and conceived that the Action well lies, being averred that he was a Jury man, as if one calls another Bankrupt Action well lies if it be alleged that the Bankrupt actionable. Plaintiff was a Tradesman, and it is common speaking that one is a Leader of the Jurors, and a man may presume that other Jurors will give Verdict, and may take upon him the knowledge of the Act. Walmesley conceived that the Action did not lie, for that the words are a hundred men, which is impossible, and for that no man will give any credit to it, and for that it is no slander, and for that Action doth not lie, no more than if he had said that he had killed a thousand men, But Coke, Warburton, Daniel, and Foster, agreed that the number is not material, for by the Words his malice appears, and for that they conceived that the Action doth well lie. Pasch. 7. Jacobi 1609. In the Common Bench. Denis against More. ANthony Denis plaintiff in Replevin, William More Defendant, Grant of Reversion. the case was this, Two joint Lessees for life were, the Remainder or Reversion in Fee being in another person, he in Reversion grants his Reversion, Habendum, the aforesaid Reversion, after the death, surrender, or forfeiture of the Tenant for life, it happeneth, that the Lease determines, for the life of the Grantee, and Remains to another for life, and resolved that this shall be a good grant of the Reversion to the first effect of Possession, after the Deaths of the Tenants for life, according to the 23 of Eliza. Dier 377. 27. And it shall not be intended to pass a future interest, as if it were void of the other party, and so was the opinion of all the Court, see Bucklers case 2. Coke 55. a. and Tookers' case 2. Coke 66. Upon a Fine the first Proclamation was made in Trinity Term 5. Error in Proclamation. Jacobi. And the second in Michaelmas Term 5. Jacobi. And the third in Hillary Term 6. Jacobi, where it should be in Hillary Term 5. Jacobi. And the fourth and fifth in Easter Term 6. Jacobi. And this was agreed to be a palpable error, for the fourth Proclamation was not entered at all, and the fifth was entered in Hillary Term 6. Jacobi, where it should have been in Hillary Term 5 Jacobi, and it shall not be amended, for that it was of another Term, and the Court conceived that this was a forfeiture of the Office of the Chirographer, for it was an abusing of it, and the Statute Forfeiture of Office of a Chiroghapher. of 4. H. 4. 23. and Westminster 2. Are that Judgement given in the King's Court shall stand, until they be reversed by Error. A man is bound in an Obligation dated the third of January, and Release. by Release dated the second day of the said Month of January, releases all Actions, etc. From the beginning of the World until this present day, and delivered the Release after he had delivered the Obligation. And Coke chief Justice conceived, that a Release of all Actions until the Date, shall not discharge duty after, but a Release, Vsque confectionem presentium, that discharges Duties after the Date, and before the Delivery: But he conceived that the Day of this present time shall be the Day of the Date, and it shall not be averred that it was delivered 20. years after, and it shall not wait upon the Delivery of the Deed. A Writ of Dower was brought by Frances Fulgham against Serjeant Harris the younger in this manner, Praecipe, etc. Quod, etc. Error in a Writ of Dower. Frances Fulgham, Widow, where the form in the Register (Que fuit uxor) and not Widow, and the words of the Writ are, Rationabilem detem Tenementorum que fuerunt Fran. Fulgham quondam viri su●, and yet it was resolved to be Error, see the Register, and yet it doth not vary in substance, and 38 Ed. 3. In re nisi sunt, all one, yet for that the form in the Register is otherwise: The Justices would not amend it. John Warren Plaintiff in Trespass, and Ejectione Firm against Copyhold. Cicely Spackman, it was resolved that the admittance of a Copyholder for life was sufficient for him in remainder. In a Writ of Dower by Mistress Fulgham upon Ne Vnques Certificate of the Bishop. couple etc. pleaded, a Writ was awarded to the Archbishop (in the time of the vacation of the Bishopric of Lychfeild and Coventry) who returned that he had a Delegate, which made a Commission to Babington Chancellor of the said Diocese, to make inquiry, and certificate of the said matter, which have certified that they were lawfully coupled in lawful matrimony: And adjudged without question, that the return was not good, for the Archbishop himself ought to execute it, and Delegata potesta● non potest delegari, and for that it was ordered that he should amend her Certificate. See the Statute of 5 Ed. 3. That an Arrest, Eundo & rediundo, Minister Arrested. from celebrating divine service, And it seemed to the Justices, that such Arrest is not lawful, for he ought to be privileged rather than a man which comes to any Court, to procecute or defend any suit here. Pasche▪ 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Exchequer. The Duke of Lenox case. IN Trespass the case was this, the King by his Letters Patents Grant of the King of Alnage. created the Duke of Lenox Alneger, and he made his deputy: And the Duke by the said Letters Patents of the King, was to measure all Clothes, and to have so much for every Piece, and to search and to view that if it be well and sufficiently made or not, and he made his Deputy, which offers to measure, search, and view, certain parcel of Worsted, and demanded the duty due to the Alneger for that, and for that, that the owner refused to pay it, he seized certain pieces of Worsted, and kept them, upon which this Action was brought. And Haughton Sergeant for the Defendant, conceived that the Haughton. sole question rests upon these Letters Patents of the King, and for that he would first consider. First if these duties of Subsidies and Ausnage are due by the Common Law, and if they are not due by the Common Law, then if they are due by Statute Law: And if they be due, neither by the Common Law, nor Statute Law; then if the King by his Letters Patents may grant it. And to the first he said: That Subsidy is aid or help: And there are two manners of aid, one which is Inheritance in the King, as aid to make his Son Knight, or to marry his Daughter, and others which are given by grant of others, and these are not Inheritances in the King; and these duties were not demandable by the Common Law, nor by Custom: And this appears by the 25. Ed. 3. 6. Where any prizes were demanded which were due by the common Law, and some which were not due, and subsidy for Wools were not due by the Common Law, but it was granted to the King and is now due, but this is by grant, and not by the Common Law, and in the 14. Ed. 3. A Statute was made for the King for his subsidy for Woolles, what part he should have, which part was given to him in quantity; and in time of H. 6. A Statute was made by which subsidy was given to him during his life, and 36, Ed. 3. Subsidy was granted for three years, and after should not be any subsidy paid, as appears by 45. Ed. 3. And if subsidy were not due by the Common Law for Woolles, then may it be concluded, that it was not due for clothes, for Woolles grow without man's labour, and the 11. H. 4. and 13. H. 4. The King makes a grant of Alnage of clothes, and a Writ is awarded to the Mayor and Sheriffs of London, to give possession to the Patentee, which returns the Writ, that the Office was not granted before this time: And the Statute of 24. Ed. 3. was the first Statute that gave profit to the King for clothes: But he granted that the Office of Alneger was of ancient times, and an ancient Office, but it was no Office of profit, but an Office of Justice and Right; and no Fee was due for the exercising of it, and that 1. Ed. 2, was a Grant of the Office of the Alneger, and 11. H. 4. was a Grant of the Office of Alneger for Canvas, but it doth not appear by any account, that the King had any profit for the Alnage itself, or upon the said Grants, either before or after, and allowing that there were accounts for Cloth, yet it doth not appear that there were any accounts for Worsteds, The Statute of 27. Eliz. gives subsidy of four pence for every broad Cloth, so that the Statute made express mention of broad Cloth, but there was not any mention of Worsteds, and this Statute shall not be taken by equity, though that the Statute of 1. R. 2. 12. for escapes by the Warden of the Fleet, being a penal Statute, yet for that, that it was for a general mischief, shall be taken by equity, as it appears by plats Case in the Comment: So the Statute of 9 Ed 3. chap. 3. provideth that where Debt is brought against divers Executors, that they shall have but one Essoyn, and the Statute mentions Execurors only, yet Administrators are taken within the equity of this Statute, as it appears by 3, H. 6. yet in this case at the Bar, the Statute of 27. Eliz. was not for the remedy of a mischief, but is a Grant to the King, and Grant of one thing cannot be Grant of another thing, as if the King pardon an Offence, another Offence cannot be pardoned by this: As it appears by the Archbishop of Canterbury's Case, 2. Coke, where the Statute of 1. Ed. 6. by which divers Chantryes were granted to the King, it shall be intended a Grant within the Statute of 31. H. 8. of Monastries which was before: But further he said that the matter is insufficient to raise a duty to the King, for in vain is the property of any thing in one man if another man may charge it: And in this case the King cannot grant these Clothes, and for that he cannot charge them, and the Letters Patents of the King are not sufficient only to charge the Goods of any man, see the case of 11. H. 4. But he agreed that if the King grant a Ferrey, and that every passenger shall pay for his passage four pence, this is good, for every man may choose whether he will pass by that or not: And none shall be constrained to pass by that, but Grant of the King to one, that none shall bring in any Cards into England but the Patentee only is word; and it was adjudged in nichols Case in 18. Eliz. That if any man offend in not repairing of a Bridge, the King cannot pardon it, for the Subjects of the King have Interest in that, and further he saith, that the Grant was against an express Statute made in 7. Ed. 4. 1. for this appoints that the Alneger shall not take any Fee, by which the Grant of the said Office shall be without Fee, and this Grant is with a Fee, that is, so much for every Cloth, he agreed that this is an affirmitive Law, and for that it shall not bind the King generally, but when it is for determination of right or wrong, the King shall be bound by that, and the Patent is grounded upon the Statute of 27. Eliz. or 47. Ed. 3. 1. which are made for the breadth of Clothes; and here the Patent hath not any respect to it, for if the piece be but of the breadth of a foot, if it be in length according to the Statute, so much shall be paid for that as if it were a broad Cloth, and for that there is not any equity in it, that the Statute seems to intend, for the charge ought to be correspendent to the quantity of the Cloth, as 41. Ed. 3. 16. Avowry for distress of sixteen Oxen for nine pence Rend, and adjudged that it was found outrageous, and therefore he was amerced for taking of an excessive distress, and so he demanded Judgement for the Plaintiff. Dodridge the King's Sergeant, that the question is if the Alneger Dodridges▪ may meddle with this new kind of Drapery and shall take Fee for that, and it seems to him that he may meddle with all things, which consists in Measure, Weighing, and Searching: And may exercise his Office in this for necessity of Merchandise, for Common Wealth cannot consist without commerce, and Pecunia est rerum mensura, and provides to make recompense in value for every thing, as it is said by Keble 12. H. 7. 24. b. and then to reduce all other things in certain, for it is the certain value of money, is known to be a direct means to know the quantity of all other things, and that is by weight and measure, etc. And for this for the necessity of commerce, there ought to be a public Officer, which shall have the care and charge that such things shall be well and duly made, for the profit and benefit of the Common Wealth, and this. Officer is as ancient as there hath been any commerce within this Realm, and he made illustration thereof by divers Rolls of the Exchequer in time of 2 H. 4. By which it appears, that then there were Marts for cloth: And that then was an Officer, to search, measure, and see the said clothes opened, for than was an Officer made of purpose to measure and search the clothes, which were sold in a Fair at Worcester, by which Rolls also it appears, that there was an Assize of breadth and length of clothes before any Statute for that purpose, by the Statute of Magna Charta, made 9 H. 3. chap. 25. It is provided that una mensura, and una latitudo pannorum tinctorum, russatorum, & Haubergettarum, that is, Duo ulne infra list as per totum Regnum Anglie, and 1 Ed. 1. amongst the Rolls of the Patents in the Tower, it appears that the Office of Alneger was granted De omnibus pannis tam ultra mare quam infra mare: And 1. R, 2. was another Grant of the Office of Alneger, and 14. R. 2. the King granted the Office of Alneger in Ireland, and by the Statute of 5. Ed. 2. it is provided that the estretes by the Warden of the Alnage should be delivered into the Exchequer to the Treasurer of the Exchequer, and 17. Ed, 2. the Office of Alneger was granted to one J. Griffin of all the clothes made beyond Sea, till the 1. of Ed. 3. by which the use appears in the time of the Reign of King Ed. 3. upon which records he observed, that the Office of an Alneger is an ancient Office, and that he hath power to see, search, and measure, omnies pannas tam ultra marinas quam infra marinas, without any exception, and for that it cannot be denied, but that he ought to meddle with woollen clothes, and he ought to meddle with all for oneself same end and purpose, that is to fasten a Seal to them. Secondly, That the Law depends upon the Art and invention of Artists, than no Law shall prevent more mischiefs, for there is no end of Art and Invention. And thirdly, and that in this Individuo, for there is not any Invention made of Worsteds, till the time of Ed. 2. for it was a new commodity, and then first Invented, and after it was first invented, there was immediately an Officer made for that, and for this it appears that 1 Ed. 3. Nicholas Shoverler was made general Alneger for that, and after that came Wadlowes and Says, and also an Alneger was immediately made for them, by which it appears, that so soon as new stuff was invented by the Artist that there was a new Officer to search, and see that, and prevent that deceit should not be used in it, and then for the Fee of the Alneger, that is grounded upon a just Law, which is the Law of Retrebution, for Dignus est operarius mercede, and though it doth not appear by their Patents, that they had taken any Fee for the exercising of their said Office, yet it appears by their Accounts that they have had a Fee for it, and if they have no Fee of the King, than it follows that they ought to have a Fee of the Subject by Common Law, the Office being for the public good, and the Patent is, upon which the Duke shall have the said Office as hitherto they have had it, and it appears by the 11 of H. 4. 58. and the 12 of H. 4. That the King may grant and annex Fee to a necessary Office to be taken of the Subjects, but it was objected that the Alneger had no Fee, and if he had that, he was abridged of that by the Statute of 2 Ed. 3. 14. Where it is said that they shall be ready to make proof; when they should be required to measure, without taking any thing of the Merchant, but this refers only to the Majors and Bailiffs of Towns, where such clothes shall come, and not to the Alneger, and that the Statute of 11 Ed. 3. chapter 3. consists upon two parts. First, that Clothiers may make Cloth of what length and breadth that they will. The second, that no Cloth shall be brought into England, Wales, or Scotland, but that which is made in them, and then if the Clothiers have such liberty to make Cloth of what length and breadth they will, than there is no need of Alneger: As to that it was answered, that there was need of him to see and search the Goodness of that, as well as the length and breadth, And also the Statute of 25 Ed. 3. chap. 4. Provides that all Clothes vendable, which shall be sold whole clothes in England, in whose hands soever they are, shall be measured by the Alneger of the King, and the Statute of 27 Ed. 3 chapter 4. Statute the first, provides that no clothes shall be forfeited, though they be not of the same Assize, but the Alneger of the King shall measure the Cloth and mark it, with such a mark, that a man may know how much that contains; so for these Statutes, and for the reasons aforesaid it appears, that it belongeth to the Office of an Alneger to survey, measure, and mark clothes, as well by the Common Law, as by the Statute Law; It was objected, first that the Statute of 27 Ed. 3. limits and appoints that the Alneger should measure broad Cloth, and doth not make mention of any other clothes, but broad clothes, and for that it seems that he shall not meddle with any other clothes, but it appears by divers Accounts, that he should meddle with Wadlowes and Says, and the Statute of the 17 R. 2. chap. 2. Provides that none shall sell any Cloth before that it be measured by the Alneger of the King, and that none shall make any deceit in Kerseys. The second Objection that clothes of Lesser Assize then half broad Cloth, the Alneger shall take nothing by the Statute of 27 Ed. 3. This is intended of Broad Cloth which hath used to be sold, and these be in length above the broad Cloth, and in breadth as Kerseyes, and others were but as Remnants which have not been used to be sold, no subsidy was due by the Common Law, for that is granted by the Statute of 27 Eliz. And in this Grant two things are to be considered. First, the Statute of 2 Ed. 3. and the Statute made at Northampton, where it was petitioned to the Parliament, that the King would remit the penalties, and the Kiug should have recompense for the loss, and for this the Statute gives subsidy, this was no private gift, but a public gift, and the reason of this was the retribution of his loss and the King paid for it, and that for this he should have a Subsidy. Secondly, Wools are the continual Treasure of the Realm, and let them be of what nature they will they are called Panui: And for that when the King hath a settled Inheritance, it is no reason that the slight of an Artist should prejudice the King: And it appears by the Statute of 11 H. 4. 7. that was made to prevent the barrelling of Clothes, and the making of them into Garments, and the transporting of them beyond Sea. And also the third reason is usage, for all other clothes pay Subsidy, and there is no other Law to charge them but the Statute of 27 Ed. 3. 4. That this subsidy is settled in the King, and no devise of man may divest it, the Statute of 27. Ed. 3. and 47. Ed. 3. Set down and alter the length and breadth of clothes, and yet the Custom remains. The fifth objection that the Statute doth not extend in equity to a thing which is not in Rerum natura at the time of the making of the statute which is false position, for how can makers of statutes prevent all mischiefs, Eton and Studs case Com. Aristotle in Ethics liber 5. chap. 10. saith, that Equitas est correctio legis Statutes, how to be understood, etc. generatim late, qua parte deficit. And Bracton in his first Book of new Division Ch. 3. saith, that Equitas est rerum convenientia que in paribus causis, paria desiderat jura & omnia bene coequi paret & dicitur equitas quasi equalitas, and for that it is enacted by the Statute of 11 Ed. 1. Acton Burnell for understanding of the Statute, that if praisers of Goods praise them at too high a value, that they themselves shall have them at the same price at which they were praised, and after another Statute is made, which provides, that lands shall be extended upon a Statute, which is taken to be within the Statute of Acton Burnell, which was made before, and so it appears by Littleton that the Statute of Gloucester provides, that warranty by Tenant by the Courtesy shall not bind the Heir without Assets, and an Estate tail was not then created but it was afterwards created by the Statute of Westminster 2. which was made the 13 of Ed. 2. Yet this Warranty shall not bind the Heir in tail, and also two objections have been made against the Patent. First, That it was against an express statute. Secondly, That it did not observe any rate or proportion, proportionable to the quantity of the piece, to that he answered, that it is not against any statute, see 7, Ed. 4. 2. 27. H, 7. 5. H. 8. 2. 1. and 2. Phil. and Mary: It is not against any of those, for those provides and ordains, that there shall be Wardens for the better performance of all things which are to be done by the Alneger, and doth not deprive the King of any thing given to him by any former statute, but adds further care and diligence, and when there is a Law which adds care and Manner and Form to a former Law: That doth not abridge and deprive the former Law, of any thing given by that, and if the Wardens do not do their Office, yet that cannot prevent but that the Alneger may do it, which to him belongeth, as in 1 Ed. 4. 2. For Indentures taken in Sheriffs Turns, which should be delivered by Indenture to the Justices, yet the Justices may proceed, though they be not delivered by Indenture, and so it is in 43. Ed. 3. 11. The Sheriff ought to array his Pannell four days before the taking of that, and adjudged that if he doth not, it shall be no error in 43. Ed. 3. Assize 22. and so the Statute of 5. and 6. of Ed. 6. provides that the Mayor appoints to viewers and searchers, this doth not abridge the power of the Alneger, for this is but an addition of greater care and diligence, and by the statute of 39 and 43. Eliz. If upon a search they find any forfeiture, they shall have it, but if they do not find the Alneger may find it, and then the King shall have it. And to the Second he answered; that true it is for every 64. of clothes, the Alneger ought to have four pence, for his Fee, and though that some pieces of cloth are more broad than others, yet the labour of the Alneger to measure them is all one: So he concluded, and demanded Judgement for the plaintiff. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Rutlage against Clarke. IN Account the Plaintiff declares, that the Defendant hath received Account. of his money by the hands of a stranger to give an account: The Defendant pleads in Bar, that he received to deliver over to a stranger, the which he hath done accordingly, without that, that he received it to make any of account otherwise then in this manner, and it was resolved that the Plea in Bar was good without traverse, for when he received the money, he is to deliver it over, or to give an account of it to the Plaintiff, so that he is accountable Conditionally, but the traverse is repungnant to the Plea, though it be otherwise, or another way, against the Book of 9 Ed. 4. 15 See 41. Ed. 3. 7. 1. Ed. 5. 22. H. 6. 49: 21 Ed. 4. 4. 66, 1. Ed. 5. 2. that it is a good Bar without traverse. But Brook in abridging the case of 21. Ed. 4. 66 in Title of account, saith, that it seems that the traverse aught to be without that, that he was his receiver in other manner; and there and in the Book at large are, that Justices, that is, Coke, Nele, and Vavasor against Bryan; that it ought to be traversed: But here in the principal case, it was adjudged that the traverse made the Plea ill. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Dunmole against Glyles. THE case was this; Grandfather, Father and Son, the Grandfather was possessed of a Term for two and twenty years to Devise of a Teerme. come, devised to the Son the Land for one and twenty years, and that the Father should have it during the Mynority of the Son, and makes the Son his Executor and dies, the Son being within the age of one and twenty years, the Father enters into the Land, and makes a Lease for seven years by Indenture, until the Son came to full age, the Father makes his Son his Executor and dies: The Son enters by force of the devise made by the Grandfather: And the question was if the Son shall avoid the Lease made by his Father and it was agreed that he might, in proof of which a Judgement was cited which was in the King's Bench, Mich. 5. of Eliz. Rot. 459. or 499. In the Prioress of Ankoresse Case, where a Term was devised to one, and if he died within the Term, then to such of the Daughters of the Devisor, which then should not be preferred, the Devisor dieth; the Term was extended for the Debt of the first Devisee, and then he died, the extent was avoided by the Daughters not preferred, and they grounded their Judgement upon the former Judgements in Weltden and Eltingtons' case, and Paramores and Yardleys' case in the Comment. and for that the Law intends that a Devisor is Inops consillij, and for that his devise shall have favourable construction according to his intent appearing within the devise, and it was said by Coke that in many cases, a man may make such an Estate by devise, that he cannot make by an Act executed in his life time, as it was adjudged in Graveners' case, where a man devices his Lands to his Executors for payment of his Debts, that there the Executors have Interest, that there the Executor of Executors shall have that, and such Estate cannot be executed by Act in the life of the Devisor, and so it was concluded by them all, that the Son shall avoid the Lease made by the Father, for the Devise was Executory, and doth not vest till the full age of the Son, and then Executor, and shall avoid all Acts made by the Father, by which Judgement was given accordingly. Freeman against Baspoule, See 9 Coke 97. b. THE case was this; A. was indebted to B. and they both Award. died, the Heir of A. for good consideration, assumed to the Administrator of B. that he would pay to the said Administrator the said Debt, and for the not payment of that, according to the Assumption the Administrator after brought an Action, and then the said Heir and the Administrator submitted themselves to the award and arbitrement of C. and became bound one to the other; to stand to the award accordingly, so that the said Arbitrator makes his award of all the matters and controversies between them before such a day, C. the Arbitrator before the day recited the Assumpsit, and the debt as aforesaid, and agreed that the Heir should pay the Administrator so much money, and that published according to their submission: And in Action upon the case, Submission. Nullum fecit Arbitrium was pleaded, and upon demurrer, it was objected that the award was void. First, For that it was for one party only, and nothing was arbitrated of the other, and to prove this the Book of 7. H. 6. 6. was cited, and 39 H. 6. 9 see 2 R. 3. 18. b. And this also appears by the pleading of an award, for he which pleads it; that he hath performed all things which are to be performed of his part: And that the other pleads performance of all thing which are to be performed of his part, by which it appears that there ought to be performance of both parts, and by consequence one award to both parties, according to 22. H. 6. 52. Secondly, that the award was void, for that, that the submission was of all controversies, so that the Arbitrator delivered his award of all controversies, etc. And there was no award of the said Suit between the parties, and for that he hath not Arbitrement. made an Arbitrement of all controversies, and by that the award was void, and to prove that, the Books in 4 Eliz. Dyer 216. Pumfreys award, and 19 Eliz. Dyer 356. 39 and 39 H. 6. 9 Where it is said, that if the submission were of all things, and the Arbitrement of one only, that is a void Arbitrement. Thirdly, For that it was not limited within the award, at what day, nor at what place the money should be paid by the Heir to the Administrator, and for this cause also it shall be void, for it ought to be paid immediately; and if the Heir cannot find the Administrator, he forthwith hath forfeited his Obligation, and for that in this point it is uncertain, and for that shall be void, as it is in samon's case, 5. Coke 77. b. Where the Arbitrator awards, that one party shall enter into Bond to another for enjoying of certain Lands, and doth not say in what Sum, and adjudged void for the uncertainty, and so in this case by which, etc. But it was answered and resolved, that the Arbitrement was good. And to the first objection it was resolved, and agreed, that every award aught to have respect to both parties, if it be not a matter which concerns one party only, and neither recompense nor acquittal due to the other party in which case the award shall be good: And it was resolved in the principal case, that the award was made of both parties, for one was to have money, and the other though there was no express mention, that the other should be discharged of his Assumpsit, yet the award was a good discharge in Law, and may be pleaded in Bar upon an Action brought upon the Assumpsit, and so it was for both parties. And to the second objection, it was agreed, that where submission is, with Ita quod, etc. as above, that there the Arbitrators ought to make arbitrement, of all the variances and controversies, referred to their arbitrement, and if they do make no arbitrement, of all the matters of which the submission is made, the award is void, but if the submission be general, as of all matters in variance or controversy between them: There if the Arbitrator makes his award of all matters which are known to him, the award shall be good: As my Lord Coke conceived, though that there are other matters in variance, of which the Arbitrator hath no notice, as if divers Creditors sue a-commission, upon the statute of Barkrupts, and an another person to whom the Bankrupt was indebted, doth not come in as a Creditor, nor give notice to the Commissioners, that the Bankrupt was indebted to him, he shall not take benefit of the commission, for the Commissioners cannot relieve those Creditors of which they have no notice, as it appears by the case of Bankrupts in 2. Coke. And to the third objection it was answered and resolved, that the award was good, notwithstanding that no place be expressed where the money shall be paid, for in Law that ought to have reasonable construction, and the party ought to have reasonable time for the payment of that, but Foster conceived that it is not good, for it seemed to him, that if the award shall be good, that the Obligation of submission shall be immediately forfeited, for that there was neither time nor place, where the money should be paid, but this was answered with the Books of 3. H. 7. 16. Ed. 4. Where it is said that if an Arbitrator award that one party shall pay such a sum of money at such a day, and keeps the award in his Pocket till such a day be past, that yet the Obligation shall not be forfeited: And so it was resolved and adjudged by all the other Justices, that the award was good, and Judgement was entered accordingly. Hillary 7. Jacobi, 1609. In the Common Bench. Foster against Jackson. RICHARD Foster Plaintiff in Scire Facias against Anno Where the death of the Defendant in Execution shall be satisfactory. Jackson and Miles Jackson Executors of Thomas Jackson, upon Judgement had against the said Thomas in an Action of Debt: The Defendants pleads that the said Thomas Jackson the Testator was taken upon a Capias ad Satisfaciendum, awarded upon the said Judgement, and in execution for the said Debt, by force of the said Capias, and there died in execution, and so demands Judgement, etc. And the sole question was, if the said Testator being in execution for the said Debt by force of the said Capias, and there dies, if this be satisfaction of the Debt or not. And Dodridge the King's Sergeant which argued for the Plaintiff Dodridge. in the said Scire Facias conceived that it is no satisfaction, but that notwithstanding the Debt remains, for the words of the Writ are, Capias ad satisfaciendum, and all others Executions, as Fire Facias, and Eligit are satisfactory: But the Capias is but a restraint of his liberty, till he hath satisfied the Debt, and for that it is no plenary satisfaction, but only restraint of his liberty, which the Law more respects than Goods or Lands, and for that Custodia ought to be Salva & stricta: So by this the party may be Enforced to pay his Debt Salva, to the party, so that by this the party may be safely detained, till he hath satisfied the Debt, and Stricta to the King, so that by this Justice may be satisfied, and for that Bracton saith; that it is only to compel the party to make satisfaction: And it is resolved in the 33. H. 6. 47. That it is no satisfaction, but that the Body should remain as a Pledge, till satisfaction a were made, or as return Irreplevisable, and yet neither the one nor the other are satisfaction: And the words of the Writ are Capias ad satisfaciendum, the party, but if he will satisfy then there is no reason that the Defendant shall be Imprisoned by the Writ: But if he will not pay, than he shall continue in Prison, Quousque satisfecerit, by which it appears that the Imprisonment is no satisfaction, and it appears also by the Register, and Fitz. Na. Bre. 246. b That if a man recover Damages of Trespass, before the Justices of Oyer and Terminer, and hath the party in execution by force of this Judgement, now if the parry which is in execution dies in Prison, he which recovered may sue Certiorari to the Justices to remove this Record into the King's Bench, that the Justices there may make upon that Record, as the Law will in such case: And it seems by this that the party shall have execution by Elegit, or by Fieri Facias, for it is not reasonable as it is there said, that the death of him which died in Prison, shall be satisfaction to the party which recovered: (but Fitzh. here saith, Tamen quere, for he doubted of that) Certiorari. but in the Register there is a special Writ of Certiorari to this purpose, that is to remove the Record into the King's Bench, so that the Justices may do there upon that, as the Law will, and if the Law will not allow the party to have new execution, it were in vain to have such Certiorari, for other course cannot be taken, and the end of every suit is to have payment, and so is the Judgement that the Plaintiff should recover his Debt, and so is the Writ, and the count, and the Capias also, and to the end of Justices in Suum cuique tribuere: And the party hath not any of these ends, if the death of the Defendant in prison shall be satisfaction, and in the 47. Ed. 3. Fitz. execution 41. Persey said, that if in Trespass the Plaintiff recover, and the Defendant is taken for the King's Fine, if he pray that the Defendant continue in Prison, till he have made agreement with him, perchance he shall not have Elegit, and for that being in Prison, he prayed execution of his Body, and had it, but if the party gets out that he hath no execution, that it is not his default, he shall have Elegit after, for that, that he cannot have his purpose according to his first election. And if any be in this case, then upon that he inferrred that the party in this case may have a Fieri Facias against the Executors. And also it is resolved by the whole Court in the Common Bench, 29 H. 8. B. Execution 132. That if two are bound in an Obligation, conjunctim & devisim, the Obligee impleads one, and hath execution of his body, and after impleads the other, and condemns him, he may have Execution against him also, for the taking of the body is good execution, but it is no satisfaction, and therefore he may take the other also: but if he have satisfied the Plaintiff, he shall not have execution afterwards. And therefore this Order, that the Plaintiff upon an Obligation shall have but one Execution is intended such an Execution, which is a satisfaction: See 33 H. 6. 48. b. 4 H. 7. 8. 4 Edw. 4. 38. 5 Edw. 4. 4. 5 Coke 92. Blumfields case, resolved by all the Court, that if the Defendant in debt die in Execution, that the Defendant shall have new execution by Elegit or Fieri Facias, for the death of the Defendant is the act of God, which shall not turn the Plaintiff to prejudice, as it is said in Trewynyards case, 38 H. 8. Dyer 60. The Plaintiff shall not be prejudiced of his Execution by act in Law, which makes no wrong to any. And to the first Objection which may be made against him, that is, That all process are determined after the party is taken, and in execution; to that he answered, that this is where the Plaintiff hath satisfactory execution, as it appears by 41 Edw. 3. 13. where an action of Account was brought against two, one was outlawed, and the other comes by Outlawry. the Exigent, and enters in the Court; and he which was outlawed, obtained his charter of pardon, and for that, that process was determined against him. And the Plaintiff hath chosen to have his action against the other, he prayed that he may be discharged. But it was resolved, that the process was not determined, nor he which was outlawed shall not be discharged, till the Plaintiff be satisfied, by which it appears that the process is not determined till execution with satisfaction. Two other Objections also he endeavoured to answer, that is, that the Plaintiff hath determined his election by taking the Capias, and that cannot resort to any other Process: and to that he agreed, that where the party hath made such election, that he cannot resort to any other Process, during the life of the party. But if the satisfaction be prevented by the act of God, as in the principal case. But when his person which was the pledge for the debt, and was to remain in prison till the debt be satisfied, is discharged by the act of God, and the Plaintiff hath not the fruit of his Suit, nor the Judgement is not satisfied, and the Plaintiff hath done all that he can, and there was no defect in him, it is no reason, but that he may have new process; and the third objection is a Judgement which was given in the King's Bench, Pasche 43. Eliz. Rot. 58. between Williams and Curtiz: And to that he said, that he he conceived, that this was a rule for default of prosecution, for the cause was referred to Arbitrement, and so hanged for long time: and so though the Judgement was directly against Law in the principal points, yet for that, that it was not upon solemn argument of the Judges, he saith it is not to be compared to other authorities by him cited before, for which he includes, and prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. Hutton Sergeant that argued for the Defendants conceived the Hutton. contrary, and first he examined how the body of a man cometh subject and liable to any Execution, and to that he said, that by the Common Law the body was not subject to Execution for the debt of any man, but in account only a Capias ad computandum lies, and no other process in this action, but distress infinite till the Statute of Marlbridge, Chap. 23. and West. 2. Chap. 11. Capias was given in Account; for by the Common Law, the Process in that was Distress Infinite as aforesaid, and after by the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. Chapter 17. Such like Process was given in debt, as in account, and before that the body of the Defendant was not liable to execution for debt, if it be not in the King's case, as it appears by Sir William Harberts' case, 12. a. And upon this he inferred upon the words of the Statute of 25 Ed. 3. Chap. 17. which saith, that such like Process shall be in debt, as were in account: That after the Plaintiff hath determined his election, and taken a Capias, that then he is in the same case as if it had been in account, and for that he cannot resort to any other Process. And he said that the words of the Elegit and Fieri Facias do not differ in substance from the words of Capias, for there is to satisfy the party, as well as in the other: And when a man hath made his Election to have Elegit, he shall not have other Execution. But when the Defendant hath neither goods nor Lands, Then qui non habet in are licet in Corpore, and the Plaintiff at the first when he hath Judgement hath election to have Fieri Facias, Elegit, or Capias, than he cannot have fieri facias; but if he determine his Election at the first, and sue Elegit or Capias, than he cannot have fieri facias, but may first sue fieri facias, and after Elegit or Capias, as it appears by the 15 H. 7. 15. 14 H. 7. 28. and 7 H. 6. 7. But if it be upon Statute staple, Then he may have execution for his Body, Goods, and Land together, as it appears by 31 H. 6. 47. Lynnacres Case is put in Blunfields' case, 5 Coke 92. b. and 15 H. 7. 15. But the reason of this is, that a special Execution by statute is given in this case. And he agreed, that where a Judgement is given against 2 or 3. and the Plaentiff sue Capias against one of them, by that he hath determined his Election: So that if he die in Prison or otherwise, he may sue another Capias against the others, but he cannot sue fieri facias, or Elegit, as it appears by 33 H. 6. 47. before; and Blunfields' case, 5 Coke 92. b. 4 H. 7. 8. And he said that the body is the principal, and becomes chargeable by statute: and it appears by 22 Assis. 43. That when the party is in Prison, that this is adjudged in Law an Execution for the party: and further in the Book of 33 H. 6. 47. is but the opinion of Prisot and Lacon: And the principal case there depends upon another point, Fitz. 246. before cited, is but a quere, and Eitz. himself doubted of it; and the book of 44 Edw. 3. Fitz. Execution, 41. is but the opinion of percy; But the Judgement upon the principal point is otherwise. And the principal case in Blunfields' case, 5 Coke, was upon another point also, as it appears by the Book, and so he concluded with the Judgement before cited to be in the King's Bench, Pasche 43 Eliz. between Williams and Cuttris, which was direct in the point according to his opinion, and prayed Judgement for the Defendants in the Scire Facias, and it is adjourned. This Case was argued in Trinity Term next ensuing, by all the Judges of the Common Pleas: and first Foster the youngest Judge argned, Foster. that the death of the Defendant in Prison being in Execution, was no satisfaction, but the Plaintiff may have a new execution against his Executors, for he said it was an old saying, That debts went before deadly sin: And that every one ought to satisfy his debts by the Law of God, before Legacies given to charitable uses: And so by the Law of the Realm, if it be not the default of the Plaintiff, as it was not in our Cause; for the death of the Defendant in Prison was the act of God, and the Executors have confessed by pleading that they have assets, and the Plaintiff hath nothing but grief and pain; and he said as before, that at the Common Law no Capias lay, till the Statutes of Marlebridge, Chap. 23. and Westminster, the 2. Chap. 11. Capias was given in Account, and then the statute of 25 Edw. 3. Chap. 17. gives such like Process in debt which was in Account, and then in Account Capias ad Computandum lies, and in debt Capias ad Satisfaciendum: And if in Account the Defendant was adjudged to account, and Capias ad Computandum be awarded, and he taken by force of that, and committed to Prison, and here dies, a new Writ shall be awarded: So in debt, if the Defendant be taken by Capias ad satisfaciendum, new Writ shall be awarded against his Executors, see 1 Edw. 3. 24. 1 H. 7. 5 Coke 92. Blundfields' case; for it is only the default of the Defendant, that the debt is not satisfied, and for that it is no reason that the Plaintiff should be prejudiced by that: Debt upon escape against whom. and 11 H. 4. 44. and 45. by Skreene, Debt upon an Escape doth not lie against the Executor of the Sheriff, but new Process shall be awarded against the Prisoner which is escaped; for a man shall not take advantage of his own wrong, as in the case of Littleton. If the son makes disseisin, and enfeoffs the Father, which dies, the son shall not take advantage of this Descent, because he was particeps criminis, and he said it was no wrong to any, if execution were made of the goods of the Testator, and it is mischievous to the Plaintiff, for he shall lose his debt: And to the Objections which have been made, that there is an end of Process when the Defendant is taken by Capias, and dies in Execution, the which he agreed as long as the Defendant lived, but after his death he may make new election, 47 Ed. 3. Fitz. Execution, 41. by percy. And it appears by the pleading in 17 Ed. 3. That Judgement & Execution without satisfaction is no Plea in Bar. And also he cited the Register, 285. and Fitz. Na. Bre. 246. 19 Ed. 3. 21 H. 6. 5. where the Plaintiff had effectual execution, which was satisfaction, 44 Ed. 3. 21 Edw. 4. 1 Edw. 4. 8 H. 7. 16 H. 7. to the same purpose, for which Dodridge cited them before. And also he said, that the Judges have always had respect to the satisfaction of Debts, and for that would not bail one in Execution upon a Writ of Error, where Error indeed was assigned, but suffers him to remain in Prison till the Judgement were reversed. But here the Plaintiff hath neither Bale nor any satisfaction but grief and pain: And in the 21 of H. 7. the Sheriff returned, that the Defendant had no land, but lands in use, and was adjudged that he should execute the Elegit upon these Lands, such was the respect that the Judges have to Executions, and to the Case of 35 H. 6. 47. This is but the opinion of Lacon, which erred in the principal case, and may as well err in this point: and his opinion also is so intricately penned, that he cannot understand it: And Martin's opinion also in 7 H. 6. 7. is against the Judgement of the principal case. And to the Objection, that the Party had determined his Election by the Execution of the Capias, he agreed to that with this difference, that is, if the Plaintiff sue Scire facias, & the Sheriff levied part, that this notwithstanding the Plaintiff may have Capias for the residue, and so Elegit after Fieri facias, or Capias, for there is not any Entry made of awarding of fieri facias, or Elegit: But the Plaintiff only sued that out of the Court, see 44 Edw. 3. 18 Ed. 4. 31 Ed. 3. 17 Ed. 3. 20 Ed. 2. 22 Assis. 17. H. 7. 1. And so he coucluded that the Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff in the scire facias. Warburton Justice conceived the contrary, that is, that the Plaintiff Warburton. in the Scire facias shall be barred: And he agreed and said, that none will deny but that Debts shall be paid, but that aught to be according to the rules of the Law: For by the Common Law the body of the Defendant was not liable to execution, and then it is to examine in what cases he is at this day subject to execution: and though in Trespass Capias lies at the Common Law, but in Debt no Capias lies till the Statute of 25 Edw. 3. which gives the same process which was in Account, and this is as well in the Original process, as in the Judicial, and Elegit was first given by the statute of Westminst. 2. And this was of the half of the Land: But Levari facias was at the Common Law of the profits of the Land: That in debt Acceptance and Election binds the party, and so this remains; for the said Statutes being in the affirmative, doth not take away that, nor abate it: and by that if Conusee of a statute accepts Land extended Land extended at too high rate. at too high a value, he is bound by that, 22 Edw. 3. 32. H. 6. 15 H. 7. And that when the Party hath Judgement, he hath election to have execution by Fieri facias, Elegit, or Capias, for he hath determined his Election. So if he makes his Election of a Capias at first, he cannot have Elegit after, 30 Edw. 3. adjudged 32 Edw. 3. Process 52. according, Long 5 of Edw. 4. by Markeham and others, and the reason which is given in 47 Edw. 3. 17 Edw. 4. and 21 H. 7. that have been remembered to the contrary is only, that it is reason that the Plaintiff should have the same process: which was at the Common Law, and there was not any such process as Capias in debt at the Common Law, and 21 H. 7. may be understood that the Elegit was not returned, and so no record of that. And 50 Edw. 3. a man may recover in Debt, and pray Elegit, and after brings Debt upon the Record, but it doth not lie. And he agreed to the Book of 23 H. 6. For there the Defendant was bound in an Obligation to make satisfaction of Debt, and he died in Prison, and this cannot be satisfaction according to the Condition. And in the Case of Fitz. Nat. Brev. the same doubt of that, and this was the more strong case then the case at the Bar: and if he doubted of that, is the cause that he doubts also. And cited Williams and Cuttis' case, Rot. 88 in the point, where the reason of the Judgement was for that, that the Plaintiff had his plain and full satisfaction, and saith that it was apparent difference between that and Blunfields' case, for there was 2 Defendants: and here if one dies, there shall be no satisfaction, and so these reconciled. And so if a man be taken upon a Statute Merchant, and dies in execution, that shall not be satisfaction, for this is special process given by statutes. And 14 H. 7. 1. If a man being in Execution escape, he shall not be taken again: and in the 14 H. 7. in debt upon an Obligation Capias profine was awarded, and the Defendant taken by that. And the Plaintiff prayed that he might be in Execution for his debt also, and could not, for that he had sued Fierifacias, and it doth not appear if the Sheriff have that executed or not. And so he concluded that the Judgement should not be revived by the Scire facias against the Executors, and that Judgement shall be given for the Defendants in the Scire facias. Walmsley Justice accordingly. He specially observed the form of Walmsley. the Writ which suggests, quod executio adhuc restat facienda, etc. And to that the Defendants in the Scire facias plead that Capiás was awarded at the suit of the Plaintiff, and upon that the Defendant was taken in execution and there died, by which it appears that the words and suggestion of the Writ was answered directly, and upon that the strongly relied, and then said that there were 3▪ ways to have Execution, that is, by Fieri facias, Capias, and Elegit: And there is a special order to be observed in the suing of that, for a man may have Fieri ficias, and if the Defendant have not goods, may have Elegit, or Capias: But if he make his Flection to have Capias, he cannot have Fieri facias, nor Elegit, or if he sue Elegit, he cannot have a Fieri facias, nor Capias: In 33 H. 6. and 44 Edw. 3. which have been cited, the Plaintiff sues Elegit, and after that would have sued Capias, supposing that he had not accepted the Elegit; but of the other part it was said, that the Sheriff had made Execution of it, the which he could not contradict it. And if the Plaintiff had Fieri facias, and goods delivered to him in Execution, and the Writ returned, he shall not have a second Execution: and so if Elegit executed and returned, 14 H. 7. 15 H. 7. and said that Executions are tickle things; for if the party escape, he delivers himself out of Execution, and the Plaintiff shall not have other Execution against him, for that he hath had one Execution, 2 Edw. 4. And so if a man sues a Writ of Privilege out of Parliament, and by that is delivered out of Execution, he shall not be taken again. And so if a man be delivered upon a Writ of Error, for when the Party hath made his Election to take process against the body, it was his folly that he made such Election; for though that death be the act of God, yet for that, that statutum est omnibus semel mori, and for that God hath done no wrong, for he hath but performed his Eternal Decree, and for that it is not the act of God only, but the folly of the party to make such Election, and the Book of 47 Edw. 3. by Percy is but his opinion, and more other Books are against that, and 〈◊〉. H. 6. Danby and Prisot are against Lacon: and though that the death of the Party in Execution is no satisfaction in rei veritate, yet in Law it is satisfaction, for that that the party hath no other remedy, the Writ in the Register is certiorari ad faciendum in omnia & singula que secundum legem & consuetudinem fieri, etc. And there is not any Law nor Custom to warrant any such Course, and here is not any other proceedings upon it. But if he may have a Writ of Scire facias ostensurus quare satisfactionem habere non debet, than it may be that the Defendant's aught to give another answer, but for that, that there is not any such Writ, it seems that Judgement shall be given for the Defendants. Coke chief Justice seemed the contrary, and he agreed with Foster, Coke. and he said, that it is vexata et spinosa questio, for the Books vary, and great arguments have been made of both parts. There are three things considerable. 1. Reasons. 2. Authorities. 3. Answers of Objections. And for the Reasons: First, he considered in whom the default is for which the Plaintiff shall lose his Debt. 2. That the Debt remains after the body is taken in Execution. 3. If the body taken in Execution be satisfaction. 4. If the dying in Execution be a discharge. 5. The Mischiefs, if so they shall be. And to the Objections. First, Escape, which is the wrong and act of the Party, it is no satisfaction nor discharge, and here is the act of God, and election of the party. 2. Execution by Elegit, If Lands be extended upon that, this is no satisfaction. And so if he be delivered by a Writ of Error, and so in this case. And for the first, the fault was in Jackeson, for he did not keep his day in the Condition, and upon this was sued, than he pleaded a false plea, and upon that Judgement was given against him, in all which actions the default was in the Defendant, and no default in the Plaintiff, for he took the Body which is the visible execution, not in satisfaction, but to satisfy, and the Defendants have not pleaded fully administered, but confess that they have Assets, and there is more reason that the Plaintiff shall be satisfied, than the Executors keep the goods to their own use; for it is Summa Injustitia nocentem habere totum lucrum, & innocentem totum damnum. Second reason was, that it is no satisfaction for the Defendant to die in Prison, and agreed that if 2 Precipes are contained in one Original, there shall be but one satisfaction. But if one be taken by Capias, and remains in Execution, Capias shall be awarded against the other, and he shall remain in Prison till satisfaction be had, for execution is no satisfaction, as it is said in 29 H. 8. b. Execution 132. adjudged: See 4 Ed. 4. 38. 5 Ed. 4. 4 H. 7. 8. And hilaries case, 33 H. 6. And to the third, that is, that the Debt remains after the taking of the body in execution, and agreed that when execution is made of goods or lands, no Debt remains, but otherwise it is of execution of the Body, as it appears by 29 H. 8. before cited, B. Execution 132. and 41 Assis. 15. where a man was condemned in Damages in Trespass, and committed to Prison by Capias, and escaped, the Gaoler died, the Plaintiff prayed debt against his Executors, and could not have it, for they are not charged without specialty: and the Plaintiff alleged that the Defendant was vagrant in the County of M. and prays Capias to the Sheriff of M. to take him, and it was granted, for his remedy against the Sheriff was determined, and this proves also, that the Debt remains after escape, & scire facias is, licet Judicium redditum sit, tamen executio restat ad huc facienda de debito, for the body is but as a pledge, & the form of the Writ in the Register Capias ad satisfaciendum, and not in satisfaction, which proves that there is no satisfaction, but upon the payment of the money his body shall be delivered out of Prison, & this is execution with satisfaction, for there are two Executions; that is, Medius & finalis, the first is the Capias, the second Satisfaction, which is Vltimus Finis: And it is a good rule, quod nihil videtur factum, ubi aliquid restat faciendum; and here is aliquid faciendum, that is, Satisfaction, for in all acts there is a beginning, progression, and consummation, & Consummation in this case fails, Mors est horendum divortium, which is the act of God. And when the act of God hath delivered him which lies in prison for his own default, it is no reason that the Plaintiff should be prejudiced, 43 Ed. 3. 27. A man enfeoffs the Father with Warranty, which infeoffs an estranger which enfeoffs the son: the father dies, the son may vouch, for it is the act of God: And to the Mischiefs, nec crudelis creditor, nec delicatus debitor sunt audiendi, for they play at Bowls, and keep Hospitality in the Prison: Or if a man be arrested, and makes a tumult, and is slain in endeavouring to break the Prison, and breaks his Neck, it is no reason that he by such act should defraud the Plaintiff of his Debt, the opinions against him are coupled with absurdities, as 7 H. 6. 8. Martin's opinions is also imparted with absurdity, 33 H. 6. 48. The opinion of Lacon is also coupled with another absurdity: and 22 Assis. b. Execution is also coupled with absurdity, that is, if the Defendant escape, this determines the debt, and is satisfaction: and 15 Edw. 3. Quare Impedit, 174. in Writ of Right of Advowson, the Plaintiff hath Judgement, and habere facias sesinam in the life time of the Incumbent, and after his death sues Scire Facias, the first is Execution, but not with satisfaction, and the last is satisfaction, for by this he hath the fruit of his Judgement: So 19 Ed. 3. Execution 12. a younger statute is extended, and Liberate sued, executed, and returned: And after an elder statute is extended, and after satisfaction of that, he that hath the youngest may sue Scire Facias, and have execution of the youngest: So of Beasts distrained, and put into the Pound, and there die, he which distrained, may distray● again, for this is no satisfaction of his Rent, 14. H. 4. 4. 15 Edw. 4. 10. 11 Eliz. Dyer 280 And so Capias ad computandum▪ is not Account, nor Capias ad acquietandum, Acquital, Register, 30. 39 285. And it is said in Bract. lib. 7. Chap. 17. Sunt brevia Magistralia & f●rmata, the first are made by Masters of the Chancery, the others which are Original by Cursitors, which are founded by acts of Parliament▪ and cannot be changed without Parliament; and as Fitzherbert in his Preface to his Na. Bre. saith, that every Art and Science hath certain Rules and Foundations, to which a man ought to give faith & credence, and the Writ of Fieri facias being founded upon a Statute, and the form, that executio adhuc restat facienda: he saith that this was the Judgement of the Parliament, that the first Execution was not Satisfaction. But as the Writ is also in the Register, 245▪ That where a man is condemned in Trespass, and committed to prison, detinendum quousque, he satisfy the party, by this it appears that he is but a pledge: And Fitz. Na. Bre. 63. 65. 67. and Register, If a man be taken by Capias Excommunicatum, ad satisfaciendum & parendum Clavibus Ecclesiae, and is delivered by Writ, which issues improvide, another Writ of Capias shall be awarded. And to the matter of Election he agreed, that if Elegit were awarded, the party cannot have Fieri facias, nor Capias, for there is Entry made, quod Elegit sibi executionem de meditate. But when Fieri facias or Capias is awarded, no entry at all is made. But if any of them are returned executed, than he cannot resort to another Process; and with this difference agrees all the Books of 15 H. 7. 15. 21 H. 7. 19 30 Ed. 3. 24. 31 Edw. ●3. Process 52. 19 H. 6. 4. 34 H. 6. 20. 45 Edw. 3. 19 50 Edw. 3. 4. and 5. 18 Edw. 4. 11. 20 Edw. 4. 13. 11 Eliz. Dyer, 296. And to the case of Williams and Cuttrys, cited to be adjudged, 43 Eliz. the which he cited as Lamb's case, he said in this was many apparent Errors in form of pleading, so that the matter in Law cannot come to Judgement, 35 H. 6. Prisot seemed that by the law of God the Imprisonment of the body of a man was no satisfaction, for by that the Creditor may sell his Debtor and his Children for the payment of his Debts, Matth. chap. 18 vers. 24. 4 Kings 4 Chap. vers. 1. Matth. chap. 5. Luke chap. 12. And so he agreed with Foster in opinion, and concluded, that the death of the Defendant in the action of Debt was no satisfaction, nor determination of the Process, nor of the election, But that the Plaintiff may have new Execution against the Executors, and by consequence that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff in the Scire facias, but no Judgement was given for that, there was equality of opinions, that is, Coke and Foster against Walmesley and Warburton, Danyel being dead, and for that it was adjourned. Pasche 8. Jacobi 1610. See Hillary 7. Jacobi the beginning. Chalk against peter. THis Case was argued this Term by Harris youngest Sergeant for the Defendants, and by Haughton for the Plaintiffs: And Harris. Sergeant Harris conceived that Sir Francis Barrington was within the Intent of the Act of 22. Ed. 4. chap. 17. For he hath grant of Trees of Inheritance, and this was all the profit which rise upon the Soil, and for that it shall be intended of the Soil itself: And to prove that, he cited Parromor and Yardlyes' Case in the Com. 542. and 543. 2. H. 8. 159. Crook, 11. Eliz. Dyer 285. Where it is agreed by three Justices, that the Patentee or Grantee of Herbage in a Forest shall have Trespass against any which consumes and destroys the Grass, but not the Trees, nor of the fruit of that; and the Trespass of that shall be Quare clausum fregit, as well as i● it were of Land: And may enclose the Forest by such Grant: See 17. Ed. 4. 6. a. by Littleton that Vestura terrae doth not pass without Livery: Also admitting that he is not owner of the Ground within the Statute, yet it seems by the Statutes that they are: It shall be lawful for the same Subjects, Owners, etc. And to such other persons to whom such Wood shall happen to be sold: Immediately after the Wood so cut, to fence and enclose the same Ground with sufficient Hedges able to keep out, etc. Upon which words he inferrd, that S. Francis Barrington is such a Person to whom the Wood is sold, and for that may enclose: And also he conceived, that the Statute is general, and concerns all persons in general: and also all Forests and Chases whatsoever: And for that it is not like to the Cases, put in Holland's Case, 4. Coke upon the Statute of 13. Eliz. Which concerns all Ecclesiastical persons in general, that this is a general Act, and yet concerns but one Genus in particular: But the Statute of 1. Eliz. Is otherwise, which concerns the Bishop, which is but a species of this Genus, as it is resolved in Elmers' Case, 5. of Coke: And also he conceived that it shall be relieved by the Statute of 35. H. 8. And so prayed Judgement for the Defendant. And Haughton conceived, that the words of the Statute intent Haughton. such a person to whom Wood is sold, for one turn only: And not he which hath Inheritance of Wood: & that there is no word in the statute to exclude Commoner, and such a Vendee is not without remedy, for he is within the statute of 35. H. 8. If he pursue his remedy according to the statute, and so prayed Judgement for the Plaintiff. And at another day Foster Justice argued, that the Plaintiff in Foster Justice. the Replegiare shall recover, and said that the cause consists of three parts. First, the Arbitrement. Secondly, the assurance. Thirdly, the private Act of Parliament, of 27. H. 8. And to those the Arbitrement and the assurance shall tie only those which are parties to it, and no others, and the Commoner is not party to that nor shall not be bound, and the private Act confirms the assurance, saving the Right of all strangers, by which the Commoner is exempted, and also the statute is made only as confirmation of the Grant, and for that it shall not extend to any other thing, nor to other parties, but those only which are parties to the Grant, as if the Queen had made a voidable Patent, and after had made a Lease for years, and after by the statute of 18. Eliz. All Letters Patents made within such a time were confirmed, this makes the Letters Patents good, against the Queen, but against the Lessee: And also all the Covenants in the Grant, extend only to the Lord Rich and his Heirs, and these which claim under him: And for that it shall not extend to the Commoner, and also the private Act saves the Right of all strangers, by which the Right of the Commoner was saved: And he conceived, that the Commoner shall not be excluded by the statute of 22. Ed. 4. chap. 7. which recites, that if any Subjects have any Woods growing in his own Ground, within any Forest, Chase, etc. Shall cut the same Wood by licence of the King or his Heirs, in Forest, Chases, etc. Or without licence in the Forest, Chase, etc. of any other person, or make any Sale of the same Woods: It shall be lawful to the same Owners of the same Ground, whereupon the Wood so cut did grow, and to other such persons to whom the said Wood shall happen to be sold Immediately, etc. to cut and enclose the same Ground, with sufficient hedges, able to hold out all manner of cattle and Beasts, and to continue the same by the space of seven years, without suing of any other Licence, of him or of his Heirs, or of any other persons, or of any their Officers of the same Forest, Chases, etc. By which words it appears, that the statute doth not extend to any Wood of the King, but only to the Wood of the subject lying in Forest of the King, or of other person owner of the Forest, or Chase: And if it be in the King's case, and he hath licence from the King to cut the Wood, then may he cut it without other licence, according to the perclose of the Act: And the statute doth not give licence to Inclose, without the assent of the Commoner, but without other licence of other Officers of the Forest: And by this Statute the Owner of the Ground, may first cut the Wood, and then Inclose: But by the Statute of 35. H. 8. Otherwise it is, for by this he may first enclose, and then cut within four Months; and that Sir Francis Barrington hath no interest in the Soil, and that this Statute of 22. Ed. 4. is a private Statute and aught to be pleaded, for it concerns only forests and Chases, and it is no other, then if it had been of all Woods in Parks, and resembled that to the statute of 1. Eliza. of the Bishop, which concerns only the Bishop, and it is resolved in Elmers' case to be private; and the same Judges shall not take notice of that without pleading, and it is not like the statute of 13 Eliz. which concerns all manner of spiritual persons in general, and also that this statute is repealed by the statute of 35. H. 8. which is a negative Law, and Leges posteriores priores contrarius abrogant, and it is agreed in Porter's case 1. Coke, and so he concluded that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff. Warburton Justice to the contrary, and yet he agreed that neither the Arbitrement, nor the conveyance, nor the private act, excludes Warburton. the Commoners for these reasons, which have been urged by Foster; but he relied only upon the statute of 22 Ed. 4. and to that he said that the statute gives power to the owner of Ground to enclose, and it should be frivolous for him to enclose, if the Commoner shall not be by that excluded, and he said that the persons mentioned in the statute are two. The first is the owner of the ground, and such person he agreed Sir Francis Barrington is not. The second is such person to whom such wood shall happen to be sold, and such Person it seems, is Sir Francis Barrington, and yet he agreed that he hath an Inheritance in the Trees, and the Owner of the soil cannot cut them, nor dig the soil from the Roots of the Trees, for then the Grant could not take effect, and he said there is no difference between sales of Wood, though that the statute speaks of the Person to whom Wood shall be sold, and another person to whom it shall be given without consideration, and to that he resembled the statute Westminster 2. Chap. Si quis alienavit terram uxoris suae, non deferratur, etc. sed expectet emptor, etc. though that the statute mention buyer only, yet Donee without any consideration shall be intended in it, and that the statute doth not intend within it, and that the Statute doth not intend sale Vinca vice tantum, but rather sale of Inheritance, for such Vendee may rather intend the preservation of the wood than the other: And he inferred upon these words of the statute, to enclose the same Grounds with hedges sufficient to keep out all manner of cattle and beasts out of the same Grounds, and these words expound themselves, for they shall not be intended Deer, but cattle which belong to Commoners, and so is the statute of West. 2. Chap. If Infant suffer Usurpation, this shall not bind him, but this shall be intended, where he hath Advowson by descent and not by purchase, and this appears by the words of the statute, which are, Cum aliquis vis presentandi non habens presentavit ad aliquam ecclesiam, cujus presentatus sit admissus, ipse qui verus est patronus, per nullum aliud breve recuperare potuit advocationem, quam per breve de recto quod debet perminare per duellum vel per magnam assisam per quod heredes infra etatem existentes per fraudem & negligentiam custodis multities ex heriditatem patiebantur, etc. By which words it appears, that there ought to be presentation which passeth by fraud and negligence of the Guardian, which the Statute remedies, and that is presentation which he had by descent, and not by purchase, and in the Time of Ed. 1. Fitz. trespass 239. It is said, the Law of the Chase, that none may enclose his own Wood, without the view of the Forester, and if the statute of 22 Ed, 4. Gives licence to enclose, and that notwithstanding the Commoner may put in his Beasts, then is the statute made in vain; and it is resolved in the 30 of Ed. 3. Fitz. trespass, that if a man hunt in a Park or Chase, that this is not within the statute of Westminster 1. Chap. 21 Ed. 1. So the statute of 22 Ed. 4 Extends to the King's Deer, and also to other Beasts, which shall be intended ●he cattle of the Commoners, and it is not repealed by the statute 35. H. 8. For these statutes are made for several purposes, and consist upon several grounds, and if the statute of 22 Edw. 4. be repealed, then there cannot be enclosure in forest or Chase at all: And which is general Law, and the Justices ought to take notice of that without pleading, and that all Laws to some respects may be intended to be special as the statute of 13 Eliz. Concerns only spiritual men, and so Charta de foresta, concerns only forests, and the statutè of 3 H. 7. Chapt. 1. Gives appeal to the Wife for the death of her Husband, and though that all these statutes concern one thing only, and for that to some intent may be said to be special, yet they are all general Laws, and so he concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Defendant. Walmsley. Walmesley agreed with Foster in all, that is, that Sir Francis Barrington hath nothing but profit, In alieno solo, and for this cause was not within the statute of 22 Ed. 4. Which might enclose, and the Common Law doth not exclude the Commoner, for the Lord Rich granted the Wood, and this Transit cum onere, to Sir Thomas Barington, and said, that it was in vain to dispute if the statute of 22 Ed. 4. was private Law, or if it were repealed, which makes nothing in the Case, and so he briefly concluded that Judgement shall be given for the Commoner, which is the Plaintiff. Coke chief Justice agreed, that Judgement shall be given for the Coke. Plaintiff, and did agree that the Arbitrement, the Conveyance, nor the private Act made nothing in the Case, for by these the Commoner cannot be barred of his Common; but for the statute of 22 Ed. 4. He would first consider how the Law was before the making of that, and as to that it appears by the statute of Charta de foresta, that by the Common Law, no man which was Owner of Wood in which Charta de Foresta. another had Common; that they could not enclose, but Assize of Common or action upon the case lieth, as it requires, and if it be several Wood within the King's Forest, in which none hath interest of Common, then may he enclose by the view of the Foresters, and this hold enclosed by the space of three years, as it appears by the Preamble of the Statute of 22. Ed. 4. Cum parvo fossato & bassahaia, that is a Little Ditch, and Low Hedge, for that the King's Dear are not shut out, and this appears in the Register, in the Writ of, Ad quod damnum, Fitz. Na. Bre. 226. f. And then comes the statute of 22 Ed. 4. and gives power to enclose with such sufficient Hedges able to keep out all manner of Beasts and cattle. And then considered between what persons the statute is made: And to that he conceived it is made between the King and his Successors of one part, and Subjects having woods growing upon their own Grounds, and such persons unto whom such woods shall happen to be sold of the other part; and a Commoner is not named in the statute, and also the Body of the statute is not general, but there are some words in one sentence, and this is but a sentence and cannot be divided; the words are. First, The said Hedges so made, may keep, etc. Secondly, And repair and maintain them, as often as need shall be, within seven years. Thirdly, without suing any other Licence of him (that is the King) or his Heirs or other persons (that is, which have forests or Chases) or any of their Officers, and here the sentence concludes, and there is no period before them, so that this statute being made between the King and owners of forests and Chases of one part, and Owners of woods in their own soil, and other persons to whom such woods should be sold other part, this shall not extend to other persons, Commoners, and it is like to the case in 9 Eliz. Dyer 257. 13. A man makes a Lease for years, and covenants that the Lessee shall enjoy the Term without eviction of the Lessor, or any claiming under him, if he be evicted by a stranger, this shall be no breaking of the Covenant, for a stranger is no party to the Deed, nor claims under the Lessor, and for this his Entry shall not give Action to the Lessee, and so is the Case in 21 H. 7. between the Prior of Castleton and the Dean of Saint Stephens, which was adjudged the 18 of H. 7. Pasch. Rot. 416. Though that no Judgement be reported, where it appears that the King Ed. 3. seized all the Lands of Prior's aliens, in time of War, for that that they carried the Treasure of the King out of the Realm to the King's Enemies, and so it was made by H. 4. also during the time of his Reign, and then in the second year of the Reign of King H. 5. by a statute made between the King, and the said Prior's aliens, all the Possessions of the said Priors were resumed into the hands of the said King, and adjudged in 21. H. 7. 1. before that this shall not extend to the Prior of Castleton, which had Annuities issuing out of the Possessions of the said Priors, for the said Prior of Castleton was not party to the said act of Parliament, and for that he shall not be prejudiced by that, and so it was adjudged, 25. and 26. Eliz. In the Court of Wards in the case of one Boswell, where the King made a Lease for years which was voidable, and after by another Patent granted the Inheritance, and then came the statute of 18. Eliz. to confirm all Patents made by the said Queen within her time, and adjudged that the said Act shall not make the said patent void to the Patentee, which is a stranger to the act of the Parliament, but only against the Queen, her Heirs and successors, for by the statute it is made only against one person only, and shall not be good against another, though there be no saving of such person in the said Act. And also he conceived that the statute of 22 Ed. 4. Doth not extend to any woods in forest, in which another hath Common, for it doth not extend only to such woods which a common person hath in the King's forest, or common person, and that it may be enclosed for the space of three years after the cutting of the wood in this, before the making of the said statute, and this was no wood in which an Estranger had Common, as it appears by the Preamble of the said statute; and then after in the said statute it is said, such woods may be enclosed. And also he conceived where the statute saith, that they may enclose the same Grounds, with such sufficient hedges, able to keep out all manner of Beasts and cattle out of the same Grounds, but this refers to the quality of the hedge, for before it ought to be a small Ditch, and by this statute it ought to be with such hedge which shall be able, etc. And it shall not be referred to the manner of the cattle: But for the difference between Beasts of Forest, Beasts of Chase, and Beasts of Warrain, see the Register, fol. 96. 43 Ed. 3. 13. 12. H. 8. 12. b. Hollinsheads Cronicle, fol. 20. b. 32. And he conceived that Sir Francis Barrington is such a Vendee of Wood, that is within the statute, though that he be Vendee of Inheritance, and hath a greater Estate than Vnica vice, but for that, that he conceived that it was not within the statute for other reasons before cited, he would not dispute it: But he conceived if this had been the question of the Case, that this was within the statute, and also he conceived that this was a general statute, of which the Judges shall take notice without pleading of this; And this reason was, for that that the King was party to it, and this which concerns the King, being the head, concerns all the Body and Common Wealth, and so it was adjudged in the Chancery in the case of Sergeant Heale, that the statute by which the Prince is created Prince of Wales was a general statute, and for that see the Lord Barkleyes' case in the Commentaries: Also he conceived, that the said statute of 22 of Ed. 4. was repealed by 35. H. 8. for this was in the Negative, that none shall cut any wood, but only in such manner as is prescribed by the said statute, and for that shall be a repeal of the first, and that by the first Branch of the said statute it appears, that if such giving of Wood in his own Soil within any forest, he cut to his own use, he cannot enclose, and by that Branch Commoner is not excluded, but by the second Branch it is provided, that he may enclose the fourth part of his Wood, and cut that in such manner as is appointed by the said statute, and then he shall lose his own Common, in the three other parts, and so he concluded that Judgement ought to be given for the Plaintiff, which is the Commoner, and Judgement was entered accordingly. Pasch. 1610. 8. Jacobi, in the Common Bench. Cesar against Bull. THomas Cesar Plaintiff in Assize against Emanuel Bull, for the Assize Office. Office of Clock-Keeper to the Prince, & this he claims by grant of the King during his own Life, with the fee of two shillings a day for the exercising of it, and three pound yearly for Livery, and the patent purports only the Grant of the Office, and not words of creation of the Office, as Constituimus officium, etc. And the Plaintiff could prove that it was an ancient Office, and for that was nonsuited in the Assize, though that the Tenant had made default before. Pasch. 1610. 8. Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Heyden against Smith and others. THE Plaintiff counts in Trespass against these Defendants, and Trespass. these Defendants justify as Servants to Sir John Leventhorp, who was seized of a freehold of Land, in which the Tree, for which the action was brought, was cut, and so demands Judgement if action, the Plaintiff replies, that the place where, etc. was parcel of a house and twenty Acres of Land, which time out of mind, etc. have been demised and demisable by Copy of Court Roll, which was parcel of the Manor of A. of which the said Sir John Leventhorp was seized in his Demesne as of see, and by Copy at a Court held such a day and year granted the said Message and twenty acres of Land, whereof, etc. To the Plaintiff and his Heirs, according to the custom of the said Manor, and prescribes that within the said manor was a Custom that every Copyholder may cut the boughs of all the Pollingers and Husbands growing upon his Copyhold for fire to be burnt upon his Tenement, and also prescribed for Houseboot, Plowboot, and Cart-boote, and averred that he had nourished the growing of the Trees upon his said Copyhold, and that the said Message and buildings, upon that were ruinous, and the Trees growing upon that twenty Acres of Land were not sufficient for the repairing of it, and so demanded Judgement if he should be debarred of his Action, upon which these Defendants demurred in Law, and it was adjudged by Coke, Warburton, and Foster, Daniel being absent, that the Action was well maintainable; against Walmesley who objected, that if a Copyholder may cut Trees, as it was here pleaded at his pleasure, without pleading first, that his House was in decay and ruinous, and that then he cut trees for the repair of that, that then he hath an Estate at will according to the Custom, and not at the Will of the Lord, and he said that he could not cut a tree, and employ that for Reparations twenty years: But the cause of this cutting, which is the Ruins, aught to precede the cutting; and he said that such Copyholder hath no property in the Trees, by such prescription, no more than he which hath Common of Estovers, or tenant at will, and if he cut a tree without special custom, he shall be punished in trespass, as Littleton saith of Tenant at Will, and also he ought to plead how the House was ruinous, and what place and what part of that was in decay, and then that this so being in decay, that he cut trees for the repairs of that, and also that the Prescription to cut off the boughs, Pro ligno combustibili, is not well pleaded, for by that he may cut all the timber and others also, and he who prescribes to hate Estovers, aught to prescribe to have reasonable Estovers for Estovers. Fuel, and the averment that all the trees are not sufficient for reparations is surplusage, and so he conceived that the Action for these causes is not maintainable, that is, that it is not maintainable, without special custom, and that the custom as it is pleaded here is void, but it was answered and resolved, by Coke and the other Justices before cited, that the Action was well maintainable at the Common Law without such Custom, and that the pleading of the custom was surplusage, for it was agreed that the Copyholder hath special property, and the Lord a general property: and it was said by Coke and Foster, that the Lord may as well subvert the Houses as cut down the Trees, for without them the Copyholder hath no means to repair that, and for that if the Lord cut the Trees, the Copyholder may take them for repair of his house, for the Copyholder hath as large an Estate in the trees, as in his Copyhold Land, and it was resolved that the Prescription, was very well pleaded, insomuch that the Copyholder pleads that as a custom, and also that prescription, Pro ligno combustibili is Good, and this is an apt word by which he may claim it, and that boot in any sense is maintainable, and in some sense is Recompense or Reparation, and it is Houseboote, Hedge-boote, Fire-boote, Plow-Boote, etc. Is in itself a Saxon word, and the Lord Coke said, that it was adjudged Boot, its signification, etc. Michaelmas 25. and 26. Eliz. in Doylyes' Case, Where it was a custom that the Copyholder might cut Merisme for to repair, that if the Lord carry it away, that an Action of Trespass lies for the Tenant, and Pasch. 36. Eliz. Tailor's Case: A man was Tenant by copy of Court Role of wood, and the soil was excepted to the Lord, and yet the Copyholder maintained an Action of trespass against his Lord for cutting of wood, And Trinity 4. Eliz. Stebbing Case, Copyholder prescribes to have the Loppings of all the trees growing upon the Copyhold, and the Lord cut a tree himself, and the Copyholder brought an action upon his case, and adjudged that it lieth well, and 9 H, 4. Fitz. Waste 59 by Hull, that Tenant by copy of Court Roll cannot make waste, nor cut woods to fell, but for his Benefit in repairing of his House, and 2 Henr. 4. 12. a. It seems that if a stranger cut a Tree, the Lord may have an Action of trespass, and the Copyholder another, and every one of these shall recover Damages according to his interest, that is, the Lord by his general property, and the Copyholder for his special property; & it appears by Clerk and Pennyfathers' case 4 Coke 23. b. That the Heir of the Copyholder, may have an Action of Trespass, before admission, by which it appears that the heir doth not take his Estate of the Lord but of his Father: and also agree, that if such an Heir die before Admission, the Heir may enter, and take the profits, and so it was adjudged that the Action of Trespass brought by the Copyholder against his Lord was well maintainable. Pasche 1610. 8. Jacobi, In the Common Bench. Earl of Rutland's Case. EARL of Rutland Plaintiff in an Action of trespass upon the Case against Spencer and Woodward Defendants, the case was, The last Queen Elizabeth Anno 42. Eliz. by her Letters Patents under the great seal of England, granted to the Earl of Rutland the Office of the custody of the Porter-ship of the Castle of Nottingham, Habendum to the said Earl to be executed by him or his Deputy during his natural▪ Life, and further the same Queen, by the same Letters Patents, granted to the said Earl, the Office of Stewardship of divers Manors, Habendum & exercendum, cum omnibus feodis, vadis & proficuijs eidem Officio pertinentibus, to the said Earl, from the time that he should be of full age, during his Life, and further the said Queen granted to the said Earl the Office of Keeper-ship of divers Parks and forests, Habendum & exercendum Officium predictum cum omnibus & singulis suis proficuijs, vadis, feodis, & emolumentis, quibuscunque, eidem Officio pertinentibus, aut ratione ejusdem percipiendis per se vel sufficiendem deputatum sunm, etc. And after in the said Patent it is recited, that the said Earl was of full age An & 40 Eliz. Vt informamu, r mandamus quod omnes & singuli Officiarij, & alij quicunque sint intendentes & obedientes dicto Commiti, & deputatis suis, in exerendo officium predictum, and if this patent were good or not was the question. And Hutton sergeant conceived, that the Patent was good, and that the said Earl may exercise the said Office of Stewardship, for which this Action was brought, by Deputy by force of the said Grant. The first question, which he moved was, if Steward of a Court may execise his Office by Deputy, without special Grant of that. Secondly, if there be words within the Patent, to enable him to execute that by Deputy. Thirdly, if upon this disturbance, action upon the case, Quare vi & armis, lies. And to the first, he conceived, that the Patentee may exercise the Office by Deputy without special words of Deputation in the Patent, for he conceived that it is not merely an Office of trust, for he hath not the keeping of any Records, for the Courts of which he was steward were not Courts of Record, and yet that all the Books are, that ancient grants of Office of stewardship, contain that the Patentee may exrecise, Per se, vel per sufficientem deputatum suum, though they are not of Courts in which the steward is Judge, but the suitors, but if a Grant be of such an Office of Inheritance, than there needs words of Deputatum, for here it is apparent, that there was not special trust reposed in the Patentee: And he also agreed, that if it be not an Office of profit, the Grantor may enter and out the Patentee, but the fee shall remain, as it appears by the 31 H. 8. Brooks Novel Case and 18 Ed, 4. And it was not the intent of the Queen, that the Earl of Rutland should execute the Office in person, for that should be an undervaluing of him, the which he said was proved by Sir Robert Wraths Case in the Commentaries, where an Officer to the Prince was discharged of his attendance, by alteration of quality of the Prince, and making of him King, and yet the Fee remained. And to the second it seems, that the patent hath express words of Deputation. And the third Grant, which hath a reference to the Grant precedent, and all the words being put together make a perfect Grant, and this such construction hath been always made of Grants of the King, as it appears by Sir John Mullyns Case, 6 Coke 56. And Justice Windhams case 5 Coke 7. a. So if the King makes a Lease of a Manor, except a Grove next to the Manor, this shall be intended next to the Manor House, for otherwise it shall be out of the Manor, and so the exeption void, but Coke and Foster doubted of that. And to the third point, that the Action was maintainable, Vi & armis, for when the Deputy of the Earl, of Rutland proclaimed the Court as Deputy of the Earl of Rutland, and these Defendants proclaimed that as stewards of the Earl of Shrewsbury, and after adjourned that; and after held all the Courts and received the profits, it seemed to him, that for this outing and disturbance which is disseisin, action upon the case lies, Quare vi & armis, as well as in the Book of Entries 15. two men had Warrens adjoining, and one of them puts Cats, and other vermin into the Warren of the other to destroy it, and the Action of trespass, Vi et armis lies, and so for menace action of trespass, Vi & armis lies, as it appears by 3 H. 4. and this disturbance is sufficient to maintain an Assize, and upon that he concluded that the Plaintiff in the Action ought to recover, and to have Judgement. And Harris the younger Sergeant argued, that the Grant is not good, for default of certainty, as to this Grant of Stewarship, for the Grant is of the Office of Stewardship of the Manor of Mansfeild, and doth not show where the Manor is, nor in what County; and it appears, and is put for a Rule by Hussey chief Justice, in the 25. of H. 7. 60. b. That when a man will have advantage of Letters Patents of the King, it behooveth that they extend certainly to things of which he will have advantage, see 2. R. 3. 7. a. By Hussey 44. Ed. 3. 17. 5 Ed. 4. Garters Case, 17 Ed. 3. 15. and Doddingtons' Case, which is Hill, and Pext, 2 Coke 1. 31. b. If the Town be misnamed it is good, if there be another certainty, but if it be not named at all, otherwise it is. And to the Point moved by Hutton, he concived that this Office of Stewardship could not be exercised by a Deputy, as it appears by Littleton in his Chapter of Estates upon condition, where he saith, that there are Estates upon condition in Law, of which Stewardship is one, fol. 89. Sect. 379. That cannot make Deputy without special Grants, and with this agreed Sir Henry nevil's Case Com. 379. and Long 5. Ed. 4. 26. b. and by 21 E. 4. 20. and Sir Henry nevil's Case before, he could not grant over his office, but if he do not attend to the Execution of that, it is forfeiture, 11 Ed. 4. so if he wants skill 29 H. 6. 42. Per totam curiam, He conceived that the Law doth not make any difference, between the person of an Earl and another, to the executing of this Office, and that the words of the Patent do not contain words of deputation, for in the Grant the words are, Habendum Officium predictum, briefly written, Cum omnibus vadis & feodis eidem Officio, sue ratione ejusdem, etc. The which last words are expository of the first, that is, that it shall be intended that the Office is contained in the last Grant, and shall not be referred to a Grant precedent, in which the Stewardship is contained, and also he conceived that this Action upon the case doth not lie, Quare vi & armis, as it appears by Fitzherberts' Naturabrevium 86. H. Where it is said, that in trespass upon the case, these words, Vi & armis are contained in the Writ, shall be sufficient cause to abate the Writ, see 11 Assize 25. He which counsels to make Disseisin, shall not be a Disseisor with force, for he ought to do some manual Act, either to the person or to the possession, see 41 Ed. 4. 24. a. and 44. Ed. 3. 20. b. And so he concluded that this Action is not maintainable, and that Judgement ought to be given for the Defendant for the causes aforesaid. This Case was argued again by nichols Sergeant for the Plaintiff, nichols. and by Dodridge the King's Sergeant for the Defendants, to the same intent, and it was urged by Dodridge, that the Patent contains three several express Grants, which are distinct Grants in themselves, as there be three distinct several Patents, though they have but one Parchment and one Seal, and if the King grant the Office of parkship of two parks by one self same Grant, if the Patentee be disseised of them, he may have several Assizes, though that it be but one selfsame grant. And he agreed that the words, officium predictum, in the 3. grant shall be intended officium predictum, and so supply the defect in the second grant, if it were not limitation of the estate in the second grant, but for that, that the second grant was perfect in itself, there need not of necessity any such construction, and that these words shall be referred to the last words, appears by the last words of the habendum, that is, cum vadis & feodis, eidem officio, aut ratione ejusdem officij, and these Relatives are exposition accordingly. And to the objection of the clause of Assistance in the end of the Patent: he answered that if the grant were ill and void in itself, this Clause doth not supply that. For this is but notification to the Officers of the Queen, that they should be attendant to the said Earl. For though that the Intent of the Queen was, that the Earl of hutland should execute this office by Deputy, yet this intent shall not make the grant good, for though that the Intent of a common person be apparent within the Deed, yet this intent shall not make a void grant good, 19 H. 6. 20 H. 6. 22 H. 6. 15. Grant to 2. Et heredibus, with warranty to them and to their Heirs, this clause of warranty, though it were the intent of the parties apparent, yet it was not sufficient to make the grant which was void good, and so it is in 9 H. 6. 35. Abbot by his deed in the first person grants a Tenement, and the Grantee in the third person, renunciavit totum Commune quod habuit in uno tenemento: and though that in this Grant the Intent of the parties is apparent, yet this Intent shall not make the Grant which is void in itself to be good. So if a man makes a Lease for life to the Husband and Wife, and after grants the reversion of the Land that the Husband held for term of life, that grant of the Reversion is void, though that the Intent was apparent, 13▪ Edw. 3. Grants 63. And so in Patent of the King, grant to a man, and heredebus masculis suis, is void, though that the Intent also is apparent, that he should have an estate tail, 18 H. 8. b. Estates 84 But admitting that the Grant may be supplied by the last words, that is, that in the last Grant the words are officia predicta, and in the clause of Assistance, yet these words may be supplied, for there are two other Grants, in which there is express mention that the Patentee may exercise it by Deputy: and so the words shall have full Interpretation, Reddendo singula singulis. And he conceived that the Writ shall abate for that, that it contains Vi & armis. And also the Declaration; for the Jury have not found any disturbance at all. And he agreed that in some cases, Trespass Vi & armis well lies, as it is Fitzh. Na. Bre. 92. 86. as where it is actual taking, 45 Ed. 3. 30. 44 Edw. 3. 20. where trespass Vi & armis is maintainable against a Miller for taking of Toll against the Custom, for here is actual taking, and 8 R. 2. 7. Hosteler 7. In an action of Trespass, Vi & armis against an Host, for that, that certain evil persons have taken the money of the Plaintiff, and good. But where there is not any actual taking, there the Writ ought not to contain Vi & armis, for, for not scouring of a Ditch, or stopping of Water, as it is 43 Ed. 3. 17. But for casting of Dung into a River, action of Trespass Vi & armis lies, 12 H. 4. But for burning of a house it doth not lie Vi & armis, 48 Ed. 3. 25. And so for turning of watercourse, 3 H. 4. 5. But in this case there is but disturbance with a word, and commandment to hold a Court, and no Court held, nor no Proclamation made, and so no disturbance at all; 16 Edw. 4. 11. one hath the office of a Parkership, and another man was bound, that he should not disturb. And in debt upon the Obligation he pleaded that the Obligor hath threatened to disturb him, and adjudged that this is no breaking of the Condition, for there is no disturbance: and in 2 Ed. 3. 25. and 40. Quo minus by Jeffery Scorlage, where the King grants to the Mayor of Southampton the Customs of the same Town, and in quo minus for taking of them, it was adjudged that words are no assault, but there ought to be an act done. But in this Case is nothing found but words, and no act done, but it is found that after the Defendants held the Courts. But that doth not appear if it were against the will of the Earl of Rutland or not, and so concludes that the action is not mayntainable. And this case was argued again in Trinity Term next ensuing by the Justices, Danyel being dead, but I was not present at the argument of Foster and Warburton Justices: but I heard the arguments of Walmsley Justice, and Coke chief Justice. And first Walmesley conceived that the Grant was good, and that Walmesley. the Earl of Rutland by this Grant might exercise his Office by Deputy, and this only in respect of the quality of his person, for the Patentee is a Noble man, which hath been employed as an Ambassador of the King into other Realms, and this Grant of this Office being amongst others, varies from them; for this wants the word, exercendum, which is contained in the others: and also the office of a Steward is too base for an Earl to execute, for the Steward is but as a Clerk, and not a Judge, for he shall not be named in a Writ of false Judgement, nor shall hold plea of any actions but under 40. s. & for that it is not fit nor convenient that an Earl should exercise such a bas Office in Person. For if Recovery here be pleaded, it shall be tried by the Country, 1 Edw. 3. And the Steward shall not give Judgement, but the Suitors, and no trial shall be by Verdict, but by waging Law, and the fee of the Stewardis but a 1 d. for every Plaint. And for that it was not the Intent of the Queen that the Earl should exercise such a base office in person, and her Intent is apparent, for that, that the word Exercise is not contained in the Patent. And the Intent of the Queen is to be considered, for the other Offices are fit to be executed by the Earl: for the exercising of them is but a matter of pleasure, as in hunting in the Forests and Parks of the Queen: and for that if these Grants have not contained words of deputation, the Earl ought to exercise them in person, according to Littleton. And Noble men are not to be used as common people, for they are not to be Impanelled of a Jury, and Capias doth not lie against him, by which he cannot be outlawed, and for that he shall not be bound to sit in such a base Court, as this base Court is: And all this matter is well declared and expounded in the last clause of the Patent, where the words are, Et ulterius volumus & mandamus quod omnes, etc. Sint intendentes & auxiliantes, etc. Where the words volumus in Patents of the King, to amount to as much as concedimus, or a Covenant, which is all one with a Grant, as in 32 H. 6. The King releases all his right in an Advowson, Nolentes, that the Patentee shall be grieved or disturbed, and adjudged that this shall amount to a Grant, and so the word Volumus, in the principal case: and also he conceived that the action is well maintainable, Vi & armis, as Quare Impedit, for disturbance by word, or presentment by word. And it is also found that the Defendants did take all the profits, and that the Deputy of the Plaintiff came to the usual place where the Court was kept, and that could not be intended to be out of the Manor. And so for these reasons he concluded that Judgement should be given for the Plaintiff. And Coke chief Justice argued to the same intent, that is, that the Coke. Plaintiff ought to have Judgement. And first he conceived, that the Patent is good, notwithstanding the uncertainty, that the Manors are not named in what Counties they are, either in England, France, or Ireland, for the Manor is named very certain, by which it may be granted though it be in the King's case, as it appears by 32 H. 6. 20. where the King grants all Manors, Messages, etc. which were parcel of the possessions of I. S. attaint, and good. And such grant was made to Charles Brandon Duke of Suffolk, and adjudged good, though that the person of a man is more incertain than the Manor, & yet, Id certum est quod certum reddi potest. And 39 Ed. 3. 1. in the Abbot of Redding case, where a grant was made to the Abbot and his Successors, that the Prior and Covent shall take the profits in time of vacation, Fitz. Na. Bre. 33. b. And 23 Ed. 3. 20. The King grants to the Queen the Barony, and all Manors, etc. till john of Gaunt be able to govern himself, and that shall be intended till the Law intends him able to govern himself, and Manor is very certain, of which a view shall be awarded. The second exception which was taken to the grant was, for that, that it was to take effect at the full age of the Earl. And after it is recited in the Patent, that he was of full age before the making of the Patent, and so by consequence the Patent is to take effect from the time that it was passed: And to that he said, that it shall be intended to the profits of the Office only, for it appears by the Patent that the Queen had granted it to another during his Minority: That is, the office. And to the third matter, That is, if he cannot make a Deputy, than he hath forfeited the said Office, by the not using of it. And to that he said, it appears by Waltons' case, 10 Eliz. Dyer, fol. 270. That if a man grants a Fee, pro concilio impendendo, or keeping of Courts, the Fee shall not be forfeited without special request to the Fee when forfeited. Patentee to give Council, or to hold his Courts, for he doth not know if the Grantor will have his Courts held or not: and so it is 39 H. 6. 22. Brewens' case, where it is also agreed, that it shall be no forfeiture of an office without special request to hold the Courts, or to give Council: But in the case of the Queen otherwise it is, for she ought not to make demand in case of Rent nor Condition, though that it be within the Statute of 32. H. 8. And yet it was argued in Sir Thomas Hennages case, that if the King make a Lease for years upon condition to cease; this shall cease without office upon the breaking of the Condition, but a Lease for life shall not cease without office, though that the Condition be broken: And so if the King grants an Office for life, this shall not be avoided without Office: And he doubted the case of the Lease for years: And also he agreed, that the Grantee of a Stewardship, cannot make Deputy to exercise his Office, without special words in the Patent: But if the Office be granted to him and his Heirs, or to him and his assigns, it is sufficient without other words to make a Deputy: And also he said that the word Steward, is the name of an Office, and is derived of Steed and Ward, which are Saxon words, and intent the Keeper of the place, which the party himself ought to hold; and it appears by Cambdem and Lambert: And so the word Senescallss also signify, for this is but a Custos sive officiarius loci: See Fleta liber 2. chap. 72. Senescallum providebit Dominus circumspectum fidelem, Modestum & pacificum qui in consuitudinibus, etc. & Jura Domini sui teneri, etc. Quique balivos suos instruere potest, Cujus officium est curia maneriorum, etc. And a Deputy is a person authorised by the Officer in the name and right of the Officer, and for all that he doth the Officer shall answer, for he is but as a shadow of the Officer: But assignee is in his own right, and he shall answer for himself, and forfeiture by assignee of Tenant for life, shall not be forfeiture of the reversion, 39 H. 6. And he agreed that a Marshal, Steward, Constable, Bailiff, and such like cannot make Deputies, without special words in the Grant, as it appears, 39 H. 6. 11. Ed. 3. 10. Ed. 4. 14. 17. and 7. 21. Ed. 4. nevil's case in the Com. and Littleton: And to the exceptions which have been taken to the Writ and Count, he saith that an Action of Trespass, which is founded upon the case, doth not lie, Vi et armis, where the point and cause is Action, is supposed to be made Vi et armis, and for that he takes difference between. Causa causans, and Causa causata, for where the matter which is supposed to be done Vi & armis, is not the point of the Action: But the cause of the Action there lies very well Vi & armis: But wherein the point of Action is supposed to be made Vi & armis, there the Writ shall abate: As if a man brings an Action of Trespass for casting dung into a River, Trespass. by which his Land is drowned, in this case an Action of Trespass upon the case, Vi & armis lieth very well, for here the casting in of the Dung, is but Causa causans, And the drowning of the Land is Causa causata, 8. R. 2. And so disturbance to hold a Leet, by which he hath lost his offerings 19 R. 2. 52. And the Earl hath election to have Trespass or Assize, though it be not Manurable: As if a man prescribe to have seven pence of every Brewer which sells strong Beer, for disturbance to have the seven pence, Action upon the case lies, for this disturbance is Dissesin 15. Ed. 4. 8. 14. Ed. 3. 4. 1. Ed. 5. 5. 19 R. 2. Action upon the case 51. And to the objection which hath been made, that disturbance found by the Jury, is not the same disturbance, which is mentioned in the Count, for in the Count the disturbance is supposed to be made Vi & Armis, but the Jury do not find any distubance to be made Vi & Armis: But this notwithstanding, it seems that the Count is good: As if a Sheriff enters a Franchise and executes a Writ, this is disturbance, and Action upon the case lies: And so in Quare Impedit: And also he said, that the Earl cannot make a Deputy but by writing, as it is resolved 28. H. 8. Br. deputy 17. Where it is said that Deputation of an Office which lies in Grant, aught to be made by Deed and not by Word: But here the Jury have found, that the Earl hath made his Deputy, this shall be intended in lawful manner, and cannot be but by writing: And also he agreed that the Habendum mentioned in the third Grant, shall extend only to this Grant, which is his proper Grant, that the Office of the Habendum: And it appears by Wrotsleys and Adam's case, Comment. 17. That the Office of Habendum, is to make certain▪ the Estate and not the thing granted, for this is the Office of the Premises of the Deed: And if the Habendum in the third Grant, had had reference to the second Grant, this would make the Grant void: And in Grants of the King other construction shall be made, as it was adjudged in the Court of Wards, Michaelmas 28. and 29, Eliz. between Brunkar Plaintiff and Robotham Defendant, where the case was, the King Hen. the 8. had two Manors, whereof divers Lands of one Manor extended the other Manor, and then the King granted one Manor and all his Lands in the same Manor, Nec non omnies & singulas Terras, etc. In the same Town, and adjudged that the Lands which were parcel of the other Manor, which was not granted, pass by this Grant, though that they are in the other Manor, in the same Town, and he denied that the words Precipientes & volentes shall be taken as a Grant, for they are not spoken to the Patentee, but to other Officers, which are strangers to the Grant: But if the thing granted had been a Chattel, that a Covenant might enure as a Grant, and 10. Eliz. Dyer 270. 22. The King Philip and Queen Mary, granted for them and their Heirs and Successors, Grant le Roy. to A. B. That he and his Factors and Assigns might Tavern, and keep a Tavern, etc. Commanding all Mayors and Sheriffs, etc. and other Officers and Subjects and their Heirs and Successors, to permit and suffer the said A. B. during his life to hold and use a Tavern, and to sell Wine without Impeachment, and it seems that the Grant is void, for that that there is not any time limited, for how long it shall endure, and the mandate in the last clause shall not make any limitation,, for by the death of the Prince this altogether ceaseth, for Omne mandatum morte mandantis expirat: And for that all Proclamations made in time of the Reign of Queen Eliz. cease and determine by her death: And to the person of the Earl, he said that it was a Maxim, that Honour and Order shall be observed, and that was a common saying of the said Queen, and for that it was not her intention, that this Maxim should be broken, and that the said Earl should exercise the said Office in person, but she intended the said Earl should overlook the said Manor, and place here a sufficient able man to exercise the said Office, because he should answer, for the misdemeanour of such a Deputy is the forfeiture of the Office, and he saith that the Dignity of an Earl, was the most high Dignity in this Realm, that any Subject doth possess, till the 11. Ed. 3 The black Prince was the 1 Duke, and Aubry de Vere the 1 Marquis in the 11. R. 2. and Beaumont the first viscount in the time of H. 6. And none of these Dignyties are above an Earl in degree, but only in precedency, for Bracton lib. 1. chap. 8. saith, Quod Comites dicunter a socitate, quia Comitantur Regem: And in ancient time none were made Earls but only those which were of the blood Royal, and this is the reason that they are called Consanguinij Regis, and also they may be called consuls a Consulendo, Tales enim Regis sibi associunt ad consulendum & regendum populum Dei: And at their creation the King gives to them a Robe and Cap, which signifies Council, and Coronet, which signifies the greatness of his Blood and Honour, and also sword, Vt sit in ntrumque tempus, as well ready for War as peace: And for that it should be unfit, that one of such Honour, State, and Dignity; should be employed in holding of Court Barons, and there sit to enter Plaints, and have a penny for every Plaint for his pains, and to make Copies and such like base employments which are Vividae rationes, which was not the intent of the Queen, that he should exercise the said Office in person, and the Law requires conveniences in all Grants, as in 12. and 13. H. 8. One licenced a Duke to come and hunt in his park, and the Duke came with his Servants and many others of his Retinue, and hunted there, and it was adjudged that the Grant was sufficient, to warrant his hunting in this manner, in respect of the conveniency, for it is not fit and convenient that the Duke should go alone, and 21. Ed. 3. 48. The Bishop of Carlisle sued the Executors of his Predecessor the Ornaments of the Chapel of the said Bishopric: and then recovered, and though that the said Chapel was in the private House of the said Bishop,, yet it was thought fitting, that such Chapel should be adorned with convenient Ornaments, and that these Ornaments should go in succession to the Successors, and not to the Executors, and if conveniency be so required in all these cases, then by the like Reason such inconveniency shall not be admitted, that the Earl should be Clerk to Suitors as every Steward is. And for that he conceived that the Grant is good; And that the said Earl may exercise this Office by a Deputy, as well as if a Common person grant an Office of Fostership to the King, he may exercise that by any party, or grant it over, though therebe no words of deputation in the Grant, and this in respect of the quality of his person, and in many other cases an Earl or another Noble man shall be privileged, as in 3 H. 6. A Noble man shall not be examined upon his Oath in account, And 48 Ed. 3. 30. He shall not be sworn upon Inquests, which is to serve God and his Country Register 179. And if a common person be in debt to me a hundred pound, I may have a Capias and arrest his person for this Debt, but if the King create him Baron or Earl, than his person is so privileged, that that cannot be attached for this Debt, and this is without wrong to me▪ as it appears by the Countess of Rutland's case 6. Coke; And if a Baron be returned of a Jury, and if Issue be taken, if he be a Baron or not, this shall be tried by Record whether he be a Baron or not, 35 H. 6. 46. 22 Assize 24. 48 Ed. 3. 8. Register 47. And in case that one common person hath any Office, which he cannot exercise by a Deputy, yet if he be employed in the King's service, as if he be made Ambassador out of the Realm, or other such employment, he may during his absence make a Deputy, and this shall not be forfeiture of his Office, and an Earl in ancient time was not only a Counsellor of the King, but by his Degree was Prefectus sive prepositus commitatus, as it appears by Cambden 106, 107. Comes prefectus Satrap, which is Prepositus comitatus, and was in place of the Sheriff at this day, and when that he was Sheriff, though that he had the custody of the county committed unto him, which was a great trust, yet then by the Common Law, he might make an under Sheriff which was but a Deputy, the like Holinsheads Chronicle 463. Amongst the customs of the Exchequer, he called the under Sheriff Senescallus, which agreed with the Definition before, for he held the place of Sheriff himself, and by the statute of Westminster 8. chapt. 39 It is said that Vice comes est viccarius commitatus, and if a Barony descend upon the Sheriff, yet he shall continue Sheriff, 13. Eliz▪ Dyer and Britton 43. If a Rybaud strike a Baron or a Knight, he shall lose his Land: And Tenant by Knight's service, may execute it by Deputy. 7. Ed. 3. Littleton: And if it be so in the case of a Sheriff, which hath the County committed to him, that he may make a Deputy by the Common Law, upon that he inferred, that the Steward which hath but the Manors of the King, committed to him, that he may make a Deputy: And also he said that the words in the last clause, that is, (Volentes & precipentes) that the Officers and the Subjects should be attendant, expounds and declares the intent of the Queen, for the words are; Omnibus premises, and the Grant of the Office of the Stewardship is one of the premises, and so he concluded upon these reasons, that Judgement shall be given for the Plaintiff, and that the Grant was good, and the Action well maintainable: And o● this opinion were Warburton and Foster, Justices: And Judgement was given accordingly; this Trinity Term 8. Jacobi. And Coke chief Justice remembered a Report, made by him and Popham chief Justice of England, upon reference made to them, that this Patent was good, and that the Earl of Rutland, might exercise this Office by Deputation, and he conceived, that there were other words in the Patent which were found by the Jury, that the said Earl should have the said Office, Cum omnibus Juribus & Jurisdictionibus, etc. as full. etc. as any other Patent hath been had, and withal the Appurtenances, and it seemed that a former Patentee had power by express words to execute that by a Deputy, and he conceived though these words Adeo plene &c, do not enlarge the Estate, yet this enlargeth the Jurisdiction of the Officer, as in 43. Ed. 3. 22. Grant is made by the King of a Manor, to which an advowson is appendent, Adeo plene, & tam amplis modo & forma, etc. And these words past the advowson without naming that, and he said it was adjudged Hillary 40. Eliz. in Ameridithes' case, where the case was, the Queen granted a Manor, Adeo plene & intigre & in tam amplis modo & forma, as the Countess of Shrewshury or any other had the same Manno, r and Queen Kathrin had the same Manor and divers liberties with it of great value, during her life, and adjudged that these liberties should pass also by this Patent by these words, and so in the principal case, if the former Patent had been found also by the Jury, and so was the opinion of Popham and him, and was certified accordingly. FINIS. A Table of the Second Part. ARch-Bishops Jurisdiction, 1, 2. 28. Admiralties Jurisdiction, 10, 11. 13▪ 16, 17. 26. 29. 31. 37. Arbitrement satisfaction, what 31. 131. Assumpsit, 40, 41. 273. arianism, one committed for it, 41. Assets, 47. Almony, 36. Apurtenant, what shall be said, 53 Action sur Case by a Commoner for words, 55. 84. 100 119. 122. Avowry the whole plea, 62, 63. 102 Agreement, what, 72 Account, 76 Audita Querela. 81. 83. 168 Atturnment good by one under age, where and why. 84 Award void. 100 Age not allowed in Dower. 118 Administration repealable. 119 Accord with satisfaction good plea, where, where not. 131 Attorney ought to find Bail in an Original, not Bill. 134 Action sur Assumpsit. 137 Assu●psit against an Executor where maintainable, 138 Assets in Formedon, what, 138 Attachment, 144. 168 Assent to a Legatee, 173 Aid prayer, 191 Attachment for contempt of the Court, 216 Accessary null, unless there is Principal, 220 Assignment of an estate suspended, 225 Assize of novel Disseisin, 229 Abatment of brief per entry 231, 232 Abatement de facto, and by plea differ in what, 235 Agreement and Arbitrement good pleas, where, 132 Agreement by word to keep back tithes, 17 Admiral's Commission for measuring of Corn, 29 Administration during minority of etc. 83 Attorney brings Debt for Trees. 99 Arbitrement. 130. 131. Arrest of Judgement. 167. Acts what to make an Executor de seu tort. 184. Attachment of Privilege for an Estate against the Marshal etc. 266. Assize where it may lie, sans view, 268. Assize, the Recognitors challenged, ibid. Ajournment of the Term. 278. Annuity or Writ of Covenant where 273. Arbitrement, submission, and revocation 290. Approvement of Common, 297. Account. 308. Award submission, 309. Arbitrement, 310 Arbitrement who it binds 323. Assize deal Office 328. B BIshop not displaceable. 7. Baron alone cannot sue for not setting forth Tithes without the feme proprietory. 9 Ballast granted to Trinity House a Monopoly. 13. Baron and Feme join where. 66. Baron Judgement against an Executor 83 Baron how chargeable, pur sa feme, 92. 93. 95. Bar in trespass, 121. By-Laws, whom they bind. 180. To what extended 258. Baron and feme take by intirity, where. 226. Barwick whether part of England or Scotland. 270. Bail 293 Bankrupt actionable 299. C CHase an action not to be divided. 56 Cui in vita of Copyhold 79. Custom for pound breach, 90. Common Recovery 16. Copiholder shall hold charged, where 208. Confirmation to a copiholder destroys common 209 210. Consultation, after it no Prohibition grantable upon the same Libel 247. Cape grand & Petit, 253 Cause of a commitment traversable 266. Count in trespass after the teste del Breife 273. Covenant to pay Rend 273 Continuance Ibidem. Chellenge 275 Customs of London argued by the Justices. 284. 285. 286. Certiorari 312. Capias ad satisfaciendum no satisfactory execution 312. 313. 314. 315. 316. Copyhold at common Law 44. Creditor may sue both heireand Executor 97. Court of Equity not proper after Judgement, 97. Copyhold entailed 121. Covenants direct and collateral how they differ 136. Condition repugnant void 138. Condition in rei & in persona diff. 139. Covenant where it lieth 160 Covenant express and employed, or in Law, how they differ 162. Copyhold customs 197. Covenant P. Administrator 207. Covenant joint surviveth, ibidem & 208. Churchwardens not interessed in church Goods 210 Consultation awarded 216. Challenge for favour 229. Challenge to the Array for action against the Sheriff 230 Consultation awarded 26 Citation for defamation 28. Charter part beyond sea where to be sued 34. Citation out of the Deocess 34 Consultation granted 26. Clerk of a Parish who shall nominate him 38. Covenant destroyed 56. Common Recovery 75. Custom 76. Incertain void 85 Void for inconveniency 86 Copyhold what Authority 77 Its nature and reason 79 It is within the statutes which speaketh of Lands and Temements 79. 80 It's several customs 86, 87 Consuetudo sola quia non totaliter disallowed 86 Customs unreasonable void 87 Commission to the council in Wales 119 Caveat to a Bishop 119 Coram non Judice where 127 Commoner cannot have an Action of Trespass 147 Chase in possibility not grantable 173 Cinque Ports the custom of taking the Body of a man in Withernam not good 195, 196, 197 Common of a Copyholder destroyed by confirmation 211 Corrody granted 211 Common Law where void 38 Clam delinquens etc. 288 Covenant express doth qualify covenant in Law where 212, 213 Covenant in Law not binding Executors where 214 Copyhold custom 12 15 Custom ought to be reasonable 217. Custom in the Isle of Man 217 Custom of London 218 Custom of Hallifax 218 Copyhold custom for a married-wife a Devise to her Husband 218 Court Baron cannot inquire of Felonies 219 Condition entire not to be apportioned 227 Challenge principal, what is & what is not 240 Cestercians their Privilege 20 Contra formam collationis to who given 22 Contract made in the straits of Malico 30 Custom for thithing 30 Cpoihold anciently villinage 44 Corporation cannot be limited to a county 244 Certificate of a Bishop 301 Charta de foresta 325 D DEfamation Sint ex officio 28 Debt Sur Judgement 39 Debt Sur Award, 48 Sur Judgement 39, 40 Damages in dower 41 Devise of lands how taken 74 That executors shall sell etc. 100 Devastavit where 81 83 Damages uncertain, therefore a fine certain for them void 86 Debt Sur bill P. memorand. 97 Debt Pur fees P. attorney 99 Devise of lands in cap. and the stat. of 32 and 34 H. 8 expounded 105, 106, 107 Deed without date 107 Dower 118 execution in it 141 Debt against an Administrator 118 Dower ass. by the Sheriff without jurors good 141 Damnum five injuria 148 Debt against an administrator 153 Debt sur oblige pur Pf. cove. 167 176 177 Debt 177 178 pur penalty of a by-law 179 Demurrer sur evidence 183 Ddvastavit 185 Debet & detinet for Rent against an administrator 202, 203 Damages found entire, where it is error 272 Defendant entered after the habere fac. poss. executed 216 Dower recompense what 132 Delapidation suit for it 27 Dreprivation for drunkenness 37 Debt P. executor 283 against executors 183 Demurrer in ejectione firm 128 Discontinuance 142 Dower of tithe wool 143 Devise of a lease 172 Devise to a corporation 246 Debt against an administrator during minolity 248 Debt against executors 274 Duress where 276 Distress a quasi action 289 Devise enures to bargain and sale where 291 Devise of a Term 308 E Ejectione firm 40 Shall not abate if the Term end 131 Estrepment 401 68 Election by an Executor 51 Executor refuseth when too late 58 when good ibid. Ejectione firm 74, 102, 103 Accord with satisfaction good 130 131 Elegit 97 sur testatum 208 Extent sur stat. 122 Executrix during nonage 144 Ejectione firm 168 172 168 223 Election by an executor of a legacy 173 Executor de seu tort who 184 Executor de seu tort 184 185 Executors two jointly sued one confess the action good 286 Elegit sur testatum where it is necessary 207 Ejectione firm Judgement in it 216 Estoppell 219 Escheat 220 Election implicit 220, 221 Error sur judgement in assize 230 Entry to abate an assize what, what not 235 236 Ejectione firm and a good bar where 133 Executor sued and also the heir 67 Executrix during nonage 144 Express covenant qualifies covenantin law 212 213 Exposition of usage 222 Estate increasing sur condition when it ought to vest or not at all 251 Error in ve. fa. and hab. corp.. 274 Essoyn day is a day in term 279 Entire services casual 293 295 Error in prolcamation 300 Error in writ of dower 300 Common of Estovers 329 F FOrm edon lieth for copyhold lands intayted 43 44 Forgery by Scrivener who lost his ears for it 50 Franchise the lord shall answer for his bailie 50 Feme covert what she may do sans Boron 71. how punishable 9495 Fealty seisin of ser. au. 99 Fine amended where 101 Feoffment to a son for valuable consideration 102 Forstaller, regrator, and engrosser, who 109 False imprisonment 124 Feme covert how she is bound by joining with her husb. 140 141 142 Fine where it binds 154, 155 Fradulent conveyances within the stat. 13 Eliz. 188 Fraud what by the statute 27 Eliz. 190 Fyling a writ not material where 216 Formedon in remainder 274 Frank almoigne, gift to the Templars▪ 21 Formedon in discender 79 Fine and ransom 113 False imprisonment action for it 255 Fine, error in it 270 Fine by deb. potest: of an infant 271 Freedom of London how many ways obtained 286 287 Forfeiture of office of the Chirographer 300 G GRants how construed 193 Grant of common extinct 222 Grantee of a reversion of what conditions he may take advantage of by the common law of what by statute 32 H. 8. 228 General pardon 37 Gravi que●ela 72 Grant le roy when not good 252 Grant le roy incorporate a burough 292 Grant of a reversion 299 Grant del roy of alnage 301 302 303 304 Grant del portership 330 Grant Pro concilio impendendo 336 Grant P. Letters Patents 333 H HAb. corp.. granted to a brownist counted 3 Heretic his censure 4 High commissioners their jurisdiction 4, 5, 14, 15, 16, 18, 19 Harriot unreasonable 89 Hab. fac. poss. the Shereffs officers poss. the plaintiff refuseth 168 Harriot service 187 Habere fa. possessionem in ejectione firm 216 Hab. corpus and prohibition to the high commissioners 18 Hospital of St. John of Jerusalem 21 Hab. corpus granted 36 Husband and wife where they shall join 66, 67 Hab. corpus and prohibition 271 Harriot an entire service. 294 ISsue imperfect▪ 47 Justification for calling one perjured, 49 Judgement in Debt 76 preferred before a statute etc. 81 Innuendo shall not help the Action 84 Jus accrescendi where it holds not 99 Information sur le statute 5 Ed. 6. Chapt. 14 108 109 110 Jurors non concluded by Pleas of the parties, 150 Information for extortion 151 Jeofailes stat. 168 Judgement arrested 182 Joint Tenants for years of a Mill and grants etc. 212 Judgement in a Writ of error 215 Intendment where 234 Judgement Sur brief abatest error 235 Imprisonment unlawful 20 Impropriation 24 Instruction for the Precedents of Wales 29 Judgement reversed for the Outlawry only and confirmed for the other 39 Jointure 52, 53 Information sur stat. 21. H. 8 chap. 13. For nonresidency 54 Judgement void 127 Informer exhibits a Bill in the Star chamber 151 Imprisonment for a force when or not 266 Justices of Peace and Auditors ought to make Record where and when Ibid. Indemptitas nominas 270 Jurors from two counties 272 Infant levies a Fine brings error 278, 279 K KIngs Grant void for defect in recital 241 King is specially favoured in the Law 249 Kings Patent how to be taken 250 L Licence from the Ordinary where 1 Licence how many kinds 3, 27 Legates Jurisdictions ibidem Licence to a Copyholder when pleadable by whom 40 Limitation and Condition their difference 68 Levant & couchant what 101 Lease by a Dean 134 Livery void where 135 Libellous Letters 152 Law of England of what it consists 198 Lateran Council concerning Tithes 24 Licence to appropriate 25 Licence to a Copyholder 40 Lord of a Manor enclose the Demesnes 168 Letter of Attorney cannot be made by a wife 248 London the custom for an Inn-holder 234 Lease to determine upon limitation 292 Letters Patents how expounded 323 Licence in a Forest 323 M MArriage disagreed to at years of consenting &c. 36 Misnosmer in an obligation what it effects 48 Marriage a gift of all goods personal 91 Merchant 4 sorts 99 Meal accounted dead victual within the stat. 5, Ed. 6 chap. 14. 116 Maim is felony 220 Modus decimandi 33 Murder sur Thames where tryable 37 Maxim in law 43 Misnosmer of a corporation 243 Mainténance 271 Minister arrested 301 Marshal court its jurisdiction 125, 126, 127 N Nonsuit 41 Nisi prius record amended 41. non-residency the statute 21 H. 8. 13 expounded 54 Nonsuit after verdict 219 Nisi prius by proviso for whom 276 Notice where requisite 278 O ORdinary cannot imprison 4 Ordinary may imprison a priest by 1. H. 7. 4. Ibid Obligation taken for a legacy incourt court Christian 11 Ordinary may transmit 28 Office granted by a Bishop 137 Occupancy where ●02 Outlary in felony was reversed 229 Offences exorbitant what 19 20 Obligation to perform covenants 167 Officers gradual of the King's bench who 282 Obligation with condition against law or impossible 281 Outlary 313 Office exerciseable by deputy where 334, 335 P PRohibitionupon the stat. of 13 H. 8 chap. 9 Polygamy punishable where and how 7 Prohibitionjoynt and severallcounts 7 Prohibition surle stat. de simony 7 for not settingforth of tithes 9 Prescription for tithes 31 33 34 Prohibition to the admiralty 34 to court Baron 34 Prison private and common 41 Prescription for inhabitants 178 Prohibition for common 47 Prescription none after consultation duly granted 36 Parson deprived for drunkenness 37 Proof what 57 Privilege out of higher court to inferior 101 Payment directed how 107 108 Patent of a Judge 122 Papist that not actionable 166 Possibility reasonable where 173 Prescription and custom do differ wherein 198 Prescription 210 211 Prohibition to court Christans 215 Prerogative del roy 219 Prescription for waif and stray 219 Paunagium quid 236 Prohibition good sans action pendecit 17 Privilege determined 22 Process from the admiralty 29 Prohibition not grantable after consultation 36 Possessio fratris 43 Plurality with dispensation 45 Pardon of one attaint pro false verdict 47 Prescription where good where not 64 Per que servitia 84 Prescription for beasts, sans number 101 Physicians college the authority 256 Physitans examined by whom 257 Privilege of attorney allowed before the Deputy Martial where 267 Partition without naming the parts good, where 275 Prohibition to the Court of request 297 Copyholder prescribeth Pro ligno combustibuli 330 Q QUare impedit 45 Quo warranto 217 Quare ejecit infra terminum 133 Quare clausum fregit, where it lieth 322 Quare Vi & Armis where it will and of what 331, 332, 334 R RIght to a spiritual Office is temporal 12 Residency where 13 Ravishment against feme covert 59 91, 92, 93 Replevin 84, 52, 149 Right the Writ 138 Remainder in a Chattel 173 Release where not good 190 Release of one Church warden shall not bind the other 216 Restitution to the Heir of an accessary where the principal reversed the outlawry 220 Reservation of Rent at Michaelmas ten or days after 220 Reservation not taken strictly 221 Right to a term not grantable, 226 Revocation the power when suspended 228 Return of the sheriff where good, 145 Revocation of uses 157 Remainder of a Chattel 173 Request where necessary 176 Release of Dower by Fine 175 Replevin 248 Reentry after possession executed 253 Release 254 Return of writs granted to a corporation 270 Replevin 297 Release 300 S STatutes ecclesiastical by whom to be expounded 2, 3 Surrender an attornment where 51 Scire fac. by bail 76 Scire fac. against an Executor 83 Surrender by Cognisor, etc. 97 Statutes pro bono publ.. taken by equity 110, 111 Summons in Dower 122 Scire facias for whom 145 Seisin of a Rent p. viscount 237 Submission awarded 48 Survivorship not a●ongst Merchants 99 Statute penal 112 Scire facias special non-tenure a goodplea 146 Seisin to have Assize what sufficient 241 Slander of an Attorney what 252 Slander 272, 276, 299 Sheriffs power what 281 Under sheriff how limited ibid. Sheriff may limit the Authority of his Under Sheriff 282 Sheriff committed for taking undue Fees 283 Suit beg●n hanging another 293 Statutes how to be understood, 305, 306 307 T Tithes what Lands are free of them P. 8 21, 22, 23, 24 Taxes for Church-Reparations and other like duties who are chargeable and how 10 Tithes not grantable P. Parol unless by way of Retainer 11 Tithes where discharged by unity of possession 26 Transmission of causes where 27 Tenant in Dower disseised 41 Tail its incidents 67 By Copyhold custom 77 Its Creation and nature 79 Testibus lies what comes after no part of the Deed 99 Town cannot be corporate without the assent of the Major part &c 100 Trespass for a commoner good 149 By the Lord against the commoner 168 Trespass for assault 182 Tales challenged 235 Tithes their antiquity 24 Tithes of what not payable 32 33 Trespass for breaking of a close 65 Teste of a ven. fac. amended post verdict 102 Trespass for imprisonment 124 125 Tenant pur view with warranty 191 Testatum where no writ issued 209 Tithes not paid for seven years of what 257 Tail 271 Trade with Infidels without licence 296 U VEn. fa. amended after verdict 102 Vourcher P. attorney 167 Vourcher sur bre.. abateable the danger 185 Verdict special 187 188 189 Verdict doth not cast a man off an action of a higher nature 219 Usage its exposition 222 Usitatum whom it doth advantage ibid. Variance what 239 Valuable consideration out of the statute 102 Unity of possession 26 Uoluntas donatores how to be taken 77 Vexation unjust remediable how 100 University of Oxford was removed for a certain time 244 University not local ibid. Variance what 245 W WAles council and precedents Jurisdiction 29 Waste 46, 150, 168 Wittol who 37 Westminster 2 chap 35 expounded 92, 93, 94, 95 Writs 147 Warrantia chartae 169 Warranty to a tenant pur view 191 Warrantia chartae not upon two deeds 56 Writ of error 137 208 Wife join with her husb. in feoff. what shall bind 141 Wager of law 255 FINIS.