Baron and Feme. A TREATISE OF THE COMMON LAW CONCERNING Husbands and Wives. Wherein is contained The Nature of a Feme Covert, and of Marriages, Bastardy, the Privileges of Feme Coverts: What Alterations are made by Marriage as to Estates, Leases, Goods and Actions. What Things of the Wife accrue to the Husband by the Intermarriage, or not. What Acts, Charges, Forfeitures by the Husband, shall bind the Wife after his Death, or not. Of Jointures and Plead, Fines and Recovery, Conveyances, and other Law Titles relating to Baron and Feme. Of Wills, and Feme Covert being Executrix. Of the Wief's Separate Disposition and Maintenance. What amounts to the Disposition of the Wife's Term by the Husband. Of Actions brought by or against Baron and Feme. What Actions done, or Contracts made by the Wife, shall bind her Husband. Of Indictments and Informations against them. Of Baron and Feme's Joinder in Action. Of a Feme Sole Merchant. Declarations and Pleas, etc. of Divorces, etc. with many other Matters relating to the said Subject; and some useful Precedents. LONDON, Printed by the Assigns of Richard and Edward Atkyns Esquires, for john Walthoe, and are to be sold at his Shop in Vine-Court, Middle-Temple. 1700. TO THE READER. HAVING Methodised and Explained the Law concerning Infants, by a natural Chain of Thought, I was prompted to reflect upon the Law as it respects the Parents: And I had some reason to conceive and hope, that a Treatise of this nature (having been never hitherto designedly perused) might meet with an Entertainment agreeable. It is a Subject so copious that we shall found something or other relating to Baron and Feme in almost every Folio of our Law-Books, either in respect of Conveyances, Acts Judicial, Acts in Pais, Testaments, Actions or Plead, etc. All which I have here Methothodized, Explained or Corrected, as occasion lead me to it. I have herein, considered Baron and Feme in all the Circumstances of Life, from the Solemnisation of Marriage to the Divorce, and have not omitted those Collateral By-blows, (the Title of Bastardy making a considerable figure in our Books▪) and the Variety of the Matter made me some Atonement for the Labour. I have been something tedious in considering what Alterations are made by the Intermarriage as to Estates, Leases, Chattels and Actions, and what Things of the Wife accrue to the Husband by the Intermarriage, or not; and what Acts, Charges or Forfeitures made or committed by the Husband, shall bind the Wife after his Death, as well knowing that they are of frequent use, and consequently carefully to be examined. But I have not been over-solicitous in Attornments, Disseisins, Remitters and Warranties, and such like, which have a respect to real Actions concerning Feme Coverts; our Law having been much abridged and altered in such Cases, and our Settlements and Deeds of Trust as they are now framed, will strike of, and abate many of the Moot Cases; and whoever has a mind to be curious about them, may with great Satisfaction consult the first Institutes, where they are largely and most excellently handled. However, I have not totally omitted them, but have touched on some Cases which may be obvious in Practice, and by which an ingenious and well-disposed Student may improve his Notions, without heaping up other Cases or Points, one whereof perhaps may not be started in his Practice once in an Age. Only in the Section where and in what Cases Baron and Feme shall take by Interest or Moieties, I have been more exact for that it is a curious and useful Learning. As to what Acts or Contracts made by the Wife shall bind the Husband, the Resolutions of our Books have not been very consistent till that great Case (in point of Consequence I mean) of Scott and Manby, which was solemnly debated and settled in the Exchequer-Chamber by as Learned Judges as ever sat at one time in Westminster-Hall. Which long Arguments I have abridged and reduced to certain Propositions. We likewise found our Books have been very wavering about Baron and Feme's Joinder in Action; but I have brought them into seven or eight Rules, by which a Studious Mind may easily be directed how to advice in such Cases. And under every several Action brought by or against Husband and Wife, I have showed the manner of Declaring and Pleading under each Action, which makes the Chapters of Declarations and Plead much shorter than they would have been. As for the Faults herein committed, I have no way but (me ipsum tegere) to shelter myself under the Coverture of your Candour and Ingenuity. THE CONTENTS. CHAP. I The Consideration of Marriage in the Eye of the Law. Of Affiances, and where the Breach thereof is punishable. When the Solemnisation of Marriage in the Church began; and how the ancient manner of Espousals was. If Marriage be once done by one in Orders, not to be dissolved for a defect of Ceremony, as to Time, Place or Licence. CHAP. II. The Nature of a Feme Covert. Wherein a Feme Covert and an Infant differ as to Privilege. What Acts the Husband may do to the Wife, and what the Wife to the Husband; and the Explication of the Rule that they are one Person in Law. And in what respects she is said to be sub potestate viri. Of the Change of her Name and Dignity. CHAP. III. Of Bastardy. Of the Writ de Ventre inspiciendo. The Form of the Petition for such a Writ. The exact time for the Birth of an Infant. Of the Sheriff's Proceed in this Writ in the Case of a Widow, and in the Case of a Wife. In what Case the Child may choose his Father. Who shall be said to be a Bastard or not. Who shall be accounted a Bastard though born within Marriage. The Signification of Mulier in our Law. Bastardy in what Court to be proved, and why the Ecclesiastical Court cannot proceed to the Trial of Bastardy before they receive Commandment out of the King's Court. The Credit of the Bishop's Certificate in such Case. Where the Trial of Bastardy shall be per Pais, and where by the Ordinary. The Difference between general Bastardy and special Bastardy, and where each is to be tried. Bastard by our Law and Mulier by the Civil Law. Bastard by the Spiritual Law and Mulier by the Common Law. What Divorce shall Bastardise the Issue. Who only may writ to the Bishop to certify Bastardy. Of Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne in case of descent. How Estates may be limited to a Bastard by a reputed Name. CHAP. iv Queen. How the Queen in an exempt Person from the King in our Law. She it not to found Sureties, nor to be amerced. She is to be sued by a Praecipe, not by Petition. She may inform by her Attorney in Chancery. Queen Consort or Queen Dowager in case of Treason, how to be tried. The Penalty for any to marry the Queen Dowager without the King's Licence. She is not restrained by the Statute of 1 H. 4. c. 6. She and her Tenants not to pay Toll. CHAP. V Privileges of a Feme Covert. No Mortuary to be paid at her Death. She is not within the Statute of W. 2. cap. 25. What Conditions in Law shall bind the Wife, or not. She may not be a Constable, though the Custom be to elect by Houses. Laps shall incur against her. Latchess not to be accounted against her for not Entry or Claim to avoid Descent. What Privilege the Wife shall have in Suits by reason of the Husband's Privilege. CHAP. VI Who shall be said to be Baron and Feme, or in what Cases Marriage shall be said to be valid or not. 1. In respect of Age: Of the time of Agreement or Disagreement to the Marriage: What shall amount to such Agreement or Disgreement. 2. In respect of Affinity or Consanguinity. What Marriages are within the Levetical Degrees or not; with several Modern Cases of Precontracts. CHAP. VII. Trial of Marriage. Where and in what Cases Trial of Marriage shall be by the Bishop's Certificate, and where in Pais. Of the Issue n'unque accouple en loyal Matrimony where to be tried. If the Issue be, whether she be a Feme Covert or Feme Sole, where to be tried, and the reason of the Difference. The Diversity between a Marriage in Right and a Marriage in Possession, or de Facto; and the consequence of the Diversity. The Day and Place is omitted in the Bishop's Certificate, if good. The Form of the Bishop's Certificate. The Credit the Law gives to it. CHAP. VIII. Marriage, and the Consequence of it by Law. Where Alterations are made by Marriage as to the Names of Dignity; as to change of Name on Estates devised. Where or in what Cases Marriage shall amount to a Countermand or Revocation of Livery or Attornment. If Marriage be a Revocation of a Will or Countermand of Arbitrament. If Marriage be a Breach of a Condition by way of Disability. A Lady of a Manor marries a Copyholder, if it be a Suspension. In what Cases Marriage is a Release in Law or not. Woman Jailor marries a Prisoner, if it be an Escape or not. Where a Term is extinct by the Intermarriage or not. In what Cases the Husband shall be said Assignee of the Wife or not. CHAP. IX. What things of the Wife are given, or do accrue to the Husband by the Intermarriage or not. What he gaineth of his Wife's Lands in Fee by the Marriage. What Estate or Interest he gaineth in her Chattels Reals, and Chattels Mixed, which are partly in Possession, and partly in Action. What he gaineth in her Chattels Personals, or in Chooses in Action. Diversity between Property in Personal Goods, and a bore Possession. What things of the Wife the Husband may release or discharge or not, as Obligations, Annuities, Promises, etc. What Acts, Charges or Forfeitures of the Husband shall charge the Wife after his Death. How and wherein the Wife shall be bound by her Husband's Submission to an Award, or for a Rent of Owelty of Partition. How the Husband may charge the Land of the Wife by Rent, Statute, Judgement, etc. What Lands of the Wife shall be put in Execution for the King's Debt upon the Husband. What Act of the Husband amounts to a Forfeiture of the Wife's Land, and for how long. What Acts of the Husband and Wife shall be construed, as the Act of the Wife so as to bind her after his Death or not. For what Acts or Facts of the Wife the Husband shall be punished: Et e contra. Of Paraphernalia. What Things or Actions the Wife shall have after the Death of the Husband. What Actions Real, what Things and Actions Personal, as Obligations, Recognizances, Goods, or Money purloined What Things Real, as Rents, Leases, etc. What Things the Husband shall have after the Death of the Wife, as Leases in Trust, Arrears of Rents, Presentations, etc. What Things the Wife may make good after the Death of the Husband, as Bonds, Rents of Acceptance. CHAP. X. Tenant by the Courtesy. The Nature of Tenancy by the Courtesy. Of what Estate a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, or not. If he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of an Estate in suspense or not. In what Cases the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, where the Wife's Estate is defeasible by Condition. Four Things belong to a Tenant by the Courtesy. What Seisin of the Wife it must be to make the Husband Tenant by the Courtesy. In what Cases a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of a Seisin in Law. How a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy in respect of the Issue, and how he must pled the having of Issue. CHAP. XI. Dower. The Nature of Dower. Qualifications of the Wife to enable her to have Dower. What Divorce shall avoid Dower or not. Of the Endowment of a Wife de facto and de jure. What Seisin the Husband must have to make the Wife Dowable. Of what Seisin of the Husband the Wife shall not be endowed. Of what Estate a Woman shall be endowed. Of what Inheritances entire and not divisable she shall be endowed, and after what manner. In what Cases of Lands or Tenements, which are devisable, and which the Heir of the Husband shall inherit, yet the Wife shall not be endowed. How she shall be endowed of Lands mortgaged. For and in what respect of Disabilities a Woman shall not be endowed. Where the Wife shall loose her Dower by the Attainder of her Husband or not. Whether an Alien Woman shall be endowed, and how. What Act of the Wife shall bar her Dower. Several Cases of Elopement and Divorce relating thereunto. Assignment of Dower, by whom and how to be made. What Assignment of Dower is against common Right or not. What things may be assigned in lieu of Dower. Of Endowment by Meets and Bounds. Assignment of Dower by the Sheriff and how. By the Heirs Assignment in Chancery. Of the Tenant in Dower having Damages, what Charges made by the Husband the Wife endowed shall avoid or not. The Writ and Declaration in Dower. Plead in Dower. What Pleas are good or not in Bar of Dower. Trial, Evidence, Issue in Dower. Damages, Judgement and Execution. Of the rationabili parte bonorum, according to the Custom of London. CHAP. XII. Of Jointures. The Nature and Reason of the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. of Jointures. Construction of the said Act relating thereunto. What Estates are Jointures within the said Statute or not. What is a good Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. and what Alienation by the Wife is within that Statute, illustrated in several adjudged Cases. What Agreement or Waver a Woman may make as to her Jointure; and what shall amount to an Agreement or Refusal. Of Plead. CHAP. XIII. Of Fines and Recoveries. Of a Fine levied by a Feme Covert as a Feme Sole, and the Operation of it. The reason why a Feme Covert shall be barred by the Fine. The Operation of a Fine by Baron and Feme illustrated by several Cases. Of Commissioners taking a Fine of a Feme Covert Infant. Of the time of Acknowledgement. Where a Feme Covert shall be examined or not. Where a Feme Covert shall be barred by Fine and Non-claim. Of the Declaration of Uses by a Feme Covert. Of a Fine levied to Baron and Feme, and the Operation of lt. Of a Common Recovery. How a Feme Covert may be Tenant to a Praecipe. A Feme Covert barred by a Common Recovery. Whether a Feme Covert in passing a Recovery ought to be examined privately. Recovery by Baron and Feme within Age and Appearance by Attorney, if it be Error. Of Recovery by default. CHAP. XIV. Attornment. What Act of the Husband or Wife shall amount to an Attornment. Avowry for Rent out of the Wife's Land in whose Name it ought to be. Where and to what purposes a Feme Covert shall be said a Disseisoress without her proper Act or Entry, and where, and to what not. What Act of the Husband shall be a Discontinuance of the Land of the Wife, and what not. What was a Discontinuance at the Common Law. Where a Descent cast during the Coverture shall toll the Entry of the Wife or not. CHAP. XV. Remitter. The Nature and Reason of Remitter. What Act shall be a Remitter to the Wife. Remitter wrought by a voidable Estate. Remainder expectant on an Estate for Life works no Remitter. Notwithstanding what Acts and Alienations by the Husband the Wife shall be remttted. Of Remitter by Acceptance. Where the Wife being remitted during the Coverture, may after the death of her Husband wave the Remitter, and where not. No Disagreement of the Husband shall divest the Remitter, and the Reason. Where a Warranty descending on an Infant or a Feme Covert, shall be a Bar, and where not. Where a Baron and Feme shall be Jointenants; and where by Intierties, and where by Moieties, with several Cases to illustrate that curious Learning; and how it was at Common Law, and how it is now by the Statute of Uses. CHAP XVI. Conveyances. What shall be said to be the Deed of the Husband and Wife. Of a Feoffment by the Husband of the Wives Land. Where the Wives Grant, if she join with her Husband, is voided or not. Surrender by the Husband how it operates. What shall amount to a Surrender or not. Of a Release of the Husband of the Wife's Right to rend. Of his Release of Money to be paid after the Wife's Decease. Of Exchanges of the Land of the Wife, and what shall be a good Confirmation of it by the Wife. How a Man may execute an Estate to his Wife. Of the Christian Names of Women in Grants. CHAP. XVII. Leases. Of a Lease for Lives made by Baron and Feme. Of a Lease made by the Husband of the Wife's Land, and how and wherein it shall bind the Wife or not. What shall be a good Lease warranted by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. The Qualifications of such Leases to bring them within the Statute. What acceptance of the Husband shall affirm a voidable Lease. What is a good Lease by Baron and Feme to bring Ejectment of Leases for years made to Baron and Feme. Diversity between a Lease for Life and a Lease for Years made to a Feme Covert. Lease to a Feme Covert when it shall be said to vest. Of a Lease for Life made to Baron and Feme, if the Husband may grant it when the Lease is made to Baron and Feme. If the Husband may grant it when the Lease is made to the Survivor for Years. How if the Remainder be to the Heirs of the Survivor. Of Leases for Life made by Baron and Feme. Diversity where Livery is made by the Lessor in person, and where by Letter of Attorney. CHAP. XVIII. Wills. How and in what Cases a Feme Covert may make a William. What she may device without the consent of her Husband. If she may make a Declaration in the Nature of a Will, without the Assent of the Husband. Several Cases of the Husband's being bound to permit his Wife to make a Will. Of Devises to the Wife by the Husband or others, and the Construction of such Devises. What is a Devise by Implication or not. Of a Feme Coverts assenting to a Legacy. If the Husband may device the Term made to him and his Wife. Wife Legatee of Goods is made Executor, if the second Husband's Executor shall have them. CHAP. XIX. Rend, Reservation, Emblements. In what Cases the Wife shall not have the Rent though the Reservation be to her. The Husband grants a Rent out of the Wive's Term, and dies; If the Wife shall hold it discharged, and why. Of what Arrears of Rent the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 37. gives the Husband power to recover. Feme Covert received the Rents of the Tenants, they not having notice of the Coverture. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Arrears. Avowry for Rent out of the Wife's Land, how to be brought. Where the Executor of the Husband shall have the Rent, and not the Wife. Where the Wife shall have the Emblements, and where the Husband. CHAP. XX. Copyhold. What Acts of the Husband shall destroy, or forfeit the Custom of the Wife's Copyhold Estate, and what not. Where she shall have her Viduity, though the Freehold be severed from the Manor, and where not. Of Grant, and Surrender to and by Baron and Feme, and the Construction thereupon. Customs of Manors as to Wives or Widows, which are good, or not. CHAP. XXI. Vide William. Of the Wife's Separate Disposition. Where the Money which the Wife had separate pour to dispose of, to whom it shall be paid. Separate Maintenance on a Proviso, and the Plead. Where Detainer of the Husband is a breach of the Condition. Covenants in a Deed of Separation between Baron and Feme, and for allowing yearly Maintenance, and Plead thereupon. CHAP. XXII. What amounts to a Disposition of the Wife's Term by the Husband, to vest the Interest in him, his Executors and Administrators. What Condition in Mortgages shall survive to the Husband or not. If the Mortgage of the Wife's Term doth amount to a Disposition in Law. Diversity between a Feoffment, and Bargain and Sale, as to the Extinguishment of the Term of the Wife. Of the Forfeiture of the Wife's Term by the Outlawry or Attainder of the Husband, or on extent. If Recovery by the Husband in Ejectment altars the Term. If Payment of the Debts of the first Intestate, vests a Term in him. What Trusts for the Wife the Husband may dispose of, or not. What shall amount to a Forfeiture of the Wife's Term. CHAP. XXIII. What Acts done, or Contracts made by the Wife, shall bind the Husband, or not. Six Resolutions of the Court in Scott and Manby's Case, as to that Point, and other Cases relating thereto, and the manner of laying the Action, and declaring therein. CHAP. XXIV. Feme Covert, Executrix. Administratrix. How a Feme Covert may be made Executrix, and of what things; what things the Administrator of the Wife shall have, and not the Husband, as Chooses in Action, etc. Debt recovered by Baron and Feme Executrix, and she dies, if the Husband shall have Execution. What things Feme Covert Executrix, may do without her Husband, or not. Obligee makes the Wife of one of the Obligor's Executrix, quid operatur. Legacy devised to the Wife, who is made Executrix. Whether she shall be in as Excutrix, or as Legatee. Of her assent to a Legacy. Debt as Executrix not extinct by the Intermarriage, and why. Feme Executrix takes the Obligor to Husband, if that be a Release in Law. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Waste of the Wife as Administratrix, and the manner of Proceed by the Sheriff in such Case; and whether Execution shall be de bonis propriis of the Husband. Of Actions brought by Baron and Feme as Executrix or Administratrix. Where Administration belongs to the Baron and Feme. CHAP. XXV. Actions. Suits. Abatement of a Writ or Suit in Law or Equity, by Marriage or Death pending the Suit. If the Wife be put before the Husband, the Writ abates. Feme Plaintiff after Writ of Enquiry, and before the Return marries, if the Action shall abate. Feme Sole depending a Bill in Chancery takes Husband, if the Suit shall abate. How it is if she be Defendant. Of Actions which the Husband may have for Wrongs done to the Wife. Indictment by Baron and Feme, and against Baron and Feme. Where and in what Cases Wives are indictable, without their Husbands or not. CHAP. XXVI. Joinder in Action. Where and in what Actions Baron and Feme shall join, and where and in what Actions not. In what Cases the Husband only shall have the Action. Diversity between an Action which affirms Property, and which disaffirms Property. Four general Rules of the Baron and Feme's Joinder in Action, and Cases under each to direct where Baron and Feme must join in the Action, or it may be brought by the Husband only. Particular Actions, as Trover, Indebitatus Assumpsit, Account, Formedon, Ejectione Firm, Actions for Rent, Rescous, Actions for Tithes, Covenant, Wast, Debt on Bond or Contract, Trespass, Battery, Escape, Action on the Case sur Assumpsit, Actions on the Case for Torts, Forcible Entry, Writ of Error, etc. and the manner of Declaring in such Actions. Of Actions brought by a Feme Covert against a Feme Covert. In what Cases a Feme Covert is enabled to sue without her husband. Of a Feme Sole Merchant. CHAP. XXVII. Special Actions brought by a Woman. Cui in Vita. Appeal. The Nature of an Appeal. The Process Plead and Trial in an Appeal. Quare Impedit. Actions on the Case for Scandalous Words by Baron and Feme against Baron and Feme, with Declarations and Plead therein, and where Baron and Feme must join or be joined in the Action. CHAP. XXVIII. Actions against Baron and Feme. Trover, Debt, Trespass, Actions on the Case, Waste, Covenant, Account, Audita Querela, with the manner of Declaring and Pleading in each Action. Actions against Baron and Feme by reason of Offences against a Statute. Information against Baron and Feme for the Recusancy of the Wife by the Stat. 1 Eliz. & 23 Eliz. In what Actions the Husband shall be charged after the Death of the Wife. Where the default of the Wife shall be the default of the husband, and e contra. Where the wife shall be received upon the Husband's default. Wager of Law by Baron and Feme. In what Cases the Husband shall appear, and be compelled to put in Bail for his Wife or not. Of Baron and Feme being sued to the Outlawry, and how the Entry shall be. CHAP. XXIX. Declarations and Plead. The manner of declaring against Baron and Feme, or by Baron and Feme. In what Cases the Life of the Wife must be averred, or not. Where the Husband shall be estopped to say that his Wife is remitted, and yet she shall be received. In what Cases the Wife shall come in, and be received on the Default of her Husband. Of the Wife's Pleading without her Husband. The manner of Pleading Coverture. Of the Conclusion of Pleas in Actions by or against Baron and Feme. Where it is necessary to aver the assent of the Husband. Traverse when that the Wife died seized. Ad tunc & modo Uxor. if good. Of Estoppels. Error assigned because she was a Feme Covert. Divorce pleaded. Outlawry pleaded. Where there be two Women of one name in Debt on Bond, how to pled. Where the Parol shall demur for the Nonage of the Husband and Wife. CHAP. XXX. Issue. Evidence. Trial. Verdict. Trial of Marriage. Death of the Husband where triable, and how; whether by Proofs or in Pais. If the Baron and Feme shall join in a Challenge. In what Case by the Evidence of the Wife she and her Husband were discharged of a Judgement. Where the Husband and shall be a Witness for the Wife or not. CHAP. XXXI. Judgement. Execution. Damages. Where Judgement against Baron and Feme shall bind the Husband surviving, or not. In what Cases a Feme Covert shall be taken in Execution. Writ of Error brought by all for the Coverture of one. The Coverture of a Woman not to be determined by Affidavit. In Action against Baron and Feme, where Judgement shall be quod Capiantur, or not. Where Baron and Feme both aught to be in Misericordia, or not. Baron and Feme in Execution, and the Wife escapes, if Action lies against the Sheriff. Where the Husband shall recover Damages Sole. Judgement that the Baron and Feme shall recover Damages, in what Cases good. CHAP. XXXII. Offences against the Statutes concerning Women. Action on the Statute of 5 Eliz. c. 9 against the Husband and Wife for the Wife's not appearing ad Testificandum, and the Declaration of Polygamy against Stat. 1 Jac. c. 11. Of stealing Women, etc. Construction of the said Statute, and of the Stat. 39 Eliz. c. 8. Of Rape. Baron and Feme indicted of Perjury. Information against a Feme Covert for Selling Fish. In all Statutes which provide for actual Wrong, Femes Coverts shall be intended within them. CHAP. XXXIII. Of Divorce. The nature of a Divorce. What are good Causes of Divorce. The several kinds of Divorces. What Divorces declare the Marriage voided ab initio. Of the Divorce causa praecontractus. Causa frigiditatis, causa affinitatis Consanguinitatis, and several Causes of each for Illustration. Of a Divorce a Mensa & Thoro, and the Consequences thereof. What mean Acts done by the Husband shall stand good or not, notwithstanding the Divorce. Of Suits and Actions after the Divorce. Where and in what Cases notwithstanding a Divorce, the Wife shall be endowed or not. Plead and Trial. What Divorce shall Bastardise the Issue, or not. BOOKS Printed for and sold by John Walthoe at his Shop in Vine-Court, Middle-Temple. 1. LES Reports de Edw. Coke L'Attorney General le Roign. Des divers Resolutions & Judgements donez avec grand deliberation, per les Tres-reverend Judges & Sages de la Ley, de Cases & Matters en Ley queux ne fueront unques Resolve ou adjudges par devant: Et les Reasons & Causes des dits Resolutions & Judgements, durant le Tresheureux regiment de Ties-illustre & Renomes Roign Elizabeth, le Fountain de tout Justice, & la Vie de la Ley. Avec References all touts livres deal Common Ley, cybien Ancient come Modern. In eleven Volumes in Folio, with a new Table to the whole. Price in Quires 3 l. 10 s. 2. The Law of Obligations and Conditions: wherein is contained the whole Learning of the Law concerning Bills, Bonds, Conditions, Statutes, Recognizances and Defeazances, as also Declarations on special Conditions, and the Plead thereon, Issues, Judgements and Executions with many other useful Matters digested under their proper Titles, etc. In 8 vo Price 5 s. 3. A Compendious and Accurate Treatise of Fines upon Writs of Covenant; and Recoveries upon Writs of Entry in the Post. With ample and copious Instructions how to draw, acknowledge and levy the same in all Cases. Being a Work performed with great exactness, and full of variety of Clerkship. The third Edition; wherein the former are reviewed, corrected and enlarged. With an Addition of several Precedents, and many Observations, Rules and Cases concerning the Effect and Operation of Fines and Recoveries. In 8vo. 4. Lex Custumaria: Or A Treatise of Copyhold Estates, in respect of the Lord and Copyholder: wherein the nature of Customs in general, and of particular Customs, Grants and Surrenders, and their Constructions and Expositions in reference to the thing granted or surrendered, and the Uses of Limitations of Estates are clearly illustrated; together with the manner of Declaring and ●leading, either generally or as to particular Customs, with Trial and Evidence of Custom, and of Special Verdicts, etc. In large 8 vo. Price 5 s. BARON and FEME: OR A TREATISE of the Law concerning Husbands and Wives. CHAP. I The Consideration of Marriage in the Eye of the Law. Of Affiances, and where the Breach thereof is punishable. When the Solemnisation of Marriage in the Church began; and how the ancient manner of Espousals was. If Marriage be once done by one in Orders, not to be dissolved for a defect of Ceremony, as to Time, Place or Licence. THERE is no Consideration respected in the Law so much as the Consideration of Marriage, in regard of the Establishment of Families by Alliances, and the Continuance of them by Posterity: 1 Inst. 9 And therefore at Common Law, if a Man had given Lands to a Man with his Daughter in Frankmarriage, a Fee-simple had passed without this word (Heirs) and at this day it is an Estate of Inheritance in Tail; and how valuable a Consideration it is for the raising of Uses every days Practise and Experience can testify. Sponsalia dicuntur futurarum nuptiarum conventio & repromissio, Clanlvil lib. 6. c. 1. If one be affianced to a woman and than forsake her, he is to be sued in Court Christian, and not in a Court of Equity, for breach of this Oath; Si petit ipsum canonice inimicitia, yet she may have remedy for the damages she sustained for the Non-performance of the Agreement, though others have said that it was her Folly to trust his word, and therefore she had no remedy; Quia Deus est procurator fatuorum. But it's not to be doubted but a good remedy lies upon an Assumpsit at Law, as hereafter will in several Cases appear. When the Solemnisation of Marriage in the Church began. Before the time of Pope Innocent III. there was no Solemnisation of Marriage in the Church, and than it was sirst ordained; but before the said Ordinance Marriage was solemnised in such form, viz. The Man came to the House where the Woman inhabits, and in the presence of her Friends and Relations, took the Woman to his own House; and this was all the Ceremony; and for this reason the Man is said ducere uxorem, and than the Wife was said nupta viro, by reason she is quasi cooperta nube (this Man) to whom she hath subjected herself by Agreement of Marriage. Now to read the several Forms of Marriage in the several Countries of the World is very delightful, but is not to the purpose of my present design, Moor 170. 〈…〉 Now by our Law Marriage being once lawfully solemnised, and without impediment, By whom and at what time. Sid. 64. Tarry and Brown. all the World cannot dissolve it if it be done by one in Holy Orders, let it be at what time and place it will be; as the Case was in Siderfin's Reports, the Party was married at twelve of the Clock at Night in an Alehouse. And in Car. 2. Sid. 432. Maddox versus the Chancellor of Peterburrough. a Libel was brought against J. S. Parson, in the Spiritual Court for marrying without Licence in a Church. J. S. moves for a Prohibition in the King's-Bench, suggesting that the Church is donative, and that the Donor ought ex jure, to appoint Commissioners to inspect and visit this, and that the Ordinary cannot intermeddle with it. The Suggestion is good by Twisden: But the other Justices, because J. S. had another Living Presentative, would not grant a Prohibition. CHAP. Two. The Nature of a Feme Covert. Wherein a Feme Covert and an Infant differ as to Privilege. What Acts the Husband may do to the Wife, and what the Wife to the Husband; and the Explication of the Rule that they are one person in Law. And in what respects she is said to be sub potestate viri. Of the change of her Name and Dignity. The Nature of a Feme Covert. COverture is tegere in Latin, 1 Inst. 112. and is so called for that the Wife is sub potestate viri. The Law of Nature hath put her under the Obedience of her Husband, and hath submitted her Will to his, which the Law follows, cui ipsa in vita sua contradicere non potuit, and therefore will not bind her by her Acts joyining with her Husband, because they are judged his Acts, and not hers; she wants Free Will as Minors want Judgement, and yet the Law of the Land for necessity sake makes bold with this Law of Nature in a special kind, and therefore allows a Fine levied by the Husband and his Wife, because she is examined of her free will judicially by an authentical person trusted by the Law, and by the King's Writ, and so taken in a sort as a sole Woman; as also when she comes in by Receipt, Hob. 225. A Feme Covert in our Books is often compared to an Infant, Wherein a Feme Covert and an Infant differ. both being persons disabled in the Law, but they differ much; an Infant is capable of doing any Act for his own advantage, so is not a Feme Covert. A Lease made by an Infant without Rent is not voided, but voidable; but its voided in the case of a Feme Covert. If a Feme Covert enter into Bond, Non est factum may be pleaded to it; but if an Infant enter into. Bond he must pled the special matter that he was under Age. An Infant may bind himself for conveniences, as necessaries for himself and Family, and the Law giveth him authority so to bind himself; but a Feme Coven cannot do so without the consent actual or implied of the Husband, because thereby she is to bind another that hath all the property in her Estate, as was the Opinion of the Lord Chief Justice Hales in Scot and Manby's Case. And yet a Feme Covert is a Favourite of the Law, and therefore the Law gives her rationabile Estoverium, till Dower assigned: 2 Inst. 18. And it's said in some of our Books an Action lies not by the Executors against her for her Paraphernalia: But more of this infra. What Acts the Husband may do to the Wife, and the Wife to the Husband, though they are but one person in Law. Baron and Feme are commonly said to be one person in Law; the consequents of which are, that a Man cannot grant Lands and Tenements to his Wife; and also if a joint Estate be made of Lands to Baron and Feme and too a third person, 1 Inst. 112. in this Case the Husband and Wife shall have but a moiety, and for this reason also, if the Husband discontinues the Land of his Wife and takes back an Estate to him and his Wife, the Wife is remitted, and so is the Husband, though he cannot say so; for she cannot be remitted but the Husband also must be remitted, for they are one person in Law, Cro. Eliz. 129. Vide plus sub Titulo Moieties. Though Baron and Feme be but one person in Law so as neither of them can give any Estate or Interest to the other, yet if a Charter of Feoffment be made to the Wife, the Husband, as Attorney to the Feoffor, may make Livery to the Wife; so a Feme Covert that hath power to cell Land by Will may cell the same to her Husband, because they are but Instruments to others, and the Estate passeth from the Feoffor or Devisor, 1 Inst. 188. Though our Law makes the Woman subject to the Husband, yet he may not kill her but it is Murder; he may not beaten her, but she may pray the peace, 1 Ed. 4.1. So he may not starve her, but must provide Maintenance for her. Nay, so near is this oneness of Husband and Wife respected in the Law, Siderfin 123. that if the Husband enter into Obligation for the Duress of his Wife the Bond shall be voided. A Wife by the Law of God is sub potestate viri, Change of her Name. and her Name of Dignity is changed. It was a pretty Case of Sherwood, Hill. 2 Car. 1. B. R. In Trespass the Defendant justifies the taking by the command of J. Pots Armiger ' and Dame Ursula his Wife, and Exception was taken to it, because a Gentleman may not have a Lady to his Wife; and held a good Exception to the Writ. A Writ of Partition was brought against the Duke of Suffolk and his Wife by Ranulph Haward Esquire and Dominam Annam Powes uxorem ejus, and Exception was taken because she was not named by the Name of her Husband, Dyer 29. b. and held a good Exception; but it was amended and made Ad respondend. R.H. & Annae uxori suae nuper uxor ' Dom ' Powes defunct. Vide infra, of the Name of Nobility being lost or not by the Marriage. CHAP. III. Of Bastardy. Of the Writ de Ventre inspiciendo. The Form of the Petition for such a Writ. The exact time for the Birth of an Infant. Of the Sheriffs Proceed in this Writ in the Case of a Widow, and in the Case of a Wife. In what Case the Child may choose his Father. Who shall be said to be a Bastard or not. Who shall be accounted a Bastard though born within Marriage. The signification of Mulier in our Law. Bastardy in what Court to be proved, and why the Ecclesiastical Court cannot proceed to the Trial of Bastardy before they receive Commandment out of the King's Court. The Credit of the Bishop's Certificate in such Case. Where the Trial of Bastardy shall be per Pais, and where by the Ordinary. The difference between general Bastardy and special Bastardy, and where each is to be tried. Bastard by our Law and Mulier by the Civil Law. Bastard by the Spiritual Law and Mulier by the Common Law. What Divorce shall bastardise the Issue. Who only may writ to the Bishop to certify Bastardy. Of Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne in case of descent. How Estates may be limited to a Bastard by a reputed Name. A Writ de Ventre inspiciendo. THis is a Writ for the searching of a Woman that saith she is with Child, and thereby withholds Lands from him that is next Heir at Law, Regist. 227. 1 Inst. f. 8. A Feme supposed to be enseint at her Husband's Death. Nota, saith the Register, Quod si quis habens haereditatem, duxerit aliquam in uxorem, & posteae moriatur sine haerede de corpore suo exeunte, per quod haereditas illa fratri ipsius defuncti discendere debeat, & uxor illa dicit se esse praegnantem de ipso defuncto cum non sit, habet frater & haeres ejus breve de Ventre inspiciendo. The Form of the Petition for such a Writ. To the Right Honourable, etc. Lord Keeper of the Great Seal of England. The humble Petition of A. B. Shows, That whereas J. B. being in his Life time seized in his Demesne as of Fee, of and in certain Lands, etc. in the County of C. lately died seized having at the time of his death no Issue of his Body lawfully begotten. And whereas E. late Wife and Relict of J. B. since the death of the said J. B. hath and still doth pretend and give out in Speeches, that she is impregnate by the said J. B. to the disherison of your said Petitioner, who is next Kinsman and Heir of the Deceased J. B. and to whom the said Lands and Tenements by right of Inheritance do descend, the said J. B. dying without Issue of his Body lawfully begotten. And jest the said E. out of a design to deprive your Petitioner of his Inheritance impose upon your Petitioner a supposititious Child as Heir of the said J. B. deceased declaring the same to be born of her Body after the death of the said J. B. to the disherison of your Petitioner against Equity and good Conscience, etc. May it please your Lordship to grant to your Petitioner his Majesty's most gracious Writ de Ventre inspiciendo to the Sheriff of, etc. directed returnable, etc. And your Petitioner shall ever pray, etc. The Lord Keeper ever grants a Day to the Wife to show Cause why such Writ may not issue. The Form of the Writ Vide Fitz. N. B. Bracton saith, If the Feme hath not an Infant within 40 Weeks after her Husband's Death, or if she be not found enseint, she shall be punished by Imprisonment and Fine. But if the Feme hath a Child within the 40 weeks than such Infant shall have the Heritage, if the other Heir cannot prove the Infant to be another's, and not the Husbands. The exact time for the Birth of an Infant. It is held amongst Physicians, that by the Rules of Nature and their Observations in Physic, that the exact time for the Birth of an Infant is 280 Days from the Conception, scil. 9 Months and 10 Days, accounting it per menses solares, that is, 30 Days to every Month; but it is natural also if the Birth be at any time within 10 Months (that is to say, 40 Weeks) for 10 Months and 40 Weeks are all one. And it hath been observed in respect of the many Infirmities of Women, that no Woman since the Virgin Mary went her just time, Sed hoc restat probandum. An Infant was born 40 weeks and 10 days after the death of the Husband, and was held to be legitimate; so it was adjudged in the Case of Dr. Andrews, who died of the Plague, 2 Jac. B. R. A Man dies 23 March 8 Jac. his Wife priviment enseint, which was born 5 January after, which was by computation 40 weeks and 10 days after the death of the Husband; and the Physicians upon conference held that 20 days backwards and 20 days forward doth not take away Legitimetion, though 40 weeks is the Tempus constitutum, Palm. 9 Lit. Rep. 178. and the Jury found the Issue legitimate. But by accident an Infant may be born after the 40 weeks, or before; and in the Case of Dr. Andrews, he died of the Plague, so that he was sick but one day before his death, and the Woman's Father-in-Law used her with great Inhumanity, and caused her to lie in the Streets several nights; and she was in Travel six weeks before she was delivered, and that she was delivered within 24 hours after she was taken into the House and well used, which was a good Proof of Legitimation; though it was proved on the other side that she was a lewd woman of her Body: And at the Trial of Dr. Andrews' Heir Dr. Chamberlain, a Man Midwife, informed the Court upon his Oath, that he had known a woman to be delivered of one Child, and two weeks after to be delivered of another. And Dr. Paddy and Dr. Momford than affirmed that the Birth is sooner or later according to the Nutriment the Mother had for it. So in Alsop's Case; The Wife after 40 weeks and 8 days was delivered of a Daughter; by the Doctors it way be legitimate; for as well Antenatus might be Heir in a Chlid born at the end of 7 months, so a Postnatus actually born after 40 weeks; and they held a Child may be legitimate, though it be born the last day of the 10th month after the Conception, accounting the months per menses Solares not Lunares, Godb. 281. 1 Rolls 356. 2 Cro. 571. Alsop and Stacy. I shall only cite two Cases more on this Writ of Ventre inspiciendo, one was in the Case of a Widow, and the other in the Case of a Feme Covert. One was in the time of Queen Elizabeth: Ventre inspiciendo in case of a Widow. Sir Francis Willoughby died seized of a great Estate of Inheritance, having five Daughters, leaving Dorothy his Wife, who at the time of his death pretended herself to be with Child by Sir Francis, which if it were a Son all the five Sisters would loose the Inheritance descended to them. They prayed a Writ de Ventre inspiciendo out of Chancery, directed to the Sheriff of London, that he should 'cause the said Dorothy to be viewed by twelve Knights, and to be searched by twelve women in the presence of the twelve Knights, and add tractand. per ubera & ad ventrem inspiciend ', whether she was with Child, and to certify the same into the Common Bench; and if she were with Child, to certify for how long time in their Judgements, & quando sit paritura. Whereupon the Sheriff accordingly caused her to be searched, and returned that she was twenty weeks gone with Child, and that within twenty weeks fuit paritura. Whereupon another Writ issued out of the Common Bench commanding the Sheriff safely to keep her in such an House, and that every day he would 'cause her to be viewed by some of the women named in the writ (ten being named thereon) and some to be present at the Delivery, and to view the Birth whether it were Male or Female; and the Sheriff returned, that such a day she was delivered of a Daughter. The other was in the time of King James the First, and it was one Thecar's Case, In case of a Wife. and the like Circumstances and Proceed were in this Case Pasch. 22 Jac. 1. with this difference. The Lady Willoughby's Case was in the Case of a Widow, but this was in the Case of a Feme Covert, who was married within a week after the death of her first Husband, who is supposed to get the Child, for here she was a Feme Covert, and aught to cohabite with her Husband. They did not take such a course as in the Lady Willoughbies' Case, of taking her into the Sheriff's Custody, but left her with her Husband, he entering into a Recognizance that she should not remove from the House wherein they inhabited, and that one or two of the women might see her every day, and two or three be present at her Travel; for it was said that this Issue might well be said to be the Child of the first Husband, and should inherit the Land. And after this course observed she was delivered of a Female Child, who was afterwards by Inquisition on Office found to be the Daughter and Heir of the first Husband, Cro. Jac. 685. and Litt. Rep. 177. Thecar's Case, Winch p. 71. In what case the Child may a choose his own Father. Note, It is said in 1 Inst. f. 8. a. If a Man hath a Wife and dieth, and in a very short time after the Wife marrieth again, and within nine months hath a Child, so that it may be the Child of the one or the other, that in this case the Child may choose his Father, Quaere, hoc Casu Filiatio non potest probari. Who shall be said to be a Bastard or not. In respect of the months or weeks after the decease of the Husband, Vide sub Titulo de Ventre inspiciendo more fully. By our Common Law we term them all Bastards, which are born out of lawful Marriage. If the Husband be within the four Seas (viz.) within the Jurisdiction of the King of England, if the Wife hath Issue, no proof is to be admitted to prove that Child a Bastard (for in that Case Filiatio non potest probari) unless the Husband hath an apparent impossibility of Procreation, as if the Husband be but eight years old, etc. But if the Issue be born within a month or day after Marriage between parties of lawful age the Child is legitimate. If the Husband be castrate, Where Issue shallbe a Brstard though born within Marriage. so that it is apparent that he cannot in any possibility get Issue, if his Wife hath Issue divers years after, this shall be a Bastard although it be begotten within Marriage, because its apparent that it is not legitimate: In the Starr-Chamber 14 Jac. Done and Egerton versus Hinton and Starkey, by the Lord Chancellor and Montague, but Hobart contra. If a Woman be big with Child by A. and after A. marries her, and the Issue is born within the Espousals, this is a Mulier and not a Bastard. (Mulier in our Law signifies Uxor, & sic filius natus vel filia nata ex justa uxore appellatur in legibus Angliae filius mulieratus vel filia mulierata.) So if a Wife be big with Child by one, and after another marries her, and after the Issue is born (though but three days after) this is a Mulier and not Bastard, because born within the Espousals. If a Feme Covert hath Issue in Advoutry, yet if the Husband be able to beget a Child, and he is within the four Seas, it is not a Bastard. Egerton's Case. So it is if a Woman elope and live in Advoutry with another, but than the Husband must be within the four Seas, so as by intendment he may come to his Wife. Bastardy. In what Court to be proved. If a Suit to prove a Bastardy and Legitimacy be first commenced in the Ecclesiastical Court before any Question be moved of such Matter in the Temporal Court of the King a Prohibition lies to restrain such Suit; and if it accompanied with Practice and Fraud this is a Misdemeanour punishable in the Chancery. And the reason why the Ecclesiastical Judge cannot inquire of Legitimacy or Bastardy before he hath received direction or commandment out of the Temporal Court of the King is, because the Court Christian never had power to intermeddle with Temporal Inheritances direct or indirecte. It hath been resolved, that where the Question of Bastardy or Legitimacy hath been moved in the King's Temporal Court, and Issue upon it be joined there; than it may be transmitted to the Ecclesiastical Court by the King's Writ to be examined and tried there; and upon this the Bishop ought to make a Certificate to the King's Court, which Certificate being made in due manner the Law gives such Credit to it, that all the World shall be estopped and bound by it. But in an Action on the Case for calling one Bastard, the Defendant justified that he was a Bastard, and it was awarded that this should be tried per pais, and not by the Ordinary, Hob. 179. General Bastardy where tryable. Special where. General Bastardy ought to be tried by the Bishop, and not per Pais, 18 Ed. 4. 3. a. Special Bastardy per Pais. When the Issue is joined upon Bastardy before it shall be awarded to the Ordinary to be tried, Proclamation shall be made of it in the same Court, and after the Issue shall be certified into Chancery where Proclamation shall be made once a month for three month, and after the Chancellor shall certify this to the Court where the Plea is depending, and after it shall be proclaimed again in the same Court, that all those whom this Plea doth concern shall go to the Ordinary to make their Allegations, 10 H. 6. c. 11. If the Wife of a Man who hath been beyond Sea by so long time before the Birth of the Issue, which the Wife hath in his absence, that the Issue cannot be his Issue, this is a Bastard, Hill. 14 Jac. 2. in Camera Stellata, Done & Egerton. In respect of Marriage unlawful. If a Man having a Wife takes another Wife, and hath Issue by her, living the first Wife, this Issue is Bastard, for the Second Marriage is voided, 7 Co. 44. Kenn's Case. If a Man marry his Cousin within the degrees, the Issue between them is no Bastard until a Divorce, for the Marriage is not voided, 18 H. 6. 34. b. So it is if the Brother marry his Sister. If a Man hath Issue by A. and afterwards intermarry with her, yet the Issue is a Bastard by our Law, but a Mulier by the Civil Law. An Idiot a nativitate may consent to Marriage, and his Issue shall be legitimate, Trin. 3 Jac. Style and West, B. R. Bastard by our Law, and Mulier by the Civil Law. If A. hath Issue by B. and after they intermarry, yet the Issue is a Bastard by our Law, but a Mulier by the Civil Law, 11 H. 4. 84. By the Constitutions of the Pope a Bastard born before the Espousals of the same Parents, who after intermarry, is legitimate; yet it appears by the Statute of Merton cap. 9 the King refused to accept such Law in this Realm, and answered to the Motion of it in Parliament, Nolumus Leges Angliae mutari. If the Parents are divorced causa Consanguinitatis, they not having notice of this at the Marriage, the Issues had before are Bastards by our Law, and Muliers by the Civil Law. If a Man had Issue by a Woman, and after marry the same Woman, the Issue by our Law is a Bastard, and by the Spiritual Law a Mulier. Bastard by the Spiritual Law, and Mulier by our Law. If a Man marry a Woman big with Child by another, and within three days after she is delivered, in our Law this is a Mulier, and in the Spiritual Law a Bastard. If a Woman elope and hath Issue in Avowtry, the Issue is a Mulier in our Law, and by the Spiritual Law a Bastard, 43 E. 3. 19, 20. But if a Man who hath one Wife takes another, and hath Issue by her, this Issue is a Bastard by both Laws, for the second Marriage is voided. Divorce. What Divorce shall bastardise the Issue, Vide Tit. Divorce. At what time the Divorce being made shall bastardise the Issue, Vide Tit. Divorce. Jeo oye que il fuit agreed que si un ad issue bastard eign per un feme & puis la feme marrie un altar, & le Baron morust depuis la dit Feme marry a luy per que el ad le bastard & ad issue altar fitz per luy & le Baron morust que si en ceo case le bastard enter en les terres de queux son pere morust seize & add Issue & morust, que ceo nest tiel descent que barrera le Mulier a claymer les dits terres, car le maxime tient lieu ou le marriage est prosecut & nemy ou un marriage mean ovesque un estranger. Ex Manuscrip. Mri. Brownloe. Bastardy where tryable. General Bastardy or unque accouple en Loyal Matrimony is tryable by the Bishop's Certificate; but special Bastardy, as whether one was born or begotten before the Espousals, or whether a woman be a man's wife or not; or whether she were married to another before: These matters being specially alleged and put in issue it shall be tried per Pais, Hard. 2. 63. Ashfield's Case. If Bastardy be pleaded in one, for that he was born of a second wife, living the first, this shall be rryed per pais, for the Marriage is voided, 38 Ass. 24. adjudged. If Issue be, whether a Bastard or a Mulier, it shall be tried by the Ordinary. But if the Issue be, whether a Bastard or born within the Espousals, it shall be tried per Pais, 7 H. 4. 8. So if the Issue be whether born before Marriage, it shall be tried per Pais, for this lies well in the Conisance of the Country, 11 H. 4. 84. In an Issue against an Infant, if Bastardy be pleaded in the Infant, this shall not be tried by the Ordinary, but per Pais; because the Infant is not compellable to take Issue upon it, for than he should loose the advantage of the inquiry of Circumstances, and so no Issue shall be joined upon this; and if Issue be not joined between the Parties the Ordinary shall not try it, 30 Ass. 45. If Bastardy be pleaded in Abatement of the Writ, and the other saith he is a Mulier, this shall be tried per Pais, because it is not peremptory, 49 Ass. 45. Who only may writ to the Bishop to certify Bastardy. Note, None but the King's Courts of Record, as the Court of King's-Bench, Common-Bench, Justices of Gaol-delivery, and such like may writ to the Bishop to certify Bastardy, Mulierty, Loyalty of Matrimony, and such like Ecclesiastical matter; for it is a Rule in Law, That none but the King can writ to a Bishop to certify; and therefore no inferior Court, as London, Norwick, York can writ to the Bishop; therefore in such Cases the Plea ought to be removed in Banco, and this Court ought to writ to the Bishop, and after to remand it again, 1 Inst. 134. In Assize, if the Tenant saith that A. the Father of the Plaintiff took B. to Wife, and had Issue the Plaintiff, and after they were divorced, and so the Plaintiff a Bastard. To which the Plaintiff faith, that he is a Mulier; upon which a Writ is directed to the Bishop, who certifies that the Plaintiff was born en loyal Matrimony without fully certifying that he is fully a Mulier; and although the Tenant had acknowledged in his Plea that there was a Marriage and that the Plaintiff was born in it; yet because if there were a Divorce than this was not a lawful Marriage, the Certificate aforesaid is good which certifies that he was born in lawful Marriage, 43 Ass. 43. Upon Issue of Bastard or not, if the Ordinary certify that the Plaintiff was a Mulier prout per Inquisitionem invenit, this is good without certifying generally Legitimus, 3 H. 6. Bastardy 2. If a Writ issues to the Bishop to certify if J. S. be a Bastard, if he make a Certificate, yet if he does not remand the writ which comes to him to warrant the Certificate, it is not good, 41 Ass. 29. adjudged. If a writ issue to the Archbishop Garden of the Spiritualties seed vacant of the Bishopric of Coventry and Lichfield, to certify whether A. was ever accouple en loyal, etc. and he returns that Dr. Babington his Commissary of Coventry and Lichfield had enquired, etc. this is not a good Return, because delegata potestas non potest delegari; but the Return aught to have been in the name of the Archbishop himself, Trin. 7 Jac. Foliam's Case. If between Strangers another be tried a Bastard per Pais, this shall not bind him that is so tried, because he is a Stranger to the Trial, and cannot have an Attaint, Doct and Stud. 68 b. If a man be certified a Bastard by the Ordinary in an Action personal, he shall be bound perpetually, as well as in Actions real, 19 H. 6. 18. b. If the Defendant be certified a Bastard by the Ordinary, yet the Certificate after shall loose its force, if the Plaintiff be afterwards nonsuited, for than the Certificate is not of Record, 18 Ed. 3. 34. Of Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne in case of Descents. A man seized of Lands in Fee, and hath Issue Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne, and dies: if the Bastard enters, and the Mulier dies, his wife priviment enseint with a Son, and the Bastard hath Issue and dies seized, the Son is born, his Right is bound for ever; but if the Bastard dies seized, his wife enseint with a Son, the Mulier enters, the Son is born, the Issue of the Bastard is barred; for there must be not only a dying seized, but a descent to his Issue. Note, That the Case of Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne differ from the common Cases of Descents and Bar; for Descents do only toll the Entry of him that Right hath, but leaveth him to his Action; but now if a man seized of Lands in Fee hath Issue two Sons, Bastard eigne and Mulier puisne, and the Father dies, the Bastard enters claiming as Heir to his Father and occupieth the Land all his Life without any Entry made upon him by the Mulier, and the Bastard hath Issue and dies seized, and the Land descends to his Issue, who entereth; in this Case the Mulier is barred for ever, both of his Entry and of his Action; for the Issue of the Bastard is become in Judgement of Law as lawful Heir: For it's the ancient Law, Justum no● est aliquem post mortem facere Bastardum, qui tot● tempore vitae suae pro legitimo habebatur, 1 Inst. 224. 8 Co. Lechford's Case. How Estates may be limited to a Bastard by reputed Name, or not. If a Remainder is limited to J. S. Son of W. S. although he be a mere Bastard, and no Mulie● by the Spiritual Law, yet if he be reputed for hi● Son, it's a good Remainder: But if an Estate fo● Life be made, the Remainder to the Issue of th● Body of J. S. or of him begotten on the Bod● of A. S. if he hath afterwards an illegitimate Issue yet this Issue shall never take this Remainder, because he cannot have the Reputation of Issue before hi● Birth, 1 Inst. 3. b. If A. makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use o● himself for Life, the Remainder to the Issue Mak● of one Mary Lloyd of her Body begotten by A. th● Feoffor; whether he be lawfully begotten or not so that he be the reputed Son of A. it is sufficient for him to entitle himself to say, that he is the Son of the said A. begotten on the Body of the said Mary Lloyd, and that he is so reputed in the common Reputation of the Country, although he was not born nor in esse, at the time of the Remainder granted; and although there are lawful Issues between them which are puisne to the Bastard; for the person who is to take is certainly described; for the Bastard of a woman is certainly known to be her Issue, and this is limited to the eldest Issue, Mich. 38 and 39 Eliz. Blodwel and Edwards. But though a Bastard be a reputed Son, yet he is not such a Son in consideration whereof an Use can be raised, because in Judgement of Law he is nullius Filius, 1 Inst. 123. a. By a Devise of all his Goods to his Children a Bastard eigne shall take a Portion, Moor f. 10. Note, An English Merchant living beyond Seas hath Issue a Son by a woman of that Country, who is an Alien, although by the Civil Law Partus sequitur ventrem; yet it is not so in our Law, for the Child shall be of the Father's condition, for the woman was sub potestate viri, quasi under the Allegiance of our King. CHAP. iv Queen. How the Queen is an exempt person from the King in our Law. She is not to found Sureties, nor to be amerced. She is to be sued by a Praecipe, not by Petition. She may inform by her Attorney in Chancery. Queen Consort or Queen Dowager in case of Treason, how to be tried. The Penalty for any to marry the Queen Dowager without the King's Licence. She is not restrained by the Statute of 1 H. 4. c. 6. She and her Tenants not to pay Toll. THough the Queen be a Feme Covert and a Subject, yet hath she a Prerogative as she is the King's Wife. The Wife of the King of England is an exempt person from the King, and is capable of Lands o● Tenements of the Gift of the King, etc. and ma● sue and be sued without the King as a Feme sole. That the Queen as Feme sole may give and tak● solely without the King, appeareth by an ancient Charter long before the Conquest. I Ethelswith Queen of the Mercians with Consent of my Eldermen will give by Gran● to Cawolf my most faithful Servant a ce● piece of Land, being part of my peculi● power, etc. that he may have and posset at his pleasure as long as he lives; an● after his end and limit of his days he ma● leave it to whomsoever he will for eve● lasting Power and perpetual Inheritance And we charge all Secular Powers in th● Name of God the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, to observe the aforesaid inviolably. These Witnesses subscribing and consenting thereunto, I Etheldred King of the West Saxons, and Burghred King of the Mercians. When the Queen sueth any Writ the Writ shall not say, if the Queen of England shall secure thee, etc. for she ought not to found Sureties, as a common person ought to do; for she shall not be amerced, Vide Fitz. B. de parco fracto. A Protection may be allowed against the Queen, but not against the King; neither shall the Queen be sued by a Petition, but by a Praecipe. The Queen may inform by her Attorney in the Chancery by English Bill to have a Decree made in the Court of the Queen confirmed; for though the Queen be a Subject, yet hath she a Prerogative with the King as she is his Wife. Queen Consort or Queen Dowager in case of Treason shall be tried per pares, as Queen Anne, Wife of King Henry the 8th, was, Pasch. 22 H. 8. in the Tower of London before the Duke of Norfolk than High Steward. Plenarty by six months against the Queen is a good Plea albeit she claims the Advowson by the King's Endowment, 2 Inst. 361. At a Parliament held 6 H. 6. it is Enacted, That no man shall contract or marry himself to any Queen of England without a special Licence or Assent of the King, on pain to loose all his Goods and Lands, 2 Inst. 18. If a Queen Dowager marry any of the Nobility, or under that Degree, yet loseth not she her Dignity, as Katherine Queen Dowager of England, married Owen ap Meredith ap Theodore Esquire, and yet she by the Name of Katherine Queen of England maintained an Action of Detinue against the Bishop of Carlisle, 2 Inst. 50. The Queen shall found no Pledges, for she shall not be amerced. The Queen is not restrained by the Statute of 1 H. 4. cap. 6. concerning Grants by the King, 1 Inst. 135. In the Case of a Quare Impedit brought by her, Plenarty is no Plea, Quaere. The Queen shall pay no Toll. If the Queen's Tenant alien any part of the Tenaney to one, and another part to another, the Queen may distrain any one part for the whole, as the King may do; but other Lords shall distrain pro rata. CHAP. V Privileges of a Feme Covert. No Mortuary to be paid at her Death. She is not within the Statute of W. 2. cap. 25. What Conditions in Law shall bind the Wife, or not. She may not be a Constable, though the Custom be to elect by Houses. Laps shall incur against her. Latchess not to be accounted against her for not Entry or Claim to avoid Descent. What Privilege the Wife shall have in Suits by reason of the Husband's Privilege. IF a Feme Covert dies, no Mortuary shall be paid; but if a Woman survive her Husband, and live in an House for a year sole with the Government of a Family, and after dies, she shall pay a Mortuary, Linwood f. 7. This was ordained by the Constitution of Simon Langhan. The Statute of W. 2. cap. 25. a Feme Covert and Infant are not within this Statute to have corporal Imprisonment by punishment by their Plea, by vouching a Record, and failing of it, 2 Inst. 414. What Conditions in Law shall bind a Feme Covert or not. If Conditions in Law founded upon Skill and Confidence, as Offices of Parkship or Stewardship in Fee, etc. descend to a Feme Covert, if the Condition in Law annexed to them be broken, this shall bar her for ever: But if Feme Covert be Lessee pur vie, or Tenant in Dower, and her Husband makes a Feoffment in Fee, and the Lessor enters for the Forfeiture, as he may, yet the Feme after her Husband's death may enter, for this is a Condition in Law without any Skill or Confidence annexed to the Estate, 8 Co. 44 Whittingham's Case. Women in Prison by reason of their Pregnancy have been released upon Bail, Cro. Jac. 356. She is punishable upon a Malefactoribus in Parcis, Hob. 95, 97. She is imprisonable for force, Hob. 97. She is punishable within the Statute of 10 Eliz. for hearing Mass, and within 23 Eliz. for not coming to Church. A Woman (though the Custom be to elect by Houses) may not be a Constable, Cro. Car. 388. Prouse's Case. But Lapss shall incur against a Feme Covert if she doth not present within six Months. Regularly no Lachess shall be accounted to Infants or Feme Coverts for not Entry or Claim to avoid descents; yet Lachess shall be accounted to them for Non-performance of a Condition annexed to the Estate of the Land; for if a Feme be enfeoffed either before or after marriage, reserving a Rent, and for default of Payment a Reentry, in this case the Lachess of the Husband shall disherit the Wife for ever, 1 Inst. 246. b. Privileges in Suits. If the Husband have Privilege in Chancery it shall not serve for his Wife. P. C. Clerk of the Crown in Chancery and his Wife, as Executrix to her first Husband, were impleaded in Banco he brought a Writ of Privilege for himself and his wife, & non allocatur, because the is not impleadable there, nor her attendance requisite. What Privileges the Wife shall have by reason of her Husband's Privilege in Actions. L. brought Debt against Sir Simon Fanshaw and his wife, as Executrix of another, and sued to the Exigent, and at the return of the Exigent the Defendant, Sir Simon, came into the Court voluntarily and prayed his Privilege, because he was an Officer of the Exchequer, & per Curiam the Defendant shall not have his Privilege, because the Action was brought against him and his wife en auter droit. Rolls in his Argument of this Case took these differences. Diversities. 1. Where the Defendants are coming to make their appearance and are arrested, as in 22 H. 6. 20. and where they are sued in one Court and the Husband demands his Privilege because he is an Officer in another, as in this Case. 2. Where he is Defendant, and where he is Plaintiff. 3. Where he is sued in his own right, and where in the right of another, as in this Case. In the first of these differences he shall have his Privilege, in the later not. Quaere, If the Defendant had not surceased his time in this Case, because he demands his Privilege at the Exigent, and not before, March. Rep. 149. Levet and Sir Simon Fanshaw's Case. T. P. a Clerk in Chancery, married a Feme, who was Executrix to her Husband, Debt was brought against them in C. B. T. P. brings a writ of Privilege to have the Action removed into Chancery; the writ was disallowed by the Court, and the Defendant ruled to answer over, because the Wife was joined in the Action with the Husband; aliter, where the Wife comes in aid of her Husband to follow the Suit, Godb. p. 10. Dyer 377. Pole's Case. If the Husband be solely impleaded in Banco, and he comes with his Wife to the Court to defend the Suit, and both are arrested, there they shall have Privilege. CHAP. VI Who shall be said to be Baron and Feme, or in what Cases Marriage shall be said to be valid or not. 1. In respect of Age: Of the time of Agreement or Disagreement to the Marriage: What shall amount to such Agreement or Disagreement. 2. In respect of Affinity or Consanguinity. What Marriages are within the Levitical Degrees or not; with several Modern Cases of Precontracts. In respect of Age. Consangunity. Divorce. Profession. 1. AGE. In former times the Marriage of a Ward made a considerable Title in our Books. I remember Bracton lib. 2▪ f. 88 saith, A Woman being Heir sine dispositione & assensu Dominorum haereditatem habens maritari non potest; but now the Law is altered, and therefore I shall not trouble the Reader with it; only let me observe that in case the Lord disparaged the Ward in Marriage under fourteen that than he lost the Wardship. Now there were four Causes of Disparagement than looked upon. 1. Propter vitium Animi, as Idiot. 2. Propter vitium Sanguinis, as 1. A Villensis. 2. A Burgensis, i e. a Mechanic, Habedasher, Draper, etc. 3. The Son or Daughter of a person attainted of Treason or Felony, albeit pardoned, for the Blood is corrupted. 4. A Bastard. 5. An Alien or Child of an Alien. 3. Propter vitium Corporis, as 1. De membris, having one Hand, one Foot, one Eye, etc. 2. A Deformity, as, to squint, be lame, crooked, etc. 3. Privation, as, blind, deaf, dumb, etc. 4. Horrible Diseases, as, Leprosy, Palsy, etc. 5. Natural Impotency to have Children, 6. Deflowered. 4. Propter jacturam Privilegii, as, to marry the Heir to a Widow, whereby he should, by reason of the Bigamy, have lost the benefit of his Clergy; but that Bigamy is ousted by the Statute of 1 Ed. 6. cap. 12. The time of the Agreement or Disagreement to the Marriage, when they marry infra annos nubiles. The time of Agreement or Disagreement for the Woman is at twelve, or after; and for the Man at fourteen or after, and there needs be no new Marriage if they so agreed; but disagree they cannot before the said Ages; but than they may disagree and marry themselves to others without any Divorce, and if once they give consent they can never disagree after, 1 Inst. 79. 2 Co. 16. If a Man at fourteen marry a Woman at the Age of ten, at her Age of twelve he may disagree, as well as she may, though he were of the Age of Consent; because in Contracts of Matrimony both must be bound, or equal election of Disagreement given to both: So it is e converso, if the Woman be of the Age of Consent, and the Man under. If a Man marry a Woman, who is within the Age of twelve years, and after the Wife disagrees to the Marriage within the Age of twelve years also, and after the Age of twelve years marry with another; now the first Marriage is absolutely defeated so that he may take another Wife; What amounts to a Disagreement. for although the disagreement within the Age of Consent was not sufficient, yet the taking another Husband after the Age of Consent affirms the Disagreement, and so the Marriage is voided ab initio, as it was adjudged in Babington's Case. But if a man marry a woman within the Age of twelve years, and after the wife at eleven years of age disagrees to the marriage, and after the Husband takes another Wife and had Issue by her, this is a Bastard; for the first continues notwithstanding the disagreement of the woman; for she may not disagree within the age of twelve years, and so her disagreement was voided, 1 Roll. Abr. 341. A Feme marries with J.S. and within the age of twelve years disagrees and marries with another, the second marriage resolved to be good; for the Church providing against the change of Lust prohibits Divorces, but here under the age of twelve years is not any such mischief, Per Noy, Banisters Case cited Dyer 13. in Margin. And by him marriage by Duress is good, against the Opinion of Frowick, Palmer 52. otherwise by such Allegations Divorces would by frequent to satistie the Lusts of men. If a man within the age of fourteen takes a wife of twelve, or more, this is a marriage, and they are Baron and Feme de facto; so that the husband may have Trespass de muliere abducta cum bonis viri, Trin. 12 Jac. B. R. Bradshaw and Fletcher. And if the man come to fourteen, and make any continuance of the Action, this shall be a good agreement to the marriage, so as it afterwards shall not be defeated. If disagreement be before the Ordinary, than they can never after agreed to make it a good marriage, though within the age of Consent. Quaere. Debt on Obligation by Baron and Feme; the Defendant pleads the Wife had another Husband in full life. The Plaintiff replies, that the Feme ad annos nubiles disagreed. The Defendant demurs. The Question was, If he ought to agreed or disagree before annos nubiles? Per Popham, If she marry another Husband infra annos nubiles this shall be a disagreement. But it was adjudged pro Quer. because Cohabitation was with the second Husband all the time after the years of Consent, Moore 575. Warner & sa Feme against Babington. It was a Question, If the death of the Baron before the years of Consent of the Wife doth defeat the marriage ab initio, as disagreement shall do, or had dissolved it without disaffirmance; and per Curiam it hath dissolved and disaffirmed it; for the Baron dying there is not any marriage, and Sponsalia may be before the years of Assent, but not Matrimony, Moore 742. Sir Arthur Gorge. What Marriages are within Levitical Degrees or not. IN the Statutes of 25 H. 8. c. 22. and 28 H. 8. c. 7. the Degrees prohibited in the 18th of Leviticus are truly set down, and not only Degrees of Kindred and Consanguinity, but Degrees of Affinity and Alliance are set down, and may be best illustrated and viewed in this Scheme. Of the Man's Part. Degrees of Consanguinity prohibited, or a Man may not marry his Father's Sister. his Mother. his Sister. his Daughter. the Daughter of his Son or Daughter. his Mother's Sister Of the Woman's Part. Degrees of Consanguinity, or a Woman may not marry her Father's Brother. her Father. her Brother. her Son. the Son of her Daughter. her Mother's Brother. On the Man's Part. Degrees of Affinity prohibited, or a Man may not marry his Uncle's Wife. his Brother's Wife. Father's Wife. his Son's Wife, or Wife's Daughter. the Daughter of his Wife's Son or Daughter. Father's Wife's Daughter. his Sister's Wife. On the Womans' Part. Degrees of Alliance prohibited, or a Woman may not marry her Aunt's Husband. her Sister's Husband. her Mother's Husband. her Husband's Brother. her Daughter's Husband. the Son of her Husband's Son or Daughter. The Act of 13 H. 8. provides for two things: The first was against the dissolution of Marriages consummate with bodily knowledge upon pretence of Precontracts; the other by reason of other Prohibitions to marry than God's Law requireth: But that Clause about Precontracts is repealed, 2 E. 6. c. 23. 1 Eliz. c. 1. Stat. 15 H. 8. c. 22. 18 H. 8. c. 7. cap. 16. 32 H. 8. cap. 38. are the Statutes which concern Marriage within Levitical degrees. Marriages between Cousin-germen and all Marriages onwards between Cosin-Germans are by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 38. made lawful. All Marriages are lawful which are not prohibited within the Levitical degrees. Harrison married his Grandfather's Brother's Wife by the Mother's side, this was held lawful by the Judges, Vaughan's Rep. etc. Harrison and Nunwel, where you may read excellent Learning about the Common Law's cognisance as to Marriages, and of the Construction of the Levitical degrees. Quae eandem habent rationem propinquitatis cum eis quae nominatim prohibentur: Regula. And therefore though the Marriage of the Nephew cum amita & matertera is forbidden by the said 18th Chapter of Leviticus, and yet the Marriage of the Uncle with the Niece is not by express words prohibited, yet the same is prohibited. So Cro. Eliz. 298. Man's Case. Mann had married his Wife's Sister's Daughter, for which he was sued before the High Commissioners; for tho' this was not expressly forbidden by the Levitical degrees, yet because degrees more remote are forbidden, they gave Sentence of Divorce; and he grounded his Prohibition on the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 38. and a Consultation was granted, because the Prohibition is not to be, if it be within the Levitical degrees, and here it was, general and therefore not good. In Siderfin p. 434. Mich. 21 Car. 2. B. R. Hesward and his Wife against Horn. It was moved for a Prohibition to the Spiritual Court, and the Suggestion was, that they proceeded there to excommunicate the Plaintiffs, because the Plaintiff H. had espoused the other Plaintiff, who was his last Wife's Sister's Daughter, and it was granted, Vid. More 907. 2 Kelw. 551. Grotius de Jure Belli lib. 2. f. 137. sect. 12, 13. distinguisheth well that Lineal Parents are only prohibited, not Collateral ascending or descending; and to this the Court inclined. The Plaintiff sued one in the Ecclesiastical Court for marrying his Sister's Daughter, and the Defendant prayed a Prohibition, because out of the Levitical degrees; but it was denied, because it is a Cause of Ecclesiastical Cognizance, Raym. 464. If a man marry his Mother or Sister they are Husband and Wife until a Divorce. But if a Wife take a second Husband, living the first Husband, this Marriage is voided by our Law, as by the Spiritual Law, contra 9 H. 6. 14. Whether Marriage be within the Levitical Degrees, determinable by the Common Law. One had married the Widow of his Brother's Son and the High Commissioners adjudged it Incest▪ But per Curiam this Marriage is lawful, per Stat. 32 H. 8. and 28 H. 8. And this Marriage bein● within the Levitical degrees shall be determine● by the Common Law; and so the Judges have taken upon them the Exposition of the Levitic● degrees by force of the Statute of 32 H. 8. as appears by Person's Case remembered in Coke's Ne● Entries, Litt. Rep. 356. Williams' Case. Prohibition was denied to the Ecclesiastical Cou●● in Suit there to dissolve an incestuous Marriage of his Brother's Daughter, Sir Thomas Jones 191. Margatrides Case. Though the Suggestion was, that Land settled on the said Marriage should be drawn into Question in the Spiritual Court, but no Prohibition was granted in Collet's Case; for upon such pretence incestuous Marriage may be sheltered, and this matter lies properly in the Spiritual Jurisdiction. The Case was. Collet's Wife was the Sister of his former Wife now dead; but upon Information to the Court, that the Suit in the Spiritual Court was only a Contrivance of Collet to gain him Power to dispose of the Estate, and Collet, the Father at first instance had confessed the prior Marriage, and the Spiritual Court was ready to give Sentence for the Divorce upon his Confession without farther Evidence; The Court proposed there should be a Trial at Common Law upon a feigned Action, wherein the Issue should be, whether ever Collet was married to the Sister of his Wife, which being refused, day was given to show Cause why the Prohibition should not be granted, and Proceed to be stayed in the Interim, and so from Term to Term, Sir Thomas Jone's Rep. 213. Collet's Case. As to Divorce declaring the Marriage to be voided, Vide infra Tit. Divorce. As to Profession, that is, when one is regular and professed under certain Rules, as to become one of the four Orders of Friars, or a Monk, Canon or Nun; it was held in our Books, that if a Deacon or Priest take a Wife, the Marriage was not voided, but voidable by Divorce: But if a Man marries a Nun, or a Monk marrieth another woman, the Marriage is voided, and the Issues are Bastards, because they were dead persons in Law, and are under a Vow of Chastity, 1 Inst. 138. 12 Co. 8. If an Idiot contract Matrimony, this is good and shall bind him, as was judged in Styles and Wech's Case, 3 Jac. 1. cited in Siderf. Scot and Manbies' Case 112. Precontract. Matrimonial Causes are of Spiritual Cognisance, and how. In Construction of the Civil Law the Wife is Uxor before the Espousals by Contract; for if they have Carnal Copulation after Contract, they shall not be punished for Adultery or Fornication, only for Contempt against an Edict of the Church, which hath prohibited carnal Copulation before the Espousals solemnised in fancy Ecclesiae. If a Legacy be given to a woman cum uxor fuerit, and she contract herself, she shall demand the Legacy in the Spiritual Court before the Espousals celebrated, Mo●● 170. in Bunting's Case. CHAP. VII. Trial of Marriage. Where and in what Cases Trial of Marriage sha●● be by the Bishop's Certificate, and where in Pai● Of the Issue n'unqne accouple en loyal matrimony where to be tried. If the Issue be, wheth●● she be a Feme Covert or Feme Sole, where to 〈◊〉 tried, and the reason of the difference. T●● diversity between a Marriage in Right and 〈◊〉 Marriage in Possession or de Facto; and the consequence of the diversity. The Day and Pla●● is omitted in the Bishop's Certificate, if good. T●● Form of the Bishop's Certificate. The Credit th● Law gives to it. MAtrimonial Causes are of Spiritual Cognizance as the Right of Marriage, N'unque accou●● en loyal matrimony, Divorces, 4 Co. Bunting's Cas● 7 Co. 44. And so Bastardy general, but not th● Consequents or Appurtenants of Marriage, as the Age of Consent shall be tried at Common Law. So it is said 48 E. 3. 18. All Matters of Marriage are not matrimonial, so as to appertain to the Spiritual Court. And Fitzh. N. B. 644. a. takes a difference between Actions for Money given in Marriage, and given by reason of the Marriage. In the last Case the Spiritual Court shall not have Cognisance, though in the first Case it shall; because it is not matter merely occasioning the Marriage, but as Reward of it, Sid. 115. Where and in what Cases Trial shall be by the Bishop's Certificate, or in Pais, or not. The Right of Espousals is evermore triable by the Bishop's Certificate, as if the Issue be accouple en loyal matrimony or not; this is tryable by the Bishop, and not per Pais, 7 H. 4. 25. 19 H. 6. 18. So if such Issue be in a Writ of Dower it shall be tried by the Bishop; so in an Appeal: But whether a woman be a Feme Covert or Sole is always triable per Pais: So if the Issue be Wife or not Wife, married or not married, it is tryable per Pais, 7 H. 4. 25. If a Feme and her Husband bring Trespass, Nient son feme shall be tried per Pais: So if Feme Covert bring Assize, as a Feme sole, if the Tenant saith, she is a Feme Covert, it shall be tried by the Assize. In Assize by Baron and Feme the Tenant saith, that the Wife is the Wife of a Stranger. The Demandant saith, that the Marriage between them was within the Age of Consent, and after at twenty years of Age she took him to Husband, & issint sa Feme, and not the Wife of a Stranger; this shall be tried per Pais, 49 Ed. 3. 17. b. Isabel Goodcheap's Case. In a Cui in vita, if the Issue be whether the Alienor were her Husband it shall be tried per Pais, for the Action lies if he were her Husband in facto. In a Writ by W. C. and M. his Wife; if the Issue be whether she were the wife of W. C. in Abatement of the Writ, this shall be tried per Pais, 39 E. 3. 16. Whether a Marriage be solemnised shall be tried per Pais. In a Writ of Covenant to assure certain Lands within twenty days after the Marriage solemnised between A. and B. If the Issue be whether there were any such Marriage solemnised or not, this shall be tried per Pais, and not by the Ordinary, Mich. 4 Jac. B. R. Fletcher and Muffet. If A. covenant with B. that if B. marry with the Daughter of A. rite & legittime secundum Leges Ecclesiasticas he will assure to B. a Copyhold Estate. B. brought his Action of Covenant, and allegeth that he rite & legittime espoused the Daughter of A. upon which Issue was joined, and found for the Plaintiff. Exception was taken, because it ought to be tried by Certificate and not per Pais: Sed non allocatur; for the Marriage is only in Issue, and that is the substance, and not whether he were lawfully espoused; for the Legitimation doth not come in Question; and it was held sufficient for the Plaintiff to allege a licet saepius requisitus without giving notice of the Marriage, for he ought to take notice at his peril, Cro. Jac. 102. Fletcher and Pynset. If the Issue be whether the Church is voided or not voided, Whether Coverture or sole shall be tried per Pais, but encouple en loyal matrimony by the Bishop, and the reason of the diversity. this shall be tried per Pais; but whether a Church be full or not shall be tried by Certificate; so if the Issue be whether such a Woman be covert or sole, this shall be tried per Pais, though the Issue whether such a woman was accouple en loyal matrimony shall be tried by Certificate; and the reason of the diversity in both Cases, is this; Avoidance or not Avoidance, a Coverture or Sole are things noturious to the Country, and distinguishable by them; but Plenarty and loyal Matrimony are not things within their Cognisance: For though a woman lie with a man as her Husband, yet the Country cannot judge whether they are lawfully married or not, Sid. p. 39 in Watson and Baker's Case. So is Ventris 77. If Issue be, whether she is the wife of such a man, it is to be tried per Pais; and if she be wife de facto, shall be tried by that Issue; but Loyalty of Matrimony is to be tried by the Bishop by Certificate. Trin. 13 Car. 2. B. R. In Debt on a Bond to pay Money at Marriage, unques accouple does not draw the Right of Marriage in question. Exception was taken; it is not alleged that the party was married at the time of the Bill, but Issue being joined upon married or not married, after Verdict this shall be aided, there being a good Negation and Affirmation, 1 Glascock and Morgan. Now the difference between a Marriage in Right and a Marriage in Possession is much to be regarded and ought to be carefully attended to in Plead. Diversity between a Marriage in Right and a Marriaage in Possession, and the consequence thereof in Pleading. Marriage in Possession is sufficient always in personal things and causes, especially where the Possession of the Wife is in question: But where the Possession of the Husband is in question there Marriage in Right aught to be; and where Marriage in Possession falls in Averment, there it shall not be tried by the Bishop, as in the Case of Marriage in Right where nunq ' accouple is pleaded, but in Pais. For in case of a Wife in possession nunq ' accouple is no Plea, but not his Wife: So is the Case 12 Ed. 3. Br. 481. A. brought an Action of Trespass against B. and C. B. pleaded that C. is Wife of the Plaintiff, and demanded Judgement of the Writ; the Plaintiff in his Replication said, nunq ' accouple, and this Replication was not allowed, but he was driven to say, Not his Wife; for if C. were the Wife of the Plaintiff in Possession or by Reputation it is sufficient to abate the Writ. Upon Marriage de jure infra annos nubiles, if the Husband be murdered before his Agreement, the Wife shall have an Appeal of Murder, or a Writ of Dower. Of the Certificate of the Bishop, and the Return. E. and his Wife demanded her Dower of the Lands of W. S. her former Husband. The Defendant pleads nunq ' accouple en loyal Matrimony. The Issue was, Quod fuit accouple en loyal matrimony; thereupon a Writ was awarded to the Bishop, who certified that she was accoupled in vero matrimonio cum praed. W. sed clandestino, & quoth W. & E. thori & mensae participatione nondum cohabitaverunt usque ad mortem praed. W. Upon this Certificate Judgement was given for the Demandant. Error assigned was, because there was neither day nor place of the Marriage mentioned in the Bishop's Certificate. Sed non allocatur. For the day or place of the Marriage is not material, for it is not issuable, because the Certificate from the Bishop is concluding 2. It was assigned, that this Certificate is not good, because it doth not answer to the words of the Issue, which was n'unque accouple en loyal matrimony; he ought to have answered, Quod fuit copulatus in legitimo matrimonio, but he saith, Quod vero matrimonio, sed clandestino, which is but argumentative that they were lawfully married, their cohabiting at Bed and Board: Sed non allocatur; for vero matrimonio is as good as legitimo, and though it be clandestino it doth not vitiate the Marriage, and the other words prove they continued as Baron and Feme, Cro. Car. 351. In a Writ of Dower, upon an Issue n'unque accouple, etc. if a Writ issue to the Bishop to certify, etc. and he certifies that the Husband being of 11 years, 10 months and 20 days of age, and the Wife of 16 years of age intermarried in fancy Ecclesiae, and so they were accouple en loyal matrimony; this is not a good Certificate, because it doth not give a full answer to the Writ, whether they were accouple en loyal matrimony, Dyer 313. But if upon such Writ and Issue the Bishop certify that he had made diligent inquisition of the matter, by which he had found by lawful proofs that the Woman at such a place in certain was accoupled in loyal Matrimony to the said Husband mentioned in the Writ; this is a good Certificate although it was objected that he should have certified his proper opinion, and not only the Inquisition, for he had not certified so much as the Writ requires in effect, Dyer 368. The Plaintiff brought a Writ of rationabili parte bonorum against the Executors of the Husband, and demands her part of divers Goods in certain. The Defendant pleads, n'unque accouple en loyal matrimony; Upon which a Writ was awarded to the Bishop of Chester, in whose Diocese the Wife pleads the Marriage: The Plaintiff, who had the Carriage, delivers it to the Bishop, and prays him to examine it; upon which, and notice given to the Defendant, he did examine divers Witnesses; afterwards the Plaintiff seeing the Bishop inclinable against him, took away the Writ from the Bishop's Secretary. The Defendant takes another Writ without motion in the Court, Teste the same Term: Upon which the Bishop, without other Examination and without notice of this Writ to the Plaintiff, returns under his Seal Episcopal Nunque loyal accouple; and the Defendant thereupon prayed Judgement. Per Curiam. The Writ taken out by the Defendant without motion was irregular, but by the Preignotaries the Irregularity was in defect of notice to the Plaintiff. In this Case the Plaintiff had two Children by the supposed Husband, which were by this Certificate made Bastards, although reputed legitimate before, Sir Thomas Jones p. 38. A Certificate of Marriage by the Bishop is peremptory, the Marriage being at Utrecht beyond Sea, and certified under the Seal of the Minister there, and of the said Town, and that they cohabited two years together as Man and Wife, was held a sufficient proof that that they were married, Cro. Jac. 542. in Alsop's Case. CHAP. VIII. Marriage, and the Consequence of it by Law. Where alterations are made by Marriage as to the Names of Dignity; as to change of Name on Estates devised. Where or in what Cases Marriage shall amount to a Countermand or Revocation of Livery or Attornment. If Marriage be a Revocation of a Will or Countermand of Arbitrament. If Marriage be a breach of a Condition by way of Disability. A Lady of a Manor marries a Copyholder, if it be a Suspension. In what Cases Marriage is a Release in Law or not. Woman Jailor marries a Prisoner, if it be an Escape or not. Where a Term is extinct by the Intermarriage or not. In what Cases the Husband shall be said Assignee of the Wife or not. What Alterations are made by Intermarriage. IF a Woman that is noble by descent marry one that is under the degree of Nobility, As to Names of Dignity. yet she remaineth noble still; but if she gain her Nobility by Marriage, she loseth it, if she marry under the degree of Nobility; and so is the Rule to be understood, Si mulier nobilis nupserit ignobili desinit esse nobilis. But if a Duchess by Marriage marry a Baron of the Realm she remains a Duchess, and loseth not her Name, because her Husband is noble. Et sic de caeteris. As to Devisees having changed their Name by Marriage. A Man had Issue a Son and a Daughter, and devises his Land to his Sons in , and if he died without Issue, that it should remain to the next of his Name, and died; the Son died without Issue; the Daughter being than married, and the Question was, Whether she should have this Land. Per Curiam, she shall not; for she had lost her Name by her Marriage; but it shall go to the next Heir Male of the Name. Aliter, If she had not been married; for than she should have had it, for she than was the next of the Name, Cro. Eliz. 532. Bon and Smith, and so was Jobson's Case, Cro. Eliz. 576. Jobson devised Lands in Tail, the Remainder to the next of his Kin of his Name; and at the time of the Device the next of his Kin was his Brother's Daughter than married to J. S. The Devisor dies, the Tenant in Tail died afterwards sans Issue, this Daughter shall not have the Land, for she is of her Husband's Name; but if she had been unmarried at the time of the Devise and death of the Donor, though she had been married at the time of the death of the Tenant in Tail without Issue, yet she should have had the Land. As to alrcration of Estates, Vide Tit. Moieties. As to the Goods and Leases of the Feme, Vide infra. As to the Alteration of Actions, Vide Tit. Abatement. I shall only at present consider Where and in what Cases Intermarriage shall amount to a Countermand, Revocation, Release, Suspension or Extinguishment. Livery within the View not revoked by Marriage. Two Women were Jointenants in Fee, one of them made a Charter of Feoffment to J. S. and Livery within the view, and afterwards before it was executed, marries. Per Curiam, This Livery was well executed after the Marriage, for an Interest passeth by the Livery within the view which cannot be countermanded; the effectual part of it, Go and enter and take possession, was before the Marriage; though the Estate be in the Wife till Entry, she hath put it in the Feoffor's power, and when he enters it hath a strong Retrospect to the Livery, Pleading. and shall be pleaded as a Feoffment when she was sole, 1 Ventr. 186. Parsons and Perat. But a Livery by Letter of Attorney is revoked by Marriage; but Livery within the View is a present Livery. If A. a Feme sole lease for Life or Years, Attornment. and after grants the Reversion to B. and afterwards takes C. to Husband, this is a Revocation of the Grant; so that nothing shall pass to B. by the Attornment of the Lessee afterwards, because by the Intermarriage C. is seized in the Right of his Wife, and had a possibility to be Tenant by the Courtesy, 2 R. 2. Attornment 8. Vid. 4 Co. 60. Force and Hembling's Case. But if A. the Feme, after the Grant of the Reversion to B. had taken B. to Husband, this had not been any Revocation of the Grant, but that the Lessee might have settled the Reversion by Attornment afterwards, because the Husband may not have a better Estate by the Intermarriage than he shall have by the Grant, Ibid. A Woman deviseth Lands to A. and his Heirs, Devise. if he survive her, and after she intermarries with the said A. It was argued per Curiam that by the taking him to Husband and Coverture at the time of her death the Writ is countermanded, it being her own Act, 4 Co. 61. Force and Hembling. If two Women exchange Lands, Exchange. and one marries before Entry, this shall not defeat the Exchange. If A. of the one part and B. and C. a Feme sole of the other part, Arbitrament. submit themselves to the Arbitrament of J. L. and afterwards C. takes J. S. to Husband, and after the Arbitrator before any notice of the Marriage makes an Award, that B. and C. shall pay 30 l. to A. yet this shall not bind J. S. and C. his Wife, nor B. for for the Submission by the Marriage of C. is revoked as to B. also, and this also without notice, 1 Roll. Abr. 331. White and Gifford. So is Saccum's Case, 2 Keb. 865. In Debt on Bond to submit to an Award; the Plaintiff on Oyer pleads the Intermarriage of the Wife with the Plaintiff before the Award; to which the Defendant demurred. Per Curiam: Marriage is her own Act, and was a Revocation of the power given to the Arbitrators. A Widow binds herself in a Bond conditioned that if the said Obligor from time to time and at all times upon request do such Act and Acts for the conveying of such Mesuage, etc. and for such Estates, etc. The Obligee tenders an Assurance, which was not according to the Condition, but differed in the Limitation of the Estate, and the Obligor refused to accept it. She afterwards married, and the Question was, If Marriage be a breach of the Condition as to disability. if the Marriage were a breach of the Condition, she having disabled herself to make a Conveyance, and the Baron is entitled to be Tenant by the Courtesy, and yet it is but a Possibility; and the Court advised the Defendant to make a good Conveyance, Hardr. p. 463. Edwards and Owen. Copyhold suspended. A Feme sole seized of a Manor wherein there were Copyholds, one of the Copyholders marries with the Feme, the Copyhold is suspended by her Intermarriage, Godb. 11. Cr. Eliz. p. 7. What Agreements between the Husband and Wife, stand good or be extinguished by the Marriage. It is commonly held in our Law-Books, that Agreement between Husband and Wife before Marriage is extinguished by the Marriage, Hob. 216. Smith and Stafford, but with this diversity, as was the Case of the Lady Pridgeon in Chancery. She being a Widow, upon her Marriage with Sir Francis Pridgeon suggests an Agreement precedent to the Marriage between him and her, and others on her behalf, that notwithstanding her Marriage, the Rents and Profits of all her own Estate, and what personal Estate and Goods she had should be at her own disposal, but the Executors of Sir Francis claimed them: And the Chief Baron Hales, who assisted at the Hearing, declared, That though where an Agreement is between Baron and Feme before Marriage, that the Wife may by her Will dispose of part of her Estate, or for a thing which is future to the Marriage, such an Agreement was not dissolved by the Marriage, yet where an Agreement is to have Execution during the Coverture, as was in the Case of the said Lady Pridgeon, there the Marriage extinguisheth such an Agreement; and they concluded that the Plaintiff had no ground of Suit, Cases in Chanc. 117, 118. Smith and Stafford's Case was upon Speech of Marriage between A. and S. he promised, that if she would marry him, and he died before her, he would leave her worth 100 l. she married him: Now whether the Promise in Law was released by this Marriage was the Question. And it was adjudged contrary to the Opinion of Hobert, that it was not released, not being to be performed till after the death of him that made the Promise. The Lady Darcy being a Widow and seized of a Jointure of 700 l. per annum, agreed to marry Mr. C. and he before the Marriage agreed with her by Writing, that it should be lawful for her, or such as she should appoint, during the Coverture to receive and dispose of the Rent of her Jointure as she pleased, and the Deed was put into the Hands of H. her Agent. They married, and for ten years H. received the Rents, and with the approbation of the Lady paid the same to Mr. C. He died, the Lady exhibits her Bill to have Account from H. and made Title to the same by the Agreement. Per Curiam. The Agreement was extinct by the Intermarriage, Cases in Chancery 21. So if Baron and Feme lease at Will the Land of the Wife rendering Rend, and the Husband dies, ye● the Lease shall continued, 1 Inst. 55. b. Release in Law. If Feme Obligee take the Obligor to Husband's this is a Release in Law; so it is if two Feme Obligees, and one takes the Debtor to Husband but if the Feme Executrix take the Debtor t● Husband, this is no Release in Law, for that wo●● be wrong to the Deed, and in Law work a Dev●stavit, which an Act in Law shall never wo●● 1 Inst. 264. b. As to Marriage being a Release in Law of Assumpsit, Vide Hob. 216. Smith and Stafford, as 2 Sid. 58. & postea. Intermarriage repeals her Submission to Arbit●ment dum sola, 3 Keb. 9 Escape. Plat's Case Plowd. 17. a. If a Woman be W●den of the Fleet, and one that is in prison the● marry her he is thereby out of Prison, and the La● adjudgeth him thereby to be enlarged, because it i● repugnant that he as her Husband should have th● Custody of her, and she as a Jailor the Custody 〈◊〉 him, cited 2 Veutr. 10. Where a Term is extinguished or not. Where it comes to Husband or Wife, who had the Inheritance. Lease for years, the Reversion for Life to A. a Feme Covert, and the Lessee grants his Estate to the Husband, and after the Wife dies; the Term is not extinct, because the Husband had the Estate in several Rights, for the Freehold was in the Wife, and the Husband only seized in her Right, 1 Rol. Abr. Lechden and Winsmore. So it is adjudged in the Lady Plate and Sleeps Case. The Husband has a Term for years in his own Right, and the Inheritance after descends to his Wife, that coming to her en auter droit shall not drown and extinguish the Term for years, which he had in his own Right; and so he may assign and dispose of this Term at his own pleasure, notwithstanding the descent of the Inheritance to the Wife, Cro. Jac. 275. Godb. 20. A Lease made to Baron and Feme for years, who enters; the Lessor afterwards enfeoffs the Husband, who died seized; the Feme survives and claims the Term, and the Question was between the Wife and the Heir of the Husband, whether this Term was extinguished. Et per totam Curiam, By the acceptance of the Feoffment the Husband had surrendered the Term, and it is extinguished: But if the Conveyance had been by Bargain and Sale enroled, or by Fine, it had been otherwise, Cro. Eliz. 912. Downing and Syemor. If a Feme lease at Will rendering Rend, and after take Husband, this doth not determine the Lease, but the Baron and Feme shall have an Action for the Rent, 1 Inst. 55. b. So if a Lease be made to a Feme rendering Rent, who takes Husband, this Both not determine the Lease, but an Action lies against them for the Rent or Distress, 1 Inst. 55. b. A Debt on Bond against Baron and Feme being made in her Viduity, with Condition that she, her Heirs and Assigns perform all Contracts in a Lease made by her Husband of a Warren to the Plaintiff She takes another Husband, who entereth on the Plaintiff. The Agreement found by the Jury. Now there was no Estate alleged its the former Husband in the Right of the Wife, whereby though the second Husband be Assignee in Law, yet he enter as on his own wrong not claiming under her. The Husband an Assignee of Contract. B●● per Curiam it is not requisite that the Husband's should be Assignee of the Estate, but her Assign of Contract; She is bound for some intended Interest, though no certain. Estate appear, which th● Husband hath by Marriage and doth act in her Righ● 1 Keb. 348, 512. Hall versus Creswel & Uxor '. CHAP. IX. What things of the Wife are given or do accrue to the Husband by the Intermarriage or not. What he gaineth of his Wife's Lands in Fee by the Marriage. What Estate or Interest he gaineth in her Chattels Reals, and Chattels Mixed, which are partly in Possession and partly in Action. What he gaineth in her Chattels Personals, or in Chooses in Action. Diversity between Property in Personal Goods and a bore Possession. What things of the Wife the Husband may release or discharge or not, as Obligations, Annuities, Promises, etc. What Acts, Charges or Forfeitures of the Husband shall charge the Wife e after his Death. How and wherein the Wise shall be bound by her Husband's Submission to an Award, or for a Rent for Owelty of Partition. How the Husband may charge the Land of the Wife by Rent, Statute, Judgement, etc. What Lands of the Wife shall be put in Execution for the King's Debt upon the Husband. What Act of the Husband amounts to a Forfeiture of the Wife's Land, and for how long. What Acts of the Husband and Wife shall be construed, as the Act of the Wife so as to bind her after his Death or not. For what Acts or Facts of the Wife the Husband shall be punished: Et e eontra. Of Paraphernalia. What things or Actions the Wife shall have after the Death of the Husband. What Actions Real, what Things and Actions Personal, as Obligations, Recognizances, Goods, or Money purloined. What things Real, as Rents, Leases, etc. What things the Husband shall have after the Death of the Wife, as Leases in Trust, Arrears of Rents, Presentations, etc. What things the Wife may make good after the Death of the Husband, as Bonds, Rents by Acceptance. THIS Title is of great use, as will appear by the subsequent Cases, both as to the present profit after Marriage, as for the future advantage after the death either of Husband or Wife. What the Husband gaineth of Lands in Fee by the Intermarriage. If a man take to wife a woman seized in Fee of Lands, he gaineth by the Intermarriage an Estate of Freehold in her right, which Estate is sufficient to work a Remitter, and yet the Estate, which the Husband gaineth, dependeth upon an uncertainty, and consisteth in Privity; for if the wife be attainted of Felony the Lord by Escheat shall enter and put out the Husband; otherwise, if the Felony be committed after the Issue had. Also if the Husband be attainted of Felony, the King gaineth no , but a Pernancy of the Profits during the Coverture, and the Freehold remaineth in the wife, 1 Inst. 351. a. Chattels Real. As for what Interest the husband hath by the Intermarriage in a Term of years of the wife, and how he may or may not dispose of it, Vide supra Tit. Disposition of the Wife's Term. Chattels Mixt. Chattels Real being of a mixed Nature (viz.) partly in Possession and partly in Action, which hap during the Coverture, the Husband shall have by the Intermarriage, if he survive his wife, albeit he reduceth them not into possession in her life time; but if the wife surviveth she shall have them. Rent. As if the Husband be seized of a Rend Service charge or sack in the right of his wife, the Rent becomes due during the Coverture; the wife dieth, the husband shall have the Arrearages; but if the wife survive the husband she shall have them, and not the Executors of the husband. So it is of an Advowson, if the Church become voided during the Coverture he may have a Quare Impedit in his own Name; Quare Impedit. but the wife shall have it if she survive him: But if the Arrearages had become due, or the Church had fallen voided before the Marriage, there they were merely in Action before the Marriage, and therefore he should not have them by the Common Law although he had survived her. So of Reliefs. But now by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 37. If the Husband survive the wife, he shall have the Arrearages as well incurred before the Marriage as after, 1 Inst. 351. a. B. and his wife brought a Quare Impedit against H. and made Title to present in the Right of his wife, and after Issue joined the wife died. Per Winch. The Writ is not abated, because this was a Chattel vested in the husband during the Life of the wife, Winch. p. 73. Blunt's Case. Chattels Personals. Marriage is an absolute gift of Chattels Personal in Possession in her own Right whether the husband survive the wife or not: But of personal Goods en auter droit, as Executrix or Administratrix, etc. the Marriage is no gift of them to the husband, although he survives the wife, 1 Inst. 351. b. But there is a diversity between Property in personal Goods (as is aforesaid) and a bore Possession, for if personal Goods be bailed to a Feme, or if she finds Goods, or if Goods come to her hands as Executrix to a Bailiff, and she takes husband, this bore Possession is not given to the Husband, but the Action of Detinue must be brought against the Baron and Feme, 1 Inst. 351. b. Custom of London. By the Custom of London the wife shall have the Moiety of the Goods whereof her husband died possessed, yet the husband in his Life time may give all the Goods, but by his Will he cannot prejudice her concerning her part, Cro. Car. 345. Glanvil in his Lecture on the Statute of 1 Jac. Of Monopolies 16 Febr. 1629. Monopoly. put this Case. If a Feme sole hath a Patent for the sole using of a Trade invented by her, and after takes husband, yet the husband shall have the advantage of this within the Statute, because he is Assignee in Law. Chose en Action. Things in Action, as Debts by Obligation, Contract or otherwise the husband shall not have them, unless he and his wife recover them. If a Feme Covert be seized of an Advowson, and the Church becomes voided, and the wife dies, the Husband shall present; Aliter, if a Bond made to the wife, which is merely a Chose en Action, 1 Inst. 120. Estray. If any Estray hap within the Manor of the wife, if the Husband die before seizure the wife shall have it, for that property was not in the wife before seizure. Statute. If a Statute be acknowledged to Baron and Feme they are joint-tenants of it, and the wife shall have all by survivor; so if a Bond be made to Baron and Feme, 4 E. 3. 12. b. Damages. If Baron and Feme recover Land and Damages the Feme shall have the Execution of the Damages and not the Executors of the husband, 4 E. 3. 13. If Feme sole Obligee takes husband, and the husband makes a Letter of Attorney to J. S. to receive the moneys, who receives it accordingly, and after the Wife dies, the Husband shall have Action of Account for the moneys, for by this Receipt it becomes a thing in Possession, Trin. 13 Eliz. B. R. Huntley and Griffith, Moore 452. If a Legacy be devised to a woman who takes an husband, and the husband makes a Letter of Attorney to J. S. to receive the Legacy, and he receives it accordingly, by this Receipt it ceaseth to be a thing in Action and becomes a thing in possession, and the husband or his Executors after the death of the wife shall have account upon this Receipt, Ibid. More 452. A Baron possessed of an Obligation in the Right of the wife may give it to a Stranger, Bond. and the Donee may justify the determining of it after the death of the husband, Mich. 38 & 39 El. B. R. If the wife have Goods and take an Husband, Executor of the Husband to have the Wife's Goods. the husband dies, the Executors of the husband shall have the Goods. If the wife loose Goods and take Baron, and the Baron dies, the Executors of the husband shall have these Goods, because the property is in him by the Intermarriage notwithstanding the losing. If the Goods of a woman are taken, which woman takes an husband, the Husband alone shall have the Replevin, Siderf. 174. Powes and Marshal. Land is devised to a Feme Executrix during the Minority of A. to hold to her own use without account, Term. provided that she keep and educate the said A. at School, etc. This such a Term in the Executrix as is given to the husband upon the Intermarriage, and the Education and keeping of the Child is not such a particular Privity, but it may be performed effectually by another, Hob. 285. Balder and Blackburn. An husband submits to an Arbitrament concerning the wife's Term it shall bind the wife, Arbitrament. for if the Baron had granted over the Term it should have bound the wife, and by consequence the Submission being for the Interest and Title, of the Term, is as much in effect as if he had granted over the Term, Dyer 183. in Margin. But though the husband doth gain these things by the Intermarriage, yet if he be bound in an Obligation, and the Condition is, that he shall not cell the Apparel of his wife, this is good; as if a man bind himself to a Stranger to pay 20 l. per annum to his wife, this is good without doubt by Coke, Smith and Watson's Case, 1 Rol. Rep 334. What the Husband may release or discharge or not. Covenant. The Covenant was, that a Stranger should pay 8 l. yearly to one of the covenanties, and to one F. I. a Stranger; F. I took husband one B. who did release the Payment. Per Curiam. B. is a Stranger to whose wife the Payment is to be made; now he cannot release this, he having no Right at all therein, nor yet any Remedy to come by it: And Judgement was pro Quer. 3 Bulstr. 29. Quick and Harris versus Ludborrow. Annuity. A widow brought an Annuity against A. for 30 l. Annuity granted by the Defendant to the Plaintiff by Indenture. To which the Defendant pleads a Release by express words reciting the Annuity made by the husband of the Plaintiff during the Coverture. The Plaintiff demurs; and per Curiam the Bar is not good, because the Release of the husband may not extinct the Annuity of the wife, being an Annuity for Life; but that she, if she survive the husband, shall have an Action for it, Moore 523. Thomson and Butler. After Divorce If husband and wife are divorced causa adulterii, yet the husband may after release a Legacy due to the wife, for the Divorce does not divorce Vinculum Matrimonii, but a Mensa & Thoro, 43 El. Stephen and Tott: Roll. Rep. But if after such Divorce the wife sues without the husband, as she may for a defamation in the Spiritual Court, and recover, and Pennance enjoined, expensa Litis taxed, the husband may not discharge this, 14 Jac. Newton's Case. Promise. If A. promise' B. a Feme sole, that in consideration she will marry C. his Brother, that he will give B. 10 l. if she survie C. And after B. takes C. to husband accordingly; C. cannot after discharge A. of this Promise by his Release to bind B. after his decease, because the Promise rests in Contingency during the Life of C. the husband, Hill 6 El. B. R. Belcher and Hudson. Hob. Smith and Stafford's Case. But express words of Promise had released it. A Legacy of 10 l. was bequeathed to a Feme Covert to be paid eighteen Months after the death of the Devisor. The Testator dies, Legacy. and after the wife within the eighteen months' dyes, and the Daughter of the wife took Administration. But the Legacy belongs not to the daughter but to the husband, for the husband had an Interest in it before the time of Payment accrued, and he might have released it, 2 Rolls Rep. 136. If the husband be indebted to the King he may assign a Debt due to the wife before Coverture, Assignment of a Debt due to the Wife by the Husband to the King. as B. was indebted by a Statute in 2000 l. to C. who dying intestate Administration was committed to his wife, who married Facone; Facone became bound with another to the King in 600 l. and he and his wife did assign this Statute by Deed enrolled to the King for the Payment of the said 600 l. Per Curiam, this Assignment is good notwithstanding the Statute of 7 Jac. Vide Hob. 253. Breadman and Coles. If a Feme be indebted to J. S. in a certain Sum as Administratrix to J. D. and she takes an husband, Arbitrament. and the husband and J. S. submit all matters between them to the Award of W. M. he may make an Award of this Debt that is due by the Baron and Feme, although it be done in Right of the wife, and as Administratrix, for it is now chargeable by th● Intermarriage, 1 Rol. Abr. 246. Cro. Jac. 447. La●ley and Hutton. So an Arbitrator may make a Award upon such Submission of a Debt to the wi●● as Executrix, 21 H. 7. 29. b. If A. and B. submit to the Arbitrament of J. S of all Suits and Actions depending between the● two, the Arbitrator may not make an Award of a Action that B. and his wife have depending against A. for this is out of the Submission, 1 Rob. A●● 246. Brocas and Scavage. What Acts, Charges or Forfeitures of the Husband shall bind the Wife after his Death. As for the disposition of the wife's Term, V●● infra & supra. Attornment. If the husband attorn to a Grant in Pai● Deed, this shall bind the wife, 9 Co. 85. b. Coneys Case. Legacy released. A Legacy is given to a Feme Covert, and 〈◊〉 husband releaseth, and after he and his wife fo● the Court Christian for the Legacy; the party 〈◊〉 sued shall not have a Prohibition upon the Re●● of the husband, because the Temporal Judge's 〈◊〉 not meddle with the Legacy, and by consequent cannot determine it whether the Release will extinguish it or not, Yelv. 173. Rend for Owelty of Partition. If one Coparcener be married, and for Owelty Partition the husband and wife grant a Ren● the other two out of the part of the Feme Cow● this Partition being equal shall charge the part the Feme Covert for ever, 1 Inst. 196. b. Rent. If a Baron seized for Life, or in Fee, in R●● of his wife grant a Rent and dies, the Feme 〈◊〉 hold it discharged, for she comes in paramount 〈◊〉 Charge, so if be be possessed for years in the Right of his wife, and grant a Rent, 9 H. 6. 52. The husband is seized of Land in the Right of his wife in Fee, and makes a Lease for years of it, Conisee of a Fine avoids the Lease by the Husband of the Wives Land. and after he and his wife levy a Fine come ceo, etc. to J. S. in Fee, and after the husband dies, the Conisee shall hold the Land discharged of the Lease, for the Lease was voided by the death of the Husband, for the husband joined for Conformity and Necessity, and all the Estate passed from the wife, 1 Co. 76. Bredon's Case, 2 Co. 77. Cromwel's Case. So if a Baron seized in the Right of his wife in Fee, acknowledge a Statute, So it is of the Grant of a Rent or Statute. or grant a Rent out the Land, and after he and his wife join in a Fee come ceo, etc. to J. S. in Fee, and after the husband dies, J. S. shall hold the Land discharged of the Rent, and the Statute for the cause aforesaid, 2 Co. 77. Cromwel's Case. So is Harvy and Thomas' Case, Cro. Eliz. 216. Harrison and his wife sold the Land of the wife by Deed indented, but it was not enrolled within the six Months, and afterwards the husband alone makes a Lease by Parol, and than the Baron and Feme levy a Fine to the Bargainee, and dye; the Question was, if the Conisee of the Fine shall avoid this Lease. Per Curiam. He shall, for being made by the Baron only, it was voided as to the wife, and no Acceptance can make it good; and as it shall be voided to the wife so to the Conusee: So of a Rent-Charge granted by the husband, or a Recognisance by him. But if Baron and Feme are joint-tenants in Fee, Aliter, where the Baron and Feme are joint-tenants. or in Tail, upon a Conveyance made during Coverture, and the husband acknowledge a Statute, and after he and his wife acknowledge a Fine come ceo, etc. to J. S. and suffer a Recovery to him, and after the husband dies, yet J. S. shall hold this charged with the Statute, for he comes in of the Estate of the husband as well as the wife, and there are no Moieties between them, aliter, if the Conveyance were made to them before Coverture. F●● if Baron and Feme are joint-tenants in Fee upo● a Conveyance to them made before Marriage, a●● the husband acknowledgeth a Statute, or grants 〈◊〉 Rent out of the Land, or lease the Land to an●ther, and after he and his wife levy a Fine come 〈◊〉 etc. to J. S. and after the husband dies it see● that J. S. shall hold one Moiety discharged by 〈◊〉 death of the husband, for the husband hath 〈◊〉 power to charge the Moiety of his wife, but duri●● his Life. Lease for years in right of the Wife not to be extended on Judgement against the Baron. Lands, the years in right of the Wife subject to the King's Debt. If a Baron possessed in the Right of his wife 〈◊〉 a Term is condemned in a Judgement, or acknow●●ledgeth a Statute and dies, this shall not be extended on the wife, 9 H. 6. 52. b. But if the husband be indebted to the King a purchase Lands for years to him and his wife 〈◊〉 dies, this Land shall be put in execution for the 〈◊〉 Debt, for the husband had power to dispose of 〈◊〉 said Term, 8 Co. 5, 171. Sir Gerrard Fleetw●●● 2 Rolls Abr. 157. If the Cognisee of a Statute dies Intestate, 〈◊〉 Administation is granted to his wife, who ma●● J. S. who becomes Debtor to the King, the C●●tels which J. S. had in Right of his wife as A●●nistratrix shall not be extended for this Debt of King, for that these Chattels are to pay Debts Rolls Abr. 159. Buckler and Rays. Action brought by a Feme Covert. 2 H. 4. Sir Robert Belknap that Reverend 〈◊〉 Learned Judge was banished out of the Realm (〈◊〉 legatus in Vasconiam) not for any defect or off●● of his, but by the Might of his potent Ene●● and the Malice of the Times; but Sibyl Belk●● his Lady, continuing in England, the was wrong and she commenced a Suit in her own Name alone, not naming her husband: Exception being taken against it, because her husband was living; yet notwithstanding it was adjudged good and she recovered, which made Markham say, Ecce modo mirum quod foemina fert Breve Regis Non nominando virum conjunctum robore Legis. And yet it was not any such wonder, that the wife should have an Action or Account as as a Feme sole where the husband is banished by Parliament or abjured (Abjuration is called a Divorce between the husband and wise.) Weyland 18 Ed. 1. was exiled, his wife had her Jointure. 10 Ed. 3. The King brought a Quare Impedit against the wise of an exiled man. 14 Jac. Wilmore brought Trespass by the Name of Widow, her husband living at Lisbon in Portugal. If Baron and Feme sue a Bond made to the wife in C. B. and the Deed is there denied, for which they remain in the keeping of the Custos Brevium, and the Baron die, the wife may have a Writ out of Chancery directed to the Custos Brevium in B. C. that he deliver the Deed of the wife, because the Plea is determined by the death of the husband. Forfeiture. A Baron is seized in the right of his wife pur vie, and they make a Feoffment, By Feoffment. this is a Forfeiture during the Coverture. So if Baron sole makes a Feoffment, this is a Forfeiture during the Coverture. But in these Cases it shall not be any Forfeiture against the wife after the death of the husband, 8 Co. 44. Whittingham's Case. Term. But if the husband possessed of a Term in the Righ● of the wife forfeit the Term, this shall bind the wife for that he might dispose of the Term, 7 H. 6. 2. b. 9 H. 6. 2. b. By acceptance of a Fine come ceo, etc. If Baron and Feme, Lessees for Life, in Right of the wife accept a Fine come ceo, etc. of a Stranger this shall not be any Forfeiture against the wife after the death of the husband, because she was not exmined upon this Fine, Dyer 148. Copyhold. A Copyholder in Fee takes an husband, who makes a Lease for years without Licence, which by the Custom of the Manor is a Forfeiture; thi● Forfeiture shall not bind the wife and her heirs after the husband's death, the wife after his death shal● have it again, Cro. Car. 7. 2 Rolls 244, 345. Sovern and Smith. And Dodderidge took this difference. Where a Feme sole is a Copyholder, and she takes an husband, who made a Lease for year● without Licence, the same is a Forfeiture, because it is her Folly that she will take such an husband a● will forfeit her Land: But where a Copyhold i● granted to a Feme Covert, and the husband makes 〈◊〉 Lease without Licence, Diversity. in such case it is no Forfeiture; and so in the Case of a Feme, Lessee for Life, at the Common Law against Whittingham, 8 Co. 44. But I found no such difference in Cro. Car. Lapse of time for cutting of Woods shall bind the Wife. Feoffment in Fee of a Manor to the use of himself and his wife for Life, the Remainder to his Heirs; and in the Manor there are Underwoods usually to be cut every one and twenty years, and the husband suffered the Woods to grow five and twenty years and dies. The Question was, if the husband's suffering it to grow five and twenty years during the Coverture shall bind the wise so as she should not cut the Woods? Per Curiam. It shall bind her, for that the time is limited by Law, and if the time be incurred it shall not be felled afterwards, Godb. 5. 1 Brownl. 73. 1 Leon. 61. If a Man make a Lease for years on Condition that the Lessee his Executors or Assigns shall not alien, there if the wife, Forfeiture for Alienation. Forfeiture for Condition. Executrix and her second husband alien, this shall be a Forfeiture, for the Condition follows the Estate and is inherent to it, Dyer 1. But where the Agreement is collateral and personal, as if a Condition be that a woman shall not beaten J. S. and she takes an husband who beats him, this shall not be a Forfeiture, for the Condition was annexed to the person of the wife: But the Waste of the husband is the Waste of the wife, for that follows the Estate, and is not personal. Baron and Feme are possessed of a Term in the Right of his wife, Arbitrament. as Executrix to her first husband, and a Stranger pretending Title to it, and the husband submit to Arbitrament in writing for the Interest and Title of the Lease; and the Arbitrators award one part to the Pretender, and the other Moiety to the Baron and Feme. Quaere, If the Award shall bind the wife after the death of her husband. What Acts done by the Husband and Wife shall be construed as the Act of the Wife or not, so as to bind her after the death of the husband or not. If Baron and Feme are Patrons in jure uxoris if they confirm by Deed the Lease of the Parson, Confirmation. this is not good against the wife and her heirs, but only during the Coverture, for the Deed of the wife is voided, Dyer 131. 1. Baron and Feme, Tenants for Life, Aid prier. join in the praying of aid of a Stranger, this shall be no Forfeiture of the Estate of the wife, 15 E. 4. 29. b. A Statute Merchant was made by Baron and Feme, and they join in a Defeasance, this shall not be the Defeasanze of the wife, 48 E. 3. 12. In Cases of Limitation. 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 an husband, and after she and the Husband tender the Ring, this shall be a sufficient Tender, and shall be intended the Act of the wife. declaring the ●es of a Fine. If Baron and Feme join in a Fine of the wife's Land, the wife alone without the husband may declare the use of it, Bekwith's Case, 2 Co. 27. Many Acts in Pais made by the Baron and Feme shall be intended the Act of the wife, as Agreement to the use of a Fine, which shall bind the wife after the death of the husband. Rend by Owelty of Partition. Baron and Feme grant a Rent for equality of Partion, 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. Condition to reinfeoff. Feoffment of a married woman on condition to reinfeoff, and she with her husband makes the Feoffment, Attorn. it is good. A woman Lessor pur vie with her husband attorns upon the Grant of a Reversion it is good and shall bind the wife after the death of the husband. Assent of the Wife to a Revocation. If an Estate be conveyed with power that the husband with the assent of the wife may revoke, the assent of the wife to such Revocation is good. So if the Proviso be that a married woman without the assent of her husband may make a Revocation of Uses and declare new, this is good, 2 Brownl. 139, 140. Acknowldgement of a Deed to be enrolled. Where the wife is examined by Writ she shall be bound, otherwise, not, 10 Co. 43. Baron and Feme acknowledge a Deed to be enrolled, this doth not bind her because she is not examined by Writ. Payment to a Feme Covert. Debt on an Arbitration Bond. The Defendant pleaded, the Arbitrator had awarded that the Defendant should pay to the Plaintiff 10 l. and said he had paid it to the Plaintiffs wife, who received it; upon which the Plaintiff did demur. Judgement pro Quer. For payment to her was not good, 1 Leon. 320. Froud and Batt's Case. For what Acts or Torts of the Wife the Husband shall be punished. Et e contra. Vide Tit. Action, and Tit. Wast. If a Lease be made to Baron and Feme, Waste. and the Baron doth waste and dyeth, if the wife agreed to the Estate she shall be punished for the waste done by her husband; in like manner as if a Stranger had done the waste, after the death of the husband she is in from the Lessor, and if the Action had been brought against the Baron and Feme, the waste should have been quod fecerunt vastum, so as it is as well the waste of the wife, as of the husband, 2 Inst. 303. Paraphernalia. By our Law the Apparel of the wife is called Bona Paraphernalia. The wife by the Common Law ought to have her necessary Apparel for her Body after the death of the husband, and not the Executors of the husband; but she shall not have excessive Apparel. If the husband deliver to his wife a Piece of Cloth to make a Garment and dies, albeit it was not made into a Garment in the Life of the husband, yet the wife shall have it and not the Executor, inasmuch as it was delivered to her to that intent. But against the Debtee of the husband the wife shall have no more Apparel than is convenient, Mich. 40 & 41 Eliz. Harwel's Case. A Chain of Diamonds and Pearls being worth 370 l. being usually worn by a woman who was the Daughter of an Earl in Ireland, and a Baron of England, and the wife of a Knight and the King's Sergeant at Law, shall be Bona Paraphernalia; so that the husband cannot device them from the wife, Cro. Car. 343. the Lord Hastings and Dowglass. Richardson and Crook thought the wife shall not have them as Bona Paraphernalia, because they were not necessary for her, but only convenient: Jones and Berkly e contra: But all agreed she shall have her necessary Apparel. What things or Actions the Wife shall have after the death of the Husband. What Actions Real. Personal. What Things Real. Personal. The wife shall have Trespass after the death o● the husband for Trees cut upon the Land during the Coverture, 18 E. 4. 13. 39 H. 6. 45. If the husband pull down an House, which he ha● in right of his wife, and gives the Timber, the wife shall not have an Action for it, after the death 〈◊〉 the husband, 43 E. 3. 26. b. Rose Edmond brought Trespass against P. 〈◊〉 putting in his Beasts into her Land 1 May contin●● ando usque January: On. not Guilty, the Plain●●●● had Judgement. Error was brought, and Error i● fact was, that Rose Edmond was Covert de Baron th● first day of May, and so for a week after, and h● husband being dead it is gone with his person, an● damages were given entirely: Per Curiam, It i● Error. What thing personal. Vide Acceptance. Bond. If an Obligation be made to Baron and Feme, t●● Feme shall have it by Survivor if she will, 4 H. 6. ● 10 Car. in Cam. Scaccar. Spark and Fairman● Case. So the wife shall have a Recognisance by Survivor, Goods. but if Goods are given to Baron and Feme the Feme shall not have them by Survivor, but the Executors. A Feme Covert purloined her husband's Goods or Money, and put the Money into other man's hands, moneys purloined. who therewith buy Lands to her use, if the Heir or Executor of the husband do sue in Equity for Relief, or to have the Land or Money restored, yet denied Relief; for said Egerton Chancellor, he would not relieve the Heir or Executor (nor the Husband himself if he were alive) for he sat not there to relieve Fools or Buzzards, who could not keep their Money from their wives. Things Real. Vide Acceptance. Vide Rent. If a Lease for years be made to Baron and Feme the Feme shall have it by Survivor. Lease for years. If a Feme seized of a Rend service, taketh husband, Rent. and after the husband dies, the wife shall have the Arrears incurred during the Coverture, 15 E. 4. 10. If a Feme make a Lease for Life or Years, reserving Rend, and after takes husband, after the death of the husband the wife shall have the Arrears incurred during the Coverture, and not the Executor of the husband, because this issues out of the Freehold. If a Rend charge be granted to A. a Feme, and B. for years, and after they intermarry, and after Arrearages incur, and after the husband dies the wife shall have the residue of the Rent, and also the Arrearages in the Writ of Annuity, for that they participate of the nature of the principal, and the Executor of the husband shall not have the Arrears, Mich. 22 Jac. B. R. Carew and Burgoigne. What things the Husband shall have after the death of the Wife. Arrears of Rent. If a Feme having a Rent for Life takes an husband, and dies, the husband shall have the Arrears incurred during the Coverture, 10 H. 6. 11, 12. 4 Co. Ognel's Case; but he shall not have the Arrears incurred before the Coverture at Common Law, but by the Statute of 32 H. 8. he shall. If a Feme make a Lease for years rendering Rend, and afterwards takes husband, and dies, the husband shall have the Arrears incurred during the Coverture, 10 H. 6. 11. Presentation. If Baron and Feme in the right of the wife are seized of an Advowson, and the Church is voided, and after the Feme dies, yet the husband shall present to this Church, for it cannot be granted over, yet it is not merely in Action, 1 Inst. 120. But otherwise of a Bond to the wife, as if J. S. becomes bound to a Feme Covert, and she dies, her husband shall not have this Obligation without Administration, for that it is a thing in Action. Lease for years. If the husband be possessed of a Lease for years of Land in the right of the wife, and after the wife dies, the interest of the Lease is presently vested in the husband by Law, and he shall have it and not the Administrator of the wife, Dier 151. Plewd. 192. Wrotely and Adam's, 1 Inst. 46. Interest of a Term by the performance of the Condition. A Feme possest of a Lease for years, takes husband, and they join in the Grant of a Term upon Condition that if they, their Executors or Administrators pay 10 l. at such a day it shall be lawful for them to re-enter, and after the wife dies the husband pays the 10 l. and enters, and dies, his Executors shall have the Term, and not the Administrator of the wife; for that the interest of the Term survives to the husband, P. 12 Jac. B. R. Radford and Young. If a Term for years be granted in Trust the Baron shall not have it, Tem in Trust. Per Coke in Waterhouse's Case. What things the Wife may make good after the death of her Husband or not. If a Bond be made to Baron and Feme, Bond. the Feme may refuse this after the death of the Baron, 4 H. 6.6. and by such waver this is made an Obligation to the husband only. If Baron and Feme join in a Lease for Life of the Land of the wife rendering Rend, Lease for Life, or Years. the Feme may make this good by agreement after the death of her Baron, and shall have the Rent, 10 H. 6. 4. So of a Lease for years, Vide Lease for one and twenty years, or three Lives by the Statute, Infra. CHAP. X. Tenant by the Courtesy. The Nature of Tenancy by the Courtesy. Of what Estate a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy or not. If he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of an Estate in suspense or not. In what cases the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, where the Wife's Estate is defeasible by Condition. Four things belong to a Tenant by the Courtesy What Seisin of the Wife it must be to make the Husband Tenant by the Courtesy. In what Cases a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of a Seisin in Law. How a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy in respect of the Issue, and how he must pled the having of Issue. TEnant by the Courtesy of England is where a Man taketh a wife seized of Lands in Fee-simple or in Fee-Tail general, or seized as Heir in Tail special, and hath Issue Male or Female by the same wife born alive, though the Issue after dieth or liveth, yet if the wife die, the husband shall hold the Land during his Life by the Law of England. Of what Estate a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy or not. Regula. It is laid down as a Rule by Littleton sect. 52. That in every case where a Man taketh a wife seized of such an Estate of Tenements, etc. as the Issue which he hath by his wife may by possibility inherit the same Tenements of such Estate, as the wife hath, as Heir to the wife: In this case after the decease of the wife he shall have the same Tenements by the Courtesy of England, otherwise not. If Lands be given to a woman and to the Heirs Males of her Body, she taketh an husband and hath Issue a Daughter and dyeth, he shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, because the Daughter by no possibility could inherit the Mother's Estate in the Land; and therefore, if a woman Tenant in Tail general maketh a Feoffment in Fee, and taketh back an Estate in Fee, and take an husband, and hath Issue and the wife dieth, the Issue in a Formedon may recover the Land against his Father, because he is to recover the Land by force of the Estate Tail, as Heir to his Mother, and is not inheritable to his Father. If a man taketh a wife seized of Lands and Tenements in Fee and hath Issue, and after the wife is attainted of Felony, so as the Issue cannot inherit to her, yet he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy in respect of the Issue which he had before the Felony, and which by possibility might have inherited; But if the wife had been attainted of Felony before the Issue, albeit he hath Issue afterwards, he shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy. If an Estate of Freehold in Signories, Rents, No Tenancy by the Courtesy of an Estate suspended. Commons or such like be suspended a Man shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy; but if the suspension be but for years, he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, as if the Tenant make a Lease for Life of the Tenancy to the Seignoress, who taketh an husband and hath Issue, the wife dyeth, he shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy; but if the Lease had been made but for years, he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy. If a woman Tenant in Tail general taketh an husband and hath Issue, which Issue dyeth, and the wife dyeth without any other Issue, yet the husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, albeit the Estate in Tail be determined, because he was entitled to be Tenant per Legem Angliae, before the Estate in Tail was spent, and for that the Land remaineth. But if a woman make a Gift in Tail, and reserve a Rent to her and her Heirs, and the Donor take husband and hath Issue, and the Donee dies without Issue, the wife dies, the husband shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, because the Rent newly reserved is by Act of God determined, and no Estate thereof remaineth; aliter, if a man seized in Fee of a Rent makes a Gift in Tail general to a woman, etc. 1 Inst. 30. A woman taketh husband and hath Issue, Lands descend to the wife, the husband enters, and after the wife is found an Idiot by Office, the Lands shall be seized by the King; for the Title of the Tenancy by the Courtesy and of the King being at one instant the Title of the King shall be preferred. A man shall be Tenant by Courtesy of a Castle. A man shall be Tenant by Courtesy of Common sans nombre. Regula. A man shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy of a bore Right, Title, Use, or of a Reversion or Remainder expectant upon any Estate of Freehold, unless the particular Estate be determined or ended during the Coverture. In what Case the Husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy where the Wife's Estate is defeasable by Condition. The Mother being seized of certain Lands had Issue two Daughters, and by Indenture covenanted to stand seized to the use of E. her eldest Daughter in Tail, on Condition that the said E. should pay to her other Daughter within a year after the death of the Mother, or within a year after the other Daughter should come to the Age of eighteen years, 300 l. and if E. should fail in the payment of the said Sum, or shall die without Issue before such payment, than to the use of the said second Daughter in Tail. The Mother dies, E. takes husband, hath Issue, and afterwards dies sans Issue before the day of payment, the husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy: For as to the Condition of the payment of the said Sums, the same is not determined, for she died sans Issue before the day of payment viz. before the second Daughter came of the Age of eighteen years, and as to that there is no Condition broken: And as to the point of dying without Issue the same is not a Condition but rather a Limitation of the Estate, and the same is no more than what the Law saith, and the Estate Tail is spent and determined by dying sans Issue, and doth not cease nor is cut of by any Limitation, 1 Leon. 167. Sams and Pain's Case. A Man is entitled to be Tenant by the Courtesy, and maketh a Feoffment in Fee upon Condition, and entereth for the Condition broken, and than his wife dieth, he shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, because albeit the Estate given by the Feoffment be conditional, yet his Title to be Tenant by the Courtesy was inclusively absolutely extinct by the Feoffment, for the Condition was not annexed to it. Now four things do belong to an Estate of Tenant by the Courtesy. 1. Marriage. The Custom of a Manor was, That if any man taketh to wife any customary Tenant, and hath Issue, and shall over-live his wife, he shall be Tenant by Courtesy, and pleads he took to wife Anne, to whom during the Coverture a customary Tenement did descend and had Issue; by this Custom he shall not be Tenant by Courtesy, for Anne was not a customary Tenant at the time of the Marriage, 2 Lenn. Sir John Savage's Case. 2. Seisin of the wife. Now there is a twofold Seisin, a Seisin in Deed, Law. And this Seisin of the wife is intended a Seisin in Deed. As if a Man died seized of Lands in Fee-simple or Fee-tail general, and these Lands descend to his Daughter, and she taketh husband and hath Issue, and dies before any Entry, the husband shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy, and yet in this Case she had a Seisin in Law; but if she or her husband had during her Life entered, he should have been Tenant by the Courtesy, 1 Inst. f. 29. Except the wife be actually seized, the Heir shall not make himself Heir to the wife; and that is the reason that a Man shal● not be Tenant by the Courtesy of a Seisin in Law. But in some Cases a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of a Seisin in Law; as if a Man seized o● an Advowson, or Rend in Fee, hath Issue a Daughter, who is married and hath Issue, and dies seized, the wife before the Rent become due, or the Church became voided, dyeth, she had but a Seisin in Law and yet he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, because he could by no industry attain to any other Seisin, E● impotentia excusat Legem. The Tenant took the Seignoress to wife, and had Issue, the wife died, the husband shall not be Tenant by Courtesy, for although the Seignory was in her at the time of the Marriage, yet by Priority in Law it ceased, so as no Seisin of the signory was during the Coverture, 1 E. 3.6. Copyhold. A Baron shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy of 〈◊〉 Copyhold unless there be a Custom to warrant i● Cro. Eliz. 361. 3. Issue. If a Man seized of Lands in Fee hath Issue 〈◊〉 Daughter, who taketh husband and hath Issue, the Father dies, the husband enters, he shall be Tenant by the Courtesy although the Issue was had before the wife was seized; and so it is, though the Issue had died in the Life time of her Father before any descent of the Land, yet shall he be Tenant by the Courtesy. If a woman seized of Lands in Fee taketh husband, and by him is big with Child, and in her Travel dies, and the Child is ripped out of her Body alive, yet shall he not be Tenant by the Courtesy, because the Child was not born during the Marriage, nor in the Life time of the wife, but in the mean time the Land descended, Pleading. and in Pleading he must allege that he had Issue during the Marriage. If the Issue be born deaf or dumb, or both, What shall be said lawful Issue. or be born an Idiot, yet it is a lawful Issue to make the husband Tenant by the Courtesy, and to inherit the Land. And if the Issue be born alive it is sufficient, tho' it be not heard cry, 8 Co. 34. Pain's Case. for the crying is but a proof that the Child was born alive, and so is motion, stirring, or the like. 4. Death of the husband. Yet it is not necessary that these four should concur altogether at one time; and therefore if a Man taketh a woman seized of Land in Fee, and is disseised, and than have Issue, and the wife dye, he shall enter and hold by the Courtesy; so if he hath Issue which dyeth before the descent. And though the Estate be not consummate till the death of the wife, yet the Estate hath such a beginning after Issue had in the Life of the wife, as is respected by Law for divers purposes; as after Issue had he shall do homage alone; and if after Issue had the husband makes a Feoffment in Fee, and the wife dyeth, the Feoffee shall hold it during the Life of the husband, and the Heir of the wife shall no● during his Life recover it in a sur cui in vita, fo● it could not be a Forfeiture, for that the Estate a● the time of the Feoffment was an Estate of Tenancy by the Courtesy initiate and not consummate. By Noy in his Lecture it is said to be adjudge 36 Eliz. Feme Tenant in Tail acknowledgeth 〈◊〉 Statute and takes husband, and hath Issue and die● the Lands may be extended in the hands of Tenant by the Courtesy, and in the hands of the Iss●● in Tail, if the Tenant by the Courtesy surrender during the Life of Tenant by the Courtesy, Dy● 51. b. in margin. Tenant by the Courtesy grants his Estate wi● Warranty, and comes in as Vouchee, yet shall hav● aid of him in the Reversion, Hob. 21. Pleading. In Pleading he must allege he had Issue duri●● the Marriage, and upon that point the Trial is 〈◊〉 be had; and upon the Evidence it must be prov● that the Issue was alive, for mortuus exitus non 〈◊〉 exitus: Proofs are crying, motion, stirring, etc. Et sic seisit ' existen ' habuer ' exitum inter eos qu● dam A. & postea & antea etc. ead. M. apud 〈◊〉 praed. obiit, & praedict. (Baron) ipsam supervi● & se tenuit intus in praed. etc. Et fuit inde s●● seisitus in dominico suo ut de libero tenemento ut ten● inde per legem Angliae quousque, etc. CHAP. XI. Dower. The Nature of Dower. Qualifications of the Wife to enable her to have Dower. What Divorce shall avoid Dower or not. Of the Endowment of a Wife de facto & de jure. What Seisin the Husband must have to make the Wife dowable. Of what Seisin of the Husband the Wife shall not be endowed. Of what Estate a Woman shall be endowed. Of what Inheritances entire and not divisable she shall be endowed, and after what manner. In what Cases of Lands or Tenements, which are devisable, and which the Heir of the Husband shall inherit, yet the Wife shall not be endowed. How she shall be endowed of improved Lands. If she shall be endowed of Lands mortgaged. For and in what respect of Disabilities a Woman shall not be endowed. Where the Wife shall loose her Dower by the Attainder of her Husband or not. Whether an Alien Woman shall be endowed, and how. What Act of the Wife shall bar her Dower. Several Cases of Elopement and Divorce relating thereunto. Assignment of Dower, by whom and how to be made. What Assignment of Dower is against common Right or not. What things may be assigned in lieu of Dower. Of Endowment by Meets and Bounds. Assignment of Dower by the Sheriff and how. By the Heir. Assignment in Chancery. Of the Tenant in Dower having Damages what Charges made by the Husband the Wife endowed shall avoid or not. The Writ and Declaration in Dower. Plead in Dower. What Pleas are good or not in Bar of Dower. Trial, Evidence, Issue in Dower. Damages Judment and Execution of the rationabili par● bonorum according to the Custom of London. Tenancy in Dower, what. WHere a Man is seized of certain Lands or T●nements in Fee Simple or Fee Tail gener●● or as Heir in Tail special, and taketh wife, and dye●● the wife after her husband's decease shall be endow●● of the third part of such Lands or Tenements as we●● her husbands at any time during the Coverture, whether she has Issue by her husband or not. Qualifications of the Wife to enable her to her Dower. She must be of 9 years of Age at the death of 〈◊〉 husband, else she shall not be endowed: But if 〈◊〉 take a wife 100 years old she shall be endowed. S● must not be an Alien, nor one that elopes, V● infra. Three things are necessary to the consummation 〈◊〉 Dower. 1. Marriage. 2. Seisin. 3. Death of the Husband. 1. Marriage. This must continued during the Coverture, for if that be dissolved Dower ceaseth and yet this is to be understood when husband 〈◊〉 wife are divorced a vinculo matrimonii, as in 〈◊〉 of Precontract, Consanguinity, Affinity, etc. a● not a Mensa & Thoro, as for Adultery. If a Marriage de facto be voidable by Divorce respect of Consanguinity, Precontract, Affinity, 〈◊〉 yet if the husband dye before Divorce the wife 〈◊〉 be endowed; but if they are divorced a vin●● matrimonii in the Life of her husband, she los● her Dower; aliter, if they were divorced causa adulterii. It's to be understood of a wife de facto, Wife de facto and de jure. as well as de jure; and therefore if the wife be passed the age of 9 years at the time of the death of the husband, she shall be endowed let the husband be of never so young an age. Though the woman cannot consent before 12. nor the man before 14. yet their imperfect incohate Marriage, from the which either of the said parties at the age of Consent may disagree, after the death of the husband shall give Dower to the wife; and therefore after the death of the husband it is in Law accounted legitimum matrimonium quoad dotem. If a Man take a wife of the age of 7 years, and after aliens his Land, and after Alienation the wife attains the Age of 9 years, she shall be endowed, for she was conditionally dowable at the time of her Marriage (viz.) if she attained the age of 9 years before the death of the husband, 1 Inst. 33. 2. Seisin. The husband must be seized either in Deed or in Law during the Coverture, Seisin in Law. or else she shall not be endowed, where Lands and Tenements descend to the husband; now before Entry he hath but a Seisin in Law, and yet the wife shall be endowed, albeit it be not reduced to an actual possession, for it lies not in the power of the wife to bring it to an actual Seisin, as the husband may do of the wife's Land when he is to be Tenant by the Courtesy. Grandfather, Father and Son, and the Grandfather is seized of three Acres of Land in Fee, and taketh wife and dyeth, this Land descendeth to the Father, who dieth either before or after Entry, now is the wife of the Father is dowable: The Father dieth, and the wife of the Grandfather is endowed of one Acre and dyeth, the wife of the Father shall be only endowed of the two Acres residue; for the Dower of the Grandmother is paramount the Title of the wife of the Father, and the Seisin of the Father which descended to him (be it in Law or actual) is defeated, and in that case Does de dote peti non debet. It is not necessary that the Seisin should continued during the Coverture, as the Marriage must; for albeit the husband aliens the Lands and Tenements, or extinguisheth the Rent, or aliens, etc. the wife shall be endowed. Of what Seisin the Wife shall not be endowed. And yet of every Seisin the wife shall not be endowed, as in these Cases following. The wife shall not be endowed of the Seisin 〈◊〉 her husband had by Inter-union on the King's possession. The woman shall not be endowed both of the Land given in Exchange, and of the Land taken i● Exchange, and yet the husband was seized of both but she may have her Election to be endowed 〈◊〉 which she william. Of a Seisin for an instant a woman shall not 〈◊〉 endowed. If the Conusee of a Fine doth grant and tender the Land to the Conusor, the wife of the Conusor shall not be endowed, 1 Inst. 31. b. What Seisin it is that entitles the Wife to her Dower. 1. He must be sole seized thereof and not i● Jointenancy; if there be two Jonytenants in Fee and one makes a Feoffment in Fee, his wife sha●● not be endowed. Regula. 2. He must be seized of such an Estate during the Coverture, that the Child that he shall beget o● the said wife may by possibility inherit the said Lands. And yet this is not a general Rule. If a Man be Tenant in Fee-Tail general, and maketh a Feoffment in Fee, and taketh back an Estate to him and his wife, and to the Heirs of their two Bodies, and they have Issue, and the wife dies; the husband taketh another wife and dies, the wife shall not be endowed, for during the Coverture he was seized of an Estate Tail special, and yet the Issue, which the second wife might have, by possibility may inherit. The same Law it is, if she had taken back an Estate in Fee-simple, and after had taken wife, and had Issue by her, yet she shall not be endowed, for that the Fee-simple is vanished by the Remitter, and her Issue hath the Land by force of the Entail. But in this Case the Tenant cannot pled that the husband was never seized of such an Estate, whereof the Demandant might be endowed, but he must pled the special matter. 3. Death of the husband; it must be a natural not a civil death. Note, It is not requisite that Marriage, Seisin and Age concur together all at one time, but it is sufficient if they hap during Coverture. If a Man seized of Lands in Fee taketh a wife of eight years old, and alieneth his Land, and afterwards the wife attaineth nine years, and than the husband dies, the wife shall be endowed; for though at the time of the Alienation the wife was not dowable, yet forasmuch as the Marriage and Seisin in Fee was before the Alienation, and the Title of Dower is not consummate till the death of the husband, she shall be endowed. Broughton and Randal's Case was a little odd. The Title of the wife to recover Dower was, that the Father and Son were Jointenants to them and the Heirs of the Son, and they were both hanged in one Cart; but because the Son, as was deposed by Witnesses, survived, as appeared by some tokens viz. the shaking his Legs, his wife thereupon demanded Dower, and had it upon the Issue unq● sesie que Dower, Cro. Eliz. 502. Of what Estate a Woman shall be endowed. Of every Estate of Freehold and Inheritance i● Fee-simple, Fee-tail general, or as Heir in Tail sp●cial whereof her husband was seized during the Coverture either in Deed or Law, except as before. Of Estate-Tail determined. Of an Estate Tail in Lands determined a woma● shall be endowed, in the like manner and form as man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy, mutatis 〈◊〉 tandis. Castle. She shall be endowed of a Castle that is o● maintained for the private use and habitation of 〈◊〉 Owner. Capital Mesuage. She shall be endowed of a principal Mansion 〈◊〉 Capital Mesuage, Si non sit caput baron. seu 〈◊〉 tatus. Inheritances entire. Though by many Inheritances that be entire whereof no division can be made by Meets a●● Bounds, a woman cannot be endowed of the th●●● itself, yet the woman shall be endowed thereof 〈◊〉 a special and a certain manner, as, Mill. Of a Mill a woman shall not be endowed 〈◊〉 Meets and Bounds, in common with the Heir, 〈◊〉 either she may be endowed of the third Toll-dish, 〈◊〉 de integro molendino per quamlibet tertium mense● In Gilpin and Cookson's Case in C. B. was q●● recuperet tertiam partem molendini, and not of 〈◊〉 third Toll-dish; and it is well enough, the Writ ●●ing of the Inheritance, and not of the profits; 〈◊〉 on Recovery of the third part of the Mill she sh● have the Toll-dish, and so is 1 Inst. 32. to be intended, 2 Keb. 8. A woman shall be endowed of the third part of the profits of Stallage; Stallage. Fair. of the third part of the profits of a Fair; of a third part of the profits of the Office of the Marshalsea; of the third part of the profits of the keeping a Park; Parkership. Dovehouse. and of a third part of the profits of a Dove-house; and of the third part of the profits of a Piscary (viz.) tertium piscem, vel jactum retis tertium. Piscary. She shall be endowed of the third Presentation to an Advowson. Third Presentation. She shall be endowed of the third part of the Profits of Courts, Fines, Herriots. Courts. Herriots. Fines. Tithes. She shall be endowed of Tithes, and the surest Endowment of Tithes is of the third Sheaf, for what Land shall be sown is uncertain. In some Cases of Lands and Tenements which are devisable, Inheritances devisable, what she shall not be endowed of. and which the Heir of the husband shall inherit, yet the wife shall not be endowed. As if the husband makes a Lease for Life of certain Lands, reserving a Rent to him and his Heirs, and he taketh wife and dyeth, the wife shall not be endowed; neither of the Reversion, though it be within the word Tenements, Seisin. because there was no Seisin in Deed or in Law of the Freehold; nor of the Rent, because the husband had not but a particular Estate therein, and no Fee-simple. But if the husband make a Lease for years, reserving Rend, and takes wife, the husband dies, the wife shall be endowed of the third part of the Reversion by Meets and Bounds together with the third part of the Rent. If a Man makes a Gift in Tail reserving a Rent to him and his Heirs, Rent. and after the Donor takes wife and dyeth, the wife shall be endowed of this Rent, because it is a Rent in Fee, and by possibility may continued for ever. A woman shall be endowed of a Common certain; but of a Common sans nombre in gross, Common. she shall not be endowed. She shall not be endowed of a Common sans nombre, for than the Land should be doubly charged, 11 Co. 45. Godfrey Pasch. 9 Car. B. R. Prewet and Drake. Though in that Case in a Writ of Error Judgement was affirmed, because it shall not be intended Common sans nombre, but appendent. She shall be endowed of a Rent-Service, Rent-Charge, Rent-Seck. Annuity. Of an Annuity that chargeth only the person, and issueth not out of any Lands or Tenements she shall not be endowed. Estate suspended. If the Freehold of the Rents, Common, etc. were suspended before the Coverture, and so continued during the Coverture, she shall not be endowed of them. But if after the Coverture the husband do extinguish them by Release or otherwise, yet she shall be endowed of them; for as to her Dower in the eye of th● Law they are to have Continuance. Land improved. Of improved Lands she shall be endowed; as i● the wife be entitled to have Dower of three Ac●● of Marsh every one of the value of 12 d. and 〈◊〉 Heir by his Industry and Charge makes it goo● Meadow, every Acre of the value of 10 s. the w● shall have her Dower according to the improved v●lue, and not according to the value, as it was in 〈◊〉 husband's time; for her Title is to the quantity 〈◊〉 the Land viz. one third part. So it is if the H●●● improve the Lands by Building. On the other side, if the value be impaired in th● time of the Heir, she shall be endowed according 〈◊〉 the value at the time of the Assignment, and not according to the value as it was in the time of th● husband. Of what Estate the Wife shall be endowed. It's a Rule: In every case where a woman taken husband seized of such an Estate in Tenement● etc. so as by possibility it may hap that the wife may have Issue by her husband, and that the same Issue may by possibility inherit the same Tenements of such an Estate as the husband hath, as Heir to the husband, of such Tenements she shall have her Dower, otherwise not. As if Tenements are given to a Man and the Heirs, which he shall beget on the Body of his wife, in this case the wife has nothing in the Tenements, and the husband hath but an Estate as Donee in special Tail; yet if the husband die without Issue, the same wife shall be endowed of the said Tenements, because the Issue, which she by possibility might have had by the same husband, might have inherited the same Tenements; but if such wife dyeth, living her husband, and after the Baron takes another wife and dies, his second wife shall not be endowed in this case, for the reason aforesaid, Lit. sect. 53. And therefore though a woman be 100 years old, and the husband but four years old, and he dies, she shall be endowed, because the Law faith, If she be above nine she shall be endowed. The wife shall not be endowed of Lands and Tenements, Not of joint-tenancy. which the husband held jointly with another at the time of his death, for the joint-tenant claims all by Survivorship, which is above the Title of Dower; but Tenants in Common have several Freeholds and Inheritances, and their Moieties shall descend to their several Heirs, and therefore their wife's shall be endowed, 1 Inst. 37. b. A Feme shall be twice endowed, as in case of a Recovery by Eigne Title, 1 Rol. Abr. 684. If the wife elope she shall be barred of her Dower, Elope. and yet her Issue shall inherit. If a Man seized in Fee of Land covenant to stand seized of it to the use of himself and his Heirs until C. his younger Son take a wife, Not of an Estate ended by express Limitation. and after to the use of C. and his Heirs, and after A. dies, by which the Lands descend to B. his eldest Son, who had a wife, and after dies, and after this C. takes a wife, the Question upon a special Verdict was, if the wife of B. the eldest Son, shall be endowed of the said Estate of her husband; and the Court was divided in Opinion. But it seems she shall not be endowed, because his Estate is ended by an express Limitation, and consequently the Estate of the wife being derived out of it shall not continued longer than the original Estate, Pasch. 10 Jac. B. C. Flavel and Ventrice. Note, If Tenant in Fee takes a wife, and makes a Lease for years, and dyeth, the wife shall be endowed, and she shall avoid the Lease, but after her death the Lease shall be in force again, 1 Inst. 46. Dower by Release. The Bargainee hath a wife and dies, afterwards the Deed is enrolled, the wife shall have Dower, Baron Frevil's Case cited in Flower and Baldwin's Case, Cro. Car. 217. For by relation the Bargaine● was seized ab initio, Vide Cro. Jac. 615. Amen's Case. Not of a Fee gained in an instant. If Tenant in special Tail take a second wife, wh● is not dowable of the Tail, and after makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies, his wife shall not be endowed, for that he gains the Fee but in an instant, 8 Co. 43. The husband ought to have a Fee or Tail and Franktenement in possession; otherwise, the w●● is not dowable. The husband of the Demandant and Father 〈◊〉 the Tenant being Tenant in Tail, in consideration of a Marriage with his Son, Covenant to stand seized by Tenant in Tail. the Tenant in T●● covenanted that the Land after his death should descend and come to his Son and his Heirs, and after he takes the Demandant to wife, it was adjudged he was seized of such Estate, of which she wa● dowable, for that no Estate was altered by her husband's, for he was Tenant in Tail still as before Quaere, If it had been a Covenant to stand seized, Cr● Eliz. Blithman's Case, Vide Moor. J. S. seized in Fee by Indenture enrolled bargains and sells to the husband for 120 l. in consideration he shall redemise it to him and his wife for their Lives under a Pepper Corn; Mortgages. and with Condition that if he paid the 120 l. at the end of 20 years, the Bargain and Sale shall be voided; he redemiseth it accordingly and dies; his wife brought Dower. Per Curiam. Resolved in Chancery, that she shall have Dower, and a Court of Equity shall not preclude her of it; and when he redemiseth it upon the former agreement, yet the Lessees are to receive it subject to this Title of Dower, and it was his Folly that he did not join another with the Bargainee, as it is the ancient course in Mortgages. And yet it is held in our Books upon a Mortgage, Land be redeemed, the wife of the Mortgagee shall not have Dower, Cro. Car. 190. Nash and Preston. If an husband takes a Fine sur Conisance de droit come ceo, and renders Arrear; Instant. although it was the husbands, yet his wife shall not have Dower, for it is in him and out of him quasi uno flatu, and by one and the same Act, 3 Leon. 11. A Man sold his Land upon Condition, Condition. and after took a wife, and died, the Heir entered for the Condition broken, yet the wife shall not be endowed; and so if the Condition had been broken before the death of the husband, if he had not entered; for he had Title of Entry, 1 Brownl. 59 A woman shall be dowable of an Estate granted by Tenant in Tail to her husband and his Heirs, Of an Estate descendible for the Life of the Grantor. and discendible only for the Life of the Grantor, 1 Sand. 261. in Tooke and Glass' Case. If a Man seized in Fee makes a Feoffment to divers persons to her use for Life, and to uses which he shall declare by his Will, and after marries, his wife shall not be endowed. Per Curiam, aliter, if Uses expressed in his Will bearing date tali die ante the Feoffment, ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Baron is outlawed of High Treason, and five years passed after his death, yet she shall be endowed. One seized of Lands in Fee took a wife, and levied a Fine of the said Lands with Proclamations, and afterwards was indicted and outlawed of High-Treason, and died, and five years passed after the death of the husband, and the Heir reversed the Attainder; the Question was in Vivian Menvil's Case, whether the wife shall be endowed, 13 Co. 19 And it was resolved that the wife should be endowed; for though a Fine levied and Non-claim of five years shall bar a woman of Dower, and her five years is saved, yet in this case the wife is not to be aided by that saving; for in respect of the Attainder of her husband she had not any right of Dower at the time of his death, nor can she after his death prosecute any Action for it. But the wife is aided by another former saving in the said Act (viz.) And saving to all other persons (viz.) who were 〈◊〉 parties to the Fine, such Action, Right, Title, Cl●●● and Interest, in or to the said Lands, etc. as shall first grow, remain, descend or come to them after the said Fine engrossed and Proclamations made, etc. So that they take their Actions and pursue the●● Rights according to Law within five years' ne●● after such Action, Right, etc. to them accrued etc. and in this Case the Action and Right 〈◊〉 Dower accrued to the wife after the Reversal of the Attainder. For or in what respect of Disabilities a Woman shall be endowed or not. The wife of an Idiot, non compos mentis. The wife of one outlawed. The wife of one attainted of Felony or Trespass, Heresy, Praemunire shall be endowed. So note at this day, Where the Wife shall loose her Dower by the Attainder of her husband, and where not. if the husband be attainted of Felony the wife shall be endowed, and yet the Issue shall not inherit the Lands, which the Father had in Fee-simple, 1 Inst. 40. b. But before the Statute of 1 E. 6. the wife should not have been endowed, and the Issue should have inherited. But the wife is not dowable if the husband be attaint of Treason, for her Title gins by the Intermarriage, and aught to continued and be consummate by the death of the husband, which cannot be in this Case; for the Attainder of the husband hath interrupted it, as in the case of Elopement; and this Attainder is an universal Estoppel and doth not run in Privity between the wife and him to whom the Escheat belongs; but every Stranger may bar her of her Dower by reason thereof, and a Pardon doth not help her: For now suppose the husband obtaineth a Charter of Pardon and dies, this doth not help the matter, for the same extends but to the Life of the Offender, but doth not take away the Attainder by which she is barred to demand Dower during the Attainder being in force; and so it is though the Lands be aliened before the Treason committed, as it was in Dyer 140. b. Lady Gate's Case, Vide Stat. 5 & 6 Ed. 6. cap. 11. ult. Provis. 1 Leon. 3. Mayney's Case. If a Man marry an Alien woman she shall be endowed, 1 Rolls Abr. 675. Alien. that is to be understood as a Parliamentary Case by Petitioning, and the King's Answer, the Countess of Arundel's Case. For if a Man take an Alien to wife, and after the husband aliens the Land, and after she is made a Denizen, and than the husband dies, she shall not be endowed, because there was an absolute disability; aliter, if she be naturalised by Act of Parliament. As to Divorce Vide supra. Divorce. If the wife be divorced causa praecontractus, consanguinei, or impotency, she shall not be endowed. If the wife elope she is barred of her Dower Vide infra. What Act of the Wife shall bar her of her Dower. Elopement. If the wife elope from her husband, viz. if the wife goeth away and leave her husband, and tarrieth with the Adulterer, she loseth her Dower unt● her husband willingly without coersion Ecclesiastical be reconciled to her, and permit her to coha●●● with him. Sponte virum mulier fugiens & adultera facta, Dote sua careat nisi sponsi sponte retracta. Though in this Case of Elopement the wife cou●● not be barred of her Dower by the Common La● but by the Statute of W. 2. cap. 34. Si uxor sp●●● reliquerit virum suum, etc. If the woman be tak●● away not sponte, but against her Will, and a●●● consent and remain with the Adulterer without ●●ing reconciled, etc. she shall loose her Dower. If the wife go away with her husband's Agreement with A. B. and after A. B. commits Adultery with her, and she remaineth with him without Reconciliation, she shall be barred of her Dower. If she commit Adultery with him, though 〈◊〉 doth not continually remain with him, it is a tarrying within this Statute, 2 Inst. 436. If the husband grant his wife with her Goods 〈◊〉 another, by force of which the wife lives with th● Grantee afterwards all the Life of her husband 〈◊〉 shall loose her Dower, because she lived in Adultery with him, 30 E. 1. lib. Parliament. f. 96. Willi●● Paynel and Margery his wife. The Precedent 〈◊〉 this: Elopement pleaded in Dower, Vide Dyer 106. a. 107. a. Parliament. 30 E. 1. apud Westm. Petitio Wil Paynel & Margaretae uxoris ejus, etc. quod Dominus Rex iis reddere vellet tertiam partem manerii quae ipsam contingit de libero tenemento Johannis Commoys primi viri sui, etc. Et Nic ' Warwick pro Rege pled Elopement de dit feme de sa baron ove le dit William. Paynel & super hoc praefat. Willielmus Paynel & Margareta protulerunt quoddam factum praed. Johannis Commois primi viri in haec verba. Omnibus Christo fidelibus, etc. Sciatis me tradidisse & commisisse de spontanea voluntate mea Dom. Willielm. Paynel Milit. Margaret. de Commoys uxorem meam, & etiam dedisse & concessisse & eidem Will relaxasse & quiet clamasse omnia bona & catalla quae ipsa Margareta habet vel de caetero habere possit, & etiam quicquid est de praedict. Margaret. bonis & catallis cum pertinentiis fuit. Ita quod nec ego, nec aliquis alius nomine meo in praed. Margaret. bonis & catallis ipsius Margaretae cum pertin. exigere vel vindicare poterimus nec debemus imperpetuum. Volo & concedo & per praesens scriptum confirmo quod praedicta Margareta cum praedicto Domino Willielmo sit & remaneat pro voluntate ipsius Willielmi. In cujus rei testimonium & his testibus, etc. Et super hoc petit Judicium. Et consideratum est quod praedictus Willielmus & Margareta nihil capiant per petitionem suam sed sint in misericordia. Cest petitio fuit commence Westm. 1. 29 Ed. 1. Et Judicium 30 Ed. 1. If the husband's Friends sand him away from his wife, so as the wife knows not what is become of him, and they publish that he is dead, and afterwards they procure the woman to release all Marriages and interest in him as an husband; and afterwards by the persuasion of the Friends of the husband marries with another, who dies, and she take● another husband, the wife having no notice of the first husbands being alive, although the wife live i● Adultery, and though the first husband was not out of the Realm; yet inasmuch as she did not leave her husband sponte, as the Statute saith, bu● by persuasion of the husband's Friends, that he was dead; and it did not appear that she knew he was alive, this is not any such Elopement as to b● her of her Dower, 1 Rolls Abr. 680. Green and Harvey. Fine. The wife had a Jointure made to her after Marriage, and she and her husband levy a Fine sur Canisance de droit, etc. and alien the Jointure, 〈◊〉 shall not be good after the Coverture for her Dow●● of the Residue of the Lands of her husband, because her time of Election is not come until she become, sole according to the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 1● Dyer 358 b. 1 Inst. 36. b. 3 Co. 32. a. The husband being Tenant in Tail, the Remainder to his wife for Life; the husband makes a Feoffment to the use of himself and his wife for Li●● for a Jointure, and dies without Issue; this Joyature was pleaded in Bar of Dower. Per Curi●● It is no Bar, because the wife is remitted, and 〈◊〉 her first Estate, and the Jointure avoided, Moore 8● Wood and Shirley. If the husband seized in Fee makes a Feoffment reserving an 100 Marks Rend yearly for twe●●● years next ensuing, to him and his wife, and 〈◊〉 and the wife accept the Rent, yet this shall not 〈◊〉 any Bar in a Writ of Dower, because she deman●● a Freehold; and that only of a third part, Temp●● 1 Ed. 1. 65. Of the wife's being barred by Fine and Non-ch●● Vide Tit. Fine, and 13 Co. 20. If Divorce be causa Consanguitatis, Divorce. Praecontractus, Affinitatis, Frigiditatis, the wife shall not have Dower. As concerning Dower at the Common Law, there must be assignment either by the Sheriff, by the King's Writ, or by the Heir, or other Tenant of the Land by consent and agreement between them. Assignment of Dower. What persons may assign Dower, or not. An Infant may assign Dower in Pais, because he is compellable thereto by Writ. Guardian in Soccage may not assign Dower. If two or more be joint-tenants of Lands, joint-tenant. the one of them may assign Dower to the Wife of a third part in certainty, and this shall bind his Companion, because they were compellable to do the same by Law; but if one assign a Rent it shall not bind his Companion. Assignment may be made by a Disseisor, Abator, By Disseisor. Intruder, and be good, if there be no Covin, and if it be not prejudicial to the Disseisee. It is a general Rule, Regula. No Assignment can be made but by such as have a Freehold, or against whom a Writ of Dower doth lie, and therefore Assignment by a Gurdian in Soccage is voided; and so by Tenant by Elegit, Stat ', or Tenant for years, 1 Inst. 34, 35. There needs no Livery of Seisin or Writing to any Assignment of Dower, No Livery and Seisin. because it is due of common Right. If the husband make several Feoffments of several parcels, and dies, Dower assigned by one Feoffment. and the one Feoffee assigns Dower to the wife of parcel of the Land in satisfaction of all the Dower, which she ought to have in the Lands of the other Feoffees; the other Feoffees shall take no benefit of this Assignment, because they are Strangers thereto, and cannot pled the same; but in th● case if the husband die seized of other Lands in Fee simple, which descend to his Heir, and the Heir endoweth the wife thereof, this is good, and the several Feoffees shall take advantage of it, and vouch the Heir; so as there is in this case a Privity between the Heir and the Feoffees, 1 Inst. 35. a. What Assignment of Dower is against common Righ● or not. To assign Dower of an Advowson is against common Right, for she ought to have the third Presentation of common Right. So Assignment of Rent out of Lands is aga●● common Right, 12 Ed. 4. 2. Assignment of all the Wood or all the Mead●● in lieu of all the Wood, Meadow, Pasture, a●● Land is not against common Right. Common Rig●● is a third part of each. If she be dowable of three Manors, and she accept of the Heir, one Manor in Dower, in allowance of all, this is an Endowment against comm●● Right, 18 H. 6.27. What things may be assigned in lieu of Dower. Rent. A Rent of the same Land may be assigned in 〈◊〉 of a Dower, and this without Deed. Rend on Condition. If a Man assign such Rent on Condition, this not good; for she ought to have it free without Condition, as she should the Land, 27 El. W●● worths Case. Twenty Acres of Corn out of the same Land. In Dower, the Tenant pleads that he had assigned to the wife in the name of Recompense of 〈◊〉 Dower twenty Acres of Corn out of the same Lan● and held a good Bar, as well as a Rent or other Pro● out of the Land; aliter, if an Horse or Sheep, for this is not of the nature of the Soil, Moor 59 It is a Rule. Regula. Assignment of other Lands. Assignment of other Lands whereof she is not dowable, or of a Rent issuing out of it, is no Bar of Dower. If Dower be assigned on Condition the Condition is voided; Assignment with a Condition or Exception. so if Dower be assigned of the Land excepting the Trees growing upon the Land, this is a voided Exception, for she comes in by her husband, 44 El. B. R. Bullock and Finch, Ploughed. Com. Colthirst and Bejushen. If Dower be assigned with a Remainder over, Dower assigned with Remainder over. this is a voided Remainder, because the comes in by her husband, and if it should be a good Remainder, it would be without a particular Estate, Pl. Com. Colthirst. Endowment by Meets and Bounds. Albeit of many Inheritances that be entire, whereof no division can be made by Meets and Bounds, a woman cannot be endowed of the thing itself; yet she shall be endowed thereof in a special manner, Vide supra. Note, Endowment by Meets and Bounds more beneficial for the Wife. Endowment by Meets and Bounds according to common Right is more beneficial to the wife, than to be endowed against common Right, for there she shall hold the Land charged in respect of a Charge made after her Title of Dower, 1 Inst. 32. b. As if a Man be seized of three Manors of equal value in Fee, and taketh Wife, and chargeth one of the Manors with a Rent-charge, and dieth, she may, by the Provision of the Law, take a third part of all the Manors, and hold them discharged; ●ut if she will accept the entire Manor charged, she ●hall hold it charged, 1 Inst. 171. a. Not to be endowed by Meets and Bounds, where the Husband is seized in common. Note, The husband must be sole seized; where 〈◊〉 is seized in common she cannot be endowed 〈◊〉 Meets and Bounds, as if there be two joint-tenants 〈◊〉 Fee, and the one alieneth that which to him belongeth to another in Fee, who taketh wife and di● the wife for her Dower shall have the third part 〈◊〉 the Moiety, which her husband purchased, to h●● in common with the Heir of her husband and 〈◊〉 other joint-tenant, for here she cannot have Dow●● assigned by Meets and Bounds; aliter of Joy●●nants: For the Joyntenant, which surviveth, claimeth the Land by the Feoffment and survivor 〈◊〉 which is above the Title of Dower, and he 〈◊〉 pled the Feoffment made to himself without na●●● his Companion which died; but Tenants in Common have several Freeholds and Inheritances, 〈◊〉 their Moieties shall descend to their several Heirs, 〈◊〉 therefore their wife's shall be endowed. Assignment of Dower how to be made. Generally by the Sheriff; sometimes by the 〈◊〉 by consent; sometimes in Chancery. By the Sheriff. Regula. It is laid down for a Rule: Wherever the 〈◊〉 demands Land, Rent or other thing in certain, 〈◊〉 Demandant after Judgement may enter or dist●● before any Seisin delivered to him by the Sh● upon a Writ of Habere fac. Seisinam; Demandant cannot enter or distrain till Execution sued. but Dower, where the Writ demands nothing in ●●●tain, there the Demandant after Judgement can● enter nor distrain until Execution sued; by wh● Execution the Sheriff is to deliver the third part certainty to the Demandant, 1 Inst. 34. b. If a 〈◊〉 man bring a Writ of Dower of 3 s. Rent, altho●●● she ought to be endowed of 1 s. yet she ca●● after Judgement determine 12 d. before Assignment, because the Demand was uncertain. In Assignment of Dower the Sheriffs Return need not be of such precise Certainty, The Sheriffs Return in Dower. for it is but the Return of the Sheriff, therefore Quod habere fecit Seisinam de uno Tenemento sive firma, etc. and when he saith in the end, that he delivered them all by Meets and Bounds it is sufficient, Cro. Jac. 612. Sir Charles Howard's Case. If the wife accept and enter upon the Sheriff's Assignment lesser Land in quantity than the third of the whole, upon Record, Barred to demand more than what she accepted upon the Sheriff's Assignment. Assignment of Dower amended. she is barred to demand more, Moor 679. in Longvil's Case. The Court ordered Amendment of Assignment of Dower being under value, and on refusal of an equal division proffered to him by the Dowager, and committed the Sheriff for taking 60 l. of the Lady to execute his Writ of Execution, and Information against him, 1 Keb. 743. In Dower the Demandant recovered Dower of the Tenths of Wool and Lamb, How Execution to be made of the Tenths of Wool and Lamb. how Execution shall be made is the Question; and the Justices conceived that the Sheriff might deliver the Tenths of every third Yard Land, and assign the Yard Lands in certain, or deliver the third part of all in general; and this Dower the Sheriff may assign without a Jury, 2 Brownl. 148. If a woman recover Dower of a Rectory impropriate where there is not any Glebe, How to be endowed of a Rectory impropriate where there is no Glebe. Endowment of a Manor how to be. the Sheriff shall put her in possession of the third part of the Tithes generally, and not of the Tithes of the Land of the Parish in certain, Mich. 9 Jac. in B.R. per Curiam. If a woman be dowable of a Manor the Sheriff may assign the third part of the Manor in common in lieu of Dower without setting out by Meets and Bounds. By the Heir. Entry taken away by Descent revived by Endowment. An Entry being taken away by Descent is revi●● by his Endowment; as a Disseisor dies seized, a●● the Heir enter, etc. who endows the wife of 〈◊〉 Disseisor of a third part; now presently after 〈◊〉 wife entereth and hath the possession of the sa● third part, the Disseisee may lawfully enter upon 〈◊〉 possession of the wife into the same third part, b●cause when the wife is endowed she shall not be 〈◊〉 by the Heir, but immediately by her husband be● the Disseisor, who is in for her Life by a Title p● amount the dying seized and descent; and the la● adjudgeth no mean Seisin between the husband a● wife, Lit. sect. 393. Acceptance waves the Endowment by Meets and Bounds. If A. seized of Land in Fee takes wife, and a●● deviseth it for one and twenty years to B. and 〈◊〉 and after C. his Heir assigns to the widow the th● part of the Land for her Dower without setting out by Meets and Bounds, and the wife accepts it 〈◊〉 satisfaction of her Dower, although she was 〈◊〉 bound to accept this so in common without set●● it out by Meets and Bounds, for the prejudice 〈◊〉 might accrue to them to occupy it in common 〈◊〉 inasmuch as the third part in common is due by 〈◊〉 Law, and they both consent to accept this accords to the Law, they may by their consents wave 〈◊〉 Assignment by Meets and Bounds, which is only their own advantage; and albeit the Lessee for y● does not agreed to it, yet the Assignment of the ●●nant of the Freehold shall bind him, Trin. 16 Cootes and Lambert. In Chancery. Dower may be assigned out of Chancery by a W● de dote assignanda; and if it be evicted the Re● shall be transmitted into Chancery, and there she 〈◊〉 be endowed de novo, Cro. Eliz. 364. Damages. If a Feme Tenant in Dower sue in a Court of Equity for Damages, Not to be relieved in Equity. where her husband died not seized, a Court of Equity ought not to relieve her, for it is against the Law. If the Baron make a Feoffment to the use of himself for Life, the Remainder to the Son in Tail. Per Curiam, This is not such a dying seized of the husband for the wife to have damages in Dower, Dame Egerton's Case. But the husband ought to be seized of an Estate Tail or Fee-simple which may descend to the heir, Lit. Rep. 341. Alienation or death of the Heir after Recovery before Seisin prevents not Damages, 1 Keb. 85, 646, 711. If Tenant in Dower be disseised, Tenant in Dower not within the Statute of Gloc '. and the Disseisor makes a Feoffment, the Tenant in Dower shall recover all her Damages against the Feoffee, for she is not deins le Statute of Gloucester, c. 1. by which every one shall answer for their time, 2 Brownl. 41. What Charges made by the Husband the Wife endowed shall avoid, or not. Lord of a Copyhold Manor in which were many Copyholders for Life takes wife; Copyhold. the Copyholder dies, the Lord grants this to another and dies, adjudged that the wife shall not avoid this Grant in a Writ of Dower, for that the Custom is before the Title of Dower, 2 Co. 4. Dyer 8 Eliz. 21. con●ra. If the wife accept Dower of the Heir against common Right she shall hold this subject to the Charges ●f her husband, 8 H. 6. 27. otherwise, Dower against common Right. if she be ●ndowed against common Right by the Sheriff. Advowson. If A. seized in Tail of a Manor, to which an Advowson is appendent, grants the next Presentation to B. and after marries C. and dies, and the wife is endowed of this Manor with the Appurtenance in lieu of all her Dower, and after the Church 〈◊〉 voided; Quaere, if she may present and avoid th● Grant made before Coverture. Writ and Declaration. Writ of Right of Dower. Writ of Dower unde nihil habet. Tenant for Life, Reversion in Fee of Lands whereof the Demandant had Title of Dower, and 〈◊〉 brought a Writ of Dower against the Tenant 〈◊〉 Life, hanging the Writ, he in Reversion levied Fine with Proclamations of the Reversion, the ●●nant for Life dies, five years expire, and the demandant brought a new Writ against the Tenant 〈◊〉 possession, Hob. 165. Quaere. In Fulliam and Harris' Case: The Writ 〈◊〉 Praecipe A. quod reddat E. Fulliam rationabile●●tem suam des terris, etc. dudum B. Fulliam qu● dam viri sui: Per Curiam, The Writ is ill; 〈◊〉 it ought to be Praecipe A. quod reddat E. Full● quae fuit uxor B. Fulliam, etc. For in the begins of the Writ she ought to be named Uxor of 〈◊〉 husband, for that is the name whereby she claims Dower, Cro. Jac. 217. In Dower the Demand was the tertia parte d● messuagiorum etc. in tres parts dividend ': 〈◊〉 Judgement was to recover Seisinam de tertia 〈◊〉 tenementorum praedictorum cum pertin ' tenend ' e● separabilitate per metas & bundas. It was ill, cause they are Tenants in Common, and the Judgement ought to have been Tenendum insimul & communi; but had it been divided, aliter, Ex ●nuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Pleading. If in a Writ of Dower the Tenant would bar the Demandant by a Jointure made during the Coverture, he ought to say, Quod intrando agreavit; Bar by Jointure. for if the wife entereth and agreeth, the same is a good Bar of Dower, 3 Leon. 272. In Dower the Tenant pleads the Release of the Demandant made to such a Tenant in possession tenementorum praedictorum, Release of the Demandant. and because he doth not say he was tenens liberi tenementi, it was held to be no Plea, Cro. Jac. 151. If one pled an Acquittance or Release in Bar of Dower, he ought to show that this was for the same cause of Action, 5 H. 7. 1. A Release of all his Right, etc. to him in the Reversion shall bar the wife of Dower, 8 Co. Altham's Case. N'unque accouple in loyal Matrimony pleaded in London, and Replication to it, N'unque accouple en loyal Matrimony. and the Record removed into the Common Bench, and Writ to the Bishop, Co. Entr. 180. In a Writ of Dower sued in any Court of Wales, if they are at Issue upon n'unque accouple, etc. the Court there hath not power to make Process to the Bishop, but the King shall writ to the Marshal there to amesne the Record here in Banco, and here Process shall be awarded to the Bishop, 19 H. 6. 12. In Dower against two, if one acknowledge the Action, and the other pled n'unque accouple, etc. the Demandant shall not have Judgement against him who acknowledged, until Issue tried, for this goes to the whole, 7 H. 6.34. So if one acknowledge the Action, and the other pled Assignment of Rent out of the Land, etc. in lieu of Dower, this aught to be tried before Judgement against the other for the Moiety, for this goes to the whole. Non-tenure. Non-tenure to part or all is a good Plaa. Assignment of Rent out of the Land pleaded. In Dower the Defendant pleads Assignment of Rent out of the Land, but because he does not say he was Tertenant at the time of the Rent assigned it was adjudged against him, Dyer 361. and so i● Beaumond and Dean's Case, 2 Leon. p. 10. The Defendant pleaded in Bar that he himself before the Writ brought did assign a Rent of 10 l. per annu● to the Demandant in recompense of her Dowe● The Demandant demurs, and for cause shows, because the Tenant had not showed what Estate he ha● in the Land at the time of the granting the Re● as to say, that he was seized in Fee, and granted 〈◊〉 said Rend, that it might appear to the Court up●● the Plea, that the Tenant had power to grant s●● a Rent; and the Demurrer was held good. The Demandant after the death of her husband enters into the Land in demand, and continued 〈◊〉 possession of it five years, and afterwards the 〈◊〉 entered, upon which she brought Dower, it was agreed that the Tenant needed not to pled 〈◊〉 temps priest after his Reentry; Touts temps priest. for the time the Demandant had occupied the same is a sufficient Recompense for the damages, 3 Leon. 50. Riches' Case By the Heir. If a woman bring a Writ of Dower against 〈◊〉 Heir, and the Heir comes into Court upon the Summons the first day, and pleads that he hath been ● ways ready, and yet is to tender Dower, etc. if 〈◊〉 wife have not requested Dower she shall loose 〈◊〉 mean values and her damages; but if she have requested her Dower she may pled it, and Issue th● upon may be taken, and a Request in Pais is su●cient; And the reason why Touts temps priest 〈◊〉 good Plea by the Heir in this Case is to bar her of 〈◊〉 damages, because the Heir holds by Title, and 〈◊〉 no wrong till demand be made, 1 Inst. 32. 33. a. Dower was brought against J. S. J. S. pleads, and Judgement given for the Defendant, and afterwards the Judgement was reversed, and she brought a new Writ of Dower; and the Tenant pleaded he always was ready, and yet is: Against which the Demand pleaded the first Record to estop the Tenant; the Tenant pleads Nul tiel record; Mul tiel Record. Per Curiam, the Demandant cannot conclude the Tenant by that Replication to pled Nul tiel Record, for the Judgement is reversed, and so no Record, and it cannot be certified as a Record; but if Issue had been taken upon the Plea if the Tenant, absque hoc that he was ready, the same might have been given in Evidence against the Tenant, 30 Leon. 50. Riches' Case. Judgement of the Reversion and of the Rent. In Dower. If the Tenant show before the husband had any thing in the Land A. was seized of the same Land in Fee, and let it for years, rendering Rend, and granted the Reversion to the husband of the Plaintiff, who died seized of the said Reversion, and demanded Judgement, if the Demandant shall have Dower, etc. This is no Plea in Bar of Dower, but proves she had Title of Dower; but this saves the Lease for years, and she shall have Judgement only of the Reversion of the Rent, Winch p. 80. N'unque seized. If Tenant in Fee Tail general makes a Feoffment in Fee, and takes back an Estate in Fee-simple, and after had taken wife and had Issue by her, yet she shall not be endowed, for that the Fee-simple is vanished by the Remitter, and her Issue hath the Land by force of the Entail; but in this Case the Tenant can never pled that the husband was never seized of such an Estate whereof the Demandant might be endowed, but he must pled the special matter, 1 Inst. 31. b. The Issue was, N'unque seize que Dower; and per Curiam the Tenant shall never give in Evidence a Remitter to defeat the Estate of the husband upon this Issue, but aught to pled it and show the Remitter in certain, and that the Issue was of another Estate than the husband had, and than the wife shall be barred; and it is the same Law to say the husband's Estate is defeated by Condition, Dyer 41. a. Sir J. S. and Dorothy his wife, late wife to Sir H. Bowyer, brought Dower against Barbara Wo●● Widow: The Tenant pleaded that Sir H. Bowye● was seized in Fee of the Manor of W. and made a Feoffment thereof to the use of himself and Dorothy, his wife, for the term of their Lives for h●● Jointure, the Remainder to one Bowyer, and the● died, and his wife entered and claimed it for he● Jointure. Et hoc paratus, etc. The Plaintiff replies that before the said Feoffment made that the said S● H. Bowyer, being seized of the said Manor, did covenant to stand seized thereof to the use of himself in Tail, and for default of such Issue to the use o● his wife for Life, and after to Sir Thomas Henly 〈◊〉 Tail, and afterwards made the Feoffment prout and died sans Issue, and that she entered claiming by the Indenture of Covenant and was remitted. The Tenant rejoins, Remitter. that the said Feme entered after the death of her husband, claiming her Estate for L● as Jointure by the said Feoffment, and demanded Judgement if she shall against her Claim be remitted And to this the Plaintiff demurs. It was adjudge that she was volens nolens remitted for the benef●● of him in Remainder. But per Curiam, the Tenant's Plea is ill; for the Tenant ought to hav● taken a Traverse to the matter alleged in the Replication, Plea pleaded out of time. and so ill in substance, as it is in Cro. Jac 488. But by Hobert, a Plea of Claim by force of the Jointure was pleaded out of time and idle, and requires no Traverse, Vide Hob. p. 71. Sir John Shirley and Barbara Wood Fine with Proclamations, Fine and Non-claim. and that she did not claim within five years after the death of the husband, Co. Entr. 171. Vide supra Tit. Fine. By Attainder of Treason or Petty-Treason the wife shall loose her Dower, and it may be pleaded, Attainder of Treason. 5 Ed. 6. cap. 11. Not so of Murder or Felony. Elopement by the Demandant is a good Plea in Bar, Vide supra. Elopement. In Dower to say, General Issue. that the husband had not but an Estate for Life is no Plea, for this is but the general Issue, 10 H. 6. 17. If a Divorce be a vinculo matrimonii, Divorce. this is a good Bar. It is a good Plea that the wife was not 9 years old at the time of the death of the husband. That the Wife was not nine years old at his death. Alien. Jointure. That the wife is an Alien is a good Plea. If an Estate be made to the wife before Coverture (or after, if after the death of her husband she enter and agreed to it) for term of her own Life, or a greater Estate, this is a Bar, if it be expressed to be for a Jointure, or it may be averred, 4 Co. 1. Vernon's Case. 1 Inst 36. Co. Entr. 171. In a Scire Fac ' to execute a Recovery in Dower, Acceptance of Tenant. it is no Plea to say that the Demandant accepted a Rent after Judgement out of other Land; but the Heir etc. may assign to the wife parcel of the Land, or a Rent by parcel out of the same Land in full satisfaction of her Dower; Heir vouched. and if she bring a Writ of Dower against the other, he may vouch the Heir who shall pled this. Detainment of Charters pleaded. Detainment of Charters concerning the same Lands whereof she claims Dower is a good Plea in delay of her Dower, 11 H. 4. 3. b. If detainment of Charters be pleaded in delay o● Dower, he who pleads this aught to allege wha● Charters they are, as certainly as in a Count, or detinue of them, 14 H. 6. 4. In Dower against the Feoffee of the husband continued of Charters is no Plea; it is no Plea, but for th● Heir, Hob. 113. Demand of Lands in A. B. against the Heir. T● Tenant pleads N'unque seisie que Dower. The Ju● found the husband was seized during the Coverture de omnibus tenementis infrascript. praeterquam 〈◊〉 Tenements in, etc. sicut praed. M. dotari poterit. 〈◊〉 Curiam. Release Damages. The Praeterquam is idle, and Surplusage and the Seisin of Land in A. and B. is confess and the Jury have assessed damage, and therefore ●●ing seized is not found by the Verdict; but the Demandant may pray Judgement of the Land and release damages; or the Demandant may aver 〈◊〉 the husband died seized, ●nd have a Writ to enq● of the damages, 1 Leon. 37. Butler and Airs. Return of the Sheriff upon a Recovery by default. In a Writ of Dower, if the Plaintiff recover 〈◊〉 default, and upon this a Writ is awarded to 〈◊〉 Sheriff or Bailiff where the Recovery is to deliver to the Plaintiff tertiam partem per metas, and 〈◊〉 inquire of the value by the year, and how ma● time is passed after the first demand of the Dow●● and what damages she has suffered. And up●● this the Sheriff returns, that he had delivered 〈◊〉 third part of the Lands, and that two years are pa● after the first demand, and damages 50 l. and accordingly Judgement is given to hold in severalty as to recover damages. Though the Judgement is 〈◊〉 good as to the damages inasmuch as it is not aven● that the husband of the Plaintiff died seized, not 〈◊〉 it so found by the Jury; so as the Judgement is erroneous, yet it shall be reversed only as to this, 1 R● Abr. 776. Tye and Atkins. The Tenant in Dower vouched the Son to Warranty, as Son and Heir to the husband of the Demandant, who appeared and entered into the Warranty gratis, and he pleaded he had nothing by descent from his Father: Upon which Plea the Tenant and Vouchee were at Issue, and the Demandant had Judgement against the Tenant to recover, but cesset Executio till the Voucher is determined; after that, before the day of Nisi Prius, the Vouchee died, and at the day the Tenant lost by default, and the Demandant prays to have a Writ of Seisin, Winch p. 88, 89. In a Writ of Dower brought by a woman of a third part. Gavelkind. The Tenant pleaded that the Lands of which Dower is demanded are in nature of Gavelkind; and that the Custom of such Land is, that Dower ought to be demanded of a Moiety. The Demandant demurs, and by the Justices she may demand Dower of a third part, or by Custom, but Quaere, for it has been adjudged contrary, 1 Leon. 62. The Custom is, that the wife ought to be endowed of the Moiety of such Land quamdiu non maritata remanserit & non aliter. Judgement against the Demandant. 1 Leon. 133. Hunt and Gilborn. Trial. Evidence. Issue. If the Tenant pled that the husband is alive, That the husband is alive, how to be tried. this shall be tried by the Justices by Proofs before them for greater Expedition, Vid. Precedent, Rast. Entr. 228. 2 Inst. 80. 8 H. 6. 23. In Dower, Where the Judgement shall be taken upon the Confession, and not upon the Verdict. if the Defendant by his Plea acknowledgeth that the Baron was seized Que Dower, etc. And Issue is taken upon an immaterial thing, and this is found pro Quer. and Judgement accordingly; yet in a Writ of Error the Court shall take the Judgement to be upon the Confession, and not upon the Verdict, 21 Ed. 4. 46. Per Cur. M. O. and her second husband brought an Action of Dower against T. and demanded Dower of 〈◊〉 Endowment of one P. her first husband: It 〈◊〉 agreed that this Trial ought to be by Witnesses, according to Dyer 155. Tryable by Witnesses. And it was awarded by 〈◊〉 Court that the Council of either side should d●● up Interrogatories, and put their names to the● and than they should be delivered, and he shall h● the Examination of the Witnesses on both sides, a● than seal up the Interrogatories again, and so 〈◊〉 main until they were delivered over to the Co● and than qui melius probat melius habet, Winch 〈◊〉 Mary Over versus Tucker. Verdict uncertain. In a Writ of Dower of one Message, and 〈◊〉 Garden; if the Defendant pled N'unque seisie 〈◊〉 Dower, and the Jury found that the husband of 〈◊〉 Demandant was seized of the said Message 〈◊〉 Garden, all but so much as J. S. had, etc. this 〈◊〉 not a good Verdict, because non constat how m●●● of the Land J. S. had, and so merely uncertain 〈◊〉 what Judgement should be given, 2 Rol. Abr. 65 Pope and King. Damages. Judgement. Request in Pais to assign Dower. It is a needful thing for the wife after the de●● of her husband, as soon as she can, to demand 〈◊〉 Dower before good Testimony, otherwise she 〈◊〉 loose her damages, 1 Inst. 32. b. and a Request 〈◊〉 Pais is sufficient. In what Writ of Dower damages shall be recovered, and from what time. By the Statute of Merton the wife shall recei●● damages in her Writ of Dower from the time 〈◊〉 the death of her husband; it must be in a Writ 〈◊〉 Dower unde nihil habet, not in a Writ of Right 〈◊〉 Dower; for in no Writ of Right damages are 〈◊〉 be recovered, and she shall receive damages only whe● the husband died seized of the Freehold and Inheritance. It is to be observed that the mean values and damages are to be recovered against the Tenant in a Writ of Dower, and the Lord Coke citeth Belfield and Rouse's Case. The Tenant as to parcel pleads Non-tenure, and for the Residue detainment of Charters upon which Pleas they were at Issue, and both Issues by the Jury found against the Tenant, and found further that the husband died seized such a day and year, and had a Son, and that the Demandant and the Son by six years after the decease of the husband took the profits of the Land, and that after the Son died without Issue, after whose decease the Land descended to the Tenant, as Uncle and Heir to him, by force whereof he entered and took the Profits until the purchasing of the original Writ, and found the value of the Land by the year, and assessed damages and costs; and the Demandant had Judgement to recover damages for all the time from the death of her husband without any defalcation. Let the Tenant take heed therefore how he pleads false Pleas. False Pleas. The Statute of Merton extends to Copyholds where women are dowable. If the wife have Dower assigned to her in Chancery she shall have no damages, Not damages on Dower assigned in Chancery. Judgement on Nil dicit, and Enquiry and Damages assessed. for the words of the Statute be, Et Viduae per Placitum recuperaverint. W. brought a Writ of Dower against N. and Judgement was given upon Nihil dicit, and because the Baron died seized a Writ of Enquiry of damages was awarded, by which it was found that the third part of the Land, which she ought to have in Dower, was of the value of 8 l. per annum, and that eight years elapserunt a morte viri sui proxime ante inquisitionem, & assident damna ad 80 l. And the Demandant had Execution after Judgement upon the Habere fac. seisinam. Error assigned: 1. Because damages are assessed to the time of the Inquisition where they ought to be but to the time of the Judgement, Sed non allocatur. 2. B●cause damages are assessed for the whole eight yea● after the death of the husband, where it appeare● that for part of the said years the Demandants w●● seized of the Lands by force of the Judgement, 〈◊〉 Execution in the Writ of Dower, and upon 〈◊〉 the Writ of Error was allowed, 1 Leon. 56. Wall● and Nevil. And it was assigned for Error in 〈◊〉 Case, that they assessed damages beyond the Revenue: Sed non allocatur. For perhaps the De●●●dants have sustained more damage than the bore Revenue. If a Feme recover in a Writ of Dower before 〈◊〉 Writ of Enquiry of damages awarded, and befo●● the third part assigned by Meets and Bounds; 〈◊〉 Judgement is perfect as to the Realty, Judgement when perfect. and the damages are given by the Statute by way of addition 17 Car. 1. B. Steward and Steward. If a woman recover Land in a Writ of Dowe● and after the Sheriff return damages from the Wit purchased usque diem Judicii, and after the Tenant brought a Writ of Error in Executione Judi●● He may upon this assign Error in the Judgement given for the damages upon the Return of the Sh●riff: The last Judgement but an Inquest of Office. For the last Judgement is not an Executi●● but an Enquest of Office by the Statute of Mer●●▪ And it is the use always to bring but one Writ 〈◊〉 such Case; and there is not any Writ Quia J●dicia reddita, but Judicium, Trin. 11 Car. 1. B● Porter and Agar. Pasch. 5 Jac. Rot. 39 Nihil dicit in Dower. J●dicium de recover Seisinam versus praefat. R. d● tertia parte predict ' come pertin '. Et idem R. 〈◊〉 misericordia & averment de dying seized. The Demand was the tertia parte unius messuagii & se●decim acrarum terrae cum pertin. per l'inquisitionem compertum fuit quod terrae & tenementa praedict● cum pertin. in Brevi praedict. ut in inquisition annex. specificat. sunt & existunt unum messuagium, quatuordecim acras terrae cum pertin. insimul jacen. in L. praed. ad terram vocat. J. ex Australi parte, etc. sunt tertia pars. Et ulterius found the time of the dying seized, and the damages, and the value, and costs. Ideo consideratum est quod petens recuperet versus praefatum tenentem valorem tertiae partis praedict. cum pertin. a tempore mortis praed M. quondam viri, etc. qui quidem valor per tempus praed. in se attingit ad 100 l. Et dampna suae praedict. ultra valorem praed. ad 5 s. 4 d. per inquisitionem praed. superius compert. necnon, etc. quae quidem dampna, etc. ad 9 l. 13 s. Note, The Jurors found the Land in demand to be of lesle quantity than the Demandant had counted. Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Judgement. Execution. In a Writ of Dower, Judgement against the Heir conditionally. If the Heir of full age be vouched by the Tenant in the same County, the Judgement shall be conditional, viz. against the Heir if he have Assets', and if he had not Assets', against the Tenant, and the Tenant over against the Heir when he had, 2 Roll. Abr. 751. But if the Heir be vouched in another County, who entereth into the Warranty, and saith, he hath nothing by descent, and the Tenant avers that he had Assets', the Demandant shall recover presently against the Tenant generally, and shall leave him to sue over to have value against the Heir. If the husband make a Lease for years, How Execution shall be where there is a Lease for years. rendering Rent and dies, the wife shall recover her Dower and have present Execution of the Land; and thereby she shall have the third part of the Reversion and of the Rent, and the Sheriff shall serve Execution of the Land as if there were no Lease for year●; for it may be that the Lease is voided, and if the Lease be good, he who claims the Lease may re-enter upon th● Land notwithstanding the Recovery and Execution Godb. 165. Foliamb. Cro. Eliz. 564. Winch 80. L●● Rep. 293. Dower against eight persons, two confess and six pled to Issue, how the Judgement shall be. One seized of Land in Fee taketh wife, and enfeoffed eight persons, a Writ of Dower is brought against eight persons, and two confess the Action and the other six pled to Issue, the Demandant shall have Judgement to recover the third part of the 〈◊〉 parts of the Land in eight parts to be divided; 〈◊〉 after the Issue for the six found for the Demanda●● she shall have Judgement to recover the third part 〈◊〉 the six parts of the same Lands in eight parts to 〈◊〉 divided. A ●●ndment of ●gnment of Dower. In Longvil's Case Trin. 16 Car. 2. B. R. It 〈◊〉 moved for amendment of the Assignment of Dow●● being under value, and on refusal of an equal division proffered by the Daughter to him, with libe● to choose which two parts he would for the H● which the Court ordered, and committed the Sh● for taking 60 l. of the Lady Longvil to execute 〈◊〉 Writ of Execution and Information against him. Rationabili parte bonorum according to the Cust●● of London. H. C. sues E. C. Executrix of her husband, 〈◊〉 declares by Bill original in nature of Debt pro u● nabili parte bonorum in the Court of the Ma● and Aldermen of London, and allegeth the Custo● of London to be, that quando Civis & liber h●● de London ' dies his Goods over his Debts and Funeral ought to be divided in three parts, and th● the wife of the Testator ought to have one pa● the Executors the second part to discharge Le●cies, and to dispose at their discretion, and the C●dren of the Testator, which were not sufficient provided for in his Life time, a third part; and th● the Custom is that the Plaintiff in this Case ought to bring into Court a true Inventory, and sue before the Mayor and Aldermen, and that she here had brought an Inventory of 18000 l. and demands a third part (6000 l.) of the Executor. And this was removed to the Common Pleas by Writ of Privilege: And Richardson said, that the Plaintiff might declare in London without alleging the Custom, for that the Custom is well known there; and a Procedendo was granted, Lit. Rep. 324. Honora Cason's Case. CHAP. XII. Of Jointures. The Nature and Reason of the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. of Jointures. Construction of the said Act relating thereunto. What Estates are Jointures within the said Statute or not. What is a good Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. and what Alienation by the Wife is within that Statute, illustrated in several adjudged Cases. What Agreement or Waver a Woman may make as to her Jointure; and what shall amount to an Agreement or Refusal of Plead. As for the Nature and Reason of Jointures. IT was a Rule at Common Law, that a Right or Title which any had to any Lands or Tenements of any Estate of Inheritance or Freehold might not be barred by acceptance of any Waver of collateral satisfaction or recompense; and this was the reason that no collateral recompense (as a Jointure) made to the wife in satisfaction of her Dower was any Bar of Dower at Common Law. Now before the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. (of Us● the greatest part of the Lands in England was conveyed to divers persons to Uses; and forasmuch 〈◊〉 wife was not dowable of Uses, her Father or Frie●● procured the husband to take an Estate of his Feo●● or others seized to his use to him and his wife ●●fore or after Marriage for their Lives or in Tail, a complete Provision for the wife after the death the husband. Than comes the Statute of 27 H which transfers the Possession and Estate of the la● to the use by which the husbands were seized accordingly, and by consequence, if other Provi●● had not been made, the wives would have t●● Dowers as well as their Jointures; and for this Branches concerning Jointures were added to 〈◊〉 said Statute of 27 H. 8. The Act expresseth plainly five Forms of 〈◊〉 Limitation of Jointures: As, 1. To the Baron and Feme and too the Heirs of 〈◊〉 husband. 2. To the Baron and Feme, and to the Heirs their two Bodies. 3. To the Baron and Feme, and to the Hei● the Body of one of them. 4. To the husband and wife for their Lives 5. To the husband and wife for the Life of wife. But there are other Estates which are within 〈◊〉 said Statute, though not mentioned; and that 〈◊〉 now under consideration. What Estates are Jointures within the Stat●● 27 H. 8. or not; or what is a good Jointure. 1. In respect of the Estate limited. 2. In respect of the manner and frame of the C●veyance. 3. In respect of the Consideration. Besides these five Examples above mentioned, there are other Estates, that are not within the Statute: As, When an Estate is limited to a Man for Life, the Remainder to the woman for Life; tho' the woman hath no joint Estate with her husband, yet this Estate is as beneficial for her; and so was Ashton's Case, Dyer 228. Ashton in performance of Marriage covenants between his Son and one A. makes a Feoffment to the use of A. for Life for her Jointure, and after they entermarry, the husband dies, this was a Jointure within the intent of the Act, though all the Examples in the Act are of a Joint-Estate. But the Estate, It must be immediate after the Husband's death in Creation. which by force of this Act shall be in lieu and Bar of Dower, aught by the Limitation to take effect after the husband's death immediately; and therefore if the husband makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself for Life, and after to the use of B. for his Life, and after to the use of his wife for her Jointure, this is not within the Act although B. dies before the husband; for a Jointure must be an immediate Estate after the husband's death in Creation; and shall not be aided by any event subsequent, or by matter ex post facto. It was a Case put to my Lord Chief Justice Bridgman, when he was called up to be Chief Justice: A Man makes a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself for Life, Remainder to the use of his second Son for Life, and to the use of such woman as he shall marry, the Remainder to the Heirs of his second Son; the Father dies, the second Son takes wife and dies, it is no good Jointure, and the wife may bring her Dower; for the Estate which was limited to the wife ought to be considered as it was at the time of the Creation of the Use; and at the time of the Creation it cannot be said to be a Jointure within the Statute, because the husband by possibility might have died before the Father, and than the wife should not have an immediate Estate, Sid. p. 34. 5 Co. 2. Winch 33. In some Cases though the wife hath immediately Freehold after her husband's decease, yet 'tis not a good Jointure to bar Dower; as if a Man make a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself for Life, th● Remainder to his Executors for years, the Remainder to his wife for her Jointure, this is no good Jointure, Winch 33. The Duke of Somerset purchased Lands to hi● and the Duchess, his wife, and to the Heirs Ma●● of their two Bodies, this is a good Jointure within the intent of the Act, Dyer 96. It must be an Estate for the Life of the Wife. It must be an Estate for Life of the wife; and a●● Estate to the wife for Life upon a Condition is 〈◊〉 good Jointure within the Act, if the wife after the death of the husband accept it; for it was a g●●● that a Jointure is a competent Livelihood of F●●●hold for a woman to take effect presently after the death of the husband for the Life of the wife, if 〈◊〉 herself be not the cause of the determination or forfeiture of it. And therefore if the husband make a Feoffment to the use of his wife pur altar 〈◊〉 for her Jointure, this is not within the Act, a●● this may determine during her Life without any d●fault in her. But if a Man make a Feoffment in F●● to the use of himself for Life, and after to the use 〈◊〉 his wife, durante viduitate, this is an Estate 〈◊〉 Life to her, if she will, and therefore it's a goo● Jointure within the Act. Acceptance of a conditional Estate for a Jointure, a good Bar of Dower. And if the Condition bind her to any unreasonable thing, she may wa● it, but when after the death of her husband 〈◊〉 enters and accepts the conditional Estate for her Jo●●ture she is barred of her Dower, 4 Co. 3. An Estate in Fee-simple conveyed to the wife 〈◊〉 her Jointure, and in satisfaction of her Dower is 〈◊〉 Jointure within the Equity of the Act of 27 H. 〈◊〉 for this is a competent Livelihood for the wife of 〈◊〉 Estate of Freehold to take effect presently after the death of the husband for all her Life and more; but it is not a Jointure within 11 H. 7. c. 10. which restrains the Alienation of women, and to restrain an Estate in Fee-simple that it may not be aliened, is against a Rule in Law, and clearly out of the intention of the Act, 4 Co. 3. b. What is a good Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. cap. 10. and what Alienation by the Wife is within that Statute. W. Bertram seized in Fee having three Daughters, by Indenture between him and R. B. in consideration of 400 l. paid by the said R. B. and in consideration of a Marriage had between R. B. Son and Heir of the said R. B. and Margaret, eldest Daughter of the said W. Bertram, and the preferment of the Blood of the Bertrams covenanted to stand seized to the use of Robert the Son, and the said Margaret his wife, and the Heirs of her Body; and for default of such Issue to the use of his other Daughters and their Issues, the Remainder to the Heirs of the said W. Bertram; the husband dies having no Issue, and Margaret by Fine conveyed it to the Defendant, on whom he reentered as a Forfeiture within 11 H. 7. and it was resolved she was not a Jointress within that Statute notwithstanding the 400 l. paid by R. B. the Father; for the Land moved from W. B. the wife's Father, and the Preferment of the Blood of the Bertrams shows the intent that the husband's Heirs should not be preferred, but the wives; The meaning of the Act of 11 H. 7. for the meaning of the makers of that Law was only to disenable women, who have any Estate in Dower, or for Life, or in Tail jointly with their husbands, or only to themselves of the Inheritance or purchase of their husbands, or given to them by the Ancestors of their husbands, or other persons seized to the use of such husbands, or their Ancestors, when they became sole, or with any after taken husband from making such Alienations, whereby the Heirs of such husband's might, and before making of that Law, were frequently disinherited. But in this Case the Advancement is by the Ancestors of the wife, and is not of the Purchase of the husband or his Ancestors, nor assured by the husband or his Ancestors, Cro. Car. 244. C●●land and Pyot, Jones Rep. 254. Fine and tender for 1000 years is within the Statute. Feme Tenant in Tail within the Statute of 〈◊〉 H. 7. accepted a Fine sur Cognisance de droit c●●ceo, etc. and by the same Fine rendered the Land 〈◊〉 the Conisor for 1000 years, this is within the Statute, 3 Leon. 78. Barker and Taylor. If a woman hath Title of Dower, if before 〈◊〉 be endowed she will enter and levy a Fine, the fa●● is within the said Statute, and yet she is not Tena●● in Dower, 3 Leon. 78. Barker and Taylor. The Bishop of Exeter in consideration of faithful Service done by N. T. for many years past, gi●●● Lands to N. T. and Sibyl his Cousin in Tail, and 〈◊〉 Marriage was than intended to be solemnised ●●tween the said N. and Sibyl, which after was solemnised; they had Issue, N. dies, Sibyl ma●● again, she and her second husband alien the La●● Per Curiam, Gift by the Husband or any Ancestor of the Husband. This was no Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. for it was not a Gift by the h●●band nor any Ancestor of the husband; and the consideration of Service is no such Purchase as the L●● intends, for it is not so valuable, but a voluntary Gift of the said Bishop, Cro. Jac. 1.173. Ward 〈◊〉 Walthew, Yelv. 101. 1 Brownl. 137. If it be no prejudice to the Heir of the Husband it is not deins le Statute. Where the Land moves from the husband but 〈◊〉 the Remainder of the Estate is to a Stranger, so as could be no prejudice to the Heir of the husbies the Alienation of the wife is no Forfeiture, as C● Eliz. 224. Mich. 28 & 29 Eliz. in Laughter and Humfries Case it was agreed, that an Estate in Fee made by the husband to the wife is not a Jointure within 11 H. 7. for that any collateral Heir might inherit it, and the Statute was made for the benefit of the Issues between them. The Case was. A Man and a Woman being joint-tenants in Fee of a Manor intermarried, and levied a Fine thereof to a Stranger, who rendered it to them in Tail; they have Issue three Daughters, the Baron dies, the Feme takes a second husband, and they levy a Fine, and retake it in special Tail; the Feme dies sans Issue by the second husband, the Daughter enters on Lessee for years of the second husband and distrained a Copyholder for Rent. And it was a Question whether the first Estate Tail was within the Statute of 11 H. 7. Per Curiam, For one Moiety it was, but for the other Moiety it was not. Covenant to stand seized to the use of my Brother and his wife for their Lives, What Estate shall be said given by the Ancestor. it is a Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. as given by the Ancestor of the husband, and it is within the words of 27 H. 8. which excludes Dower, Plowd. 307. a. D. R. seized in Fee of 20 l. per annum Lands, having only two Daughters, covenants with J. K. in consideration of a Marriage between the said J. K. and his Daughter M. and in consideration of 115 l. to be paid by J. K. to assure the said Lands to the use of himself for Life, and after to the use of J. K. and M. and the Heirs of their two Bodies, the Remainder to the Heirs of the Body of Margaret, the Remainder to A. in Fee; the Marriage took effect, J. K. dies, M. takes a second husband, and they alien by Fine. Andrew the Heir of the Body of J. K. and M. enters. Per Curiam, This is not a Jointure within the Statute of 11 H. 7. because the Land moved from the wife's Father, and her Advancement in Marriage is intended the Cause of the Gift, and not the Money, Cro. Jac. 624. Kinaston and Lloid, Jones Rep. p. 13. Though a consideration of Marriage be joined with a consideration of Money, yet 'tis a Jointure within the Statute. But a Conveyance by the husband or his Ancestor in consideration of a Marriage, though it be joined with a consideration of Money, yet is a Jointure within the Statute. R. G. seized in Fee by Indenture covenants with R. B. as well in consideration of 200 l. paid by R. B. and in consideration of a Marriage between L. his only Son, and Anne the Daughter of R. B. to convey the Land to the use of the said L. and Anne, and the Heirs of the Body of the said Anne to be begotten, and to his right Heirs. The Marriage takes effect, the Father dies before Assurance, L. makes the Assurance, and after they have Issue R. G. L. and his wife alien by Fine, R. the Son enters as a Forfeiture, this is a Jointure within 11 H. 7. But than the Question was, this being a Jointure within the Statute, whether the Alienation by the Feme with the first husband, who limited it, be a Forfeiture? Per Curiam. It's no Forfeiture neither within the Words, nor within the Intent of the Statute; not within the Words, for it is, the woman being sole or with any after taken husband; aliter, had it been a Conveyance by the Father: it is not within the Intent because the husband joined in the Alienation, and the Statute did not intent but to provide that disinherison should not be done to the Heirs of the Husband, Cro. Jac. 474. Kinkman and Tompson. Fine and Tender. Baron and Feme seized in Fee Tail in the Right of the wife, they join in a Fine and have it rendered back to them and the Heirs of their Bodies engendered: The Baron dies, the Feme and her second husband alien; they may, and the Heir of the first husband cannot enter; for though it is within the Letter yet it is not within the Equity of 11 H. 7. Ploughed. Eyston and Studd. Jones 253. Jenkins and Young. B. deviseth Lands to his wife in Tail, Remainder over and dies, the wife with the second husband aliens by Fine and dies, this is within the Words, but not within the Intent of the Statute; Inheritance must be limited to the Husband and his Heirs. for the Statute intends only of Lands given for the Advancement of the wife, and the Remainder of the Lands is limited to a Stranger, and so shall not be intended to be limited for a Jointure, where no Inheritance is limited to the husband and his Heirs, so that the Entry of the Heir is not lawful, Cro. Eliz p. 2. Fisher and Pitful, 1 Leon. 261, 262. mesme Case. The husband seized of Lands in jure uxoris, they levy a Fine, Rend in lieu of the Land. the Conisee grants a Rent to them in Tail, the husband hath Issue and dies, the wife aliens the Rent, it's out of the Statute of 11 H. 7. for the Rent comes in lieu of the Land, Cro. Eliz. p. 2. cited in Foster's Case. Baron and Feme being Tenants in Tail upon the Purchase of the husband, they have Issue two Sons, Feoffment of the Feme, tho' to him who had the Reversion in Fee, is a Forfeiture. the husband makes a Feoffment to the use of himself for Life, the Remainder to the wife for her Life, the Remainder to the second Son, and his Heirs; the husband dies, the wife enters and makes a Feoffment to the Issue of the second Son, the eldest Son may enter, for it is a Forfeiture within the Statute of 11 H. 7. and this Feoffment by the Feme, though it be to him who had the Reversion in Fee, is a Forfeiture within the Statute, Sid. p. 63. Jones and Philpot. A Man and a Woman being Jointenants in Fee of a Manor intermarried, and after levied a Fine thereof to a Stranger, who rendered it to them in Tail; they have Issue a Daughter, the Baron dies, the Feme takes a second husband, and they levy a Fine, the Remainder to them in Tail special. Per Curiam, For the one Moiety it is a Forfeiture within the Statute of 11 H. 7. and for the other, not, Cro. Eliz. 524. Laughter and Humfries. Fine and Tender. A woman Tenant in Tail within the Statute of 11 H. 7. accepted a Fine sur Cognisance de droit come ceo, and by the same Fine rendered the Land back to the Cognisor for 1000 years, this is within the Statute; for this is as mischievous as a Discontinuance, Godbolt 6. 3 Co. Sir George Brown's Case. Moor 222. 2 Leon. 168. Vide supra Barker and Tailor's Case. Of Estates devised by William. Some have been of Opinion, that no Estate devised by Will can be a Jointure within 27 H. 8. for every Jointure by that Act is intended to be made before or during the Coverture; but a Devise takes effect after the death of the husband: But in Leak and Randal's Case, Mich. 38 & 39 Eliz. it was adjudged contra, with this difference. Inasmuch as a Devise imports a Consideration in itself, and therefore a Devise may not be averred to be to the use of another than the Devisee, unless it be expressed in the Will, not more may a Devise be averred to be for a Jointure unless it be expressed in the William. But if a Man device Lands to his wife for term of her Life, or in Tail, etc. for her Jointure and in satisfaction of her Dower, this is a Jointure within the 27 H. 8. for this is within the Equity of the said Act, 4 Co. Vernon's Case. In Vernon's Case Lands were settled on J. S. and J. B. and their Heirs to the use of himself for Life, and after his decease to the use of his wife for Life etc. and avers in pleading, that the said Estate limited to the wife was for her Jointure, but it was upon Condition that she should perform his Will, yet it may be averred to be for her Jointure, for one Consideration may well stand with another, and although it be not expressed in the Deed, yet it may be averred. Of the Feme's waving or agreeing to her Jointure. If a Jointure be made to the wife before Coverture, after the death of the husband; the wife may not wave it and take her Dower, as she may do by a Jointure made during the Coverture: And If Lands are conveyed to a woman before Marriage for part of her Jointure, and after Marriage more Land is conveyed to her for her full Jointure, and in satisfaction of all her Dower, and after the husband dies; in this Case, if the woman waves the Land conveyed to her use after Marriage, she shall have the Land conveyed to her before Coverture, and her Dower also in the residue; for Land conveyed to the wife for part of her Jointure, or in satisfaction for part of her Dower is no Bar for the incertainty of any Dower. If a woman enter and agreed to her Jointure made after Marriage, than she cannot wave it: But If she bring a Writ of Dower and had Judgement of a third part, she hath estopt and concluded herself to claim any Estate; for by this she hath affirmed herself to have but a Title of Dower. Acceptance of Dower by Deed indented shall conclude the wife of her Right. By bringing her Writ of Dower of the Residue she hath tacitly affirmed that she had not agreed to any Jointure made to her. Pleading. In a Writ of Dower the Tenant pleads, B. being seized in Fee made a Feoffment to the use of himself for Life, and to Dorothy his wife for Life for her Jointure, the Remainder over to a Stranger, and Dorothy held in by Survivor claiming the said Estate. The Demandant replied, That before the said Feoffment, the said B. covenanted to stand seise● of the same Lands to the use of himself in Tail, th● Remainder to his wife for Life, the Remainder 〈◊〉 a Stranger in Tail, and afterwards made the Feoffment prout, and than died sans Issue, and afterwards she entered by the Indenture and was seise● by Remitter: To which the Tenant rejoins tha● she held it claiming her Estate by the Feoffment i● Jointure, and demands Judgement whether against that Claim she should be remitted. The one Question was, whether the rejoinder be good without traversing the Entail claimed in the first Estate, alleged in the Replication, or whether the Demandant ought to have taken a Traverse, because the Tenant i● Bar pleads an Entry claiming that Estate by the Feoffment. Per Curiam. The Tenant ought to have taken a Traverse to the matter alleged in the Replication, Traverse. and this is Matter of Substance; and for the Law, per Curiam, she shall be remitted for the benefit of him in Remainder, and nolens volens she is in of her first Estate, and that it is not any Jointure because it was to begin after an Estate Ta●● Cr. Jac. 489. Hob. 71. Shirley and Wood She must pled specially that the Jointure was made during Coverture to have her Dower. The Statute of Uses hath a general purview, th●● Jointures made for wives without distinguishing before or after Coverture shall bar Dower, and the● comes with a Proviso, that if it be made during Coverture she may refuse it and take her Dowe● which is a kind of remedy provided for her out o● the generalty of the Law, and therefore must b● pleaded by her, Hob. 71. Where the Tenant pleaded a Jointure made to the Demandant and acceptance of it after the husband 〈◊〉 death, the Demandant may pled a Refusal after the death of the husband without traversing the Acceptance; for it was not material of her part to pled but that must rise of the part of the Refuser, H●bart 104. CHAP. XIII. Of Fines and Recoveries. Of a Fine levied by a Feme Covert as a Feme sole, and the Operation of it. The reason why a Feme Covert shall be barred by the Fine. The Operation of a Fine by Baron and Feme illustrated by several Cases of Commissioners taking a Fine of a Feme Covert Infant. Of the time of acknowledgement where a Feme Covert shall be examined or not. Where a Feme Covert shall be barred by Fine and Non-claim. Of the Declaration of Uses by a Feme Covert. Of a Fine levied to Baron and Feme, and the Operation of it. Of a Common Recovery. How a Feme Covert may be Tenant to a Praecipe. A Feme Covert barred by a Common Recovery. Whether a Feme Covert in passing a Recovery ought to be examined privately. Recovery by Baron and Feme within Age and Appearance by Attorney, if it be Error. Of Recovery by default. Fines levied by a Feme Covert, as a Feme sole, and the Operation of them. THough by the Law of Nature the wife is put under the Obedience of her husband, The Reason why a Feme Covert is bound by her Fine. and Nature hath submitted her Will to his, and therefore will not bind her by her Acts joining with her husband, because they are judged his Acts and not hers, in that she wants a ; yet the Law of the Land for necessity sake of Commerce, and the like, by a Law of Policy makes bold with this Law of Nature in a special kind; and therefore allows a Fine levied by the Baron a● Feme, because she is examined of her judicially by an authentic Person trusted by the La● and the King's Writ, and so taken in a sort as a s● woman; so also when she comes in by Receipt. Fine levied by a Feme Covert, as a Feme sole, her Husband shall defeat it. If a woman Covert levy a Fine alone, as a Fe● sole, this shall bind her by the reason before give● but her husband may defeat it for himself and h● too; but she shall not be received to say she w●● covert, though her husband shall; and he may ●●ter and restore the Land to himself and his wife both Hob. 225. 7 Co. 8. Countess of Bedford's Case. But she shall not. But if a Feme Covert levy a Fine, as a Feme 〈◊〉 if her husband die she shall not defeat it, but the husband may defeat it during his Life, Stiles 254. 〈◊〉 Haywood and William's Case. So is 7 H. 4.23. 〈◊〉 a Feme Covert levy a Fine, as a Feme sole, if 〈◊〉 husband defeat it not, this shall bind her and h● Heirs for ever. If a Feme Covert take a sec●●● husband and they two levy a Fine, this shall bi●● her and her Heirs for ever, 7 H. 4. 24. 9 H. 4.23. 9 H. 6.34. But in both these Cases the husband may defeat it, and if the husband avoid the F●● this shall avoid the Fine against the wife and he Heirs perpetually. If a woman levy a Fine by the name of A. wi●● of J. S. this Fine is merely voided, Quia constat per 〈◊〉 Record, that she is Covert, Sid. 122. One with another Man's Wife levies a Fine, the Court will not stay it. If J. S. with the wife of another levies a Fi●● by the name of J. S. and Jane his wife of the inheritance of the Feme, and he who is the husband's comes into Court and shows the matter, and pra●● to stay the Fine, yet the Court shall not stay it for the Court shall not determine the Loyalty 〈◊〉 Matrimony; and if the truth be so, that she is n● the wife of J. S. it shall not hurt the husband, Tr● 7 Jac. B. Keblethwait and Ward. The Court would not stop a Fine taken of a Feme Covert when she was dead, 1 Rolls Abr. 114. cited 2 Ventr. 48. If the husband seized in Tail of Land for valuable Consideration bargain and cell this to another in Fee, and covenant, that he and his wife shall levy a Fine for better assurance; and it is agreed that 30 l. parcel of the Consideration shall be paid to the husband upon the Cognizance of the Fine by the Baron and Feme; Fine acknowledged by Baron and Feme before a Judge in the Circuit, and on Bargain and Sale, and Baron died before the Term the Vendee has no remedy in Equity. and after they acknowledge a Fine before the Judge in the Circuit, and the 30 l. is paid and received by the wife, the husband being sick in bed, and the husband dies before the Term, and upon this the wife stays the passing of the Fine, and after brought a Writ of Dower; the Bargainee shall not have any remedy in Equity against the Dower, for that it is against a Maxim in Law, that a Feme Covert shall be bound without a Fine, 1 Rolls Abr. 375. Holy and Lunn. But the Court agreed, if the wife had any personal Estate, as Executrix or Administratrix to her husband, she shall be liable for this; and thereupon a Commission was granted to inquire of Assets'. The Operation of a Fine by Baron and Feme. When Baron and Feme join in a Fine of Lands, it shall be intended the Inheritance of the wife, if the contrary be not showed. Baron and Feme are Tenants in Tail, as Lands are given to J. B. and Eliz. his wife, and to the Heirs of their two Bodies begotten, the Remainder in Fee to the said J. B. J. N. levied a Fine thereof with Proclamations come ceo, etc. J. N. dies; after his death and within five years Eliz. enters enterclaiming her Estate. It was adjudged that the Entry of Elizabeth was lawful by the Act of 32 H. 8. The Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 28. explained. cap. 28. whereby it is enacted, That no Fine, Feoffment or other Acts, etc. or done by the husband only of any Lands, etc. being the Freehold or Inheritance of his wife during the Coverture between them shall in any wise be or make any Discontinuance thereof, or be prejudicial or hurtful to the said wife or her Heirs, etc. Though the Words of the Act be, The Freehold or Inheritance of the wife, and the Lands in this Case were the Freehold and Inheritance of the husband as well as the wife, yet because it was in equal mischief it was adjudged to be within the Statute, 2 Inst. 681. So is Hob. 257, 259. If Baron and Feme be Tenants in special Tail the Baron's Fine is a clear Bar to the Issue by 32 H. 8. though the wife may enter, if she survive, and though the wife be remitted, if any Estate be limited to her upo● her husband's Fine; and when the wife enters upo● the Conisee she is remitted to her own Entail, but it is not to be aliened nor descend; descend it ca●not, because the husband's Fine bars; and aliened it cannot be, because it was aliened before, Vide more in Hobart, Duncomb and Wingfield's Case. Baron and Feme Tenants in special Tail, Baron levies a Fine, quid operatur. If Baron and Feme be Tenants in special Tail and the Baron only levy a Fine, the Femes Esta●● Tail is only turned to a possibility, and only reducible by Entry, if she survive, Hob. 257, 25● When the Baron dies the Feme by her Entry becomes Tenant in Tail again, and not Tenant in Ta●● after possibility of Issue extinct, though the Estate Tail cannot descend. R. E. seized in Fee levied a Fine to the use 〈◊〉 himself for Life, and after to the use of such a wi● as he shall marry, and shall survive him; he and his wife levy a Fine to a Stranger; Feme by Fine bars herself of a possibility. the Baron di● the Feme survives, she by her Fine hath barred h●● possibility by Estoppel, Moor 557. Wells and Fen●● contra. Cro. Eliz. mesme Case. If Baron and Feme acknowledge their Right to another by Fine and Release, and the wife only oblige her and her Heirs to warranty, this is good, 44 Ed. 3.36. b. If Baron and Feme levy a Fine (of Lands whereof they are seized jure uxoris) come ceo, etc.) this shall not be received with Warranty by them and the Heirs of the husband; Warranty. but it shall be received by them and the Heirs of the wife, because it is the Inheritance of the wife, 44 E. 3. 14. Lessee for Life, and after the Reversion is granted by Fine to Baron and Feme, and to the Heirs of their Bodies, the Remainder in Fee to the Baron, and the Baron and Feme by Fine release all their Right to the Lessee, and after they die sans Issue, Release. this is a good enlargement of the Estate of the Lessee, and this shall bar the collateral Heirs of the Baron, 30 E. 3. 4. b. A. Feme sole, and B. Jointenants for Life, Fine enure as a Release. A. takes husband, and A. and her husband levy a Fine to B. by which A. and her husband concedunt the Land, & totum, etc. & quicquid, etc. to B. and his Assigns for ●he Life of A. and this with Warranty, and after B. dies during the Life of A. in this case he in Reversion may enter, for that this Fine enures as a Release to B. Trin. 22 Jac. B. R. Eustace and Scawen. The Lessor may enter into the whole, and there shall be no Occupant of any part, because this Fine enures as a Release, not by Mitter l'estate but by way of Extinguishment. Baron and Feme by Fine grant Land to A. for 99 years, if he so long live, Feme Covert by Warranty in a Fine sur concessit is bound in an Action of Covenant. and they by the same Fine warrant the Lands to A. contra omnes homines toto termino praedicto; the Baron dies: Per Curiam in Wotton and Field's Case, a good Action of Covenant lies against the wife upon her Warranty in the Fine, although she was Covert Baron: For when the Warranty is only annexed to an Estate for years, it is only a Covenant for Damages in the person● Lien, which shall bind them and make them responsible for damages, as well as where such Warranty 〈◊〉 annexed to the Freehold, they shall be bound to warrant the Land, and to answer in value of their o● proper Lands, 2 Sand. 180. Wotton and Helena, M● Rep. What Fine is no Bar to her Election of Dower. The husband after Marriage assured to the wife 〈◊〉 Jointure, they both levied a Fine sur conisance 〈◊〉 droit come ceo & que il ad etc. of the Gift of 〈◊〉 husband; this is not any Bar to the wife of 〈◊〉 Dower, for the Election is not given to the 〈◊〉 to claim her Jointure until the death of the husband's Dyer 358. W. and his wife were seized of Lands to them 〈◊〉 the Heirs of W. they by Indenture bargain and 〈◊〉 to P. in Fee, wherein was a Proviso, that if W. 〈◊〉 his wife, or the Heirs of W. pay 100 l. to P. 〈◊〉 such a day, that than it should be lawful for th●● and the Heirs of W. to enter, and to rehave and 〈◊〉 joy, etc. and that than (after such payment) 〈◊〉 Indenture and all other Fines and Assurances to 〈◊〉 passed between the said parties, Construction. should be to 〈◊〉 use of W. and his Heirs (leaving out the wife) 〈◊〉 and his wife within seven years levied a Fine to 〈◊〉 W. died, his wife paid the 100 l. Per Curiam 〈◊〉 Feme shall have the Estate for her Life; so is 〈◊〉 first part, and the other Clause is not repugns but may stand together, Cro. Eliz. 744. South● and Manors. Exchange. Baron seized of Lands in the right of his 〈◊〉 the Baron and Feme both joined in Exchange 〈◊〉 a Stranger for other Lands, which Exchange 〈◊〉 executed; the Baron and Feme seized of the L● taken in Exchange aliened the same by Fine, 〈◊〉 the wife after the death of her husband may 〈◊〉 into her own Land notwithstanding that Fine, 1 L● 285. A. makes an Estate to Friends in Trust to the use of his wife to commence after his death, Fine by the Wife docks a Trust. the wife joins in a Fine with her husband of the Land leased in Trust; this Fine shall dock the Trust, and there being an Extent upon the Land leased, this Trust shall not prevent the Extent by reason of the Fine. A Fine is levied by Baron and Feme, Baron and Feme levies a Fine, the Feme being within age, the whole Fine shall be reversed, and not only quoad uxorem. the Feme being within Age, and in Error brought the Fine is reversed for the Nonage of his wife. The Question was in Worsley and Charnock's Case, if the Fine should be utterly reversed, or should be reversed only as to the wife, and should stand good against the husband; and two great Precedents were cited, the one contrary to the other; they who argued that the Fine should be reversed for the whole, cited Ely and Ford's Case, H. 8. A Fine was levied between R. Ely Plaintiff, and N. Ford, and Jane his wife, Defendants; the wife being within age, and Judgement was given Quod finis praedict. adnulletur & pro nullo penitus habeatur, and that the Baron and Feme should be restored; and thereupon a Writ issued to the Custos Brevium to bring into Court the Foot of the Fine, and it was presently canceled in Court. The other Precedent contrary was 7 Eliz. Baron and Feme levied a Fine, the husband died the wife being within Age; the wife took another husband and they brought a Writ of Error, and the wife by Inspection was adjudged within Age, and the Fine was reversed as to her and her Heirs only. But indeed in this Case the second husband was a Stranger to the Fine, and so it might seem absurd to reverse it as to him; but in the principal Case it was adjudged, that the Fine should be reversed as to both; for the whole Estate moved from the wife and all passed out of her, and Judgement was given Quod Finis praedict. reversetur. And by Gawdy, We cannot by this Reversal make the Conisee to have a particular Estate during the Life of the wife, ideo penitus reversetur, 1 Leon. 114. Worsley and Charnock. 2 Co. 77. cited in the Lord Cromwel's Case. Feme Covert Infant levied a Fine, in Error the Court will not permit the Husband to disavow the Guardian. A Feme Covert Infant levied a Fine, and he● Friends got a Writ of Error in her and her husband's name, and the Court would not suffer her husband to release. But Hales, I cannot see how that ca● be avoided: But he said, he had known in suc● Case, that the Court would not permit the husband's to disavow the Guardian which they admitted fo● his wife, 1 Ventr. 209. 3 Keb. 14. in Marshal an● Lady Prettyman's Case. 1 Mar. Dyer 89. b. Verny's Case. A Fine was levied by a Feme Covert, Alleged that the Feme died before the Teste of the Certificate. who died before Certificate and Ingrossment; and the Fine afterwards certif●● and alleged Error in Fait, that the woman di●● before the Teste of the Dedimus, whereas th● Judge had certified the Concord taken after; a●● this was not admitted to be questioned after the Certificate. The Court to judge of the Infancy of a Feme Covert, and not the Jury. Feme Covert levied a Fine within Age; she wa● inspected by the Court, and ajudged within Age▪ whereupon a Scire Facias was issued to the Te●tenants, who pleaded she was of full Age at the ti●● of the Fine levied; upon which Plea Issue was joined and a Trial had at the Assizes, and Verdict p●● Quer. who came into Court and now prayed Judgement. Per Glyn. The Court is to judge of her ●fancy, and not the Jury; and though the Procee●ings are not duly had, yet they do no hurt, and t● Fine was reversed, Styles 472. Videan and Fletche● Entering the Kings-silver. If Baron and Feme levy a Fine, and the Conisan● is taken six days before Term. Pasch. 7 Jac. as the Writ of Covenant is returnable quindena Pasc● which was the third day of May, and the husband's dies the ninth of May, the Kings-silver not bei● entered; yet if upon Examination it appeareth th● the Clerk had entered the Kings-silver in Paper bef● any Exception taken to it, and that now he h● entered the Kings-silver on the back of the Writ of Covenant as it ought to be, the Fine shall not be stayed, Pasch. 7 Jac. B. Boothes' Case: For when this is entered it shall have relation to the Writ of Covenant. Farmer and his wife acknowledged a Note of a Fine 26 March by Dedimus Potestatem, and the wife died the 27th of the same Month; the 28th day Composition was made in the Alienation Office on a Writ of Covenant returnable in Hillary Term before; and the Kings-silver was entered in the Office of the Kings-silver as of the same Hillary-Term, and so the Fine was passed and engrossed, and in Easter-Term the Heir of the wife moved against this Fine; but the Court resolved the Fine must stand, Hob. 330. Farmer's Case. Baron and Feme and a third person levied a Fine, Writ of Covenant against Baron and Feme, and in the Summons the Feme was left out, its Error. and the Writ of Covenant was against the Baron and Feme and the third person, and in the Summons the Feme was left out; for this Error the whole Fine shall be reversed; for being ill in part it is ill in all, Cro. Eliz. 290. Baxter and his wife against Atonating. If Baron and Feme are bound to levy a Fine upon reasonable Request, What shall be a reasonable Request to levy a Fine. if Request be made when the wife is enseint or sick, it is not reasonable; and the Request to the husband alone is not good, Moore 124. Of Commissioners taking a Fine of a Feme Covert. Herbert Parrot's Case, A Feme Covert (his wife) at twenty years of Age levied a Fine before Commissioners in the Country, and the wife dies sans Issue; she had settled the Estate upon her and her husband, and the Heirs of their two Bodies: The Court was moved to set it aside, but they agreed they could not meddle with it; but if the wife had been alive and under Age, they might bring her in by Habeas Corpus, and inspect her, and set aside the Fine upon Motion, for perhaps the husband would not suffer the bringing of or proceeding in a Writ of Error. And the Commissioners in this Case were not fined, because they could not discern by the View whether she was of Age, she being twenty years old: But had it been apparent by Inspection, that she was within Age, than they ought to have been fined, 2 Ventr. p. 30. Mod. Rep. 246. But in Cavendishes Case, 1 Rol. Rep. 113. the Commissioners did perfectly know that the Feme Covert, who levied the Fine, was within Age; and for this cause every of them were fined, but the Fine stood good and no● reversed. Carrel's Case in Dyer 220. b. and 12 Co. 142. was A Feme Covert of nineteen years of Age acknowledged a Fine before Commissioners, several Judges being in Town, who might have examined her. She died on Friday Easter Week, but the Fine and Kings-silver was entered as of Hillary Term, four days before the wife's death: The original Writ of Covenant bore Date 15 Jan. Ret ' Craft. Pur. and the Dedimus Potestatem 18 Jan. Dyer saith thi● Fine was stopped the engrossing, for undue means i● gaining it, but in 11 Co. the Fine adjudged good. Where a Feme Covert shall be examined or not. A Feme Covert is not to be examined upon a● Fine, but when she and her husband pass some Estate or Interest, or make a Grant and Tender 〈◊〉 another, or release her Right by a Fine of Lands o● Tenements, 1 Inst. 353. The Examination of a Feme Covert ought to b● secret, and the effect is to examine her whether 〈◊〉 be content to levy a Fine of such Lands, naming them particularly and distinctly, and the Estate th● passeth by the Fine of her own voluntary free Wil● not by Threats, Menaces or any compulsory means; but where nothing is moved in the Fine, but only that the husband and wife do take an Estate by the Fine, this shall not conclude the wife, because in such case she shall not be examined. Against a Fine levied by herself a woman cannot be remitted, because she was thereupon examined. If a Fine be levied of Land to Baron and Feme, and the Baron and Feme grant and tender the Land, there the wife shall be examined, and the Examination must ever be upon the Writ, and therefore a Baron and Feme upon a Fine levied to them of Land cannot grant and tender out of the Land, because the Rent is not contained in the Writ, 2 Inst. 515. 8 H. 4. 8. b. If a Fine sur Grant & Tender be made to Baron and Feme, she shall not be examined; this is to be understood as the principal Case there, that there was not any Conisance by Baron and Feme, but only a Grant and Tender by the other. If a Fine sur Conisance de droit be levied to Baron and Feme rendering Rent, the Feme shall be examined, because she is to be charged with the Rent, 46 E. 3. 15. b. If a Fine upon Release be levied to Baron and Feme, she shall not be examined, because the Fine is not an Estoppel, but for her advantage, 3 H. 6. 42. So if a Fine sur Conisance de droit be levied to Baron and Feme, this shall not estop the wife to claim another Estate. Now a Fine, which passeth an Estate, ought not to be received if she be not examined; but if the Fine be received and recorded, the Feme Covert or her Heirs shall not be received to aver that she was not examined nor assented; for this should be against the Record of the Court, and tend to weaken the general Assurances of the Realm, 2 Inst. 515. Where a Feme Covert shall be barred by Fine and Non-Claim. Fine and Non-Claim of the wife's Land shall h●● the husband, who suffered five years to pass, and all claiming under him, and the wife herself during the Coverture, but the wife shall have a new five years after the death of the husband, Cro. Car. 200 Holme and Heyfield's Case. 4 H. 7. c. 24. Tenant for Life, the Remainder in Fee to a Feme Covert; the Tenant for Life levies a Fine, the husband dies, the wife takes another husband, the Tenant dies, the five years pass, the husband dies, th● wife is barred and is not remedied by the Statute of 32 H. 8. 28. Dyer 159. in Margin. And this neglect of the second husband shall be prejudicial to the wife, Whetstone and Wentworth. A Man seized of Lands in Fee taketh a wife, and after levies a Fine, and the Proclamations were made, and the five years pass in his Life, and he dies, and after his death other five years pass, and after the wife brought her Writ of Dower, she shall be barred, because the wife had Title by the Intermarriage. although it cannot be executed till after the dea●● of the husband; and because she had Title at the time of the Fine levied she shall be bound by Non-Claim for five years after her Title consummate, Moore 53. Declaration of Uses. Beckwith's Case settles this in these Resolutions 2 Co. If the husband alone declare the use of the Fin● levied by them both of the wife's Land; his Declation shall bind the wife, if her disassent doth not appear: Neither is it always necessary that the nam● of the wife should be set to the Indenture, which doth declare the Use. The wife hath Estate in the Land, and is not sui juris, the husband is sui juris, but he had no Estate in the Land, and therefore they differ in the Limitation of the Uses, all is voided. If the husband and wife cell the Land of the wife for Money by parol, and after levy a Fine to the Vendee, this shall bind the wife without other Writing, proving her assent. If Baron and Feme levy a Fine of the wife's Land, and an Indenture is written in the name of the Baron and Feme, whereby the Land is limited to certain Uses, and the husband only seal and deliver it, and the wife will not, but disagrees to it; this Limitation of the Baron shall not bind the wife, although the wife had not expressed her disagreement by any Deed or Limitation of other Uses, Mich. 15 Jac. B. R. Webb and Worfield. Of a Fine levied to Baron and Feme, and the Operation. Vide supra Tit. Examination of Feme Covert. Feme Covert is Tenant for Life, the Remainder in Fee to the Son, which she shall have, and he in Reversion before the Birth of the Son bargain and sells the Land, and levies a Fine of it to the Baron and Feme, the particular Estate of the wife is drowned in the Reversion, and the contingent Remainder is destroyed, 2 Sand. 386, 387, 388. Recovery. Common Recovery against Tenant in Tail and his wife having nothing shall bind the Entail, Plowd. 540. Ear and Snow, Hob. 27. And a Voucher may be by the Baron only upon a Release with Warranty to him and his wife, if the wife have nothing Hob. 27. Tenant for Life, the Remainder to Baron a●● Feme and their Heirs, the Baron and Feme suffer 〈◊〉 Recovery: The Question was, if the Heirs of th● wife are bound by this Recovery, because the Feme being Covert, it was conceived she was not Tena● to the Praecipe, because it appears not she was examined. Per Curiam. It is held Br. Abr. Recovery in value 27. Feme Covert is barred by a Common Recovery. It's prudential to examine a Feme Covert upon a Recovery, but not necessary and why. A Feme Covert is barred by a Common Recovey, and it is the common practice, 10 C● 43. And it is not necessary to examine a Feme Covert upon a Recovery, though it be prudential 〈◊〉 do it; though in a Fine it is otherwise, beca●●● there is no Recompense in Value; and the Feme here is Tenant to the Praecipe, and she shall be estopped to speak against the Recovery, for she joi●● in the Recovery with her husband, and here is 〈◊〉 default made by the Baron; and now the Record is perfect, and a thing contrary to it is not to be averred against it; but before the Record was perfect she might have pleaded; and the Recompense i● Value here shall go to the Heirs of the wife, and the Tenant for Life is also bound by this Recovery, and the Feme is privy to the Recovery. If a Stranger had been Tenant to the Praecipe, and the Baron and Feme had been vouched, the Feme had been bound and this is a stronger Case, Stiles 319. Locker and Palfryman. But it was the Opinion of Chief Justice Bridgman in B. C. Sid. 11. That a Feme Covert ought to be privately examined in a Commo● Recovery, but said, the practice was otherwise, bu● it was a fault, and aught to be corrected, yet the Recovery passed without Examination: And so is my Lord Coke's Opinion 10 Co. 45. in Portington's Case, That the wife had used to be examined upon a Recovery, and a Dedimus Petestate● granted to take her Examination upon the Conisance. Baron and Feme seized to them and the Heirs Males of the Body of the Baron, the Remainder in Tail to B. the Reversion to the right Heirs of the Baron; the Baron levies a Fine; the Conisee suffers a Recovery, and voucheth the Baron, The Baron only is vouched, Quid operatur. who voucheth the Common Vouchee: Per Curiam, this Recovery shall bind the Tail, because he comes in in privity of the Tail, 3 Co. 6. Cupledike's Case. The wife who had an Estate for Life with her husband was not vouched; and though the Estate of the wife is not recontinued, yet the husband, as Vourcher, shall be in Judgement of Law in Privity of the Estate Tail which he once had; and the Estate of the wife by the husband's Fine is put to a Right, so as the husband comes in as sole Tenant in Tail: Aliter, if the Baron and Feme are seized to them and the Heirs of their two Bodies with Remainders over. But An Estate is made to Baron and Feme, and to the Heirs of the Body of the husband, a Common Recovery is had against the Baron, who voucheth the common Vouchee; the Baron survives his wife and dies without Issue; this is not good to bar the Remainders, because at the time of the Recovery there were no Moieties between him and his wife; and the Baron had not power to sever the Jointure, and he, during the Life of his wife, is not seized by force of the Tail, so that the Praecipe being brought against him only, the Conveyance cannot for any part enure to the Estate Tail or to the Remainder; to all the Estate it cannot enure, because the wife had a joint Estate with him, who was no party to the Recovery; and for a Moiety it cannot be good, for there are no Moieties between Baron and Feme, 3 Co. 5. Owen and Morgan's Case. Bargainee a good Tenant to the Praecipe. If Baron seized in the Right of his wife for Life, the Remainder in Tail to B. the Remainder to C. and the husband bargains and sells the Land to another, against whom a Praecipe is brought, whe● voucheth him in Remainder, and so a Commo● Recovery passeth; this shall bind the Remainder although not the wife, because the Bargainee was a good Tenant to the Praecipe, 2 Rolls Abr. 394. Where Baron and Feme are vouched it shall b● intended to be in the Right of his wife, 20 H. 7. 1. b. And therefore in Grosvenor and Massye's Case, 1 Leon. 291. n. 318. Four husbands and their wife are vouched in a Recovery, and the Plaintiff brought his Writ of Error as Heir to one of the husbands he ought to have brought it as Heir to one of the wives. Baron and Feme suffer a Recovery as Vouchees, if it be a Forfeiture. In consideration of Marriage the Father enfeoff his Son, and a Feme sole in Fee-simple, who intermarry, this is not within the Statute 11 H. 7. they after grant the Land by Fine to the Father, who renders to them in special Tail, this is a Conveyance of each one for his Moiety to the Father, which Moieties they take divided by the Gift before Marriage, and than the Tender of all to them in sp●cial Tail; as to the Moiety of the Son, which ●e had by the Fine, the Gift of the Father to the So● and his wife is within the Statute of 11 H. 7. But 〈◊〉 to the Moiety, which the wife gives by the Fine, are which the Father renders in special Tail, this w●● not within the Statute. The Baron and Feme su●● a Recovery as Vouchees, this is a Forfeiture with●● the Statute of 11 H. 7. Moor 715. The Queen ar● Savage. The Wife in a Common Recovery, being within Age, aught to appear by Guardian. If a Common Recovery be suffered, and the Bar●● and Feme as in Right of the wife (the Feme bein● within age) are vouched, and they appear by Attorney and vouch over, and so a Common Recover is had, this is Error; for though the husband be 〈◊〉 full Age, yet the wife being within Age, she ought to appear by Guardian, Hill. 17 Jac. B. R. Holland and Lee. But saith Rolls, 1 Abr. 288. dubitatur. Dyer 290. 366. But no doubt is in the Case; for the appearance by a Feme Covert, in a Recovery, within Age by an Attorney, is Error; and though it may be objected, that the husband is of full Age, and therefore he may make Attorney for himself and his wife, the Law is not so; for the Rule is, that the husband cannot give away or loose the Inheritance of the wife; but it must be given or lost by herself or her own Act, and she ought to appear by Guardian notwithstanding the full Age of the husband, who is to be joined for Conformity with her, Sid. 322. Raby and Robinson. Dyer 290. 363. The Custom of London. A Recovery suffered by Baron and Feme of the Land of the Wife is as strong to bind the Right of the Feme Covert by the Custom of London, as a Fine at Common Law. Vide there such Custom as to Wales. Recovery by Default. If the Baron loose by Default the Fee-simple Lands of the wife, the wife had no Remedy but by a Writ of Right; but by the Statute of W. 2. c. 3. she shall have a Cui in vita. If a Recovery be had against Baron and Feme, Tenants for Life by Default, they may have a Quod ei deforceat, 2 Inst. 350. by Stat. W. 2. c. 4. and after his death she may have a Quod ei deforceat. CHAP. XIV. Attornment. What Act of the Husband or Wife shall amount t● an Attornment. Avowry for Rent out of th● Wife's Land in whose Name it ought to be. Wh●● and to what purposes a Feme Covert shall be sa● a Disseisoress without her proper Act or Entry▪ and where, and to what not. What Act of 〈◊〉 Husband shall be a Discontinuance of the La● of the Wife, and what not. What was a Discontinuance at the Common Law. Where a Descent cast during the Coverture shall toll the Entry of the Wife or not. I Have considered what alterations have been made by Intermarriage, as to Estates, Leases, Chattels, Actions, and what things of the wife accrue to the husband by the Intermarriage, and what Charges Acts or Forfeitures made by the husband bind the wife or not after his death. The next Reflection shall be briefly of such Titles, as concern Real Actions or Estates, as, Attornment, Dissesin, Remit and the like. If a Feme grant a Reversion to a Man in Fee and marry the Grantee, the Lessee attorns to th● husband, this is a good Attornment in Law to th● husband, 1 Inst. 320. If a Feme sole make a Lease for Life or Years, reserving Rend, and granteth the Reversion in Fee and taketh husband, this is a Countermand of th● Attornment, 1 Inst. 310. b. If there be Lord and Tenant, and the Tenant taketh a wife, and after the Lord grants the Service to the wife and her Heirs, and the husband accepteth the Deed, in this Case after the death of the husband the wife and her Heirs shall have the Services, etc. for by acceptance of the Deed by the husband, this is a good Attornment, etc. albeit during the Coverture the Services shall be put in suspense, Lit. Sect. 559. A Feme Covert is compellable to attorn, 1 Rolls Abr. 296. If the husband accept the Grant of a Reversion, this shall amount to an Attornment, 10 Co. 52. Lampet's Case. A Feme may be Attorney to deliver Seisin to her husband, and the husband to the wife, 1 Inst. 52. Avowry, Vide Rent. If the husband be seized of a Seignory in the Right of his wife, Conisance ought not to be made of Rent as Bailiff to the husband alone, but as Bailiff to them both, 12 R. 2. Avowry 88 Contra 14 H. 4. Avowry 198. If Lessee for years be, rendering Rend, Avowry to be made in the name of Baron and Feme. and the Reversion descend upon a Feme Covert, and after the Rent is arrear, and the Baron distrains, and the Lessee brought Replevin; the husband ought to avow in the name of himself and his wife, and not in the name of himself alone; for the Avowry is to be made according to the Reversion, which is in the wife, 1 Rolls Abr. 318. Wise and Bennet. In Replevin Def. ut Ballivus H. & A. uxoris ejus cognovit, etc. Quod ante, etc. Willielmus S. fuit seisitus de septem acris pasturae cum pertin. in D. unde locus est parcella in dominico suo ut de feodo & tenuit de praed. H. & A. ut de Manerio suo de D. in Com. praed. per fidelitatem & reddit. 3 d. ad Festum etc. Necnon per servitium fuct. sect. ad Curiam, & ● de quo quidem Manerio Quidam R. W. fuit seisit● in feodo, & sic seisitus per nomen, etc. per q●●●dam scriptum suum indentat. gerent. dat. tali 〈◊〉 & anno feoffavit quendum R. S. & praed ' A. t●●uxorem ejus de eodem Manerio habend ' & tene●● pro termino vitae naturalis ipsius A. ad quod quide● feoffamentum praed ' tenens postea & ante, etc. apud 〈◊〉 praed ' see iisdem R. S. attornavit Quorum pra●ter● idem R. & A. fuer ' seisiti de Manerio praed ' 〈◊〉 pertin ' in dominico suo etc. pro termino vitae ip●● A. Ipsisque sic seisit ' praed. R. obiit ac prae●● A. ipsum supervixit, & se tenuit intus ac fuit 〈◊〉 sola seisita in dominico suo ut de libero teneme● pro termino vitae suae. Et sic sesit ' percipit vir●● praed ' H. per quod, etc. de quibus servitiis f●● seisit ' per manus & in jure ipsius A. & sic cog●vit pro redditu. Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brown●● Trin. 19 Eliz. Rot. 543. Where and to what purposes a Feme Covert shall be said a Dissesoress without her proper Act or E●●ry▪ and where and to what not. Regula. It is regularly true, a Feme Covert cannot be 〈◊〉 Disseisoress by her Commandment or Procurem●● precedent, or by her Assent or Agreement subsequ●● but by her actual Entry or proper Act she may, 〈◊〉 Inst. 357. b. and yet if she be of Covin and confe● with her husband to a Disseisin, she is a Disseisor● and consequently shall not be remitted. But it is universally true, a Feme Covert shall n● be a Disseisoress by the Act of the husband, as 〈◊〉 the husband disseise another to the use of the wi●● the wife is not a Disseisoress by this Act, 12 E. 4. 9 ● So it is though she agreed during the Coverture, b● her Agreement is voided; or if both agreed, she is n● a Disseisoress (unless Covin be in the Case.) But after the death of the husband she agreed to the Disseisin she shall be a Disseisoress. If Baron and Feme enter into Land in the right of the wife where she had not Right, the Feme is no Disseisoress, for it shall be taken to be the Act of the husband only. A Feme Covert cannot make a Disseisin to the use of her husband, 8 H. 6. 14. b. Curia. Feme Covert cannot make a Disseisin to the use of the husband. For although she gain an Estate by her Entry, yet she had not power to dispose of it to another, being Covert, as she ought, if she makes a Disseisin to the use of another; but contra 21 H. 7. 35. So a Feme Covert cannot disseise a Man to the use of a Stranger. If a Man take a Distress for Rent issuing out of the Land of a Feme Covert, and the Baron and Feme make Rescous, they both are Disseisors, 21 E. 4. 53. If the husband discontinue the Land of his wife, the wife being in possession and disagreeing to the Feoffment claiming her first Estate, she is a Disseisoress. Note, If the husband disseised one to the use of his wife, no Agreement of the wife shall be laid to the Disseisin, for that the cannot disagree during Coverture, Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Nota, In Trespass ad novam assignationem Def. placitat liberum Tenementum ipsius Def. & E. uxoris ejus in jure, etc. Ad quod Quer. dicit quod ipse fuit seisitus quousque disseisit ' per le Baron ad usum uxoris per quod fuer ' seisit. per disseisinam, & quod disseisee re-enter & Tresp ' null ' faciend ' mencionem de agreement del feme all disseisinam Quere car aliter d'estranger, Def. maintain son Freehold & Traverse le disseisin, Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Discontinuance. Where and what Act by the Husband was a Discontinuance of the Land of the Wife at the Common Law, and what shall be a Discontinuance, and what not. If a Man be seized of Lands in the Right 〈◊〉 the wife in Fee Tail or for Life, and thereof enfeoff another, and dieth, the wife may not enter, but m●● bring her Action, which is called a Cui in vita, or 〈◊〉 Sur cui in vita, for the Heir; this was at Commo● Law before the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 28. Stat 32 H. 8. cap. 28. But now by that Statute the wife and her He● after the death of her husband may enter into th● Lands or Tenements of his wife notwithstanding the Alienation of the husband. In what cases the Wife may enter after the Discontinuance of the Action. So it is where the husband and wife are joy●●●● seized to them and their Heirs of an Estate ●●de during the Coverture, and the husband makes a feoffment in Fee and dieth, the wife may now enter 〈◊〉 that Statute, although it was the Inheritance of th●● both. So it is if the Feoffment be made by 〈◊〉 Baron and Feme (albeit the Words of the Statute 〈◊〉 by the Baron only) for in substance this is the Ac● of the husband only. If Lands be given to ●●●o● and Feme, and the Heirs of their two Bodies, 〈◊〉 the husband makes a Feoffment in Fee, and dies, t● wife is helped by the said Statute. But note, If the husband levy a Fine with 〈◊〉 clamations and dies, the wife must enter or avoid 〈◊〉 Estate of the Conisee within five years, or else 〈◊〉 is barred for ever by the Statute of 4 H. 7. Stat. 32 H. 8. helps the Discontinuance, but not the Bar. For t● Statute of 32 H. 8. doth help the Discontinuan● but not the Bar; and the Statute speaketh of a Fi● but not of a Fine with Proclamations, 1 Inst. 326. Note, Of things that lie in Grant, as, Rents, Commons, etc. there can be no Discontinuance. J. B. and Jane his wife, being seized of Land to them and the Heirs of the Body of J. B. the Remainder to Ed. B. and the Heirs of his Body, the Remainder to W. B. in Tail, the Remainder to G. Edward's in Tail, the Remainder to the right Heirs of J. B. J. B. and his wife, and W. B. the third in Remainder, joined in a Feoffment with Warranty to M. K. and after the said Baron and Feme levied a Fine to M. K. 1. What is a Discontinuance. Whether the Feoffment be a Discontinuance of the Estate Tail? Per Curiam, It is a Discontinuance, and the joining of William does not hinder a Discontinuance, because there is an intermediate Estate Tail in Edward, which is discontinued. 2. As to the Remainder. This Feoffment and Fine to the same person make but one Assurance; and when the wife is barred and her Estate destroyed by the Fine that she cannot enter, those in Remainder cannot enter but are as at Common Law, Cro. Car. 321. King and Edwards. If a woman Inheritrix, The Wife may enter after her Husband dies in Nonage. who hath a husband within Age, and he being within Age makes a Feoffment in Fee and dies, she may enter, and she shall take benefit of the Nonage of the husband; for the Heir of the Husband cannot enter, for no Right or Title descends to him. A Baron seized of Land in the Right of his wife makes a Feoffment in Fee upon Condition and dies; if the Heir enter upon the Feoffee for the Condition broken (as he may;) for though no Right descended to the Heir, yet the Title of Entry by force of the Condition descends to him: Discontinuance being defeated by the Entry of the Heir for Condition broken. The Entry of the wife is congeable upon the Heir, for by his Entry he hath avoided the Feoffment and so defeated the Discontinuance, and his Estate vanisheth, and the Estate vesteth in the wife without Entry or Claim. Discontinuance or not by the Agreement of the wife. If Baron and Feme make a Lease for Life by Deed of Lands of the wife, if the Feme after the death of the Baron, agrees, it is no Discontinuance; but if she disagree, it is a Discontinuance, Cro. Car. 406. If a Man seized in the Right of his wife, letteth the same Land to another for Term of his Life, no● the husband hath again the Reversion of the Fee simple; if the husband dies, living the wife and the Tenant for Life, and the Reversion descend 〈◊〉 the Heir of the Baron, and he grant the Reversion to another in Fee, and the Tenant attorns, and th●● the Tenant for Life dies, What is not a Discontinuance. and the Grantee of the Reversion enter, this is no Discontinuance to the wife but she may well enter upon the Grantee, because the Grantor had nothing at the time of the Grac● in the Right of the wife when he made the Gra● of the Reversion, Lit. sect. 639. But if the Baro● and Feme in such case join in a Lease by Deed, the Reversion is not discontinued, but remains in the wife, and yet it was at Common Law a Discontinuance for Life. If Baron and Feme, Tenants in special Ta● and the husband aliens in Fee, What is a Discontinuance, and of the Husbands being seized by force of the Tail. this is a Discontinuance of the Tail, for he is seized of all entirely, 8 Co. 71. Greenloes Case. But if the husband be seized of Land in the Right of the wife in Tail, and alien in Fee, this is not any Discontinuance of the Tail, for he is not seized b● force of the Entail, 1 Inst. 326. If Lands are given to Baron and Feme, and t● the Heirs of the Body of the Baron, and the husband's makes a Feoffment in Fee, this is a Discontinuance for the husband is seized by forth of the Tail, an● so it shall be pleaded, 9 Car. B. R. King and Edwards. Pled. If Tenant for Life be, the Remainder in Tail, and he in the Remainder enter upon the Lessee and disseiseth him and makes a Feoffment over, this is not any Discontinuance, because he is not seized by force of the Tail, Trin. 2 Jac. B. Morlidge and White. But if the Lessee for years be, the Remainder in Tail to J. S. and J. S. enter upon the Lessee and makes a Lease for Life, or Feoffment in Fee, this is a Discontinuance, for he was seized by force of the Tail at the time of the Feoffment, Pasch. 11 Jac. B. R. Sir Kenelm Digby and Jordan. If Baron seized of a Copyhold in the Right of the wife surrender it to the use of another in Fee, Copyhold. who is admitted accordingly, this is not any Discontinuance to the wife, 4 Co. 23. Bullock and Dibley. The husband discontinues, and the wife is attainted, the King shall have the Right of the Entry, Hob. 241, 243. Descents. Where a Descent cast during the Coverture shall toll the Entry of the Feme, and where not. If a Feme sole be seized of Lands in Fee, Where a Descent cast during the Coverture shall toll the Entry of the wife, and where not. and is disseised, and than taketh husband, in this Case the Baron and Feme as in Right of the Feme, have Right to enter, and yet the dying seized of the Disseisor in that Case shall take away the Entry of the wife after the death of the husband, because when she was sole she might have entered and recontinued the Possession; and it shall be accounted her Folly, that she would take such an husband which would not enter before the Descent: But there if the woman were within Age at the time of her taking husband, than the dying seized shall not after the death of the Baron take away her Entry, because no Folly can be accounted in her, she being within Age when she took husband, and after Coverture she cannot enter without her husband. And if the Baron and Feme in droit of the wife have Right and Title to enter into Lands which another hath in Fee or Tail, and such Tenant dies seized, the Entry of the husband is taken away upon the Heir which is in by Descent: But if the husband die the wife may well enter upon the Heir, for that no Latchess of the husband shall turn to the prejudice of the wife or her Heirs, 1 Inst. 246. a. b. and so is 9 H. 7. 24. Disseisee goes beyond Sea, or marries, where a Descent is cast during the Coverture or absence, this shall bind, because it was a default to go o● marry when he was disseised. Where Entry of Disseisee is congeable upon the Wife of the Disseisor after Endowment notwithstanding the Descent. If a Disseisor die seized, and his Heir enter, wh● endows the wife of the Disseisor of a third part o● the Land, as to the part assigned in Dower present●● after the wife entereth thereinto, the Disseisee m●● lawfully enter upon the Possession of the wife into the said part, because when the wife hath her Dower she shall be adjudged in immediately by husband, and by the Heir; and as to that the Descent is defeated, and she is in by a Title paramount the Descent and dying seized, 1 Inst. 240, 241. CHAP. XV. Remitter. The Nature and Reason of Remitter. What Act shall be a Remitter to the Wife. Remitter wrought by a voidable Estate. Remainder expectant on an Estate for Life works no Remitter. Notwithstanding what Acts and Alienations by the husband the Wife shall be remitted. Of Remitter by Acceptance. Where the Wife being remitted during the Coverture may after the death of her Husband wave the Remitter, and where not. No Disagreement of the Husband shall divest the Remitter, and the Reason. Where a Warranty descending on an Infant or a Feme Covert shall be a Bar, and where not. Where the Baron and Feme shall be joint-tenants; and where by Intierties, and where by Moieties, with several Cases to illustrate that curious Learning; and how it was at Common Law, and how it is now by the Statute of Uses. BAron and Feme Tenants in special Tail with Remainder over, Where the Wife is remitted. the Baron discontinues by Fine or Feoffment, and than takes an Estate back to himself and his wife in special Tail, by this the wife is ipso facto remitted. Tenant in Tail before the Statute of 27 H. 8. made a Feoffment in Fee to the use of his wife for Life, and after to his Son and Heir in Fee; than the Statute is made and the Baron and Feme are dead, the Issue shall not be admitted, Explication of the Statutes of 27 H. 8. and 32 H. 8. and this for the violence of the Letter of 27 H. 8. So if a Feme having Right of Lands discontinued where his Entry was not lawful, if she come to that Land by way of an Use raised out of that Estate, she shall not be remitted, for she must be in of the Estate, as she was of the Use; but now by the Statute of 32 H. 8. it hath changed the Reason of this Case, which hath given the wife Entry against her husband's Fine; so that now by the Use raised to her out of such Estate, she is not in of an Estate discontinued, but of an Estate whereupon after the death of her husband she might have reentered. Now as upon Reentry in such Case where the Entry is lawful, she is remitted; so where an Estate is conveyed to her, and is in her, though by the Statute her Entry being lawful, she shall be adjudged in of her best Estate, her Remitter being Intratio legitima, though not actualis, Heb. 255, 256. Where the Baron discontinues and retakes to himself and Wife, the Wife is remitted. A woman seized of Land in Fee taketh husband, who aliens the same Land to another in Fee, the Alienee lets the same Land to the Baron and Feme for Term of their Lives, she is remitted, though it be by Deed indented; and though there are no Moieties between Baron and Feme, yet this is a Remitter presently: So Estate granted by Intermarriage may be sufficient Estate to gain a Remitter as well as an Estate made to Baron and Feme shall wor● a Remitter; and she is remitted in the Life of the Discontinuor, because she hath a present Right, but not so of the Issue in Tail. Issue in Tail of full Age takes Husband, a Lease to her and her Husband by the Discontinuee shall be a Remitter. Tenant in Tail discontinues the Tail and hath Issue a Daughter and dies, the Daughter being of full Age taketh Baron, and the Discontinuee makes a Release of this to Baron and Feme for their Lives, this is a Remitter to the wife, and the wife is in by force of the Tail, Lit. S 671. A woman seized of Land in Fee takes husband, who aliens the same Land to another in Fee (and though it be by Fine) yet that shall not hinder the Remitter, because a Feme Covert is not to be examined upon any Fine: But when she and her husband pass some Estate or Interest or release her Right by a Fine of Lands or Tenements; Where upon a Discontinuance by the Baron by Fine a Grant and Tender to the Wife shall be a Remitter to her. Remitter wrought by a voidable Estate. and therefore if the husband levy a Fine of the wife's Land, and the Conisee grant and tender the Land to the husband and wife, although the wife be not party to the Original, nor to the Conisance, and therefore cannot take any present Estate, but by Remainder only, yet it works a Remitter, and the Grant and Tender is not voided, but voidable only by Error, 1 Inst. 353. If the Baron discontinues the Land of his wife, and after takes back an Estate to him and his wife and to a third person for their Lives, or in Fee, Remitter for a Moiety. this is only a Remitter to the wife for a Moiety; and for the other she must have a Cui in vita, and his Disagreement shall not divest her of Remitter, 1 Inst. 356. Land is given to Baron and Feme in special Tail, Remitter to Husband and Wife maugre the Husband. the Baron aliens the Land in Fee, and takes back an Estate to him and his wife for Term of their Lives, this is a Remitter to the Baron and Feme maugre the husband, for they are one person in Law; and it cannot be a Remitter to the wife unless it be a Remitter to the Baron. The Baron discontinues the Land of his wife, and the Discontinuee is disseised, and after the Disseisor lets the same Lands to husband and wife for Term of Life, this is a Remitter to the wife, except she were covenous to the Disseisor: If such Discontinuee make an Estate of Freehold to the husband and wife by Deed indented on Condition rendering Rend, and for default of Payment, a Reentry; and because the Rent is behind the Discontinuee enters, ●hen for this Entry the wife shall have an Assize of Novel Disseisin after the death of the Baron against the Discontinuee, because the Condition is defeated, ●et the husband with his wife cannot have an Assize, because the Baron is Estopped, Lit. Sect. 769. Remainder expectant on Estate for Life worketh no Remitter. And if the Baron discontinue the Tenements 〈◊〉 his wife, and takes back an Estate to him for L●● the Remainder to his wife for Life, this is no Rem●ter to her till after his decease, because during 〈◊〉 Life the hath nothing in the Freehold, Sect. 680. Baron and Feme Tenants in special Tail upon P●chase of the Baron they have Issue two Sons: T● husband makes a Feoffment to the use of himself 〈◊〉 Life, the Remainder to the wife for his Life, the Remainder to the second Son and his Heirs; the Bandies, the Feme enters and makes a Feoffment to 〈◊〉 Issue of the second Son, and the eldest enters for 〈◊〉 Forfeiture within the Statute of 11 H. 7. Heir remitted by the Entry of the Feme. His En● is congeable, and this Feoffment by the wife (tho●● it be to him who had the Reversion in Fee) is a F●feiture within the Statute; for by the Entry of 〈◊〉 wife he was remitted, Sid. 63. Jones and Phil●● If Baron and Feme are Tenants in special Ta● and the Baron only levies a Fine to the use of 〈◊〉 self and his wife for Life, Remainders remitted. though the Entail be ●●red as to the Baron and the Issues, yet the wife is ●mitted to the Estate Tail, as she should have been 〈◊〉 an Entry after her husband's death, and the Re●●●ders, which were depending upon that Estate 〈◊〉 are likewise remitted, Hob. 257, 259. Duncomb 〈◊〉 Wingfield. Wife remitted upon a Writ of Entry in the Post. If a Man seized in the Right of his wife ma●●s Lease for Life, the Reminder over in Fee, and 〈◊〉 he and his wife recover the same Land by a Wi● Entry in the Post against the Lessee for Life: 〈◊〉 Dyer, the wife shall be remitted as well as whe● Recovery is made to Baron and Feme, for the ●covery countervails a Feoffment, Quaere, if she 〈◊〉 not be estopped by the Record, Moore 32. The Baron discontinues the Land of his Fe●● Fee to the use of him and his wife for Life, 〈◊〉 Remainder over and dies, the wife enters, but not remitted, notwithstanding that the Posset was transferred to her use by the Statute of Uses, because the Statute saith, Where the Use makes no Remitter. he shall have possession in such manner as he had the Use, and the Use makes no Remitter, so neither the Possession transferred to it, Ploughed. Amy Townsend. Remitter by Acceptance. Trin. 15 Jac. Rot. 988. Duncomb's Case, Baron levies a Fine of the Land of his wife and dies, the wife accepts a Lease for years of the same Land, and resolved it was a Remitter, Dyer 171. in Margin. Where the Wife being remitted during the Coverture may after the death of her Baron wave her Remitter, and where not. The Law shall adjudge the wife in of her better Estate, as by the Cases foregoing may abundantly appear: But if both Estates be waveable, there albeit the wife is prima fancy remitted, yet after the decease of her husband she may elect which of the Estates she william. As if Lands are given to Baron and Feme and their Heirs; the Baron makes a Feoffment in Fee, the Feoffee gives the Land to the Baron and Feme, and the Heirs of their two Bodies, the Baron dies; in this Case the wife may elect which of the Estates she will, 1 Inst. 357. So is Hobert 71. Sheerly and Wood's Case, which was this: Dower of Sir H. B. The Tenant pleaded, that Sir H. B. was seized in Fee of the Lands, etc. and made a Feoffment thereof to the use of himself and the Demandant D. for the Term of their Lives for her Jointure, the Remainder over to B. Sir H. B. died, and the Feme entered claiming it for her Jointure. The Plaintiff replied, that the said Sir H. B. before this Feoffment did covenant to stand seized to the use of himself in Tail, the Remainder to his wife for 〈◊〉 Term of Life, the Remainder to H. in Tail, a● after made the Feoffment prout, and than died s● Issue, and she entered, and was remitted claiming 〈◊〉 Estate by Indenture. The Tenant rejoins, That 〈◊〉 Feme after the death of her Baron entered claimi● her Estate for Life by the Feoffment, and demur●● 1. Possession and Right must meet. Per Curiam, The Remitter to the husband co● not work till her husband was dead sans Issue, 'cause till than the Possession and Right did not 〈◊〉 in her. 2. Because both the Estates were made to 〈◊〉 during the Coverture, regularly after the death 〈◊〉 her husband she might claim which Estate she wo●● yet in this Case she shall be in her Remitter 〈◊〉 volens, Where the Feme shall be in her Remitter Nolens volens. for the benefit of him in Remainder by 〈◊〉 first Conveyance, Hob. 71. 255. Wood and S●● and affirmed in a Writ of Error, Cro. Jac. 489. If a Feme Covert be Tenant for Life, and 〈◊〉 Baron and Feme accept of a greater Estate of 〈◊〉 in the Reversion, yet after the death of her 〈◊〉 she may wave it, and claim her first Estate for 〈◊〉 2 Sand. 386. A. seized of Land in jure uxoris for her Life 〈◊〉 a Feoffment in Fee to the use of his wife for 〈◊〉 the wife is remitted, and is not like Amy Tow●se●● Case, where the Entry of the wife was not 〈◊〉 for she was Tenant in Tail, which Estate was 〈◊〉 continued by the Feoffment of the Baron. 〈◊〉 Sydenyam's Case was: B. seized in jure uxoris 〈◊〉 Term for the Life of the wife; they both surrend● and took back the Lands to them and a third ●son, it was held that the wife was not presently ●mitted, but after the death of the Baron she m● disgree to the Estate, 3 Leon. 93. Of Disagreement by the Baron. No Disagreement of the husband shall divest the Remitter. 1. Because the Estate made to the wife which wrought the Remitter is vanished and defeated. 2. Because she is restored to her ancient and better Right. 3. Remitters tend to the Advancement of ancient Rights. Where a Warranty descending on an Infant or a Feme Covert shall be a Bar, and where not. Where the Entry of a Feme Covert or Infant is not lawful when the Warranty descendeth on her during the Coverture, the Warranty doth bind them and her; and the reason is, because the Estate whereto the Warranty is annexed continueth, and cannot be avoided but by Action in which the Warranty is a Bar. The Father Tenant for Life, the Remainder to his Daughter and Heir apparent (a Feme Covert) in Fee; the Father makes a Feoffment to divers Uses with Warranty, and after levies a Fine with Warranty and dies, the Daughter by consent of her husband enters within the year after the Fine claiming the Land as her Inheritance, the Entry by the Feme only by consent of the husband is good, and the Warranty descending upon her during the Coverture, where her Entry is congeable doth not bind ●er, neither doth it bind the husband, because it descends not upon him, and being voided to bind ●er shall not bind him, Cro. Eliz. p. 72. Ardes and Sympson. Where the Warranty of the Baron being Tenant by the Courtesy, shall be a Bar to the Issue of the Wife, and where not. Where the Feme shall vouch her Husband. If the husband be seized of Lands in the Right his wife, and makes a Feoffment in Fee with W●ranty, the husband dies, this Warranty shall 〈◊〉 bind the Heir of the wife without Assets', tho●● the husband be not Tenant by the Courtesy, 1 〈◊〉 366. If a Man infeoff a Woman with Warranty, th● intermarry and are impleaded; upon the default 〈◊〉 the husband the wife is received, the shall vouch 〈◊〉 husband notwithstanding the Warranty was p●● 〈◊〉 suspense; and so on the other side, If a Woma● infeoff a Man with Warranty, and they interma● and are impleaded, the Baron shall vouch hi●● and his wife by force of the said Warranty, 1 〈◊〉 390. a. Where Baron and Feme shall take by Intierties; 〈◊〉 where by Moieties. Baron and Feme are Jointenants, and after the● intermarry, they shall take by Moieties; but of La●● given to them after Marriage, Baron and Feme cannot take by Moieties during the Coverture. they take by Entirely for Baron and Feme cannot take by Moieties d●● the Coverture. I let Lands to a Feme sole for 〈◊〉 Life, who marries, and afterwards I confirm 〈◊〉 Estate of the Baron and Feme, Habendum for Te● of their Lives; the husband doth not hold ju●● wirh his wife, but holdeth in the Right of his 〈◊〉 for Term of her Life, causa qua supra: 1. Bec● the wife hath the whole for her Life. 2. Jointen● must come in by one Title. But if I let Land 〈◊〉 a Feme sole for Term of years, who taketh husby and after I confirm the Estate of the husband 〈◊〉 wife, to have and to hold the Land for the Term their two Lives; in this Case they have a joint state of Freehold of the Land, for that the 〈◊〉 had no Freehold before; so the same Law is of a 〈◊〉 lease in both Cases, and the Chattel of the Fe● Covert is drowned: But if Land is let to a Feme sole for Life, who marries, and a Confirmation is made to the Baron and Feme, they are Jointenants of the Fee-simple, and the husband seized in the Right of his wife for her Life, for the Baron and Feme cannot take by Moieties during the Coverture. If a Man letteth Land to the husband and wife, Habendum the one Moiety to the husband for Term of his Life, and the other Moiety to the wife for the Term of her Life, and the Lessor confirms the Estate of both in the Land; Habendum to them and their Heirs; by this Confirmation as to the Moiety of the husband, it inureth to the husband only and his Heirrs, for the wife had nothing in that Moiety: But as to the Moiety of the wife they are Jointenants, for the husband hath such an Estate in his wife's Moiety in her Right as is capable of a Confirmation, 1 Inst. 299. There are no Moieties between Baron and Feme. If Tenants in Tail enfeoff a Woman in Fee and dies, and the Issue within Age taketh the same Woman to wife, this is a Remitter to the Infant within Age, and the wife than has nothing, for that the husband and wife are one person in Law, and therefore the Land cannot be parted by Moieties. But if an Estate be made to a Man and a Woman and their Heirs before Marriage, and after they marry, the husband and wife have Moieties between them. If Lands are given to two Men and a Woman in Fee, and afterwards one of them intermarries with ●he Woman, and alieneth Land and dieth, in this Case the wife hath Right but to a third part; but ●f the Man and the Woman had been married be●ore the first Feoffment, than the Woman notwith●anding the Alienation of her husband had Right to 〈◊〉 Moiety of the Land. Baron and Feme and a third Person purchase Lands jointly. Baron a Feme and third person purchase Lan● jointly, the Baron aliened the whole, he and his wi● died, the third Survivor shall have Assize of all, H● p. 3. for all survives to the third person; for 〈◊〉 Jointenancy was not severed by the Alienation 〈◊〉 the husband, for the wife and the third person 〈◊〉 join in a Writ of Right, 31 H. 6. Entry C●geable 54. A Joint Estate is made to Baron and Feme and a third person, or to Baron and Feme and to two other persons. A Joint Estate of Land is made to Baron 〈◊〉 Feme, and to a third person, in this Case the B●ron and Feme have in Law but a Moiety, and t● third person shall have the other Moiety, for th● are but one person in Law. The same Law is wh● an Estate is made to the Baron and Feme and 〈◊〉 other Men, in this Case the Baron and Feme 〈◊〉 but a third part, and the other two Men the o●● two parts. At Common Law, if Land had been given to 〈◊〉 Baron and Feme and a third person, and to 〈◊〉 Heirs, and the Baron had made a Feoffment in Fee this had been a Discontinuance of the one Moiety and a Disseisin of the other Moiety, so as after 〈◊〉 death of the Baron the wife hath a Right of E●● for one Moiety, and the other Jointenant a 〈◊〉 Entry into the other. A Feoffment is made before the Statute of ●7 〈◊〉 8. to the use of a Man and a Woman, and 〈◊〉 Heirs of their two Bodies, and they intermarry, 〈◊〉 after Marriage the husband sells the entire Land 〈◊〉 dies sans Issue, and after the Statute of 27 H was made the wife claims the Entry by Survi● as Tenant in Tail after Possibility, etc. Per Curi● She shall have but a Moiety by reason of the J●tenancy before Marriage; but the Issue, if any 〈◊〉 shall have a Formedon of the whole, Ploughed. 〈◊〉 1. Co. 102. b. 4 Leon. 198. 10 Co. 68, 102. 2● 66. Tenant in Tail enfeoffs a Woman in Fee and dies, and his Issue within Age taketh the same Woman to wife, this is a Remitter to the Infant; and the wife hath nothing, for that the Baron and Feme are one person in Law, and than if the Heir be in Remitter by force of the Tail, than it follows, that the wife hath nothing because the Land cannot be parted by Moieties, and the Freehold and Inheritance of the wife is vanished clear away, Lit. Sect. 665. Of Land recovered in value during the Coverture there shall not be Moieties, Of Land recovered in value during the Coverture no Moieties. although they had Moieties in the Land recovered against them, Plowd. 183. If a Feoffment be made to a Man and a Woman and to their Heirs with Warranty, and they intermarry, and after are impleaded, and vouch and recover in value, Moieties shall not be between them; for though they were sole when the Warranty was made, yet at the time when they rcovered and had Execution they were Baron and Feme, in which time they cannot take by Moieties. A Man gives Land by his Will to his wife for Life and dies; his wife marries B. the Heir of the Devisor by Deed enrolled sells the said Lands to Baron and Feme, Habendum to them, their Heirs and Assigns to their own use, and than the wife had Issue, Where they taketh by Intierties. a Son (who was by the Will to be Christened by such a Name) this by this Conveyance made by the Brother and Heir of the Devisor before the Birth of the Son hath destroyed the contingent Remainder; and the Baron and Feme took by Intierties, and the Estate for Life in the wife in the entire Tenancy was emerged, 2 Sand. 386. Lands are given to A. B. and C. D. a Feme, Where a Recovery binds not the Wife's Moiety. and the Heirs of the Body of A. B. A. B. and C. D. entermarry, the Baron suffers a Common Recovery against himself only without naming his wife, the Recovery is falsified for one Moiety, because the wife, who was Jointenant with A. B. was not named and party to the Recovery: This Recovery binds not th● Moiety of the wife, Lord Norris' Case, 1 Leon. 27● 3 Co. Copyhold Lands are surrendeed to the use of th● wife for Life, the Remainder to the use of the righ● Heirs of the husband and wife, the husband entry in the Right of the wife: Per Curiam, The Remainder was executed for a Moiety presently in th● wife, Where the Heir shall only have a Moiety. and the husband of that was seized in the Righ● of his wife, and the wife dying first, her Heir sh●● have it; but if the husband had died first, his H●● should have had one Moiety, 3 Leon. p. 4. Attornment. A Reversion is granted to a Man and a Woman, and their Heirs, and before Attornment they intermarry, Where Baron and Feme and a Stranger are Jointenants, the sole Alienation of the Baron shall bar the Stranger surviving, and where not. and than Attornment is made, in this Case the Baron and Feme have no Moieties. So in the Case of a Letter of Attorney to make Livery. If a Feoffment were made before the Statute of 27 H. 8. Of Uses, to the use of a Man and a Woman, and their Heirs, and they intermarry, and than the Statute is made; if the husband alien it is good for a Moiety, for the Statute executes a Possession according to such quality, manner, form and condition as they had in the Use; so as though it vest d●ring the Coverture, yet the Act of Parliament excutes several Moieties in them, seeing they had several Moieties in the Use, 1 Inst. 187 b. If the Reversion be granted to a Man and a Woman they are to have Moieties in Law, By Attornment they shall have no Moiety. but if th●● intermarry and than Attornment is had, they sh●● have no Moieties, because it is by Act of Law, th● by the purport of the Grant they were to have Moieties, 1 Inst. 310. a. Difference between joint Alienations and several. If two Femes be jointly seized, and they take husbands, and the husbands join in an Alienation an● dye, the wives are Jointenants of the Right, an● may join in a Writ of Right, or they may have several Cui in vitas at Election; but when they ha● recovered in those several Writs they shall be Jointenants again: But if the husband had aliened severally, this had been a Severance of the Jointure for a time. If a Man make a Feoffment in Fee to the use of himself and of such wife as he should afterwards marry, for Term of their Lives, Where Baron and Feme shall be Joyintenants. and afterwards he taketh wife, they are Jointenants, and yet they come to their Estate at several times, 1 Inst. 188. a. If a Feme Coverr and J. S. are Jointenants for Life of a Copyhold, What is a Severance of the Jointure. and J. S. surrenders his Moiety to the husband this is a severance of the Jointure, so that he is Tenant in Common with his wife, 14 Jac. Lane and Panel. If a Feme Covert and J. S. are Jointenants for Life, Lease an actual Severance. and the Baron and Feme by Indenture let the Moiety of the wife for years rendering Rend, and after the wife dies, the Survivor shall not avoid this Lease, because this was and is the Lease of the wife prima fancy till she disagree to it, and only avoidable, and the Survivor is not privy to her to avoid it, for the Lease was an actual Severance during the years, 14 Jac. Rolls Rep. Smalman and Ayborough. Baron and Feme and a third person purchase Land to them and the Heirs of the husband, Where a Release shall enure to the Husband sole and not to the Wife. and the third person releaseth to the Baron all his Right, etc. without the word Heirs, and afterwards the Baron and Feme make a Lease of all for years rendering Rend to them and the Heirs of the Baron; the Baron dies, the Heir shall have the Moiety of the Rent after the death of the Baron, and a Release to the husband only shall enure to him sole and not to the wife, Dyer 263. CHAP. XVI. Conveyances. What shall be said to be the Deed of the Husband and Wife. Of a Feoffment by the Husband of the Wives Land. Where the Wives Grant, if she join with her Husband, is voided or not. Surrender by the Husband how it operates. What shall amount to a Surrender or not. Of a Release of the Husband of the Wife's Right to rend. Of his Release of Money to be paid after the Wife's Decease. Of Exchanges of the Land of the Wife, and what shall be a good Confirmation of it by the Wife. How a Man may execute an Estate to his Wife. Of the Christian Names of Women in Grants. What shall be said to be the Deed of the Husband and Wife. DEbt on a Bond conditioned for the performance of Covenants in an Indenture made between S. and Anne his wife of the one part, and the Plaintiff on the other. The Defendant pleads the Indenture as an Indenture of W. S. and Anne his wife, whereas in truth the Feme never sealed it. The Plaintiff replies, That the Indenture shown by the Defendant non fuit facta inter W. S. and Anne his wife on the one part, and the Plaintiff on the other. The Jury found the Baron sealed it, but the wife did not: This Verdict is found against the Defendant, who pleaded it as the Deed of the wife; and per Curiam the Plaintiff is not estopped to say, that the Deed showed is not the Deed of the Baron and Feme; but he is estopped by the Condition to say, there is not any such Indenture. But if the Baron had sealed and delivered it in the Name of the Feme it had been the Deed of the wife during the Life of the husband; and if they by Indenture bargained and sold the Land of the wife rendering Rend, it had been a good Deed of the Femes, because she afterwards might have accepted the Rent, and affirmed it as her Deed: And Judgement was pro Quer. Cro. Eliz. 269. Ship and Steed. Feoffment. Baron and Feme make a Feoffment of the wife's Jointure, which she had by a former husband, to one and his Heirs to the use of Feoffee for the Life of the wife, this is a Forfeiture, for by the Feoffment the Fee-simple passeth, and that to the use of the Feoffor; and the Estate and the Use are several things, and the Limitation for the Life of the wife cannot extend to both, 1 Leon. p. 126. Pierce and Hoe. Baron and Feme join in a Feoffment of the wife's Land rendering Rent; the husband dies, By acceptance of the Rent the Feoffment is affirmed. the Feme takes a new husband before any Rend day, the second husband accepteth the Rent, the Feoffment is affirmed for ever. If a Feme sole make a Feoffment on Condition to reinfeoff her at what time she will, Feme Covert may request a Re-infeoffment without her Husband. and after takes husband, she may require the Feoffee to reinfeoff her without her husband, and if the Feoffee refuse to do it, the Condition is broken. Where Baron and Feme Infants join in a Feoffment by Indenture, the Feme after the death of her husband may have a Dum fuit infra aetatem; Dum fuit infra aetatem. secus where herself was of full Age at the time of the Feoffment, for there she shall not have a Dum fuit infra aetatem, for the Nonage of her husband, albeit they be but one person in Law, 1 Inst. 337. a. Baron seized in Fee makes a Feoffment to the use of himself and his wife, Feoffment of the Husband destroys a Contingent Use. and to the Heirs of the Survivor of them, and afterwards makes a Feoffment of the same Land, and dies, the Feme enters, in this Case the Feoffment of the Husband hath destroyed the Contingent Use of the wife, Cro. Car. 102. One being enfeoffed to the use of a Feme Sole, she takes an husband who sells the Land to a Stranger, the Feme received the Money, the husband and wife pray him, Sale of Land in Equity is the Sale of the Husband alone, though the Wife received the Mony. that was enfeoffed to the use of the wife, to make an Estate to a Stranger, this Sale in Equity ought to be construed the Sale of the husband alone, and it shall be not esteemed that the wife did it, for the Deed of the Baron and the Receipt of the Money by her is not material, because she cannot have the free disposal. One being possessed of a Lease of Tithes in the Right of his wife, as Executrix to her former husband, grants totum jus, titulum & interest suum de & in decimis predict '. By the Grant of totum jus suum what passeth. Verdict was pro Quaer ', who claimed under the said Grant. It was moved in arrest of Judgement, that the Declaration was not good, for he hath not set forth any good Title to enable himself to the Tithes: But per Curiam the Grant is good, and the Lease he had in the Tithes in the Right of the wife did pass, for he granted totum jus, etc. suum, and the word suum doth import a propriety in possession, and it is all one as if had especially named them in the Grant, Cro. Car. 318. Arnold and Bidgood. Where Infant Baron and Feme make a Conveyance to the King by Bargain and Sale, this is not aided by the Statute of 13 Eliz. cap. 2. Stat. 13 Eliz. cap. 2. explicated. for that aids only where there is imperfection in the Conveyance, and not where there is Disability in the person that makes the Conveyance: But where Tenant in Tail makes a Conveyance by Deed, that is aided by the Statute, for he may make a Conveyance by Fine, Cro. Jac. 364. Two husbands and their wives join in a Grant of the Lands of their wives, and covenant that they have Right to convey and covenant to make a farther Assurance within seven years, and one of the wives are within Age at the time of the making the Deed, and the Right of her Lands descended to her Son, an Infant, by which the Moiety of the Estate was devested out of the Plaintiff. Per Curiam. The wife being within Age at the time of the Covenant, as appears by the Verdict, had not power than to convey the Estate according to the Covenant, and there was no request to make the Assurance. Per Curiam. The Death of the wife in the Infancy of her Son was the Act of God, and it was the default of the Plaintiff that he did not demand Assurance in the Life of the wife, and after her full Age, Sir Thomas Jones 195. Nash and Ashton. Bargain and Sale. Grant. Where the Wife's Grant is voided when she joins with her Husband or not. A Bargain and Sale binds not a Feme Covert but by Custom. A Deed acknowledged by Baron and Feme shall by the Common Law be enroled only for the husband and not for the wife by reason of the Coverture, and though it be enroled for both, Deed enroled binds not the Wife. it binds not; Aliter by Custom, and no one hath power to examine a Feme Covert but by Writ, 2 Inst. 673. But A Feme Covert in London may be examined, Custom of London. and than she shall be bound by a Deed enrolled, Hob. 225. Now if the husband is seized in the Right of his wife, The Freehold passeth during the Coverture. and bargains and sells by Deed enroled to another, this is an Estate of Freehold; for this is as an Estate during Coverture, 2 Rolls Abr. 845. S. and his wife being seized of the Parsonage of, etc. to them and the Heirs of S. did give the same to King Henry the Eighth and his Heirs by their Deed, the King by his Letters Patents granted it over, the wife's Grant is voided, Hob. 224. 5. Anne Needler's Case. Surrender. Baron and Feme Jointenants for Life, the Baron may well surrender to him in Reversion, and this shall bind the husband though not the wife, not shall be any Discontinuance to her, yet this is not a good Surrender during the Life of the Baron, Kelw. 42. What is a Surrender or not. If Lessee for Life enfeoff Baron and Feme in Reversion in Right of the wife, this is a Surrender (admitting it not a Forfeiture) but if Lessee for Life grant his Estate to Baron and Feme in Reversion in Right of the wife, this is not any Surrender for the benefit of the Baron, 21 H. 7. 40. M. and J. his wife take a Lease jointly for their two Lives, and now by new Indenture take a new Lease to them two and the Survivor, the acceptance of the second Lease to commence a die datus is a Surrender, because they conclude than that the Lessor had power to make a new Lease, which he cannot do unless the former be surrendered, Moore 636. Mellow and May's Case. If Feme Lessee for years take husband, who after accepts a new Lease for their Lives, this is a Surrender of the first Lease, Plowd. 199. Wroth and Adams. Baron and Feme they cannot expressly nor by Acceptance of a new Lease surrender the wife's Freehold so as to bind her surviving, Hobert p. 203, 204. Baron and Feme are seized in the Right of the wife for Life of the wife, and the King grants this to the wife for Life of the wife with Remainders over by new Letters Patents in consideration of the Surrender of the first Estate, this is a voided Grant, for that this Surrender is not absolute inasmuch as the wife after the death of the Baron may claim her first Estate, Hob. Swain and Holman. Release. Vide Fine. Baron and Feme are Lessees pur altar vie, the Lessor may enlarge their Estate by Release for their own Lives, 2 Rolls Abr. 401. Covenant was that a Stranger should pay 8 l. yearly to one of the covenanties, and to one F. S. a Stranger; F. S. took husband one B. who did release the Payment; the Question was, whether by this Release the Defendant shall be discharged of payment: B. is a Stranger to whose wife the payment is to be made. Now he cannot release this he having no Right at all therein; the Release is made by a Stranger who had nothing in the thing, nor yet any Remedy to come by it: And Judgement was for the Plaintiff, 3 Bulstr. 27. Quick and Harris versus Ludborough. Release by the husband pleaded to an Action brought by the wife after his decease for Money to be allowed her after his death not good, Brownl. 15. Belcher and Hudson, p. 18. Smith and Stafford. Exchange. If Baron and Feme exchange with another this is good during the Coverture, 39 E. 3. 30. If the husband exchange the Land of the wife for Lands of lesle value, if the wife after his death once agreed to the exchange she shall never avoid it afterwards, 9 H. 6. 52. The husband and wife were seized of Lands i● Right of the wife, they both joined in Exchange of the Lands to a Stranger for other Lands, which Exchange was executed; the husband and wife seise● of the Land taken in Exchange aliened the same by Fine. Per Curiam, The wife after the death of the husband may enter into her own Land notwithstanding the Fine, 1 Leon. p. 285. By the woman's acceptance of Dower out of Lands exchanged she agrees to the Exchange, 3 Leon. 27. Of a Feme Covert's being a Purchaser, and how 〈◊〉 shall be good. A Feme Covert cannot take any thing of the gift of the husband, but is of a capacity to purchase of others without the consent of her husband, but her husband may disagree thereto and divest the whole Estate; but if he neither agreed nor disagree, the Purchase is good; but after his death although her husband agreed thereto, yet she may without cause alleged wave the same; so may her Heirs also if after the death of the husband she agreed not thereto, 1 Inst. 3. a. How a Man may execute an Estate to his Wife. By no Conveyance at the Common Law a Man could during the Coverture either in Possession, Reversion or Remainder limit an Estate to his wife: But a Man by his Deed may covenant with others to stand seized to the use of his wife, or make a Feoffment or other Conveyances to the use of his wife and now the Estate is executed to such uses by the Statute of 27 H. 8. But a Man cannot covenant with his wife to stand seized to her use, because he cannot covenant with her for that they are one person in Law: And yet if Cestuy que use had devised his wife should cell his Land and made her Executrix and died, and she took another husband, she might cell the Land to her husband, for she did it en auter droit, and the husband shall be in by the Devisor. So if a Charter of Feoffment be made to the wife, the husband as Attorney to the Feoffor may make Livery to the wife, 1 Inst. 112. Of Christian Names of Women in Grants, whether one or several. Johan makes a Lease by the Name of Jane, Quaere. A Grant to T. and Ellen his wife, where her Name is Emmelin, yet it is good, because it is the wife of T. 2 H. 4. 25. For wife Uxor is a good Name of purchase, as uxori J. S. So if a Christian Name be added and mistaken, as Em ' pro Emmelin; for utile per inutile non vitiatur, 1 Inst. 3. a. Agnes and Anne are several Names of Baptism and not one Name, Cro. Jac. 425. Jane and Joan are but one Name, and not distinct several Names, Mich. 15 Jac. B. R. Griffith and Midleton. Isable and Sibyl are distinct Names of Baptism, 1 Ass. 11. CHAP. XVII. Leases. Of a Lease for Lives made by Baron and Fem● Of a Lease made by the Husband of the Wife Land, and how and wherein it shall bind t●● Wife or not. What shall be a good Lease warranted by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. Th● Qualifications of such Leases to bring them with in the Statute. What acceptance of the Husband shall affirm a voidable Lease. What is a good Lease by Baron and Feme to bring Ejectment of Leases for years made to Baron and Feme. Diversity between a Lease for Life and a Lease for Years made to a Feme Covert. Lease to a Feme Covert when it shall be said to vest. Of a Lease for Life made to Baron and Feme, of the Husband may grant it when the Lease is made to Baron and Feme. If the Husband may grant it when the Lease is made to the Survivor for Years. How if the Remainder be to the Heirs of the Survivor. Of Leases for Life made by Baron and Feme. Diversity where Livery is made by the Lessor in person, and where by Letter of Attorney. Lease for years made by Baron and Feme, Vide Tit. Rent. By the Husband of the Wife's Land, and how and wherein it shall bind the Wife or not. By the Baron sole. Voidable not voided. THE Husband makes a Lease of the wifes Lan● and dies, the Lease is not determined nor voi● after the death of the husband, but voidable only by the Entry of the wife after his death, Cro. Jac. 332. Jordan and Wikes. But If Baron seized in Fee in the Right of his wife had Issue by her, and so is Tenant by the Courtesy, and after makes, a Lease for years reserving Rend, and after the wife dies, and after the husband dies before the end of the years, yet this is voided and ended in the Law before any Entry of the next Heir of the wife, forasmuch as he cannot make this good by any acceptance of the Rent, the Lease being made only by the husband, 1 Rolls Abr. 380, 381. Cro. Car. 399. Miller and Manwaring. But the husband makes a Lease of the wife's Land and dies, this Lease is not determined nor voided after the death of the husband, but voidable only by the Entry of the wife after his death, Cro. Jac. 332. Jordan and Wikes. If Baron and Feme lease for years by Indenture rendering Rend, Where a Lease enures by way of Interest, and not by Estoppel. where the husband had all the Estate in the Land, and the wife nothing, after the death of the Baron the Lessee in an Action of Debt for the Rent brought by the wife shall not be estopped to say that at the time of the Lease made the wife had nothing in the Land, for this doth not enure by way of Estoppel, forasmuch as it enures by way of Interest, 1 Rolls Abr. 877. Brierton and Evans, Cro. Eliz. 701. mesme Case. By Baron and Feme. What shall be a good Lease warranted by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28. Or, What Lease for years made by Baron and Feme shall bind the wife and her Heirs or not, Vid. 1 Inst. 44, 45. By the Statute of 32 H. 8. any husband and wife seized of any Estate of Inheritance in Fee-simple or Fee-tail in the Right of the wife, or jointly wi● his wife before the Coverture or after, this-shall b●●● the wife and her and their Heirs; but such Lease must have these Qualifications. 1. They must be by Deed indented. 2. They must begin from the day of the making thereof, or from the making thereof. 3. There must not be a double Lease in being 〈◊〉 one time. 4. It must not exceed one and twenty years' o● three Lives from the making. 5. It must be of Lands, Tenements or Hereditaments manurable. 6. It must be of Lands or Tenements which have most commonly been let to Farm or occupied by the Farmers thereof, by the space of twenty years next before the new Lease made. 7. There must be reserved the yearly accustomed Rent, which must be reserved to the Baron and Feme and too the Heirs of the Feme. 8. They must not be made without Impeachment of Waste. If they are made with these Qualifications they shall bind the wife and her Heirs, but if they are not warranted by this Statute, yet they shall be good against the husband. The wife must join in the Lease and be made party to it, and seal and deliver the same in person; and if it be for Life or Lives there must be Livery and Seisin, Cro. Jac. 563. Greenwood and Tyler. The husband purchased Lands to him and his wife and their Heirs, he afterwards, his wife not being party, let these Lands to L. and T. for 60 years if they lived so long, rendering Rend, this Lease shall bind the wife by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 28 for it is not within the Proviso, for that it is not the sole Inheritance of the wife, Cro. Car. 22. Smith and Trinder. If a Man possessed of a Manor for 99 years makes his Will and deviseth it to A. his wife, Construction of the words of a Will impowring to make a Lease. for her Life to set, let or make Estates out of it, and them in as ample manner as I myself might, if I were living during the said Term; and after the death of A. deviseth it to B. his Daughter, and to the Heirs of her Body begotten and dies, A. being Executrix consents to the Legacy, and after makes a Lease of a Tenement, parcel of the Manor, to C. for 99 years, if three Lives shall so long live, and dies, this is a good Lease against B. the Daughter, although it was objected, that by this Clause she had only power to dispose of it during her Life, 2 Rolls Abr. 261. Baron and Feme seized of Lands in the Right of the wife levied a Fine to the use of themselves for their Lives, and afterwards to the use of the Heirs of the wife, Proviso to make Leases. Proviso that it shall and may be lawful to and for the Baron and Feme at any time during their Lives to make Leases for one and twenty years or three Lives; the wife being Covert made a Lease for one and twenty years, and adjudged a good Lease against the husband, though it was made when she was a Feme Covert, and by her alone, and this by reason of the Proviso, Godb. 327. pl. 419. Quaere. Tenant for Life takes husband, Forfeiture or not. and by Deed indented they make a Lease to him in Reversion for the Life of the husband, reserving Rend, this is no Forfeiture; for he in the Reversion was party, and a Surrender it is not, for their whole Estate was not given, and the Reservation is good, 1 Inst. 42. Baron makes a Lease, than Baron and Feme levy a Fine the Conisee shall avoid the Lease. a. Baron and Feme seized of Land in the Right of the wife, the husband alone makes a Lease for years, afterwards Baron and Feme levy a Fine, and they ●fterwards both die, the Conisee shall avoid the Lease, 〈◊〉 Leon. 247. Harvey and Thomas. A Lease is made by Baron and Feme in jure ux●ris, and he dies, and she accepts the Rent, it is good against her, Cro. Jac. 563. 2 Anders. 42. For by her own Act she hath affirmed that the Estate continues. Second Husband accepts the Rent it binds the Wife. Baron and Feme make a Lease by Indenture for Term of years, rendering Rend, the Lessee enters, the husband before the day of payment of the Rent dies, and the wife also before the day of payment takes a second husband, who accepts the Rent at the d●● and dies, the wife may not oust the Termor. She might have avoided the Term before the day at her pleasure; but that Liberty she had assigned to her second husband, Dyer 159. Vide plus sub Titulo, What shall be a Disposition of the Wife's Term or not. It was held Pasch. 18 Eliz. in C. B. Que si Baron & Feme sont & font Lease de terres del Feme per fait Indent ' pro 21 ans de le date de fait reservant rent etc. Le Baron & Feme ou l'un de●● adonque esteant deins age the 21 ans, ceo lease 〈◊〉 garrant estre bon per Stat. 32 H. 8. Et uncore f●●● tenus que si Jointure soit fait al Feme deins ●ge avant que el soit Espouse & puis est marry, & s●● Baron morust que el ne poit wave ceo Jointure & demand estre endowed de tierce part de touts les terres de que son Baron morust seize. Mes serra lie per per ceo Jointure fait avant les Espousals per reas●● de Stat. 27 H. 8. cap. 10. come all temps de feas●●● de Jointure el ad estre de plein age. Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownloe. Wife conceals her Marriage and makes Leases as a Widow, the Husband decreed in Chancery to confirm the Lease. If a Feme sole being a Widow be seized of Lan● and secretly takes husband, and conceals her Marriage▪ and so continuing under the notion of a Widow▪ makes Leases of divers parcels of Land, and afterwards the time of her Marriage is published, th● husband in Equity sought to avoid the Leases, but was denied Relief, and decreed in Chancery to confirm the Leases during the Term. Lease for years by Baron and Feme without Deed, is voided, as to the Feme, Cr. El. 656. Baron and Feme, Baron and Feme Jointenants with another; she and her husband make a Lease, and the wife dies, the Lease is good against the Survivor. (in the right of the Feme) and a third person were Jointenants for the Lives of the wife, and of the third person, the Baron and Feme by Indenture let the Moiety for 21 years, the Feme dies, the surviving Joyntenant enters: Lessee brings Trespass, and recovered; for the Lease is good, and is as a Lease made by her, until she after Coverture, or one who claims in privity by her, avoids it by Entry: for it is not voided by the Death of the Baron, but voidable, and the Avoidance ought to be by Entry, and this cannot be by the Jointenant's Survivor, for he is paramount the wife, and so the Lease shall bind as long as any Jointenant be alive, Cr. Jac. 417. Smalman & Ayborows, 1 Rol. rep. 441. Mesme case. If a Man demise Lands to B. his wife for life, the Remainder to C. in Fee, Power to make Leases. and by a Codicil he deviseth that B. shall have a power six months before his death to Lease this for six years. B. takes a second husband, she and her second husband may Lease this by Deed or without Deed for six years; and if they lease this Habend ' a die datus, it is good, 1 rolls Abr. 329. Lease by Indenture signed and sealed by Baron and Feme, (of the wife's Land) and a Letter of Attorney by Baron and Feme to deliver it on the Land in both their names, Lease of Ejectment by Baron and Feme. and the Declaration was of a Lease by the Baron only, and not in the name of the wife in Ejectment; the Declaration is good; for the delivery by the Attorney is a voided Delivery, and voided Warrant as to the wife, and so it is the Lease of the Baron only: but if the Lease had been delivered upon the Land by Baron and Feme, it had been a good Lease for both. But now it is the Lease of the Baron only, and not voidable, but voided against the wife, Cr. Jac. 61●▪ Gardner and Norman; and so in Wilson and Rich● case, Yelv. 1. in such case the Declaration was b● Baron and Feme, and adjudged the Lease is th● Lease of the Baron sole, and doth not maintain the Declaration. But in Cr. Car. 165. Hopkans' case contra, where the Lease was sealed and subscribed by them both, and a Letter of Attorney made by them to deliver it upon the Land. Et per totam Curial. It is a good Letter of Attorney for both, and the Lease well delivered, and it is the Lease of them both during the husband's life. Leases for years made to Baron and Feme. There is a diversity between a Lease for life and a Lease for years made to a Feme Covert. Diversity between a Lease for life, and a Lease for years. If I let Land to a Feme sole for years, who taketh husband, and after I confirm the Estate to Baron and Feme, To have and to hold to them for the term of their two Lives, this Confirmation makes them Jointenants for their Lives, because the Chattel of a Feme Covert may be drowned, and the husband hath such a Possession in her Right of a Chattel as is capable of a Confirmation or a Release; but a Feme's Estate of a Freehold cannot be altered by the Confirmation made to the husband and her, as a term for years may, whereof the husband may make Disposition at his pleasure, 1 Inst. 300. Where the Baron shall be Assignee to the Wife. Feme Lessee for years upon condition, that she, he● Executors or Assigns, shall not alien without the consent of the Lessor, she taketh Baron and dies; 〈◊〉 husband is within the danger of the Condition, 〈◊〉 he is Assignee; in Moor and Ferrand's case, 1 L●● pag. 3. An Estate made to a Feme Covert, de novo, vests till the husband's dissent, but to a new Lease made to a Feme, who was Lessee before, vests not till his assent, Hob. 204. Lease for life made to Baron and Feme. I let Land to a Feme sole for term of her life, who taketh an husband, and after I confirm the Estate of the Baron and Feme, Habendum for term of their Lives. Confirmation. In this case the Baron does not hold jointly with his wife, but holdeth in right of his wife for term of her life; but this Confirmation shall enure to the husband by way of Remainder for the term of his life if he survive the wife; he cannot hold jointly with the wife, because the wife hath the whole for her life, and Jointenants must come in by one Title, 1 Inst. 299. Land is demised to Baron and Feme for their Lives, Land demised to Baron and Feme for their Lives, Remainder to the Survivor in years. the Remainder to the Survivor of them for years; the husband granted over this term for years and died, the wife shall have it, and not the Grantee, because there was nothing in the one or the other to grant over but the Survivor; so if the wife had died after the Grant, and the Baron survived, yet he shall have the term against his own Grant, Poph. 4, 5. So if a Lease be made to Baron and Feme for their Lives, the Remainder to the Executors of the Survivor of them; and the husband grant the term and dies, this shall not bar the wife, because the wife had but a Possibility and no Interest, Co. Lit. 46. b. But if a Lease is made to Baron and Feme for their Lives, the Remainder to the Heirs of the Survivor, Remainder to the Heirs of the Survivor. it's a good Remainder notwithstanding the uncertainty; and in that case the husband after the death of the wife, shall have Judgement to recover the Land, Godbolt 139. Lease to Baron and Feme, and his Son for life, the Son dies; he in pleading shall not say as amongst other Jointenants, fuer ' seisit ' in dominico suo ut de libero Tenemento per termino vitiae ipsorum patris a● filii per jus accrescendi, but omitting per jus accrescendi. Ex Manuscript Mr. Brownloe. Leases for Life made by Baron and Feme. Ut supra. Lease by Baron and Feme of the Lands of the wife Habendum from Michaelmas for life, Livery, Diversity. and Livery is made after Michaelmas, Secundum formam Chartae, it is good enough; and the difference is where the Livery is made by the Lessor in person, and where by Letter of Attorney in the same Charter generally made: But if the Letter of Attorney be to make Livery after Michaelmas, it is good enough in both cases; for there is not any Intention that the Livery should operate in futuro, but that Livery should be made when it should operate, and the Estate should be good presently; and it differs from 2 Rep. 55. Buckler and Harvey, where a Reversion was granted Habendum after Michaelmas for life, although the Attornment be after Michaelmas, yet it being the Act of a Stranger shall not make that good which otherwise would be voided: But here when the Lessor makes Livery himself after Michaelmas, it is well enough, Cr. Jac. 563. Greenwood and Tyler. Lease made by Baron and Feme, in right of his wife, to J. S. Habendum from Michaelmas following for term of life, after Michaelmas Baron and Feme make Livery, secundum formam Chartae, it shall be good against the wife to bind her; for the Livery alone did not make the Lease, but the Livery and Deed, and it took its operation by both. And although if Livery had been made before Michaelmas, it had been voided to make it a good Lease; yet it being made after Michaelmas, it is made a good Lease by the Deed and Livery, and not by either of them solely, for the Livery in this case is but the Execution of the Deed, and is a sufficient witness of their Agreement, which is the cause it ought to be by Deed to prove the Agreement of the wife; and all Reservations, Covenants and Warranties in the Deed, are good, and the Lessor and Lessee bound by them. CHAP. XVIII. Wills. How and in what Cases a Feme Covert may make a William. What she may device without the consent of her Husband. If she may make a Declaration in the Nature of a Will, without the Assent of the Husband. Several Cases of the Husband's being bound to permit his Wife to make a Will. Of Devises to the Wife by the Husband or others, and the Constitution of such Devises. What is a Devise by Implication or not. Of a Feme Coverts assenting to a Legacy. If the Husband may device the Term made to him and his Wife. Wife Lagatee of Goods is made Executor, if the second Husband's Executor shall have them. How and in what Cases a Feme Covert may make a Will, and it shall be good or not. A Feme Covert may make a Testament, if her Husband agreed to it after her death, Mich. 8 Jac. B. Grant's Case. A Feme Covert may not device things in Action which she hath, without the Assent or Agreement of the husband, and by his assent she may make Executors, or him to be Executor, 4 H. 6. 3. 39 H 6. 27. A Feme Covert Executrix may not device any Goods she hath as Executrix, without the assent of her husband or his Agreement afterwards, although she may make an Executor without his assent Grant's Case, supra. Regularly a Feme Covert cannot make her Will, Regula. and therefore a Feme Covert made a Will, and deviseth 30 l. per annum out of some of her own Land to a charitable use; the Heir submits himself to an Award, and is bound to perform it; the Arbitrators award payment of it, yet by Decree of Chancery the Heir is discharged of the Payment, and the Devise was voided ab initio: The like case of an Infant. If a Feme sole make a Feoffment to her own use, and after takes husband, and after makes a Will that the Feoffees shall make an Estate to her husband and dies; this Devise shall not be good in Chancery, because that all Acts by a Feme Covert are voided, and there Aequitas sequitur Legem. But though a wife cannot make a Will without her husband's Assent, Declaration in the nature of a Will. yet she may make a Writing or Declaration in the nature of her Will, and it shall be good in many cases, as was Tilley and Peirce's Case, Cro. Car. 376. Debt upon Bond conditioned, Whereas the Defendant was to espouse A. S. a Widow, if the Marriage took effect, and he should survive the said A. S. there were paid to the Obligees 300 l. to and for such Uses and Purposes as she said A. S. by any Writing under her Hand and Seal, subscribed and published in the presence of two witnesses, should nominate, declare and appoint than, etc. The Defendant pleads, she did not limit, declare or appoint any Use or Purpose for the employment of that Money. Plaintiff replies, that she by her Will in writing, sealed and published by her in the presence of two Witnesses, (naming their names) did will and appoint such Sums to be paid, and that the Defedant had not paid them, and on Arrest, Judgement, pro Quer. The Condition of a Bond was; Whereas he had taken A. S. a widow, to wife, Condition of a Bond to permit a Wife to make a Will. being possessed of divers Goods. If he should permit his said wife to make a Will, and dispose in Legacies as much as she would, not exceeding 50 l. and pay and perform what she appointed, so that it exceed not 50 l. that than, etc. The Defendant pleads she made not any Will, and upon issue it was found that she made a Will, and did dispose of divers Legacies, not exceed 50 l. but that she was Covert at the time of making the Will; and Judgement pro Quer. for it is a Will within the Intent of the Condition, and it is but her Appointment which the husband is bound to perform, Cro. Car. 219. Marriot and Kinsman. The like Case is Cro. Car. 597. Sherman and Lilley. The Condition was to permit his wife to make a Will of her first husband's Goods, to the value of 100 l. to be paid within one year after her decease, That than, etc. Defendant pleads, that he permitted his wife to make a Will, but does not pled that he paid it accordingly, and so the Plea was held to be ill. It is held in 3 Keb. 624. Articles were made before Marriage, That the wife shall make a Will, and the husband to pay the Legacies devised. Per Cur ' Her Will is voided, and the husband bound only by the Articles to permit it, vid. Mod. Rep. 211. In Harris and Hessie's Case, 1 Keb. 347. Authority was given by the wife to device 300 l. and she disposeth 200 l. by Fifties, and well, per Cur '. If a Feme Covert make a Will, and device Goods to another, and the husband after her death deliver the Goods to the Devisee accordingly, this shall bind him, 26 E. 3. 71. Of Devises to the Wife by the Baron or others, and the Construction of such Devises. A Man may device Lands to the wife, though they be but one person in Law, because the Devise doth not take effect till after his death; Feme cannot device her Lands to her Husband. but though a last Will doth not take effect till after death, yet if a Feme Covert be seized of Lands in fee, she cannot device the same to her husband, because at the time of the making her Will she had no power, being sub potestate viri; and the Law shall intent it to be done by the Cohersion of her husband, 1 Inst. 112. b. If a Man device Lands, whereof he is seized in Fee to his Son and Heir after the death of A. the wife of the Devisor, Device by Implication. this shall raise an Estate for life to A. by Implication, because by this the Divisor shows his Intention that this his Heir shall not have this during the life of his wife; whereas had it not been for the Devise, he ought to have had it presently upon his death, 13 H. 7. 17. b. But upon a Lease for years on condition, that he should not alien to any besides his Children, the Lessee deviseth part of the Estate to H. his Son, after the death of the wife, and made his Executors. Per Cur '. This Devise to the Son after the death of the wife, is not any Devise to the wife in the mean time, for its plain he did not intent it to his wife, but to his Executors in the mean time, and so no breach or forfeiture. (But in the other Case none other could have it besides the wife, Cro. Jac. 74. Horton and Horton's Case.) And if a Man device a Term to the Son after the death of the wife of the Devisor, this shall not raise any Estate to the wife, because it does not appear that his intent was so, because the Son was not to have this by the Law after the death of the Devisor w●●●●ut a Devise, but the Executor. If a Man device a Term to his wife, if she so long live unmarried, and if she marry, than the wife shall have a Rent out of the Land, Consent to a Legacy of a Term. and make his wife Executrix and die, and the wife consent to the Legacy of the Term, and enters upon it, and after takes husband, this Consent to the Legacy of the Term is also a Consent to the Rent when the Contingent happens, Mich. 13 Jac. B. R. East and Hayward. Feme Covert cannot assent to a Legacy. It is settled, that a Feme Covert cannot assent to a Legacy; for if she should have power to assent or disassent to a Legacy, than if a Term be devised to a Feme for life, (who is also Executrix) Remainder to J. S. if the Feme taketh J. S. to husband, yet it should be in her power to affirm or destroy this Devise, which would be mischievous, Syd. 188. Cook and Bellamy. One devised a Term to his wife for life, and after to his Children not provided for; and the Term was afterwards sold upon Execution for the Debt of the wife, and after the wife died during the Term; it was judged that notwithstanding this Alienation, the Children of the Devisor should have the Residue of the Term, Woodcock's Case. Where the wife shall have the Goods, and not the Executors of the husband. The Residue of my Goods I give to F. my wife, whom I make Executrix of this my Will, to dispose for the Health of my Soul, and to pay my Debts; and dies: She pays the Debts, and takes a second husband, who makes his Executor, and dies possessed of the Residue of the Goods; the wife shall have them, and not the Executor of the husband if he did not makes Gift of them in his Life-time, Dyer 321. 1 Anders. 23. More 98. Plo. 544, 343, 545. J. S. deviseth to his wife 100 l. to be paid at such a day, and if it is not paid than, that his Executors sh●●● pay her 200 l. at such a day after to come: The w●●e dies before the first day, the Executors are ●●●●●arged, Hill. 2 Car. Rot. 858. Dier 262. in margin. Of the Husband's devising the Estate of the Wife. If a Lease be made to Baron and Feme for years, th● Baron cannot device the Term, because the wife is in by Survivorship before the Devise takes effect. CHAP. XIX. Rend, Reservation, Emblements. In what Cases the Wife shall not have the Rent though the Reservation be to her. The Husband grants a Rent out of the Wive's Term, and dies; If the Wife shall hold it discharged, and why. Of what Arrears of Rent the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 37. gives the Husband power to recover. Feme Covert received the Rents, they not having notice of the Coverture. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Arrears. Avowry for Rent out of the Wife's Land, how to be brought. Where the Executor of the Husband shall have the Rent, and not the Wife. Where the Wife shall have the Emblements, and where the Husband. What shall be good to the Wife or not. A. Possessed of a Term for 100 years by Deed indented, mentioned to be made between him and B. his wife of the one part; but she never sealed the Deed. A. and B. assigns the Term to C. yielding and paying during the Term to A. and B. and the Survivor of them, and to the Assign of the Survivor of them, 10 l. Rent per annum, upon condition that if the Rent be not paid, it shall be lawful to him and his wife, and the Survivor of them, and the Assigns of the Survivor of them, to re-enter, and after A. dies; neither his Administrator, nor B. the wife, shall have the Rent, Rend not to be reserved to a Stranger. nor enter for the Condition broken: for the wife shall not have the Rent, because she sealed not the Deed, and so the Rent cannot be reserved to her, being a Stranger; and so it's voided as to her, and the Administrator of A. shall not have this as Assignee of A. during the life of B. in as much a● this was not intended as a Limitation to determine by the death of B. but to be reserved to B. herself, and so the Assignee in Law of the husband cannot claim it, because he did not survive the wife, and the wo●d Solvendo cannot enure by way of Grant to the wife, Solvendo. when it is by way of Reservation to the husband. And the Condition in this Case runs with the Rent; Lessee assigns his Term rendering Rend to him and his wife, (she seals not the Deed) and dies; the wife shall not have the Rent. and therefore the Rent being gone, the Condition is gone also; and although the Rent be reserved during the Term, yet the other words (to A. and B.) restrain it, 2 Rolls abr. 450. Cro. Car ' 289. Bl●●d and Inman, Godbolt 448. And so is 2 386. where the husband possessed of a Term by Indenture, to which the wife was party, (but she did not seal 〈◊〉 it) assigns all his Term to the Assignee, rendering Rend to the said Baron and Feme, and the Survivor of them, and dies; neither the wife nor the Administrator may have the Rent. Debt for Arrears. Rent was granted to Baron and Feme for their Lives, the Rent was Arrear, the husband dies, another Rent is Arrear, the Feme dies intestate, and her Administrator brought Debt for the Arrears du● in the life of the husband and after. Per Curiam, It will lie because the Arrears survived to the wife, as well as the Rent itself, Cro. El. 791. Temple's Case. Baron grants a Rent out of the Wife's Land. If the husband hath a Term in the Right of his wife, and the husband grants a Rent out of it, and dies, the wife shall hold it discharged, for she comes in paramount the charge, 7 H. 6.1. b. 9 H. 6. 5. She shall not have the Rent, because she comes in paramount the Reservasion; but the Executor of the husband shall have it. Contra Perkins, Sect. 834. 1 Inst. 46. b. A Man possessed of a Term for 20 years in the Right of his wife made a Lease for years, rendering Rend to him, his Executors and Assigns, and died, the Rent is gone; but by Montague, the wife in Chancery may be relieved, for the Rent, Godb. 279. A Feme sole is seized of a Rent in Fee, Remedy for Arrears. etc. which is behind and unpaid; she taketh husband, the Rent is behind again, the wife dies, the husband by the Common Law should not have the Arrears grown due before the Marriage; but the Statute of 32 H. 8. c. 37. gives the husband the Arrears due before the Marriage, and a double Remedy for the same by Action or Distress, 1 Inst. 162. Tenant in Dower makes a Lease for years, rendering Rend, and takes husband; the Rent was in Arrear, the husband dies, his Executors shall have the Rent. When a Feme Covert receives from the Lessees the Rents, the Lessees not having notice of the Coverture, Payment of Rent to the wife not good. there being no Countermand of Payment to the wife. Per Curiam, This Payment of Rent to the wife is no payment, but the husband may well demand it and recover it again: The payment to the wife is not material, for by such pretences Femes Coverts should receive their husband's Rents without their Authorities, which is not allowable, (but this seems to be durus sermo; and it is an hard case that the Tenants should refuse to pay the Lessor, and so forfeit their Bonds of Covenants, and it is a kind of Impossibility for them to divine whether she be married,) Cro. Jac. 621. Sir Paul Tracy versus John Dutton. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Arrears. The Husband or his Executors, 10 H. 6, 7. 4 Co. 49. and Underwood's Case, B. R. 1641. shall be chargeable in Debt for the Arrearages in the time of the Coverture on Lease made to a woman, dum sola fuit, 1 Keb. 22. Of Avowry for Rent. Vide Avowry. Where the husband shall be charged in Debt for Rent. Land is demised to a Widow, she marries, the Re●● incurs during the Coverture, the wife dies, the h●sband shall be charged in Debt for the Rent, R●mond 6. Pain and Monshall. If a Feme, having a Rent for life, takes husband's and dies, Arrears. the husband shall have the Arrearages ●●curred during the Coverture; but he shall not ha●● the Arrears during the Coverture by the Comm●● Law, yet this seems to be aided now by the St●●● of 32 H. 8. A Man possessed of a Term for 20 years in right 〈◊〉 his wife, makes a Lease for 10 years, rendering Re●● to him, his Executors and Assigns, and died: T●● wife shall not have it, Where the wife shall not have the Rent. for she comes in by Title p●●mount; and it is but an Extract of 10 out of ●●, the Remainder continuing as before, and the Exec●tors shall have it, for the Rent shall be incident 〈◊〉 him who hath the Reversion under the Lessor, w●● is the Executor, Poph. 145. Blaxton and Heath. Emblements. Where the Wife shall have the Emblements, and where the Husband. If Tenant in Dower sow her Land, and die befo●● the Corn is ripe, the Corn in Conscience belongeth 〈◊〉 her Executors, and not to him in Reversion; but otherwise, it is in Conscience of Grass or Fruits, 〈◊〉 the Diversity in Law maketh the Diversity in Conscience. The Tenant in Dower may device ●he Corn so●ed upon the Land, she is endowed of: If the Husband's sow the Land, the Property of the Corn is in the Executor, but subject to this Condition; If the Heir ●●sign to her the Land sowed for her Dower, she shall have the Corn, for she shall be in de optima possessione viri, above the Title of the Executor, 2 Inst. 81. If a Lease be made to Baron and Feme during the Coverture, and the Baron sows the Land, and after they are divorced causa praecontractus, the Baron shall have the Corn, because the Judgement is an Act of Law, 5 Cok. 116. Oland's Case; and so it is if the Divorce be at the Suit of the husband, though Popham seemed to doubt of it. If an husband seized in Fee or for Life in the right of his wife, sows the Land and dies, Baronsows the Land, and than there is a Divorce. or his wife dies before Severance, yet he or his Executors shall have the Corn, 1 Inst. 55. b. If Baron and Feme, Jointenants for life, Where the Wife shall not have them. and the husband sows the Land, and dies before Severance, his Executors shall have the Emblements, and not the wife; for there is no Diversity in this case, and where ●he husband is seized in the right of the wife, Mich. 5 Jac. Skehe and Arnoll, B. C. but 1 Inst. 55. b. 〈◊〉 contra: for there it is said she shall have the Corn, and so it's said in Cro. El. p. 61. by Wray, that it was so adjudged: Quaere Dyer 3. 6. 1 rolls Abr. 727. Noy 149. per Cro. Car. 515. she shall not have it. But by Coke in Goodman and Gore's Case, Godb. 189. Sil. 270. Baron and Feme are Jointenants, the Baron sows the Land, the wife surviving, shall have the Emblements. If a Feme seized in Fee, or for Life, of Land, Where she shall have them. sows this, and after takes husband, who dies before Severance, it seems the wife shall have them, and not the Executor or Administrator of the husband, because the husband did not sow them. If Baron seized of a Copyhold Land in Fee sows it, Copyhold. and after surrenders it to the use of a Feme, who is accordingly admitted, and after the Baron dies before Severance, the Feme shall have the Emblements, and ●ot the Executor or Administrator of the Baron; because the husband passed the Emblements with the Land, to the Feme as an Executor to the Land, and by it the Privilege which the Law gives to him that sows, is taken away by the Surrender, and so is 〈◊〉 one as if the Feme had sowed it, or purchased the Land sowed of a Stranger. If the Baron sows the Land, and dies before Severance, and his wife is endowed of this Land so sow●● of a third part, she shall have the Emblements, and not the Heir or Executor; for she is to have the Land fuerit culta vel inculta cum frugibus & redditib●●, Bract. 2. 96. In Action of Trower the Question was. Feme tenant for Life takes the Plaintiff to husband, the Remainder to another for Life, Hops. and Hops were growing out of the ancient Roots, being within the Land in question, the Feme dies a little before the gathering of the Hops; whether these Hops appertain 〈◊〉 the Husband, or to him in Remainder? The Co●● held, they are like Emblements, which shall go to the husband or Executor of the Tenant for life, and ●ot to him in Remainder; for they are such things 〈◊〉 grow by Manurance, and Industry of the Owner, 〈◊〉 not to be compared to Apples and Nuts, which grow of themselves, Cro. Car. 515. Latham and Awood. A Feme Copyholder, durante viduitate, sows the Land, and before Severance takes husband; the Lord shall have it, Cro. El. 466. alias 471. For what things created during the Coverture, the Wife shall be charged after the death of the Husband, by her Agreement or Disagreement. Rent. If Baron and Feme accept a Fine, rendering Re●● if she agreed to the Estate after the death of the husband, she shall be charged with the Rent, 50 E● 3. 9 b. If a Lease for years be made to Baron and Feme, rendering Rend, if after the death of the husband the wife agreed to the Lease, Debt lies against her for all the Arrears incurred in the Life of the husband, 2 H. 4. 19 6. but after the death of the husband she may disagree to the Lease. If Baron and Feme join in a Feoffment of the wife's Land, rendering Rend, the Baron dies, By Acceptance of Rent a Feoffment affirmed. the Feme takes a new husband before any Rent; the second husband accepts the Rent, the Feoffment is affirmed for ever. If Baron and Feme Lease by Deed, and after the husband dies, and she takes a second husband, who accepts the Rent, this shall affirm the Lease against the wife perpetually, Dyer 159. If Baron and Feme join in a Lease for Life of the Land of the wife or years, rendering Rend, the wife may make this good by Agreement after the death of the Baron, 10 H. 6. 24. b. and shall have the Rent, 3 Leon. 271. Butler and Baker's Case. If Obligation be made to Baron and Feme, Obligation. the wife may refuse it after the death of the husband, 4 H. 6. 6. and by such waver, this is made an Obligation to the Baron sole. So it is in Exchanges and Partition, where Possession of one is waved and refused. CHAP. XX. Copyhold. What Acts of the Husband shall destroy, or forfeit the Custom of the Wife's Copyhold Estate, and wh● not. Where she shall have her Viduity, though the Freehold be severed from the Manor, and where not. Of Grant, and Surrender to and by B●●●● and Feme, and the Construction thereupon. Customs of Manors as to Wives or Widows, which are good, or not. What Acts of the Husband shall destroy the Custom of the Wife's Estate, or forfeit it, or not. THE Husband seized of a Manor in the Right of his Wife, let's a Copyhold Parcel thereof, for years, by Indenture, and Died; this shall not destroy the Custom as to the wife, but that after the death of her husband she may demise it by Copy as before, Cro. El. 459, or 475. Conisby and Ruskey. The Custom of a Manor is, If any Copyholder dies seized, having a wife at the time of his death, that his wife shall have it during her Viduity, the Lord and the Copyholder enfeoff J. S. thereof, and the Copyholder dies, his wife shall have it during her Viduity; Custom continued quoad the Wife, tho' the Freehold be severed from the Manor. for the Custom is continued quoad her although the Freehold be severed from the Manor▪ for the Lords Acts shall not prejudice the Copyholders Estate, and it is a Privilege by the Custom fixes to the Estate, that the wife shall have it after h● death, Cro. Jac. 573. Waldoe and Bertler. Vid. ● Rolls Rep. 178. Mesme Case. But the Custom of a Manor was found to be, that If a Copyholder in Fee died seized, his wife should hold it during her Life as free Bench, the Lord enfeoffs the Copyholder, who died seized; she shall not have the Land; but if the Lord had enfeoffed a Stranger of the Land, yet the Land remained Copyhold, and the Custom is not taken away, Cro. Jac. 126. Leshmere and Avery. If a Copyholder makes a Lease for years of Lands, Feme that hath the Widow's Estate, shall not avoid a Lease made by her Husband. whereof a Feme by Custom is to have her Widow's Estate, she shall not avoid the Lease, unless there be a special Custom to avoid it; for he comes under the Custom, and by the Lord's Licence, as well as the wife, Cro. Jac. 36. Farley's Case, Moor No. 147. Mesme Case. Baron seized in the Right of his wife of a Copyhold Land, surrenders it. Per Walmsley, It is a Discontinuance notwithstanding 4 Cok. 23. Discontinuance. Cro. Jac. 105. Collins and Couck. What Acts of the Husband shall forfeit the Wife's Estate or not. Feme Copyholder takes husband, who lets the Lands for more years than the Custom doth warrant; it is made a Quaere in Head and Challoner's Case, Cro. El. 149. whether this shall bind the wife as a Condition in Law. But it is resolved in Sauerne and Smith's Case, Palm. 387. and 2 Rolls 344, 372. Mesme Case, Copyholder makes a Lease for more years than the Custom warrants, it's no Forfeiture. if Feme Copyholder of Inheritance takes husband, the husband makes a Lease for more years than the Custom will bear, the Lord enters for the Forfeiture, the husband dies, the wife dies, the Heir of the wife enters, and his Entry adjudged lawful, so that it is no Forfeiture. Denial of rent. Denial of Rent by the husband shall be a Forfeiture against the wife, and so Denial to do Suit of Cou● are present Forfeitures. If a Feme Copyholder tak● husband who commits Waste, Wast. this shall bind the wife; and the difference betwixt this Act, and the husband's making a Lease is: In Waste the Forfeiture goes to the Inheritance of the Wast, which continues for ever; but in Sauerne and Smith's Case the Forfeiture determines with the Lease. Vide Rolls Rep. 372. But if a Stranger without the assent of the husband commits Waste, this is no Forfeiture, 4 Cok. 27. Clifton and Molineux. Dodderidge in Sauerne and Smith's Case, Diversity. took a difference, where the Copyhold came to the Woman after Coverture, his Forfeiture shall not bind her; for than it cannot be said it was her Folly to take an husband that would forfeit as it might if she had the Copyhold before Marriage, Palm. 387. Vide Hobert 181. Howard and Bartlet. Where the Severance of the Customary Tenants from the Manor, shall not prejudice the Widow in her Customary Estate. It is not in the power of the Lords to destroy Widows Estates. By the Severance Incidents to the Tenancy are not destroyed, but Incidents to the Seignory are. The Custom is that a Woman shall hold durante Viduitate; she shall make a Lease before Admittance; for in that case there is no Fine due to the Lord, and the Law vests the Estate in her, Noy 29. Remingt●● and Cole, Hob. 181. Surrenders, Grants, and the Construction. The husband takes Copyhold Lands of the Lord cui donor concessit seisinam, The Wife is named after the Habendum, the Grant is good. Habendum to Baron and Feme; this is a good Grant to the wife, though she be named after the Habendum, and the wife by the●● words takes a present Estate with the Baron, whic● she cannot do by Common Law Conveyance, 1 151. A Copyholder in Fee (where the Custom was for a Widow's Estate) made a Lease by Licence, Where Wife shall have the Rent, though no Party to the Lease. reserving Rend to him and his wife during their Lives, (and did not say, and either of them.) Per Curiam, The wife may have this Rent, though no Party to the Lease, and it shall continued for the Life of either of them, Hill's Case, cited 1 Vent. 163. The husband seized in Right of his wife, The Wife to join with the Husband in Grant of Copies. cannot grant Copies in his own name, but aught to join the wife with him, Cro. Jac. 99 in Shipland and Royden's Case. Husband seized in the Right of the wife of Copyhold Land, surrenders it. Walmsly held this a Discontinuance, notwithstanding 4 Rep. 23. Ideo Quaere; for I conceive it makes no Discontinuance; and Cok. 4 Rep. is good Law. Vid. Lex Cust. 178. Customs of Manors as to Wives, Widows; what are good and what not. That the wife of a Copyholder for Life shall hold it durante viduitate, was agreed to be a good Custom; and so the Custom of Taunton Dean, That if a Copyholder in Fee marries a wife, if the wife survives, she shall have the Fee, & sic e converso agreed to be good, Noy p. 2. There can be no Dower nor Tenancy by the Courtesy of a Copyhold, without special Custom, 1 Anders. 292. It was admitted by the Court to be a good Custom, That an Executor or Administrator shall have a year in the Land of the Copyholder against the wife that claims her free Bench, Noy 29. Remington and Cole. The Custom of a Manor was, That a Woman cooperta viro poterit devisare her Copyhold Land to her husband, or any other by the assent of her husband. Per Curiam, The Custom is not unreasonable; but because it was poterit devisare; which is a word of Justification, and it should have been usi sunt devisare, by way of Excuse, it was adjudged against the Plaintiff, Moor No. 268. 3 Leon. 81. Skipwith's Case. If a Man marry a Widow, it's a good Custom that she shall not have Dower, Kitchen 149. Dalt. 30. b. but such a Custom of the wife of Tenant in Fee, is not good. By Custom the wife to have the Moiety as Survivor, is good; and if any Lease be made, she shall have a Moiety of the Rent, 1 Keb. 357. The wife that is endowable of the Moiety of Gavelkind Land, may not wave it, and have the third part, Moor 260. CHAP. XXI. Vide William. Of the Wife's Separate Disposition. Where the Money which the Wife had separate power to dispose of, to whom it shall be paid. Separate Maintenance on a Proviso, and the Plead. Where Detainer of the Husband is a breach of the Condition. Covenants in a Deed of Separation between Baron and Feme, and for allowing yearly Maintenance, and Plead thereupon. COndition of a Bond was to pay 50 l. to the Plaintiff. Memorandum, Condition to pay 50 l. to J. S. and the Wife is to dispose of the 50 l. yet it must be paid to J. S. It is agreed before sealling, etc. that the wife may dispose of the 50 l. to whom she will in her life-time to be paid by the Plaintiff accordingly, he being only Trustee of the wife in the said Obligation. Defendant pleads, That the wife of the Defendant with his consent made her Will, and by it bequeathed 30 l. of the said 50 l. to divers Persons, and the rest to her husband the Defendant, and made him Executor, and after dies, and so she disposed of the said 50 l. in her life: In Debt on this Bond, and on Demurrer on this Plea, Judgement was given for the Plaintiff; for the 50 l. aught to be paid to be Plaintiff, notwithstanding the Disposal; Sir Tho. Jones, p. 216. Blunt and Collins. Covenant to pay to the Defendant's wife, or such as she appoints, 50 l. per annum as a separate Maintenance, provided she live at such a place as N. and W. appoint. Defendant pleads, She did not live at such a place as N. and W. appointed. The Plaintiff replies, She was ready to live at any such place, but that N. and W. appointed no place To which the Defendant demurred as being a Condition precedent; but the Plaintiff insisted it was a Condition subsequent, and so became impossible, one being since dead, and no place appointed. Condition subsequent, and not precedent. Per Curiam, The Defendant should say she lived at such a place, and that no other was appointed; for this is a Condition subsequent, the Covenant being in pursuance of a former absolute Agreement to pay so much; and it's like the assent of the husband, which is intended till the contrary appears, 3 Keb. 363. Leeds and Beer. Condition not to meddle with the Goods of the first husband; Detainer of them is a Breach. Bond conditioned, That whereas the Defendant should marry such a Widow who was possessed of divers Goods of her first husband, and the Goods of his Children, that her husband should not meddle with them; but that she and her Children might enjoy them without Disturbance or Interruption of the Defendant. The Defendant pleads Performance. The Plaintiff Assigns for Breach, that the first husband was possessed of such Shop and Goods, and that the wife had them before Marriage; and that such a day after the Marriage, the Defendant her new husband took the said Goods into his hands, and them detains Verdict pro Quer. And moved in Arrest of Judgement, that here is no sufficient Breach alleged, because he doth not show that the husband made a●● Act or Disturbance; for by the Intermarriage the Goods are in the husband, and it's not showed that he disturbed the wife to enjoy them. But per Curiam, The Breach is well assigned; for it's said he detained them from the wife, especially being after a Verdict, Cro. Car. 204. Crowle and Dawson. The Wife saves Money by her Frugality. The wife of an Improvident husband had, unknown to him, by her Frugality, raised some moneys for the good of their Children, which she had disposed of for that purpose, being no otherwise provided for: this Disposition of the wife the Lord Chancellor established by Decree; but afterwards upon Review and Assistance by the Judges, this Decree was reversed, as being dangerous to give a Feme power to dispose of her husband's Estate: This was Scot and Brograves Case, anno 1639. but in George's and Chancey's Case a Disposition by a Feme Covert of Money raised out of separate Maintenance, is good against the husband. Vide Supra. A Feme Covert purloined her husband's Goods or Money, and put the Money into other men's hands, Wife purloining her Husband's Goods or Money. who buy Lands to her use therewith; if the Heir or Executor of the husband do sue in Equity for Relief, and to have the Land or Money restored, yet denied Relief; for Egerton Chancellor said, He would not relieve Heir or Executor, (no not the husband himself if he were alive;) for he sat not there to relieve Fools or Buzzards who would not keep their moneys from their wives. The other Chancellors have been of another Opinion, and with great reason. An 100 l. was lent by the Lord Holles' Lady, and in the Note which was first given for it, it was written that the Money should be disposed as the Lady Holles should direct. An Action at Law for this Money being brought, it was barred by the Statute of Limitations: A Bill was exhibited for Relief, and the Statute of Limitations insisted upon; but in regard the Money was looked upon as a Depositum, and a Trust thereupon for the Lady, a Decree was obtained for the Money, 2 Ventr. 345. Lord Holles' Case. Bond was given before Marriage, that the wife should dispose of 500 l. which she did, and decreed good notwithstanding the Bond was canceled by the consent of the wife: But upon the releasing the said Bond, the husband gave a Note in writing, that she should dispose of it, so as first he might be made acquainted with it; and so the husband would have avoided the Note, pretending he was not acquainted with it; supposing those words to be a Condition; but the first Decree was confirmed 1 Rep. in Chancery 118. Palmer's Case. Separate Maintenance. A Feme Covert may sue without her husband for her Separate Maintenance, and the Demurrer was over ruled. Cases, 35 Reinss and Lewes. Money saved by the Wife out of her Separate Maintenance disposed by her. Baron and Feme by Agreement separated and lived apart, and it was agreed the wife should have 150 l per annum Separate Maintenance; and out of which she had saved some moneys, and put it out to Intere●●, and took Bonds in a Friend's Name, and disposed 〈◊〉 Money by Will; and this was in Chancery establi●●●● a good Disposition, Lady Prudgeon's Case. Cases 11●. In Covenant: The Defendant covenanted with t●● Plaintiff, That S. (wife of the Defendant) should be permitted to live separate from the Defendant ●●til the Defendant and the said S. by writing under their several Hands, attested by two Witnesses, should give notice to each other that they would cohabit: And further, that he the Defendant, during the Coverture, and until such notice be given of their Desi●●s to cohabit as aforesaid, would pay to the Plaintiff f●● the Maintenance of the said S. 300 l. per annum 〈◊〉 four Quarterly Payments; and sets forth, that the said S. from the Date of the Indenture of the Covenants, to the time of the said Suit, did live separate from the Defendant, and no notice of Cohabitation as aforesaid had been given during that time of either side, and for 75 l. for one Quarter's Payment, being alive. Defendant pleads in Bar, That after the Indenture aforesaid, and before the Action, another Indenture was made between the Defendant and S. his wife o● the one part, and the Plaintiff of the other, reciting the first Indenture; and further reciting, That t●● Defendant and S. did intent to cohabit, and did s● at that time, and expressing that it was the true ●●tent and Meaning of all the said Parties to the sa●● Indenture produced, ut supra, that so long as the Defendant and S. should agreed to cohabit, the said annual Payment should cease: And the Plaintiff did by the last Indenture covenant, That so long as they cohabited, that the Defendant should be saved harmless from the 300 l. per annum Payment. The Plaintiff replies, They did not cohibit modo & forma pro ut. The Defendant demurs. Judgement pro quer '; for unless the Cohabitation had been according to the first Indenture, as by writing mutually subscribed, and attested by two Witnesses, etc. it was no Bar; for the last Deed had not taken away the Effect of the former, and a later Covenant cannot be pleaded in Bar of a former: But the Defendant must bring this Action on the last Indenture if he will help himself, 2 Ventr. 217. Gawden and Draper. CHAP. XXII. What amounts to a Disposition of the Wife's Term by the Husband, to vest the Interest in him, his Executors and Administrators. What Condition i● Mortgages shall survive to the Husband or 〈◊〉. If the Mortgage of the Wife's Term doth amount to a Disposition in Law. Diversity between a Feoffment, and Bargain and Sale, as to the Extinguishment of the Term of the Wife. Of the Forfeiture of the Wife's Term by the Outlawry or Attainder of the Husband, or on extent. If Recovery by the Husband in Ejectment altars the Term. If Payment of the Debts of the first Intestate, vests a Term in him. What Trusts for the Wife the Husband may dispose of, or not. What shall amount to a Forfeiture of the Wife's Term. What amounts to a Disposition of the Wife's Term by the Husband, to vest the Interest in him, his Executors or Administrators. What power the Husband hath of the Wife's Term. THE Baron by the Intermarriage hath full power over the wife's Term to alien it; and if the wife dies, the Term survives to the husband; and if the husband dies, it survives to the wife unless he dispose it: But the husband can make no Disposition of it by his last Will, Plow. 416. Bransby and Gr●●tham; and so is 2 H. 4. 7. b. 1 Rolls Abr. 344 Pop. 5. where a Man possessed of a Term for years in the Right of his wife, made a Lease for years of the same Land, to begin after his death, and afterwards he died, and the wife survived him, the Question was, If the wife shall have this, or the Lessee? And per Curiam, The Lessee shall have it; for as the husband, during his Life might contract for the Land for the whole Term which the wife had in it; so might he do for any part of the Term at his pleasure; for if he may demise the Land for 21 years, to begin presently, he may make it also to begin at any time to come after his death if the Term of the wife be not expired; but for the Remainder of the Term, if the wife maketh no Disposition during his Life, the husband shall have it: But in this case, if the husband device this Land to a Stranger, yet the wife shall have it, and not the Devisee, as it happened in the Case of Matthew Smith, because that by the death of the husband (before which the Devise cannot take effect) the wife had it in her first Right not altered by the death of the husband. The husband can make no Disposition of it by his last William. So it is where Baron and Feme are Jointenants during the Coverture for 60 years; the husband by Indenture lets all the Land for 70 years to commence immediately after his death, the husband died and the wife survived, the Question was, If this were a good Lease to charge the Possession of the wife? And Per Curiam, 1. It is a good Lease, Term in Interest, though not in possession. for here is a good Term created in Interest, although not in possession; and it is not like a Case where nothing passeth till his death: 2. The husband having an Interest to dispose in his life-time, he might dispose all the Term, and it should bind the wife; so when he hath disposed by an Act executed in his life time of the Interest of the Term, and hath created a Term in Interest, this is as good as if he had granted all the Term, Cro. Eliz. 287. 1 Co. 155. Moor 329. Grant and Locroft. L. possessed of a Term for 18 years, and of another Term in Reversion of the same Land for 40 years, died intestate: His wife takes Administration, and enters and marries J. S. who let it to J. D. for 21 years, rendering Rend, and makes his Executor and dies. Per Curiam, During the first Term for years the Executor shall have it; for the husband had given away all that Term; but for the residue of th● Term of 21 years, which is derived out of the Te●● of 40 years, the wife shall have it as annexed to 〈◊〉 Reversion or Term which the wife had, Cro. El. 27●. Loftus' Case. Disposition of part of the Term, no Disposition of the whole. If a Man be possessed of a Term of 40 years in 〈◊〉 Right of his wife, and makes a Lease for 20 yea●●, reserving Rent and dies, the wife shall have the Residue of the Term, but the Executors of the husband's shall have the Rent; for it was not incident to 〈◊〉 Reversion, for that the wife was not Party to 〈◊〉 Lease: So note, A Disposition of part of the Term 〈◊〉 no Disposition of the whole, 1 Inst. 46. 6. But Blackstone and Heath's Case is; A Man possessed of a Term for 20 years in the Right of the w●●● makes a Lease for 10 years, rendering Rend to him, 〈◊〉 Executors and Assigns, and died: The first Questi●● was, If the Executors or the wife shall have the Re●● By Houghton and Crook the Rent is gone, against Montague, who held the wife should have it; 〈◊〉 it was agreed that the Executors of the husband 〈◊〉 not have it: And if the husband after the Lease m●●● had granted over the Reversion, the Grantee sho●●● not have it: But by Montague in that Case in Chancery the wife may be relieved for the Rent, Godb. 27● Pl. 396. Pop. 145. Possibilities not vested in the Husband. In Cases of Possibilities the Law doth not ve● them in the husband: As if a Feme sole be possessed of a Chattel Real, and be thereof dispossessed, and than takes husband, and the wife dies, and the Baron survives, this Right is not given to the Baron by the Intermarriage; but the Executors or Administrato●● of the wife shall have it; so it is if the wife have b●● a Possibility, as if the husband possessed of a Term i● the Right of his wife grants this to J. S. if he sha●● so long live, and dies, the wife shall have this Possibility of Reversion; if J. S. dies within the Term, and not the Executors of the husband, 1 Inst. 351. 1 Rolls Abr. 345. So if a Lease be made to Baron and Feme for Term of their Lives, the Remainder to the Executors of the Survivor of them, the husband grants away this Term and dies; this shall not bar the wife, for that the wife had but a Possibility, and no Interest, 1 Inst. 46. b. Baron and Feme mortgage their Interest in the wife's Term, Baron and Feme join in a Mortgage of the Wife's Term, the Feme dies, the Condition shall survive to the Husband. and before the day of Payment the wife died, and the husband paid the Money at the day in Redemption of the Mortgage, and entered and took another wife, and made her Executrix, who entered, R. took Administration to the Goods of the first wife, and entered upon the Lessee, upon whom the second wife entered, and made the Lease to the Plaintiff, and Judgement was given for the Plaintiff, because that though the Lease was at first the wife's, and that the husband was possessed in her Right; so as though he had purchased the Fee-simple, the Lease had not been extinct; yet by the Intermarriage he hath full power to alien it; and if he survive the wife, he is to enjoy it against her Executors and Administrators: So here when he survives, the Condition survives to him and restores the Lease to him in state as it should have been if it had been aliened, Hob. 3. Young and Radford, 1 Rolls Abr. 344. the same Case. It is said in Rolls Abr. 344. If a Feme possest of a Term take husband, and they grant the Term upon Condition, and re-enter for the Condition broken, the wife shall have the Term again: And the Case of Radford and Young is there cited to be adjudged contrary to Hobart; which was, if a woman possessed of a Term take husband, and they grant the Term upon Condition, if their Executors or Administrators p●y 10 l. to re-enter, and after the husband pays the 10 l. this is not any Disposition, but they shall be possessed in the Right of the wife; for although he pay the moneys to redeem it, yet perhaps he received the Money when it was mortgaged. If a husband possessed of a Term in Right of his wife grant this over upon Condition, that the Grant●● shall pay 10 l. to his Executors, the husband dies, the Condition is broken; the Executors of the husband enter, the wife shall not have the Term, for this w●● a Disposition of the Term; all the Interest being granted over, 1 Inst. 46. b. If husband possessed of a Term in Right of the wife, grants this to J. S. if he shall so long live, and dies, the wife shall have this, causa qua supra. If a husband grant the Land which he had i● Lease in the Right of his wife, except part, the wi●● shall have this part so excepted, for it is not disposed of, Dyer 264. Lessee for years assigns his Term to the wife of the Lessor and a Stranger, and after the Lessee barg●●●● and sells the Land for Money by Deed enrolled, 〈◊〉 dies; the Stranger dies, and the wife claims to h●●● the Residue of the Term not expired. Now 〈◊〉 Bracebridge's Case, Ploughed. where the husband i● such a Case made a Feoffment, it was adjudged that by the Livery he had extinguished, Extinguishment of the Term of the Wife. and given over the Term of the wife: But some make a Divers●●y where the husband makes a Feoffment, and where a Bargain and Sale, because by it nothing passeth b●● the use; and after the Statute of 27 H. 8. the Possession is conveyed in such manner as the Use, and by the Grant of the Use the Lease in jure uxoris, passe●● not, Moor 171. Extent of the Wife's Term. If a Term for years in the Right of the wife be extended for the Debt of the Baron, this shall bind t●● wife, 7 H. 6. 26. but the wife shall have the Residue after the extent incurred. If the Baron grant the Herb or Vesture of the Land, which he held with his wife for years, and dies, the Grantee shall have the Grass or Vesture, 7 H. 6. 52. If Baron and Feme be ejected out of the Term in Right of the wife, Recovery in Ejectione Firm is a Disposition and the Baron recovers in Ejectment brought by him in his own name only, this is an Alteration of the Term, and vests in the husband only, 1 Inst. 46. b. Upon Execution against the husband for his Debt, Term of the Wife sold by the Sheriff. If Baron be outlawed or attainted. the Sheriff may cell the Term during his Life. Terms for years in Right of● the wife, if the husband be outlawed or attainted, they are Gifts in Law, 1 Inst. 351. Though the husband be possessed of the Term in her Right, yet he hath power to dispose thereof by Grant or Demise; and if he be outlawed or attainted, they ●re Gifts in Law, 1 Inst. 351. Two Femes Jointenants of a Lease for years, Two Femes Jointenants, one takes Husband and dies, the Term shall survive. one of them takes husband, and dies; yet the Term shall survive; for though all Chattels real are given to the husband if he survive, yet the Survivor between the Jointenants is the elder Title, and after the Marriage the wife continued sole possessed; for if the husband die, the Feme shall have it, and not the Executors of the husband; aliter of personal Goods, 1 Inst. 185. b. What Trusts of the Wife the Husband shall dispose or not. If husband being possessed of a Term for years, grant this over in Trust, for the Benefit of the wife, he may afterwards dispose and forfeit this Trust, and bar the wife, p. 8. Jac. in Scac. Wyke's Case; What Trust of the Wife the Husband may dispose or not. for he had as great a power of the use which he had in the Right of his wife, as he had of a Term in the Right of his wife; but if he make a Lease for years to another to the use of the wife if she so long live for her Jointure, the husband may not dispose this Trust, Mesme Case, and so for the Benefit of his Wife and Children. If a Lease be made by the Father to P. A. 〈◊〉 Trust for the Advancement of his Daughter, who married with him, the husband may clearly dispose of this Term, and no Remedy at Common Law for it, 1 Bulst. 118. Platt and Sleep. If a Term for years be granted in trust to the 〈◊〉 of the wife, the husband ought not to have this Tr●●● after the death of the wife. If a Term for years be granted to the use of a Fe●● Sole, and she takes husband, and dies, the Administrator of the wife shall have the use and not the husband; because this Trust of the wife was a th●●● in privity, and in nature of an Action, for wh●ch there is no remedy but by Writ of subpoena; for th● Trust runneth in privity in this case, and the husband's shall not be Tenant by the Courtesy of an Use. The Husband cannot grant or charge the Term of the Wife in trust. A Woman conveys a Lease in Trust for her 〈◊〉, and after marries; in such case it lies not in the power of the husband to dispose of it, and if the wife 〈◊〉 the husband shall not have it, but the Executor 〈◊〉 the wife, March Rep. 45. Sir John St. John's Case, so ruled at Common Law; and in Wytham and Waterhouse's Case, a Lease for years was granted to the Defendant to the use of the Grantor's Sister, whom he afterwards should marry; who married her accordingly, and than died: the Feme takes the Plaintiff to husband, and afterwards she died; and the Defendant takes Administration of the Plain●●●● wife's Goods, and the Plaintiff sued the Defendant i● Chancery to have the Term; and it was decreed by the advice of all the Judges of England, that neither the Term nor the Use thereof appertained to the husband, Nor forfeit it for Outlawry or Felony. Cro. El. 466. And it was resolved in Chancery, That the husband cannot grant or charge th● Term of the wife in Trust, Cases 225. as the w●●● having assigned her Term in Trust for herself befo●● Marriage, and the husband without joining with th● trusties, does mortgage the Trust; and the husband's being dead, the Mortgagee exhibits his Bill to have the Lands conveyed to him, or that they should redeem, and the Court dismissed the Plaintiffs Bill; for since Queen Elizabeth's time it has been the constant course of this Court to set aside all Encumbrances and Acts of the husband upon the Trust in the wife's Term, and that he shall neither charge or grant it away, neither shall he forfeit it by Outlawry or Felony if it be for Jointure. A Trust was for raising of Money for a Feme sole in case she did not marry contrary to the liking of Sir Ed. W. and his Lady; and if she did, Trust for raising Money for a Feme sole if she marry with consent. than to such persons as the said Sir Edward and his Lady, or the Survivor of them, should nominate; and for want of such Nomination, than to Sir Edward and his Lady; and Sir Edward and his Lady were Lessees in Trust. The Feme sole married without their consent, Sir Edward died without any Appointment, and so did his Lady. The Court was of opinion, that it was not in the power of Sir Edward and his Lady to have disposed of this Lease, otherwise than for the Benefit of the Feme sole, if she had lived; and her Administratrix was well entitled to the Benefit of this Lease. Cases 58. Fleming and Walgrave. A Trust was, Annuity purchased in Trust for the Wife, yet the Arrears decreed to the Husband. That one A. should purchase in his own name an Annuity of 80 l. per annum for the Life of the Plaintiffs wife, and pay the same to her and her Assigns, and the Bill in Chancery was to force the Payment of this Annuity to the Plaintiff, who lived separate from his wife: It was decreed, That the husband being Assignee of the wife, and that there being no Negative words by the Will to exclude the husband from the Annuity, he could not exclude him, and so decreed the Defendant to pay all the Arrears and the growing Annuity to the Plaintiffs husband. Cases 194. Dakins and Beresford. Diversity between a Lease for life, and a Lease for years. Note, A Diversity between a Lease for Life and a Lease for years made to a Feme Covert, for if I let Land to a Feme Sole for Term of years, who taketh husband, and after I confirm the Estate of the husband and his wife, To have and to hold the Land for Term of their two Lives: In this Case they have a Joint Estate in the Freehold of the Land, for that the wife had no Freehold before; but her Estate of Freehold cannot be altered by the Confirmation made to her husband and her, as the Term for years may, whereof her husband may make Disposition at his pleasure; and this Confirmation makes them Jointenants for life, because a Chattel of a Feme Covert may be drowned, 1 Inst. 300. a. Term vests in the husband by Payment of Debts. Executor de Son Tort dies intestate, his Mother administers, and after takes husband, (there being amongst the Chattels of the wife as Executor the Son Tort, a Term for years) the husband pays so much of the Debts of the first Intestate as the Term for years is worth. Per Curiam, The Term for years is vested in the husband, Sid. p. 76. Baker and Beresford. What shall amount to a Forfeiture of the wife's Term, or not. Lease for years is made to Baron and Feme, provided that if the same Land shall come into other hands, than to Baron and Feme, and their Issue, that the Lord upon tender of 100 l. may enter. By Dyer and Brook his Entry is lawful, for it is the Act of the wife: By Marriage of an Husband who aliens. Weston count ', for it is an Act in Law, and the husband is possessed in jure Uxoris, aliter if the wife had been dead. The principal Case in Dyer was; The Lessee covenants that if he, his Executors or Assigns, alien the Term, than the Lessor to enter. Lessee makes his wife Executrix, and dies; the wife takes husband, the husband aliens the Term, and it is debated there whether the Lessor may enter. Baldwin; The Condition is not broken, because the husband's Estate is made by Law, and cannot be said Assignee, and so like a Tenant by the Courtesy: But by Brown and Shelley, an Assignment in Law is as strong as an Assignment in Fait; and by the Espousals the Term vests in the husband, as if it had been a Gift by the wife, and it was adjudged it was a Forfeiture, Dyer 6. b. 7. a. CHAP. XXIII. What Acts done, or Contracts made by the Wife, shall bind the Husband, or not. Six Resolutions of the Court in Scott and Manby's Case, as to that Point, and other Cases relating thereto, and the manner of laying the Action, and declaring therein. REgularly the Contracts of Femes Covert are voided, in as much as their Powers are transferred to their husbands by the Intermarriage, Sid. 120. Yet in 11 H. 6. 30. it is the Opinion of Martin, that if a Woman buy things suitable to the Degree of her husband, he shall be bound by it; so 27 H. 8. 25. 67 Brook, if the things come to the use of the husband, she shall be charged by the Contract of the wife, Sid. 114. 2 Cr. Car. 258. and yet Hutton, Rep. 106. Bill and Lully's Case, the Baron shall not be charged by the Contract of the wife, Sid. 123. Dyer 324. It is said in 1 rolls Abr. 351. If a wife buy things for her necessary Apparel without the assent of the husband, yet the husband shall be bound to pay it, Sir Tho. Gardner's Case. But these seeming Diversities will be reconciled by the following Resolutions in Scott and Manby's case. Six Resolutions in Scott and Manby's Case. 1. Husband shall not be bound by Assumpsit in Law upon the Contract of his wife, although for Necessaries, Sid. 109. 2. If the wife buys any things, and the husband does any Act precedent or subsequent to show his assent, the husband shall be charged for it, though not by Assumpsit in Law, yet by reason of the Assumpsit in Fact, whether they are for herself, Children or Family, Sid. 120. 3. Though our Law does not exclude the wife from having a Community in using the Goods of the Baron, (and so it is not Felony in her to take them) Stamf. 276. yet she may not dispose them; as she may not pawn them, and so enforce him to a Redemption, Sid. 122. If the wife play and loose 40 l. of her husband's Money, the husband shall recover this again in Action of Trover against the Gamester, Tr. 6 Jac. Rot. 1717. Rice Rey versus Tho. Stephens. Though the wife may not bind her husband by her Contract for Necessaries, yet she is not destitute of a Remedy; but Chancery, or rather the Ordinary, will do it, Sid. 124. The buying of Goods in a Market overt of a Feme Covert, knowing her to be a Feme Covert, (unless in such things in which she usually tradeth by and with the Consent of her husband) bindeth not; but regularly Sale by a Stranger in a Market overt, bindeth Infant or Feme Covert that hath either in their own Right, or as Executrix or Administratrix, 2 Inst. 713. If the wife buys any thing, and it is found by special Verdict that this is spent in the Household; yet the husband without his actual assent, shall not be charged; so is 21 H. 7. 40. b. If my wife buy things to keep my Household, as Bread, etc. and I do not know of this, and it is spent in my House, I shall not be charged for it, Sid. 126. but the Employment to the Uses of the husband, is good Evidence for the Jury to found that the husband Assumpsit, although it be not binding Evidence: As is the Case of a Factor, or Servant that buys Goods which come to the use of the Master, the Master shall be charged. So if the husband be in a Voyage beyond Seas, and during his absence the wife buys Victuals, or other Necessaries for her, this is good Evidence for a Jury to found that the Baron assumpsit, and so the Judge ought to direct them; so if the Baron will not cohabite wi●● the wife, and she buys Necessaries, this is good Evidence, etc. but this Evidence is not binding nor conclusive; but Presumptive only, as in the Chancellor of Oxon's Case, 1 Co. in Trover and Conversi●● Request and Denial is a good Evidence for the Jury to have found for the Plaintiff; but being found sp●cially, the Court cannot give Judgement pro Quer ' 〈◊〉 more in the principal Case. Also the husband mig●● have contradicted such presumptive Evidence by other Proofs, as that he gave the wife ready Money 〈◊〉 buy. 4. Admitting in such Case, that the husband should be charged by Assumpsit in Law, yet if he prob●●● particular Persons specially that they should not tru●● his wife, he shall not be charged after such Prohibition; and Prohibition given to the Mercer that she is a Feme Covert, and than let him trust her at his ●●ril. As to a Man's Prohibition in general not to trust his wife, as by posting or putting her in the News-books, that none shall trust his wife, this h●● been voided in itself, Sid. 119. because if such Prohibition should be good, the Law gives her a fr●● lesle power in enabling her for to contract w●● there is no person who may contract with h●●, Sid. 114. 5. Admitting that the husband shall be charged upon Assumpsit in Law for Necessaries, the finding of the Jury that the things bought by the wife 〈◊〉 necessary to the degree of her husband is not goo● for the Law will that Women shall be maintain●● according to the Estate, and not to the Degree of the husband: But the Jury ought to have found, th● they were Necessaries suitable to the Estate and Degree of the husband, or that they were necessary generally, Sid. 128. 6. Where Women are allowed by their Husbands to be Housekeepers, and have used to buy things without ready Money for the Household, the husband shall be charged for them; for in such a respect the wife is as a Servant, Scott and Manby's Case. Baron shall not be charged in Trover and Conversion for things which the wife buys, Delivery of Goods to a Feme Covert, not knowing her to be so. though the buying be voided: But if the delivery of Goods be to a Feme Covert, not knowing her to be a Feme Covert, or to an Infant, not knowing him to be an Infant, it is otherwise, Sid. 129. Mod. Rep. 841. If a Woman will not cohabit with her husband, How it is if a Woman will not cohabit with her husband. and buys Victuals and Chattels for herself, and it is given in Evidence to a Jury that these are Necessaries for the Estate and Degree of her husband; yet this is no Evidence for a Jury to found that the Baron assumpsit; and there is a difference between those Women that will cohabit with their husbands, and those that will departed of their own heads. Action was brought against the Defendant upon ●●deb. Assumpsit pro diversis mercimoniis vendit ' & deliberat ', to the wife to the use of her husband, it being for her wearing Apparel. After Verdict for the Plaintiff it was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that this Declaration being laid, Declaration. that the Sale was to the wife, though it was to the use of the husband, was not good, as if it had been sold to the Servant of the Plaintiff. Yet per Curiam, It being for her Apparel, and that suitable to her Degree, the husband was to pay for it; and so it was resolved in Scott and Manby's Case, 1 Vent. 42. Dyer and East. In Assumpsit the Plaintiff declared upon several Promises, three whereof were for finding Lodging so many Months for the wife of the Plaintiff at his request, and the last Promise was Indebitat ' for Goods sold to the Defendant himself. The Defendant pleads, Long before he lodged her, she went away without his consent, and lived in Adultery with some Persons respect of the Profits taken by Dame Dorothy Fl●● and himself, should be liable to the Payment thereof. For the Tort died not with Floyd, as if Feme Tena●● for life marries, and the husband doth waste and dies; Wast lies against the wife. Feme Executrix takes h●●band, that wastes the Testators Estate; a Devasta●●● lies against the Feme after the death of the husband f●● the Waste of the husband, Cases in Chan. 81. Gil●●● and Smith. The Husband charged with the debt of the Wife for Goods. The wife when sole bought Goods for Money, 〈◊〉 after married, and died; the Goods came to her husband's hands after her death, but the Debt rem●●●● unpaid: The Plaintiff Creditor brought a Bill to discover the Goods, and it was demurred to, but the Demurrer was overruled, Cases in Chan. 295. Freeman and Goodham. Vide Plus infra; Where the husband shall be punished for Torts done by the wife. CHAP. XXIV. Feme Covert, Executrix. Administratrix. 〈◊〉 a Feme Covert may be made Executrix, and of what things; what things the Administrator of the Wife shall have, and not the Husband, as Cho●es in Action, etc. Debt recovered by Baron and Feme Executrix, and she dies, if the Husband shall have Execution. What things Feme Covert Executrix, may do without her Husband, or not. Obligee makes the Wife of one of the Obligor's Executrix, quid operatur. Legacy devised to the Wife, who is made Executrix. Whether she shall be in as Excutrix, or as Legatee. Of her assent to a Legacy. Debt as Executrix not extinct by the Intermarriage, and why. Feme Executrix takes the Obligor to Husband, if that be a Release in Law. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Waste of the Wife as Administratrix, and the manner of Proceed by the Sheriff in such Case; and whether Execution shall be de bonis propriis of the Husband. Of Actions brought by Baron and Feme as Executrix or Administratrix. Where Administration belongs to the Baron and Feme. ●st how a Feme Covert may make Executor, and than how she may be made Executrix. A Feme Covert may make her Testament of Goods, and make an Executor by the assent ●f her Husband. A Feme Covert may make an Executor of Ch●●● in action due to her, 8 Jac. B. C. Graunt's C●● and so is 18 Ed. 4. 11. b. A Feme with the consent of 〈◊〉 Husband may make an Executor of things, which 〈◊〉 husband shall not have by her death. She may make her husband Executor of the Go●● which she hath as Executrix, if he will accept 〈◊〉 4 H. 6. 31. A Feme Covert cannot make Executor wit●●● the assent of her husband, and the Administration 〈◊〉 her Goods of Right appertains to her husband, 4 〈◊〉 Ognel's Case. But a Feme Covert Executrix may make an E●cutor of the Goods which she hath as Execu●●● without the assent of her husband, and in such 〈◊〉 Administration appertaineth not of Right to the ●●●band; and what she had as Executrix, she had 〈◊〉 altar droit, and not otherwise an Interest in the 〈◊〉 M. 8 Jac. Graunt's Case. Administration of the Goods of a Feme Covert. If a Feme Covert dies intestate, Administrati●● may be granted of her Goods; for peradventure 〈◊〉 had Chooses in action, which are not given to the ●●●band by Law, Dyer 251. admitted. What things the Administratrix of the Wife 〈◊〉 have, and not the Husband. Chooses in action. The wife's Administrator shall have Chooses in ●●on always, and not the surviving husband; as i● case of Lease or Bond: As if an Obligation be m● to the use of the wife. The Case was; Art● Johnson was possessed of a Term for years, and 〈◊〉 signs it over to J. S. being Brother to the wif● the said Johnson, to the use of the said wife: Jo●●son dies, and makes his wife his Executrix, 〈◊〉 which the said wife takes Rob. W. to husband, 〈◊〉 takes the Profits of the said Lands during the life 〈◊〉 the wife; the wife dies intestate, J. S. as next of 〈◊〉 took Administration as well of the Goods of the said wife, as of her first husband. By all the Judges ●●e Administrator had now as well the Interest as the ●●e of the said Term, as well in Conscience as Law: And Rob. W. shall not have it, because it is as a thing 〈◊〉 Action, which the Administrator of the wife shall ●●ways have, and not the husband: As if an Obligation had been made to the use of the wife, Pop. 106. ●●. Johnson's Case. Feme as Administratrix to her husband brought Debt for Arrears of Rent incurred in the Life of the ●●●band; Arrears of Rent. which Rent was granted jointly to Baron 〈◊〉 Feme. Per Curiam, The Arrears belong to the ●●fe in jure proprio, and not as Administratrix of 〈◊〉 husband, and the naming her Administratrixes ●●s surplusage, Moor 886. Dembian and Brown. If a Feme Executrix to J. S. takes husband, and af●●● the Baron and Feme brought Action of Debt upon 〈◊〉 Obligation in Right of the wife, Debt on Bond by Baron and Feme Executrix, and they have Judgement, Feme dies, the Baron shall not have Execution. as Executrix to ●. S. against J. D. and have Judgement against him 〈◊〉 recover the Debt, with Damages and Costs; and ●er the wife dies before Execution sued, the hus●nd shall not have Execution upon this Judgement; 〈◊〉 that he (although he be privy to the Judgement) 〈◊〉 he shall not have the thing recovered; but this being's to the succeeding Executor or Administrator of J. S. 1 Rolls Abr. 889. Beaumond and Long. ●●de Infra. Lease to J. S. who assigned it over to K. who by 〈◊〉 Will devised the same to his wife, who made her executrix also; and she afterwards took one W. to ●●sband, and died. W. takes out Letters of Admini●●tion of the Goods and Chattels of his wife, and used it to the Plaintiff: The Question was if the ●●●e be in as Executrix or Legatee, Feme Legatee and Executrix, at Election. for until Election ●●de she shall not have it as Legatee. But it was ●●ved that the said wife, Executrix to her husband, had made a Lease by Deed, reciting thereby that where the husband was possessed in Right of his wife as Executrix of her first husband. Per totam Curiam, This is an express Claim as Executrix; and than when the wife dies, if the husband would have advantage of it, he ought to take out Letters of Administration of the Goods of the first husband. Vid. 1 Le●●. 215. Cheyney and Smith. A Woman is made Executrix, and after married, she cannot now assent to a Legacy, there being no Interest vested in the husband. Assent to a Legacy. Contra, Of a bore Authority given her to cell; but by Windham this assent, and the husband's not contradicting it, is good Evidence that he did agreed, 1 Keb. 708. Cook and Bellamy. What things Feme Covert Executrix may do without her Husband, or not. Feme Covert Executrix may make an Executor without his assent. Feme Covert Executrix, without her husband, acknowledgeth Satisfaction of a Judgement without real Satisfaction had, Acknowledge Satisfaction. it is not good, Sid. p. 31. Lady Fe●ner and Sir Lewis Dives. Feme Executrix may not give the Goods of the Testator in pios usus, without the assent of the husband. Vid. 14 H. 6. 4. vid. Cook, p. 9 43. In Russel's Case, 5 Rep. 27. it is agreed that a married wife cannot do any thing as Executrix i● prejudice of her husband. Two were bound to a third jointly and severally; the Obligee made the wife of one of the Obligors Executors, and deviseth to her all his Goods, after Debts and Legacies paid, and dies: The Woman Executrix administers; than the same Obligor made her his Executrix, and died, leaving Assets' to pay the Debt; than the wife dies intestate, and the Plaintiff administrat. de bonis non, if the Obligee brings Action and sues the surviving Obligor. It was resolved that the Action lies not: 1. When the Obligee made the wife of one of the Obligors Executrix, Obligee makes the wife of one of the Obligors Executrix the Action was suspended during the Continuance of the Executorship, and than the Rule is a personal Action once suspended, is extinct if it be by his own Act, as here it is by making the Woman Executrix, Regula. aliter by Act in Law. 2. When the Obligor made the Executrix of the Obligee his Executrix, and left Assets', the Debt was presently satisfied by way of Retainer, Obligor makes the Executrix of the Obligee his Executrix. and so no new Action can be had for that Debt, Hob. 10. Friar and Gildridge, Moor 855. Mesme Case: But if a Feme Executrix of a Debtee takes the Obligor to husband, and after the Baron dies, this Suspension is not any Extinguishment, Feme Executrix of a Debtee takes the Obligor to Husband. because it was by Act in Law, and in altar droit, M. 30 & 31 El. Sir John Needham's Case, 8 Co. 136. A Feme Executrix marries with a Debtor of the Testator; the husband dies, and Debt was brought against the Feme, who pleads riens enter les mains; and if this were Assets' was the Question? Per Curiam, Debt suspended. This Debt is not Assets' in her hands; for by the Intermarriage the Debt which the Executrix had en auter droit, was not extinct but suspended; and the Action was revived against the Executors of the Baron, and compared it to Darcy's Case in the Commentaries, Cro. El. 114. Crossman and Read. Though if the Feme Obligee take the Obligor to husband, this is a Release in Law: Feme Obligee takes the Obligor to husband But if a Feme Executrix takes the Debtor to husband, this is no Release in Law, for that should work a Devastavit, which an Act in Law shall not work, 1 Inst. 264. b. If a Man takes to wife an Excutrix, all the Debts being paid, and he hath Goods in his hands to pay Legacies, the wife dies, the husband cannot be sued for these Legacies in the Ecclesiastical Court by the Legatees; for the next of Kin to the wife may have Letters of Administration granted to him of these Goods in the hands of the husband. And therefore if such husband, after his wife's death, makes a promise, That in Consideration he had the Goods, being more than would satisfy, if the Plaintiff being Legatee would forbear to sue him for such a time, he would pay the Legacy. It is a good Consideration, 1 Bulst. 44. Smith and Jones. Administratrix, dur ' minoritate of the Daughter; Executrix made divers Bonds to the Creditors of the Testator, Of Husband's retaining Goods. and than took husband. Per Curiam, The husband may retain so much of the Testator's Goods as amounted to the value of the Debts paid. But Hobert, p. 250. makes it a Question, how the Case shall be if the wife die? for than the Husband is not longer chargeable by her Bond: But it's said in 1 Rolls Abr. 923. If the husband in the life of the wife declare that he retains such particular Goods instead of the Obligations, although the wife after dies; yet by the Declaration the Property was absolutely altered in the husband, Alteration of the Property of the Goods. and than the death of the wife will not divest it, Briers and Goddard. Feme and another Person are Executors; Feme takes husband, the husband doth not altar the Property of the Goods of the Testator, and the wife dies; now the other Executor shall have Action of Detinue against the same husband of the said Goods, Ben●●. No. 38. p. 10. Where the Husband shall be charged with the Waste of the Wife Administratrix: The manner of the Proceeding of the Sheriff in such Case; and whether Execution shall be de bonis propriis of the Husband. If A. recover against B. Debt and Damages, Where Execution shall be de bonis propriis of the husband. and after B. dies, and Administration is granted to C. his wife, who wastes the Goods; and after she takes D. to husband, and a Fieri fac ' is awarded de bonis Testatoris in the hands of D. and C. the Sheriff returns nulla bona, etc. And upon this, on surmise that they have wasted the Goods, other Writ is awarded to the Sheriff, si sibi constare poterit per Inquisitionem, that they have wasted, than to warn them to show cause why Execution should not be de bonis propriis, and the Inquest found this matter, and refer it to the Court whether the husband and wife have wasted the Goods of the Testator, according to the Writ or not. Upon this special Return the Court shall award Execution de bonis propriis, of the Baron and Feme; for the Sheriff had returned the special Matter, and therefore the husband is to be charged for the Conversion of the wife, M. 16 Car. 1. B. R. Knight and Hilton, Ux. versus Copping, 18 H. 6. 14. b. Upon Suggestion of a Devastavit of a Feme Executrix, it was laid, Declaration in Waste against Baron and Feme Executrix. that the Baron and Feme Devastaver ' and Converter ' ad usum ipsorum; and upon the Issue it was found accordingly: It was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that they could not convert to their own use; and so in Trover and Conversion, quod Converter ' ad usum ipsorum, is not good. But Per Curiam, Here the material part of the Issue was the Wasting of the Baron and Feme, which they might do jointly, and the Conversion is nothing to the purpose, 2 Vent. 45. Now the reason why Execution shall be de bonis propriis of Baron and Feme, is, the wife may have Goods as a Term, or Chattels real before the Coverture; also she may have Goods after the husband's decease; and therefore in Debt the husband is charged in Right of his wife, as Executrix, and Judgement is given against them, it shall be de bonis suis propriis, and good. And it was resolved, Cro. Car. 519. in Mounson and Bourne's Case, that a Devastavit may be by a Feme by Eloigning the Goods, as a Feme Covert may do a Tort, and be punished for it. It was held also, that if a Man take Executrix to wife, and waste the Goods, it is a Devastavit in the wife. And if there be a Recovery against Baron and Feme upon a Devastavit, if the Baron survive the wife, he shall be charged; also if the Feme survive, she shall be charged: But if the Recovery be not against Baron and Feme in the life of the wife, Where the Husband shall not be charged. and she dies, the Baron shall not be charged. Feme is Executrix of her first husband, and she administered when she was Sole, and than takes a second husband; Baron and Feme committed to the Fleet on a Devastavit. and there is a Devastavit returned, and a Capias ad Satisfaciendum against both de bonis propriis, and the husband was committed to the Fleet, and so was the wife, because the Devastation of the husband shall be the Act of the wife, Dyer 210. marg. M. 38 & 39 El. B. C. Vaughan & Thomas. A Woman is indebted by Obligation as Executrix, and had Assets' of the Goods for the Debt, and after takes husband, the Debtee demands the Debt of the husband, and thereupon they submit themselves to Arbitration of all Actions and Demands; the Arbitrators may make an Award of this Debt that the wife of the husband as Executrix owed to the Debtee, Husband chargeable with a Devastavit of the wife, tho' not Assets' came to his hands. And per Coke, in this Case, though no Assets' came to the hands of the husband, yet he is chargeable for the Devastavit made by the wife before Coverture. So 21 H. 7. 29. Award of a Debt due to the Wife as Executrix. b. The husband submits all Actions and Trespasses, etc. and the Award was of a Debt due to the wife as Executrix. Per Curiam, This is a good Bar of the Debt of the wife, 1 Rolls Rep. 269. Lumley and Hutton. In Debt on Obligation against J. and his wife as Administratrix; The Defendant pleads Payment by the wife after the Intestate's death, and on that Issue found pro Quer ': Judgement quod recuperet debitum against Baron and Feme, de bonis Testatoris, si non, etc. the damages de bonis propriis. Judgement was quod recuperet debitum against them de bonis Testatoris, si non, etc. the Damages de bonis propriis. Per Curiam, This Judgement is well given; 1. Although the Plea be false, yet he is altogether a Stranger to the Testator; and therefore the Judgement shall be only de bonis Testatoris, and not where he pleads fully administered, which is false in his own Conusance: Although the wife hath not any Goods during the Coverture, yet because the husband is only charged in respect of the wife, and she might have Goods if she survived, and Execution might be taken against her, the Judgement is good, Cro. Jac. 191. john's and Adams. It is said in Rolls Abr. 919. If a Feme Executrix take husband who wastes the Goods, the Feme dies; by the Common Law there is not any remedy against the husband: Devastavit returned against Baron and Feme; Feme dies, the Husband shall be charged. But in this Case by the Ecclesiastical Law, the husband shall be punished and compelled to make Restitution; but if a Devastavit is returned against Baron and Feme, and the Feme dies, yet the husband shall be charged, Sid. 330. If the husband possessed of Goods in the Right of his wife as Administratrix, Prohibition against a Spoliation. grants the Goods to J. S. and after the wife dies, and after a new Administration is granted to J. D. who sues the Grantee of the Goods for a Spoliation, in the Ecclesiastical Court, a Prohibition lies, M. 11. Car. 1. B. R. Clark and Daniel. So if such husband waste the Goods, and after the Wast dies, if the husband be sued in the Spiritual Court for a Spoliation, or a waist of the Goods, a Prohibition lies, 2 Rolls Abr. 302. Term extinct in one respect, yet remains Assets' in another. Feme Executrix hath a Term, and takes husband, and the husband purchaseth the Reversion, the Term is extinct as to her if she survive; but as to all Strangers it shall be accounted as Assets' in her hands, Moor 54. 1 Leon. 720. Crossman and Reade. In Leon. the Case was, J. S. made his wife Executrix, and died; J. D. being than indebted to the Testator in 60 l. upon a simple Contract, the wife Executrix took to husband the said J. D. J. D. made his Executor, and died: A Creditor of J. S. brings an Action of Debt against the wife, Executrix of J. S. and upon the pleading, the Matter in Question was, If by the Intermarriage of the wife with the Debtor of the Testator, Intermarriage of a Feme with a Debtor of the Testator. the same were a Devastavit or not, and if the said Debt of 60 l. due by J. D. should be Assets' in her hands? And per Curiam, It is no Devastavit nor Assets'; for the Woman may have an Action against the Executor of J. D. and it was agreed per Curiam, that if a Man make a Debtor and a Stranger his Executors, and the Debtor dieth, the surviving Executor may have an Action of Debt against the Executor of the Debtor. Debt on Bond by Baron and Feme Executrix, and they have Judgement; Feme dies, and the Husband shall not have Execution, and why. If a Feme Covert, Executrix to J. S. take husband, and after the husband and wife bring Action of Debt on Obligation in Right of the wife, as Executrix to J. S. against J. D. and have Judgement against him to recover the Debt, with Damages and Costs; and after the wife dies before Execution sued, the husband shall not have Execution upon this Judgement; for that (though he is privy to the Judgement) yet he shall not have the thing recovered, but this appertains to the succeeding Executor or Admnistrator of I S. M. 7 Car. B. R. Beaumond and Long, vide Supra, Trin. 11 Car. B. R. Jefferies' Case, Cro. Car. 208, 227. after a year and day the husband brought Scire fac ' to have Execution. But per Cur ' The Scire fac ' lies not; for the first Action was brought by the Baron and Feme Administratrix, which is en auter droit, and the Recovery being thereupon, is in Right of the Intestate; and the Feme being dead, the Baron cannot claim that Debt; for the Administratrix being dead, the Suit is merely determined, and cannot be revived by any but he who comes in in that Right, and so doth not the husband; and he who ought to have the Scire fac ' might have Privity and Property in the Debt, and the husband hath no Property in it. W. and his wife being possessed in Right of the wife of a Term, which she had as Administratrix to her first husband C. W. being indebted, by Contract granted the Term to Coleman, to the use of W. and his wife for their Lives, and after to the use of Coleman himself. W. is sued for this Debt and Recovery against him, and the Sheriff by Fieri fac ' sold the Term to the Defendant. Term in the Wife as Administratrix, if extendible for the Debt of the Husband. The Grant of the Term is not voided by Stat. 3 H. 7. as made to defraud Creditors; for this Grant is not to avoid Creditors, for the Term being in Right of the wife as Administratrix if it so continued in the hands of W. and had never been granted, this was not extendible for the Debt of W. and if W. himself had it as Executor, it had not been extendible for his proper Debt, and Fraud shall not be intended except expressly found. Actions. Vide Supra. A Feme Executrix takes husband, By Outlawry the Husband forfeits no Goods as the Wife had as Executrix. they bring Action of Debt as Executrix, and recover and have Judgement; but in bar of this the Outlawry of the Baron is pleaded. Per Curiam, The Baron forfeits nothing of the Goods which the wife had as Executrix, 3 Bulst. 210. Hix and Ux. versus Harrison. Indebitatus by Baron and Feme as Administratrix of J. S. on account as Administratrix, and Arrearages found to Baron and Feme as Administratrix: The Defendant demurs, because it is not said, The Debt was due to the wife as Administratrix, 3 Keb. 396. A Feme sole delivers a certain Sum of Money into the hands of J. S. the Defendant thereupon Covenants with the Feme to pay to A. B. 100 l. per annum, Covenant with a Feme to pay A. 100 l. per annum, Feme takes husband, husband makes Executor and dies, the Executor may sue for the Arrears so long as the Money shall continued in the hands of J. S. the Feme takes husband, the 100 l. per annum is Arrear; the husband makes his Executor, and dies, and after his death the 100 l. per annum is an Arrear also: The Executor brings Action of Covenant upon the Indenture, and good; for the Covenant concerns the Executor because he represents the Testator, Styles 140. Pope and Hunt. By a Grant of omnia bona & Catalla sua by Administratrix, what passeth. If Administratrix takes husband, and the husband grants omnia bona & catalla sua, and it is expressed in the Deed that he gives an Horse in the Name of Seizin of the Goods, which Horse is Parcel of the Goods of the Intestate, as it is found by special Verdict, the Goods of the Intestate shall pass by this Grant, 2 Rolls Abr. 58. Obligee made his wife Executrix, and died; and the wife being Executrix died Intestate: The Plaintiff in the Action took out Letters of Administration of the Goods and Chattels of the wife, and brought this Action of Debt on the Bond as Administratrix of the wife; whereas the Plaintiff ought first to have taken out Letters of Administration de Bonis non Administratis of the Testator, and so to have brought he● Action, Stiles 225. Leg and Anderton. Assumpsit against the wife of an Intestate in consideration of Forbearance, is not good unless she administer, 1 Leon. 240. Filwicks and Holt. Where and how Administration belongs to Husband or Wife. Administration by our Law belongs to the husband, and not to the wife's Kindred, by the Stat. 31 Ed. 3. c. 11. and the Stat. 21 H. 8. does not compel the husband to take Administration, for it is a Penal Law, and extends only to the wife and children; so is 4 Rep. 51. Ognel's Case, Cro. Car. 106. john's and Rowe. The Daughter takes husband, and dies; the Mother obtains Letters of Administration, and a Prohibition was denied, because Administration ought to be granted to the husband, and not to the Mother; and it is not like to the Case of two in equali gradu, and one obtains Letters of Administration, which shall not be repealed because they have executed their power, Sid. 409. CHAP. XXV. Actions. Suits. Abatement of a Writ or Suit in Law or Equity, by Marriage or Death pending the Suit. If the Wife be put before the Husband, the Writ abates. Fe●● Plaintiff after Writ of Enquiry, and before the Return marries, if the Action shall abate. Fe●● Sole depending a Bill in Chancery takes Husband, if the Suit shall abate. How it is if she be Defendant. Of Actions which the Husband may ha●● for Wrongs done to the Wife. Indictment by Baron and Feme, and against Baron and Feme. Where and in what Cases Wives are indictable, without their Husbands or not. Abatement by Marriage. Death. BY Marriage: It's a Rule. The Taking of an husband between the Ni●● Prius, Reg. and the Day in Banco is not Error, because it is but a Plea in Abatement; but the Death of one of the Parties is Error, because by this the Writ is abated, though it cannot be pleaded, Sid. 143. W. and his wife brought Case for Slanderous Words, against H. and his wife: H. the Defendant dies, the Feme takes another husband, pendant the Suit, the Court inclined because the Defendant had by her Intermarriage changed her Name, that the Writ abated, Styles 138. White and Harwood. If Feme Sole Plaintiff takes husband, the Writ is not abated, but abateable, 1 Leon. 168, 169. Death or Coverture at the time of the Writ purchased, abates the Writ de Facto, but Coverture after makes it abateable, i e. only by Plea. Trespass was brought by the Plaintiff, being a Feme Sole: It was tried by Nisi prius, Plea, at the day in Banco, that after the Verdict, and before that day, the Plaintiff took Husband. and Verdict pro Quer ' and Damages. The Defendant at the day in Banco pleads, that after the Verdict, and before that day, the Plaintiff took to husband one J. S. and ●e being married, demanded Judgement. Per Curiam, This Plea cannot be pleaded; for the Defendant hath no day to pled it, and the Plaintiff had Judgement, Cro. Car. 232. Feme maketh a Letter of Attorney to the Plaintiff to gain a Debt, and than marries; this is not any Countermand or Revocation of the Suit, and the Writ is not abated, but only abateable, 1 Leon. 186, 189. Lee and Madox. By Death. Action was brought by H. against Sir Tho. Pope and A. his wife, as Daughter and Heir of Sir Tho. W. and hanging the Writ, Pope died: Hobart was of opinion, that the Writ shall not abate. But Executrix brings Action in her own Name, and the Name of her husband, and pendant the Writ, the Baron dies, the Writ shall abate, Winch. p. 102. Holman versus Sir Tho. Pope and his wife. Feme pendant the Writ against her, takes husband; this doth not abate the Writ, but the Recovery against her upon the first Writ is good: But if after the Original Process sued, and before the Return she take husband, this shall abate the Writ, by Dodderidge in Heydon and Miller's Case, 2 Rolls Rep. 53. Several Writs of Scire fac ' by Baron and Feme, against Terretenants, Baron dies; Quaere if Writ abate against all. Baron and Feme bring several Writs of Scire fac ' against Terretenants in divers Counties: Judgement is given against some of them by default, and pendant the Pleas of others; and before any Execution the Baron dies, Quaere if all the Writ abate as well against those against whom Judgement was given, a● against those who have pleaded, Hob. 287. Trespass against Baron and Feme; after Verdict pro Quer ' the Plaintiff died, between the day of Nis● Prius, and the day in Banco, in 11 H. 6, 7. b. It is held by all the Court that the Death of the Plainti●● or Defendant, Death after Verdict, and before the day in Banco. after Verdict by Nisi prius, and before the day in Banco, shall abate the Writ or Bill: But the Court doubted in the principal Case, because this is in an Action of Trespass, which is but personal, and is joint and several; and it is clear, if the Feme had been dead, and the Baron survived, Judgement should have been entered against him, and the reason is the same, that she surviving should be chargeable for the Trespass, Adjornatur, Cro. Car. 509. but in Cro. Jac. 356. in the Case of Ridgley against Lee and hi● wife. In Ejectment the husband died since the Nis● prius, and before the day in Bank. And per Curiam, Because it is in the nature of a Trespass, and the Fe●● is charged for her own Fact, the Action continues against the wife, and Judgement should be entered against her Sole, because the husband was dead. The Wife is put in the Writ before the Husband. The Writ shall abate if the wife be put before the husband, 2 Leon. p. 59 A Writ brought against Baron and Feme ab●●● by the death of the Feme, though after Verdict, H●● 129. Ejectment. Ejectment versus Baron and Feme, and thou●● they are one Person in Law; yet if Baron die, 〈◊〉 Plaintiff may proceed against the wife. If a Feme Sole bring Trespass and Recover, and a Writ of Enquiry of Damages is awarded, and before the return of it the Plaintiff takes husband, Writ abateable by Plea. and after the Writ is returned, and Judgement given upon it without any Exception taken by the Defendant, he shall not have advantage of this in a Writ of Error, because the Writ was but abateable by Plea, 1 Rolls Abr. 781. Smith and Odiham. Abatement in Chancery Suits. If a Feme Sole takes husband pendente Light, the Feme by her own Act hath abated her Suit, otherwise where she is Defendant. If a Feme Sole have a Bill depending in the Court of Chancery, and pendent the Suit, takes husband; by this her own Act, her Suit is abated, and if she and her husband will have the effect of the Suit, they must both join in a Bill of Reviver: But if a Feme Sole in such Case be Defendant and marries, in that case the Plaintiff may go on with his Suit, for the Marriage is no Abatement or Impediment because she is Defendant. If the Plaintiff exhibits a Bill against a Feme Sole, whereto she maketh answer, and after marrieth; the Plaintiff may proceed against her and her husband, without any Reviver, and her husband shall be bound by that answer she made before Marriage, in regard she shall not be admitted to take advantage of her own Act; contrary where a Woman Sole exhibits her Bill, to which the Defendant answereth, and than marries; her husband and she cannot proceed against the Defendant without Bill of Reviver. If a Man and his wife exhibit their Bill of Complaint, whereto the Defendant answereth, and the Man dieth, the Woman shall be at her Election, whether she will exhibit a new Bill, or proceed upon the former, and the Defendant shall be bound by the answer made to the Man and his wife. Baron and Feme join in a Bill for a Duty due 〈◊〉 the wife; she dieth before the hearing, the Baron ●●ter her decease exhibited a new Bill, and served ●●●cess to hear Judgement; because the Defendant 〈◊〉 not called to answer the hearing was put of. If a Man exhibit a Bill against a Man and his w●●● for a Matter which wholly concerneth the wife, a●● both answer, and after the Baron dies, this is an Abatement of the Suit that the Plaintiff cannot proceed against the Feme without Reviver; for the Fe●● shall not be constrained to abide by that ans●●● which she made with her husband, because she w●● than under the Power and Coercion of her husband; and he being dead, and she seized and possessed of the thing in question as her former Estate, she ought to make new answer, otherwise ought not to be bo●●● in Equity; but if she abide by her answer made with her husband, than the Plaintiff may proceed, and have a Decree to bind her. If Baron and Feme in the Right of the wife exhibit their Bill upon a Matter in Equity, whereunto the Defendant answereth, and the Feme dies, this is in some cases an Abatement of the Suit. As for instant; If the wife be Guardian in Socage, and taketh husband, yet the Feme continues Guardian; and if Baron and Feme in that Capacity exhibit their Bill for any Matter in Equity, and the wife dies, it's an Abatement of the Suit. Of Actions which the Husband may have for Wrongs done to the Wife. Vide Indictment. Trespass. de Uxore rapta & abducta cum bonis v●●▪ Vide Dyer 256. pl. 10. 2 Cr. 502, 538. 2 Inst. 18●, 434. Fitz. N. b. 84. W. 1. c. 34. 6 Rep. 46 Dyer 207. The Stat. 6 R. 2. gives Appeal of Rape to the husband where the wife consents to the Ravisher; but the husband in Reputation shall not have this Action: ●●t where it is a Marriage voidable till the Marriage be anulled, the husband may have Action within this Statute; but if the wife take two husbands, the second husband may not, because he is not Baron de Facto or de Jure, Lit. Rep. 75. Indictments. Vide Information and Offences. Indictment for Assault and Battery made upon Baron and Feme, Assault and Battery. and for pulling down the House of the husband. Exception was taken because the Indictment did conclude ad damnum ipsorum, whereas it should be ad damnum of the husband only. But per Curiam, The Indictment is good though ad damnum ipsorum is left out, Stiles, p. 155. Action on the Case in nature of a Conspiracy was brought against A. and B. his wife, for that they mal●tiose, conspired to indict him for stealing a Woman's Ruff, de bonis & catallis of B. the wife; and not guilty was pleaded, and Verdict for the Plaintiff. Though a Feme Covert may not have any Goods, (Goods of the Wife) how to construe after a Verdict. ●et being after Verdict, it shall be intended to be as it ●ay be, (viz.) that these were the Goods of the Wife, dum sola fuit; and that the stealing was intended than, and not whilst she was a Feme Covert, 1 Rolls Abr. 3. Skinner and Parker. Where Wives are indictable without their Husbands, or not. It was a Question in Fenner's Case, Whether a Feme Covert may be indebted without her husband, 〈◊〉 forestall or engrossing contra forman Statuti, and no opinion was given, because the Indictment was F. Spinster alias dict', wife of F. so that it does not appear properly by the Indictment, that she is a Feme Covert, because this which comes after the alias dict' is not parcel of the Name. But it was agreed, that for greater Offences, as for Recusancy, Felony, wives are indictable without their husbands, Sid. 410. Fenner's Case; but the husband being in Court, they set a Fine upon him. CHAP. XXVI. Joinder in Action. Where and in what Actions Baron and Feme shall join, and where and in what Actions not. In what Cases the Husband only shall have the Action. Diversity between an Action which affirms Property, and which disaffirms Property. Four general Rules of the Baron and Feme's Joinder in Action, and Cases under each to direct where Baron and Feme must join in the Action, or it may be brought by the Husband only. Particular Actions, as Trover, Indebitatus Assumpsit, Account, Formedon, Ejectione Firm, Actions for Rent, Rescous, Actions for Tithes, Covenant, Wast, Debt on Bond or Contract, Trespass, Battery, Escape, Action on the Case sur Assumpsit, Actions on the Case for Torts, Forcible Entry, Writ of Error, etc. and the manner of Declaring in such Actions. Of Actions brought by a Feme Covert against a Feme Covert. In what Cases a Feme Covert is enabled to sue without her husband. Of a Feme Sole Merchant. Where and in what Actions Baron and Feme shall join, and where and in what not. I Shall consider, 1. In what Cases the husband only shall have the Action. 2. In what Cases Baron and Feme must join. 3. Where the husband may join his wife with him or not at Election. In what Cases the husband only shall have the Action. There is a Diversity between Actions which aff●● Property, Reg. as Replevin, Detinue, etc. for those aught to be brought in the name of the husband only, because the Property is affirmed, Diversity between Actions which affirm Property, or disaffirm it. and Actions which disaffirm Property, as Trespass, Trover, etc. for th●se ought to be brought in both their Names, beca●●● they are founded in Tort made before Covert●●●, Sid. 172. Powis and Marshal; therefore Trover and Conversion by Baron and Feme, Trover. for Trover supposed before the Coverture, and Conversion afterwards Though two Justices in that Case were of opi●●●● that the Action ought to be brought by the Baron ●lone, Of Goods lost before or after the Marriage. because the cause of Action is after the Con●●●sion, and subsequent to the Marriage, Beaumond 〈◊〉 Graves' Case. If Trover be laid to her before the Marriage, which was the Inception of the cause of Action, the wife may be joined; aliter if the Co●●●●sion be laid after the Marriage. In the first Case the husband may bring the Action alone, or jointly with the wife. If one hath the Custody of a Wom●●'s Goods, and afterwards marries her, she may join i● Detinue with her husband, for his use in Bailment, the Proprietor is to some Purposes in Possession, 〈◊〉 to other Purposes out of Possession, 1 Vent. ●● 3 Keb. 329. Trover after the Marriage of Good lost and converted before, is well brought by Ba●●● and Feme, as on Bailment of Goods before Marriage they are in Possession as to Trespass, or out as to Detinue; to some Purposes this is but as a thing 〈◊〉 Action, and the Property not altered by Marriage. Baron and Feme Executrix bring Trover for Goo● of the Testator found and converted, it is well brought for the Possession of the wife as Executrix, is also 〈◊〉 Possession of the husband, and the Damages recovered shall be to the Estate of the Testator, and so may concern them both, Stiles p. 48. Fremling's Case. Shuttleworth and his wife brought a Trover and Conversion, Of the Goods of the Wife dum sola. and count that they were the Goods of the wife dum sola fait, and that she lost them, and the Defendant found them, and after they intermarry; and after the Defendant converted them, and it was adjudged against the Plaintiff, because notwithstanding the Trover of the Defendant this Property continued in the wife, and than by the Intermarriage the Property was in the Baron, and than the Baron ought to have brought this Action alone without the wife, cited 1 Rolls Rep. 45. Trin. 6 Jac. Rot. 1717. Ray and Stephens; For Money lost by the wife at Cards. Action of Trover by the husband for Money, which the wife had lost at Cards, and Judgement was for him though she played in his absence, yet he may have Action for the Money won by her. If the Goods of a woman are taken, and the woman after marries, Replevin. the husband Sole shall have Replevin, Fitz. Rep. 43. In all Cases where the wife shall not have the thing when it is recovered, Regu. neither sole to herself nor joint with her husband, but the husband only shall have it, there the husband sole shall have Action without the wife to recover it: As the husband shall have Action sole sur Stat. 5 R. 2. for entering into the Lands of the wife, 38 H. 6. 3. He shall have a Quare Impedit sole, 38 H. 6. 3. b. so in Trepass for taking the Charters of the Inheritance of the wife, 38 H. 6. 4. Baron shall have Trespass sole for Trespass on the Land of the wife, 38 H. 6. 3. The husband sole shall have an Action for words spoken against his wife, Words. and if the wife be joined with him, Judgement shall be arrested, Sid. 346. but they must be such words which are only actionable in respect of Collateral Damages. Baron and Feme may not bring Trespass of Assault and Battery of the wife, but the husband ought to bring the Action alone, because whatever Damages should be recovered would go to the husband only, Stiles p. 52. Reg. This Rule is in 3 Bulstr. 163. Bret and Cumberland: It is a good and sound Rule, That which the husband may discharge alone, and of which he may make Disposition to his own use, and where the husband may have the sole Profit of that which is recovered; for the Recovery of this he may have a● Action in his own name without his wife, as Covenant. Vide Infra. Reg. For Personal things Baron and Feme cannot join: But for Personal things in Action, it is in the Election of the husband to join his wife or not. And upon a Judgement given in Trespass by Baron and Feme, of their Close broken, and Corn carried away, it was reversed, Cro. El. 133. Arundel and Short: So is the Rule in March. Where Baron and Feme sue for Personal things done to them, they shall not join; but where they have a joint Interest as in Case, Quare Impedit, they shall join, March 47. Reg. Actions for Torts which survive to the wife after the death of the husband, the wife shall join, and in no other case. Baron and Feme bring Trespass for the Battery of the wife, and Tearing the wife's Co●● ad damnum ipsorum. Per Curiam, The Action as to the Tearing the Coat ought to be in the name of the Baron only; for it is the Goods of the Baron, and this had special Damages found by itself, and than it is ad damnum ipsorum, which ought not to be, Sid. 224. Staunton and Ux. Vide Hobart. Reg. In all Cases so long as the first Contract, or specialty made to the wife dum sola, continues, she shall join, for as much as if she die, the Baron shall not have Action for it, but ●s Administrator to her. And therefore in Action on the Case sur Assumpsit, the Plaintiff declares that the Defendant being in Debt to the wife of the Plaintiff dum sola, he assumed to pay the Plaintiff; and he further declares, that he being in Debt to the wife of the Plaintiff, etc. in other Sums, he accounted with the Plaintiff, and was found in Arrears so much, which he promised to pay: And after Verdict pro Quer ' Judgement was arrested causa qua supra; but if the husband declare that the Defendant accounted with him for Money due to the wife dum sola fuit, and was found in arrear, which he assumed to pay; and in consideration also that the Plaintiff would forbear until such a time, he assumed to pay: In the first Case it is ill after Verdict, because the first Contract continues, and the wife ought to be joined; but in the second Case the Action is founded upon a new Contract, which changeth the first by the consideration of Forbearance, and therefore in that Case the Action is well brought by the Baron Sole, Sid. 299. Tyrrel and Bennet. L. (the Plaintiff) married a Feme to whom Money was due dum sola fuit, and the husband and the Debtor came to accounted for the Money. The Debtor being found in Arrear promiseth to pay the Money due upon the account, to the husband at a certain day; and for not performing his Promise, Plaintiff brought Action on Indebitat ' Assumpsit. Per Glin, C. J. It is true the Account altars not the nature of the Action, Account altars not the nature of the Action of Indebit ' Assumpsit, but if the Jury found a special Promise, Q. but here the Verdict finds there was a special Promise made to pay the Money to the husband; and here is a distinct day set for the Payment of the Money, and the Consideration is good; for here is a Debt due to the husband, and he may release it: And the Doubt made by the Jury is, Whether the Action be well brought by the husband alone? Here is a Promise' made to the husband, and he hath brought the Action as if the Defendant were indebted to him; yet he is not indebted to him generally, but sub modo, (viz. jure uxoris) but it was not resolved, because the Writ of Error was ill, Stiles Rep. 473. Coney and Laws. If A. conveys Land to B. in fee by Indenture and Covenants, Covenant. with him, his Heirs and Assigns, to make any other Assurance of it upon request, for the better Settlement to B. his Heirs and Assigns; and after B. conveys this to C. in fee, who conveys this to D. and his wife, and the Heirs of D. and after D. requires of A. another Assurance, according to the Covenant, and he refuseth; the Baron Sole without the Feme may not have Action of Covenant as Assignee to B. because he and his wife are Assignees, and therefore aught to join in the Action, P. 14. Car. B.R. Midlemore and Goodale, Cro. Car. 505. But in most other Cases out of the foregoing Rules, the Baron may join the wife with him or not, at Election. But for the fuller Illustration of this Subject, (wherein our Books seem to vary) I shall treat of the particular Actions brought by Baron, or Baron and Feme; and show how the same are laid, and the Plead thereupon. And first of Actions which are real, or savour of the Reality. Formedon. Formedon in Reverter brought by Baron and Feme, the Writ must conclude to the Feme only. The Case was, Robert Earl of Essex, and Frances his than wife, by Fine gave Lands to W. G. and F. M. and the Heirs of the said W. to the use of Eliz. Sidney, Daughter and Heir of Sir Philip Sidney Kt. and for default of such Issue to the use of the said Lady Frances, and her Heirs; Et que post mortem praed ' Eliz. add prefat ' Franciscam revertere debent per formam d●●tionis praed ' ac vigore Stat. Et eo quod praed ' Elizabeth obiit sine haerede de corpore suo exeun ': And the Earl and Countess counted accordingly: The Defendant Viscount Lisle pleaded in Abatement of the Writ, that the said Countess at the time of the death of the said Elizabeth, was Covert of the Plaintiff her now husband; so that the Right of the said Tenements, si quod, etc. to her husband and her, did revert; and so by the said Writ it ought to be supposed: Demaindant demurs, and Judgement was, That the Writ was sufficient. The Differences are fine: If it were a Formedon in Descender upon a Descent to the wife, there the Descent in the Writ must be made to the wife alone; for the Descent follows the Blood, and to that the Baron is a Stranger. But in a Formedon in Reverter, wherein already nothing is invested, but the Right only returns; there it may be laid to Return, either to the wife alone, or to the Baron and Feme. But in a Cessavit by Baron and Feme, or a Writ of Escheat, or a Consimili casu, or Action of Waste, because there is vested in them a Seignory or a Reversion actually, and the Land holden, or the present Estate to return, is to come in Possession; in those Cases the Reverter is to be made to them both, E. Clanrickard, Hob. 1. 2. If a Disseisin be made upon Baron and Feme in the Lands of the Feme, Assize. in Action brought to recover this Land again, the Baron and Feme must join, 1 Bulst. 21. If a Feme recover in Assize, and after take Baron, and they are re-disseised, the Baron and Feme shall have a Redisseison, because the husband joineth for Conformity, and it is in the Right of the wife who was disseised before, 1 Inst. 154. b. though the Statute saith, iidem Disseisitores. W. and M. his wife were disseised of the Land he held in jure uxoris, and dispossessed of his Goods; in Assize port by Baron and Feme, Judgement was given for them both, damna pro disseisina 100 l. and pro bonis 100 Marks; Judgement was reversed for the 100 Marks, because the wife had nothing in them, 2 Inst. 236. Q. Impedit. In Quare Impedit Baron and Feme shall join, and yet the Avoidance goes to the Executors of the Baron, Lit. Rep. 285. Ejectione Firm. In Ejectione Firm, and Ravishment of Ward, the wife shall join, Lit. Rep. 285. Pur Rent. Vide Avowry. Avowry. In Avowry for Rent in the Right of the wife, they ought to join, 4 H. 6. 14. as if Rent be due to the wife before Coverture, she and her husband must join in the Avowry. In Replevin the Defendant avows, because his Ancestor was seized in Fee, and let the Land in qua, etc. for years, rendering Rend, and for Rent due to him and his wife in Right of his wife, he avows the taking; after Verdict for the Avowant Exception was taken, because the Baron Sole avows, and doth not join the wife with him; whereas it appears the Rent is due to him and his wife, and he ought not to avo● in his own name only: But per Curiam, Because he shows the Truth of the Matter what it is, and doth aver the Life of the wife, and so the Distress well taken by him, and the Rent due to him it was adjudged that the Avowry was good enough, Cro. Jac. 442. Wise and Bellent. Note, Rent is as a Chose in Action. If a Man doth marry a wife which hath a Rent, if the wife dies before the husband hath recovered it, he can have no remedy to recover it after the death of the wife; for it is merely a thing in Action, and of the same nature as an Obligation which is made by a Feme Sole, who takes husband and dies, 1 Bulst. 132. Vide Rescous. In Replevin the husband avows Sole for Rend Arrear to the wife dum sola: Avowry by the Husband Sole. It's well enough if the wife were made the Defendant there they must both avow, 2 Cro. Jac. 3. 3 Keb. 647. Duke of Albemarle and Cutler. The husband distrained for a Rend Charge in Fee, granted to his wife for Arrears durante viduitate of the wife, and upon Rescous he brought the Action alone, and good, or at his Election he might have joined his wife with him, Cro. El. 459. Fenner's Case. For Tithes. Action of Debt upon the Statute of 2 Ed. 6. Tithes. by Baron and Feme for not setting forth of Tithes; the Baron and Feme may join if the Baron be seized in Possession of the Rectory in the Right of the wife, or in Jointure; and upon Writ of Error Judgement was affirmed, Moor 912. Wentworth and Crisp: So Cro. El. 608, 613. Baron and Feme possest in the Right of the wife as a Termor, they may join because the wife is Proprietor, and the Action is given to the Proprietor or Fermor. An unmarried Woman being Proprietor of a Parsonage took husband, Proprietor. the husband may not sue for the triple Damages on the 2 Ed. 6. without his wife; for the Baron is not intended Proprietor as the Statute intends, but the wife, 2 Brownl. 9 Ford and Pomeroy's Case. Covenant. A. covenants with B. and his Assigns, for further Assurance; B. assigns to Baron and Feme; they must join in the Action of Covenant. Vide supra, Middlemore and Goodale's Case. Baron alone may bring Covenant real on a Breach during Coverture of a Covenant made to the wife dum sola, 1 Keb. 20. Lease for years was made to B. Defendant rendering Rend, afterwards the Reversion of this was granted to the Plaintiff and his wife; Debt for Rent by the Baron after the Term the Tenant for years' attorns, the Term ended, and for Rend Arrear the Baron brought Action of Debt alone. It's agreed, had the Term continued, he ought to have joined his wife with him. And per Curiam, The Action of Debt is well brought here, in respect of the nature of the thing by him to be recovered, which is as a Sum in gross, and the thing to be recovered is the Rent which the Baron alone is to have: The Action generally brought is good; but had the husband brought the Action as Assignee, by Assignment made to him alone; whereas the Reversion was granted to him, and his wife jointly, that had not been good, 2 Bulst. 234. North and Wyard, 1 R●lls Rep. 51. Mesme Case. In Replevin, Avowry 〈◊〉 made for Rent due to the Baron and Feme, and it appears that part was due to the wife before Marriage, and part after: It was said that the Avowry ought to have been for that part of the Rent due before Marriage, Avowry. and a retro fore dum sola fuit; and this had been the surest way: But per Curiam, It is good enough; but the Pleading the Avowry as made by them both, is good in Law; in as much as the whole Rent is now due to them both; for the Rent was due to the wife dum sola fuit, and so the same continued at the time of the Marriage, and now by Marriage this is also made the Debt of the Baron, and the same by Marriage is due to him as well as to the wife, 1 Bulst. 136, 137. Bowls and Peers. It's said in 2 Keb. 712. Where the Wife is no Party in the Avowry. the Defendant avows by Devise of Rent to Jane Do, who marries: Judgement was for the Avowant, notwithstanding the Avowry be in jure uxoris, and the wife no Party; for unless she be made a Defendant in the Replevin, she need not be Party in the Avowry, Osborne and Whittington's Case, and 2 Cro. Wise and Bellent's Case cited. If a Lease be made by Baron and Feme of the wife's Land, rendering Rend, By Baron alone. the Baron may bring an Action alone for the Rent; and quaere if they may join, 2 Bulst. 21. Reversion granted to Baron and Feme, and to the Heirs of the husband, there is a Lease in being and Covenant that the Lessee shall repair; for not repairing the Plaintiff brings this Action without his wife, whereas the Feme hath an Estate therein as well as the Baron. Sed Per Curiam, The Action being personal, and Damages only to be recovered, the Baron may have the Action solely, or join the wife if he please, Cro. Jac. 399. Sir J. Bell and Cumberland. On Statutes. Baron and Feme joined in Action on the Statute of Labourers, and the Writ abated. On the Stat. 2 Ed. 6. of Tithes. Vid. supra. Debt was brought by B. and his wife, Debt for rent. against E. for Arrears of Rent upon a Lease for years made by the Feme, and her first husband, to the Defendant by Indenture. The Defendant pleads, Pledge. That the Ancestor of the first husband was seized in Fee, and that it descended to the first husband, and he was Sole seized, and so the Feme had nothing at the time of the Lease made. The Plaintiff demurs: Per Curiam, The Plea is good. It is true, when two join in a Fine or Matter of Record, he who accepts of them is concluded to say that both gave it; but where it is by Deed, it is otherwise, for that cannot enure from one by way of Interest, and from the other by way of Estoppel, One Deed cannot enure from one by way of Interest, and from another by way of Estoppel where both join. for one Deed cannot enure to two l●●●rests: Also when two join in a Deed, and the on● only hath the Interest, it enures by way of Confirmation from the other, and not by way of Estoppel But here this can neither be by way of Estoppel, 〈◊〉 a Confirmation; for the Deed is utterly voided as 〈◊〉 the Feme, she being Covert, and it cannot be an Estoppel, because an Estoppel ought to be mutual o● both parts, and the Deed of a Feme Covert can●●● estop her, Cro. El. 700, 701. Brereton and Evans. Q. Elizabeth made a Lease of certain Mills for 〈◊〉 years to W. Cumberland, with Covenant to rep●● the Reversion comes to the King, who did grant 〈◊〉 to Sir John Brett, and his wife; and for the Breach of the Covenant in the Letters Patents, for not rep●●●ing the Mills, the husband alone brings the Act●●● And per Curiam, It is well brought, and he ●ight have joined the wife with him if he would, 3 〈◊〉 163. Brett and Cumberland. Baron and Feme join in Covenant, and the Action was brought against them both, and it abated because it shall charge the husband only, 24 Ed●●●● 3.38. S. and his wife seized of Land to them and 〈◊〉 Heirs of the Baron, let by Indenture to the Defendant, wherein he covenants with him, and with the H●●● and Assigns of the Baron to repair; Husband and w●●● conveyed the Reversion to the Plaintiff, who 〈◊〉 Covert, and concludes his Declaration per quod ab ei accrevit, as Assignee of the husband, and 〈◊〉 not the wife to be dead; yet good because 〈◊〉 brought by the Assignee of him who had the Inheritance, and the Estate for Life, being transferred in f●● is drowned, Cro. Car. 285. Mayor and Tabot. Waste. Lease for Life is made to one, Waste. the Remainder to Baron and Feme, and to the Heirs of the Baron: Baron and Feme may join in Action of Waste, 17 Ed. 3.7. so if Baron and Feme during the Coverture make a Lease, and Waste is committed. Error of a Judgement in Waste against Tenant for years brought by Baron and Feme, of a Moiety, being seized in Reversion to them and his Heirs ad Exberedationem of them. Per Curiam, They must join in the Action, but the Conclusion must be ad Exheredationem of him; but the Original not being certified, it's well enough. 2. Damages are given to the Baron and Feme. Which per Cur ' is ill, and should have been amended in Bill; but now it is too late, and Judgement was reversed, 3 Keb. 125. Curts and Bourne. In a Writ port by Baron and Feme upon a Lease by the wife, for her own life, before the Coverture, the Court shall suppose ad Exheredationem of the wife, for she had the Reversion, and shall enter for the Forfeiture, 42 Ed. 318. So if Baron and Feme bring a Writ of Waste for the Inheritance of the wife, the Writ ought to be ad Exheredat ' of the wife; for if it be ad Exheredatio●em of the Baron and Feme, the Writ shall abate, 8 H. 6.9. In Action of Waste in the Tenuit he is to join the wise with him, because this is in the Realty, and the Locum vastatum is also there to be recovered. Debt on Bond. Obligation made to a Feme Sole, who takes husband, and dies; living the Baron, he shall not have the Obligation, nor any means now to reco●●● the same Money due upon it; for this is a thing in Action, the Benefit whereof cannot be had but as in the Right of the wife, which is now lost by her Death, 1 Bulst. 137. Bowls and P●●●'s Case, Noy 149. Styles 208. but he may admi●●● and have it. Bond is made to a Feme Sole, who marries, the husband must join with her in the Suit; for if cause of Action arise before Coverture, though but Trespass where Damages are only recoverable, they and join, 1 Keb. 440. Hardy's Case. Pleads. If a Bond be made to a Feme Covert, and the husband disagree, the Obligor may pled n●● of factum, for by his Disagreement the Obligation is no Deed, 10 Rep. 119. Whelpdale's Case. Ad damnum ipsorum. Debt by Baron and Feme upon a Bond made to the wife dum sola, ad damnum ipsorum, and good, and it is the usual way in such Actions to declare so, and the Money due upon the Obligation not be●●g paid to the wife while she was Sole, it was a ●●mage to her; and now being Covert, it is a ●●mage to the Baron also, and so it is ad damnum 〈◊〉 sorum, Styles 134. If a Bond be made to Baron and Feme, the Ba●●● alone for this may have an Action of Debt, 3 B●●●. 163. Debt on Bond to the Wife dum sola, they must join. Action of Debt on Bond to the wife dum sola, brought by the husband only without her, is 〈◊〉 good: For if Cause of Action arise before Covertue though but Trespass, where only Damages are recoverable, they must join; so in Indebitatus on Money due from the wife dum sola, on account being brought against him alone, Judgement was revers, 1 Keb. 440. Hardy and Robinson. Debt for Debt, Damages and Costs, recovered by B. and his wife, modo superstite, against the Denudant; and because the wife was not named in the Action, the Defendant demurred, but the Action well lay per Cur ', Cro. El. 844. Butler and Dealt. A. makes a Bond to Baron and Feme, Baron dies, the wife administers, and brings Debt on the Bond as Administratrix; she dies before Judgement, and her Executor brought Debt upon that Obligation. It lies not. It was in her a sufficient Election and Waver, and that personal Duty being a Chose in Action may well lie in Jointure between Baron and Feme, Noy 149. Norton and Glover. Obligation made to Baron and Feme, Joinder or not at Election. the better opinion is, that the Baron may bring the Action on this Obligation alone in his own name, or he may join the wife at Election, Stiles p. 9 Debt on Account. Baron and Feme assign Auditors to the Receiver of the Feme before Coverture, and found in Arrearages, they ought to join in Debt upon this, for the Debt was before the Coverture, and it was but put in certain by the Auditors, 15 H. 4. 9 Debt lies by the Baron only for Debt, Damages and Costs, recovered by the Plaintiff and his wife, modo superstite, Cro. El. 844. Debt on Bond to P. and K. ux. ejus, Judgement. made to the said K. dum sola fuit, and Verdict and Damages assessed to Baron and Feme ratione detentionis debit ' and good, for the Damages shall be to both, Cro. El. 259. Gurney and Ux. vers. Sir Ed. Clear. Baron alone may bring Debt upon a real Contract made to the wife dum sola fuit, On real Contract. and broken during Coverture, 1 Keb. 20. If Baron and Feme bring Action of Debt for Debt due to the wife, and recover, the Feme dies, Scire fac ' upon a Judgement recovered by Baron and Feme, brought by the Baron only. the Baron may bring a Scire fac ' to execute this Judgement; for the Debt being recovered, the Baron after the death of the wife shall have it; but if the Feme be Administratrix to her former husband, and Baron and Feme bring Debt upon a Bond due to the Intestate, and had Judgement to recover the Debt and Damages, and Feme dies, and after year and day past, the Baron brings a Scire fac ' to have Execution, it lies not, because it was a Debt demanded by the wife en auter droit; and though they recover, yet she dying before Execution, the Debt remains to him who takes Administration in Right of the Intestate; and although the Baron be Party to the Judgement, yet he hath no Property in the Debt, and he who ought to have the Scire fac ', must have Privity and Property to have the Debt, Cro. Car. 208. Beaumond and Long. Vid. p. 227, 464. For award Money. If Award be made that 7 l. shall be paid to a Feme Covert, and 13 l. to the husband, the husband Sole shall have an Action for all the Money, because it is a thing as comes in the Coverture; as if Baron and Feme make a Lease reserving Rend, the Baron Sole shall have Action for the Rend Arrear. If the next Avoidance be granted to Baron and Feme, the Baron Sole shall have it, Lit. Rep. 13. Trespass. Battery. Baron and Feme bring Action of Battery for the Beating of him and his wife: The Writ shall abate, because the wife cannot join for the Battery of the Baron, and the Baron cannot have Judgement alone, because the wife is joined with him in the Original: But the Baron and Feme shall have Judgement for the Battery of the wife, for this is but one Judgement, 1 Rolls Abr. 782. Baron and Feme brought Action for the Beating of the wife, and ad damnum ipsorum, it is good because it is such an Action as may survive to her alone, and cannot be otherwise, Sid. 387. Horton and Ux. verse. Byles. Trespass of Battery by Baron and Feme, Declaration. and Verdict: It was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the Declaration was by Baron and Feme for an Assault and Battery made to the wife, and they also declare that the Defendant, alia enormia eis intulit, which ought not to be, but ei intulit; for the Wrong being a personal Wrong done to the Person of the wife only, cannot be said to be done to the Baron, to which the Court agreed, Stiles p. 236. Watts and his wife vers. Lord; but Cro. Jac. 664. Tomlins Case contra, because it is but Form, and the Baron may have Wrong by his wife's Battery; and so (eyes) is good. Trespass of Assault and Battery by Baron and Feme, Declaration. and taking of an Horse; and the Declaration is ad damnum ipsorum. Per Curiam, The Baron and Feme cannot join in this Action, but aught to bring several Actions, for the Wrong done to each was several, Styles 130. straddling and his wife verse. Bore●an. Baron and Feme brought Trespass and Battery for beating them both; upon not guilty pleaded, Verdict was, so much damages for beating the Husband, and so much for beating the Wife. the Verdict was for so much Damages for beating the Baron, and so much for beating the wife: On motion to arrest Judgement, the Court said the Plaintiff ●ight release Damages for beating of himself, and take Judgement for the other, 1 Vent. 328. Trespass of Assault, Battery and Wounding the husband and wife; on not guilty, the Verdict was as to the wife guilty, & quoad resid. not guilty. Verdict. It was moved that Baron and Feme could not join in an Action for beating them both, Cro. Jac. 355, 655. 2. That there is nothing found as to the beating the husband, and so it is an imperfect Verdict, Et quoad residuum shall extend only to the other Trespasses as to the wife, Yelv. 106. Per Curiam, The Verdict hath cured this Mistake in the Action, Stiles 349. 2 Vent. 29. Hooker's Case. Now the Case in Cro. Jac. is, Trespass by Baron and Feme for Battery done to them both, Declaration. and found for the Defendant, and certified he did it as Constable, and double Costs prayed by Stat. 7 Jac. c. 5. It was moved that the Declaration was ill, because Baron and Feme cannot join in Battery done to than both; and therefore Judgement ought to have been given against the Plaintiff on the Declaration, and not upon the Verdict, and so no Costs. But per Curiam, Because the Defendant was found not guilty, and what he did was as Officer, the Plaintiffs shall not take advantage of the Insufficiency of the Declaration or Writ to excuse themselves, Cro. Jac. 175. Heydon's Case. Declaration. Baron brought Action of Trespass for Beating him, nec non for beating his wife per quod consortium, etc. amisit. Per quod consortium amisit. It was moved that the Plaintiff ought not to join the Battery done to the wife, in the Action with the Battery done to himself; and therefore he ought to have joned his wife with him in the Action. B●● per Curiam, It is well brought; for the Action is 〈◊〉 brought in respect of the Harm done to the wife, 〈◊〉 for the particular Loss of the Baron, for the Loss ●f the Company of the wife, which is a particular L●●● to himself, as the Master for his Servant. And Ch●ley's Case was, Action was brought for the Battery 〈◊〉 his wife, per quod negotia sua infecta remanser●● and had Judgement to recover, Cro. Jac. 501. C●● and Lawson, 2 Rolls Rep. 51. Mesme Case. Trespass, that the Defendant made Assault on 〈◊〉 Plaintiffs wife, and illam verberavit & male tra●● vit, nec non the said Eliz. cum one Gown, one petticoat, of the Goods of the Plaintiff, simulcum 〈◊〉 said Eliz. apud D. cepit abcarravit & deti●● and per quod solamen & consortium, etc. amisit. O● non culp. Declaration. Verdict pro Quer ' it was assigned for En● because the Action was brought by the Baron Sole for the Battery of the wife, which ought not to be; for the tort and Damage is properly done to the wife, and therefore the husband Sole shall not sue; and if the wife survive the husband, she shall have the Damage, and than the Damage being entirely given, the Judgement is erroneous. Per Curiam, The Action is not here brought for the Battery of the wife, but for the Loss of the husband for want of her Company and Aid, and all is concluded with the per quod, and which extends to all that went before, Cro. Jac. 538. Hyde and Scissor. The like Case, Action for Battery, whereof she died. per quod solamen, etc. Cro. Car. 89. Young and Pridd. But Yelv. 89. is, that Baron Sole shall not have Action for Loss of Service by beating his wife, for Damages shall be given to the wife for tort offered to her Body. The Plaintiff declared for assaulting his wife, of which she died, is not good; this being a personal Tort to the wife, is now dead with the wife, and it is now become an Offence to the Crown, and drowns the particular Wrong, Yelv. 89. Higgins and Butcher. Vid. 2 Inst. 434. Trespass of Assault, Ad damnum ipsorum. Battery and Imprisonment of the wife, until the husband paid 10 l. ad damnum ipsorum, it is well enough, 2 Keb. 188, 230. Browne and Tripp. Battery brought by the husband for the beating of the wife ad damnum ipsorum, it is ill on general Verdict pro Quer ', and for the Battery of him she cannot join; but if the Jury had found the Battery or Damages several, it might be otherwise, 2 Keb. 269. Jones and Aloff. So is Dunoill and Mascal's Case, 2 Keb. 813. Action for Battery of the Wife, and taking from her an Apron. In Trespass by Baron and Feme for beating the wife and taking away from her an Apron, etc. and Verdict pro Quer ' general. It was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that the wife cannot join as to the Goods, and Judgement was stayed per Curiam, Unless there had been several Pleas, and several Damages, 3 Reb. 813. Note, Where the Action and Damages do survive, the Conclusion shall be ad damnum ipsorum, as in Action for Battery of the wise; but in Action for beating the Baron and Feme, they cannot join not conclude so, 2 Keb 434. Atwood and Parnes' Case. Verdict. Assault by Baron and Feme for beating Baron and Feme, they were found guilty of beating the wise only, and nothing was found concerning the Battery of the Baron. Per Curiam, If not guilty had been found as to the Baron, it had been well; but here is a non Liquet as to him, 10 Co. 130. b. and it's a voided Verdict, part of the Issue being only found, 1 Iust. 227. and here is no Discontinuance, the whole being continued, and Venire de Novo awarded, Hardr. 166. Rochel's Case. Of Trespasses done to the Estate and Freehold of the Wife. Quare clausum fregit. Trespass by Baron and Feme, quare clausum fregit. Per Curiam, They may well join in this Action, so they shall join in a Quare Impedit; and so in Action of Trespass for cutting down of Trees; and in the principal case, it shall be taken by Intendment that they are Jointenants, 1 Bulst. 110. Maynard and Tow. 2 Vent. 195. Trespass quare clausum fregit by Baron and Feme: Pollixfen C. Justice was of opinion, that the wife ought to be joined with him tho' it was her Land; Ventris contra, The Action will survive, and they have Election to join or to bring it alone, 1 Brownl. 21. 1 Rolls Abr. 348. Hob. 189. 1 Cro. 96. 3 Cro. 306. Trignel and Reeve, Bright and Addis Case. Trespass by Baron and Feme for entering upon the wife's Land, q. c. Fregit & herbam ipsius T. & Ux. ejus messuit, etc. and herbam ipsius Thomae & Annae adtunc & ibid. crescen ' messuit & succedit & in foenum composuit, & 20 carucat ' inde provenien ' etc. It was objected, that this Action doth not lie for Baron and Feme for the 20 Loads of Hay taken, for it is a Chattel severed from the Inheritance, and vested in the husband. Per Curiam, They may well join as they may join in Trespass, de clauso fracto, and cutting their Grass; so they may for carrying away the Hay coming of it, aliter if it had been for 20 Loads of Hay, and not said inde provenien ' Cro. El. 196. Cookson and Castle's Case; the like Case is that of Wilks and Peerson, 1 Leon. 105. No. 140. Trespass by Wilks and his wife, and Tho. P. Quare clausum fregit herbam suam messuit & foenum suum asportavit ad damnum ipsus W. & Ux. & Tho. P. Exception was taken that it was not the Hay of the wife, nor was she damnified by it, but her husband. By Wray it's good enough; for though it be not good for the Hay, yet it is for the breaking the Close, & herbam messuit makes it good. Trespass by Baron and Feme for breaking the Close of the wife ad damnum ipsorum, Ad damnum ipsorum. and after Verdict. Per Cur ' This Declaration is not good, nor aided by the Stat. Cro. Jac. 473. Marshal & Ux. verse. Dorley. Trespass, Quare clausum fregit & blada messuit, brought by Baron and Feme, and Judgement given for them, but it was reversed, because Feme Covert may not have Blees in Common with her husband; and if it were that the Blees were common to them before the Coverture, they ought to be showed, for the Count ought to have a general Intendment and not special. P. 31. El. B. R. Note, The Difference between this Case and the Case of Cookson supra, Quare herbam messuit, & 20 carectatas foeni inde provenien ' &c because the Hay depends on the breaking of the Close, and all was but one Trespass, Dyer 305. 6. in marg. yet vide 2 Rolls Rep. 264. Trover. Vide Supra Principio hujus Capitis. Escape. Baron and Feme brought Escape; the husband only arrests the Prisoner with a Latitat, and takes the Latitat in his own Name Sole; and now in the Declaration in Escape, he declares that he took out the Latitat ea intention, to charge the Prisoner upon a Bond made to the wife when she was Sole; and per Cur ' it is good, 2 Rolls Rep. 312. If Trespass be made to Baron, and Battery to the wife, the Action shall be brought ad respond ' A quare clausum fregit & subboscum, etc. ac in E Uxor ' ipsius A. ibid. insultum fecit: Et ad respond A. & E. de placito quare clausum ipsorum A. & E. etc. fregit ac in ipsam E. insultum fecit, etc. Et non ad respond ' A. quare clausum ipsius A. apud, etc. fregit. Et in ipsam E. apud R. insultum fecit, come fuit is Case de Midwych. Ex Manuscript. Mr. Brownloc. Action on the Case. Sur Assumpsit. The Plaintiff in consideration, the Father of the Defendant, having Interest in certain Wood and Timber, would not cut them, but would permit them to come to the Defendant, his Heir apparent to the Land; he assumed to pay 100 l. to his Daughter, being the wife of the Plaintiff: Verdict pro Quer ' It is intended after Verdict, that the Father had good power to cut them down. Per Curiam, The Action is well maintainable by the Plaintiff, for the Benefit appertains to the Daughter, and he may refuse it, Sir Tho. Jones 102, 103. Dutton and Ux. against Poole, 1 Vent. 318. Mesme Case, vid. 331. T.T. was indebted to T. J. in 20 l. T.J. made E. his wife Executrix; whereas T.T. was indebted to E. for Wares bought of her, and T.T. died, and made his wife Executrix, (now the wife of the Defendant) and E. took the Plaintiff to husband, and the Plaintiff required payment, and the Defendant in consideration he would forbear her, promised, etc. Quaere, If the wife ought to have been joined in the Action; because the ground of the Action to the Plaintiff principally ariseth from the Plaintiffs wife, being Executrix to her husband, and for a Debt due dum sola: But by two Judges against one, it is good without her, for that is but part of the Consideration, and the Forbearance is his Act only, and therefore the Act only lies for him, Cro. Jac. 110. Ours and Lee. Whereas the Defendant received of the Plaintiffs Money by the hands of the Plaintiffs wife, etc. The Defendant in consideration thereof, promised unto them to pay it at such a day, and allegeth the Breach for Nonpayment. The Defendant pleads Non assumpsit, and found for him: It was moved in Arrest, that this Promise is voided, being for moneys of the Baron and Feme's; Ad damnum ipsorum. and ad damnum ipsorum cannot be, for a Feme Covert cannot have Goods with her husband; and though it was objected, that it may be for Money due to the wife dum sola, or for Rent during the Coverture, it was held it shall not be so intended without it had been showed, and adjudged for the Defendant, Cro. Jac. p. 644. Abbot & sa Feme vers. Blofeild. Indebitatus by the Baron alone for Money due to the wife of the Plaintiff, as Executrix; Judgement per Curiam was stayed, though the husband hath power to discharge such a Debt. So had it been sur computasset with the wife, or any other Promise' raised by the Law: But by Windham, were the Action a Promise made to the husband in consideration of Forbearance, he alone might bring the Action, 1 Keb. 106, Tyrrel and Bennet, Sid. 299. If Assumpsit be made to a Feme Covert they ought to join, Sid. 25. Shipston and Booler, as Assumps●t. A Feme Covert, which was a Surgeon, in consideration of a Cure by her made, that the Action ought to be brought by the Baron, Cro. Jac. 205. Brafford and Buckingham, 2 Sid. 128. in both their Names. Promise' to Feme. If A. speak with B. to cell Land to B. and after B. promiseth to C. the wife of A. in consideration she will not hinder the said A. her husband, to levy a Fine to him of the said Land to pay to her 10 l. or to give her a Riding Suit, Election. if the wife doth not hinder the husband, but he levies the Fine accordingly; the husband and wife may have Action on the Promise, for the Promise is laid in the Declaration to be made to the wife, for they may join at the Election of the Baron, 1 Rolls Abr. 32. Faucet's Case. Promise' to the Feme. If A. be in Execution at the Suit of B. and C. a Stranger comes to B's House in the absence of B. and assumes to the wife, that if B. her husband will discharge A. out of Execution, that he will pay the Debt at such a day if A. doth not pay it before; and after B. comes to his House, and his wife shows to him the said Assumpsit and agrees to it, and dischargeth B. out of Execution, B. shall have Action on this Assumpsit, 1 Rolls Abr. 31, 32. 27 H. 8. 24. Tatam's Case, Godbolt 361. Promise' made to the Baron and Feme during the Coverture, Action may be brought in the name of the Baron only, or else he may join her at Election, as I conceive. C. and his wife brought Action on the Case against T. and declared that the Defendant in consideration the Plaintiff would marry A. that is now the Plaintiffs wife, did assume to make good a Legacy given by her Father's Will, and 40 l. more, at such a time; and that thereupon he did marry her. On non Assumpsit, and Verdict pro Quer ', it was moved in Arrest of Judgement that the wife was joined in the Action. And Per Curiam, Thou the Money he promised be paid to the Wife, yet Baron Sole shall have the Action. here the Promise was made to the husband only, and he is only to have the benefit of the Promise; and though the Money is to be paid to both, yet it would be inconvenient to entitle the wife to it, for than the wife might have released it before Marriage; Quer ' nil capiat per billam, Styles 297, 313. Cotterel and his Wife against Theobalds'. Whereas the wife of the Plaintiff in consideration the Defendant should marry her Daughter, had given to him 10 l. he promised to the wife that if he did not marry her Daughter, he would repay the 10 l. and avers he did not marry her; and Verdict pro Quer '. The Action was brought by Baron and Feme. And Per Curiam, It is well brought; for the Agreement of the husband maketh the Promise good ab initio to the husband, and it being made to wife, they may join in the Action, Cro. El. 61. Prat. and Ux. vers. Taylor, 1 Keb. 252. If a Man promise to give an 100 l. to the wife of J. S. they ought (per Cur ') to join in Action for Recovery of it, 1 Bulst. 21. Action on the Case pur Tort. A Feme Sole had Right to Common for her life, ●nd she marries; the husband was interrupted in ta●ing the Common, and he brought Action in his own ●ame and good, being only to recover Damages, 2 Bulst. 14. Butler's Case. So in Quare Impedit. So in Ejectione Firm. John C. and Joan his wife brought Action on the Case against G. M. and declared, Whereas the said John and Joan were seized of a Mesuage and Lands in jure Joanne, and that the said John and Joan, and all those whose Estates they have, etc. in j●r● Joanne time out of memory have Common in such a Waste, which is the Soil of the Defendant pro c●● nibus averiis levant & couchant, etc. and the Defendant had enclosed 20 Acres of the said Waste. Per C●riam, Prescription for Common in jure Uxoris. The Prescription is good, though it had been better if he had said all those whose Estate the wi●● hath; but this is Tantamount, for it goes merely to the State of the wife; and the better opinion w●●, that the wife could not join in this Action, as if he were seized in the Right of the wife, and he brings Trespass for Trespass done upon the Land, the wife may not join, for she shall not have Damages if he survive; but if Battery be to the wife, they both shall join, for the wife shall have the Action if she survive, and so was the Cook of Grays-Inn's Case; but be● the husband only loseth the benefit of the Common, and the wife shall not take this with her , f●● she shall have none during the Coverture, Litt. Rep. 285. Kestrel and Sir Geo. Marr. But in Baker's Case, Cro. Car. 418. Action was brought by Baron and Feme, for that the wife befor● Marriage was possessed of a Lease for years of a Close, and had a Way from her Close over— And the Defendant to hinder her of her Way, erected a Building ex transverso viae praed ' and that afterwards she married the Plaintiff Baker, and they a●● their Intermarriage could not use the said Way, 〈◊〉 their Damage, etc. It was excepted, that the w●●● ought not to join with the husband for the stopp●●● during the Coverture, sed non allocatur, for 〈◊〉 Wrong was done to the wife, and the husba●● had it but in the Right of the wife, Baker verse. Brereman. Baron and Feme join in Action on the Case for a Vexatious Suit in the Court of the Ordinary, being presented falsely and maliciously, that they made Hay on a Sunday. It was a Doubt if the Action lay by Baron and Feme, because their Vexation is several, at lest the Feme cannot have Damages for the Vexation to her husband, & adjornatur, Cro. Jac. 355. Ward and Ux. verse. Pease. Feme Lessee for years of a Mill, takes husband, Suit to a Mill. the Baron and Feme cannot join in an Action on the Case for the Suit, because it is only to recover Damages, and not the Term, Hob. 189. One covenants to stand seized to the use of himself and his wife, for their Lives, and after to his Son, except the Timber Trees, saving that his wife shall have the Shrowds and Loppings. Husband dies; she marries the Plaintiff: The Son cut down 50 Oaks, whereby the Plaintiff lost the benefit of the Shrowds. Verdict pro Quer ' This Action was brought by Baron and Feme, and good, though the husband might only have released the Damages; and if she survive, she shall have the Action, and the Damages also, Cro. Car. 437. Trigmel against Reeve. Rescous. The Baron destrains for Rent due to the Feme dum sola fuit; Rescous is made, Baron Sole shall have a Writ of Rescous, or at his pleasure, he may join the wife with him; yet for a Debt due to the wife dum sola, they ought to join, Moore 442. Fenner and Plasket. Rend Charge granted to the wife, and to E.C. her first husband, E. C. died; she married the Plaintiff, and for Rent due durante viduitate of his wife, he destrained, and upon Rescous he may bring Reason in his own name, or join the wife with him as Election, Cro. El. 459. Fenner's Case. Vid. Supra. Detinue. Baron and Feme shall join in Detinue for Cha●●s concerning the Inheritance of the wife, (for the 〈◊〉 shall have them again when recovered,) 38 H. 64. Baron and Feme may join in a Writ of Res●● where the husband claims the Seignory in the Ri●● of the wife, 15 Ed. 4.9. b. For Bailment dum sola Baron and Feme ca●● join in Detinue, 1 Keb. 640. Forcible Entry. In Action of Forcibly Entry on the wife's L●● she was joined with her husband, 2 Vent. 195. Baron and Feme brought a Writ of Conspiracy, I will not lie, March Rep. 47. Error. Vide Fine. Where the Baron and Feme shall join or not, and 〈◊〉 and in what Cases. If Action be brought against A. as a Feme s●● where she is a Feme Covert, and she pleads to 〈◊〉 as a Feme sole, and after a Judgement is given again her, and she is taken in Execution, she and her 〈◊〉 band may bring a Writ of Error for this, otherw●● the husband would be prejudiced in his Consort● of his wife, and of her care about his Family; and 〈◊〉 hath no other means to aid himself. But in the case 〈◊〉 a Fine the Baron may enter and avoid it, M. 15. Car. 1. B R. Edwards and Simpson on Judgement in the Marshalsea, Tr. 1651. Hayward's Case. So in the same Case if the Action be brought against A. and others, they all with the husband may join on the Writ of Error, 1 Rolls Abr. 748. Coverture of the Wife assigned for Error. and the Judgement shall be reversed for all, because it is entire. They may assign for Error the Coverture of the wife, 1 Rolls Abr. 776. and the Difference is, in Styles Rep. 280. a Stranger to a Record may not bring a Writ of Error to reverse it, as in the principal Case the Baron was, but that is only where he may have another remedy to avoid the Prejudice; which in this case he hath not. If the husband seized in the Right of his wife make an Ejectment Lease, Ejectment. and the Lessee bring Action upon it, and had a Verdict and Judgement, it is no Error to allege the Death of the woman before Judgement; by which the Interest of the husband, and the Lease made by him determines, because the wife nor husband are Parties to the Action, and this depends upon the Title to the Land, for the Plaintiff may say that the Baron was seized in his own Right, Hob. Wilks and Jordan, 1 Rolls Abr. 768. If the wife be received by default of the husband, and loose the Land by Judgement, the Baron and Feme shall have a Writ of Error, 4 Ed. 3.21. b. If Baron and Feme levy a Fine, they may by Error reverse the Fine for Nonage of the wife, during the life of the husband, 2 Co. Beckworth's Case, 77. b. Worsley's Case. W. and his wise brought Error to reverse Judgement and Outlawry against them in Debt, Husband cannot assign Error without his Wife to reverse Outlawry against them. and because it was to reverse Outlawry, they could not assign Error but in Person; and because the husband could not bring in his wife, it was held that he could not assign Error, for he cannot assign it without his wife, and so is the Course of the Court, Cro. El. 6● Wade and his wife against Smith. Regula. Where Baron and Feme sue in an Action they s●sue by Attorney, for the husband makes Attorney 〈◊〉 them both, 2 213. This is to be underst●●● where the wife is of full age. Actions brought by a Feme Covert without 〈◊〉 Husband. Of a Feme Sole Merchant. In two Cases a Feme Covert hath been in our ancient Books held to be able to sue without naming her husband. 1. In Case of Exilement. 2. In Case of Abjuration. As to Exilement it was the Case of Sir Ro●● Belknap's wife: Her husband being banished beyond Sea in the time of H. 4. she sued a Writ of Dow● in her own name without her husband, he being alive, and recovered it: Which occasioned one to mak● this Reflection. Ecce modo mirum quod foemina fert breve Regis, Non nominando virum conjunctum robore Legis: And yet it was no such wonder; for King Edw. 〈◊〉 long before brought a Quare Impedit against the La● Maltraverse, and she pleaded she was Covert of B●ron; whereto it was replied for the King, That 〈◊〉 husband the Lord Maltraverse was exiled for a c●●tain Cause, and she was ruled to answer. So in the Case of Abjuration: It was Weyland Case in the time of Edw. 1. It was held that after th● Abjuration of her husband she should have her Jointure, and an Action was brought by her alone for a personal Wrong done to the Estate conveyed to her, 1 Inst. 132. b. 133. a. 3 Bulst. 188. because this Exile and Abjuration is a civil Death: But in Relegation or Exilement for a time aliter. In some other Cases a Feme Covert may sue without her husband. Feme Covert by the Custom of London shall sue without her husband as a Sole Merchant, by Wray; but the Action must be laid within the City, in Chamberlain and Sharp's Case, 1 Leon. 131. But every Feme which trades in London is not a Feme Sole Merchant. On Habeas Corpus to remove the Body cum causa of the wise of B. it was returned, That the Action was brought against her and her husband, in Lands as a Feme Sole Merchant, for Wares bought by the Feme, wherein the husband was only named for Conformity; and by the Custom the Execution shall be only against her, Cro. Jac. Langham verse. the wife of Bluet. The Case in Littleton's Reports was; Bluet was a Vintner, and pressed for a Soldier beyond Sea, and goes over Sea; the wife takes an House, and buys Wine of Langham, who trusts her, supposing her to be a Feme Sole Merchant: After the husband returns, and the wife denies to pay for the Wine, and the Doubt was if the wife were a Feme Sole Merchant by the Custom, and the Words of the Custom were read, That where a Woman exerciseth a Trade, wherein her husband doth not intermeddle, she shall have all Advantages, and shall be sued as a Feme Sole Merchant by the Custom: And by Richardson and Yeluerton, she is not a Feme Sole Merchant within the Custom, for her husband exercised the same Trade; and by Yeluerton Feme Sole Merchant ought to be the Widow of a Tradesman, who takes a second husband, and she after exerciseth the Trade of her first husband. But Croke, Hutton and Harvey contra. If the husband meddle with the Trade of the wife, than she is not a Feme Sole Merchant; but if the husband be beyond Sea, or becomes Bankrupt, or leaves his Trade, and the wife exercise the same Trade, or they both exercise the same Trade distinctly by themselves, and not meddle the one with the other, the wife is Sole Merchant, Lit. Rep. 31. Mesme Case; but vid. in 1 Croak 67. the same Case. The Custom of a Feme Sole Merchant was alleged, and a Procedendo was awarded. Feme was indicted as a Feme Sole Merchant, for selling Ale, and her husband not joined; where she useth the same Trade, she doth it as a Servant, and he alone shall be indicted: Nor will any Action lie here (in B. R.) against her alone, and a Procedendo was awarded, 2 Keb. 583. Moreton and Packman: So a Procedendo was awarded in Royston and Ivory's Case on Suit of a Feme Covert as Sole Merchant, the Custom being alleged in the Declaration, 3 Keb. 302. Wife may sue as a Feme Sole in the Spiritual Court. If Baron and Feme are divorced causa Adultera, and after the wife sues Sole without the husband for a Defamation; although the Divor e does not dissolve the Marriage, yet because the wife may sue as a Feme Sole, in such Case by the Course of the Spiritual Court, no Prohibition shall be granted though it be against the Usage of our Law, 2 Rolls Abr. 298. and fol. 300, 301. There is a Case in 1 Bulst. 140. which I think is misreported: If a Feme Covert in the absence of her husband, he being beyond Sea, doth bring Trespass of Assault and Battery made upon her, in her own name, and in the name of her absent husband, this is well brought, and she may bring such Action in her own name without her husband, quod cave; but she cannot be sued by another without her husband, tho' he be than beyond Sea, such a Suit cannot be maintained before the return of her husband. If I make a Lease to Baron and Feme, Baron and Feme Covenant not to commit Waste, Baron dies, no Action lies against the wife. and they Covenant to do no Waste, or to repair Houses, and the husband dies, and the wife survives, and holdeth it; if the wife commit Waste, or do not repair the House, no Action lies against her; but in such Case the wife is tied to pay Rend, or to perform a Condition made on the part of the Lessor, but not to observe or perform the Covenant of the Lessee, 1 Brownl. 31. If a Suit be in the Spiritual Court against a Woman for exercising the Trade of a Midwife without Licence of the Ordinary against the Canons, Suit against a Woman for exercising the Trade of a Midwife. a Prohibition lies; for this is not any Spiritual Function, of which they have Conusance, 2 Rolls Abr. 286. Benskin and Crips. CHAP. XXVII. Special Actions brought by a Woman. Cui in Vita. Appeal. The Nature of an Appeal. The Process Plead and Trial in an Appeal. Quare Impedit. Actions on the Case for Scandalous Words by Baron and Feme against Baron and Feme, with Declarations and Plead therein, and where Baron and Feme must join or be joined in the Action. Cui in Vita. IS a proper Action or Remedy to be brought by the wife upon the husband's aliening her Lands by Feoffment, etc. the wife at Common Law might not enter, but is put to her Action, which is called Cui in vita; and upon this Discontinuance her Heir might have a Sur cui in vita; but if the wife were Tenant in Tail, and her husband alien in Fee, and dies, and the wife dies, the Issue in Tail cannot have a Sur cui in vita, but he must have his Formedon in Discender by Stat. W. 2. c. 1. but this is remedied by the Stat. 32 H. 8. and the wife may enter. If the Baron and Feme loose by default, and the Baron die, the wife shall not have a Quod ei deforc ', for a Cui in vita in that Case is given to her by the Stat. W. 2. c. 3. So on Recovery in Action of Waste against the Baron and Feme by default, the wife shall have a Cui in vita, 1 Inst. 355. In a Sur cui in vita of a Mesuage, the Parties being at Issue, it was found by Verdict, that a Discontinuance being of a Mesuage, the Discontinee pulls it down, and erected a new House part on the Land discontinued, and part on his own Land adjoining, and ●●e Writ was brought for the entire Mesuage, and well; and there needed no Foreprise. And the Demandant recovered, but Judgement was entered specially, that the Demandant should recover Mesuag ' praed ', viz. so much in length, and so much in breadth, as the Verdict found, Cro. El. 234. Hays and Allen. But by the Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 28. in such Case of Discontinuance the wife and her Heirs, after the death of the husband, may enter into the said Lands and Tenants so aliened, and are not driven to this Action, 1 Inst. 326. a. 2 Inst. 456. Appeal. Faemina de morte viri sui inter brachia interfecti & non aliter poterit appellare, saith Fleta. Where by inter brachia is understood the wife, which the Dead had lawfully in possession at his death; for she must be his wife de facto and de jure, for in Appeal n'unque accouple en Loyal Matrimony, is a good Plea, 1 Inst. 69. The wife in possession without lawful Matrimony ●hall not have Appeal, None but a Wife de jure shall have an Appeal. A Wife de facto shall have Dower. she must be wife de jure as well as de facto, without Elopement or Divorce, 1 Inst. 317. and the Plea n'unque accouple shall be ta●en strictly: But a wife de facto shall have Dower ●hough not an Appeal, and in other Cases she shall ●ave Appeal where she cannot have a Writ of Dower: As if she elope she is barred of her Dower, but not of ●er Appeal, because the Stat. W. 2. c. 34. bars her of ●n Dower, but not of her Appeal. If the husband be ●ainted of Treason, the wife shall not be endowed; 〈◊〉 if any kill him, she shall have Appeal, 1 Inst. 33. b. A Woman at this day may have an Appeal of Ro●●ry, Rape and Mayhem, for she is not restrained ●●ereof, 2 Inst. 68, 69. Before the Stat. Mag. Char. cap. 34. a Woman as well as a Man might have had an Appeal of the death of any of her Ancestors, but now she is disabled to bring Appeal of the death of any but her husband; but the Son of a Woman shall at this day have Appeal if he be Heir at the death of the Ancestor. No Appeal lies for a Woman as Heir. Appeal annexed to the Widowhood. The Right of Appeal of the death of her husband is annexed to her Widowhood, therefore if the wife of the dead Person marry again, her Appeal is gone, though the second husband die within the year. And if she brings her Appeal in her Widowhood, and takes husband, the Appeal abates for ever. So if in Apeal she hath Judgement of death against the Defendant, if after she take husband, she can never have Execution of death against him. Albeit, the husband be attainted of High Treason or Felony, yet if he be slain, his wife shall have an Appeal; for notwithstanding the Attainder, he was vir suus, but the Heir cannot have an Appeal, for the Blood is corrupted between them, 2 Inst. 68, 69. It must be within the year and day. After the year and day the Appeal of death cannot be commenced; the year and day is to be accounted from the death. Process. The Plaintiff pursues an Appeal for the Murder of her husband; upon the return of the Writ it was moved that the Plaintiff might prosecute by Attorney, for which a Warrant was produced under the Hand and Seal of the Plaintiff; which being avowed by her in person, she was admitted so, and the Warrant filled, and after the Appeal was arraigned in the French Language; and after the Prisoner being at the Bar, was arraigned by Lindsey Secundary, and pleads not guilty: Upon this he was delivered by Mainprize of a Lord and two Esquires, to appear the die in diem, Sir Tho. Jones 210. Warren and Verden. By the Stat. of Gloc ' cap. 9 Count in Appeal. the Count of the Appellant must comprehend Seven things: 1. The Fact. 1. The Year. 3. The Day. 4. The Hour. 5. The Year of the King. 6. The Town where the Fact was alone. 7. With what Weapon (if any Weapon were) of which you may fully read in 2 Inst. 317, 318, 319. Plead, or Bars in Appeal. In Appeal of Murder by a Feme. The Defendant pleads nient accouple en Loyal Matrimony, Et si, etc. not guilty to the Felony. The Plaintiff replies, She was accouple en Loyal Matrimony, nor does not an●●er nor pled that he was guilty of the Felony. Quere, If it be a Discontinuance, Et per Curiam. When a Plea is pleaded which is triable at Common Law, and concludes over to the Felony, Reg. there be Plaintiff ought to reply, and conclude over to the felony; but when he pleads a Plea triable otherwise ●●an by the Common Law, it is otherwise, Cro. El. 1223. Withington and Delabar. B. was indicted for the Murder of W. and being reigned upon it, that A. the wife of W. brought Appeal against him for this Murder, and that he was a reigned upon it, and pleaded not guilty, and found 〈◊〉 Jury that he was not guilty of Murder, but Manslaughter; and that thereupon he prayed his Clergy, and had it, and demands Judgement if he shall be put again to answer this Felony, and it was adjudged a good Plea. Quere, For the finding him guilty of Manslaughter in the Appeal, is more than needs, and than the Allowance of Clergy is to no purpose, Cro. ●ct. 256. Barley's Case. In Appeal brought by E. B. of the death of her husband against R. B. who came in upon the Exi●●ent. The Defendant appears, and demands Oyer of ●he Writ, and of all the mean Processes which were entered upon Record. Than the Plaintiff having declared in her Appeal, the Defendant pleads that at the general Gaol-delivery at York before Commissioners assigned, Pleading of Conviction with Clergy allowed. he was indicted of the Felony comprised in the Appeal, and arraigned and found guilty of Manslaughter, and had his Clergy, prout patet per record ': And further saith, that nullum judicium was given upon the Premises, and took all the material Averments, etc. Et quoad murdrum & feloniam praed ' he saith he is not guilty, and Plaintiff demurs; it was agreed per Curiam, 1. No Appearance by the Defendant in Appeal shall aid any Discontinuance of Suit, but Error in the mean Process is salved by an Appearance after, as in 9 H. 6. 2. in Appeal the Exigent cepi corpus, where it should be exigi fec. The Defendant appeared, and was acquitted, and prayed his Damage; he shall have his Damage, because the foundation of the Suit, (viz.) the Writ of Appeal, and all the Process which issued at the Suit of the Party, is good and right. 2. The Plea was good; 1. Because ex necessitate juris: The Defendant need not pled omnino to the Country, where he had pleaded a good special Plea before; and here the pleading of the Connection with the Clergy allowed, is a good Plea in Bar of this Appeal, and so was Wrote and Wiggs Case, 33 El. and 4 Co. 45, 46. Burgh and Holcroft; and than the Pleading further to the Felony is negative: And the word (Murdrum) can be taken for no other than Manslaughter, and he does not say malitia praecogitate, Yelv. p. 204. 9 Jac. Bradley and Banks. Release of Action criminal or mortal, or Pleas of the Crown, is a good Bar in Appeal, 1 Inst. 289. b. Trial. Appeal for the death of her husband. Upon several Issues pleaded, the Plaintiff was nonsuited upon a Trial against the one. Per Curiam, It is a Nonsuit against all; and therefore as to the Suit of the Party, it was ruled that he should be discharged; but that the others who were not tried, should be arraigned at the Queen's Suit, Cro. El. 460. Curtis vers. Savill and three others. It is against a Rule in Law that a Trial for Murder by Appeal or otherwise, should be out of the County where it was committed; Appeals were never allowed in Counties adjoining for Murder done in Wales, Cro. Car. 247. Fentley and Price. In Appeal by a Feme Covert of the death of her husband, if the Defendant saith that the husband is alive in another County, this shall be tried by Proofs, 43 Ass. 26. so if he saith he is alive generally, without saying in another County. If the Appellee be acquitted, Appellee acquitted shall recover Damages. he shall recover Damages by Stat. W. 2. c. 12. yet every Appellee upon his being acquitted, shall not recover Damages. As if a Feme Covert be appealed alone without her husband and acquitted, because of her Disability; but if Appeal be brought against husband and wife, and they be acquitted, Damages shall be recovered by the husband alone, and shall be given to the husband and wife, for the Damage of the wife, 2 Inst. 385, 386. If a Feme Covert be acquitted upon Appeal, she ●●all have Damages against the Abettor, 2 Hob. 98. Quare Impedit. If the husband be disturbed to present to an Adtowson which he had in the right of the wife, and dies, the wife shall have a Quare Impedit of this Disturbance, 3 H. 5. Q. Imped. 21. Husband seized of an Advowson in the right of his wife, presents, and after hath Issue, and the wife dies, and after the Church is voided, the husband shall not have Assize of Darrein Presentment, because he is in of another Estate than he presented to before; for before he was seized in the right of his wife, and now he hath an Estate for life, Keb. 118. b. but if the husband after Issue had presented, and after the wife dies, and the Church is voided, the husband shall have this Writ of Darrein Presentment, because he had Inception to an Estate for life by the Courtesy by the first Presentment, which is now complete. If two Copartners be, and they cannot agreed to present, the eldest shall present; and if her Sister disturbs her, she shall have a Quare Impedit against her. So Tenant per Courtesy of the eldest shall present. A. and B. his wife present to a Church to which they have no right, this gains nothing to the wife; for the wife is at the will of the husband, and Presentation is but Commendation, or the Act of the husband, and it is not like to an entry into Lands by them; alit ' it is when the wife has right, March p. 90. Actions on the Case for Scandalous Words spoken by Baron and Feme against Baron and Feme. Thou art a Witch, no Action lies. Action lies not for calling one Witch, without alleging she hath done some Act, Cro. Car. 478, 480. 1 Rolls Abr. 45. Thou art a Witch, and I will prove thee a Witch; Action lies, Cro. Jac. 150. Edwards and Dusley. Thou art a Witch, is not actionable, and the Addition of these words, I have seen thy Imps and Spirits in the night, is but matter of fancy, and not triable if true, Cro. Jac. 399. Lloyd and Coke, 1 Rolls Abr. 44. contra. Thou art a Witch, and wert the Death of such a Man's Child, at whose Birth thou wert Midwife; it is actionable by the Stat. 1 Jac. a Witch is punishable, Godb. 341. 2 Rolls Rep. 343. She sacrificed one of her Children to the Devil to the intent to bewitch his Mother; Action on the Case for these words, for she is punishable by the Stat. of Witches, 1 Rolls Abr. 44. Lock and Lock. Thou art a Sorcerer and Enchanter; no Action lies; for this is but a sort of Cozenage, 1 Rolls Abr. 45. He has bewitched my Wear, and I can take no Fish; no Action lies. She is a Witch, and a very strong Witch; no Action lies, Cro. Car. 282, 324. 1 Rolls Abr. 45. Thou art a Witch, for thou didst bewitch my Wife's Milk; _____ and Action lies, Cro. Car. 141. 1 Rolls Abr. 45. But there are many more Cases of the like nature in our Books, which because they properly belong to mother Title, I shall not further take notice of, but come to such Cases which more immediately concern this Subject. Action was brought in London for calling a Woman Whore; the Defendant removed the Cause into B. R. and the Court granted a Procedendo to try it in London, for by Rolls we cannot determine the Custom, Stiles Rep. 244. The Defendant's wife spoke of the Plaintiff's wife these words, Thou art a Theivish Quean, and hast stolen my Faggots, innuendo, five Faggots of the Defendant's and his Wife's: It was moved that the words are not actionable; for a Feme Covert hath not any Goods that can be stolen. But per Curiam, The Action lies, she chargeth her with Felony, and it is no matter whose Goods they are, Cro. Jac. 600. Stamp and Ux. vers. White and Ux. Thou hast stolen my Goods, innuendo the Goods of a Feme Covert. If a Feme Covert saith to another, Thou hast stolen my Goods; the other asked, What Goods; the wife answered, My Blow and Stuff: And in the Declaration the Plaintiff averred innuendo, the Blow and Stuff of the husband: Not Action lies, for a Feme Covert cannot have Goods, 1 Rolls Abr. 74. Thou hast sought the Blood of my Husband, and waste his Death; for hadst thou been an honest Woman he had been alive still; and avers in Facto that her husband was killed: The words are actionable, Cro. El. 293. Gastrell and Townsend. Toose his wife, innuendo the Plaintiff, Hath killed thy Husband; innuendo J. D. her husband lately dead: The words were adjudged actionable, Cro. Jac. 306. Toose's Case. If a Man saith, A Woman told me Megs his Wife had poisoned Griffin her first Husband in a Mess of Milk: Meg and his wife may have Action of Slander for this, for otherwise a Man may raise a Slander of his own head, and not be punished, 1 Rolls Abr. 64. Meg and Griffin. One said of a Woman, Thou didst poison thy husband, and I will justify it to thy face; Action lies, though it's not said she did it voluntarily; but it's so intended by common Acceptance, but it must be averred that he was dead before the words spoken, 1 Rolls Abr. 71. Gardner and Spurdance. If the Plaintiff declare that the Defendant spoke these words of her, Thou art a Villainous Quean, and a Murderous Quean, for thou didst murder my Wife; and the Jury found she spoke the words of the Defendant in the third person, She is a Villainous Quean, etc. This is a material Variance, and cannot be intended the same words, 2 Rolls Abr. 716. Blisset's Case. Mistress P. wrote a Letter to one to poison her husband; Action lies for these words, cited in Dean and Eton's Case, 1 Bulst. 201. Wallis' Wife is thy Whore; no Action lies at Common Law, but in Spiritual Court: But to say, One keeps a Bawdy House, is actionable at Common Law, Sid. 61. Wallis' Case. Thou art an Whore, and I will throw thee out of thy Living, (viz. Copyhold) and she was possessed of a Copyhold dum sola & casta; it is actionable, Sid. 214. BoysBoys Case. She is an Whore, and her Children, (innuendo which she had by her former husband) are F 's Bastards; the words are actionable, though the Children cannot be Bastards in Law, but in Reputation they may, and its loss of Marriage, Cro. Car. 322. Bryan and Cockman. She was with Child, and miscarried at C. N. his House: Words spoken of a Virgin; per quod she lost Suitors, and was threatened by her Father to be turned out of his House; but no particular Damage assigned: Not actionable, Sid. 398. Barns and Prudlin. Thou art an Whoremaster, for thou hast lain with Browne 's Wife, and hadst to do with her against a Chair; per quod, etc. Judgement pro Quer ', Cro. Jac. 323. Matthews and Craple. Action on the Case for saying, He had two Bastards, and should have kept them. By which Discord arose between him and his wife, and they were likely to be divorced; not actionable, for it is but an Imagination of being divorced, Cro. Jac. 473. Barmend's Case. He hath three Wives: Actionable and within the Statute. What do you mean to entertain him, for he was a very harsh Man to his former Wife, and would not allow her Necessaries, and is of a small Estate: Per quod, the wife refused him, and the words adjudged actionable, Shepherd's Case cited, Litt. Rep. 193. Of a Woman who was in Communication of Marriage, She is a Burstenbellied Quean, and her Guts hung down to her Garters; adjudged actionable, Harvey's Case cited in Bridge and Langton's Case, Litt. Rep. 193. Where Baron and Feme must join in the Action or not, and how Judgement shall be. Action on the Case was brought against V and his wife, for words spoken of the Plaintiff by the Defendant's wife: Where Wife is found guilty only, yet the Judgement was against Baron and Feme. Upon not guilty, Verdict was for the Plaintiff, and Judgement given, and a Writ of Error brought: And this Exception was taken, That the Verdict found the wife only guilty, and yet the Judgement was given against Baron and Feme. Per Glin Ch. Justice, the Jury have found the wife guilty, and so the Declaration is true, and therefore just cause of Action, and the Judgement well given, Stiles p. 460. Abbot and Vaughan. C's wife is a Bawd and keeps a Bawdy House: They join in the Action, and conclude ad damnum ipsorum, and good, Chambers and his wife vers. Risley, March p. 212. In Action against Baron and Feme if the Plaintiff declare, Declaration. that they dixerunt of the Plaintiff certain scandalous words, such a day and year: If the Defendants pled not guilty, and the Jury found the husband guilty and the wife not guilty, in this Case the Plaintiff shall have Judgement, for although the words by the Baron and Feme may not be jointly spoke in as much as they have two Mouths, and the speaking of the one is not the speaking of the other, so that it shall be taken that the words were severally spoken at the same time; in which Case the Action ought not to be brought against both, in as much as if they had been both found guilty, there ought to have been two Judgements, one against Baron and Feme, and the other against the Baron only, which is not to be suffered upon one Writ; and therefore if the Plaintiff had demurred upon this Declaration, it had not been good; yet when the wife is found not guilty, there need not be but one Judgement, (viz.) against the Baron; and for this the Verdict had made it good, and so the Plaintiff shall have Judgement against the Baron, 1 Rolls Abr. 782 so is Stiles p. 349. Butcher and Orchard. H. 32 El. B. C. Fishume's Case. Baron and Feme and their Son, brought Action on the Case for saying, That they had committed Treason for coining of Money; and adjudged, no Action lies. Action on the Case for slanderous words spoken by Baron and Feme lies not, for they cannot speak together, Dyer 19 Margin. Action for words spoken against Baron and Feme for words laid to be spoken by the wife: Upon not guilty pleaded, a Verdict was found for the Plaintiffs, Quod ipsi non sunt inde culpabiles, and good, Quod ipsi non sunt culpabiles. and it is no Error, 3 Bulst. 62. Quelsh and Ux. versus Carpenter. In Action on the Case against Baron and Feme for words spoken by the wife: Verdict. The Baron is to be found not guilty, because nothing is laid to his charge; and if they are both found guilty as to the husband, the Verdict is voided, but good as to the wife alone, 3 Bulst. 60. The Defendant's wife spoke of the Plaintiff's wife scandalous words, and he brought his Action against Baron and Feme, and they pleaded quod ipsi non sunt ●alpabiles, and good, for the Baron and Feme are charged as for the wrong of the wife, Cro. Car. 417. Needler and Simnel. Action on the Case by a Victualler for saying of his wife, She was a Bawd of Bawds, and a Bawd to her own Daughter; and special Damage, Quod ad damnum ipsorum, Ad damnum ipsorum. 1 Cro. 419. The special Damage is only the husband's, and the Action would not lie without the special Damage, and Judgement was stayed, they ought not to have joined; had the Damage been laid per quod, he lost Consortium of the wife, they could not join, French and Lever in B.C. 1 Keb. 791. Coleman and Ux. verse. Haroll. Error on a Judgement in C. B. was, That the Baron and Feme should recover, and it was assigned for Error in B. R. because the Baron only is to have the Damages; and yet Judgement was affirmed by the whole Court, Godb. 369. pl. 459. Litchfeild and his wife verse. Mellhouse. So Case by Baron and Feme of words spoken of the Plaintiffs wife ad damnum ipsorum, and Judgement was stayed after Verdict pro Quer ', 2 Keb. 387. When Judgement is given against Baron and Feme for words spoken by the Feme, In mia '. both must be in mia ' Hob. 127. If A. a Feme Covert, speak scandalous words of B. another Feme Covert; and after the husband of B. makes a Release of this to the husband of A. and after A. sues B. in Court Christian for this Defamation, and there the Release of the husband of B. is pleaded; Release. and notwithstanding Sentence is given there for A. and Costs taxed, Suit for Defamation. and upon this an Appeal; yet no Prohibition lies as to this matter, because there they have Jurisdiction of the Cause, and also of the manner of Proceeding: But a Prohibition lies as to the Costs, for the Costs shall go to her husband, who had made the Release, 2 Rolls Abr. 301. Perry and Hubbard. Where the Wife may sue Sole. The wife sues in Court Christian for a Defamation, (as she may sue Sole there) and the husband and the other refer themselves to the Award of J. S. who makes an Award; and this is pleaded in Court Christian, and not allowed; yet a Prohibition was denied, because this Suit is only to restore her to her Fame, which the husband cannot hinder, 2 Rolls Abr. 301. Pannell and Watford; and so is Motam's Case there, where the wife after Divorce causa Adulterii a Mensa & thoro, sues for Defamation. Action for words against Baron and Feme. Defendant pleads quod ipsi non sunt culpabiles, Quod ipsi non sunt culpabiles. and found pro Quer ' Moved in Arrest of Judgement, because Issue was not well joined; for being for words spoken by the wife, it ought to be quod ipsa non est culpabilis, sed non allocatur; for the Baron and Feme are charged as for the Wrong of the wife, Cro. Car. 417. Needler against Symel and his wife. CHAP. XVIII. Actions against Baron and Feme. Trover, Debt, Trespass, Actions on the Case, Waste, Covenant, Account, Audita Querela, with the manner of Declaring and Pleading in each Action. Actions against Baron and Feme by reason of Offences against a Statute. Information against Baron and Feme for the Recusancy of the Wife by the Stat. 1 Eliz. & 23 Eliz. In what Actions the Husband shall be charged after the Death of the Wife. Where the default of the Wife shall be the default of the husband, and e contra. Where the wife shall be received upon the Husband's default. W●ger of Law by Baron and Feme. In what Cases the Husband shall appear, and be compelled to put in Bail for his Wife or not. Of Baron and Feme being sued to the Outlawry, and how the Entry shall be. Trover. Trover by the Feme, and conversion against Baron and Feme. TROVER by the Feme, and Conversion by the Baron and Feme. The Action must be brought against them both, 1 Leon. p. 312. and not against the Baron only, for the Action doth sound in Trespass; and it is not like to Detinue, for upon Detainer by the wife, the Action lies against the Baron only, Marsh's Case. Whether the Wife may be said to convert Goods. Whether and how the wife may be said to convert Goods, hath been a Question in our Books. Mich. 7 Jac. Trover was brought against Baron and Feme, and Plaintiff declares he was possessed of divers Goods in Specie until such a day, and lost them, which came to the Possession of both the Defendants, and they converted them ad damnum, etc. And upon not guilty pleaded, found pro Quer '. Exception was taken to the Declaration, because the Conversion is laid to the Charge of the wife as well as to the Charge of the husband; and Feme Covert may not convert Goods, but it shall be said the Conversion only of the husband, for as much as she cannot have Property, but all is in the husband. To which it was answered by Yeluerton, That this Action is not grounded in any Property supposed to be in the Defendants, but upon the Possession only; and the Point of the Action is the Conversion, which is a Tort with which a Feme Covert may well be charged as well as she may be charged with a Trespass, or a Deisseism committed. And if a Feme Covert take my Sheep and eat them, ●r other Goods, and convert them, I shall well have ●●s Action against Baron and Feme; and suppose the Conversion in the wife only, (viz.) the Tort. But ●●aron and Feme may not have Action on Trover, and suppose the Possession in them both, for the Law transfers all in Point of Ownership to the husband, Quod fuit concessum, per Curiam. But this seems not ●o be Law; for in Berry and Neve's Case, 20 Jac. 1. ●u. Jac. 661. an Action lies not against Baron and ●ane for converting Goods to their uses, for it is the Conversion of the husband only, and they are only to ●●s use; and although they may be charged with a ●●int Battery or Imprisonment, yet it cannot be so for Goods converted; and the Judgement shall not be re●●rsed quoad the wife. And yet in Rheims and Humfries' Case, Cro. Car. ●54. Trover was brought against Baron and Feme 〈◊〉 Conversion by Baron and Feme ad usum ipsorum 〈◊〉 not guilty: Both are found guilty, Conversion ad usum ipsorum. and Damages assessed. It was moved in Arrest of Judgement, That ●●e Action lies not against Baron and Feme jointly for Conversion to their uses during the Coverture; for ●hen they join it is the Act of the husband only, and ●●e Feme cannot convert to her own use: But Action of Trover well lies for Conversion by the Feme before Coverture, or by the Feme only during the Coverture, for she may do a Tort solely, and the husband shall be joined with her, but not where she joins with her husband; and Judgement was given for the Defendant, Cro. Car. 254. Trover was brought against Baron and Feme, and that they converted them ad usum ipsorum, and for that cause Judgement was reversed; for a Feme Covert cannot convert to the use of the Feme, but all is done to the use of the husband, Cro. Car. 494. Perry and Diggs, though it was alleged in such case, 1 Vent. 33. when it was ad usum proprium converterunt, that proprium might be applied to the use of the husband only, and so if it had been ad usum suum: But per Curiam, Neither had been good; so was Gallops Case, Stiles 136. And it was prayed that Judgement might be entered, quod querens nil capiat per billam; for if it be quod def ' eat inde sine die, the Plaintiff could not have brought Action de novo. Trover was brought against Baron and Feme supposing the Trover to be by both, and the Conversion by the Feme only. Quod ipsi non sunt culpabiles. The Defendants pled quod ipsi non sunt inde culpabiles: After Verdict pro Quer ' Judgement was stayed in as much as the Declaration doth not charge the husband with any Tort, but only the wife, the issue ought to have been quod ips● non est inde culpabilis, Cro. El. 883. Cox and Crapnell; and so a Repleader was awarded after Verdict. If the wife take Corn and make Bread, and eat the Bread, this is the Trover and Conversion of the husband; so if she buys , and makes a Garment and wears it, the Baron and Feme shall be charged in Trover and Conversion, Sid. 113. Trover against Baron and Feme of the Trover of the wife, and Conversion of the wife during the Coverture. The Defendants pleaded not guilty, and found against them. The Judgement was, Judgement. That the Feme, sit in misericordia; where it ought to be that the Baron and Feme, sint in misericordia; for she cannot pay it without her husband: And it was erroneous also, because the Baron pleads with the wife, and does not confess the Action, for that is the cause of the misericordia. Also the usual course is in Actions against Baron and Feme for Trespass done by the Feme during the Coverture, if they be thereof convicted to have the Judgement ideo capiantur against both; yet this is no Offence against the Baron himself: And by all the Clerks this is their course, Cro. Jac. 9 Wood and his wife vers. Dr. Sutcliff. Debt. Baron and Feme cannot be joined in one Action of Debt against them for several Contracts, On several Contracts, the one made by the Wife dum sola, the other by the Husband. the one ●●de by the wife dum sola, the other by the husband, 〈◊〉 was Revel and Gray's Case. revel brought action of Debt against Grace and his wife for 3 l. 18 s. ●nd declared for 39 s. upon the wife's Contract dum ●●a fuit, and the other 39 s. upon an Insimul com●averunt with Grace the husband after Issue joined, ●●d nil debent, and Verdict pro Quer ' Judgement was ●●yed, Hob. p. 184. Debt against Baron and Feme for the Debt of the ●●●e upon Obligation made by the wife dum sola. ●pon non est factum pleaded, Quod Capiantur. and found pro Quer ' 〈◊〉 Judgement was that the Baron should be in mise●cordia, and that the Feme capiatur; and this being signed for Error, the Judgement was reversed, for it ●●ould be capiantur for both, Cro. El. 381. Peircy and ●ardolf. Now Debt against Baron and Feme for the Debt of the wife must be in the debet & detinet, 3 Le●●. p. 206. This was upon a Bond made by the wife don sola; the husband hath the Goods of the wife in his own Right, and so is the Register 140. Walcot and Powel's Case. And if Debt is brought against Baron and Feme upon Recovery of Damages to the Feme dum sola, it is good in the debet & detinet, 47 Ed. 3.23. For Rent. Feme Lessee for Life takes husband, and dies; Debt lies against the husband for Rent incurred during the Coverture, 1 Rolls Abr. 592. Debt on Lease made to a Feme when Sole, may be brought against the Baron Sole in the Life of the wife, because during the Coverture he is Assignee in Law, and receives the Profits, 1 Keb. 20. Debt on Escape. Debt. Whereas he recovered against T.A. and Mary his wife in Trespass 202 l. and Mary was committed in Execution, and that the Defendant suffered her to go at large. The Defendant pleads fresh Suit. It was objected, this Action for Escape lay not, but Action on the Case; for she hath nothing but what is her husband's, and the husband is the principal Debtor, and subject to the Execution. Per Curiam, This Action lies as well as Case, for the wife was only committed to Prison, and not the Baron, and she is the sole Debtor who is imprisoned, Cro. Jac. 657. Whiting and Sir Geo. Reynell. Escape. In Debt on Escape the Plaintiff declares J. S. and his wife were in Execution, etc. and that they escaped on nil debet. The Jury found the husband was on Execution, and he escaped: And further, that the wife was not in Execution (being for Debt contracted before Coverture) and Judgement for the Plaintiff, though the Verdict was not pursuant to the Declaration in the whole, Sid. p. 5. If a Feme Sole do own me Money, Feme Sole owes Money, and takes Husband, Action lies against both. and takes husband, I may very well have Action of Debt against them, and count that they own me so much without saying dum sola fuit; yet this was the proper Debt of the wife when she was Sole, and now by the Marriage this is also made the Debt of the husband during the Coverture: And this was one Grubb and Johnson's Case, cited in Bowls and Peere's Case, 1 Bulst. 136, 137. Trespass. Of Assault and Battery, Against Baron and Feme the Jury found the Feme only guilty, and not the husband: Jury finds the Feme only guilty, and not the Husband. It was moved in Arrest of Judgement, that this Verdict was against the Plaintiff; for in this Case he ought to have joined the husband only for Conformity, and he declaring of a ●attery of both, the Baron being acquitted, he hath ●●iled of his Action: And so is Yelv. 106. Drury and Dennis' Case; where Battery is brought against Ba●●on and Feme, supposing that they beaten the Plaintiff, or the Mare of the Plaintiff; and on not guilty, the ●●y found the Feme only did the Battery, and not ●e husband: This Verdict was there said to be against the Plaintiff; for now it appears the Action of the Plaintiff to be faux, for the husband shall be joined in such Case but for Conformity, and there is a special Writ in the Register to such purpose. And it 〈◊〉 not like to a Battery charged upon J. D. and G. S. for there one may be found guilty, and the other acquitted, and good; for these are in Law several Tre●●sses: But the Court in the principal Case gave ●●dgment pro Quer ', and said that in Yeluerton was a strange Opinion, 1 Vent. 93. But Action of Assault and Battery for bearing the Baron and Feme, upon not guilty pleaded, the Defendant was found guilt●y of beating the wife only, and nothing was found concerning the Battery of the Baron. Per Curiam, If none cull ' had been found as to the husband, it had been well; but here is a non Liquet as to him, vid. 10 Co. 130. Verdict voided. b. and took a Diversity between, their being Plaintiffs and Defendants; for if there be a Mistake as to one of the Defendants, it may be well, as in Action on the Case brought against Baron and Feme for words spoken by them both, and the Baron be found not guilty, and the wife guilty, it is well. But afterwards it was held a voided Verdict, because only part of the Issue was found, as 1 Inst. 227. and there is no Discontinuance, for the whole is continued; and by Ch. Baron Bridgman, Venire de novo awarded, Hard. 166. Rochel and his wife against Stedle and his wife. In Battery against Baron and Feme the Baron pleads generally not guilty; The Wife cannot pled by herself. and the Baron and Feme quoad, the wounding, pled not guilty, and quoad the Battery, the wife pleads in Justification, Et hoc parata est verificare, where it ought to be parati sunt, Cro. Car. 594. Watkinson and Turner in such Case, Cro. Jac. 239. Watson and thorn; the Baron justified, for that the Plaintiff assaulted his wife, in aid of whom, etc. the Feme justifies by herself, and pleads son assault demesne. Plaintiff replies, De injuria sua propria absque Tali causa; and both Issues found for the Plaintiff, and entire Damages. Per Curiam, It is ill, for the wife by herself cannot pled, and the Damages being entirely assessed, all was ill. Assault and Battery by Baron and Feme against Baron and Feme, for Battery of the Plaintiff's wife: Upon not guilty pleaded, it was found the Baron was not guilty, and the wife was only guilty; and the Judgement was quod capiantur, Quod capiantur. and good, Cro. Cro. 203. Hales and White. Trespass was brought for mean Profits. Trespass for mean Profits. The Count was against Baron and Feme for Trespass done cum ●veriis suis, and saith not whether they were their Beasts after, or hers before Coverture. Per Curiam, It's good enough after a Verdict: for she may be Executrix, and so by Marriage they may be his Goods, but than the Actions should have been several, according to their several Capacities: And if the Goods of an Executrix after taking husband be stole, the Indictment must be of taking his Goods, 1 Keb. 944. Collingwood and Bishop. Note, In Trans. ad novam assignac ' Def. placitat ' Liberum Tenementum ipsius Defendentis & E. Ux. ejus in jure, etc. Ad quod quer ' dicit quod ipse fuit scisitus quousque disseit ' per le Baron ad usum Ux. per quod fuer ' seisit ' per dissesinam & quod disseisee reenter. & Tresp. nul faciend ' mentionem de Agreement del Feme all dissei. Qu'. Car aliter de estranger. Def ' maintain son Freehold & traverse le disseisin. Ex Manuscripto Mri. Brownloe. Action on the Case. Vide Words. Action on the Case doth not lie against Baron and Feme for negligent keeping of Fire in their House, For negligent keeping of Fire. by which the House of the Plaintiff was burnt; for this Action lies by the Custom of the Realm against Patrem familias, and not against a Servant, or a Feme Covert, who is in the nature of a Servant, 1 Rolls Abr. 2. Shelley's Case. Feme Covert, and another at her Request, are bound in a Bond for the Debt of a Feme Covert, and after the death of her husband she had assumed to ●●ve the other harmless against that Bond; this Assumpsit shall not bind the wife, Godb. 138. in Barton ●nd Edmond Case. Aliter in Case of an Infant. Feme Covert affirming herself to be a Feme Sole to entice to Marriage. Action on the Case brought against Baron and Feme; because the wife affirmed herself to be a Feme Sole to entice the Plaintiff to marry her; Action lies not against Baron and Feme, because it is Felony; and all the ground of this is the Contract and Communication of the wife, which cannot bind her husband, Sid. 375. Cooper and Witham and his wife. Waste. Waste lies not against the husband for Waste committed by him in the time of his wife. Feme Tenant for Life takes the Defendant to husband, who committed Waste, and his wife died, and Action was brought, and it was not brought in the Tenet, not the Tenuit; and therefore the Writ of Waste is not good, because it is variant from the Register, for it ought to have been the one way; and to make his Count special, Writ & Count and the Form of the Count was ill, because the Writ supposeth that the Baron fecit v●stum; whereas the Baron being charged as Tenant i● the Right of his wife, the Writ ought to have been fecerunt vastum. And the Court was of opinion that the Writ lies not against the Baron for Waste committed by him in the time of his wife; for he is to be charged by reason of his wife, and jointly with her, and she being dead the Action is gone, for it is but a personal Wrong done by her, though the Prothonotaries informed the Court that such Action had been brought against the Baron, and the Writ was quod tenuit in jure Uxoris, which the Court marvelled at, Cro. El. 357. Baron seized in Right of the Wife, doth waste, Feme dies, and he shall not be charged. and so is 1 Inst. 54. Baron seized for Life of the wife, and in the Right of the wife, doth waste, and after the wife dies, no Action of Waste lies against the husband in the Tenuit, for that he was seized, but in the Right of his wife, and the Freehold was his wife's. But if Baron possessed for years in the Right of his wife, doth waste, and the wife dies, Action of Waste lies against the husband, for that the law gives the Term to him, 5 Co. 75. b. A Lease for Life is made to A. the Remainder to a Feme Sole for years, they intermarry, Waste is committed, Lessor brings Action of Waste; he shall recover as well the Estate for Life, as for Years, 2 Leon. p. 7. If a Woman while she is Sole commits Waste and marries, Feme Sole commits Waste and than marries. the Writ shall be that the Woman while she was Sole committed the Waste. A Man gives Land to his wife during the Minority of his Son, on condition that she shall not make Waste; she takes husband, who commits Waste; this is no breach, Latch 20. in Webb's Case, 2 Leon. 35. Cobb and Priour. If a Man have Land in the Right of his wife, and commits Waste, and the Woman dies, no Action of Waste lies against the husband after the death of the wife, 1 Brownl. 238, 239. Baron and Feme shall be punished in Waste for Waste made by a Stranger, 1 Inst. 54. b. Feme Lessee for Life taketh husband, the husband doth waste, the wife dieth, the husband shall not be punished by this Law of Gloucester, c. 5. Stat. Glou ' c. 5. for the words be home que tient, etc. pur vie; and the Baron held not for Life, for he was seized in the Right of his wife, and the Estate was in his wife, 2 Inst. 301. If Feme Lessee for Life takes husband, who doth waste, Action lies against them both, 33 H. 6. 31. 17 Ed. 3. 68 b. If Feme Lessee for Life takes Baron, who commits Waste and dies, Action of Waste lies against the wife for this. Covenant. Upon a Warranty in a Fine sur concessit. Vide Supra, Pen Hale's Case, 2 Sand. 177. Account. Action of Account was brought against a Feme Covert Administratrix, and her husband in B. C. and Judgement given against the Defendants quoth co●p●tent. The Feme dies, and the Baron brings a Writ of Error in B. R. to reverse this Judgement. Per Car ', This Writ of Error lies not, because the Record cannot be removed by it, for that would disturb the Proceed in the Common Pleas, and the Party would have no fruit of his Suit if the Record were removed, nor any remedy to recover the Arrears due to him; yet the Original is determined by the Judgement given quod computent, and a Scire fac ' lies by the Executor, as the Case here is, Styles 290. Spitlehouse Case. Audita Querela. Baron and Feme sue Execution after a Defeasance: On a Statute made to Baron and Feme, Audita Querela should be brought against both, 1 Rolls Abr. 312. although the Defeasance be voided as to the wife; for the Action is in lieu of an Answer to the Execution which is sued by both, and it is all one as if the Baron alone had made the Defeasance which should be a sufficient Discharge, 11 Ed. 4. 8. b. Actions against Baron and Feme upon Offences against a Statute. Vide Offences. Information for Recusancy. The Baron is not to be joined where Fine and Imprisonment is to be; Regu. but on the Statute of Recusancy or keeping Alehouses, the husband must pay the Fine, therefore must join, for it cannot be levied on her, though she commit the fault, 2 Keb. 4.68. Information lies against Baron and Feme for the recusancy of the wife, to recover 20 l. the Month by the Stat. of Eliz. and the Stat. 7 Jac. c. 6. doth not altar any of the former Laws, but prescribes that a Feme Covert Recusant being convicted, if she after three Months do not conform herself, she shall be committed to Prison, unless the husband will pay 10 l. for every Month that she shall be out of Prison and not conformed. The Plea on Record is, Et praed ' J. C. & Magdalena veniunt: Et praed ' Magdalena dicit quod ipsa non est culpab. etc. and a Plea by a Feme Covert is voided; but the Docket otherwise, and it was mended, Cro. Jac. 529. Parker and Sir J. Curson's Case. The Question in Parker and Webb's Case, Cro. Jac. 480. was, Whether a Feme Covert being convicted by Indictment at the King's Suit, be liable to the Suit of an Informer upon the Stat. 23 Eliz. after the year that she was convicted? Vide, for it was not determined. It is resolved, That the husband is liable to the Penalty of 23 Eliz. c. 1. of 20 l. per Month, though he himself be no Recusant, 3 Bulst. 87. Le Roy verse. Law. If Baron and Feme be sued in Debt for the Recusancy of the wife, both must appear, or both be Outlawed, Hob. 174. A Feme Covert affirms she is Sole, and induceth J. S. to marry her; no Action lies against the husband, 2 Keb. 399. The wife may not join Issue without her husband in Information against Baron and Feme for the Recusancy of the wife, 2 Rolls Rep. 90. Stat. 1 Eliz. & 23. Feme Covert is within the Stat. 1 Eliz. and the Stat. of 23 Eliz. refers to the first, and therefore a Feme Covert is deins Stat. 23. and therefore she shall forfeit for every Month 20 l. and this may be recovered by Information against Baron and Feme, as was resolved 35 Eliz. at Russel-house by Puckering Lord Chancellor, and all the Justices; but there it was resolved, If Feme be indicted for a thing, the Husband shall not be charged. if a Feme Covert be indicted for this at the King's Suit, the husband shall not be charged, because he was not Party to the Judgement; for if a Feme be indicted for any thing, the husband shall pay nothing, because he is not Party to the Judgement; but otherwise it is for Actions of Battery, and for Words, because the husband there is no Party to the Judgement; so it is also where the Informer informs, and this was the cause of making the Stat. of 35 Eliz. by which Statute the King may have Action of Debt, and so recover the Penalty against the husband, 1 Rolls Rep. 93. Dr. Foster's Case. In what Actions Husband shall be charged after the Death of his Wife, or not. 1 Rolls Rep. 351, 352. If Feme Lessee for Life rendering Rend, takes husband and dies, the husband shall be charged in Action of Debt for Rent incurred during the Coverture, because he took the Profits out of which the Rent issued, 10 H. 6.11. If a Woman be indebted to another, and taketh husband, and dies; the husband shall not be charged in Debt for this after the death of the wife, because it was but a Chose in Action, 10 H. 6.10.12. 20 H. 6.22. b. If Feme Lessee for Life takes husband, and dies, the husband shall not be charged for this during the Coverture, for he was never Lessee, 5 Co. Foliamb's Case. If A. take B. Executrix to wife, against whom Action of Debt is afterwards brought as Executors, and Judgement given against them to recover de bonis Testatoris; and upon this a Fieri fac ' issues to levy the Debt and Damages; and the Sheriff upon this returns a Devastavit, and after the wife dies, it was doubted in Trotman and Jane's Case, whether Execution upon this Judgement may be sued against the husband, there not being any Judgement upon the re●●● of the Devastavit to recover de bonis propriis, 9 Car. B. R. Vide as to this supra. Process. Where the default of the Wife shall be the default of the Husband, and e converso. Where the husband is to have a Corporal Penance for the default, there the default of the wife shall not ●e the default of the husband, 11 H. 4. 7. 9 H. 6. 8. 〈◊〉 if on a pluries capias the husband appears, and the wife makes default, this shall not be the default of the husband for the Corporal Pain. So in Capias, if the husband's make default, and the wife appear. So if ●●on the Exigent the Baron and Feme have a Super●●eas, and notwithstanding this they are returned outlawed; and at the return the Baron appears, and ●e wife makes default, this shall not be the default of ●e husband for the Corporal Pain, 9 H. 6. 8. But otherwise it is where the Baron is not to have a Corporal Pain by the default, 11 H. 4. 72. as if Baron and Feme are attached in a Trespass, the default of the wife is the default of both, and so the Issues forfeit. In Assize the default of the wife shall be the default of the husband. In Action of Debt against Baron and Feme, if the Baron appears, and the Feme make default, the Baron shall not be put to answer, but Process shall issue against the wife, and idem dies given to the husband, M. 11. Jac. B. Thoroughgood and Dunham. If Action of Waste be brought against Baron and Feme, and the Baron appear upon the Distringas, and the wife make default, this shall be the default of them both, 1 Brownl. 239. Resceipt. Where the Wife shall be received upon the Husband's default, and e contra. In every Case that the wife is received for default of her husband, she shall pled and have the same advantage in pleading to defend her Right, as if she were a Feme Sole; but after receipt, she cannot levy a Fine, for that were to give away her Right, 1 Iust. 352. b. vid. 2 Inst. W. 2. c. 4. After a Verdict against Baron and Feme the wife cannot pray to be received, Hob. 177. Bell and Hartley. This was in Action of Waste. A Resceipt shall be by a Termor or Feme Covert, after a nihil dicit, 9 Ed. 4. c. 37. and a Receipt shall be by a Feme after a Writ of Enquiry of Waste returned, and the Waste required, Cro. El. 263. Elmer and Thackam. In Formedon the Tenant pleaded non Tenure, and found for the Demandant, and now the Feme after Verdict prayed to be received upon the faint Plea of her husband, because he had pleaded non Tenure, where she might have traversed the Gift, and he brought a Writ out of Chancery, de Attornat ' recipiendo for the Feme. And per Curiam, It was received, for false Pleading is faint Pleading, and faint Pleading is within the Statute, and here needs not any new Declaration, because the Feme is Party to the Suit; aliter when he in Reversion is Party to the Suit, and is received, Cro. El. 826. Greswold and Holmes. Baron and Feme Jointenants for Life, the Baron Sole is impleaded, and made default, and the wife prayed to be received; but she is not receivable, because she was not Party to the first Writ; but he in Reversion shall be received, and shall abate the Writ for Jointenancy, Moor 242. Caine's Case. Feme Covert hath a Reversion and Tenant for life is impleaded, and she conceives her husband will not pray to be received; she may have a Writ directed to the Justices, testifying therein, that she will make such Attorneys jointly and severally, commanding the Justices to receive them for Attorneys; and it must be mentioned in the Writ that she is decri●●, etc. and cannot come in Person, and pray to be ●eceived. Ley Gager. Debt against Baron and Feme for certain Barrels of ●●er sold to the wife dum sola fuit. Baron and Feme both wage Law. They both wa●●d their Law, and both Baron and Feme did swear ●●cording to the form of the Oath. Quod nota, ●he Baron did swear for the Debt of the wife, Cro. ●●ct. 161. Weeks verse. Holmes and Ux. Accounted of the Receipt of 10 l. by the hands of the Plaintiff's wife. The Defendant waged his Law, because a Receipt by the hands of the wife of the Plaintiff or Defendant, is all one as Receipt by their own hands, Cro. El. p. 919. Goodrick's Case. The husband and wife of full Age for the Debt of the wife before the Coverture, shall make their Law, 1 Inst. 172. b. In what Cases the Husband shall be compelled to appear and put in Bail for his Wife, or not. Husband to remain in Prison till he puts in Bail for his Wife; in what Case or not. In Action (as Debt) against Baron and Feme for the Debt of the wife; if the husband be taken by Capias or Exigent, he shall remain in Prison until he puts in Bail for his wife: And by the Clarks it is a common course. But in Action against Baron and Feme in Banco, if the husband comes in upon the Capias or Exigent, he shall not be compelled to put in Bail for his wife. If the husband appear upon the Original in B. R. where it is against Baron and Feme, he ought to put in Bail for his wife. If a Latitat Issue against Baron and Feme, and the wife is arrested but not the husband; the husband in this Case shall not be compelled by the Course of the Court to appear for himself and his wife, the husband not being arrested. Per Curiam, And the Clarks in Story and Smith's Case, M. 10 Car. B. R. But they say, that if the husband had been arrested, but not the wife, the husband shall be compelled to appear for himself and his wife. In Action of Debt against Baron and Feme in B. R. upon the Statute of _____ Recusants for the Recusancy of the wife; the husband who is in Custod● mar ' shall remain in Prison unless he puts in Bail as well for himself as his wife, 37 El. B. R. Philpot and Young: But it is in the Election of the Court, whether they will compel him to give Bail for his wife, or not; for all Bails are in the Discretion of the Court; so Hob. Loveden's Case. In Debt for the Recusancy of the wife, the husband may not appear by Supersedeas only, for either they ought both to appear, or both be Outlawed. Latitat was sued against J. S. and A. S. Baron and Feme, by T. D. The wife was arrested, Latitar against J. S. and his Wife, the Wife was arrested, but the Husband could not be taken. but the Baron could not be taken. The Sheriff returned Cepi Corpus for the wife, and non est inventus for the Baron. And the Court held nothing could be done in this Case, unless there were Bail put in by the husband; for the Feme without the husband cannot be sued, nor can put 〈◊〉 Bail; and against the husband, unless he be first taken and put in Bail, there cannot be any Declaration, and therefore in this Case, in regard the Plaintiff cannot declare, the Feme was dismissed; and it was said he ought to sue them by Process of Outlawry, Remedy by Process of Outlawry. and by ●●at means he might have remedy: For it were a great mischief that a Feme Covert should intermeddle, and merchandise, and procure Goods into her hands, and the Baron absenting himself, or keeping in his House, there should be no remedy against them, Cro. Jac. 445. The Court of King's-Bench was moved on the behalf of the Lady Baltinglass. There was an Action 〈◊〉 the Case brought against Baron and Feme, and the Feme appeared, and the husband would not, and that the Plaintiff's Attorney stood to have special Bail 〈◊〉 her; which she could not procure, and therefore 〈◊〉 was prayed she might be delivered on common ●●il: But by Glin, if there be cause to have special ●●il, the wife must lie in Prison until the husband ap●●ar and put in Bail for her; for she cannot put in 〈◊〉 for herself, she being a Feme Covert, Stiles 475. Action of Debt against Baron and Feme upon the ●●titat. The Feme appeared, she shall be accepted 〈◊〉 Curiam; but where the Feme is in Execution, she shall not be discharged, nor could the Lady Baltinglass, who was in Custodia only upon Process: But per Curiam, She ought to be discharged, and that without Bail, if it appear upon the Writ that she is a Feme Covert; but if she be sued as a Feme Sole, she shall put in Bail. Feme Covert appeared on the Latitat: Qu. If she shall be dismissed. And by Twisden, it is an unreasonable Course, that the wife because she cannot appear by Reddidit se, but in Custodia, therefore she should not be dismissed as in B. C. else would this be as good as a Divorce, a continual non est inventus being returned against the husband, and no Declaration o●● be against her, and so she shall be always in Prison. And this being but an Arrest on mean Process, and to say she is in Custodia, is no reason, because when he comes in he shall found Bail for himself and his wife, and so the Plaintiff may declare against them both in Custodia. Per Curiam, She was discharged. Three Opinions have been in this Case; 1. That she should lie in Prison till the husband come in; and that is unreasonable. 2. That she ought to file a common Bail if another will be bound for her, which may prevent a Fraud in arresting of her at the beginning of a long Vacation; this the Court conceived reasonable: but it is at the Election of the wife whether she will or not. 3. That she ought to be discharged without Bail, which the Court conceived reasonable, and so awarded here, 1 Keb. 187, 188. Bart and Desmond. In Action against Baron and Feme, and the Feme was an Infant, and the wife appeared per Attornat '; whereas the Court ought to have admitted her per Guardian ', and for this it was reversed; but if the wife be of age, than the Baron makes Attorney for her and himself, Entry as to appearance. and the Entry is per Attornat ' of the husband and wife; and by Hale the husband cannot disallow the Guardian made by the Court for his wife, 1 Vent. 185. Freeman and Reddayle. Suit against Baron and Feme; the Feme is arrested and giveth Bond for her appearance, and now prayed to be delivered on common Bail. The Sheriff having returned Cepi Corpus of the Baron and Feme both having only taken her; but the Court denied after return of Cepi Corpus, contra if non est inventus had been returned as to the husband: But yet if it appear only a Practice, they will discharge her; to examine which, they gave rule to the Sheriff to return the Body of the husband, 1 Keb. 367. Dethick and Yaxley and Ux. Debt was brought against Baron and Feme for Debt supposed to be due from the wife dum sola fuit, and there was special Bail put in; and after Judgement against Baron and Feme, they tender themselves to Prison in discharge of their Bail, and it was moved for the wife to discharge her, because there was not any Debt due from her before Mar●age, but that this Action was contrived between 〈◊〉 husband and the Plaintiff to make the wife a Prisoner. And it was agreed, On mean Process, if the wife be taken before the Husband, she shall be discharged: Not so upon Execution. That on mean Process if ●●e wife be taken before the husband, she shall be discharged; and when the husband is taken, he shall give appearance for both; but upon Execution the wife ●ay be taken before her husband, and shall be de●●red: But in this Case the wife, because of the Pra●●●e, was discharged, Sid. p. 395. Gabree's Case, 1 Keb. 442, 576. Mesme Case. If Baron and Feme be arrested in an Action which requires special Bail, Baron to put in Bail for his Wife. and the husband puts in Bail for ●●mself, he must put in Bail for his wife also; but if 〈◊〉 lies in Prison, the wife cannot be let out upon common Bail; aliter if the husband abscond himself, and ●●●not be arrested, 1 Vent. 49. Note, For a Rule; Unless the wife be arrested, Reg. or 〈◊〉 husband give Bond for her appearance, he shall 〈◊〉 be forced to put in Bail for both if he will lie in ●●ison, but else he shall before he can be bailed in Debt ●pon a Statute entered by the wife dum sola, against Baron and Feme: And the Court agreed; so the husband must put in Bail for both, though she was never arrested. And so it's said, The husband in Execution on an Action brought against him and his wife, is not bound to appear for her, unless she be arrested; but he shall not be discharged, unless he put in Bail for himself and her, 1 Keb. 213, 225, 277. Cranmer vers. Andrews. Escape. The Escape of the husband is the Escape of the wife, and in Ca Sa. against Baron and Feme, the Gaoler suffered the husband to escape, the Court said they would discharge the wife unless the Plaintiff would get the husband taken again, 1 Vent. 51. Jackson and Gabree. If Action be brought against Attorney of King's-Bench and his wife, Privilege for the Wife of an Attorney. and he declares against the husband being an Attorney of the Court in proper Person, and against the wife in Custodia Marr ' upon Bail filled for the wife only; this is not good, because the husband ought to put in Bail for his wife, and Bail may not be filled only for the wife without Bail for the husband, and the husband may not have his Privilege in this Case, when the Action is brought against him and his wife, 1 Rolls Abr. 580. Morthwait and Elsey. Per Curiam, He ought to put in Bail, Stiles 226. Mesme Case, and M. 17 Car. 1. Sir Simon Fanshaw's Case. It is the Custom of B. R. where Process of Outlawry issues against Baron and Feme, and the Baron appears, In Process of Outlawry Bail refused for the Contempt of the Wife. he shall have day by Bail until the appearance of his wife; but it is in the Discretion of the Court when he comes in upon the Exigent, whether he should be let to Bail; and this Court used not to let the husband to Bail, but to continued him in Prison for the Contempt of his wife until the Feme comes in, and therefore the Bail was refused, Cro. El. 370. Philpot's Case. For Debt due by the wife before Marriage the husband was returned Outlawed, and the wife waved; but before the return of the Exigent one E. an Attorney procured for the wife a Supersedeas, surmising that the wife had appeared by him as her Attorney. Per Curiam, Upon the Sheriff's return in Outlawry. If upon the Exigent the Sheriff had returned reddidit se, or upon pluries Capias had returned Cep. Corpus for the wife, than her appearance should be entered, but not by Attorney, as it is here, and the Exigent should only issue against the husband, and idem dies should be given to the wife: But if upon a Pluries Cap. the Sheriff return for the husland Cepi Corpus, and a non est inventa for the wife; yet an Exigent shall issue against both, because it is intendable that the husband may bring in his wife; but if upon Exigent the Sheriff returns reddidit se for the husband, and for the wife, and she is waved, the husband shall go sine die: But in this Case, because the Exigent was returned against both to be Outlawed, the Supersedeas supposing the Appearance of the wife, is idle and voided; and therefore it was disallowed, and the Exigent appointed to be filled against ●ath, Cro. Car. 58. Smith vers. Ash and his wife. Process continues against Baron and Feme till the exigent upon which the husband appeared, They are at Exigent, no Supersedeas shall be received for the Baron without the Wife. and put in a Supersedeas for himself only, without making ●ention of his wife: The Preignotaries said, by the supersedeas the husband is sine die, for he shall not be ●●ven to answer without his wife as this Case is, and it is impleaded as in the Right of the wife, and there●● the wife shall be waved, and the Baron dischar●●d, Lib. Intr. 187. But the Court gave order that 〈◊〉 Supersedas' should be stayed without recording the appearance of the husband; as so was it in the Case Lady Mallory and her husband, who were sued in 〈◊〉 Action of Debt, and Process continued against them 〈◊〉 the Exigent; upon which the husband appeared, ●d put in a Supersedeas for himself without speaking of the wife; and his Supersedeas was not allowed, but Process continued until Outlawry, 1 Leon. 138, 139. Bilford and Fox. In Chancery. If a Man be served with a Subpoena in London against him, and his wife being in the Country; yet if he satisfy not the Court as well for her as for himself, he being here in Person, an Attachment shall be awarded against him and his wife, as though he had never appeared. Outlawry. If the Record be that the wife is Outlawed, this is erroneous, for it ought to be waved, 2 Rolls Abr. 804. Hayman and his wife. Wife in what Case may make an Attorney. Pasch. 42 Eliz. B. R. contra: Process in Debt against Baron and Feme continues until the Exigent; the Baron appears, but will not suffer his wise to appear: And it was ruled per Cur ', That in this Case she may make an Attorney to prevent that she be not waved, Dyer 271. b. margin. Exception to avoid an Outlawry in Baron and Feme. In 3 Bulst. 212. Exceptions were moved to avoid an Outlawry in Baron and Feme: 1. Because the wife cannot be said Outlawed, but waved. 2. It was comparuit for comparuerit. Per Curiam, In the same Term such an Outlawry may be avoided upon Exceptions by a motion in Court; but this being in another Term, the same could not be avoided but by a Writ of Error: And the Court bailed him upon the Writ of Error; but they said he ought to appear in Person next Term, and so assign his Errors to reverse the Outlawry. Debt was brought against Baron and Feme for Debt dum sola, and upon this the husband was Outlawed, and the wife waved; the wife was taken and imprisoned, but the husband could not be found, and the wife was discharged upon the Act of Indemnity, which pardons Outlawries, without suing a Scire fac ' against the Plaintiff, and it was said she might not have a Supersedeas: But Hutt. Rep. 86. 1 Co. 44. b. 3 Cro. 370. 1 Cro. 58. she may in this Case have a Supersedeas upon the Exigent, Sid. p. 20, 21. Byron and Beckley. In Trespass against Baron and Feme if the Baron comes in by the Exigent, and the wife comes not in, and for that it appears to the Court that the Exigent was discontinued against the wife, they award a new Exigent against her; yet the Baron shall be put to answer presently, and shall not tarry till the wife comes in although he ought to answer again with the wife when she comes in; when he hath pleaded, he shall have idem dies with the wife, 39 Ed. 3.18. In Trespass against Baron and Feme, if the Baron make default, and the wife appears, the wife shall not be put to answer till the Baron comes in, or be Outlawed, 22 Ass. 46. The wife may not pled to Outlawry without her Baron, She may not pled to Outlawry without her Husband. nor pled Pardon of Outlawry without her husband, 2 Rolls Rep. 90. Sir Geo. Curson's Case. CHAP. XXIX. Declarations and Plead. The manner of declaring against Baron and Feme, or by Baron and Feme. In what Cases the Life of the Wife must be averred, or not. Where the Husband shall be estopped to say that his Wife is remitted, and yet she shall be received. In what Cases the Wife shall come in, and be received on the Default of her Husband. Of the Wife's Pleading without her Husband. The manner of Pleading Coverture. Of the Conclusion of Pleas in Actions by or against Baron and Feme. Where it is necessary to aver the assent of the Husband. Traverse when that the Wife died seized. Ad tunc & modo Uxor. if good. Of Estoppels. Error assigned because she was a Feme Covert. Divorce pleaded. Outlawry pleaded. Where there be two Women of a name in Debt on Bond, how to pled. Where the Parol shall demur for the Nonage of the Husband and Wife. IN Assumpsit the Plaintiff declares, where T. S. and M. his wife were seized to them, and the Heirs of T. of five Acres of Meadow lying near a River called W— River; and being so seized by Indenture, let the same to the Plaintiff for 21 years, by force whereof he was possessed. The Defendant such a day Erected a Watermill super & trans. the said River; Tort. by reason whereof obstupavit the Water, so that the Water overflowed the Banks, and inundavit the said five Acres of Meadow, by which they became barren, and scirposae, ad damnum, etc. The Defendant demurred in Law upon this Declaration: Exception 1. That Baron and Feme were seized, and shows not how the Estate began. Because he counts the Baron and Feme were seized to them, and the Heirs of the Baron, and showeth not how the Estate began; for it being a special Estate, and but a particular Estate in the wife, the Commencement of it ought to be showed. Sed per Curiam, It's well enough, it being an Action on the Case by their Lessee; so that it is but a Conveyance to the Action, and the Inheritance is in the husband. Exception 2. Because he declares of a Lease by husband and wife by Indenture, and heweth not that a Rent was reserved, and than it cannot be the Lease of the wife. But the Court held it to be good; for it is the Lease of the wife till she disagree, Cro. El. 112. Jackson and Mordant. Baron and Feme, and the Heirs of the husband, seized in Fee of a Watermill, and prescribe a Watercourse, etc. and the Defendants erected a new Mill, & obstupavit. Exception was taken to the Declaration, Prescription alleged in Baron and Feme. because the Prescription is alleged in the Baron and Feme, and the Feme had only an Estate for life, and so cannot prescribe said, non alloc '; for when the Feme is jointly seized with her husband, who had the Fee, the Prescription may be alleged in both, Cro. El. 112. Brown and Mordant. Plaintiff marries with Alice Executrix of J. S. her first husband. Assumpsit. Defendant was indebted to J. S. in 100 l. and promised the Plaintiff if he would forbear Suit against him for the Debt till Michaelmas next, that than he would pay the Debt to the Plaintiff; and avers how that the Defendant was not sued till Michaelmas, Averment of a Life. and found pro Quer ' sur non assumpsit. Sed nil capiat prbillam; because the Plaintiff doth not aver the Life of A. his wife, who was the Executrix of J. S. for the Promise of the Defendant was made in respect of a Debt en auter droit, which was to Alice as Executrix, and not in respect of any Debt due to him; than the Promise ensues the nature of the Debt, (viz.) to be recovered to other use, (viz.) to the use of J. S. and shall be Assets', and by the death of the wife the Promise is determined: And though the Plaintiff may not join the wife with him in the Action, because the Promise was particular and personal, yet he ought to have averred the Life of the wife, because the Plaintiff shall recover nothing to his own use, Yelv. 84. Lea and Minn. If a Feme Covert, or a Monk and a Stranger, are bound in an Obligation: In Debt upon this the Action shall only be against the Stranger, and he shall not say in the Declaration that the other is a Feme Covert, or a Monk; per Coke and Doddridge; but by Houghton, Averment. if it doth not appear in the Deed that she is a Feme Covert, it ought to be averred, 1 Rolls Rep. 41. 32 H. 6. 31. But of the manner of declaring by or against Baron and Feme, so Vid. Sparsim, per Touts Titles. Plead. Resceipt. Vide Resceipt. Littleton's Case, Sect. 666. is a nice Case. If a Woman seized of certain Lands in Fee taketh husband, who alieneth the same Land to another in Fee; the Alience lets the same Land to the husband and wife for Term of their two Lives, saving the Reversion to the Lessor and his Heirs: In this Case the wife is in her Remitter, and she is seized in Fee as before, and the Lessor hath nothing in the Reversion. But in this Case if the Lessor will sue an Action of Waste against the husband and his wife, for that the husband hath committed Waste, the husband cannot bar the Lessor by showing this; that the taking back the Estate to him and his wife, Remitter. was a Remitter to the wife, because the husband is estopt to say that which is against his own Feoffment. But if the husband make default to the grand Distress, and the wife pray to be received, she may well show the whole matter, and how she is in her Remitter, and she shall bar the Lessor of his Action; for in every Case where the wife is received for default of her husband, she shall pled, and have the same advantage in Pleading as if she were 〈◊〉 Feme Sole, etc. If Judgement be to be given for two defaults, and after it is adjourned till another Term, the wife shall not be received this Term before Judgement, for that she does not come in parata petenti respondere, in due time, 9 H. 6. 37. In Action of Waste against Baron and Feme, after the Waste found before the Sheriff, and returned in Banco, the wife shall not be received, to avoid contrary Verdicts, 2 H. 4. 6. In Assize against Baron and Feme, if they pled Recovery in Bar, and at the day fail of the Record, by which Judgement is to be given by the Statute as Disseisors, yet the wife may be received, 7 H. 4. 16. b. 10 H. 4. 9 b. In Action of Waste against Baron and Feme, and no Waste pleaded, the wife shall be received after Inquest taken, and before Judgement, 22 Ass. 11. 28 Ed. 3. 91. If in a Writ of Error to reverse a common Recovery brought against Baron and Feme, and the Baron and Feme are returned Terretenants Octab. Trin. and than they appear, and the Plaintiff assigns Errors, and after the husband does not put in any Plea but makes default, on which the Plaintiff prays the Errors may be examined: But after in Hill. Term the wife comes in, and saith this is her Land, and prays to be received. It was doubted in the Earl of Oxford and Muschamp's Case, whether she shall be received, in as much as she comes before Judgement, 11 Cor. 1. B. R. In Formedon the Tenant pleads Non-tenure, and found for the Demandant; and now the wife of the Defendant after Verdict prayed to be received upon the faint Plea of her husband, because he had pleaded Non-tenure, where she might have traversed the Gift; and he brought a Writ out of Chancery de Attornat ' faciend ' for the wife. And per Curiam, It was received; for false Pleading is faint Pleading, and here there needs not any new Declaration, Where there needs a new Declaration or not. because the wife is Party to the Suit; aliter where he in Reversion is not Party to the Suit, and is received, Cro. El. p. 826. Greswold and Holmes. Of the Wife's Pleading by herself. In Battery the husband justifies, for that the Plaintiff assaulted his wife, in aid of whom, etc. The wife for herself pleads, and justifies the son assault demesne. The Plaintiff saith, de injuria sua propria absque Tali causa: Both Issues are found for the Plaintiff, and the Damages are entirely assessed, all is ill; and a Repleader was awarded, Cro. Jac. 239. Thorp and Watson. Assumpsit was brought on the Promise of the wife dum sola. The Plea was entered in this manner; Et praed ' J. N. & Bridgetta ven ' & Def. etc. & praed ' Bridgetta dicit quod ipsa non Assumpsit: Verdict pro Quer ' Per Curiam, It is ill, for the wife cannot pled by herself, (except in Receipt) and the Trial is idle, and not helped by any of the Statutes of Jeofailes, and a Repleader was awarded, Cro. Jac. 288. Tumpion and Newson: It ought to have been quoth praed ' J. & Bridgetta dicunt quod ipsa Bridgetta non Assumpsit, Yelv. 210. Mesme Case; so Cholmly and Apsley's Case cited there: Action was brought against Baron and Feme for words spoken by the wife, and the wife only pleads not guilty, and Verdict pro Quer '; but could not have Judgement, but a Repleader was awarded. Of Pleading Coverture. Debt on Bond against Feme. Defendant pleads that at the time of the making the Bond she was wife to J.J. who as yet in plena vita existit; Et sic non est factum. The Plaintiff shows how that after this Bond made, there was a Suit in the Spiritual Court concerning the Marriage between the said J.J. and the Defendant, and for that he had another wife alive at the time of the Espousals with the Defendant, the Defendant's Marriage was by Sentence adjudged voided and null; and avers the Life of the first wife at the time of the second Marriage with the Defendant, and demurred upon it; judged pro Quer ': For this Divorce is but Declaratory, because the Marriage was merely voided, and there needed not any such Sentence of Divorce; for it was voided ab i●itio, and she always was Sole, Cro. El. 857. Ridleslen and Wogan. Eliz. W. brought Trespass by the name of a Widow. The Defendant pleads she was Covert Baron, Plea disallowed for the Impossibity of the Trial. (viz.) of one J. W. who is in full Life at Lisbon in Portugal; and this Plea was disallowed for the Impossibility of the Trial, Moor 851. Eliz. Wilmots Case. After Imparlance as Feme Sole in Trespass and Assault, the Defendant pleads that at the time of the Bill exhibited, she was Covert, and concludes in Bar. Per Curiam, This is but as a Plea in Abatement, and therefore granted a respondeas Ouster, 1 Keb. 822. Beck and Carolier. On Obligation Infancy must be pleaded, and the Party cannot be aided on non est factum; but a Feme Covert may, Regu. 3 Keb. 228. for its a Rule in every Case where the Obligation is voided, he shall conclude non est factum, as a Feme Covert shall pled non est factum, for it is voided as to her; otherwise where the Bond or Deed is only voidable, for there he shall show the special Matter, and conclude Judgement si actio: For when the Deed is voidable, and so remains at the time of the Pleading, (as in case of Sealing a Bond by the Infant, or duress) here he cannot pled non est factum; but it must be avoided by special Pleading, and conclude Judgement si actio, 5 Co. 119. Whelpdale's Case. Debt by H. against J. and his wife. The Defendant pleads that tempore Confectionis, and shows the day that she was Covert Baron. The Plaintiff confesseth it, but saith that the same day she and sealed it was the day of the Marriage in the Morning before the Espousals. The Defendant demurs, and the Plaintiff had Judgement, 2 Rolls Rep. 431. Jackson's Case. Debt on Bond. The Condition was, That S. the Defendant with his wife, should appear at the Marshalls-Court, and for Non-appearance the Action is brought. S. appears and p●●●ds, that at the time of the Obligation he was solus & innuptus. The Plaintiff demurs. Per Roll, This Plea is not the same with ne ' unque accouple; for one extended to a Feme de facto, the other to a Feme de jure: but Judgement pro Quer ', Stiles Rep. p. 17. Pain and Skeltrome. Conclusion of Pleas. Vide Supra. Non est factum. Battery against Baron and Feme. They pled Quoad the Wounding none culp. & Quoad the Battery, the Feme pleads in Justification, and concludes with an Averment, Et hoc parata est verificare. Et hoc paratae est verificare. The Question was if it ought not to be, Et hoc parati sunt verificare? and by the opinion of some the husband ought to have joined with the wife, Cro. Car. 594. Pelham and Hemings. Trover against Baron and Feme, and that the wife after Coverture found the Goods, and converted them to her own use. Quod ipsi non sunt culpabilies. They pled quod ipsi non sunt culpabiles; and it was held ill, for that no Tort is supposed in the husband, and they ought to have pleaded quod ipsa non est culpabilis, Cro. Jac. 56. Cox and Cropvell. Action of Assault, Battery and Wounding against L. and his wife. The Defendants pled none culp. as to the wounding. The Feme pleads a special Plea in Justification, that what she did was in the defence of her husband. The Plaintiff replies, De injuria sua propria. De injuria sua propria, and does not traverse absque tali causa, and the Jury finds entire Damages. Per Curiam, The Issue joined is an immaterial Issue, and there can be no Judgement; and a Repleader was awarded, Stiles p. 198, 210. Jennings and Lee. Trespass against B. and Ux. simul cum Bennet, of an Assault. The Defendants pled his Assault on them. The Plaintiff showeth forth a Writ taken out against the husband: To which the Defendant demurred; 1. Because the Writ is not said taken forth against the Defendant, simul cum Bennet, sed non allac '. 2. The Replication is only of the Arrest of the husband: Sed non alloc '; the wife coming in after the Assault begun, and need not be de injuria sua propria as to the wife, 3 Keb. 763. Puller's Case. Debt on Bond conditioned for the Performance of Covenants in an Indenture between W. S. and A. is wife of the one part, and the Plaintiff of the other part. The Defendant pleads the Indenture as the Indenture of W. S. and A. his wife, whereas in truth the Feme never sealed. Whether it be a Deed of the Wife and Pleading, that she never sealed it. The Plaintiff replies, The Indenture showed by the Defendant non fuit fact inter W. S. and A. his wife on the one part, and the Plaintiff on the other: The Jury found the husband sealed it, but the wife did not. Per Curiam, The Verdict is found against the Defendant, who pleaded it as the Deed of the Wife, and it was held, that the Plaintiff is not estopped to say that the Deed shown is not the Deed of the Baron and Feme; but he is estopped by the Condition to say, Estoppel. that there is not any such Indenture. Two of the Judges held, that if the Baron had sealed and delivered it in the name of the Feme, it had been the Deed of the Feme during the Life of the Baron, Cro. Eliz. 769. Sleep and Steed. Where it's necessary to aver the assent of the Baron, or not. If an Estate be made to a Man's wife de novo, it is not necessary to aver his Assent, for it vests till he descent, Hob. 204. but if the Feme Covert hath a Lease for Life and surrender it, and take a new one, the husband's Assent is necessary, because the wife had an Estate before, which cannot be divested but by his Assent to the later Estate. In Trespass the Defendant pleads in Bar, that such an one was seized of the Land in the Right of his wife, and that his wife died seized, and that he was Heir to her, and gave colour to the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff replied, that the Baron and Feme were jointly seized, Traverse. and that the wife died, after whose Death the husband was seized by Survivorship, absque hoc, that the wife died seized. Per Curiam, This Traverse is not good that the wife died not seized, but it, aught to be that she died not Sole seized, Winch p. 7. In Replevin the Defendant makes Avowry in the Right of Mary, Adtunc & modo Uxoris. adtunc & modo Uxoris ejus, of the taking of as a Distress. The Averment of modo the wife is certain enough, 2 Keb. 729. Poo versus Long vile. In Trespass the Defendant justified by Licence to the Defendant for himself and his wife, to inhabit there. The Plaintiff replies, Non Licentiavit, the husband and wife modo & forma, Modo & ferma. and its found non dedit Licentiam modo & forma. This is a Variance, 3 Keb. 755. Jepson and Jackson. Debt was brought by B. and his wife against the Defendant for Arrears of Rent upon a Lease for years made by the Feme and her first husband, to the Defendant by Indenture. The Defendant pleads that the Ancestor of the first husband was seized in Fee, and that it descended to the first husband, and that he was Sole seized, and so the Feme had nothing at the time of the Lease made. The Plaintiff demurs, and shows for cause, that the Lease being by Indenture, the Feme hath the Reversion by Estoppel against the Lessee, and the Defendant cannot contradict it, Estoppel. and say she hath nothing, 11 H. 4. 1. But per Curiam, The Plea is good; 1. For in this Case it is no Estoppel, for the Deed is utterly voided as to the Feme, she being Covert, and it cannot be an Estoppel, for an Estoppel ought to be mutual on both parts, and the Deed of a Feme Covert cannot estop her, or bind her to any effect, Cro. Eliz. p. 700. Brereton versus Evans. If Land descend to a Feme Covert, Ex Manuscript. Mri. Brownl. Entry shall be pleaded by the Baron and Feme in Descent to Daughters; he shall say, Post cujus mortem reversio Teneventorum praed ' come pertin ' descend ' praefat ' A. & B. ut filiabus & coharedibus praed ' W. You shall never say, Et se tenuit intus, but where they are in of a joint Estate; for if a Feme Tenant for Life take husband, and the husband dies, you shall say, Obiit post cujus mortem pred' le Feme fuit scisita Tenementis pred' in dom ' suo ut de libero Tenemento. If Land descend to two Women Covert, and they enter, and the husband of one dies; you shall say, Le Feme survive & fuit seisita de medietate Tenementorum in feodo. Note, When Land is given to Baron and Feme in Tail special, and the Baron dieth, the wife if she will maintain the Estate Tail, must allege that the Baron and she had Issue in plein vie A. otherwise she is but as Tenant in Tail after Possibility of Issue extinct, which is but as Tenant for Life. Annuity is devised by Will to a Feme Covert for Life, who dies, the husband brings Action of Debt upon the Statute of 32 H. 8. for the Arrears against the Administrator of the Terretenant. Nil detinet to Action for Arrears of Rent. To which the Defendant pleads nil detinet; if a good Plea or not, Hard. 332, 333. because the Action is grounded upon a Will in writing, which (as was urged) was equivalent to a Deed, and to a Deed it were not a good Plea. As in Case of Debt upon Bond or Speciality; but by Hales a Will is not a Deed, and nil detinet is a good Plea to Action of Debt grounded on a Will. Marriage averred. In Avowry as Bailiff to Baron and Feme for Rend Arrear. The Plaintiff demurred specially, because the Marriage is not averred, sed non alloc '; but by Hales the Life of the wife is not averred, which is ill on special Demurrer, but on Verdict or general Demurrer it would be well enough, 3 Keb. 151. Harlow and Bradnock. Error may be assigned that she was a Feme Covert at the time of the appearance, tho' she appeared and pleaded as a Feme Sole. If Action on the Case be brought against A. S. a Feme Covert as a Feme Sole, and she appears, and pleads to it as a Feme Sole, and Judgement given against her, upon which she and J. S. her husband brought a Writ of Error; they may assign for Error that she was a Feme Covert at the time of the Appearance and Plead, etc. for otherwise the wife may be taken ad Executionem, without the Conusance of the husband, and so be bereft of the Society of the Woman, and he hath no other means to defeat it, 1 Rolls Abr. 759. Edwards and Simpson. B. and Anne his wife were Plaintiffs in Assumpsit against Hudson; and declare in consideration that Anne dum sola fuit would marry one Tho. M. at the request of the Defendant, the Defendant promised after the death of Tho. M. to pay to the said Anne 40 l. per annum during her Life; and shows that upon this she married Tho. Mason, who after dies, and she took to husband B. the Plaintiff, and that 4 l. is in arrear for 2 years after Tho. Mason's death. Release pleaded in Assumpsit. The Defendant pleads in Bar a Release made to him by the said Tho. Mason, during the Marriage of Anne. The Plaintiff demurs, and adjudged for the Plaintiff. This Release doth not discharge the Promise, because though the Promise was present, yet the Execution of it was in futuro, and such that he which releaseth it can never have an Action for it; aliter if he by express words released all Promises, Promise cannot be released till it comes in Esse, unless by express words. or all Actions and Quarrels which he or his wife had or might have; for a Promise being a special Cause of Action, may not be released until it comes in Esse, not more than a Covenant, Yelv. 156. Belcher and Hudson, Cro. Jac. 222. Hob. Smith and Safford's Case. Debt against Baron and Feme as Executrix to her former husband, upon a Bond of 200 l. The Defendants, by J. G. their Attorney, pled, (viz.) Praed ' Joh ' and Margareta by their Attorney pled that they were divorced before the Writ purchased. Divorce pleaded. The Plaintiff demurs, 1 Because it is not alleged that the Divorce did continued, for it may be it was repealed; sed non alloc ', for it shall be intended to continued if the contrary be not showed. 2. Because they pled as Baron and Feme, Et praed ' Joh ' & Margareta, and that after Imparlance; sed non alloc '; for they do not pled, Et praed ' Johannes & Margareta Ux. ejus, for than it should be an Estoppel, Cro. Eliz 352. Underhill verse. Johannem Brott and Margaret his wife. Where the Baron may pled as a Devise to him Sole. An Estate is devised to a Man and his wife, and their Heirs: If the husband survives, he may pled it as a Devise to him Sole, Cro. Eliz. 359. Outlawry in the husband cannot be pleaded where he and his wife sue as Administrators, Outlawry pleaded. Hardr. p. 60. Debt on Bond entered in to Elizabeth Perkins, who was the Plaintiff's wife, and as her Administrator brought the Action. The Defendant pleads he delivered the Bond to one Elizabeth Perkins' Sister, quae obiit sola & innupta, absque hoc, that he delivered it to Elizabeth Perkins the Plaintiff's wife. Special Demurrer. If it be taken that there be two of the name, the Defendant should have pleaded non est factum, for it amounts to no more, or at lest he ought to have induced his Plea that there were two Elizabeth Perkins'; Traverse. but this Traverse is designed to bring the Marriage in question, which is not to be tried now. Judgement pro Quer ', 1 Vent. 77. Gifford and Perkins. A. brought Action against Julian Goddard a Feme Sole, where the Parties are at issue, and a Scire fac ' is awarded; and before the return of it, she takes to husband one Doyly; and after upon special Verdict found in the said Suit, Judgement was given in Banco pro praed ' Juliana against the said A. Upon which Judgement, A. brought a Writ of Error in B. R. and a Scire fac ' is awarded against Julian Goddard as a Feme Sole; and she appears by Attorney as a Feme Sole by assent of the husband, and after the Judgement is reversed, and the Judgement was entered quoth praed ' A. recuperet, etc. versus praed ' Julianam, etc. and Costs and Damages taxed. On which Judgement A. sues a Ca Sa. versus Julian Goddard; by force of which the Sheriff takes Julian, who is called Doyly, being the wife of Doyly; yet this is lawful, for the wife so long as the Judgement is of effect, is estopped to say that her name is other than Julian Goddard; and the Sheriff being a Minister to execute the Judgement, may take advantage of this Estoppel, Estoppel. 1 Rolls Abr. 869, 870. In Account against the husband it is a good Plea to say, that his wife was a common Taverner, and that the Plaintiff delivered the Tonels of Wine (for which the Account is brought) to the wife to cell for him, without the Assent and Accord of the husband, and she sells them accordingly, and delivers the Money to the Plaintiff, 13 R. 2. Account 50. In Action brought by Baron and Feme for the Inheritance of the wife; Parol demurs for the Nonage of the wife, or not. the Parol shall not demur for the Nonage of the husband, because in jure Uxoris, Dyer 137. But in Action of Debt brought against Baron and Feme upon Obligation of the Ancestor of the Feme, the Parol shall demur for the Nonage of the wife, 8 Ed. 2. Age 125. In a Praecipe quod reddat against Baron and Feme of Land which the wife had by Descent, the Parol shall demur for the Nonage of the wife, although the husband be of full age, 18 Ed. 3.33. If a Feme in by Descent be received for default of her husband, the Parol shall demur for her Nonage, though the husband be of full age, 18 Ed. 3.33. CHAP. XXX. Issue. Evidence. Trial. Verdict. Trial of Marriage. Death of the Husband where triable, and how; whether by Proofs or in Pais. If the Baron and Feme shall join in a Challenge. In what Case by the Evidence of the Wife she and her Husband were discharged of a Judgement. Where the Husband shall be a Witness for the Wife or not. Trial of Marriage. Vide Title Marriage. Death of the Husband where triable, and how. IF the Life of the husband be pleaded, (in Dower) and the Demandant saith he is dead; this shall by tried by Pooofs, and not per pais, 8 H. 6. 23. In Assize against Baron and Feme, if the Feme comes, and allegeth the Death of the husband in another County; if this be tried per pais, it shall be tried where the Death is alleged. In a Writ of Dower, if the Tenant saith that the husband is in full life at a Place beyond the Seas, (as at Paris) this shall be tried by Proofs, 26 Ed. 3. 70. for the Country cannot know it. Trials by Proofs. The manner of Trial by Proofs is more particular in Thorn and Rolf's Case, Dyer 185. a. In Dower the Issue was upon the Life or Death of the husband, and day given to each Party ad docend ' Curiam, (viz.) to the Demandant de morte viri, and to the Tenant de vita by Proofs, ut oportet; and the Demandant protulit duos Testes de morte; whereof one was the Brother of the husband, who were sworn and examined by Lennard second Prothonotary, and their Testimony tended to no full Proof, but by Conjectures and Presumptions, (viz.) that the husband departed this Realm An. 1 Ma. for Religion, and was a Minister, and for these seven years he had been absent; and Religion now was restored, and he was not returned, and no Merchant of Germany; or English who traveled those parts, could learn any thing of his Life, nor no Token of it; and therefore they conclude in their Consciences, that they rather think him dead than alive, and these Testimonies were entered verbatim in Record ante judicium redditum, & nullus Testis ex parte tenentis productus fuit de vita viri; ideo concessum fuit quod petens recuperet seisinam, etc. Vide Stat. Jac. In Ejectione Firm vers. Baron and Feme. Upon not guilty pleaded, and a Venire fac ' granted, the Jury found the wife not guilty, Special Verdict for the Husband adjudged insufficient; a Venire fac ' de novo shall be granted for both. and found a special Verdict as to the husband; which special Verdict is after adjudged insufficient by the Court: A Venire fac ' de novo shall be granted for both, as well for the Feme as for the Baron; and upon this new Writ the wife may be found guilty, because the Record and Issue is entire, and for this their Verdict insufficient in the whole and voided, M. 9 Jac. B. R. Langley and Paine; and the Clarks said this was their Course to grant a Venire de novo for the whole. Where a Battery is brought against Baron and Feme supposing they beaten the Plaintiff, or the Mare of the Plaintiff: And upon not guilty pleaded, Verdict. it is found that the Woman only made the Battery, and not the Baron. This Verdict is against the Plaintiff, for it now appears that the Plaintiff's Action was false; for the Baron in this Case shall not be joined for Conformity only, and there is a special Writ in the Register for this purpose, and it is not like a Battery charged upon J. D. and J. S. for there one may be acquitted, and another found guilty, and good, because they are in Law several Trespasses, 1 Brownl. 209. Drury and Dennis. The wife may not join Issue without her husband in Information against Baron and Feme, for the Recusancy of the Feme; and in 42 Ed. 3. she may not pled to Outlawry without her husband, 2 Rolls Rep. 90. Challenge. Trespass by Baron and Feme. Defendant pleads not guilty; and the husband only made a Challenge that he was Servant to the Sheriff. Per Curiam, The husband and wife should join in the Challenge, although the Cause of Challenge proceeded from the husband only. But after Trial it was aided by the Stat. of Jeofayles, and Judgement pro Quer ', 1 Brownl. 234. Wright's Case. Evidence. Vide 1 Inst. Paris pretended to help a Woman who had little Portion, to a great Fortune; and the day before the Marriage P. procures the Woman to come to a Tavern, By the Evidence of the Wife, she and her Husband are discharged of a Judgement where he said, for her provision after Marriage, in case the husband would not maintain her, she ought to seal certain Papers; which in truth were Warrant of Attorney and Release of Errors; and he paid to her 100 l. before Witnesses, and went into the next Room, and took it back again. P. was informed against for a Cheat, for extending the husband's Lands upon this Judgement: And the wife gave this Matter in Evidence, and the Court set aside the Judgement, and principally upon the Evidence of the wife. Husband admitted to be a Witness. Mistress Dormer bought a Child of Tucca, and pretended it her own, and false-swearing about it, as vid. Sid. 377. and Information of Perjury was brought. Now the husband of Tucca may be admitted to prove the Issue whether the Child were feigned, albeit not to prove or excuse his wife's Subornation of the other Defendant B. the Midwife in this Deception, 2 Keb. 403. the King verse. Buckworth. The first husband was produced at the Trial to prove the first Marriage, And where not. but the Court totally refused his Testimony. Per Curiam, The Feme cannot be Evidence against the Baron, nor the Baron against the Feme in any Case except Treason, because it might occasion implacable Dissension, according to 1 Inst. 6. b. and denied the Lord Audley's Case to be law, Hutton p. A wife cannot be produced as a Witness either for or against her husband, 1 Inst. 6. b. CHAP. XXXI. Judgement. Execution. Damages. Where Judgement against Baron and Feme shall bind the Husband surviving, or not. In what Cases a Feme Covert shall be taken in Execution. Writ of Error brought by all for the Coverture of one. The Coverture of a Woman not to be determined by Affidavit. In Action against Baron and Feme, where Judgement shall be quod. Capiantur, or not. Where Baron and Feme both aught to be in Misericordia, or not. Baron and Feme in Execution, and the Wife escapes, if Action lies against the Sheriff. Where the Husband shall recover Damages Sole. Judgement that the Baron and Feme shall recover Damages, in what Cases good. Where Judgement against Baron and Feme shall bind the Husband surviving or not, or the Wife. Where there is a Devastavit returned against Baron and Feme, and the Feme dies, the Husband shall be charged. DEbt was brought against Baron and Feme upon Obligation made by the Testator of the wife, and Judgement, and Fieri fac ', and upon this a Testat ' Fieri fac '; and upon this a Devastavit was returned, and Judgement was for the Plaintiff to recover, and than the wife dies, Error was brought to reverse this Judgement: And upon several Debates it was adjudged that there was not any Error in redditione judicii, etc. but that the Baron is liable to this Execution notwithstanding the Death of the wife, Sid. 337. Eyres and Coward, and so resolved in Mounson and Bourne's Case. If there be a Recovery against Baron and Feme in a Devastavit, if the Baron survive the wife he shall be charged; and if the wife survive she shall be charged; so is Jacobson and Charlton's Case, 3 Keb. 205. In Debt against Baron and Feme Executrix, on Obligation of M. to the former husband, and Verdict on Devastavit after Scire fac ' and Fiere fac ' and Error and Judgement affirmed. And if the husband dies, the wife shall be discharged in Execution. The Feme alone was taken in Execution. She shall not be discharged, here being a Verdict of the Waste. And per Hales, had the Wasting appeared to be during the Coverture by her, yet she alone might be taken in Execution. If Debt on Bond be brought against Baron and Feme, and Judgement, and than the wife dies, Debt. yet the husband shall be charged, Sid. 337. If Baron and Feme obtain a Judgement in Debt in the Right of the wife, and the wife dies, yet the husband shall have Execution upon this Judgement, Sid. 337. and not the Administrator of the wife, because the Debt is altered by the Judgement. In what Cases a Feme Covert shall be taken in Execution, and in what not. In a Devastavit. Vide Supra. The Court discharged a Feme Covert taken in Execution on Judgement, on Demurrer to Coverture pleaded in Abatement after Imparlance. The Court awarded a Supersedeas, no Judgement being entered. Supersedeas. Affidavit was made that she was Feme Covert before, 1 Keb. 143. Judgement against the Lady Prettyman as Sole, and she was pretended to be married before Judgement, and it was prayed that she might be discharged of the Execution, and a new Scire fac '. Per Curiam, If Feme Covert be taken in Execution, she shall not be discharged but by Writ of Error. She might have pleaded this alone upon the Scire fac '; but now being taken in Execution, they cannot ease her till Sentence in Spiritual Court for the Marriage: But she might with her husband bring a Writ of Error, and assign this for Error. In Trespass against A. B. and several others: A. being Covert, all brought a Writ of Error, and for it the whole Judgement was reversed, 3 Keb. 13. Martial and the Lady Pretty-man; and the Court will not suffer the husband to release the Error. Coverture or not, not to be determined on Affidavit. In Hunsty and Sanders's Case Council prayed, that a Feme Covert, the Defendant, might be discharged on Affidavit that at the time of the Bond which she entered into as Feme Sole, she was Feme Covert; Sed non allocatur; this being for Rent of an House taken by her as Sole. And in the Lady Prettyman's Case the Court did not determine it by Affidavit, 3 Keb. 382. The Defendant Feme Covert prayed to be discharged of a Cap ' Excom ' returned in B. R. for Nonpayment of Costs on Libel against her for Incontinence, being not within 5 El. cap. 23. sect. 12. which the Court agreed, and the Capias discharged: Some coneeived it was not avoidable but by Plea, 3 Keb. 836. Dom. Rex & Coates. Judgement against Baron and Feme where the Baron was acquitted, ought not to be against a Feme Covert by Stat. W. 2. c. 35. Cro. Jac. 417. Dr. Hussey and Moor. If the Feme die after a Verdict, no Judgement c●n be given against the Husband's. If Action be brought against Baron and Feme, and the Feme die, though it were after a Verdict, yet no Judgement can be given against the Baron, Hob. 129. It was the Case of Cowley and his wife against Poviton and his wife, for scandalous words by one of the Women against the other Woman: And after a Verdict the Court was informed that one of the Women was dead; whereupon Judgement was stayed, Hob. 129. In Action vers. Baron and Feme where the Judgement shall be capiatur, or not. In Debt upon Bond against Baron and Feme for the Obligation of the wife before Coverture: On non est factum pleaded it's found against them, both shall be imprisoned, for the husband is guilty of the Fauxity in denial of the Deed, which is the cause of the Imprisoment as well as the wife, 1 Rolls Abr. 221. 15 Jac. B.R. Wood and Sutcliff, and Hill. 37 El. in Ca●era Scaccarii, Say and Bardoife, 1 Rolls Abr. 221. But in Trespass against Baron and Feme if the wife be found guilty, and the husband not guilty, the husband shall not be imprisoned, 22 Ass. 87. but that seems not to be Law, for in Wood and Sutcliffs Case, 15 Jac. B. R. and Trin. 4 Jac. B. R. White and Halsey's Case, Action of Battery was brought against Baron and Feme, and the Baron found not guilty, and ●he wife guilty, and the Judgement was given quod capiantur, as well the Baron as the Feme, for that ●he Baron is Party to the Action, and aught to pay ●he Fine of the wife, P. 11 Car. B. R. Mayow and C●okshoot, and Cro. Car. 405. 1 Rolls Abr. 221. So ●t was in Ejectment against Baron and Feme, and the Defendants pleaded not guilty; the wife was found guilty, and the Baron not guilty, and the Judgement ●as quod capiantur, and good; for it is only for Fine ●o the King, and the Imprisonment is not longer than ●ll the Fine is paid. But in Trespass of Assault and Battery against Ba●●n and Feme for a Battery done by the wife, the Defendant being found guilty per Cur ', a Capiatur ●all be against the husband only, although the Wrong 〈◊〉 only done by the wife, Cro. Car. 513. Awayn's Case. Where Baron and Feme must be both in misericordia. Trover and Conversion against Baron and Feme, and the Baron being requested to deliver the Goods with his wife, refused, and the wife alone is in misericordia; it is erroneous, the Baron and Feme ought to have been in misericordia. Vide the late Statute of Car. 2. 3 Bulst. 151. Wood and his wife against Dr. Sutcliff. Dr. S. recovered in Trover against Baron and Feme, had Judgement against them, and both taken in Execution, Escape. the wife escaped, Debt lies against the Sheriff, 2 Bulst. 320. Dr. Sutcliff and Sir Geo. Reynell. For the wife was in Execution, and a Wrong was done by the Sheriff, and the Imprisonment is several, and so the Escape is several, 1 Rolls Abr. 215. In Trover and Conversion against Baron and Feme for the Conversion of the wife during the Coverture, if the wife be found guilty, and the Baron not guilty, In misericordia. yet both shall be in misericordia, for the Amerc iament is not for the Conversion, but for the delay of Suit, and not rendering the first day, of which the Baron is as well guilty as the wife, 1 Rolls Abr. 315. Judgement against Baron and Feme where the husband was acquitted, ought not to be given against a Feme Covert by Stat. West. 2. c. 35. in Ravishment of Ward, Cro. Jac. 413. Hussey and More. Action on the Case against Baron and Feme for scandalous Words spoken by the wife, and Judgement is given against them both; as well the husband as the wife shall be amerced, Hob. Scaef and Nelson. Action of Case against W. and his wife for Words spoken by the wife. The Defendants pled, Quod ipsi non sunt inde culpabiles. The Plaintiff shall have his Judgement; for the Plea of the husband is voided, and so good for the wife, 1 Rolls Rep. 216. Carpenter vers. Welsh and Saffene. Costs. Damages. In Trespass by Baron and Feme for Imprisoning the wife until a Fine paid; for all the Trespass except the Fine they shall recover Damages in Common, 11 H. 4. 16. b. but for the Fine the husband shall recover Damages sole, because it was his Chattel. In Assize by Baron and Feme, if it be found they were disseised they shall recover Damages of the Issues in Common, 11 H. 4. 16. b. but if it be found that certain Goods of the husband were taken upon the Land, the husband sole shall have Judgement of ●he Damages for them, 11 H. 4. 17. adjudged. If Baron be possessed of a Term in the Right of the wife, and Damages are recovered against him, the Damages shall not affect the Term of the wife after the Death of the husband, in regard she came in Paramount; aliter if an Extent be upon it, or upon 〈◊〉 Recognizance in the Life of the husband, 9 H. ●. 52. If Ba●on and Feme join in an Action, and a Verdict is given for the Plaintiffs, and the Jury ●ess Damages ultra misas & custagias per ipsum which is the husband) circa sectam suam exposita 〈◊〉 so much, and pro misis & custagis illis to so ●uch. And upon this Judgement is given, That the husband's and wife shall recover the Costs and Damages; although it is found that the husband only expended and disburbed the Money for the Costs ●f Suit, for as much as the wife had nothing; yet ●●e Judgement is good that the Baron and Feme ●all recover the Costs, for there may not be one ●●dgment for the Costs, and another for the Damages, 1 Rolls Abr. 516. Confee and Berree. CHAP. XXXII. Of Divorce. The nature of a Divorce. What are good Causes of Divorce. The several kinds of Divorces. What Divorces declare the Marriage voided ab initio. Of the Divorce causa praecontractus. Causa frigiditatis, causa affinitatis Consanguinitatis, and several Causes of each for Illustration. Of a Divorce a Mensa & Thoro, and the Consequences thereof. What mean Acts done by the Husband shall stand good or not, notwithstanding the Divorce. Of Suits and Actions after the Divorce. Where and in what Cases notwithstanding a Divorce, the Wife shall be endowed or not. Plead and Trial. What Divorce shall Bastardise the Issue, or not. A Divorce is where the Espousals were lawful, according to the Maxim, Ubi nullus habitus ibi nulla potentia. So if a Man marry a second wife, the first living, there needs no Divorce in regard it is voided, ab initio, by Law: For you must know by our Common Law the Espousals in the Church be so strong, they cannot be defeated without a Divorce, and without giving notice in Convention; and if they die before such Convention, the Issue shall never be a Bastard, in as much as the Espousals were not voided but voidable; and in all Cases where the Espousals are voidable, it behoves that the Party be convened before Separation, or otherwise the Espousals continued lawful, and the Issue is Legitimate, Moor 171. What are good Causes of Divorce, and of the several kinds of Divorce. Formerly some Matters were Causes of Divorce, which are not so now: As 1 & 2 P. & Mary, c. 8. A Divorce propter Impedimentum publicae honestatis & justitiae. Causa Compaternitatis or Commaternitatis, (Godfather or Godmother) which in the Act of 1 & 2 P. & M. c. 8. are called cognatio Spiritualis, causa Professionis. Observe, if a Deacon or Secular Priest had taken wife the Marriage was not voided, but voidable, causa Professionis; and if either Party had died before Divorce, the Marriage had been Legitimate, and should have inherited, for that Deacons and Priests within England were not Votaries, (viz.) had not vowed Chastity; but if a Monk or Nun had married before the Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 38. and of 2 Ed. 6. c. 21. the Marriage had been merely voided. Causa cognationis Legalis, (viz.) Adoption. These are all taken away. In our Books the Division is Common of Divorces, a Vinculo Matrimonii. a Mensa & Thoro. Those Divorces which dissolve the Vinculum Ma●rimonii, are Causa Praecontractus. Causa Frigiditatis: Where the Party hath perpe●●am impotentiam. Causa Affinitatis or Consanguinitatis. Causa Saevitiae sive Metus. These Divorces declare the Marriage voided ab initis, and declare the Issue a Bastard. Something I shall say of each of these, and the Consequences thereupon. Causa Praecontractus. By the Divorce Causa Praecontractus, as I said, there is a Nullity of the Marriage, and the Children are mere Bastards, 2 Inst. 93. by the Divorce causa praecontractus the first Parties are complete Baron and Feme. It was Sir Robert Pain's Case, Sid. 13. If a Man contract with a Woman to marry her, and after he marries another Woman, the first Woman sues in the Spiritual Court, and it is by Sentence adjudged that the Man and first Woman are Baron and Feme; by this Sentence the first Man and Woman are complete Baron and Feme without any other Solemnity, By Divorce Causa Praecontractus, the first Baron and Feme are complete Baron and Feme without other Solemnity. quod Twisden negavit; and said the Marriage ought to be solemnised before they can be complete Baron and Feme: And Noy in his Lent reading An. 1632. held, that if the wife be divorced from her husband causa praecontractus, made with another by verba de praesenti, that in this case immediately by Sentence given in Court, the Marriage shall be consummate between the Woman and her first husband, without any Rites in fancy Ecclesiae; aliter upon Contract by verba de futuro, Dyer 105. b. in margin. Two were precontracted, one after is espoused to a Stranger, and after sued in the Spiritual Court, and Sentence is there given that they shall marry according to the Precontract, and she marries; this is good without Divorce or Consent of the husband, and their Issue is not a Bastard, Moor 169. Bunting's Case. Causa frigiditatis: Where a Man hath perpetuam impotentiam generationis. It hath been a great Question, If the Parties divorced Causa Impotentiae intermarry others, and have Issue, whether the Issues are Bastards. if the Parties divorced intermarry severally with others, and have Issue severally, whether the second Marriage is voided, and whether their Issues are Bastards? My Lord Dyer citys one Bury's Case, fol. 179. a. Sentence against Bury, Causa frigiditatis naturalis ad sectam Uxoris suae; and the wife was married to Cary, by whom she had Issue, and she gave all her Inheritance to Carry her second husband; and Bury was married to another Woman, by whom he had Issue: And in this Case the Opinion of the Doctors was, that than the Persons shall be compelled to cohabit together as Man and wife, Eo quod Sancta Ecclesia decepta fuit in priori judicio. Harrison in his Lent Reading citys a Case to be adjudged Hill. 37 El. Stafford and Money. Feme sues a Divorce for Frigidity, and after the husband marries another wife, by whom he had Issue, and adjudged that the second Marriage is voided; and the Civilians gave the Rule, Qui aptus est ad unam aptus est ad aliam, & quando potentia reducitur ad actum debet redire ad primas nuptias. Impotentia & frigiditas, quoad hanc est causa sufficient divorce apres l'exploration, & Trial pro tres ans & auters, Ceremonies, enjoined by Canons, and the second Marriage of both is good notwithstanding that the Party impotent have Children. Vid. Moor 225. 2 Leon. 169, 170, 171, 172. In Berry's Case the first Judgement was given upon a Libel, which was that he was frigidus, and the Sentence was accordingly; but no mention whether maleficiatus, or not quoad hanc only, or frigidus a natura; but because that after he took a second wife, and had Issue by her, a great Question was whether he shall be intended maleficiatus quoad hanc, or not? for the Proofs of the first Sentence tend to prove a perpetual Frigidity, and upon a special Verdict all this appearing, the first Sentence was intended to be true, 1 Rolls Abr. 212. Causa Affinitatis, Consanguinitatis. Vide Supra tit. Bastard. Causa Saevitiae sive Metus. Causa Saevitiae. If the husband take from his wife Apparel, and other Necessaries, this is a good Ground to sue a Divorce Causa Saevitiae. If one of them be in Dread of the other for poisoning, it is a good Ground for Separation by Sentence. Causa Adulterii, Divorce a Mensa & Thoro, or Causa Adulterii: This doth not dissolve the Marriage, for it is subsequent to the Marriage as the others are precedent. And in case of Divorce Causa Adulterii, the Coverture continues between them: If the husband after such Divorce release an Obligation, or any other Duty due to the wife before Coverture, it hath been held a good Release; Yet the Espousals continued. which proves that the Marriage continues, and the wife after such Divorce shall have Dower of her husband's Lands, which proves that the Espousals continued. And therefore in Littleton's Case, Sect. 380. a Lease is made to the husband and wife, To have and to hold to them during the Coverture between them; in this case they have an Estate for their two Lives, upon condition, (viz.) if one of them die, or that there be a Divorce between them, than it shall be lawful for the Lessor and his Heirs to enter. Littleton here speaketh of such Divorce as dissolves the Marriage a Vinculo Matrimonii; for though the husband and wife are divorced Causa Adulterii, yet the Freehold continueth because the Coverture continueth. If a Woman be divorced a Mensa & Thoro, How a woman divorced a Mensa & Thoro shall sue. she must sue by her next Friend, as was Lady Rosse's Case; aliter if she is divorced a Vinculo Matrimonii: As if a Man marries a second wife, the first living, the second wife may sue by the name when she was Sole, for that the second Marriage is voided ab initio. What mean Acts done by the Baron shall stand good or not, notwithstanding the Divorce. Where Baron and Feme are divorced, where she is an Inheritrix: Mean Acts executed shall not be reversed by the Divorce, as Receipt of Rent, Waste, Presentment to a Benefice, Gift of the Goods of the wife; contrary of Inheritances, if the husband had discontinued or charged the Land. He may release an Obligation due to the wise Coverture, after a Divorce a Mensa & Thoro; so of a Legacy, as was the Case of Stephens and Totty. F.T. was divorced from the husband Causa Adulterii in the husband; the wife sued Stephens in the Spiritual Court for a Legacy given to her by a Stranger, and he pleaded the Release made by the husband after the Divorce. Per Curiam, This Divorce is not a dissolutio a Vinculo Matrimonii; so as that any of them may marry again, but it is a Separation only, and they be not compellable to cohabit; but if they will they may, without any new marrying. And in regard this Separation does not avoid the Marriage absolutely, but they still remain Man and wife, the Release to the husband was good to extinguish the Duty. And the Books which speak that the Feme shall have her Goods after Divorce, are to be intended of an absolute Divorce ab initio, Cro. El. 908. If a Feme post annos nubiles, (viz.) at 12 years' contract Matrimony with A. and after marry with B. and after that she have passed the age of 16 years, her Marriage with B. is dissolved, Causa Praecontractus; by this Divorce there is a Nullity of the Marriage ab initio; and if she had any Goods or Personal Estate, Where the Wife shall have the Goods again. she ought to have the same again, for cessante causa cessat Effectus. But if he had given or sold them before without Collusion, than there had been no remedy; but if it were by Collusion, there the wife might have averred the Collusion, and she may have the Goods, whereof the Property may be known either by Detinue, or in Chancery; and the rest that lay in Money, and the like, she may sue for by the Spiritual Law, or in Chancery: And the Reason, in Dyer 13. a. why she shall have her Goods again is, because the Cause and Consideration of the Gift of them in Marriage, is now defeated, for the Goods were given in Advancement of her Marriage. If the husband aliens the Land of the wise, and after they are divorced causa Praecontractus, or any other Cause which dissolves a Vinculo; the wife during the Life of the Baron may enter by the Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 28. If Baron and Feme purchase jointly, and are disseised, the Baron releaseth, and after they are divorced, the Feme shall have a Moiety, albeit there were not Moieties before the Divorce, for the Divorce converted it into Moities. Of Suits after Divorce. Vide Actions. If a Man be obliged to a Feme Sole, and after she marry him, and after she is divorced; she may have an Action afterwards which by the Marriage was suspended. Feme sues again. If Baron and Feme are divorced Causa Adulterii, and after the Feme sues without the husband for a Defamation; although the Dviorce dissolve not the Marriage, yet in regard the Feme by the Course of the Civil Law may sue alone, in such a Case a Prohibition hath been denied. Where and in what Cases, notwithstanding a Divorce, the Wife shall be endowed, or not. If Baron and Feme are divorced, a Vinculo Matrimonii, Dower ceaseth, but not if it be only a Mensa & Thoro, 1 Inst. 32. a. If a Marriage de facto be voidable by Divorce in respect of Consanguinity, Affinity, Precontract, or the like, whereby the Marriage might have been dissolved, and the Parties freed a Vinculo Matrimonii; yet if the husband die before any Divorce, there now because it cannot be avoided, this wife de facto shall be endowed, for this is Legitimum Matrimonium quoad dotem, 1 Inst. 33. a. A Woman Copyholder for Life according to the Custom of the Manor, durante viduitate, takes J. S. to husband, she being Niece to a former wife of J.S. upon which J.S. is questioned for an Incestuous Marriage, and does Penance, and is bound not to keep her company; and after J.S. dies, this Marriage does not determine her Estate, for she was not divorced a Vinculo Matrimonii, though there was cause for it, Hob. Remington's Case. Pleading. In Pleading of a Divorce the Judges coram quo, must be precisely pleaded, 2 Leon. p. 170, 171. Trial. Divorce shall be tried by the Bishop, and not per Pais, 7 H. 4. 23. 19 H. 6. 18. What Divorce shall Bastardise the Issue, or not. It appears before that such Divorces which dissolve Vinculum Matrimonii, shall Bastardise the Issue, if they are executed during the Lives of the Parties, otherwise not; and the Issue may not be made a Bastard after their Death: For the Divorce in the Spiritual Court is pro peccatis, which cannot be after their death; and they cannot disinherit an Issue there. If A. takes B. to wife within age of consent, and after at the age of consent they descent, and marry elsewhere, and have Issue and die, it cannot be examined in the Spiritual Court after, whether they consented at the age of consent before their dissent, because they cannot Bastardise the Issue after their death; Englefeild's Case; and a Prohibition granted out of Chancery upon it. And it's a general Rule, that after their death the Spiritual Court cannot examine any Matter to Bastardise the Issue. If two are divorced for Consanguinity, if they were ignorant of the Consanguinity, the Issue shall be Legitimate, 1 Rolls Rep. 212. CHAP. XXXIII. Offences against the Statutes concerning Women. Action on the Statute of 5 Eliz. c. 9 against the Husband and Wife for the Wife's not appearing ad Testificandum, and the Declaration of Polygamy against Stat. 1 Jac. c. 11. Of stealing Women, etc. Construction of the said Statute, and of the Stat. 39 Eliz. c. 8. Of Rape. Baron and Feme indicted of Perjury. Information against a Feme Covert for Selling Fish. In all Statutes which provide for actual Wrong, Femes Coverts shall be intended within them. H. Brought an Action sur Stat. 5 El. c. 9 Upon the Stat. 5 El. c. 9 for not appearing ad Testificandum. against H. and his wife for the Penalty of 10 l. given by the said Statute against him, who was served with Process ad Testificandum, etc. and doth not appear, not having any Impediment, etc. And shown that Process was served upon the Defendant's wife, and sufficient Charges, having regard to her Degree and Distance of the Place, etc. tendered to her, and yet she did not appear. Verdict pro Quer '. Moved in Arrest of Judgement; 1. Because the Plaintiff in setting forth he was damaged for the not appearance of the wife, and has not showed how damnified. Respond ' Though the Party be not at all damnified, yet the Penalty is forfeited. 2. A Feme Covert is not within the said Statute, for no mention is made of a Feme Covert. Respond '. Femes' Coverts are within the said Statute, otherwise it would be a grand Mischief, for she may be the only Witness. 3. The Declaration is, That the Plaintiff tendered the Charges to the wife, where he ought to have tendered the same to the husband. Respond '. The wife ought to appear, and therefore the Tender aught to be to her: And Judgement pro Quer ', 1 Leon. 122. Havithlom and Harvey, Mesme Case, Cro. El. 130. Polygamy. Per Stat. 1 Jac. c. 11. If any Person or Persons within his Majesty's Dominions of England and Wales, being married, do marry any Person or Persons, the former wife being alive, that than every such Offence shall be Felony, and the Person and Persons so offending, shall suffer death, as in Cases of Felony. But this Act shall not extend to husband or wife, being absent seven years from the other beyond the Seas. Nor shall it extend to any Person divorced at the time of such Marriage in the Spiritual Court, nor to Marriage within the age of Consent. As to a Woman being divorced, and than marrying again. It was one Porter's Case: R. was lawfully espoused to one Porter, and had sued a Divorce propter Saevitiam, and it was Separamus a Mensa & Thoro, but no word of Divorciamus. By the better Opinion she is within the Proviso, and that it was not Felony; but it appeared by the Canons that such Persons as are divorced a Mensa & Thoro, may not marry again; and it was clearly agreed by the Civilians, that the second Marriage was unlawful, and that she might be in danger of the Statute; but it was not adjudged there: But in my Lord Rosse's Case it was the Opinion, that they might marry again, Cro. Car. 461. Porter's Case. One Williams was indicted at Bristol upon the Stat. 1 Jac. 11. for having two Wives, and upon not guilty, a special Verdict was found that the said Williams married one wife, and was afterwards divorced from her Causa Adulterii, and afterwards married the other; and if that were within the Proviso of that Stat. which provides for those who are divorced, was the Question. And it was resolved without Argument by Bramstone Chief Justice, and Heath, (caeteris absentibus) that it is within the Proviso, for the Statute speaks generally of Divorces, and it is a Penal Law: And Heath said that by the Law of Holy Church the Parties divorced Causa Adulterii, might marry; and he cited Porter's Case, who was divorced Causa Saevitiae, and said it was resolved that that was not within the Proviso, because only a Divorce a Cohabitatione, and a Temporal Separation till the Anger past. But here it is a Vinculo Matrimonii, (in which last he was much mistaken) March Rep. 101. One was indicted of Felony upon the Stat. 1 Jac. c. 11. for having of two Wives; and the Evidence was, that he espoused one beyond the Seas, and another here; and the Court was of opinion that he was not within the Statute. Quaere, If the second Espousals were beyond the Seas, for that makes the Offence, and cannot here be tried, Sid. 171. Council on 1 Jac. c. 11. prayed stay of Process upon the Recognizance of the Prosecutor, who was bound over by Judge Archer, Judge of Assize in Cornwall, to prosecute the Defendant for having two Wives; in regard he being taken in Cornwall, must be tried there, and that therefore it might be saved. But per Curiam, This being an Affirmative Statute, doth not take away the Trial by the Common Law where the Offence was committed, and agreed to save the Recognizance, Pengell and Dr. Eaton's Case, 2 Keb. 31. Of Stealing Wives. Information was exhibited in the name of Sir Tho. Fanshaw (Clerk of the Crown, and so to this purpose, Attorney for the King) against T. and others, for taking and marrying the sole Daughter and Heir apparent of T. of Kent, without the Assent, and against the Will of the Father; and this was an Information for Offence at Common Law: And the Evidence was, That T. was oftentimes at her Father's House, and in her Company; and there he secretly contracts himself to his Daughter, she being fifteen years of Age; and by Appointment between him and his Daughter, his Daughter left her Father's House, and met T. who came with Horses from London to Kent, and brought the Daughter to London, and there were married. And upon the Evidence the Jury at the Bar found them guilty. The Cause being prosecuted by the Father and Mother, who gave Evidence against them, they prayed the Fine might be moderated, and were discharged out of Prison upon Bail. And all that this was an Offence punishable by Fine and Imprisonment at Common Law, Sid. 387. the King against Twisleton; and the Statutes 4 & 5 P. & M. & 3 H. 7. c. were but Aggravation of Punishment, and do not created any Offence originally, 2 Keb. 432. Offences against Penal Laws. In the time of K. Charles 1. the Lady Fullwood, Roger Fullwood, and divers others, were indicted in the County of Surrey, That whereas Sarah Cock was a Maid who had a Portion of 1300 l. the said Roger by Procurement of the Lady, at the Parish of St. Saviour, violently, and with force, and against the Will of the said Sarah, took and carried the said Sarah to St. Saviour's, and there married her against the form of the Statute. They pled not guilty. The said Roger Fullwood, R. B. and J. H. were indicted in the County of Middlesex, de eo quod, the said Sarah having a Portion of 1300 l. For Lucre of the gain of the said Portion, they took her at N. in Com. Mid ' against her Will, and carried her to St. Saviour's in Surrey, and there the said Roger married the said Sarah contra formam Statuti; and a Copy of the Indictment in Mid ' was allowed them. It was in the Case agreed, That the taking of a Woman unless she be married or defiled, is not Felony, within the Statute; and if the taking of such a Woman, and the marrying or defiling be in several Counties, it is Felony compounded of all the three parts, as Stroke and Death are but one Murder. Per Curiam, Although it had been objected, That it was an Obsolete Statute, yet they were deceived, for the Statute is good, and of good use; but many had not been executed thereupon, because they had their Clergy: For the taking whereof away, the Statute 39 El. c. 8. was made. And whereas it was pretended, that Sarah was married with her Consent, and therefore not within the Statute; the Court said, That the taking being unlawful, and against her Will, though the Marriage was with her Will, yet it is Felony within the Statute: And although this was not a Marriage de jure, because he was in such fear that she knew not what she answered or did; yet it is a Marriage de facto, and is Felony within the Statute, and Judgement was given that ●hey should be hanged. 31 H. 8. Rot. 14. inter placita Regis: Henry Sturges and Philip Sturges were indicted for taking one Agnes Hobson against her Will, who was the Daughter and Heir of John Hobson, who was seized of Lands ●f 20 l. per Annum Value. And they pleaded to the ●ndictment, that they ought not to answer pro eo ●uod non mentionatur, in the said Indictment, quod ceperunt ad intentionem maritandi dictam Agnete●● vel ad prostituendam, etc. and they were discharged. Hill. 3 & 4 P. & M. Rot. 10. Roger Tompson and Peter Rewley were indicted pro eo quod Felonice ceperunt Margaretam Burton & Margeream Burton, Daughters and Coheirs of Roger Burton deceased, and against their Wills, etc. and they pleaded they ought not to answer to the said Indictment, pro eo quod non apparet in quo loco nec quomodo, they took the said Daughters, and pro eo quod non mentionatur in dicto indictamento, that the said Roger or Peter married or defiled the said Margaret or Magery, ils aleront sans jour. Though the words in the Purview of the Statute of P. and M. seem to be general, and to extend to all Women unlawfully taken against their Wills; yet considering that the Preamble of the Statute cannot be conceived to be idle, it must be intended to restrain the purview to the particular Cases in the Preamble mentioned, (viz.) that they shall be Maids, Widows or Wives, their Substance in Lands or Goods, or otherwise Heirs apparent, Stat. P. & M. Explained. that the Motive be Lucre, and the End to be married or defiled, and the Purview is what Person or Persons should steal away a Woman (so) against her Will unlawfully: This word (so) did bind up the Preamble to the Purview, Cro. Car. 484, 488, 492. In Fullwood's Case divers Witnesses proved that she was willing to marry him, and appointed a Tailor to make her a Gown, and was found in Bed with him: But she made Oath that she did it for fear of his Threats, and that she knew not what she did. It was not expressed in the Indictment that they took her ea intention to marry or defile her, as in the Case of 31 H. 8. but the Court resolved it was good; for in regard it appears apparently by the Indictment, that they took her & abduxerunt for Lucre, and the same day married her, that shows the Caption to be with an Intent to marry her, and there be no such words in the Statute as ea intention. Information for Recusancy. Vide Supra, tit. Information. A. steals his wife against her Friends Consent, and after sues in Equity for her Portion, but denied Relief by Egerton Chancellor, and said, He that steals the Flesh let him provide Bread how he can, he shall have no relief in Equity. Note, By the express Purview of this Statute the Accessary or both, before and after are made Principals, as the Receivers of the Woman, 12 Co. 20, 21. Feme Coverts Keepers of Gaols, shall be chargeable in Debt for the Escape of a Prisoner, 2 Inst. 382. and so Infants. Rape. A Man of 60 years of age who had a wife was arraigned at Newgate, 22 Jac. of the Rape of a Girl than of the age of 7 years and no more, by the apparent Evidence of divers Women, and the Surgeon, and the Damsel herself, and he was hanged, Dyer 304. in Margin. Perjury. Baron and Feme convicted of Perjury, she only was taken; and Council prayed that she might stay till the Baron comes in to receive Judgement together; which the Court denied, and the Indictment was joint, which was well enough: So of the Issue jointly taken, 1 Keb. 585. the King and Chedwick. Information was brought against a Feme Covert for Selling Fish. Twisden, notwithstanding Hob. Moor and Hussey's Case, conceived this lay not against her, but against the husband alone, 11 Co. 64. being his Contract, to which the Court inclined, 2 Keb. 634. the King against Jordon. M. 24 Car. 2. B. R. The King against Storey: The Court fined him 100 l. and Good behaviour for 5 years on Information for deceitful taking away out of her Mother's Custody Mistress Gilburne, under 16 years old, with intent to marry her, and well; Geery 50 l. and Goodhaviour for a year; Lenthall 40 Marks; who were Women guilty of the Exploit, and found guilty only of the Deceit, 3 Keb. 101. For all Statutes which provide for actual Wrong, a Feme Covert shall be intended within them, 9 H. 8.6. If a Feme Covert make actual Disseisin with force, she shall be imprisoned, 9 H. 4. 7. b. Precedents. Det ' super Obligac ' fact ' al Feme sole & alter uxor B. V. & Vir dissentit ab obligation ' & alter Obligor prosequitur Actionem. PAsch. 28 Eliz. Rot. 112. ss. I. B. summonit fuit ad respondend Susan C. de placito qd reddat ei 40 l. quas ei debet & injuste detinet etc. Et unde etc. dic quod cum pdict I. (tali die & anno) apud A. per quoddam scriptum suum obligatorium concessit se teneri eid S. & cuidam H. adtunc uxori B. V. in pred 40 l. solvend eisdem S. & H. (tali festo) tunc prox. sequen Predictusque B. ●ost confectione scripti pred & ante diem impetationis brevis originalis ipsius S. habens noticiam qd pdict I. per idem scriptum tenebatur & obligabatur eidem S. & pfat H. adtunc & adhuc uxori ipsius B. in pred 40 l. scripto illo ●ost hujusmodi noticiam & ante diem impetra●ionis brevis originalis ipsius S. sclnt (tali die 〈◊〉 anno) apud A. pred dissentit & scriptum illud ●●tunc ut fact pred H. acceptare penitus recusa●it predictus tamen I. licet sepius requisit pdict ●●dem 40 l. eisdem S. & H. ante pdict recusa●●nem pdict B. seu eidem S. post recusationem ●●sdem B. non reddidit sed ill etc. Pasch. 33 Eliz. Rot. 1940. Brownloe Hertff. Gabriel Child & Agnes sa Feme que la Feme Thomae Henerey Demand ' versus Eliz. Connyesby Vid ' & Henry Hendry lafoy tierce part de deux meases cum pertin in R. come sa Dower del endowment de dit T. J. son Baron etc. Barr. Quod quondam vir, etc. concessit annualem redditum 20 l. petent. in satisfactione dotis ipsam contingen '. Et pdict Eliz. & Henricus per I K. Attornatum suum ven & dicunt qd pred Gabriel & Agnes dotem ipsius Agnetis de tenementis pdict cum pertin unde etc. ex dotatione pdict T. quondam viri sui habere non debent quia dicunt qd pdict F. in vita sua fuit seisit de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de fe●●d et tenementa illa cum ꝑtin tenuit de Henric 〈◊〉. Mil ' ut de Manerio suo de D. in Com p●●ct Heref. per servitium militate que quidem tenementa cum ꝑtin sunt & tempore mortis pdict T. fuer clari annui valoris ultra o●●● omnia & reprisas 12 l. Predict T. sic de tenementis pred cum ꝑtin in forma pdict sei●●● existen apud R. pred duxit in uxorem pred Agnetem & post disponsalia inter eosdem T. & Agnetem celebrat scilicet (tall die & anno) apud A. pdict condidit voluntatem suam in scriptis & ꝑ eandem voluntatem suam voluit & legavit psat Agneti tunc uxor ejus quendam annualem re●dicum 20 l. exeun etc. percipiend de omnibus terris & tenementis ipsius T. in Parochia de R. & T. pdict ad duos anni Terminos per equales portiones solvend prima solutione inde incipiend ad finem sex mensium prox. post decessum ejusdem T. & sic quolibet dimidio anni durante vita naturali ejusdem Agnetis in plenam satisfactionem totius dotis ipsius Agnetis ipsam de terris & tenementis ipsius T. contingen Et postea apud R. pred obiit de terris & tenementis pred cum pertin in forma pred seisit post cujus mortem & ante impetrationem brevis pred scilt (tali die & anno) pred Agnes apud R. pred dum ipsa sola fuit pred annualem redditum 20 l. in plenam satisfactionem totius dotis ipsius Agnetis de tenementis pred cum ꝑtin contingen acceptare agreavit Et hoc parat est verificare unde petit judicium si pdict Gabriel & Agnes dotem ipsius Agnetis de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin unde etc. ex donatione pdict T. quondam viti sui habere debeant etc. Glanvil. Et pdict G. & Agnes dicunt quod ipsi per alien palligat a doie ipsius Agnetis de tenementis pdict cum ptin unde etc. habend pcludi non de●ent quia dicunt qd eadem Agnes dum ipsa sola ●elt, non agreavit acceptare pdict annualem red●●um ●0 l. in plenam satisfactionem dotis to●us dotis ipsius Agnetis ipsam Agnetem de te●●mentis pdict cum ptin contingen prout pred ●●iz. & Henric superius allegavexunt Et hoc ●et qd inquiratur per patriam etc. 4 Co. f. 4. Repl '. Demandant dicunt quod le feme ne agreed a pay. Ver●on's Case est adjudge que cest bar est bon & deins ●e equity de Stat. del 27 H. 8. the Jointures. Dower. Narratio in Dote. ANna que fuit uxor R. D. per A.D. Attornatum suum petit versus johannem D. tertiam partem Maneriorum de O. & N. cum ꝑtin ac decem Mesuagiorum decem toftorum nonagint acr terre cum ꝑtin in E. ut dotem ipsius A. ex donatione pdict R. quondam viri sui & unde nihil habet etc. Plea. Non fuit in legitimo Matrimonio copulat ' vide supra. Plea. N'unque seize que Dower. Et pdict I per .. Attornatum fuum venit & dicit qd pdict Anna dotem suam de tenementis pdict unde etc. versus eum habere non debet quia dic qd pdict R.D. quondam vir ipsius A. ex cujus dotatione etc. nec die quo ipse R. eandem A. desponsavit nec unquam postea feisitus fuit de cenementis illis cum ꝑtin unde etc. de tali statu ita qd eadem A. inde dotasse poruit 〈◊〉. de hoc ponit se super Patriam Et pdict A. similiter Ideo etc. Plea Acceptation ' Annuitatis in satisfactionem Dotis. Et pdict I per .. Attornatum suum venit & dicit qd pdict A. dotem suam de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin ex dotatione pdict I.H. quondam viri sui habere non debet quia dic qd diu ante tempus impetrationis brevis originalis ipsius A. scilt (tali die & anno) apud B. pdict I. assignavit pfat A. annuitatem sive annualem redditum sex librarum legalis monete Anglie exeun de omnibus cerris & tenementis pdict cum pertin habend & tenend eidem A. pro tempore vite sue in nomine dotis sue exeun de omnibus terris & tenementis pdict que fuer pdict I H. quondam viri sui etc. Quem quidem redditum sex librarum pdict A. acceptavit in plenam satisfactionem totius dotis sue ipsam de omnibus terris & tenementis pdict que fuer pdict I contingen Et hoc etc. Vnde petit judicium si pdict A. dotem suam de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin habere debeat etc. Et pdict A. dicit qd ipsa per aliqua preallegata a dote sua pdict habend precludi non debet quia protestando qd ipsa non acceptavit pdict annuitatem sive annualem redditum ser librarn legalis monete Anglie in plenam satisfactionem totius dotis sue ipsam de omnibus terris & tenementis pdict cum ptin que fuer pdict I H. contingent prout pdict I. superius allegavit pro plito eadem A. dicit qd pdict I. non assignavit eidem A. pdict annuitatem sive annualem redditum sex librarum legalis monete Anglie exeun de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin habend & tened eidem A. pro termino vite sue nomine dotis de omnibus terris & tenementis pdict que fuer pdict I H. quondam viri sui etc. prout idem I. superius allegavit Et hoc parat est verificare ●●de petit judicium Et qd ipsa de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin dotare possit etc. Repl. Non acceptavit. Et pdict I. ut prius dic ' qd pdict I. assignavit pfat A. pdict annuitatem sive annualem ●eddicum sex librarum exeun de tenementis pd cum ꝑtin habend & tenend eidem A. pro termino vite sue nomine dotis sue de omnibus terris & tenementis predict que fuer predict I H. quondam viri sui prout idem I. supius allegavit Et de hoc ponit se super Patriam etc. Plea. Elopement. Et pdict A. per .. Atttornatum suum venit & dicit qd pdict K. dotem suam de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin ex dotatione pdict I. habere non debet quia dicit qd pd K. in vita pdict I. scilicet (tali die & anno) apud W. in Com L. sponte sua reliquic pfat I. virum suum & ab eo abiit & elopavit cum quodam T. W. & cum ipso T. W. apud K. in pdict Com L. in adulteris moram traxit continuam tota vita ipsius I. minime reconciliat ad pfat I. virum suum in vita ipsorum I. Et hoc etc. Vnde etc. si dotem suam de tenementis pdict cum ptin ex dotatione etc. in hac parte habere debent etc. Repl. Et pdict K. dicit qd ipsa per aliqua preallegata de dote sua de eisdem tenementis cum ꝑtin de dotatione pdict I quondam viri sui versus prefat A. habend precludi non debet quia dicit qd ipsa in vita pdict I. non reliquit ipsum I. virum suum nec ab eo abiit cum pfat T. W. nec moram cum ipso in adulterio trahend fecit prout pdict A. superius allegavit Et hoc petit qd inquiratur per Patriam etc. Bar per acceptance de Jointure cum recitatione Stat. 27 H. 8. Et pdict T. H. per .. Attornatum suum ven & dicit qd pdict R. & D. dotem ipsius D. de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin unde etc. ex dotatione pfat D. quondam viri etc. habere non debent quia dic qd in Statut in Parliamento Domini Henrici nuper Regis Anglie odavi apud Civitatem London tertio die Novembris anno Regni sui vicesimo primo inchoat & ex eadem Civitate usque ad Palatium suum apud Westm in Com Midd & adjornat & prorogat atque ibidem continuat usque ad & in decimo septimo die D. iunc prox. sequen & ab eisdem die & loco per diversas Prorogationes usque ad & in quartum diem F. anno Regni sui vicesimo septimo continuat & prorogat inter alia inacticat ordinat & stabilit existit authoritate ejusdem Parliament qd cum diverse persone perqui sivissent sive habuissent statum fact & composit de & in viversis terris tenementis & hereditamentis sibi ipsis & suis executoribus & heredibus dici sive viro & uxori & heredibus de corum ambobus corporibus procreat ' aut hered ●alus eorum corporum procreat ' aut marito & ●xori pro termino suarum vitarum aut pro termino vite olde utoris sue aut ubi aliquis talis status sive perquisitio aliquorum terrarum tenementorum sive hereditamentorum fuit aut ext●at imposterum foret fact alicui marito & ejus uxori modo & forma superius express. alicui alle persone seu personis heredibus & assignatis suis 〈◊〉 usum & opus dictorum & uxoris vel ad asum uxoris prout prius memorat existit pro junctura uxoris qd extunc quolibet hujusmodi casu quelibet mulier nupta habens talem juncturam fadam aut extunc in posterum fiend non clam seu haberet aliquem titulum altrujus dotis de resid terrarum tenementorum vel hereditamentorum que aliquo tempore fuissent dicti viri sui per quem ipsa habuisset aliquam talem juncturam nec peteret neque clam dotem suam de & versus tos qui haberent terras & tenementa dicti viri sui sed si haberet nullam talem juncturam tum ipsa foret admisse & habilis ad prosequend habend & ●●tend dotem suam per breve de dote secundum debitam formam & ordinem Communium Legum hujus Regni eodem actu sive aliqua lege aut provisione in contrarium inde non obstant prout in eodem actu plenius continetur Et idem T. H. ulterius dicit qd pfat nuper Rex Henricus octavus fuit seisitus de scitu etc. in etc. in dominico suo ut de feodo & sic inde seisius existen idem nuper Rex postea videlicet (tal die & anno) per Literas suas Patentes geren dat apud Westm eisdem die & anno de gratia sua speciali ac ex certa scientia & mero motu suis dedit & concessit pfat D. in vita sua & eidem Ducisse adtunc uxori sue pdict scitum etc. habend & tenend eisdem D. & Ducisse ꝓ termino vitarum suarum & eorum alterius diutius viventi remanere inde post mortem eorundem Ducis & Ducisse hered de corpore ejusdem Ducis procreat Quarum quidem Literarum Patentium pretextu iidem Dux & Ducissa fuer de pdict scitu etc. cum ꝑtin seisit videlicet idem Dux in dominico suo ut de feodo talliato & pd Ducissa in dominico suo nt de libero tenemento Et sic seisit existen idem Dux postea apud H. in Com S. obiit & pdict Ducissa ipsum suꝑvixit & se tenuit in pdict scitum etc. cum ꝑtin & fuit & adhuc eristit inde seisit in dominico suo ut de libero tenemento ꝑ jus accrescendi etc. atque proficua & exitus inde agreeando & consentiendo ad juncturam illam a tempore mortis pfat Ducis hucusque continue percepit & habuit Et hoc paratus est verificare unde petit judicium si pdict R. & Ducissa dotem ipsius Ducisse de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin in demanda pdict superius spec habere debeant etc. Appeal for the death of the Husband against the Principal and Accessories. Hert. ss. E. D. nuꝑ de etc. alias dic I.A. nuꝑ de etc. I.W. nuꝑ de etc. & L.B. nuper de etc. attach fuer per corpora sua ad respond P. que fuit uxor T. S. Gen de morte pd T. S. quonda viri sui unde eos appellat Et sunt pleg ' de prosequend scilicet T. A. de Lond Gen & W. E. de etc. Et unde eadem P. per T. W. jun & I F. Attornatos suos conjunctim & divisim juxta forma Statuti etc. instanter appellat pdict E. D. I. A. I. W. & L. B. de eo qd ubi pdict T. S. fuit in pace Dei & dicti Domini Regis nunc apud S. pdict in Com pdict Hextford sexto die Maii anno etc. circa horam quartam post meridiem ejusdem diei ibi scilt apud S. pdict in pdict Com Hertf. ven pdict I. A. I. W. & L. B. ac felonice ac ut felones dict Domini Regis nunc ex malitiis suis pcogitat & insult pmeditat contra pacem dict Domini Regis nunc coron & dignitates suas die anno hora loco & Com Hertf. pdict & in pfat T. S. adtunc apud S. pdict in pd Come Hertf. insult fecer Et pdict L. B. cum quodam gladio de ferro & calybe vocat a Rapier ad valentiam trin solidorum & quatuor denar quem idem L. in manu sua dextra adtunc eodem sexto die etc. apud S. pd in pd Come Hertf. habuit & tenuit pfat T. S. in & super dextrum genu ipsius T.S. adtunc apud S. pd felonice voluntary & ex malitia sua pcogitat percussit & pupugit dans eidem T. S. adtunc & ibidem scilt apud S. pd cum gladio pdict in & super dextrum genu ipsius T. S. pd unam plagam mortalem ꝓfunditat sex pollicium & latitud unius pollicis de qua quidem plaga mortali pdict T. S. adtunc apud S. pdict in pdict Com Hertf. instanter obiit Et pdict I A. & I W. apud S. pdict felonice & ex malitiis suis pcogitat fuer adtunc psentes auxiliantes abettari procurare consultare & manuteneri dict L. B. ad fellow & murdrum pdict in forma pdict felonice faciend & perpetrand contra pacem dicti Domini Regis nunc coron & dignitates suas Et sic pdict L. B. I. A. & I W. pdict T. S. dicto sexto die Maii anno etc. apud S. pdict in pdict Com Hertf. felonice voluntary & ex malitiis suis pcogitat interfecer & murdraver contra pacem dicti Domini Regis nunc coron & dignitates suas Et pdict E. D. ante fellow & murdro pdict in forma pdict fact scilt quined die Maii anno etc. apud S. pdict in Com Hertford eisdem L. B. I. A. & I W. ad faciend & perpetrand fellow & murdrum pdict modo & forma pd ex malitia sua pcogitat malitiose & felonice incitavit ꝓcuravit & consulit Anglice did counsel. Ac etiam I D. sciens pfat L. B. I. A. & I W. fellow & murdrum pdict in forma pdict fecisse ipsos L. B. I. A. & I W. postea scilt pdict sexto die Maii etc. apud S. pd in Com Hertf. pd post fellow & murdrum pdict ꝑ ipsos L. B. I. A. & I W. in forma pdict fact felonice receptavit concelavit hospitavit Anglice did lodge & confortavi● ac ipsos ad fugand & escapiand ꝓ felonia & murdro pdict modo & forma pdict fact adjuvavit Anglice did help excicavit & consuluit contra pacem etc. Et quam cito iidem felones & murdr pdict in forma pdict tecissent fugerunr dict P. recent insecut fuit de villa in villam usque quatuor propinquiores Et ulterius quousque etc. Fresh suit. Et si iidem felones fellow & murdrum pdict in forma pdict eye imposit ' velint dedicere pdict P. hoc parata est versus eos ꝓbare ꝓut Curia etc. Et pdict E. D. I. A. I. W. & L. B. in propriis personis suis ven & defend vim & injuriam quando etc. omnem feloniam & murdrum & quicquid &c. Et seꝑal dicunt qd ipsi in nullo sunt inde culpabiles Et inde de bono & malo seꝑatim ponunt se super Patriam Et pdict P. similiter Ideo etc. Det sur Obligac ' versus Administratric '. Def. plead plene administravit Quer. replic ' que il ad prosecut ' original Writ verse. Def. & sa Baron & proceed all Issue & abate sur mort de Baron, & i'll recent. exhibuit Bill. Note, le Bill fuit exhibit Pasch. 19 Car. 2. _____ Sur Obligac. plene administravit plead. Precludi non debet quia dicit qd diu ante exhibitionem bille pdict scilt (tali die & anno) idem Quer ꝓ recuperatione debiti pdict ei in forma pdict aretro & insolut existen ꝓsecut fuisset extra Cur Canc dicti Domini Regis nunc (ad Cur Canc apud Westm in Com Mid tunc existen quoddam breve original dicti Domini Regis usus quendam I S. nuper de etc. & pdict Elizabetham tunc uxorem ejus nuꝑ administraticem bonoru & catallorum que fuer E. S. qui obiit intestat nuꝑ dict etc. tunc Vic Essex. direct ꝑ quod quidem breve originale pcept fuit pfat tunc Vic Essex. quod pciꝑet pdict I. & Eliz. qd just & sine dilatione redderent dict (Quer) pdict 40 l. quas ei injuste detinebant Et nisi fecissent Et pdict (Quer) fecisset pdict tunc Vic securum de clamore suo ꝓsequend tunc summon ꝓ bonos summon pdict I. & Eliz. qd essent coram justiciariis dicti Domini Regis apud W. in Octab Sancti Hillarii ostens' quare non fecissent Et qd idem Vic haberet summon & breve illud posteaque in Octab Sancti Hillarii pdict coram justice dicti Domini Regis apud W. pdict I. & Eliz. ad breve pdict comparaverunt & pdict (Quer) superinde versus eos narravit Et pdict I & Eliz. inde placitaverunt ad exitum Posteaque scilicet (tali die & anno) apud H. pdict in Parochia & Warda pd pdict I. obiit ac ratione inde brevis originale pdict & tot process. inde cassat fuer Et idem (Quer) recent postea exhibuit billam ipsius Quer hic in Cur ipsius Domini Regis versus pdict Elizabetham Et pdit Quer ulterius dicit qd breve originale pdict prosecut fuit & billa pdict exhica fuit versus pdict Elizabetha ꝓ debito pdict & non pro alio debito Et idem (Quer) ulterius dicit qd tempore impetrationis brevis originalis pdict pdict (Def.) habuit diversa bona & catalla que fuer pdict E. S. tempore mortis sue in manibus suis administrand ad valentiam debiti pdict unde ead (Def.) eid (Quer) dedebito suo pdict satisfecisse potuit videlicet apud H. pdict in Parochia & Warda pdict Et hoc etc. unde etc. Rej. Non recent. exhibuit billam. Et pdict (Def.) dicit qd pdict (Quer) non recent exhibuit billam ipsius Quer in Cur Domini Regis hic versus ipsam (Def.) mode & forma ꝓut pdict (Quer) superius inde placitando allegavit Et de hoc ponit se super Patriam etc. Barr all Bond. plead que le Execut ' del Def. marry le Debtor. Actio non Quia dicit qd post confectionem scripti pdict R. T. in vita sua apud C. pdict condidit testamentum & ultimam voluntatem sua in scriptis ac per idem testamentum suum pd Eliz. Executricem testamenti illius constituit & ordinavit etc. postea obiit post cujus mortem eadem Elizabetha pdict testamentum pdict R. T. in debita juris forma probavit ac onus executionis testamenti illius super se suscepit Et postea & ante diem impetrationis brevis originalis ipsius Eliz. scilicet (tali die & anno) eadem Eliz. apud C. pd cepit in virum pfat jac. H. ac ratione inde tam omnes actiones super pdict script obligatorio habend quam pdict debitum 10 l. suꝑ pd script obligatorio pet penitus in lege extinct sure & exonerat devener & adhonerat exist ' Et hoc ꝑatus etc. Action brought by a Man and his Wife for scandalous Words, That she had a Child dum sola suit. ss. B. P. Gen & C. uxor ejus queruntur de E. A. in custod Marr etc. pro eo videlicet qd cum ead C. bonorum nominis fame conditionis conversationis & gesture a tempore nativitatis sue hucusque fuerit ac dum ipsa sola non solum vitam honestam & immaculatam degit verumetiam ut feminam castam seipsam gesserit habuerit & gubernaverit abs quovis corrupt incasto pravo aut malo vivendi genere intact & immaculat remanens ex venerabili & generosa stirpe in Comitat pdict prognat existit pretextu cujus non solum eadem C. consanguineorum suorum verumetiam quam plurimorum aliorum Dom Regis fidel subdit benevolentiam & amicitiam sibi tonciliaverit Cumque quidem A. R. Gen avunculus ipsius B. magnas diversasque annuales exibitiones eid B. dedisset ac omnia terras tenementa sua eide B. post mortem suam relinquere in animo habuisset (liberorum aliquem de corpore suo exeun non habens) pdict Def. pmissorum non ignarus ac ꝑcipiens ipsam B. pfat C. matrimonii causa affidat fuisse ipsamque C. in urore sua ducere intendisse diabolica & matiosa ment sua machinans & intendens non solum bona nomen & famam pd C. ledere verum etiam ipsum B. in tantum odium & displicentiam apud A. R. Auunculum suum inducere ut idem Auunculus ejus omnia terras & tenementa sua aliis personis post mortem sua conveyaret ac assuraret ac pdict B. inde penitus exhereditaret & ut pdict B. & C. post sponsalia inter ipsos B. & C. celebrat scil̄c (tali die & anno) apud etc. dixit locutus fuit & propalavit Auunculo pfat & A. uxor ejus in psentia quamplurimorum fide dign Domini Regis nunc subdit de pfat C. dum ipsa sola fuit hec falsa ficta & scandalosa Anglicana verba sequen videlicet I (ipsum pdict E. A. modo Def. innuendo) marvel that you (pdict Auunculum innuendo) will bestow your Kinsman (ipsum B. modo Quer innuendo) on that base Woman (C. uxorem pfat B. modo Quer innudo) for she (ipsam C. iterum innuendo) hath had a Child ubi revera eadem C. dicto tempore dictionis & propalationis verborum illorum aut a toto tempore vite sue usque sponsalia inter ipsum B. & C. celebrata in pura virginitate sua remansisset & nullam prolem habuisset Quorum quidem scandalosorum verborum dictionis & propulationis ptextu eadem C. non solum in bonis nomine fama & estimatione suis quibus preaucea gavisa fuerat multipliciter lesa & denigrata existit verum etiam idem B. in magnam displicentiam & odium pdict A. R. Auunculi sui incidit ac diversas annuales exhibitiones quas pd A. R. ejus Auunculus ei dare solitus fuerat (ulterius idem facere desistt sect) amisit ac idem R. Auunculus ipsius B. pdict scandalosis verbis ipsius E. fidem adhibens pro eo qd idem B. ipsam C. in uxorem duxit terras tenementa sua annui valoris centum librarum diversis aliis personis eidem B. ignot habens post mortem ipsius A. Auunculi sui conveyavit & assuravit a pdict B. & A. post sponsalia pdict huc usque indies maxime depauperat sunt unde idem Quer dicunt qd ipsi deteriorat sunt & dampnum habent ad valentiam 3000 l. Et inde ꝓduc sectam. Declaration in Covenant brought by a Man and his Wife, where the Lessor enters upon the possession of the Lessee and with their consent enfeoffs the Plaintiff (Feme sole) as Assignee. Hill. 22 Car. 2. Rot. 1667. B. C. Warr ss. H I nuper de etc. summonit fuit ad respondend T. R. & Anne uxori ejus assign E. M. Gen de placito qd teneat eye conventionem inter pdict E. & pfat H. I. fact secundum vim forma & effectum quarunde Indenturarum inde inter eos confectarum Et unde iide T. K. & A. per etc. Attornatum suum dicunt qd cum pdict E. fuit seisitus de vigint acris pasture cum pertin in W. in Com pdicte in dominico suo ut de feodo Et sic inde seisit existen idem E. (tali die & anno) apud W. pdict per quandam Indenturam suam inter ipsum E. per nomen E. M. etc. ex una parte & pfat H. I. per nomen etc. ex altera parte fact cujus alteram partem sigillis pdict (Def.) signat iidem T. K. & A. hic in Curia proferunt cujus dat est iisdem die & anno admisisset concessit & ad firmam tradidisset & per eandem Indenturam dimisit concessit & ad firmam tradidisset pfat H. I. tenementa pdict cum pertin per nomina omnium illarum suarum separalium sive parcellarum pasture (So recite the Deed and Covenants and the Covenant to repair, ut sequitur) Et pdict H. I. pro seipso Executoribus Administratoribus & Assignatis suis convenisset & agreeasset ad & cum pdict E. M. Heredibus & Assignatis suis ꝑ Indenturam pdict modo & forma sequent videlicet qd ipse pdict H. I. Executores Administratores & Assignati sui de tempore in cempus & ad omnia tempora durante dicta dimissione (Anglice Lease) ad eorum vel alicujus eorum propria custag' & mis manutenerent repararent & custodierent sepes fossas pontes januas parca (Anglice Pounds) repagula palos (Anglice Pales) posts fensuras (Anglice Fences) & clausuras (Anglice Enclosures) dictis pmissis spectan in & per omnes requisite (Anglice needful) & reparaciones quando necessitas requiret & ad quamlibet ꝑtem inde sufficient reꝑat manutent & custodit ut ipsi recepissent eadem in fine expiratione vel all determinatione dimissionis pdict pdict E. W. Heredibus vel Assignatis suis quiet & pacifice relinquerent & sursum redderent prout ꝑ eandem indenturam inter alia plenius apparet Virtute cujus dimissionis pdict H. I in tenementa pdict cum ꝑtin except pexcept intravit & fuit inde possessionat ipso H. I. sic inde possessionat existen & pdict E. M. de reversione tenementorum pdict cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de feodo seisit existen id E. M. postea scilicet (tali die & anno) in tenementa pdict cum ꝑtin super possessionat ipsius H. I. inde intravit & de eisdem tenementis cum ꝑtin cum assensu & consensu pdict H. I. adtunc feoffavit pdict Annam dum ipsa sola fuit Habend & tenend eidem Anne here & Assignatis suis imꝑpetuum Virtute cujus quidem feoffament eadem Anna dum ipsa sola fuit fuit seisita de tenementis pdict cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de feodo ipsa Anna sic inde possessionat existen pdict H. I in tenementa pdict clamando terminum suum pdict inde intravit & fuit inde possessionat pro residuo termini pdict Et sic inde possessionat existen ac eadem Anna de reversione tenementorum pdict cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de feodo seisita existen eadem Anna postea scilicet (tali die & anno) apud W. pdict cepit in virum pdict T. per quod iidem T. & A. fuer durante residuo pdict termino decem annorum seisit de reversione tenementorum pdict cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de feodo in jure ipsius Anne usque & ad finem termini pdict & abind semper postea hucusque iide T. & A. fuerunt & adhuc seisiti existunt de tenement pd cum ꝑtin in dominico suo ut de feodo in jure ipsius A. Et iide T. & A. ulterius dicunt qd pd tempore confect Indenture pd necnon tempore prime intrationis pd H. I. in tenementa pdict cum ꝑtin Virtute dimission pdict omnia & singula sepes fosse pontes janua parca (Anglice Pounds) repagula pali (Anglice Pales) fensure & clausum pdict tenementis cum ꝑtin superius dimiss. spectan fuerunt bene & sufficient reꝑat Quodque post confectionem Indenture pdict & post desponsalia inter ipsos T. & A. celebrat & ante diem impetrationis brevis originalis ipsorum T. & A. nec non ante finem termini pdict scilicet (tali die & anno) & ab eodem vicesimo die etc. usque & ad finem termini pdict sepes videlt mille perticat sepium quodlibet perticat inde precii 2 s. janue videlicet 20 janue quelibet janua inde pretii 10 s. pale videlicet mille pale quelibet pala inde precii 4 d. pdict tenementis cum ꝑtin suꝑius dimiss. spectan fuer fract dirupt prostrate & in magno decasu ꝓ defectu reparationis inde Et qd sepes janue pala sic fract dirupt & prostrate exist●n ꝑ pdict H. I in fine termini pdict eisdem T. & A. relict fuer minime reparat contra formam & effectum Indenture pdict pdict tamen H. I. licet sepius requisite pdict sepes januas & pala reparare minime curavit Et sic iidem T. & A. dicunt qd ipse H. I. Executores Administratores & Assignati sui de tempore in tempus & ad omnia tempora durante dimissione (Anglice Lease) ad eorum vel alicujus propria custag' & mis manutenerent reparerent & custodirent sepes januas & pala etc. dictis pmissis spectan in & per omnes requisite (Anglice needful) & reꝑationes quando necesse requireret Et eadem & quamlibet partem inde sufficienter reparat manutent & custodit ut ipsi recepissent eadem in fine expirationis vel all determinationis dimission pdict pdict E. M. Heredibus vel Assignatis suis quiet & pacifice relinquerent & sursum redderent eisdem T. & A. non tenur sed infreger ac ill eyes hucusque contradixerunt & adhuc contradicunt Vnde dicunt qd deteriorat sunt & damna habent ad valenc etc. Narratio pro Administrat ' de bonis non administrat ' per uxor ' ejus versus duos Executores. H. G. & Anna uxor ejus execut testamenti A. C. nuꝑ dict etc. & Isabel Coexecutrix testamenti pd summon fuer ad respond W. H. administrat bonorum & catallorum que fuer I R. per juditham R. Administratricem bonorum & catallorum que fuer pfat I. qui obiit intestat non administrat de placito quod reddant ei 30 l. quas ei injuste detinet Et unde idem W. per etc. Attornatum suum dic qd cum pdict A. C. in vita sua (die loco & anno) ꝑ quoddam scriptum suum obligatorium etc. concessisset se teneri pfat I. in vita sua in pdict 30 l. solvend eidem I cum inde requisitus fuisset pdict tamen A. C. in vita sua ac pdict Anna & Isabel post mortem ipsius A. dum eadem Anna sola fuit nec non iidem H. & Anna & Isabel post desponsalia inter eosdem H. & Annam celebrat licet sepius requisite pdict 30 l. pfat I. in vita sua seu pdict W. & judithe in vita ipsius Iudithe post mortem ipsius Iohannis necnon eidem W. post mortem ipsius Iudithe cui administratio omnium bonorum & catallorum que fuer pdict johannis tempore mortis sue pdict judith administratric bonorum & catallorum que fuer pfat johannis non administrat ꝓ tall die & anno apud G. post mortem ipsius Iudithe commissa fuit non reddider sed ill eyes reddere contradixer ac pdict H. & Anna & Isabel ill ' eidem Willielmo adhuc reddere contradic ac injuste detinent unde dic qd deteriorat etc. Aliter. I. W. & E. uror ejus administratrix omnium & singulorum bonorum & catallorum jurium & creditorum que fuer R. F. tempore mortis sue ꝑ S. F. nuꝑ Executricem testamenti pdict R. non administrat queruntur de R. B. nuꝑ de L. Armig alias dict R. B. de Interiori Templo London Gen in custodia Marr etc. de placito qd reddat eye centum libras legalis monete Anglie quas eye injuste detinet ꝓ eo videlicet qd cum pdict R. B. (tall die & anno) apud L. pdict videlicet in Parochia beat Marie de Arcubus in Warda de Cheap ꝑ quoddam scriptum suum obligatorium sigil ' ipsius R. sigillat Curieque dicti Domini Regis nunc hic ostens' cujus dat est eisdem die & anno cogn se teneri & firmiter obligar pfat R. F. in vita sua in pdict centum solid solvend eide R. F. cum inde requisitus esset pdict tamen R. B. licet requisitus etc. pdict centum libras pfat R. in vita sua seu pfat S. in vita sua post mortem pdict R. F. seu eidem E. post mortem pdict S. dum sola fuit cui quidem E. administrac omnium & singulorum bonorum & catallorum jurin & creditorum que fuer pdict R. in tempore vite sue ꝑ S. F. nuꝑ Executor testamenti pdict predict R. non administrat cum testament pfat R. annex ꝑ _____ post ipsius S. mortem scilc (tall die & anno) apud L. pdict in Parochia & Warda pdict debit modo commissa fuit seu eisdem I & E. post deponsalia inter ipsos celebrat vel eorum alicui non solvit set ill ' pfat R. F. in vita sua ac pfat S. post mortem ipsius dum sola fuit ac eisdem I & E. post desponsalia inter ipsos celebrat & eorum cuilibet solvere omnino contradixit & ill ' eisdem I & E. adhuc solvere contradic ac in just detinet in retardatione administrationis bonorum & catallorum pdict & ad dampnum ipsorum I & E. 40 l. & inde ꝓduc sectam etc. Et ꝓferunt hic in Curia dicti Domini Regis nunc iidem I & E. literas administratorias etc. Indebitatus Assumpsit per virum & uxorem pro denariis accommodat ' defendant ' per uxorem dum sola fuit. Kanc ss. C. B. & H. uxor ejus queruntur de I L. in custod Marr etc. ꝓ eo videlt qd pd I L. tall ' die & anno apud L. in Com pd indebitat fuisset pfat H. dum ipsa sola fuit in 16 l. legalis etc. pro diversis denariorum summis ꝑ pd G. dumb sola fuit pfat Def. suꝑ requisitionem ipsius Def. ante tempus illud accommodat pdictoque I L. eidem I H. sic inde indebitat existen idem I in consideratione inde postea scilt (eodem primo die Aprilis die & anno) apud L. pd in Com pdict suꝑ se assumpsit pfat H. dum ipsa sola fuit ad tunc & ibidem fideliter promisit qd ipse idem Def. pdict 16 l. eidem H. cum inde requisite esset bene & fideliter solvere & contentare vellet Cumque etiam pdict H. dum ipsa sola fuit scilt (primo die Aprilis die & anno supradict) apud L. pdict in Com pdict ad special instanc & requisition pdict Def. mutuo dedisset & accommodasset eidem Def. 20 l. similis monete pdict Def. in consideratione inde postea scilicet eodem primo die Aprilis anno vicesimo supradict apud L. pdict in Com pdict super se assumpsit pfateque H. dum ipsa sola fuit adtunc & ibidem fideliter promisit qd ipse idem Def. pdict 20 l. eidem H. cum inde postea similiter requisit esset bene & fideliter solve & contentare vellet pd tamen Def. seꝑal promissiones & assumptiones suas pdict pfat H. dum sola fuit in forma pdict fact minime curans sed machinans & fraudulenter intendens pdict G. dum ipsa sola fuit & pdict C. & H. post desponsalia inter eos celebrat in hac parte callide & subdole decipere & defraudare pdict separal ' denariorum summas in toto se attingen add & pfat H. dum ipsa sola fuit aut eisdem C. & H. post desponsalia inter eos celebrat vel eorn alter non solvit juxta separales promissiones & assumptiones ipsius Def. nec eye aut eorum alter proinde hucusque aliqualiter contentavit licet ad hoc faciend pdict Def. ꝑ pdict E. dum ipsa sola fuit ac ꝑ pdict C. & H. post desponsalia inter eos celebrat scilicet tali die & anno apud L. pdict in Com pdict requisite fuisset sed pdict libr eisdem C. & H. vel eorum alter solvere hucusque omnino recusavit & adhuc recusat unde iidem C. & E. dic qd ipsi deteriorat sunt Et dampnum habent ad valentia Et inde etc. Def. in Ejectment placitat Covert Baron. Def. venit & petit judicium de brevi pdict quia dicit qd ipsa eadem (Def.) die impretrationis brevis originalis ipsorum (Quer) fuit cooꝑta de quodam A. B. viro suo videlicet apud S. pdict Et hoc parat etc. unde ex quo pdict A. non nominatur in brevi pdict eadem (Def.) petit judicium de brevi illo etc. Repl. Cassari non debet quia dic qd pdict (Def.) die impetracionis brevis originalis ipsius (Quer) scilicet (tali die) apud S. pdict fuit sola absque hoc quod predict (Def.) die impetrationis brevis originalis ipsius (Quer) fuit cooperta de A. B. viro suo prout pdict (Def.) superius Allegavit Et hoc etc. Vnde ex quo pdict (Def.) transgress. & ejection pdict superius cogn idem Quer petit judicium & possession termini sui pdict una cum damnis etc. sibi adjudicar. Issue sur le Traverse. Et pdict (Def.) ut prius dicit qd ipsa die impetrationis brevis originalis ipsius Quer fuit cooperta de pfat A. B. viro suo prout eadem Def. superius allegavit Et hoc etc. Covert Baron plead post original ' purchased. Et pdict (Def.) in propria persona sua ven & petit judicium de brevi pdicto etc. quia dic qd pd (Quer) postquam ipsa tulisset breve suum pdictn versus eundem (Def.) scilicet (tali die & anno) apud G. pdict cepit in virum quendam I C. adhuc superstitem & in plena vita existen (videlicet) apud G. pd & sic pdict (Quer) modo cooꝑta de viro existit Et hoc etc. Vnde petit judicium de brevi illo etc. Cassari non debet quia dicit qd ipsa die impetrationis brevis pdict ac semper postea sola fuit & non cooꝑta de pfat A. B. prout pdict (Def.) superius allegavit Et hoc petit qd inquiratur ꝑ Patriam. Qd ' Quer ' cepit virum post darrein continuance. Dicit qd post ult contin placiti pdicti (scilicet) post tale return ult pterit de quo die loquela pd ult continuat fuit hic usque ad hauc diem scilicet Octab Hill & ante hunc die scilt primo die & ann etc. apud A. pdict pd (Quer) cepit in virum quendam A.B. qui quide A. adhuc superstes & in plena vita existit videlicet apud A. pdict Et hoc etc. Vnde etc. Cassari non debet quia dic qd post pdict (tale return & ante pdict Octav Hill ipsa (Quer) non cepit pdict A. in virum suum ꝓut pd Quer allegavit Et hoc petit etc. Aliter. Defendens placitat cooperta de Baron. Actio non quia dicit qd eadem D. tempore exhibitionis bille pd fuit coopert de quodam S. adtunc viro suo qui quidem S. apud E. in Com Warr adhuc superstes & in plena vita existit Qui quidem S. non nominatur in billa pd unde petit judicium si etc. Precludi non debet quia dic qd ipsa D. die impetrationis bille sue pdicte scilt (tali die & anno) fuit sola absque hoc qd ipsa eodem die seu unquam postea fuit cooꝑta de pd S. ꝓut ipsa () superius allegavit Et hoc etc. Et pd D. dicit qd ipsa () tempore exhibitionis ville pd fuit cooperta de pd S. adtunc viro suo ꝓut ipsa superius allegavit Et hoc etc. N'unque accouple en loyal Matrimony. Actio non quia dicit qd eadem (Quer) nunquam fuit eidem R. legitimo matrimonio copulat Et hoc paratus est verificare ubi & quando ac ꝓut Cur hic considerav. etc. Vnde petit judicium etc. Repl '. Precludi non debet quia dic qd ipsa () apud S. in Com War in Diocess. C. & Litchf. pfat R. in legitimo matrimonio fuit copulat Et hoc paratus est verificare ubi & quando etc. ac ꝓut Curia Regis hic considerav. etc. Et quia hujusmodi cause cogn ad forum spectat Ecclesiasticum Ideo mandat est Episcopo L. & C. loci pd Diocessano qd convocat coram se in hac parte convocand rei veritat super pmissis diligenter inquir Et quid inde inquisit constare fac hic Crast ' Animarum per Literas suas Patentes & clausas idem dies dat est ꝑtibus pdict ibi etc. De Brevi, quia matrimonium non fuit solempnizatum inter Querentem & uxorem ejus die impetrationis ejusdem. ss. F. E. etc. summonitus fuit ad respond R. R. Gen & A. uxori ejus Executric testamenti W. G. Gen de placito qd reddat eye xx l. quas eye injuste detinet. Et pd F. per A. B. Attornatum suum venit & petit judicium de brevi pdicto quia dicit qd matrimonium die impetracionis brevis originalis pdict R. & A. inter eos secundum Legem Ecclesiasticam hujus Regni Anglie non fuit solemnizatum Et hoc paratus etc. Cassari non debet quia dicit qd matrimonium inter ipsos R. & A. diu ante impetrationem brevis originalis ipsorum R. & A. scilicet vicesimo die junii Anno Regni Domini Regis nunc primo secundum Legem Ecclesiastica hujus Regni Anglie fuit solemnizat videlicet apud B. pdict Et hoc petit etc. Debt against an Executrix and her Husband for Rend arrear on a Lease made to the former Husband. ET unde idem R. B. per I S. Attornatum suum dicit qd cum ipse tali die & anno apud etc. ꝑ quandam Indenturam suam inter ipsum R. B. ex una parte & pfat I. in vita sua ex altera parte cujus alteram partem sigil etc. dimissiset pfat I. in vita sua totum illud etc. habend etc. reddend etc. ꝑ equales portiones solvend Virtute cujus dimissionis pdict I. in vita sua in tenement pdict cum ꝑtin suꝑius dimiss. intravit & fuit inde possessionat Et sic inde possessionat existen tali die & anno apud H. pd condidit testamentum suum & pd M. Executricem ejusdem testamenti sui constituit Et postea scilicet eisdem die & anno apud I pd obiit de tenementis pd cum ꝑtin in forma pd possessionat post cujus mortem pd N. onus Executionis testamenti pd super se suscepit & in tenementa pd cum ꝑtin intravit & fuit inde possessionat & sic inde possessionat existen apud I pd cepit in virum pd M. N. ac pd 100 l. de redditu pd ꝓ uno anno integro finite ad (talem effectum) & ꝑ spacium 14 dierum prox. post idem festum eidem R. post mortem pd 1 aretro fuerunt & a huc existunt minime solut ꝑ quod actio accrevit etc. Dett per Baron & Feme Administrat ' d'Obligee versus Haeredem d'Obligor. T. S. nuꝑ de London Amiger filius & heres C. S. nuꝑ dict etc. summonit fuit ad respondend I. H. & jane uxor ejus administrat bonorum & catallorum que fuer T.C. Gen qui obiit intestat etc. de placito qd reddat eye 100 l. quas eye injuste detinet etc. Et unde iidem I & I. ꝑ I. S. Attornatum suum dicunt qd cum pdict C. pater T. S. cujus heres ipse est in vita sua secundo die Martii anno etc. apud London in Parochia etc. in Warda etc. ꝑ quodda scriptu suum obligatorium concessisset se teneri pfat T. C. in vita sua in pd 100 l. solvend eidem T. C. cum inde requisitus fuisset & ad eandem solutionem bene & fideliter faciend pd C. obligasset se & heredes suos ꝑ idem scriptum pd tamen C. in vita sua ac pd T. S. filius & heres ipsius C. post mortem ipsius C. licet sepius requisitus 100 l. pfat T. C. in vita sua seu eidem I. post mortem ipsius T. dum ipsa sola fuit cui administratio omnium bonorum & catallorum que fuer ejusdem T. tempore mortis sue W. D. Legum Doctorem Curie Prerogative Cantuar Magistrum Custodem sive Commissarum legitime constitut ibi die etc. anno etc. apud London in Parochia & Warda pd commissa fuit seu eisdem I & I. post disponsalia inter eos celebrat non reddiderunt sed ill eyes reddere contradixerunt ac pdict T. S. ill. eisdem I & I reddere contradicit ea injuste detinet Vnde dic qd deteriorat sunt & dampnum habet ad valenc & inde ꝓduc sectam Et ꝓferunt hic in Curia tam script pd quod debitum pd in forma pd testatur Cujus dat est pd secundo die Martii anno etc. quam Literas Administratorias pd Commissar que commissio Administrationis pd in forma pd testantur etc. Debt for Rent upon a Lease for years against Baron and Feme Executor of the Lessee. A B. Armiger queritur de I W. & E. uxor ejus Executrice testamenti & ultime voluntatis R. M. de placito qd reddant ei 30 l. quas ei injuste detinent etc. ꝓ eo videlicet qd cum idem A. B. die etc. ꝑ quandam Indenturam inter ipsum A. ex una parte & pfat R. M. in vita sua ex altera parte factam cujus alteram ꝑtem sigil ' pd R. M. signat idem A. B. hic in Curia ꝓfert cujus dat est iisdem die & anno dimisisset concessit & ad firmam tradidisset dicto R. M. totum illud messuagium etc. habend & occupand dictum messuagium & omnia alia pmissa ꝑ Indenturam pd dimissa sive mentionat fore dimissa & quamlibet ꝑtem ejusdem dict R. M. Exec Administr & Assignat suis a festo etc. prox. sequen dat Indentur pd usque plenam finem & terminum etc. extunc etc. si idem A. B. & E. tunc uxor ejus & I ejus filia vel aliquis eorum tam diu viverit reddendo (ꝓut ꝑ Lease) ꝓut ꝑ eandem Indenturam inter alia plenius apparet Virtute cujus dimissionis pdict R. M. in Crastino pd festi etc. prox. post dat Indentur pd in messuag ' pd cum ꝑtin intravit & fuit inde possessionat Et sic inde possessionat existen Idem R. M. postea scilicet die etc. apud etc. condidit testamentum & ultimam voluntatem suam in scriptis & per eandem ultimam voluntatem suam predictam E. Executricem testamenti sui predict constituit & ordinavit Et postea scilicet die etc. anno etc. apud etc. obiit de messuagio pd cum ꝑtin sicut pfertur possess. post cujus morte pd E. testament pd in debita juris forma ꝓbavit & onus Executionis testamenti sui pd super se suscepit Et ut Execut & Testament pd in messuag pd cum ꝑtin intravit & fuit inde possessionat ratione Executionis Testamenti pd Et sic inde possessionat existen eadem A. postea scilicet (tali die & anno) apud etc. cepit in virum pdict I W. Virtute cujus iidem I & E. in jure ipsius E. fuer & adhuc existunt de messuag ' pd cum ꝑtin possessionat ratione Executionis Testament pd etc. 30 l. de redditu pd ꝓ uno anno integro finite ad festum etc. vit pterit post mortem pdict A. B. eidem R. B. aretro fac & adhuc existunt insolut ꝑ quod actio accrevit etc. (ut in al.) THE TABLE. A Abatement. OF a Writ or Suit in Law or Equity by Marriage or Death, pending the Suit, Page 235, 236, 237 The Wife is put in before the Husband, it abates the Writ, 236 Feme Sole Plaintiff depending a Bill in Chancery, takes Husband, it abates the Writ; how if she were Defendant, 237 Acceptance. What things the Wife may make good after the death of her Husband by Acceptance, 69 Acceptance of a Conditional Estate for a Jointure a good Bar of Dower, 116 Remitter by Acceptance, 155 Acceptance of Rent after the Husband's death, affirms his Feoffment of the Wife's Land, 165 What Acceptance of the Husband shall affirm a voidable Lease, 176 By Acceptance of Rent a Feoffment affirmed, 193 Acts. What Acts, Charges or Forfeitures of the Husband shall charge the Wife after his death, 58 What Acts done by the Baron and Feme shall be construed as Acts of the Wife or not, so as to bind her after the death of the Husband, 63 For what Acts or Torts of the wife the husband shall be punished, and e contra, 65 What Acts done or Contracts made by the wife shall bind the husband, 214 Wire or for what Acts of the wife the husband shall be chargeable or not, 219 Actions. What Things or Actions the wife shall have after the death of the husband, 66 What Actions Reals, what Actions Personals, 66, 67, 68 Actions brought by Baron and Feme as Executrix or Administratrix, 231, 232 Actions which the husband may have for Wrongs done to the wife, 238 Joinder in Action. Vide title Joinder. Diversity between Actions which affirm Property, and which disaffirm Property, 242 Actions brought by a Feme Covert without her husband, 270 Chose in Action, 222 Account altars not the Action of Indebit. Assumpsit, 245 Account brought against Baron and Feme, 298 Administratrix. Vide Executrix. If a Feme Covert die Intestate, in what Cases Administration may be granted of her Goods, 222 What Things the Administratrix of the wife shall have, and not the husband, ibid. Where the husband shall be charged with the Waste of the wife Administratrix; the manner of the Proceed of the Sheriff in such Case, 227 Of Action brought by Baron and Feme as Executrix or Administratrix, 231 Where and how Administration belongs to the husband or wife, 233 Agreement. Disagreement. What Agreement between the husband and wife shall stand good, or be extinguished by the Marriage, 47 For what Things during the Coverture the wife shall be charged after the death of the husband, by her Agreement or Disagreement, 176 Alteration. Alteration of the Property of Goods, how and by what Act, 226 Appeal. Appeal brought by a Woman, 275 None but a wife de jure shall have an Appeal, ibid. Appeal is annexed to the Widowhood, 226 It must be brought within the Year and Day, ibid. Process in Appeal, 276, 277 Plead or Bars in Appeal, ibid. Trials in Appeal, 279 In what Cases the husband shall be compelled to appear and put in Bail for his wife, or to remain in Prison, 304 Assignment. Assignment of Estate and Assignment of Contract, 50 Assignment of Dower, 93 Assignment of Rent out of Land pleaded in Dower, 102 Where the husband shall be Assignee to the wife, 178 Assent. What's a good Assent or Claim as Executrix, and not as Legatee, 234 Assent of a Feme Covert to a Legacy, 169, 170 Term extinct in one respect, yet remains Assets' in another respect, In Assize Baron and Feme must join on Disseisin of the wife's Land, 246 Assumpsit. vide Action on the Case, tit. Case, 262, 263 Covenant for further Assurance, 166, 167 Attainder. Where the wife shall loose her Dower by the Attainder of her husband, 89 By Attainder or Outlawry of the husband, the wife's Term is a Gift in Law, 209 Attachment of the husband if the wife appear not on a Subpoena, 310 What Act of the husband or wife shall amount to an Attornment, 141 Avowry. In Avowry for Rend Baron and Feme must join, 248, 250, 251 Avowry for Rent out of the wife's Land, in whose name it ought to be, 143 Averment. Averment of a Life, 313 Averment that she is Feme Covert, 314 Award. How and wherein the wife shall be bound by her husband's Submission to an Award, 57 Audita Querela brought against Baron and Feme, 298 B Baron and Feme. WHat Acts the husband, may do to the wife, and the wife to the husband, though they are one Person in Law, 5 Who shall be said to be Baron and Feme, 28 What Things and Actions the husband shall have after the death of the wife, 68 What Things the wife may make good after the death of the Baron, ibid. Where Baron and Feme shall take by Intireties, or by Moieties, 158 Where the wife's Grant is voided when she joins with her husband, and where not, 167 How a Man may execute an Estate to his wife, 170 What amounts to a Disposition of the wife's Term by the husband, so as to vest the Interest in him, his Executors or Administrators, 204 What power the husband hath over the wife's Term. Vid. Term. Where the husband shall be punished for Torts done by the wife, 219, 220 Of Actions the husband may have for Wrongs done to the wife, 238 In what Actions husband shall be charged after the death of the wife, 300 In what Cases the husband shall be compelled to put in Bail for his wife, 307 In mean Process if the wife be taken before the husband, she shall be discharged; not so in case of Execution, ibid. Bastard. Who shall be said to be a Bastard or not, 12 Bastard in what Court to be proved, 13 General Bastardy, where triable, 14 Special Bastardy, where triable, 14 Bastard by the Common Law, and Mulier by the Civil Law, 15 Bastard by the Spiritual Law, and Mulier by our Law, 16 Bastardy, where triable, 17 Of Bastard Eigne & Mulier puisne in case of Descent, 19 How Estates may be limited to a Bastard by a reputed name, or not, 20 Who only may writ to the Bishop to certify Bastardy, 18 Of the Bishop's Certificate to prove Marriage, 40 C Case. ACtion on the Case for scandalous Words spoken against Baron and Feme by Baron and Feme, and what Judgement must be, 281, 282, 283 Action on the Case lies not against a Feme Covert for negligent keeping of Fire, 259 Feme Covert affirming herself to be a Feme Sole to entice another to Marriage, Action on the Case lies not, 297 Charge. What Acts, Charges or Forfeitures of the husband shall bind the wife after his death, 58 How the husband may charge the Land of the wife by Rent, Statute, Judgement, etc. 59, 60 Where the Baron and Feme shall join in Challenge, 326 Chattels. Chattels Real, Mixed, Personal; and what Estate the Baron gains in them by the Intermarriage of his wife, 51 Ghosts in Action, what Estates the Baron gains in them by his Intermarriage, 222 Commissioners. Commissioners taking a Fine of a Feme Covert, and how their Irregularity punished, 133 Common. Prescription for Common in jure Uxoris, 266 Conditions. What Conditions in Law shall bind the wife or not, 25 Condition Subsequent and not Precedent, 200 What Contracts by the husband made by the wife shall charge the husband, or not, 214 Copyhold. If a Surrender is a Discontinuance, 149, 155 What Acts of the husband shall destroy or forfeit the Custom of the wife's Copyhold Estate, or the Estate or not, 195 Feme Copyholder who hath a Widow's Estate shall not avoid a Lease made by her husband, 195 A Woman that holds durante viduitate by Custom, may make a Lease before admittance, 196 Surrenders, Grants of Copyhold Estate by Baron and Feme, and the Construction, ibid. The wife to join with the husband in the Grants of Copyholds, 197 Customs. Customs of Manors as to Wives, Widows, etc. what are good and what not, 197, 198 Covenant. Covenant for further Assurance on Request by two Femes, and one dies before Request, 166 Feme Covenant by Warranty in a Fine sur concessit, is bound in an Action of Covenant, 129 Covenant where to be brought by Baron and Feme, 250 Covenants in a Deed of Separation between Baron and Feme, and for allowing yearly Maintenance and Plead, 202 Costs. Vide Damages. Coverture. Of delivering Goods to a Feme Covert not knowing her to be so, 217 Coverture, not to be determined by Affidavit, 332 Courtesy. Tenant by Courtesy. The nature of this Estate, 70 Of what Estate a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy or not, ibid. If one shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of an Estate in suspense or not, ibid. In what case the husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy where the wife's Estate is defeasible by Condition, 72 Four things belong to the Estate of Tenant by the Courtesy, 73 What Seisin of the wife it must be that makes the husband Tenant by the Courtesy, 74 How a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy in respect of Issue, and how he must pled the having of Issue, 75 Custom. Custom of London as to Goods how the wife may dispose of them, 54 Rationabili parte bonorum, according to the Custom of London, ibid. Cui in vita brought by a Woman, 274 D DAmages in Dower, 108 Where the husband shall recover Damages Sole, 335 Judgement that the Baron and Feme shall recover Damages, ibid. Death. Death after Verdict and before the day in Bank, it abates the Writ, 236 Debt. Debt suspended, 225 Where Debt for Rent to be brought by Baron or Feme, or both, 250 Of Baron and Feme's joining in Debt on Bond, 233, 255, 256 Debt against Baron and Feme, how to be brought, 291, 292 Where Baron and Feme shall join in Detinue, 268 Declaration. Declaration of Uses on a Fine, 137 Declaration as to Wares taken up by the wife, 217 Declaration on Devastavit against Baron and Feme Executrix, 227 Debt by Baron and Feme on Bond made to the wife dum sola, how to declare, 254 Declaration in Trespass and Battery by Baron and Feme, 257, 258 Declaration in Action against Baron and Feme for scandalous words, 284, 286 In Declaration he saith Baron and Feme were seized, and shows not how the Estate began; and he need not, being but a Conveyance to an Action on the case, 313 Prescription alleged in Baron, and Feme, 313 Averment of a Life, ibid. Averment that she is a Feme Covert, 314 Deed. What shall be said to be the Deed of the Baron and Feme, 164 One Deed cannot enure from one by way of Interest, and from another by way of Estoppel, 252 Where a Descent cast during the Coverture shall toll the Entry of the wife, and where not, 140 Where and to what purpose a Feme Covert shall be said a Disseisoress without her proper Act or Entry, and where not, 144 Feme Covert cannot make a Disseisin to the use of the husband, 145 Where the default of the wife shall be the default of the husband, 301 Where the wife shall be received on the husband's default, and e contra, 302 Discontinuance. What Act of the husband was a Discontinuance of the wife's Land at Common Law, Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 28. explained as to Discontinuance; in what cases the wife may enter after the Discontinuance of the husband, 146 Discontinuance, what, 147 Discontinuance or not by the Agreement of the wife, 148 Divorce. The nature of it, and what are good causes of Divorce, 336, 337 The several kinds of Divorce, 337 What Divorces declare the Marriage voided ab initio, ibid. Of the Divorces causa Praecontractus, Frigiditatis, Affinitatis, Saevitiae, which dissolve the Marriage a vinculo, 338 The consequence of a Divorce a Mensa & Thoro, 340 Divorce pleaded, 323 By Divorce causa Praecontractus the first Baron and Feme are complete Baron and Feme without other Solemnity, 338 If the Parties divorced causa impotentis intermarry others, and have Issue, whether the Issue are Bastards, 339 What's a good ground to sue a Divorce causa Saevitiae, 340 What Acts are done by the husband shall stand good notwithstanding the Divorce, 341 Of Suits or Actions after Divorce, 342 Where and in what cases notwithstanding a Divorce, the wife shall be endowed or not, 343 What Divorce shall bastardise the Issue or not, 344 Dower. The nature of it, 78 Qualifications of the wife to enable her to Dower, ibid. Of the Endowment of a wife de facto and de jure, 79 What Seisin the husband must have to make the wife dowable, 29, 80 Of what Seisin of the husband the wife shall not be endowed, 80 How she shall be endowed of an entire Inheritance, 82 How she shall be endowed of improved Lands, 84 Of what Estate the wife shall not be endowed, ibid. How she shall be endowed of Lands in Mortgage, 87 For and in respect of what disability a woman shall not be endowed, 89 Where the wife shall loose her Dower by the Attainder of her husband or not, ibid. What acts of the wife shall bar her of her Dower, 90 What persons may assign Dower or not, What Assignment of Dower is against Common Right, 94 What things may be assigned in lieu of Dower, ibid. Endowment by Meets and Bounds. 95 Assignment of Dower to be made, 96 The Writ and Declaration in Dower and Plead, 100, 101 What Pleas are good or not in bar of Dower, 101 What Divorce is a good bar of Dower, 105 Judgement and Execution in Dower. 109, 110, 111 Devastavit. Baron and Feme committed to the Fleet on Devastavit, 228 The husband charged with a Devastavit of the Woods tho' not Assets' come to his hands, ibid. Devastavit returned against Baron and Feme, the Feme dies, the husband shall be charged, 229 E. Ejectment. LEase of Ejectment by Baron and Feme, 177 Election. Where it is at the Election of the husband to join the wife with him in Actions, 244, 245 Election as to the woman's taking by Jointures or Dower, 123, 130 Elopement, 90 Emblements. Where the wife shall have the Emblements, and where the husband, 174 Error. Where Baron and Feme shall join in a Writ of Error or not, 268 Husband cannot assign Error without the wife to reverse Outlawry against them, 269 Error may be assigned that she was a Feme Covert at the time of the appearance, though she appeared and pleaded as a Feme sole, 322 Writ of Error brought by all for the Coverture of one, 331 Escape. Where Baron and Feme shall join in Escape or not, 262 Debt on Escape against Baron and Feme, 292 The Escape of the husband is the Escape of the wife, 308 Baron and Feme in Execution and the wife escapes, whether the Action lies against the Sheriff, 334 Estoppel, 321 Where the Sheriff shall take advantage of an Estoppel, 325 Execution. Judgement and Execution in Dower, 111 Baron and Feme obtain Judgement in Debt in the right of his wife, the wife dies, yet the husband shall have Execution on this Judgement, and not the Administrator of the wife, 331 In what Cases a Feme Covert may be taken in Execution or not, 331 Execution vide Administrator. How a Feme Covert may make an Executor, and how she may be made Executrix, 221 If a Feme Covert dies intestate in what cases Administration shall be granted of her Goods, 222 What things the Administratrix of the wife shall have, and not the husband, ibid. Debt recovered by Baron and Feme Executrix, and they have Judgement, the Feme dies, the Baron shall not have Execution. 223 Feme Legatee and Executrix, ibid. What things Feme Covert Executrix may do without her Husband, 224 Obligee makes the wife of one of the Obligors Executrix, Quid operatur, 225 Obligor makes the Executrix of the Obligee his Executrix, Quid operatur, ibid. Feme Executrix of the Debtee takes the Debtor to husband, Quid operatur. ibid. Feme Executrix takes the Debtor to husband, Quid operatur, ibid. Feme obligee takes the Obligor to husband. ibid. Executrix made divers Bonds to the Creditors of the Testator, and than marries, the husband may release to the value of the Testators Goods. 226 Where the husband shall be charged with the Waste of the wife Administratrix, vide Devastavit. Debt on Bond by Baron and Feme Executrix, and they have Judgement, Feme dies, the husband shall not have Execution, and why, 230 Actions brought by Baron and Feme as Executor or Administrator, 231, 232 Extinguishment. Where and by what means a Term is extinguishable, 49 Diversities between a Feoffment and Bargain and Sale as to the Extinguishment of the Term of the wife, 208 Extents of the wifes Term. ibid. Exchange. Of the husband's Exchange of the Land of the wife, and what shall be a good confirmation of it by the wife, 167, 170 In Dower, 107 By Evidence of the wife she and her husband were discharged of a Judgement. 326 Husband admitted to be a witness and where not, 328, 329 F. Feme Covert. THE Nature of Coverture, 3 In what cases Feme Covert and Infant differ, 4 In what case the Child may choose his own Father, 12 Privileges of a Feme Covert, 24 What privilege the wife shall have by reason of her husband's privilege in Actions, 26 What the husband gains of the wife's Fee-simple by the Intermarriage, 52 Forfeiture. What Acts, Charges or Forefeitures of the husband shall bind the wife after his death, Vide Charge, 58 What act of the husband amounts to a Forfeiture of the wife's Land, 61 What acts of the husband amount to a Forfeiture of the wife's Copyhold Estate, 194 Of a Feme sole Merchant, 270 Where a Feme Covert may sue sole, 286 Of a Feme Coverts being a Purchaser, and how it shall be good, 170 Feoffment by the husband of the wife's Land, 165 Feoffment of the husband destroys a Contingent Use, ibid. Fine. The reason why a Feme Covert is bound by her Fine, 125 Of a Fine levied by a Feme Covert as Feme Sole, 126 The operation of a Fine by Baron and Feme, 127 Stat. 32 H. 8. cap. 28. explained, ibid. Feme by Fine bars herself of a possibility, 128 Where a Fine enures as a Release, 129 Feme Covert by a warranty in a Fine sur concessit is bound in an Action of Covenant, ibid. Fine by the wife docks a Trust, 131 Baron and Feme levy a Fine the Feme being within age, the whole Fine shall be reversed and not quoad uxorem only, ibid. Entry of the Kings-silver, 132, 133 Of Commissioners taking a Fine of a Feme Covert, 133 Where a Feme Covert shall be examined or not, 134 When and where a Feme Covert shall be barred by Fine and Non-claim, 136 Declaration of Uses on a Fine, 136, 137 Where Baron and Feme shall join in a Forceable Entry, 268 G. Guardian. FEme Covert Infant levied a Fine, in Error the Court will not permit the husband to disavow the Guardian, 132 Grant. Where and in what cases the wife's Grant, if she join with her husband shall be voided or not, 167 Of Christian Names of Men and Women in Grants, 171 By Grant of Omnia bona & catalla what passeth, 232 I Indictment. AGainst Baron and Feme, 300 Information. Of Recusances, 229 Where and in what Cases wives are Indictable without their husbands, 239 Infant. Wherein Infant and Feme Cover differ, 4 The exact time for the Birth of an Infant, 9 The Court is to judge of all the Infancy of a Feme Covert and not the Jury, 123, 132 jointures. The nature and reason of them, 113 What Estates are Jointures within the Stat. 27 H. 8. c. 10. or not. 114 What is a good Jointure within the Stat. 11 H. 7. c. 10. 117 What is a good Consideration within that Stat. 120 What Agreement or Waver a Woman may make as to her Jointure, 123 Plead as to Jointure, 123, 124 Where Baron and Feme shall be Joint Tenants, or take by Moieties or Intierties. 158 What amounts to a severance of the Jointure. 163 joinder in Action. Where and in what Action Baron and Feme shall join or not. 241 Set out in 4 or 5 Rules. 242, 244 In what Cases the Husband only shall have the Action, ibid. judgement. In Dower, 108 Judgement in case for Scandalous words brought by Baron and Feme, 284 Judgement in Trespass against Baron and Feme, quod capiantur, where good or not. 294 By Evidence of the wife she and her husband were discharged of a Judgement. 328 Where Judgement against Baron and Feme shall bind the husband surviving or not, 330 Where the husband shall be charged with a Devastavit, and so shall the wife if she survive, 331 Debt or Bond against Baron and Feme and Judgement; the wife dies, yet the husband shall be charged, 331 If a Feme die after a Verdict, no Judgement can be given against the husband, 332 In Action against Baron and Feme, where Judgement shall be quod capiantur. 333 Where Baron and Feme must be both in misericordia. 334 L. Lease, Vide. Term. LEase by the husband of the wife's Land, and how and wherein it shall bind the wife or not, 172 Wherein a Lease enures by way of Interest and not by way of Estoppel. 173 Of Lease for Lives made by Baron and Feme, and what shall be a good Lease warranted by Stat. 32 H. 8. c. 28. and the Qualifications of such Leases to bring them within the Statute, 173, 174 What Acceptance of the husband shall affirm avoidable Lease, 176 Prouisoes and Powers to make Leases, Vide Proviso. Lease of Ejectment by Baron and Feme, 177 Leases for years made to Baron and Feme. 178 Diversity between a Lease for Life and a Lease for Years made to a Feme Covert, 178 When the husband shall be Assignee to the wife, ibid. When an Estate made to a Feem Covert de novo shall vest and when a new Lease made to a Feme who was Lessee before, 179 Lease for Life made to Baron and Feme. ibid. Lease to Baron and Feme for their Lives, the remainder to the Survivor of them for Years, the husband's grants over the term for Years and dies, the wife shall have it, as if the remainder had been to the Executors of the Survivor, ibid. How if the remainder had been to the Heirs of the Survivor, ibid. Lease for Life made by Baron and Feme. 180 Livery. Diversity where Livery is made by the lessor in person, and where by Letter of Attorney, 180 Livery within the view not revoked by Mortgagor, 44 Legacy. Of a Feme Coverts assent to a Legacy, 169, 170 What is a good assent or claim as Executrix or as Legatee. 235 M. Marriage. WHen the Solemnisation of Marriage in the Church began. 2 Marriage out of the Canonical Hours, and in a public House late at night; good if done by one in Orders, 3 Libel for marrying without Licence, ibid. Of change of Name by Marriage, 5, 6 Time of Agreement or Disagreement to the Marriage when they Mary, infra annos nubiles. 29 What Marriages are within the Levitical Degrees or not, 31 Whether if Marriage be within the Levitical degrees or not, be determinable at Law or not, 34 Diversity between a Marriage in Right and a Marriage in possession, or de facto, and the Consequence thereof in Pleading, 39 What alterations are made by the Intermarriage: as to Name, as to alteration of Estates: as to Lease or Leases, Actions, vide Tit. Actions, 43 Where and in what Cases Marriage shall amount to a Countermand, Revocation, Release, Suspension, or Extinguishment, 45, 46, 47, 48 If a Marriage be a vinculo, of Livery, of Attornment, of a Will, of an Exchange, or of Arbitrament, or Copyhold, 45, 46 Mortgage. How a Woman shall be endowed in Law of Lands Mortgaged. 87 What Conditions in Marriages shall survive to the Husband or not, 207 If the Mortgage of the wife's Term does amount to a disposition in Law, 208 Of a Feme Sole Merchant, 270 Endowment by Metes and Bonds, 95 Suit against a Woman for exercising the Trade of Midwife, 273 Where the Baron and Feme shall take by Moieties and where by Intierties, Vide Jointure. N. OF Christian Names of Men and Women in Grants, 171 O. Outlawry. BY the Outlawry of the husband the wife's Term is a gift in Law, 209 By Outlawry the husband forfeits nothing of the Goods which the wife had as Executrix. 231 Latitat against J. S. and his wife, the wife was arrested, but the husband could not be taken; nothing can be done in this Case, without Bail be put in by the husband, and the wife was discharged, but the Remedy as by Outlawry, 305 But some say she shall lie in Prison till the husband appear for her, ibid. In process of Outlawry Bail refused for the Contempt of the wife, 308 Process against them till exigent, no supersedeas shall be received for the husband without the wife, 209 Exceptions to avoid an Outlawry of Baron and Feme, 310 She may not pled to Outlawry without her husband, 311 Outlawry pleaded, 324 P. PArtus sequitur Ventrem; where the Rule holds not, 21 Praraphernalia what, 65 Perjury. Baron and Feme convict of Perjury, 351 Pleading. How a Man must pled the having of Issue to entitle him to be tenant by the Courtesy, 75, 76 Plead in Dower, 101 Plead as to Jointures, 123 Plea in Abatement by Marriage or Death, 335 Where Non est factum may be pleaded to a Bond, 254 Plead in Appeal, 277 The wife cannot pled by herself, 294 Where the wife shall pled and have the same advantage in Pleading, as if she were a Feme sole, 315 Of the wife's Pleading without the husband, 315, 316 Of Pleading Coverture, 317 Of the Plea, of sola & inupta, 318 Why Feme Covert may pled Non est factum, and so cannot Infant, ibid. Conclusion of Pleas, ibid. Modo & forma, the effect of it in Pleading, 321 Plea by Estoppel, 329 Nil detinet pleaded to Action for Arrears of Rent, 322 Marriage averred, ibid. Release pleaded in Assumpsit, 323 Divorce pleaded, 323 324 Outlawry pleaded. 324 Where the Parol shall demur for the Nonage of the wife or not, 325 Plead in Divorce, 343 Possibilities. Possibilities not vested in the husband by Intermarriage, 206 Polygamy, 346 Of Precontract and the Effect of it in the Civil Law, 36 Prescription. Prescription for Common in jure uxoris, 266 Prescription alleged in Baron and Feme, 313 Privileges. Privileges of a Feme Covert, 24 Privileges in Suits, 26 Husband may not have Privilege as Attorney when Action is brought against him and his wife, 308 Diversity between Property in personal Goods, and a bore possession, 51 Prouisoes and Powers to make Leases, 175, 177 Prohibition not to trust his wife, the force of it, 218 Q. Quare Impedit. WHether Baron and Feme shall join, 279 Queen. How she is an exempt person from the King, 22 Queen Consort or Queen Dowager in case of Treason how to be tried, 23 The Penalty for any to marry the Queen Dowager without the King's Licence, ibid. Privilege of the Queen's Tenants, 24 R. Recovery Common. WHether a Feme Covert to be exaimned in a Recovery, 138 The Baron only is vouched, Quid operatur, 139 How a Feme Covert may be Tenant to a Praecipe, 138 Baron and Feme suffer a Recovery as Vouchees, it is a Forfeiture, 140 The wife within age in a Common Recovery, how to appear, ibid. Recovery by default, 141 Custom of London as to Recoveries, ibid. Recusancy. Information of Recusancy against Baron and Feme, 299 Release. What things of the husband the wife may release or discharge or not, 56 Release pleaded in Assumpsit, 323 Promise cannot be released till it come in Esse, 323 Release of the husband of the wife's Right, 169 Release of Money to be paid after the wife's decease, not good, ibid. Remitter. The nature and reason of Remitter, 151 What act shall make a Remitter to the wife, 152 Remitter wrought by a voidable Estate, 183 Remitter to Baron and Feme maugre the husband, ibid. Remainder expectant on Estate for Life worketh no Remitter, 154 Remainders remitted, ibid. Remitter by Acceptance, 155 Where the wife being remitted during the Coverture, may after the death of her husband wave her Remitter, and where not, 185 Where the Feme shall be in her Remitter nolens volens, 156 Not disagreement of the husband shall divest the Remitter, 871 Rent. Rend not to be reserved to a Stranger, 171 The husband grants a Rent out of the wife's Term, and dies; if the wife shall hold it discharged, and why, 172 What Arrears of Rent the Stat. 32 H. c. 37. gives the husband power to receive, 171 Feme Covert receives the Rents, the Terretenants not having notice of the Coverture; they must be paid again to the husband, 172 Where the husband shall be charged with the Arrears of the Rent, 173 Avowry for Rent out of the wife's Land, how to be brought, 174 Where the Executor of the husband shall have the Rent, and not the wife, ibid. Debt for Rent against Baron and Feme, 272 In Replevin, if the husband may avow Sole for the Rent, 299 Request. What is not a reasonable Request to levy a Fine, 133 Where Baron and Feme shall join in Rescous, 267 Where the wife shall be received upon the husband's default, and e contra, 302 S Seisin. SEisin in Deed and in Law, 74 What Seisin of the wife it must be which makes the husband Tenant to the Courtesy, ibid. In what Cases a Man shall be Tenant by the Courtesy of a Seisin in Law, ibid. Separate Maintenanc. Of Separate Maintenance and Disposition of the wife, 199 Separate Maintenance on a Proviso, and the Plead, 200 Money saved by the wife out of her Separate Maintenance, is to be disposed of by her, 202 Separation. Covenants in a Deed of Separation between Baron and Feme, and for Allowance of Yearly Maintetenance, and Plead thereon, 202, 203 Solvendo. Solvendo in a Grant, how to enure, 172 Statute. Stat. 27 H. 8. Of Jointures explained, 114 Stat. 32 H. 8. 28. explained, 146, 147, 182 Stat. 13 El. c. 2. explained. Stat. 1 Jac. c. 11. Of Stealing Women, 345 Stat. 39 El. c. 8. Concerning Rape, 351, 348, 349. Stat. 5 El. c. 9 For Non-appearing ad Testificandum, 345 Where the husband must be joined with the wife in Offences against a Statute-Law, and where not, 299 All Statutes which provide for an actual Wrong, a Feme Covert shall be intended within them, 352 Spoliation. Prohibition against a Spoliation, 229 Surrender. Vide Copyhold. Surrender, what. Surrender by the husband of the wife's Land, how it operates, 168 What shall amount to a Surrender, ibid. T Term. Vide Lease. WHat power the husband hath over the wife's Term, 204 What amounts to a Disposition of the wife's Term by the husband, so as to vest it in his Executors and Administrators, 204, 205 Term in Interest though not in Possession, 205 Where the wife's Term vests in the husband by Payment of Debts, 212 What shall amount to a Forfeiture of the wife's Term, or not, 212, 213 Trust. What Trusts of the wife the husband shall dispose, or not, 209 Fine by the wife docks a Trust, 131 The husband cannot grant or charge the Term of the wife in Trust, 210 The husband cannot forfeit the wife's Term in Trust for Outlawry or Felony, ibid. Annuities purchased in Trust for the wife, yet the Arrears decreed to the husband, 212 Traverse. Traverse where not allowable, 324 Trespass. Where in Trespass of Battery the Baron and Feme shall join, or not; and the Declaration how to be in such case, 276, 277 Of Trespass done to the Estate and Freehold of the wife; how they shall join in Action, 260 Trespass brought again Baron and Feme, 293 Trover. Trover against Baron and Feme, and Declaration, 288, 289 Trial. Trial of a Bastard, where and how, 17 Where it shall be by the Bishop's Certificate, and where in Pais, 36 If the Issue be whether a Feme Sole or Covert, where to be tried, ibid. The Issue n'unque accouple, etc. where to be tried, 389 The Form of the Bishop's Certificate, 41, 42 Trial in Appeal, 229 Death of the husband, where triable and how. Tithes. In Debt for Tithes Baron and Feme may join, 249 V VErdict on Trespass and Assault by Baron and Feme, 287, 260 Verdict in Case against Baron and Feme, 285 Voucher. Where a Feme shall Vouch her husband, 158 Writ de Ventre Inspiciendo. Vide Writ. W Wager. WAger of Law by Baron and Feme, 303 Warranty. Feme Covert by Warranty in a Fine sur concessit, is bound in an Action of Covenant, 129 Where a Warranty descending on an Infant, or a Feme Covert, shall be a Bar or not, 157 Waste. Vide Devastavit. Feme Copyholder takes husband who commits Waste, this shall bind the wife, 196 Of Baron and Feme joining in Action of Waste, 253 Feme Sole commits Waste, and than marries, the Writ shall be, the Woman while Sole committed the Waste, 297 Husband seized for Life of the wife, and in her Right doth waste, and after the wife dieth, no Action of waste lies against the husband in the Tenuit, 296 William. If a Will be countermanded by the Intermarriage, 54 Jointures devised by Will, 122 How and in what Cases a Feme Covert may make a Will, 166 What a Woman may not device without the Consent of her husband, ibid. Of Declaration made by a Feme Covert in nature of a Will, 167 Cases of the husband's being bound to permit his wife to make a Will, 168, 169 Devises to the wife by the husband and others, and the Construction of such Will, 184, 185 Devise by Implication, 185 If the husband may device the Term made to him and his wife, 170 Where the husband may pled as a Devise to him Sole, 324 Words. Action for Scandalous Words, 280 Writ. Writ the Ventre Inspiciendo; the Form of the Petition for such Writ, 7, 8 Writ de Ventre Inspiciendo in case of a widow, and in case of a wife, 11 FINIS.