AN EXACT ABRIDGEMENT In English of all the REPORTS OF THAT Learned and Reverend JUDGE Sir James Dyer Knight, And sometimes Lord Chief Justice of the COMMON PLEAS. COMPOSED BY Sir Thomas Ireland Knight, late of Grays-inn, and heretofore Reader of that Honourable Society. Wherein is contained the very substance of all those REPORTS at large. With a perfect TABLE to the same, Being a perfect abstract of every particular Case. London, Printed for Matthew Walbancke, and John Place, and are to be sold at their Shops at Grays-Inne-gate, and Furnivalls-Inne-gate 1651. To the Reader. GENTLE READER, I Hope I shall not need to use either many words or much eloquence in the commendation of this small although polite Abridgement, in regard not only of the fame of the honourable and learned author, out of which this was abstracted, but likewise in respect of the living worth of the deceased Sir Thomas Ireland, the judicious Composer of this work: You have been lately pleased to accept of a former piece of his, which imboldeneth me to present you with this further fruit of his labours in the like nature, for the general good of the Commonwealth. If any errors have passed the Press, blame the Printer; I humbly conceive I have more reason to be sorry for that than yourself. THE ABRIDGEMENT OF THE REPORTS OF THE Lord DYER. The fourth year of Hen. 8. Pas. 1. Fol. 1. IN debt upon an Obligation, the Defendant pleaded in Bar, that it was endorsed upon Condition, to make Account, etc. And that the Plaintiff had accepted of a Lease at Will, in satisfaction of all Accounts, Judgement, etc. The Plaintiff demurred. And it was adjudged no Bar; For where a Condition is Collateral, the acceptance of another thing is no 〈◊〉 contrary, where the Condition is to pay money; accords, 2 H. 4. 9 H. 7. 17. & 20. 2. Attaint and Error were maintained by him in reversion, after the death of the Tenant for life (upon erroneous Judgement or false verdict given against the Tenant) at the Common law. And now by the Statute 9 Rich. 2. cap. 3. they are maintainable in the life of the Tenant, 18. Edw. 3. Error 32. Scire sacias was brought by the Feoffees of the Conusor, being a stranger to the Record. If after a Parson hath recovered an Annuity, the Benefice be appropriate, or union made, the Abbot or the Parson shall have a Scire facias upon the said recovery, if again there be Arrearages. And it was said, If the King grants his own Recognizance, it shall be sued in the name of the Grantee; But if he grants an Obligation forfeit by outlawry, it shallbe in the King's name. 3. In a Quare impedit against Cook and his Clerk, it was holden, That a Clerk is not enabled by the stat. 25 Ed. 3. c. 7. by the word Possessor, to pled in Bar, till Induction, for it is that which makes him possessor; upon that he pleaded he disturbed not. Mich. 6 H. 8. fol. 2. 4. Repleg. Empson avowed for a Rent-Charge granted to him by a stranger, who as seized of the land where, etc. pro consilio impendendo. It was pleaded in Bar, that the Defendant was attaint of Treason, and committed to the Tower, and that the Grantor had business for to have his counsel, and could not have access to him, etc. and upon Demurrer, Judgement was, that the Avowdant shall have the Rent, for the Rent cannot be forfeit, neither granted over. As landlord given by the King to a Duke to maintain his dignity, may not be granted. Also the Defendant being in prison may give counsel, as well as when he is at large, and no default is Assigned in him. 5. In debt against the Executors of Ready, at the issue, upon Fully administered pleaded, etc. the Plaintiff gave in evident that they had goods in their hands; the Defendant plead 〈◊〉 that they redeemed part of them with their own money, which goods were pledged by the Testator to the full value, and for the residue that they had paid for the Testator, so much to the full value. And upon Demurrer, It was adjudged a good evidence to maintain the issue, for a man shall have recompense for that which he hath lawfully paid; as a Disseisor paying rend it shal● be recoaped in damages. And it is not like the case, where the Testator devises that his Executors shall cell his land, for in that case they may not retain it; because it is the will of the Testator that they shall cell. 6. Alien born is no plea in disability in an Action personal, except he be of the allegiance of the King's Enemy; Contrary in a real Action, for an Alien may not have land in the Realm, if he be not made a Denizen. Pas. 3. 19 H. 8. fo. 3. 7. A fine was levied by Tenant in Tail, after the 4 H. 7. cap. 24. and proclamations passed, and five years incurred, after Tenant in tail died; the question was, Whether the Issue shallbe barred as privy, because he is to make his conveyance by his Father, or that he shall not be reputed privy, because he claims per forman Doni, and than his right be saved, by the second saving, because he is the first to whom the right descended after the fine engrossed; vide new stat. 32 H. 8. But it was agreed, that if he to whom the remainder in tail or other title first accrued, suffered five years to incur without claim, that this laches of the Ancestor shall bar the issue. Tri. 4. 8. By Brudnel and Eglesfield; If a man make two Executors, provided, that the one of them shall not administer, that it is a voided hecaiso, because it restrains all the authority given in the premises, and the intent which agrees not with the law is not to the purpose; As a device to A. in fee, and if he die without heir that it shall remain, etc. is a voided remainder. So a device to the Abbot of 〈◊〉 Peter, where the foundation is St. Paul's: And so than ●●●action of debt was well brought in the name of both the Executors, notwithstanding the proviso: But Fitzh, was of opinion, that it was a good proviso, because he may bring an Action although he doth not Administer, and that a man may make one man Executor of his Plate, and another of his Goods, and another of his Debts: And may make an Executor of his Goods in one County, and another Executor of his Goods in another County. Tri. 24 H. 8. 9 Rusdens' Case: Termor rendering Rend granted his term in parcel of the land; the Grantee made a Feoffment; it was said, that an Action of Debt lieth not for the Rent, till the Reversion be recontinued, quia accessor sequitur, etc. As a Disseisee of a Manor, with an Advouson appendent may not present after the descent, till he hath recontinued the Manor; Contrary before descent, because his entry is congeable: & upon Recontinuance supra, he may sue the first lessee for the entire rent, & the privity remains as well when parcel of the land is granted, as when parcel of the term is granted: and no apportionment shallbe made; for before the stat. Quia emptor, no apportionment was by the act of the party, but by the act of the Law, and particular estates yet abide at the Common law per Henly. Mich. 25 H. 8. 10. The youngest brother disseised the eldest brother, who is Barred in an Assize by false oath, the youngest brother Charged the land, and died without Issue, and the land descended to the eldest; he is without remedy to avoid the Charge, for he shall not be remitted against the Record; and there was not any against whom he might bring an Attaint. 11. Stat. 21 H. 8. A Servant receives money upon an obligation, or upon sale of wares, and goes away with the money; It seems not to be within the statute, for he had not 〈◊〉 money by the delivery of the Master: But contrary 〈◊〉 it, if he had money by the delivery of another Servant; for it is the Master's delivery by another: So if he bade gone away with the obligation itself, it seems not to be within the statute, because it is a thing in action and not valuable; whereas the words of the statute are of Goods to the value of 40. s. Yet Fitzh. opinion was, That by the Grant of all Goods and Chattels, an Obligation shall pass. 12. Idemptitate nominis lieth of Surnames, and not of the names of Baptism. Mich. 13. 26 H. 8. 13. Knowles let land which was devisable, for years rendering rend, and devised the rent to A. It was holden, that the Executor, and not the Heir of the Devisee shall have it, because it is but a Chattel in the Devisee: But Baldwin and Shelly held, that the Devise was voided, being a new thing, to which the Custom reacheth not: But Fitzh. made a diversity, where Rent is incident to the Reversion, there it shall be of the nature of the land; But contrary of a new Rend Charge. 14. An Indenture of Bargain and Sale, in which were divers Covenants, & in the end were these words, ad quas convenc. perimpl. oblige me in 20. l. etc. In debt brought upon that, payment is no plea without an Acquittance; for it is as a single Obligation, 28 H. 8. 25. idem. 15. In a Formedon against A. B. & C. A. & B. Confessed the action: But C. pleaded Jointenancy with B. without that that A. any thing had; the Demandant maintained his Writ, viz. that they three are all Jointenants, and upon that Issue was taken, and holden by the Court a good Issue; But the Demandant shall not have Judgement for any part till the Issue be tried. Pas. 28 H. 8. 16. Lease for years by Indenture: the Lessee covenanted and granted, that if his Executors or Assigns did alien, that it should be lawful for the Lessor to enter. After he made his wife Executrix and died, the woman took another husband, and he aliened, now if this was a breach of the Condition or not, was the Question: Some held not, because the husband is in by the law, and not Assignee, as is Tenant by the Courtesy, and the Lord of a villain, etc. But Brown and Shelley held, that the husband is Assignee in law, and that the lands are subject to the Condition in whose hands soever they shall come: Quere if the words supra make a Condition. And if a new Lease before entry be good, to which all said, It was not. 17. In a Praecipe the vouchee was returned dead, per Curiam the Tenant may vouch at large, for the Vouchee never entered into warranty; Quere if he may vouch one as Heir within age, because the plea shall abide for the nonage of the Vouchee. 18. A termor devised his term to his eldest daughter and her Issues, the remainder to the youngest daughter, etc. the eldest died without Issue, and her husband aliened the term. Baldwin and Shelley held, that the youngest daughter is without remedy; because a voided remainder being only of a term, as it is of a Chattel personal; Englefield contrary, because of the intent. 19 By Shelley the Philizers Office may not be granted although it be a franktenement, of which an Assize lieth, because it is an Office of trust, for it may not be aliened; the same law of an Office of Carver, etc. Trin. 89. 10, 11, 12. 20. In a Writ of Guard the case was, before 27 H. 8. a man enfeoffed I. S. of land held by knight service, to the use of Bokenham and his heirs. After J. S. enfeoffed J. N. to the use of Bokenham and his wife, and to the heirs of Bokenham, after Bokenham died, and his wife yet living, having a son within age: And it was holden, that he shall be in ward in the life of the feme, by stat. 4. Hen. 7. as the Heir of Cestui que use; for the ancient use is not gone, but only for so much as it was altered in, so that it is a Reversion in the son, and not a new Remainder, for a thing may not be given to a man which he had before, as if Tenant in tail infeoff him in ●●version it is no discontinuance. It was the Lord Rosses case; that Cestui que use of two acres, one holden by priority, the other by posteriority, made a feoffement of both to his own use, it made not a owelty, because the use remains. The Writ here supposed, that B. held of the Plaintiff, etc. and counted that he was but Cestui que use, so that the Feoffees held. But by Knightly, because stat. 4 H. 7. gives the Guard, and appoints not a special Writ, the general Writ, and special Count is good: as warrant Chart. shall be unde Chart' babet, yet his Count may be upon warranty by Homage ancestrall. By Knightly also, that the use behoveth to be altered by reason of the person, as the King, or a Corporation may not be seized to an use; so of the estate, as an estate for life or in tail, because of the tenure, except the use be expressed, or for money, because of the Consideration: and holden, that a warranty is not sufficient consideration to altar an use, so a feoffment rendering rend is no consideration, because it is issuing out of the same land: Also it was argued by him, that a Lease to two, for the life of one, stands well in jointure, although no survivor on one part: Also a lease for another's life, without impeachment of waste, the remainder for his own life, that drowns the lesser estate, and makes h●● presently punishable by waist: Also by Brown, If an infant make a feoffment, and die without Heir, the feoffee is Tenant by title, and therefore the Lord may not enter for Escheat. 21. Tenant in tail made a Lease for life, the remainder to the Donor in Fee. Quere if it be not a discontinuance, and vesteth a new Fee in the Donor; Knightly it seems not, because he may not loose and take Fee by one and the same livery. 13. 22. Upon a divorce the woman shall have her goods again which were given in marriage; except they are spent, per Fitzh. and Shelley, because they were given for advancement of the woman, & Cessante causa, etc. As upon deraignment, the party shall re-have. 13 Ed. 3. upon divorce vorce he shall loose the land: for which cause it was moved, Fitzh, that it shall be divided. 23. By Shelley and Baldwin, a Presentment in the Leet of Bloodshed may not be traversed after the day of the presentment; contrary of things which touch franck-tenement. Leets were derived out of the Turn of the Sheriff, by Fitzherbert. 14. 24. A Lease to the husband and wife by Indenture, with proviso, that if they are disposed to alien, that the Lessor shall have the first offer, if he would give for it as another would; It was doubted whether it be a Condition or not; but by Shelley, if it be but a covenant, the wife shall be bound by that if she survives, and occupy, especially being a covenant which ariseth upon the estate, vide 46 E. 3. 38 Ed. 3. A feoffement to two with covenants, and but one sealed to the same, the other survived and occupied, and he was bound by the seal of his companion; and by Shelley in the case supra, It sufficeth to make proffer, without saying what is offered by others, till the Lessor said that he would have it, which aught to be showed presently, without respite of consideration peremptory for hindering the sale. 25. A Termor covenanted in his Lease to build, and no mention of his Executors, the term expired, and the Lessee died, Fitzh. and Shelley held, that the Executors shall be charged. But the heir shall not be charged upon an Obligation, except he be named; But Baldwin said, that the covenant supra, sounded but to wrong and damage, which dieth with the person; but upon an Obligation the Executors shall be charged without being named. 26. In Debt against a Termor; it was adjudged, that non habuit, nec occupavit, is no plea; but otherwise it is of a Tenant at will, per Fitzh. 27. By Mountegue it is clear law, if a feoffement be made to four without deed, and livery be made but to one, that nothing passeth to the rest; & non negit. 15, 16, 17. 28. The Condiiton of an Obligation for marriage money was, That if the woman die before Michaelmas without issue of her body than living, that the Obligation shall be voided; She had issue and died, and after before Michaelmas the issue died; and it was adjudged that the Obligation was voided for (than living) shall have relation to the next antecedent, viz. Michaelmas, and not to the death of the woman; and the Condition being for advantage of the Obligor, if it be doubtful it shall be construed to his best advantage; and in doubtful words, that interpretation shall be taken which is most agreeable to the intent, and the intent is apparent that it was regarded to the continuance of the issue; Besides where the intent of the parties is to have continuance in a thing, the thing which they would have continued, shall be referred to the very last time which possibly it can, per Fitzh. as a Condition to graft stocks before Christmas than growing, shall be referred to Christmas; so that if they die or fail before Christmas, the Condition is broken, and there it is holden, that where Death and Life are in issue, it shall be tried where the issue was in life; so that it seems, that he who pleaded that the issue was dead, needs not to show the place of his death. 18. 29. A recovery to my use, and after I infeoff the Recoverer, yet it is holden, that he shall be in by the Recovery, and so still seized to my use. 30. A man seized of two acres of land in one county, let one to A. for years, and the other to B. for years, and after enfeoffed a stranger of all his lands in the said County, livery in one acre in the name of all is not good for the other; Contrary, if the other had been but Tenant at will; But if he had been Tenant at will to my Disseisor per Knightly my feoffement may not determine the will of another. 31. A man made a Lease of a house, and after enfeoffed a stranger of the house, and of one acre in possession, and made livery in the house (the wife of the Termor being there) in name of all, And by Shelley, if the livery be voided in regard of the house, it shall not be a good livery within the view for the acre of land in possession; because the intent to make actual livery, and not livery in law, which also shall not be done but in case of necessity: But Knightly hold, that the acre shall pass. 19 32. Trespass of a close broken in O. the Defendant justified in S. without that he is culpable in O. And by the Court it shall be entered generally not culpable, vide 9 H. 6. 33. A Lease reserving wood and underwoods'; the Termor cut, holden, that no waste lies, because the statute is in terris, boscis, etc. sibi dimissis, etc. By reservation of woods the land is not reserved, by Shelley, for the Tenant shall have the herbage, etc. But by a Grant of woods the land shall pass, because the deed of every man shallbe taken most strongly against himself; and in a writ of Entry, where the demand is of twenty acres of wood, the land shall be also recovered. 34. In Action upon the case by two, for calling them false Knaves and Thiefs, per Curiam they may not join, because the defamation of the one is not the defamation of the other. So in false imprisonment. 35. Per Curiam, If an Obligation be made, and fail in words, in cujus rei testimonium sigill', etc. yet it is good if it be sealed. 36. Per Curiam, Obligamus nos & utrumque nostrum is several as well as quemlibet nostrum. 37. A Lessor covenanted that the lessee shall have sufficient hedgebote by the assignment of his Bailiff, and fuel. 1. By Shelley, He may not take without assignment, quia modus & conventio vincunt legem. 2. That the Copulative (&) makes it, that he behoves to have Assignment of the fuel; Baldwin and Shelley contrary, not being words in the negative, & non aliter. 20, 21, 22. 38. In debt by A. against the Administrators of G. Woddy, and counted upon such a Bill, viz. Be it known to all men, etc. that I G. W. have received 20. l. of A. J. to bear the adventure to Rouen, an there to bestow it in Herrings, and to see them shipped, and A. to bear the adventure home, and averred that G.W. had not bestowed it in Herrings, and it was adjudged that an Action of Debt lieth very well upon the said Bill; for an Account lieth not against Executors or Administrators, because they are not privy to the Accounts; And although there be no Bill, it is in the Election of him who delivered the money to have an Action of Debt or Account; for a Detinue lieth not for money numbered, because one penny may not be known from another: And the Testator may not wage his law against the said Bill being sealed and delivered as a Deed, for all words which prove by specialty one to be debtor to another, is a sufficient Obligation, and the Executors and Administrators shall be charged although they are not named; contrary of the heir. But it was agreed, that if he had employed the money, that debt lieth not. And there it is said, that a man shall not wage his law against a tall written and sealed; but otherwise of a Scoch; and by Fitziames', that in an Action of Debt for wages, for a Sum due for tabling, for arrearages of Account, and for rent upon a term a man shall not wage his law; but for such a rent a man may pled levied by distress, or payment although reserved by deed, because the Lease is the foundation of the action, and not the deed. Also by him, if a man be indebted upon a contract, and make an Obligation for that, the contract is gone, and so upon a Judgement. And if a man make an Obligation for arrearages of Account; Debt upon arreargaes is gone, 11 H. 4. contrary. 23. 39 Two as Executors had a Term, and the one granted all that to him appertained, per Curiam; the entire shall pass, because every Executor hath an entire authority; contrary of Joint-tenants. 40. Trespass for a Close broken, The Defendant said, that the place where, etc. are six acres in D. which is his franck-tenement; The Plaintiff said, that it is his franck-tenement, and not the franck-tenement of the Defendant; If the Defendant give in evidence of other six acres in D, which are his franck-tenement, it is not to the purpose, for his Plea shall be intended to be referred to the six acres of the Plaintiff, per Curiam, and the Plaintiff need not make a new Assignment, because the Defendant varied not from his meaning, when he gave no new name. 24. 41. The husband made a feoffement of his wife's land, to the use of his wife, for life, and died, and the statute 27 H. 8. was afterwards made, the woman entered, she shall not be remitted; So if Tenant in tail make a feoffement to his own use, and die, the Issue enters, he shall not be remitted, for they shall have the possession in such quality, etc. as they have the use, vide Amy Townesends case, that to be remitted, it's requisite to waive the possession, and to bring their action. 42. Abbot with the assent of his covent granted to the feoffor and his heirs, to sing Mass every Holiday, etc. & quoties defectus, 5. lively It seems upon default debt lieth for the heir, for it is a penalty which ensues the land, but an annuity lies not per Curiam, because it is casual, and peradventure never shall be a default. Notwithstanding peradventure annuity lies of Rent payable every three years. Executors shall not have a Debt for reliese, if the Lord had estate greater than for life or years, per Fitzh. And by him a Sergeant may not have an attachment of privilege in an action which he brings as heir; Quaere. 43. A Parson let for three years, and those ended for three others, and those ended for three others, during the life of the Lessor; by the court it is a Lease but for nine years; but if the words had been, And so from three years to three years, during the life of the Lessor, it livery secundum form. etc. peradventure it shall be otherwise. 44. In a Formedon the Tenant vouched, and upon the Summons returned the Vouchee is essoined, and day given to the Demandant and Tenant, and at the day both the Tenant and Vouchee made default, per Curiam, a Petit cape shall issue against the Tenant, and no remedy against the Vouchee, because the Tenant had not attended the suit of the Vouchee, for the view may be demanded, etc. so that he had not yet entered into Garranty. 45. A Quare impedit against the Bishop of Worcester, and the Guardian of Merton College in Oxford, and counted, how that the Predecessor of the Guardian was seized in the right of his College of Six acres, to which an Advowson was appendent in Fee, and presented. And after William Catesby was seized of the Six acres with the Advowson appendent in Fee, and died seized, and they descended to G. his son and heir, and after the father was attaint of Treason by the Parliament, upon which the King seized the land, and the King so seized, the Church became voided, and the predecessor of the defendant presented by usurpation upon the King, and after the attainter was anulled, and the son restored, and entered into the six acres, and enfeoffed the Plaintiff, and now the Church became voided, and it appertained to the Plaintiff to present, the Defendant demurred, and it was adjudged against the Plaintiff, and a writ was awarded to the Bishop without making title. 46. Brickhed brought an Action of Debt for forty quarters of Malt, and counted upon two Obligations, in which the Defendant acknowledged himself to own twenty quarters to be delivered at J. such a day, and if he failed, to forfeit forty: the Defendant pleaded tender, and that the Plaintiff refused judgement, etc. the Plaintiff demurred, and after released twenty quarters and had Judgement; Defendant aught to pled always ready. 25 Hil. 47. One of the Pannell was sworn upon the principal, and all besides challenged by the Defendant, and he that was sworn chose to him one to try; the polls, after the inquest remained for default of Hundredors', and the Plaintiff suggested that there was not Freeholders sufficient in the Hundred, and prayed process to the next Hundred; but the Court denied that till they were certified by the return of the Sheriff●. 48. A man arrested upon a Capias, found surety according to the statute, after came a Supersedeas, yet per Curiam he aught to appear to save the bond. 49. A man devised his term to his two sons equally; Quaere whether they are Joint-tenants, or tenants in common. 50. A man shall be tenant by the courtesy, if the issue be born alive, although it be dumb, so that it be not heard cry, per Fitzh. 51. In an action of Debt upon an Indenture in which a man was bound to pay twenty pound, payment is no plea without an acquittance not more than upon a simple bond, contrary, double with penalty. 52. An Attaint, by name of J. S. Knight, where the first writ was of D. it was holden good notwithstanding the variance, because a new original. 3 H. 6. 16. the same of an Estrepement. 53. A Dog kills Sheep, the Master being ignorant of his property, is not punishable. 54. Waste is found, by which the Committee of the King lost the custody of the land, by the statute of Marlbridge, cap. 4. Yet the opinion was, that he might maintain a forfeiture of marriage. So if entry be for Mortmain, Guard vested shall not be devested, But Abbot shall have the marriage, etc. 26. 55. The King seized the body and land of a Lunatic by commission, and granted that over; and it was adjudged that in a trespass brought, that the Patentee shall not have aid of the King; and Fitzh. said, that when the Lunatic comes to be of sound memory he shall have an account, but he lands of a Lunatic the King or his Patentee shall have to their own use; vide stat. Prerog. cap. 9 & 10. 56. The next avoidance is granted, cum primo & proximo vacaverit, the church being voided at the time of the Grant, the Grantee shall not have this presentation, for it is a thing in action; but the next to that, which is the first which can be granted. 57 Quaere if the Tenant in a Cessavit may be averred pernor of the profits. 58. By the opinion of Mounteg. where a man makes a lease for years rendering rend, and after makes a Lease of the same land to begin, during the first term, it is a good grant of the Reversion, and he shall have the rent being but a chattel which is granted in reversion without atturnment; But Baldwin and Shelley were contrary, vide Braces. Case. 59 A man recovered an annuity against a Parson, and and had a Scire facias upon the Recovery against the Successor, who prayed in aid two patrons, in this case one only may not be essoined per Curiam, but Fitzh. said, that to allow an essoine where it doth not lie, is no error, but to deny an essoin where it lieth, is. 60. Cestuy que use devised that A. should have the government of his Children, and the letting and ordering of his land; in this case by the Court A. may not cell the land, for the intent appears to be an ordering for the benefit of the children. 61. Russell brought an action upon the case against A. for saying that he was a false thief, and that such a night he would have rob him, ad damnum, etc. A. came and defended vim, & quoad pro palationem, etc. querens non suit dam. in forma qua, etc. the Plaintiff demurred, and adjudged for him; for the words are confessed, and no damages more grievous than to take away a man's fame, etc. and a writ was awarded to inquire of damages without further argument. 27, 28. 62. The Abbot of Westnunster brought an action of debt against the Executors of one Leman Clerk, upon an Obligation dated the 10 Novem. 12 H. 8. The Defendant pleaded an Indenture of Defeasance, dated the same day and year, by which the Plaintiff demised to L. the Rectory of A. and the said L. covenanted in that quod ipse & assignat. sui. exoner. Abb. de omnibus onerib. ordinar. & extraordinar. & durante termin. repar. aedificia, & in fine term. reparat. sursum red. Ita quod non liceret alienar. sine licenc. Abb. etc. sub pena forisfac. by virtue of which Leman entered, & occupied till the first of August, 21 H. 8. during which time be paid the rent, and paid five marks debit. per appropriate. praedict. quae sunt omnia onera tam ordin. quam extraordinarnecnon aedific. repar. usque dictum diem quo die statumsuum inde futur. concessit cuidam P. & hoc parati sunt verificare, Judgement if the Action, The Plaintiff demurred. Seven Exceptions taken. 1. Because the Defendant shown not the date of the Indenture, but by the same day and year, referring that to the plea of the adversary, which is not to the purpose, so for default of showing the time, it shall be intended before the Obligation, viz. most strong against him who pleads it. 2. The Conclusion aught to be prout in eadem Indent. plen. apparet, or at the least quae sunt omnes & singul. conventiones. 3. Also he shown not where the five Marks were paid, which aught to be because of the Vi●ne. 4. The Covenants be in the copulative, That he and his Assigns would pay, etc. it aught to have been pleaded jointly, for though the Lessor might have a Covenant against the Assignee, yet that proveth not the Lessee to be discharged. 5. He shown not the Licence of Alienation, and of the statute 21 H. 8. which prohibits Ecclesiastical persons to have Fermes, doth dispense with the edit. it aught to have been pleaded, being but in particular to spiritual persons. 6. He shown not that the Assignee was a lay person, where if he were not, the Assignment is voided. 7. Notwithstanding that the statute 21 H. 8. had words that the Lease shall be voided, if it be not aliened before Michael. yet there shall be entry, as Cestui que use, aught to enter, notwithstanding stat. 27 H. 8. Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. 29 H. 8. 63. One brought an account for Tin delivered by him to the Defendant, for to tender an account, and it was holden that it was no plea in Bar, that he had sold it, and taken an Obligation in the name of the Plaintiff for the Money: But it is good in discharge before Auditors. 64. If composition between Tenants in common to present by turn, be one time executed, in a Quare impedit, it needs not to show the composition; Also Partners may make composition without deed, because privies in blood, and compellable by the Common law. 65. If my dog kill sheep without my incitation, I shall pled not guilty in a Trespass brought for the same. 66. The Transcript of a Fine was removed by the Ancestor out of the Treasury into the Chancery, and it came into the Bank by Mittimus, to have a Scire facias to execute the same, and the Ancestor died. And holden that without a new Mittimus, the heir shall not have a Scire sacias, for by the death of the Ancestor the authority given to the Justice of the Bank by the Mittimus is determined; But contrary 14 H. 7. for the heir; but agreed for he in remainder. 67. Trespass, the Defendant justified, as Termor, by the demise of a Patentee of the King for life: And the better opinion was, that he need not to show the Patent; and the same law of an Undersheriff, Under-collector, & Incumb. because they have no means to come to the possession of it. But otherwise it is, if the Patentee had granted all his estate to the Defendant. 30. 68 In Detinue for forty Quarters of Wheat, and counted upon an absolute contract, etc. The Defendant said, that it was upon condition to pay for it when it was delivered; and that the Defendant delivered twenty Quarters, for which the Plaintiff did not pay presently: so the contract voided. Judgement if the Action. And holden good without Traverse that the contract was simple; for the Traverse aught to be on the other part, viz. that it was absolute without it was upon condition, but agreed that the Defendant might wage his law, or pled non detinet per patriam. And agreed, that a contract is not good without present payment, except a day be limited, and than the one shall have a Debt for the money, and the other a Detinue for the ware. 69. Per Curiam, Lessee for life by the Lease made before 27 H. 8. by the Feoffees to an use, shall now be distrained by Cestui que use, for the rend reserved without atturnment; and if before the statute they had granted a Rent upon condition, it shall be now subject to the condition. 70. A man surrendered copyhold to J. S. and is bound in an Obligation that J. S. shall enjoy it without interruption of any; and J. S. afterwards committed a forfeiture, and the Lord entered, the Obligation is not forfeit, because his own act. 71. Debt brought against Executors in Middlesex, the Defendants pleaded fully administered, etc. the Plaintiff said, that they had assets in Essex, and upon demurrer adjudged good, because assets are transitory; and the Jury of Middlesex may take notice of assets in any county. 72. The Lord Audley Diffeisor, let for life rendering rend, and granted the Reversion to the Disseisee, who accepted the rent; it is an affirmation of the Lease. Concess● per quosdam. 73. The King Grants obligation forfeit by attainter, etc. the Grantee may sue in his own name. 74. A man who had a Warren, and a Law-day in his Manor, by Charter, he granted the Manor to the King, yet the other shall not pass without cum pertinent. and per Curiam, one may have either in another man's soil. 31. 75. J. S. made a Lease for life to A. and after he made a lease to B. for years of the same land rendering rend; A. surrendered, I S. enfeoffed a stranger, who suffered a recovery, & Tenant for life died. Quaere, if the Recoverers may avow for the Rent, upon 7 H. 8. cap. 4. for he against whom the Recovery was might not, because the Lease was not begun. 76. In waste brought by the Grantee of a Reversion, the Lessee may pled, that he in Reversion, did not grant by his deed, or that nothing passed by his deed, and give in evidence that he never made atturnment, or he may traverse the atturnment, per Knightley, & Fitzherbert. 77. In Formedon of a Rend charge in two acre's Jointenancy in one, shall abate all the Writ, for a Rend charge aught to be demanded of all the Tenants of the land, but Rend service may be demanded of the pernor of the profits. 78. In debt upon an Obligation, with condition to perform covenants in an Indenture, whereof one was to make such assurance as the counsel of the Obligee should device, if he were to that required. The Defendant pleaded by protestat. that the counsel of the Plaintiff did not device, and for plea that he was not required to make assurance; the Plaintiff said, that J. S. his counsel devised a Release, and he required the Defendant to seal it, who refused; The Defendant rejoined, that he did not refuse, and by the Court it is a departure, that he did not refuse, and by the Court it is a departure, and the issue joined a Jeofaile. And holden, that the Plaintiff needed not to have pleaded the refusal, but only that he was required; because the Defendant had pleaded in the negative, that he was not requested, and so at issue. 79. If a Diffeisor sow, and sever, and before it is carried the Disseisee enters, he shall have them. Pas. 32. 29 H. 8. 80. Tenant in tail, the Reversion in the King levied a Fine, or suffered a recovery. Tenus a Bar to the issue, but no discontinuance, because the King is in Reversion. 18. Upon issue of fully administered, the Executors gave in evidence payments of Debts upon contracts, where that was a suit upon an Obligation, the Plaintiff demurred, and had judgement of the goods of the Testator, so much as was in the issue, and adjudged, that after an Action brought upon one Obligation, a Debt shall not be paid upon another Obligation. 82. Baron & Feme Cestui que use, before 27 H. 8. and after the statute a writ of Entry in the Post was brought against the husband only, who pleaded Jointenancy, with his wife, per Curiam he aught to show the statute, as by the common law he aught to show of whose feoffement. Pernors are gone by 27 H. 8. therefore the husband may not be averred sole Pernor of the profits. 83. In an Action upon the case the Plaintiff was Nonsute; and the Defendant had Judgement of costs, upon stat. 23, H. 8. And upon a writ of Error brought the Record was removed into the King's Bench, and after the Defendant sued an original of Debt for the costs, in the Common place; And adjudged that it ●ieth very well, being an original; and if the Record be denied, it shall come by Mittimus into the Chancery. But the Common bank may writ to a more base Court; and by the better opinion, although the Record be reversed, he shall have the costs assessed by the Court for the wrongful vexation. 84. Debt for Rent, and counted upon the Demise of twenty six acres rendering rend; the Defendant said, that the Plaintiff let to him the twenty six acres, and four acres more, without that he demised the twenty six only, and it was found, that he let but twenty one acres. Quaere, If the Plaintiff shall recover: It seems by the better opinion that he shall, for the Defendant confessed the twenty six acres by implication, and than the verdict is not to other purpose, but to manifest that he did not let four acres more. Curia advis. But Shelley said, that the Defendant needed not to have traversed, because he confessed the 26 acres and more, but the traverse shall come of the part of the Plaintiff, that he let twenty six acres, since he let the four acres, and than it had been a better issue. 33. 85. Lessee of a Meadow covenanted to repair the banks, and the banks are broken by sudden flood, he is bound to repair them, because of his covenant. But by Fitzh. and Shelley he shall now have sufficient time to repair them, because of the decay, and also the act of God. 86. By the custom of London, a man may device his land which he purchased in Mortmain. One devised to the Prior and Covent of St. Barth. etc. so that they tender to the Dean and Chapter of Paul's 20. l. by the year, and if they fail, their estate to cease, and remain to the Dean. Fitzh. and Shelley held it to be a voided remainder, because a Remainder may not be limited after an estate in Fee. And as to the Condition, the Dean and Chapter shall not have advantage of the Condition, but the heir. 87. He in Reversion made a feoffement and livery, the Termor being upon the land: It seems that it is a good livery, because the franck-tenement is seen, & the Rent passeth: But otherwise in case of a Lease for life, and although the Termor be content with the same, yet that is not a Surrender, per 5 H. 7. Quaere, if livery within the view, the Termor being upon the land, be good: If the Lord disseise the Tenant, and make a feoffement, and the Tenant re-enter, the Feoffee shall have the rent, for his estate is not openly defeated, as in the other case, but only the possession. 34. 88 In debt against a Chancery man, process continued till the exigent, upon which he purchased a general Supersedeas, he had lost the advantage of his privilege, because it recites an appearance: But if he had sued a Writ of privilege first, it should have been good, although at the Exigent, and than he shall have a special Supersedeas. 89. Two outlawed in an appeel of murder, purchased a pardon, and had a Scirefacias against the Plaint: and Signors, mediate and immediate (it seems it needs not to the Signors, for the pardon affirms the attainter and not reverse it) and the pardon agreed not with the indictment in the addition: But they may aver that they are the same persons; also the pardon was Perdonamus A. & B. omnes utlag. versu● praefat. A. & B. seu alterum eorum promulgat. And although the words of pardon are joint, and they are joined in the words of pardon, whereat the felony of the one is not the felony of the other, yet by the ensuing words it is made several, and his nonobstante pardon allowed. 90. A woman brought a Writ of Dower in a hundred acres of land in R. and S. and as to that in R. the Defendant confessed the Action, and the Plaintiff had judgement, etc. And to the rest he pleaded to the issue, which the Plaintiff relinquished, and had a special Scire facias in R. and upon a Scire facias returned, and default made, she had a special writ of Seisin, because it appeared not how much of the hundred acres lies in R. 91. Per Fitzh. and Shelley, an Obligation may be delivered to the Obligee himself, as an Escrow to be a deed upon conditions performed, and that is not his deed till, etc. Quaere. 35. 92. Concordat, that a feoffement to divers without deed and livery to one in the name of all, is not good to the other. 93. Feoffee of a Conusor of a statute upon execution sued, had an Audita querela, supposing that the Mayor of Chester, before whom it was acknowledged, had no authority to take the Conusance. 94. A common recovery was had against Tenant in tail, who died before execution: per melior. opinio. the issue shall not be remitted, nor yet falsisie the Recovery, because of the Recovery in value of the Vouchee. 95. If a man grants the next presentation to one, and after grants the nex● presentation to another, the second grant is good by Shelley, and it shall be intended the next, which he may lawfully grant, and no difference between proxim. presentat & proxim. advocate. But Fitzh. said, that if it had said, proxim. advoc. mea. peradventure that passeth which is next to dispose. 96. Maleveret brought a writ of Waste, and counted that he let a house, and six acres of land, and six acres of wood to the Defend, who made waste; cutting and selling twenty oaks in the aforesaid wood sparsim, growing; The Defendant for ten, said that the house aforesaid, in tempore quo, etc. was in decay of Timber, for which cause he had bestowed upon reparations; and as to the other ten, that they grew upon one acre of land of the tenements aforesaid: which sometimes had been arable, and pro melioratione, etc. Plaintiff demurred. He aught to answer to the sale, for if he sold and after redeemed, and bestowed in reparations, as 5 Ed. 4. is, the wrong by the sale is not gone; so also if a man sells the distress, and after redeems, and puts it in pound again. 2. He did not conclude that this is the same waste, etc. 3. The words praedicto tempore quo, shall be referred to the time of the demise, for no time was put of the cutting; so that if they were ruinous at the time of the demise, the Lessee is not bound to repair no more than if the house be dejected by tempest or enemies; and although he better the inheritance of the Lessor, yet it is not lawful to do wrong to another that good may come, as to drive beasts out of my corn, 21 H. 7. or to carry my tithe in jeopardy to be destroyed by , into my barn; or to make a trench to convey water to better land in which I have common. Yet for the commonwealth a man may justify wrong; as in time of war to make Bulwarks in another's land; so the rasing of a house which is burning for the safety of the neighbour; so a 〈◊〉 Sheriff may break a house to apprehended a villain; but otherwise in cases which concern a private man, as upon a Capias in a Debt or Trespass. So if a Termor in pursuing a villain him exile, if it be for felony it is no waist; if because he him had slandered; contrary by Knightly; and a Termor may not at all repair in Timber, without the assent of the Lessor, but only in small reparations, for the Lessor hath interest in the body of the trees, and the Lessee only in the branches, fruit, brows and shadow; and if the Lessor upon notice given do not provide timber, so that for default of that the house fall, the Lessee shall have an action upon the case, and that is but negligence, and not like to the case where the Defendant allegeth personal wrong, which the Plaintiff did himself; for there the Defendant shall Rebut the Plaintiff of the action, by matter of another action, but not so here; as in waste which the Plaintiff himself hath made, in debt for rent against the Termor, or the Plaintiff had him ousted; So in dower that she detains the charters. 4. It is holden that if a Termor set wood in arable, vel e converso, it is waste; so if he convert pasture into arable, and it is a prejudice to the inheritance; for if the evidence of the Lessor serves to prove that he had woods, or etc. although he may aver that to be the land, yet that may in time be unknown. 5. Because the Defendant justified in one acre of land, and so answered not to the Plaintiff; The Plaintiff recovered. 38. 97. Jurors at a Nisi prius being agreed upon their verdict, they saw Read chief Justice going to see an affray, they followed him; and did eat and drink; and after gave their verdict, and it was alleged in arrest of Judgement, and every one was fined 40. l. yet the Plaintiff had judgement; and after error was brought. 98. Array challenged, because the Sheriff is cousin to the Defendant; after in making conveyance the Sheriff was cousin to the wife of the Defendant; and yet holden very good, for the matter is the partiality; and it is aswel a principal challenge, if he be of the blood of the wife of the Sheriff, as if of his own blood per Justiciar. but because he did not say, that it was at the time of the array made, the challenge was disallowed. 99 Gawen brought an appeal in Wiltshire against two, as accessaries to a robbery made, and counted of incitation at London: Defend ' Demurr' and Hales Justice, said, that it is well brought in Wiltshire, and till the robbery done, the counsel is no wrong; and the subsequent Action made it wrong in both counties. And where a man hath an Action founded upon two wrongs in several counties, the Plaintiff is at his election to bring his Action in either, as in forging in one county, and making Proclamation in another: But an accessary after the fact, is no wrong done in the county where the robbery is committed. Also if it may not be brought here, the wrong is dispunishable, for a man shall have but one appeal against principal and accessary (R. quaere causa) and in punishing wrong a man shall have favour in trial; as it is in a Mortdant cestor; And in debt for wages, where the retainer is here, to serve in France in war; but the Demurrer supposeth a confession of the matter, so that the trial came not in question, as 18 Ed. 4. where a debt was brought upon an obligation, and counted not where it was made, and the Defendant pleaded an acquittance; but four Justices were of contrary opinion, who said, that it is a maxim that trials shall be where may be best notice●, and that is where the wrong gins; especially in personal wrongs. If two Closes adjoining, being in several Counties in Curia claudenda, because of the decit it shall be brought in the county where the Close of the Plaintiff is. But if he had but a term, an action upon the case only lieth, and it aught to be brought in the county where the land of the Defendant lieth, because it is in the personalty (but an appeal is no action either real or personal). Recovery in a Quare impedit in Devonshire, and the writ to the Bishop is delivered in Middlesex, who refused; a Quare non admislt shall be brought in Middlesex. Also Life, Liberty, and Dower, are favoured in Law, and the attainter of the principal because it is a matter of Record, those of London as every one is, aught to take notice of that. But peradventure of a thing which ariseth upon the land the action shall be brought where the land lieth. And where the Defendant may pled the general issue in the several counties, an action may be brought in the one county or other. As where an annuity is granted out of a parsonage in one county and seisin is had in another. So if a Physician take upon him to cure in one county, and administers unhealthful salve in another county. But if the general issue may not be pleaded, as in our case he may not pled not culpable to the procurement, which is counted to be in London, than otherwise it is because it shall be wrong to the Defendant. And by Brown clearly the demurrer is no confession, but is to the insufficiency of the Count, for after that adjudged the Defendant may pled not culpable. And by them there is a diversity, if a man steals in one county and carries it into another, for there because the property is not divested, the appeal lieth in every county. But otherwise in a Trespass, as also in an appeal of Robbery, for it is no robbery in the county where the goods are carried into. If a Lease be made in Middlesex of Land lying in Essex, rendering rend for years. So if Retainer be in one county and Departire in another, for the privity the plaintiff may choose or bring his action where he pleaseth. But otherwise after the privity destroyed, as after waste committed, or where a stranger takes the servant. London may not join in trial with another County, and although it be a mischief to abate the appeal, yet it shall rather be suffered than an inconvenience of trial, where there can be no notice for that part. 100 The Dean of Salisbury let to one Chaffin by these words, quod Decanus ex assensu Capitul' dimisit, and the seal of the Chapter put to the deed, and good per Curiam, If the Dean be sole seized in the right of his Deanary. But if the Dean and Chapter be seized together, than words of assent are not sufficient, because persons able to make a Lease, and is not like the case of an Abbot and Covent. Pas. 41. 30 H. 8. 101. In a Warrant of Dower upon issue, never seized so that she may have Dower; A remitter to defeat the estate of the husband is no good evidence by the Court, but it aught to have been pleaded, and so if the estate be defeated by condition: and the Court would not admit a verdict at large (1 Ed. 1. contrar ') and for that reason it was found against the defendant for folly in pleading, and the Plaintiff had judgement. 102. In a Replegiare the Plaintiff is non-sute, and after he issued a second deliverance, a superdeas is had for a Retur' babend ', for it is but a reviver of the first plaint, yet after the Sheriff returned averia elong ' upon that, and it was alleged in arrest of judgement that insomuch as it appeared that he himself elong ' etc. that the Plaintiff shall have judgement, for the return was without warrant. 42. 103. A writ of Proclamation upon the Exigent was returned by the Sheriff out of office at the time, upon which the out-lawry was adjudged voided per stat. 6 H. 8. 104. The Executors of Greenliffe brought an action of debt upon an obligation, and the condition was, that whereas W. hath sold to G. a certain Meadow in etc. the said W. shall warrant the said G. against Lord and King, and all other; if the said G. shall peaceably enjoy the said Meadow, to him and his heirs of the Lord of the Manor of M. by the services due after the custom, that than, etc. The Defendant said that the Meadow is copyhold, and is holden of, etc. and that is customary and rend behind, or for waste, the Lord may enter for forfeiture, and that G. took that by copy, and all his life habuit & pacifice gavisus suit, & obiit inde scisitus, and it descended to the Plaintiff as son and heir, who of his own wrong entered without admission contrary to the custom, etc. And because 3. s. rent was behind such a day, the Lord entered as forfeit, Judgement, etc. Plaintiff demurred. Jenney said that the condition is voided, for if G. peaceably enjoy, it needs not that the Defendant should warrant it. And it was agreed that although it was not showed what was warranted; yet it shall be intended of the Land about which was a communication. But the warrant to G. shall not extend over the life of G. Yet if the feoffee upon such warranty recover in value he shall recover in fec-simple; and it is not spoken to whom the warranty is made, but only that it shall be for him and his heirs, per. 6. Ed. 2. the garranty shall be according to the state. And as to the last part of the condition Jenney put adversity, where words are that a man shall enjoy to him and his heirs, and where it is he and his heirs shall enjoy, for if he enjoys but during his life, he enjoys to him and to his heirs, because he had see per touts, that a man is not holden to warrant against new titles after the garranty. (43) Also the Plaintiff is particeps Criminis for that etc. per touts the Bar is not double for the entry without emitta● is but surplusage, and at the first he did not allege it as a forfeiture. Shelley that pacifice gavisus fuit is but an argument, that he had warranty; And it is a failable argument also, for he may be impleaded for the issues which the obligor had forfeit, and yet it is not contra pacem, but pacifice made. But it aught to have been showed directly how he had warranted, or that he was non damnifis '. 105. Concord ' that if a Parson purchase a Manor and after he lets his parsonage, notwithstanding the unity he shall pay tithes, and so of his feoffee. But they were in divers opinions whether if a person let his Glebe rendering rend, if the lessee shall pay tithe. 106. After custom and subsidy paid for clotheses in a tempest upon the Sea, the clotheses were cast out, and the Merchant came again & Deputy customer. It seems that he may, and also gives to him licence to carry over so much more without custom, all which was pleaded in Bar upon Informat' for subsidy and custom not paid, etc. Counsel the King demur' and it seemed reasonable that he shall not pay. And in many cases where a man hath loss and makes the other privy he shall have recompense. As if a man be implead ' and vouch ' he shall recover in value. So where a man grants a signory by fine, and the Tenant dies without heir before atturnment, and a stranger abate in the land, the Conusee shall have a scire facias servitia. The King after waived the Demurrer, and joined issue, that custom and subsidy Domino Reg. deb' concelat' & substrac' etc. contra formam flat'. and it was found that he did not conceal and withd raw etc. in manner and form as is supposed by the Information. And it's doubted whether this verdict shall be taken for or against the King, for if it be for the Defendant, it should be concluded prout defend allegavit. Reed said, that it seemed to be their intent to acquit the defend ' of conceal' but not of the substract'. It's there holden that custom is inheritable in the King and due by the common Law. For the first stat. viz. 14. Ed. 3. which speaks of custom gives not custom, but abridgeth it for wool and cord. Subsidy is a tax assessed by Parliament, and granted by the subjects during the life of every king, for defence of the Merchants upon the Sea. (44) And for that information of a subsidy for cloth is evil, for were excepted in stat. 1. H. 8. also there is is no statute which gives to the Informer the moiety, for all the custom and forfeiture for that is due to the King. And there it's holden that custom is well paid for the time, if it be before the departure of the ship out of the view of the Port. As it is of a distress chased within the view, and a prisoner within the view of the Gaoler. 107. It was found by office that Gilbert held land of the King as of his Honour of Philipton, and other land as of his Manor of Dartington which came to the King by attainter of treason of the Marquis of Excester. It seems it is not holden in capite, for tenors in capite began in ancient time by the Grants of the King, to defend him against Rebels and Enemies, and stat' Prerog. cap. 1. Quod Dominus Rex habebit custod' etc. Dum tamen ipsi tenuerint de Rege ab antiquo de Coron'. and at this day the King may created a tenure in capite if he gives to hold of his person, but otherwise if he give to hold of a Manor, Honour, etc. (45) and tenure in capite shall be immediately of the King, and shall be created by the King himself, for a tenure created by a subject can never be a tenure in capite neither shall have any prerogative annexed to it, and if the tenants of an Honour hold in gross, viz. in capite of the King, the Honour when it comes to the King shall be destroyed, que nes issint. Also it is no reason that a tenant in whom is no fault, that he should be prejudiced in his tenure by the offence of the Lord. Otherwise if forejudge or evict of his mesne. Also tenant in capite is inseparably of the person of the King, and cannot be released, although he after grants the Reversion, for it is not incident to the Reversion, but to the person of the King: as it is of Frankalm ', every grand Sergeanty is tenure in capite, for it cannot be of any but of the person of the King. Vide a good case vouch ' 6. Ed. 3. the diversity of the degree in which the King shall have an escheat, either as Lord or as King. Mich. 31 H. 8. 108. A Lease upon condition that he shall not alien to A. the lessee aliened to B. and he aliened to A. the condition is not broken, for a condition which goes to the breaking of an estate shall be taken strictly. 109. A Lease upon condition that he shall not assign his term during his life without the assent of his lessor, he devised that without etc. and died: by two it is a forfeiture, for he that is in that, is in by the Devisor; contrary of assignment in Law if one had that as Executor. 110. John Minors Tenant in tail made a feoffment upon condition to remake an estate to him and his wife in tail, remained ' too T. M. filio meo etc. the remainder to Sibill' filiae meae, the Feoffees reciting the deed, made a feoffment by words Dedimus & concess ' too J. Minors & his wife, and to the heirs of their two bodies, remained ' T. M. filio meo, remained ' Sibill. filiae meae, and J. M. died, T. M. within age entered for breach of the condition, and holden that Sibyl filiae meae may not be intended the daughter of J. M. But peradvent' otherwise of T. M. filio meo, because none of the names of the Feoffees were M. ' (46) Mountegue and Bromley the party who shall take advantage of the condition, is party to the breach, for that etc. also his acceptance extinguisheth the condition, but otherwise if an estate be made to a stranger, it shall be taken strictly. But quaere if the condition be but suspended during the life of the father, for the parties agreed. 111. Milbourne let land to two habend' iis ad termin' vitae corum (conjunctim) & alter' diutius vivent' & assignat ' suis q. primus eorum decedere contingat, durante vita ejus q. superstes & non aliter. Plusors' that the word conjunctim is no restraint to make partition. Quaere if he that first dies shall assign all, if good by the words supra, or but a for a moiety, but if there was no assignment, the survivor shall have the entire. 112. A man wounded in one County died in another, the heir sued an appeal in the county where the death was, the defendant pled none culp'. Tenus that the Jury shall come out of both counties, and that the visne of each county shall be of the body of the county: and the trial be in the King's Bench, and not at the Nisi prius: but per Clericos if a man be wounded in Middlesex and he die in London, the trial shall be only in Middlesex, because London may not join. 113. A Bishop made a lease to two for years rendering Rend, and after he made a new lease with the confirmation of the Dead and Chapter to one of them, the Bishop died. Quaere if by his death the first Lease be voided in all, for because of the second Lease the liberty of the successor is gone of affirming the first Leass by acceptance of the rent in prejudice of the second Lease, but otherwise if the second Lease had not been. So of Tenant in tail, Abbot etc. who have inheritance. but of Lease of a person or tenant for life it is otherwise, for it is voided by their deaths. But some held that the Lease was surrendered for the moiety only, and remained for the residue. Quaere, for the parties agreed. Pas. 32 H. 8. 114. A man let for life to A. after by Indenture renting the said lease, he demised the remainder to B. habend ' the said remained ' after the determinat ' of the first lease for 20. years: quaere if the reversion passeth by name of remainder, and if there need atturnment. 115. Indictment of the husband for the murder of his wife, it was found before the Coroner, qued Elizab. fuit in pace &c quousque predict. A. vir praefat' E. of H. in come. predict. Yeoman etc. Tenus that although it be not said nuper vir etc. so that it was objected if he be now her husband than is she living. For husband and wife are relative, yet good, because the death found super visum corpor ' and the best shall be taken for the King. (47.) 2. The addition although Elizabeth be the next antecedent, shall be referred to the husband, because a woman may not be a Yeoman: contrary of Spinster. Trin. 116. Banister brought a Trespass of entering into a house and issue joined upon the disseisin supposed to be committed before to the Plaintiff, and the Defendant in evidence to prove that he disseissed not, shown a recovery of land, with averrment of building the house after; the Jury was charged to find the disseisin if they found not the building, but if etc. They prayed discret' and per 3. Justices a Form ' in reverter shall be of a house if it be built upon the land after the gift: but by others, by a recovery of the land the buildings upon the same are also recovered. 117. A Lease without impeachment of waste, and if it hap he make waste, it shall be lawful for the lessor to enter, and the lessee made waste; per Shelley it is a voided condition, because repugnant to the grant to be discharged of waste. Others held that it was good, because it shall be intended, that the les●ee shall not be impleaded for waste, for to lose treble damages, per that the lessor may enter. 118. Quaere if debt lies against the Executors of an Administrator upon an obligation of the intestate, or a new administrat' committed. 119. Per Shell●y two Towns may not inter common because of Vicinage, where there is a third Town between the Commons, because they are not neighbours, Baldwin contrary, but such Common may not be used where the Commons are at several seasons. And per Curiam, if two Towns are adjoining, and a great field lieth between them, and one who liveth in one of the Towns hath Common there with the tenants of the other Town, It behoves to make title for Common because of vicinage and not appendent. 120. A man was obliged to a Dean in 20 l. solvend' eidem Decan' & Success ', the Dean died, per Shelley the successors shall have it, for an obligation may be made to him and his successors, as well as to his Executors. So of a Prior, Abbot, or Bishop. Contrary of a Mayor, or the Guardians of a Church. Baldwin held the payment to the Dean and Successors was voided, because the obligation was to the Dean only. A man had two sons, the eldest is attaint and dies without issue in the life of the father, the youngest son shall inherit, but if he had issue the land shall escheat. Mich. 121. One man had the nomination, an Abbot the presentation to a Church, the King after had the possession of the, Abbot, and presented without nominat' per Curiam, a Quare impedit lies against the Incumbent notwithstanding, for the King may not be a disturber. Townsend moved that the King cannot be an instrument to any. Shelley, he is an instrument to every one in administration of Justice to him. 122. A Juror was laboured with by the Plaintiff to appear and to give verdict according to his conscience, and no cause of challenge, per Curiam. Pas. 33. H. 8. 123. Upon issue joined of Villain regardant, in evidence it is no good title that he is a villain in gross. But by Justice Bromley contrary, insomuch that their charge is upon the right of the villainage, viz. if a villain or not. 124. Tenant in tail of a Manor with a villain regardant enfeoffed J.S. of one acre, parcel of the Manor per words, Dedi unam acram etc. and over, Dedi & concessi R. villan' meum, Dubitatur if the villain pass in gross or appendent, because by several grants, although in one deed; Shelley, the Advouson appendent so granted is in gross; But otherwise it had been if the feoffment had been of the entire Manor. 125. Tenant in tail of a Manor with a villain regardant, enfeoffed the villain of one acre parcel of the Manor and died, per Justitiar. the issue aught to recontinue the acre before he seize the villain. 126. The Earl of Bridgwater tenant in tail, before the stat. 32. was bound in a Recognizance to him in remainder, that he should not make an estate longer than for his own life, if after the 32. he make a lease for 21. years or 3. lives according to the said stat. Per 3. Sergeants, he forfeits the Recognizance notwithstanding every of them is party to the statute. But he in reversion or remainder shall not avoid the lease made according to the 32. if tenant in tail die without issue, for so is the intent of the makers of the statute although no words in the statute of the Donor or he in remained '. (49) Vide Augustine's case adjudged contrary, where the King was within in point of reverter. 127. A man delivered money to the use of a woman, to be delivered to her at the day of her marriage; quaere if the Baylor may revoke before the condition performed: and diversity was taken where there is a considerat' precedent, and where it is mere good will; as for a New-year's gift before the delivery. So a man may altar his Will annexed to a feoffment at the time of the livery, and he may revoke a letter of attorney before livery made; so of a bailment or delivery, before delivery be made over; and by Baldwin the case above, except the words of use altar that. And use altars not the property of chattels. For stat. 50 Ed. 3. cap. 6. to prevent fraudulent gifts of goods to an use to the deceit of Creditors had been in vain, if the property had continued in the Donor. But 2 contra 2. Mich. 128. Stat. 27 H. 8. which establishes the Court of Augmentation, wills that all grants for life or years of offices concerning the land of the said Court, shallbe sealed with the seal of that Court. It's doubted if a patent of such an office under the seal of the Chancery, viz. if the word (shall) be compulsary. Bromley, if it be enacted, that the youngest son shall have an appeal of death of his father, that shall not exclude the eldest because there is no word of restraint. 51. 129. Stat. 31 H. 8. made it treason for a woman to poison her husband. It seems that now an appeal lies not for the heir, because now the murder is changed into Treason, and the greater extinguisheth the lesser. Yet it was moved that although chase in Park be by the statute made felony, yet the offence may be made a Trespass at the pleasure of the party. Saccombs case. 130. A man condemned in debt paid part, and the Plaintiff made acquittance, viz. received 10. l. in part of a more sum, wherein the Defendant was condemned by judgement, before the Justices of Nisi prius, where judgement is always in the Bank. Tenus, that it is no good Release to have an Audita querela, if Execution be after sued of the entire, for there was no such judgement. And this diversity put by Whorewood, If I release all my right in white acre, which I purchase of such a man, where I had it by descent, yet it is good, because white acre is named certain, an the rest surplusage: but if it be of all his lands which he had purchased; it's otherwise, because general an uncertain. 131. An appeal of Murder against Wainford, the writ was to answer A. B. alias dict. A. C. frat' & haered ' of the dead: the defendant was disch. because the name of the brother which enabled to the appeal was in the alias dictus, for the alias dict' is not any part of his name. The count was, The Defendant percuss ' 1 day of May, etc. whereof he languished at D. three weeks, and there died, & sic defend' die & anno praedict' murdr', etc. Quaere because die predict. was the day of the wound, and not of death. 132. Cockerell was sued upon a simple Obligation per Survivor, he pleaded payment, and re-delivery of the Obligation in place of acquittance, and re-taking by the Plaintiff and so not his deed. Tenus no plea. For first, he which pleads payment in the same county, aught to rely upon the Debet. Also a simple Obligation may not be discharged without deed; for arbitrament is no plea, and in annuity payment is no plea, for a mischief shall be suffered rather than an inconvenience that a nude averment shall discharge a deed. Contrary, if it be with penalty, or the annuity clause of Distress, and the deed re-delivered is no acquittance, because there wants words of acquittance. Also a second delivery of a deed, which takes effect at the first i● voided. 133. Tenant in tail discontinued, and retook an estate in Fee, and after made a Lease for years, rendering rend and died; The issue before he entered upon the termor, or receipt of the rent, levied a fine of the land; and holden that the Grantee shall not avoid the Lease, for because the rend reserved may be a recompense to the issue, the Lease is not voided, but is at his election to affirm it. And there by Bromely, that if Tenant in tail infeoff his issue, who at full age makes a Lease for years, and the father dies, the son shall avoid the Lease, as Littlet. put, que il serra Rent Charge. 134. Condition that for default of payment of Rent the Term shall cease, it behoves to demand the rent upon the land; Contrary, if it be reserved to be paid dehors, per Shelley. Hill. 52. 135. A Parcener let that which appertained to her, after upon a partic' faciend ' brought against the Lessor, too little is allotted to his part. Per some there is no remedy for the Termor; Quaere if the partition had been without writ. Pas. 34 H. 8. 136. The King granted a Licence to transport Bell metal non obstante any statute made, or to be made. Baldwin and Shelley held, that the dispensation for statutes made after is voided, because before the law is made, also the Grantee is a party to the statute. But the King may dispense in things to come wherein he hath inheritance, as subsidies or taxes, Quaere. 137. Per Broml. & Shel. if tenant by Knight's service make a gift in tail rendr' 10 shill' without any more, yet the Donee? shall hold as the Donor held, for the law creates that, Quaere. Trin. 138. A Parson made a Lease for forty years, to which the confirmation of the Patron and Ordinary was annexed for twenty years: some held it good for all, others contra, Fitzwills' case. (53.) 139. Quaere if he in remainder be in possession according 32 H. 8. cap. 9 that he may acquit a pretenced title, viz. si particul' estate a remain ' soient come un a ce ' purpose. 140. In Attaint it was agreed for law, that a will of land deviseable by the Common law is good without deed, and that the Plaintiff in Attaint may not produce two witnesses, nor the ancient may not depose farther matter, and to that purpose the witnesses were examined if they deposed at the first as now; otherwise of the Defendant: And it was said to the Jury that they aught to found accordingly if the evidence were pregnant, which induced the first verdict, although it be false, for bomines sunt mendaces, & non Angeli, Inter Rolfe & Hampden. Information against Richards upon 4 H. 7. cap. 9 for importing Gascoigne wine in a strange ship; the Defendant pleaded as assignee of part of a Licence, and shown not the Letters Patents, nor the life of the Patentee, neither shown the deed of Assignment; but averred a custom amongst the Merchants to assign by paroll only. Also after the said Licence the stat. 3. H. 8. enacted, that the stat. 4 H. 7. should stand in force; So that from thenceforth no man shall presume or attempt to do any thing contrary to the effect thereof. Quaere, if that takes away the Licence before. But for insufficiency of pleading judgement was given against the Defendant. 142. Tenant in tail before 27 made a feoffement to the use of his wife for life; and after her decease to the use of his son in fee; the statute is made, the husband and wife die, his issue enters, he is not remitted, but his issue shall be remitted. 143. Tenant in tail before 23 H. 8. made a feoffement to the use of himself and his heirs, the Feoffees granted a Rend charge, the statute is afterwards made, Tenant in tail dies, the issue enters, he is not remitted to the tail to avoid the Charge, Adjudged between Simmons and Chapman. Pas. 35 H. 8. (55.) 144. The Lord Borough Tenant in Capite, suffered a recovery to the use of his sons and his wife, and the heirs of the bodies of his sons, without limiting any remainder over, the son died having issue within age, and notwithstanding the sta. 32 H. 8. it was adjudged that the issue shall not be in ward during the life of the mother, for the ancient Reversion remains, and the father donor held of the King; and not the sons, as they should if there had been a remainder. Tenus also that whereas the Lord Borough was seized of land in possession & in use, covenanted upon the said marriage, that his son immediately after his death shall have all his lands, according to the same course of inheritance that than stood, and that all now or to be seized, shall stand seized to the uses aforesaid; and it was holden to be but a covenant, and that it altered not the use of the father of the Fee presently; so that for no cause shall the issue of the Son be in guard; Quaere si les parolls fuissont urera & remain ' all fits. 145. Two Parceners of an Advowson, the youngest within age, and in Guard, The Lord intermaried with the eldest; the Church being voided he presented in both their names, after the youngest came to age, and the Church again voided: It seems the eldest shall present if the youngest will not join, for the last presentment was indifferent, Quaere. 146. A Quare impedit was abated because the Plaintiff was made a Knight, and yet compellable; Quare if he shall have a new writ by Journeys Accounts. 147. Judgement upon a writ of Annuity was, that the Plaintiff shall recover the arrearages before, and hanging the writ of q' attingunt, etc. and in summing there is a quarter more than is incurred. Also it was showed to the Court before the verdict that the Jury had eat and drank at their own costs, and upon those matters Error was brought; But because the day of writ brought, and also of the Judgement is put in certain; it is apparent to how much the arrearage will amount; And the Summing which was the office of the Clerk is not of necessity. Also the eating of the Jury at their own costs, although it be finable, yet it shall not induce affection, and so the first Judgement was affirmed. 148. Trespass, Demur', if the Son may avoid the feoffement of his Father being deaf and dumb. Trin. 56. 149. A Lease of land and sheep, the sheep died, or part of the land is surrounded with the sea, the entire rent shall issue out of the residue, by divers, but some held the contrary, because it is the act of God: And if a part be evicted upon elder title it shall be apportioned. 150. A Writ of right was brought against husband and wife, the wife being within age is admitted by her next friend, the Tenants vouched, and joined issue upon the mere right; and after made default; Judgement final was given against the Vouchee and his heirs, and against the Tenant and his heirs, Nota. 151. A. is obliged that B. shall pay 20. l. to the Obligee, the Obligee accepts a horse of B. the Obligation is discharged, but otherwise had it been if the payment had been to a stranger to the Obligation. (57) 152. Reed brought a debt upon an Obligation, where the condition was to perform Covenants, Grants, and agreements, in an Indenture of Lease, The Defendant pleaded the Indenture, and that after, viz. such a day five years after, the Plaintiff by deed here showed in Court released, etc. ad primum diem Maii●, qu' esset in anno Domini, etc. all Covenants in the Indenture. Judgement if the Action. The Plaintiff demur' and adjudged that the plea is not good, because he had not alleged that till the release he had not broken any Covenants; for if the Obligation be one time forfeit, a release of Covenants after shall not dispense with that. Mes si per release les Covenants sont dischar' durant ascun infrient, the Obligation is than discharged Quia accessorium. As in cases of Redisseisin, etc. nomine penae, etc. Per melior. opinio. that the words ad primum diem Maii qu' esset, etc. are voided words, and the premises shall stand as a present release, for the subsequent words may qualify and abridge but not destroy the premises. And a release is not available but for a right, or an Action which one had at the time of the release; for it is contrary to the nature of a release to take effect in time to come. Notwithstanding by Laldwin peradventure, if the heir of the Disseisee deliver a writing as an Escrow, to be his deed after the death of his father, it shall be good (R. Quaere because of the relation) and holden by Bromley, and Shelley, that by a release of covenants, the Demise and all agreements, as Reservation of Rent, which is an agreement of both, is released. But Baldwin denied it. Mich. 153. Stat. 1 Rich. 3. gives authority to Cestui que use to make a Grant, Lease, Feoffement, Per Justice. if Cestui que use for life, where the remainder is over in tail, makes a Lease for another's life and dies, the Lessee is but Tenant at sufferance; for the statute intends, not that it shall be a Discontinuance, but such an estate as he may lawfully grant; Case Lord Zouch. (58.) Cestui que use made a Lease for 20 years the first day of May, to begin at Midsum. The Feoffees they made a Lease the second day for 30 years to begin at Midsum. also: And holden that it is not a surrender of the first Lease, because it was not yet begun, although it be so in the Lessee that he may either give or forfeit it. But it shall inure as a confirmation for 20 years, and as a new Lease for 10 years after: If Cestui que use make a Lease for years, and after make a Feoffement of that, and other land, and livery in the other. Quaere, because he neither had in possession nor in use according to the statute, if good for that in Lease. Cestui que use in tail made a Feoffement and died, as it seems the franck-tenement shall not be adjudged in Feoffees with regress. Saunders Case. Trin. 36 H. 8. 154. The King had the honour of Gloucest ' partly by descent, and partly by attainter of the Duke of Buckingham; The tenants of the Honour held not in Capite, nor the King shall not have the prerogative of other lands, as was decreed in the case of the heir of A●●●ur of Clopton, in Guard for tenure in Chivalry as of the said Honor. 155. The Bishop of Bath and Wells made a Lease for life, and after granted the Reversion, habend' terr. praedict. cum post mortem etc. vacare contigerit usque finem 20 annorum extunc' proxim' sequent ' with a Letter of Attorney to make livery; which was executed and a Confirmat. had; The tenant for life made regress; the Bishop died; if the said grant be good as a new Lease without Atturnment, or if the regress be a sufficient attornment, Quaere. 156. The King let to Taverner a Rectory rendering rend, and granted to him to be discharged of all pensionibus, portionibus & omnibus denar' summis; and decreed in court of Augmentation, that the King shall found the Curate; and if a common person let without such words of discharge, yet he shall found, for it is a spiritual administration, which may not be let; and the service is annexed to the person, and not issuing out of the Parsonage. 157. The Prior and Covent of C. let the Manor of D. Cum pertinent' una cum columb' ac reddit' tenent' decim' garb' finib' heriot' perquis' cur. & aliis omnib' proficuis, advocac' eccl' & wrecc' excep' & reserv'. Per some the word (ac) conjoines the last words of that which is let, but that may not be first, for than aliis omnibus proficuis which came after is excepted which is repugnant, also the nature of a forspris is to restrain part of a thing before spoken of, whereas decim' garb ' is a new thing. Case Wiltshire. (59) 158. In a debt upon an Obligation brought against Hawood, he pleaded non est factum, and so at issue, and before the day of the appearance of the inquest, the rats had eaten the label of the Obligation per the negligence of the Clerk, in whose custody it was, etc. upon which the Jury were charged by the Justices that they should found that it was the deed of the Defendant at the time of the plea, and give a special verdict, and so they did. 2 Ed. 3.22 simile. In a Repleg. the Plaintiff was Nonsute and ●Return' habendo awarded which was returned Averia clongat ', for which in Withernam other beasts were delivered: yet by the Court the second deliverance shall be of the first. Pas. 159. The Lord Latimer devised to his wife the third part of all his Goods and Chattels; Quaere if they shall be intended as they are after all Debts and Legacies paid, or if the entire; And if three parts of the Debts of the Testator shall also pass. The word utensils shall not pass plate and jewels, per Justice. A Devise to the daughter 500 l. towards her marriage, If she die before marriage, per greater opinion her Execut' shall have it. Contra if the words were to pay at the day of her marriage or at the age of 21 years, and she die before both, as tenus 3 Eliz. Pas. 28 H. 8. (60.) 160. Trewynnard Burgess of the Parliament was taken upon an Exigent after a Capias, and now upon a Writ of privilege from the Parliament the Sheriff let him go at large. (61.) 1. Tenus that the privilege is grantable non obstante the execution, for the King and the Realm had interest in the body of every Burgess, and the Commonwealth shall be preferred. Trin. 2. That the party after the Parliament may be taken in execution again, for the Plaintiff shall not be prejudic ' of his execution by Act of the law, which makes not wrong to any. 3. Admitting that the privilege should not lie in that case, yet the Sheriff shall not be charged, because he is sworn to execute process, but he is not bound to take notice of the law. 161. A Prebend in a Cathedral church let parcel of his prebendary for years, and the Dean and Chapter confirm' and divers held, that it shall not bind the Bishop, who is Patron and Ordinary of every Prebend, Quaere. vide 8 Ed. 3. 162. Whorewood and his wife were Joint-purchasers of 60. l. land, and the husband seized of 300. l. land more, devised that his wife shall have the 3 part of the entire, with her Jointure by the Assignment of the Executors, and the wife waived her Jointure, and demanded the third part of the entire as a Legacy, viz. 120. l. and the third part of the residue for her dower, viz. 80. l. And it was decreed that she shall have the third part of the entire, and over that 40. l. of the residue for all her dower. 163. Upon information upon the statute of plurality of Farms, and that the Defendant had seven lying in seven towns in 4 Hundreds in Essex. Concord ' if there be 4 hundredors returned which have land, or abide in any of them, it sufficeth for the challenge for the Hundred. 164. Tenus, that a plaint in Assize of four acres of land and a house, it may be abridged for the house, because the Jurors had not the view of that, and it sufficeth if the Jury have notice of themselves, although the Sheriff● 'cause them not to view it: (62.) For the matter is, if they can put the Plaintiff in possession if he recovers. The examination of the view was, by the true speaking of the Jury upon their oath, & holden that if a Termor after surrender continued possession and pay rend to the Lessor, holden that it is no Disseisin except at the pleasure of the Lessor. Three were named conjunctim & divisim as Attorneys to make livery, and two did it the third being present, but said nothing; Quaere. But it was agreed if the third had been absent it had not been a good livery. Expliciunt Anni Regis Henrici Octavi. Incipiunt Anni Regis Edwardi sexi: Anno Tertio. Mich. 65. A Parson granted an Annuity de Rectoria sua to A. and his Assigns for the life of the Grantor pro consitiosuo impens. tantum, and A. assigned that J. S. who brought an Annuity, and counted that A. was seized in Demcan as in francktenement, etc. Defend ' demur' if it may be assigned: Also it was moved by Pollard that an Annuity lieth not because of the Count that the Grantee was seized in his demean as of francktenement, which shows an election to take as a rent seck, Quaere. 166. Wast is assigned in amputando & decapitando 40 fraxinos, etc. and upon Demurrer adjudged waste. Error Assigned in Assize of 40. s. rent. 1. Because B. in the association was also Attorney to the Plaintiff. 2. Because at the day of Assize one Defendant appeared & nihil dixit, and the Assize was adjourned into the Exchequer chamber, at which day the said Defendant made default, and upon that default the Assize awarded, whereas it should have been awarded upon the nihil dicit. 3. The Plaintiff and Defendant varied in the land put in view whereof, etc. and the verity is not inquired by the Jury. 4. Because the Plaintiff was admitted to abridge 20. s. where the rent is entire; and is not as in case of land. 5. Also notwithstanding the said abridgement, the verdict and Judgement was ne redditu in querela, viz. of the entire. 6. After 5 sworn upon the principal, than the Assize remained ' pro eo quod nihil habuerunt infra hundred. de A. without saying infra quod, etc. quodque non fecerunt visum, etc. where if 4 hundredors are sworn upon the principal it is sufficient. 7. The rejoinder was in nullo est erratum, where the first error assigned is matter of fact, and issuable of one and the same person. But holden very good, for he agreed that it is one and the same person, but yet denied it to be an Error. Signior Windsor's case. (66.) 167. The words of a Lease were & non licebit to the Lessee to alien without assent of the Lessor sub pena sorisfac '; It was agreed that this is condition. But that the restraint continues but during the life of the Lessor and Lessee. 168. Debt was brought in the Exchequer by Sergeant Minors against the Sheriffs of London upon an escape A. And counted that he was in execution in Ludgate in the time of 4 Sheriffs, till the Defendants 15 Decemb. 3 Ed. 6. etc. Defend ' said, that long before the said 15 Decemb. 3 Ed. 6. viz. 23 September, 1 Ed. 6. the said A. being in custody of J. and C. the● Sheriffs, upon the said Execution, they at Lambeth in Surrey let him to go at large, etc. & hoc &c. Plaintiff demur. 1. Because it may be before the 3 of Ed. 6. and yet the year after J. and C. were out of office. 2. It is repugnant that the said Sheriffs suffered him to escape in Surrey he being than in their custody in London. (67.) 3. Also it aught to be alleged certainly that he was in their custody in Surrey, or otherwise if there be not special matter, as the commandment of the King, or his counsel, or chamberlain by writ, it is an escape. 4. Also they excuse not their own wrong by traverse, nor by confession and avoiding: But this put upon another, whereas every one shall answer for his own misdeed, Escape 45. that such matter is confessing and avoiding, 33 H. 6. it is a good excuse, that escape was by sudden fire, or enemies. Contra of Rebels. So also a Gaoler may not him aid of the escape by error in the Record, upon which the prisoner was in execution, because a stranger to that, 21 Ed. 4. fol. 28 acc' & M. 14 Ed. 3. 169. A man made a Lease for years to two, provided, that if they die with● the term, that the term shall cease, the t●rmors made partition, and after one of them died, Tenus that his Executor shall have it, because there is no occupant in this case, and it shall not cease during the life of his companion. But if it were a Lease for life it should be determined. Farringtons case. 170. In debt the Defendant pleaded a release of the Plaintiff in Bar; and at the issue upon Non est factum the Defendant confessed that it was not the deed of the Plaintiff, and than the Plaintiff had judgement presently, and Defend ' Capiat. 33 H. 6. and he was but amerced. But for denying his deed, the judgement is quod capiatur, although he be not convict by verdict. 171. Upon Extend' faci ' upon a statute Staple the Sheriff extended the land of the Defendant, and sold the goods, and returned the extent in Chancery; And a writ of Prerogative issued, that the Sheriff should first levy 100 l. for the King, and driven to execute the writ of Prerogative; for it's holden that till the Liberat ' no property is in the Conusee. R. Quaere, for by many of the Temple, the extent seizeth them into the hands of the King to the use of the party, and upon that they are in custody of the law, in privilege of all other executions. Hill. 5 Ed. 6. (68) 172. Tenant in tail in feoffed his issue within age and his wife, the issue died having issue, he is remitted. Quaere because of the Feme. Pas. 173. An Indictment was quod A. apud D. insult. etc. & ipsum murdravit without ad tunc & ibidem; also the Indict' was Barksh. Inquisit' capta ibid. ' without showing where the Inquisition was made, Defendant outlawed; and the outlawry reversed for the same errors: (69.) And holden that the word murdravit implies ex malitiapraecogita, as furatus est implies felonice cepit. Also holden that a Justice of peace may inquire of murder, because it is felony non obstante opinio ' Fitzh. Bucklers case. 174. A Parson makes a Lease for years or grants a Rend charge to begin after his death, the Patron and Ordinary confirmed it. It seems good to bind the Successor, because the charge is present, although it take not effect in the life of the Grantor, Quaere. 175. Three brothers the middle of them was slain, and the eldest died within the year, and no appeal began, and Demur' if the youngest may have an appeal. 176. Four women being coheirs of one Harwell, three of them and their husbands-prayed a Covenant to levy a Fine against the fourth and her husband: which Conus ' of the tenem' to be the right of one of the three sisters as that which her husband and she, and the other two husbands and their wives had of their gift; The Conusees rendered to the wife of the Conusor in tail, the remainder to three women Conusees in tail, remained ' rectis bered' Harwell; The wife Conusor died without issue, and the three husbands and their wives now brought a Scire facias to execute the remained. quare the remained ' non deb●ant, etc. Vide 1 H. 5.8. that a Scire facias lieth not to execute a remained ' in that case, for the Conusees as that, etc. ●●ey had see executed, and than it is a voided limination of a remainder in tail to themselves. 177. Tenant in ancient Demean vouched one at the Common law, within the same county, because the Vouchee had nothing to be summoned within, etc. And upon Demurrer the Voucher adjudged, and day was given in the Bank to determine the warranty: And a Summons ad warrant ' was warded to the Vouchees in the foreign county, who entered into warranty, and vouched over into another foreign county, etc. 178. A man enfeoffed two upon condition to remake a Lease for life to the Feoffor, the remainder in see to a stranger, the one sole made an estate accordingly, and per many it is good for the moiety by dispensation of the party who made the condition, per his acceptance of the estate. Trin. 6 Ed. 6 (70.) 179. In a Trespass against Isham Keeper, for entering into a Park and depasturing swine, and for entering into one meadow and taking of grass, etc. the Defend ' pleaded in Bar to which were divers exceptions. 1. Because he had pleaded a grant of the office of a Keeper for life, by virtue of which he was possessed, whereas it was a franktenement. 2. Because in his Bar he made three several Justifications, and pleaded semper, quod J. S. suit seisit, etc. and granted to him the office, and said not praedictus J. S. so contra, because it shall be intended divers men. (71.) 3. He justified the depasturing of swine as appendent to his office, whereas swine nor goats are not commonable. 4. He had pleaded a grant of the office, and made prescription to have things incident, etc. and said not that he was seized by force of the grant before he made his prescription, for otherwise he may not prescribe. 5. Before his prescription Non dicit that it was an ancient Park, which exception was the principal cause that Judgement was given against him. For matter in law it was doubted, if the Defendant being Keeper but for life whether he may prescribe in him and his predecessors, for he cannot say, and those whose estate he had, etc. or if he aught to prescribe in a place, as to say quod habetur talis usus in the said county that every Keeper, etc. As Tenants at will may prescribe quod talis habetur usus in such a town, etc. but not in their persons. Yet it is said that the prescription of the chief Justice in giving offices is general, that every chief Justice for the time, etc. yet he is an Officer at will of the King. vide 11 Ed. 4. the like prescription of a Sergeant to be sued by original and not by Bill. The like 21 H. 7. for Bar fee by the Sheriff. And holden that a Lord of a Manor may prescribe to have a hariot upon the death of the tenant for life, for although an estate for life be interrupted, others have continuance by which the prescription is made. But the Tenant himself may not prescribe. Tenus that the Lord may dispark, notwithstanding the grant of the office; But not ear it if he had granted the herbage. And holden that by grant of the office of a Keeper incidents pass especially if the words be in tam amplis modo & forma quod A. habuit, which are as available as express words. (72.) Also it was objected, that a Keeper of a Park might not prescribe to have seyn, viz. primam tonsuram prati, for it is a franktenement, and an Assize lieth of it, and than for the mischief of obeyance, etc. which shall not be suffered but only in case of a parson. Contrary of an office of inheritance. And it was argued, that an Advowson may not be appendent to the services but to the Demean. Mich. 180. Vide the form of the Sergeants writ, the inscriptions of annuals were, Plebs sine lege vuit. 181. One learned in the law took notes of the Will of one sick, and after writ the Will, but before he shown it to the sick he died; And yet by the opinion of the Court it is a good will in writing within 32 to convey soccage sand. Idem 5 Elizab. although written after his death. Sackvils' case. 182. The husband alone levied a Fine with Proclamation of his wife's land and died, and five years incurred without entry or action of the wife; she is bound per Curiam by stat. 4 H. 7. And the stat. 32 H. 8. aids him not although it limits not any time peremptory, for that speaks not of a Fine with Proclamation. 183. A man levied a Fine at the Common law of land in ancient demean of the nature of Gavelkind. The course is not altered, Quaere. 184. A Parson made a Lease for years after the Patron granted proxim' advocate ', and after the Patron an Ordinary confirmed the Lease, and the Parson died: he that had the next avoidance presented A. and he was discharged of the Lease; after the Patron granted the Advowson in Fee, and A. died, and the Grantee presented B. If he shall avoid the residue of the term, Quaere; and note the alienation was after the death of the Lessor. 185. Adjudged that an Action upon the case lies, for saying, W. Kempe will be a bankrupt within this two days. 73. 186. Upon a writ of Partition upon 32 H. 8. the Sheriff returned the partition made by 12 lawful men; one of the parties surmised an inequality, and prayed a new writ, Quaere if he shall have it. 187. Eps. surrendered an ancient Lease of the possession of 2 Priory, and took a new lease for 41 years, within the year 31 H. 8. of Dissolutions rendering the ancient rent; and after the Patentee of the King avowed upon the Lessee for Damage fesant, Demurr' if it be a good Lease. (74.) 188. Exceptions to an information upon the Will of the Lord Boucher. 1. That the will was not found by office, and the Attorney of the King may not entitle the King to the franktenement by suggestion without matter of Record inducing thereto. 2. The information is quod dedit manerium O. etc. by his Will, which is false if he had but an use; for a Devise is not within the stat. 1 Rich. 3. the don. de possess ' as it is of a scoffement of Cestui que use. And being before the stat ' of Wills, it shall not be intended that he might device the land itself, without pleading the custom specially. 3. Also in his Will he requested the King to accept his Manor of O. etc. for the 500 pound which he owed him, but those he gave not to him, and therefore the acceptance aught ●o be showed. 4. The words are over, paying to high Executors ultra, so much as the King pleaseth, towards etc. and this word paying in the Will is a condition, and aught to have been shown performed by the payment of some sum. 5. Also a use or possession of a franktenement may not be vested in the King without matter of record. 6. Also after his will made his Feoffees by his commandment made a feoffement to the use of himself for life, remained ' to estr. uses, which was a countermanding of the Will, for a Will cannot take effect till the death of the Testator. 189. Lessee for years devised his entire term to A. provided if he die while J. S. is living, than the residue shall remain to J. S. A. aliened and died, per Hales and M●ountagu●, J. S. is without remedy. Vide Welkdens case. Debt by Patridg against Grocker upon stat' 32 of buying itles. Ploughed. Com. (75.) 190. An Action upon the case was brought by Bridges, for saying B. is a maintainer of thiefs, and a strong thief himself; Issue joined if propalavit mode & sorma, and all the words found besides strong, and the Plaintiff had Judgement. Quaere if he shall be amerced for the said addition, for peradventure it shall be an error in Judgement. 191. Andrew's brought an Action upon the case, and counted that the Defendant for 20 pound whereof the moiety was paid; and the rest agreed to be paid at a time; for which he promised to deliver 400 pound of wax to the Plaintiff such a day, and at the day he delivered to the Plaintiff 373 pound of ill wax, and warranted it to be good and merchantable, by which the Plaintiff was damnified, etc. The Defendant pleaded an agreement or concord made between them after for the 26 pound of wax, iswell for the insufficiency, as for the rest not delivered, which agreement or concord he had paid or performed, & the Plaintiff accepted that, etc. Judgm' etc. Plaintiff demur' because the deceit was not answered; (76.) And the Bar was holden good, because a Concord executed is a good Bar in all actions where only damages is to be recovered. And arbitrament is a good plea before it be executed, because an action of Debt lies upon Arbitrament. And holden that the deceit supra, is not material to be answered, because the warranty of the sufficiency was after the Contract, and so no confidence. Also the Count is not good because he had not showed that the second day of payment was not come, for it shall be intended that it is come, and that the consideration is not paid, where the agreement was for 20 pound; which is condit'. 192. Fieri facias issued against Vincet, who died, and the Sheriff levied the execution against the administrat'; And the administrators brought a writ of Error, and reversed the Judgement, Quaere of a writ of error by Administrat. 193. In Dower by the wife of Kettlesby, the tenant pleaded the entry of the Demand ' in parcel after the last continuance, and holden that the tortuous entry shall abate the writ; The Plaintiff said that she entered for a Quarentine. And holden that she aught to show the death of her husband in certain, and the time of the forty days. 194. In a Quare impedit against the Bishop of Salisbury and the Incumbent, verdict passed before the Justices of Assize for the Plaintiff, accord. stat. w. 2. cap. 5. Judgement was given before them and a writ to the Metropolitan awarded; and for damage a Fieri facias to the Sheriff the Defendant upon a writ of Error brought removed the record into the King's bench, and had a Supersedeas to the Metropolitan made in the Common pleas, after the Plaintiff sued a Scire facias to have execution, because the Defendant did not assign Errors, which by the course in this writ is as add assignand' Error ', upon which the Defendant assigned Errors. 1. Because found by the inquest of Office that the Incumbent was in by the presentation of A. who was not named in the writ. (77.) 2. Because damages were adjudged for half a year where it appeared that the presentation was not deraigned within 6 months, and the words stat. w. 2. cap. 5. are recited quod si disratio ' presentat' infra tempus semestriae tunc adjucent' dampn' add valor' medietat' ecclesiae per unum annum, notwithstanding these the Judgement was affirmed; And upon suggestion, that the writ of Error was brought before the payment were assessed by the Court, and costs according 3 H. 7. c. 10. & 19 H. 7.20. And a writ of Execution awarded to the Guardian of the spiritualty sede vacan●● of the Metropolitan. Exception was, because the writ of Error was, in recordo, processu, & redditione judicii loquel. que fuit co●am nebis etc. which was false. 195. The King let the fee of Richmond with all Deodands which should hap within it to C. for years; And after he granted all Deodands generally to Amne ': the term of C. expired, and the King made a new Lease to C. as supra; By Montague the Almoner shall not have the Deodands against the Patentees, for his Grant was voided because the Lease of C. was not mentioned in the Patent. Omnia quae movent ad mortem sunt Deodands. 196. The King let the Scite of an Abbey & omnia terras, prata, pasturas & subscript' cum pertin' dicto Monaster' pertin' &c. viz. such a thing, & such, etc. Tenus that (viz.) shall have relation to the subscrip ' only; so that the Patentee shall have alother lands which appertain to the Monastery, and not to omnia. 197. Adjudge in Assize that where Tenant in tail discontin' to the use of himself for life, the remainder to the use of the heir in tail, the remainder to a stranger in fee, and died, and the heir entered, stat. 27 H. 8. is made, and after the heir died without issue. It was resolved that the entry of him in remainder was congeable, because the heir of the Tenant in tail was not remitted, by the possession executed by the statute. 198. Abbot 29 H 8. made a Lease for 80 years rendering &c. of a wood three miles distant from the house, notwithstanding never in Lease before, but the wood was never spent in the house but always sold; the house within the year was dissolved. And the opinion of the Justices was that it is a Lease within stat. 31 H. 8. ergo, voided. 199. In Attaint the Grand Jury were returned Summoned, by the Sheriff Cousin to one of the Petty-Jury; But the Resummons and Distress, & 20. & 16. Tales, all were returned by a new Sheriff, and now full Jury appeared, and the grand Jury was quashed, causa qua supra, and the Tales at the peril of the Plaintiff; But divers precedents are that such a Tales shall stand. 200. In Assize the Writ was the libero tenemento in C. the plaint was of one house, etc. the Defendant said that the land was in H. and not in C. Judgement of the writ, & si, etc. Quaere if he need to say and not in C. for this writ is but a supposal, viz. de libero tenemento. 201. In a Quare impedit the Plaintiff made title by survivor upon a grant made to him and others by A. who had advoc' quart' partis in gross, and had presented B. etc. and after another as in gross, & after a third as in gross, and than the Defendant presented as appendent, and every of them had advoc' alius quartae partis, etc. and that the Church is now voided by the death of the presentee of the Defendant: and so now appertains, etc. The Defendant said, that the entire Advowson is appendent to the Manor of D. the moiety of which he had by descent, and now it belonged to him to present, sans that the said B. was admitted and instituted ad presentat' A. Some held that he aught to have traversed it absque hoc, that in gross; Quaere, for the parties conveyed not from one and the same person; Ideo 20 Ed. 4. 21 & Lib. Entr. 130. and the presentation was traversed, this issue shall be tried by the Ordinary. Hill. 7 Ed. 6. (79.) 202. An Indenture of Lease had such a clause, viz. And the Less shall continually devil upon the premises upon pain of for feiture; Per Curiam, it is a Condition, for the clause is the words of both; so quoth non licebit alien' etc. sub poena sorisfact'. Vide de proviso & covenant ensemble. 203. In a Formedon the tenant vouched one as Cousin and heir of Townsend, and prayed that the plea abide, per Curiam he aught to show how he is Cousin. 16 Ed. 3. idem 15 Ed. 4. contra. 204. A man made a Lease of a Manor in which was 30 acres of wood, and also in another place of the Manor were timber trees; excepting timber trees and great woods: by 3 Justices that the herbage and underwoods' in the woods shall pass, and so seems to be the intent of the Lessor per paroll grand, Montague the contra. 205. A man was sued in his spiritual Court for his very tithe, and upon suggestion de modo decimand ' over 60 years, viz. of paying 12. d. only for, etc. and that he had pleaded it in spiritual Court and was not allowed, and had a Prohibition, and per Curiam if the 12. d. had been a rent issuing out of the land, yet a Prohibition shall be granted, Quaere & vide 8 Ed. 4. fol. 14. per Choke 2 man may not prescribe de non decimando. 206. In a writ of Right, the writ to summon the four Knights was returned served, and they appear not, Hab. corpora shall issue, and not alias summon'; per Justices. 207. A writ of Partition was brought by Ra. Haward Esquire, and the Lady Anne Powes his wife, and was abated, and so he was driven to purchase a new writ; and to leave out the word (Lady) and the form was per Annam uxor' ejus. And the Plaintiff counted how the feme was coheir with one in tail with the Defendant. (80.) And holden that he needs not show the beginning of that, because he affirms the possession of the Defendants, and demanded not the land. The Defendant pleaded special Bastardy in the wife of the Plaintiff. Judgement of the partition; And holden a good plea without traversing the Coparcenary, and the trial shall be where the birth was alleged. 208. A man condemned in Debt died, before Execution, and holden that the Administrators are holden to pay this debt upon Record before specialties, and if they are sued upon an Obligation, they may pled recovery against them, which is not executed, and if they do not pled so, but in default of that Judgement was given against them, and execution had, before the first execution sued; they shall answer of their own proper goods, for by the first Judgement the goods were charged. 209. Questions for the Lord Willoughby. 1. If a man let all his meadows in D. containing 10 acres, where it doth indeed contain 20, if all pass; And it seems it doth. 2. If a man let 40 acres juxta F. whereof 10 lie in A. & 20 in B. and 10 in F. if all pass. 3. If a Stewardship may be granted by a common person to be had after the death of the first Grantee. 4. Of herbage of a Park be granted, and the Grantee surcharge so that the Deer are not pastured, if he hath any remedy. 5. Grant of a Keepership, with 3. l. fee of rents, profits, & issues of the Manor of S. by the hands of the Receiver it shall charge the Manor, Per Montague & Hales. 210. There is a proviso in stat. 31 H. 8. that Leases which have been examined, enrolled, decreed, or affirmed in the Court of Augmentation, and the decree put in writing and sealed with the seal of the said Court, it shall be good and effectual according to the said decree, etc. Lease made within the year, and the ancient rent not reserved, (so that it shall be voided except for the proviso) was exhibited in the Court of Augmentation 25 April 31 H. 8. to be allowed, and so was, and exemplified: But that bore date 28 day of April, which was the first day of the Parliament, Quaere if it be aided. It's clear it had, if it had been dated 27 April. Sir John Sentlees case. (81.) 211. The heir was condemned in an Action of Debt by nihil dicit upon the Obligation of his father. And the opinion of the Court was, that the Plaintiff shall have no other execution but by special Elegit of all the lands descended in fee to the heir of the said Ancestor, which he had the day of the Writ purchased. Peppes case. 212. The College of Graystock having a Master presentable, and 6 Priests with stipend; The opinion of the Justices that the college was not given to the King by the saint. 1 Ed. 6. of dissolutions, because the master is presentable, and had not a common seal, Hales contra. 213. Sir John Ailiffe sued an attaint in London, upon the stat. 23 H. 8. and process continued upon the said stat' & upon the statute 37 H. 8. cap. 5. and this Judgement was given in the Exchequer, and before execution the record wac removed into the Bank by C●ritiorare, Nota hoc, and now the Plaintiff prayed Judgement upon that and had it. For by the Justices an Attaint is not a Supersedeas as a writ of Error is, nor a Supersedeas lies not in attaint; and upon the Resum. returned in the Bank served, 20 Tales awarded. Nota. And because by the said statute the inquest shall not be compellable to appear out of London, the Justices caused the distress to be returned at Guildhall, and there they sat in the Mayor's court and charged the inquest, verdict passed for the Plaintiff, but Judgement was respited per Curi●m to be advised. (82.) 214. Debt against the Executors of Potter in the debet & detivet for rend incurred upon a term after the death of the Testator; They pleaded that part of the land was evicted in the life of the Testator, and for the residue that they profer', etc. & uncore priest. etc. Plaintiff demurred but at length accepted according to the apportionment, without costs or damages of either side. 215. A man is obliged to pay 20. l. viz. 10 pound at Michaelm. and 10 pound at Christm. he tendered the 10 pound at Michaelmas, and was in pollards which after were abased, which was refused, and he failed of payment of the other 10 pound, upon which a debt is brought, and upon the tender pleaded, etc. Judgement that because in default of the Plaintiff himself, that he received not the first payment he shall have it in pollards, but the second in sterling, and damages, etc. 216. A man sued A. before the Mayor of London, and a third person being so much indebted to the Defendant, by the custom of attachment he is condemned, notwithstanding this Judgement, yet till execution, the Plaintiff may resort, and have judgement and execution against the Defendant himself, also he may sue the third person for his debt, notwithstanding the judgement unexecuted, which was certified by the Recorder. 217. Receiver who paid not that over at the day which he aught, if he shall bear the imbasement of the money after. Quaere if the cofferer refuse to accept after the day, and after it is embased. Quaere if the Receiver pay not upon Request having money of the Kings in his hands. (83.) 218. A man is bound in 20. l. to pay 10 pound at Michaelmas, the Obligee upon tender refused, and after brought a debt upon the Obligation. It seems because it behoves to pled, unc' priest that the Obligor shall bear the imbasement. Pas. 219. Sergeants case: assize de porciene decimarum per the Dean and chapter of B. 1. Exception was taken because the writ was the libero tenemento. But it seemed to the other side to be very good, and the count shall be special de porcione decimarum, for no special writ is given by the statute 32 H. 8. and than the ancient writ stands, and there shall be a special count. Vide Bckenhams case. 2. Because the Land-tenants were not named; but it was said to be very good, for tithes are not so precisely issuing out of land as rent is, neither is there other want of those than he that takes it. (84, 85, 86, 87.) 3. Because the plaint is quadam portione garbar', etc. in 200 acres, without showing the certainty of the loads. But is was answered the taking of part was a disseisin of the entire tithe; the which being casual and uncertain the plaint cannot be more certain, and quadam is a word of certainty, except it be joined with a word uncertain, as quidam ignotus. 4. Because the statute was not particularly alleged, answer was it need not because general. 5. Because the writ was in Dominico, etc. It was said they are tangeable, ergo Demean. 6. Because the prescription of the payment made the plea double, to which it was denied, because the prescription is but an inducement to the right, and the seisin the effect, and seisin only shall not be a sufficient title of a profit apprender to charge another's soil. 7. Praet●xtu quorum shall have relation but to the last part. But it was answered to all; but not to better or worse the estate. 8. Because it was not said in jure coronae. To which it was said, that the statute gives tithes to the King to dispose, & sil allegeroi●, etc. It may be doubted if they may be severed from the crown. 9 Because the name of Baptism of the Dean is not showed, fuit dit, that it is no policy if it be of a thing which he hath with the chapter, for by interlessant his name of Baptism he may have an assize of Disseisin in time of his predecessor. 10. Because it is not showed that the tithes are not parcel of the Demean of the Archbishop York nuper in tenura B. according to the Grant. It was said it need not, for it is very certain to name the land out of which they come 2 Ed. 4. There were also three matters in law moved. 1. If where the statute speaks but of a person or persons a body Politic shall have advantage of that. 2. If Tithes in their spiritual hands may be demanded in Temporal court. 3. If Tithes are made Temporal by any words in the statute 27 or 32 of Dissolutions. 220. Presentment is come to the Bishop by lapse, and after the Bishop is deprived. Quaere if the Metropolitan or King shall have the presentment. 221. The King by Indenture made a Lease for years of tithes rendering rend to be paid at Midsummer & Michaelmas, or within a month after the said feasts in the court of Augmentation; provided if it be behind by the space of one month after any day of payment limited, if it be duly demanded, that the Lease shall be voided. The King after granted the Reversion in fee, the rent is hehind two months after the feast day; Quaere if any demand need to be made by the Kings Patentee; and if he aught, whether of the person, or in the court of Augmentation; (88) and whether tender in any mean day of the month sufficeth. Note, rend reserved upon tithes, and that they pass by the grant of the reversion of them; and so it is not like a sum in gross. 222. Eden who had practised Multiplication, which is felony by the statute, 4 H. 4. cap. 41. he was pardoned by the general pardon; But W. accessary was accepted, as one of those who were in the Tower; It was moved if he be yet discharged: Quaere if he may be accessary to a new felony. 223. Assize against 3 the plaint is of 6 acres, and it was found that one is tenant of 2 acres and disseised the Plaintiff of one only, and not of the other; so of the other; so of the third, he is tenant of two acres the residue, and disseised the Plaintiff and is dead hanging the writ; The Plaintiff after verdict abridge the plaint of two acres in which there was no disseisin, and of the other two, of which he that died was found tenant: Quaere if he shall have judgement according of the residue. Trin. 224. Appeal of murder by a woman of the death of her husband, against Margaret Oldcastle Spinster, where she was indeed a Gentlewoman; It seems it is not a sufficient addition: But she was estopped to pled that to the writ because she purchased a Supersedeas upon this, and so she pleaded not guilty; after the Plaintiff took a new husband; for that, etc. (89.) 225. Davies the 19 H. 8. made a feoffement to B. to the use of C. in tail; the remainder to the right heirs of the same Davies: and O. and C. levied a fine to a stranger, who granted the land to the King; C. died without issue, after D. died, and B. sued a Petition to revive the use to the heir of D. and the matter supra, found, & suit said, that the fee was lawfully granted by D. Also the stat. 27. had taken away all interest of the feoffees, for that, etc. 226. Clifford's Error, Ejectione firmae, & bona & catalla ibidem invent' vi & armis, etc. And counted of a Lease for 40 years to begin at Michaelmas next after the death of J. S. and averred that J. S. died and he entered, etc. It was pleaded non ejocit, it was found quod ejecit, and Judgement was given that he shall recover the term aforesaid; where indeed the time is not showed certainly when he entered; so that it may be the term is ended. Also he did not show the time of his entry, for if he entered before the Michaelmas, after the death of J.S. he is a Disseisor, and not a Termor; also bona & catalla, nor vi & armis, are answered, per non ejecit pleaded, and found, but it should have been none culpable to that, yet judgement quod capiatur pro fine. Also the Plaintiff was not amerced for a false clamour of the goods, etc. because nothing was found. Expliciunt Anni Regis Edwardi sexti. Incipiunt Anni Reginae Mariae, Anno Primo. Mich. IOhn Varney made a feoffment to the use of himself and D. his wife, and to the heirs of their two bodies, the remainder to the right heirs of the husband, and they had issue Mary, and the husband died; D. the wife sold the land in fee; Mary and R. her husband joined in a Fine in Confirmation of the estate and Mary died without issue. Now R. and D. and one Edward Varney, as cousin and heir of Mary, brought a writ of Error to reverse the fine, and than to avoid the sale of D. upon stat. 11 H. 7. And R. and D. did not appear; upon which a Summons ad sequend' simul issued, which was returned nihil, and after they appeared freely with the third: note, that they assigned for Error, that after the conusance, but before that certified and engrossed, viz. 25 day of March, which was before the Teste of the Dedimus potestatem that Mary died. But it was holden that they shall not be suffered to allege that, contrary to the record and certificate of the Justice before whom, etc. Also it was holden that because the writ of Error was to remove the record itself it was evil, because only the Transcript shall be removed till it be reversed; because they have not the Chirog. in the King's Bench if the fine be affirmed. Also the writ of Error is brought by Edward Varney as cousin and heir collateral to Mary, and the tail is determined as appears by her death without issue, and he had not made himself right heir to John Varney, (90.) than it shall be intended that he had issue a son or another daughter, and a writ of Error shall be brought by him who shall have the land, viz. the right heir to him in remainder; by the equity of 9 Rich. 2. cap. 3. Quaere, and not by heir general to Mary. And admitting that fee in Mary, yet because expectant upon tail he which shall demand it when the tail is spent, aught to make himself heir to John Varney, for he shall have it although he be but of the half blood to Mary. (91.) 228. In waist by Marvyn de suceidendo & vendendo, etc. the Defendant said that the Plaintiff sold to him omnes arbores suas crescentes super, etc. quae possent ration abi●●ter parcari. for that he cut, etc. Plaintiff demur'. 1. Because he had not answered the selling. 2. He had not showed for what the Plaintiff sold the trees to him; so that he had not quid pro quo. 3. Also they shall not pass per the Grant of the Plaintiff de arbor suis; for not being excepted in the Lease, the Lessor during the term had but a right in them and not a property; and a right may not be granted but by deed, not more of a chattel than of land. 4. Also the Grant is voided for the incertainty, when it may be spared; contrary if it had been referred to an arbitrament, because it might be reduced into certainty. 229. Scire facias to execute a Recovery in Dower by Tourney, the Tenant pleaded that the Plaintiff had accepted a rent after the judgement in satisfaction, etc. and a good plea if it be issuing out of the same land; which rent is distrainable of common right; the assignment was pleaded without deed, Quaere, there it is held acceptance of land which is not in demand in no Bar in Dower per Justices. If before the 32 husband and wife make a Lease per paroll rendering rend, and the husband die, and the wife accept the rent, that doth not affirm the lease, because her assent is needful to the Lease at the making thereof, which cannot be without deed. 230. In attaint the array was challenged because Mary the wife of Sir Richard Mannering Sheriff, who had issue in life, is cousin to one of the Petty jury, and it was demur● upon the challenge. 1. Because it was not showed that he was Sheriff at the time of the making of the panel. 2. Because it was not showed that Mary was his wife at the time of the making of the panel, etc. (92.) 231. In an Indenture of Lease made to one Dives, there were these words, viz. it is agreed that if any fortune to have the interest, that he or they shall found surety within the year for the rent, otherwise the estate to cease, the Lessee devised his term to his wife, the wife found surety and after took husband, he aliened to M. Quaere if he be bound to found surety. 232. Wast was assigned in cutting and selling, where the Defendant had but the lops, he may pled no waste made, and give the especial matter in evidence. 233. The King without words For him and his heirs, granted to an Alien that he should pay but English custom, and holden by all the justices that it should bind the King's successors because of the King's inheritance in the custom. But otherwise of a Licence; contrary also of an Annuity except it be for executing an office, and than it aught to be limited by whose hands it shall be paid, because the person of the King shall not be changed, Com. sol. 449. Wroths case. 234. In a writ of Partition it is a good plea that the Defend ' had such a writ against the Plaintiff, and judgement to have partition; but doubted whether he shall pled it in Bar or in abatement; because hanging another writ; or as estoppel that he had contradicted the partition; although that appears by the first record that he was all times ready, when they confess the Action, 22 Ed. 3. A. brought a Quare impedit against B. and B. brought another against A. of the same Church, and returnable at one and the same day, and the Court caused one of them to be discontinued. (93.) 235. King Hen. 8. made a Commission to four Lords under the great seal, and signed with the sign manual to give royal assent to the act of Attainter of the Duke of Norfolk, which Act was endorsed soit fait come est desire. Dubitatur if it be a good act; Quaere for this assent, 33 H. 8. cap. 21. a Cerciorare was directed to two Clerks of the Parliament to certify the act. Tenus a voided Certificate by one only; Also the circumstances were not certified: But this Commission was suspected because H. Rex was written after the Teste, where it aught to be supra caput, and the King was so sick that he could not writ well; and after it was declared by Parliament to be voided. 236. Judgement in waist was reversed. 1. Because it was recorded quod querens obtulit se 4. die per attornatum, and not named him. 2. The writ alleged seisin to the use of the father of the Plaintiff and his heirs, without showing the state of the feoffees, but they shown it in the assignment of the waist. 3. It is not showed how the use of the particular estate began. 4. The Plaintiff shown that A. held for life, the reversion to him, and said not spectant. 237. A man made a Lease to Woodhouse, after he let the same land to B. habend ' from the falling of the first interest. The Assignee of W. took a new Lease, which is a surrender of his first estate (note where is a mean interest.) Quaere if the term of B. gins. (94.) 238. King Edward 6. granted to his Aunt the Lady Cromwell, the Manor of D. etc. habend' sibi pro termino vitae suae si tamdiu nobis placuerit: after the King reciting the Lease, granted the reversion of that to Sir William Cecil. It seems he may not defeat that estate at william. But it seems the King may of other Manors which are in his hand. 239. A Replevin by Chafyn against the Lord Sturton, it was enacted 13 Ed. 3. that the County of Cornwall should bea Duchy, and that E. the eldest son Ed. 3. should be Duke of Cornwall, and so every eldest son and heir apparent of the King; King Ed. 3. by his Patent granted the Manor of Mere, which he had in the right of his crown; to be holden inseparably, and to go as the Duchy. After all escheated to Ed. 3. and by descent came to Hen. 8. who before, and also after the birth of Edw. 6. made a Lease of Mere and died; holden that Ed. 6. being made King cannot avoid the Leases. 1. Because it was but an estate at will in the son of Ed. 3. 2. Also the annexing to the Duchy, and limiting how it should go, was not to the purpose without an act of Parliament. 3. Upon the escheat to Ed. 3. he was seized in his first estate, and a son born after shall not divest it. 4. No livery or ousterlemaine was sued by Ed. 6. when he was Prince, and now he may not avoid it when he had taken the royal dignity, which drowned the Dukedom. Chafyn pleaded that Ed. 6. by his birth was seized of the reversion in see which might not be so long as the term continued, as Littleton is, upon disseisin of a Manor; the reversion is not in the disseisor so long as a particular estate continues: so also if the Prince had title to the reversion, he had also to the possession; and shall avoid encumbrances, as a son born after descent or escheat. (95.) 240. A man took one to wife who was in Guard to the King, and had issue, and after 16 years accomplished per the feme, tendered a general livery, but before it passed the wife died, her issue within age, Quaere if the husband shall be Tenant by the Courtesy. 241. In debt by Oliver Whitton upon the statute 1 Ed. 6. for usury, and in his writ he misrecited the statute, to be made at the Parliament holden 5 Ed. 6. but holden that was but surplusage in the writ; for the declaration aught to show the cause of the debt, also it was holden at that time by prorogation, etc. Defend ' pleaded quod non recepit, etc. that is a confession of the contract which is within the statute, and the Court ex officio aught to take notice of that and give Judgement: And if a Juror takes moneys to speak his verdict, although he speak it not, or a man takes upon him to maintain although he doth it not; and if a man carries wools to any other place than to Calais, although by wind forced thither, yet is it forfeit. 242. Termor avowed for damage fesant, the Plaintiff said, that he of whom the Lease, etc. was but Tenant in tail who died, and we his issue, etc. The Defendant said that the rent was received, which you accepted after the death of your ancestor, etc. Tenus a departure, Quaere. (96.) 243. Seymor late Admiral covenanted with B. that in consideration that the said B. had conveyed to him certain lands after his death to levy a Fine to the use of himself for life, the remainder in tail to B. Tenus. that the use is not changed till the fine levied, for than the covenant may not be performed. Contrary upon a covenant that the party shall have, etc. If a man device that his Feoffees shall make estate to A. and die; the use changeth before the state is expected. 244. Duke of Somerset purchased to himself and to the Duchess and to the heir males of their two bodies, which is not an estate mentioned within the statute 27 H. 8. to be a jointure which shall be a Bar in Dower, yet resolved that it is within the intent of the statute. 245. Plus de Clifford's Error. 7 Ed. 6. sol. 89. upon an indictment in an ejectione firmae, also it was assigned. 1. Because the writ was in manerium de A. etc. & unum M. suagium, unum etc. and the Count of a Demise of the Manor (advoca ' eccles ' reddit' assisae, etc. dicto manerio pertin' except' & reservat') so that the entire Manor was not let as the writ supposeth: Bromeley said that it was a voided exception of services which are the substance of the Manor, and not only the Maneri' pertin ' as the conclusion of the exception is. 2. Also the premises of the deed comprehend all the names in the writ, but the habendum is, habendum maneri ' without speaking of the house, etc. so that he is but Tenant at will of that: Bromley said that the rest might peradventure be known by the name of the Manor. 3. Also the writ supposeth a demise by the Abbot of C. and the Count is that the Abbot & Covent Monasi. beati Petri de C. etc. and so a variance. (97.) Bromly said it was a very good name, because he departed but with a term. Contrary of a franktenement; and the Covent do not demise but only give consent; and by all the Justices that the substance of the Action is out of the statute 32 H. 8.30. of Jeofailes. So it seems of a declaration, for that is no pleading, quaere. But after upon great deliberation the Judgement was reversed. 246. Error was assigned because the Venire fac. being returnable Mensae Mich. the Hab. corpora was returnable octab. Martim proxim. non alloca●d' unicum esson. vel default ' to the Defend ' upon the Ven. fac. Also because the Hab. corp.. was returnable octabis Martini, Nisi Ed. Montague capitalis Justic' de banco, etc. die Sabbati, viz. 19 No. apud Guilel all' prius venisset, whereas the 18 day was the first day of the Utas; so to take verdict after the day returnable is an Error by the Court, 31 H. 6. fol. 45. accord. 22 Ed. 4.49. a fine levied had relation to the first day of the Return. Pas. 247. The case of the Duchess of Somerset abridged before fol. 96. (98.) 248. A writ was to summon the Parliament, without the stile of Supremum caput, and it was resolved by the Justices upon great deliberation that the writ was very good, for it is but an addition and not parcel of the name. 249. In a writ of right brought by the Lord Windsor, the Plaint' and four Knights, and eleven of the grand Assize appeared, and the Tenant made default; per Pronotaries the default of the Tenant shall only be recorded, and the Jurors shall not be demanded, for the Inquest shall not be taken by default in this case as in personal actions. Vide Glanvill contra. But the default of the demand' or (after the mice joined) of the Defendant it is peremptory (vide 44 Ed. 3.22. husband and wife Tenants, they made default after the mice joined, and the wife was received to join the mice again) but if the party shall have seisin of the land without a petty Cape, in that the books differ. And holden that 16 shall be of the Inquest in a writ of right (R.) Quaere, for the form of the writ to the four Knights is, Ad ●ligend' ex s●ipsis & aliis duodecem. 250. Two Coparceners are of land in tail, one of them made a feoffement of her part; the feoffee and the other in 18 H. 8. made equal partition, it seems, the issue shall not be defeated; because the feoffee was compellable at this day to make partition; although not contrary. Contrary if inequal: Also there i● Tenant in tail be disseised and die, and the issue release with warranty, and die; if it be a discontinuance or no Quaere, Saunders held that it is. Moor's case. 251. Sir N. Throgmortons' case; two conspired to commit treason and one only executed it, both are Traitors, and so at the Common law before the declaration of the stat. 25 Ed. 3. (99) 252. Upon a Fieri facias the Sheriff returned, that he had taken goods to the value of part of the debt, and found not buyers; and although it was objected that the execution is not served, nor the property altered; yet upon this return vendic' exponas, was awarded by Saund. & Browne. 253. Indictment was that the Defendant burglariter fregit Ecclesiam in nocte ad depredand' bona parochianorum; and it was holden Burglary, but the Indictment not good, because it should have been fregit & intravit. 254. Clergy was allowed to an accessary in horse-stealing, because the stat. 1 Ed. 6. cap. 12. speaks but only of the principal, which shall be taken strictly. 255. To let one to go at large, which was put in fetters for felony, although he was not indicted, it is felony by the Common law, de frangentibus prisonam. 256. Indictment quod felonice cepit bona cujusdam ignot', is good, as it is de morte ignoti, for it may be brought in a foreign couty, where the owner is known, per plusors Justices. Portman held a diversity. 257. Justices of Assize hold plea of an appeal of murder, per stat. West. 2. or 3 H. 7. and of robbery per Commission of Gaol delivery. 258. Indictment of Murder of Manslaughter, Quaere if good by words interfecit, or murdravit, with percussit. 259. A man made a feoffment to the use of his wife, for life, and after her death to the use of the right heirs of the body of the Baron and Feme; the woman had issue and died, the husband survived, the issue may not enter, for the husband may not have an heir in his life. 260. A man gave a mortal stroke 15 Septem. and a general pardon was granted the 1 of October; the party died the 3 of October; Quaere, if by that pardon the felony be discharged. 261. A man bought stolen beasts out of any Market, and gave 5 shillings to have election to refuse in the Market to be holden the next day; and than in the Market he agreed to have the beasts, and paid toll. It was holden that the property was not altered because that agreement relates to the contract out of the Market. 262. Upon the arraignment of W. Thomas for Treason because he had compassed the death of Queen Mary; It was said that the statute of trial by peers, had always been in ure; And that an Esquire may be tried by those who have 40. s. freehold, or 100 pound goods. Trin. (100) 263. If one be an accusor upon is own hearing or knowledge, and saith moreover, he to whom, etc. may be the other Accusor, and so over; and such two were accusors of W. Thomas. 264. He which challengeth Juror for the hundred, and saith that the place where, supposed to be within the hundred, is within time of memory exempt; he shall be sworn and show how it is exempt. 265. It was holden that if the Queen gives land to the honest men of Islington, rend ring rend, although no mention of Successors; yet is is a perpetual corporation as to the rendering of the rent, but not to another intent, and if the rent be released the corporation is dissolved, for Cessante causa, etc. Quaere. 266. Upon an Elegit the extent shall be by the oath of. 12 men, & not by the Sheriff himself, although the writ speak not of Inquisition, and so are many precedents. King H. 8. gave land in tail to T. Culpep ' the remained ' in tail to Jo. Culpep ' and T. Culpep ' is attaint of Treason, which is confirmed by Parliament; and the actual seisin of the land of T. given to the King without office; saving rights, titles, entries, reversions, remainders, etc. to strangers: The King seized the land, and granted the same to one Bush. in fee. Tho. Culpep ' died without issue; John Culpep ' entered, and was ousted by Bush. and he brought a writ of entry sur disseisin, and counted that he was seized in his demean as of fee, which was evil, (100) upon which he amended that, and said, ut de libero tenemento; and that by Fitzh. Nat. bre.. shall maintain an estate for life or in tail. Bush. he shown all the matter, and descent of the signory to Ed. 6. and prayed aid of him and had it, and 4 searches in Chancery, during the hanging of which a Mandamus was awarded at the suit of Bush. upon that the grant in tail to Tho. Culpep ' is only found, and a false date of the Letters Patents, as also the attain and execution, and that the King was seized in see, and granted, etc. and after upon a Melius inquirend ', the very date found, but the attainter and execution was found to be before the Grant, upon mistaking the change of the year of the reign, upon which return in Chancery, for the apparent untruths in them a Procedendo in loquela was awarded, the Demandant not put to a Petition or Monstrance of Droit, the Plaintiff traverse that the Queen ne suit seisit' in Dominico suo ut de feodo, and issue upon that: and it seemed that the matter in law would maintain that, for the base fee of the King is determined by the death of T. Culpeper without issue, for the King was not in point of reverter, because of the mean interest, & the remainder, and entry of the demandant is saved by the act; after the Defendant acknowledged the action; but the Justices would not proceed to judgement; without a Procedend● to judgement; according to Fitzherber●; Nat bre.. 153. upon that all the matter was again removed into the Chancery. (K.) because there are not words of restraint, viz. & non ad Judicium, It seems it needs not. 267. Marmaduke Constables case; the grand father tenant for life, the remainder in fee to the father, they covenanted in consideration of the marriage of the son, that after their death, the land should descend, remain and come to the son, & to the issues of his body; with proviso, that they shall have liberty and make Jointures to their wives, and to pay ransoms, etc. and that whosoever are sersed, shall be seized to the said uses, the Grandfather died, the father entered, and after was attaint of treason and executed, the covenanties sued a Petition of right to the use of the son, supposing them to be disseised, by the father who was attaint; if the use was in the tail by the said Indenture, or not, was the question. (102.) 268. marquis Barkley Tenant in capite levied a fine, with tender to himself in tail, the remainder to King H. 7. and his heirs males, the remainder to his own right heirs: The L. Barkley died without issue, the heir males of the body of H. 7. failed, if the right heir of the Lord Barkly being within age, shall be in guard to Queen Mary; because the signory was suspended at the instant of the death of King Edward, and it was resolved per Justice ' that it was so: for the tenure is now revived, and if the right heir had sailed it aught to have escheated. Ergo the see simple was in consideration of the Law. 269. The Dean and Chapter of Winchester made a Lease for 30 years, after they made a lease to another for 50 years, to begin after the expiration of the 30; and that upon condition of reentry if he should alien without licence; the second Lessee aliened, the Lessors made a new Lease for 21 years, before the expiration of the 30 years, and that without entry or claim, Quaere if the Lease for 50 years was voided, becauss they may not enter during the first term: Quaere also if they may enter without Attorney warranted under their common seal. 2 Mary. Mich. (103.) 270. Trespass by Fulminston against Stuard, come 102. The Lord windsor brought a writ of Droit against Baron & Feme, and at the Petty Cape the Feme, and it was prayed that because the Demandant proffered not himself at the first day, that he might be nonsuit; but it seems he needs not where the tenant had made default. But upon issue joined by battle or Grand Assize; for there he aught to appear, etc. and his proffer aught to be entered in the Roll●: Also the Tenant was not there the first day to make demand ' of the Demandant; and than he may not be non-sute: And the Feme answered and vouched, and after waived that, and joined the mice upon the Grand Assize; & upon the summons the 4 Knights appear ' (104.) & one was challenged because he had married the daughter of the Demandant, and so he was drawn out; and a Summons awarded to summon another; and a Habeas corpora of the residue. 271. Ward recovered in a Dum fuit inf. aetatem per default after default, and that against an infant, who brought a writ of Error, and assigned for Error, that he was within the age of 21 years at the time of the judgement; and averred not that he had the land by descent; so that it might appear that there was cause that the plea should abide. After the defendant demur' in law upon the said assignment, and best per Curiam, and not to rejoin in nullo est erratum. But the said except' supra not allowed, and the precedent 6 H. 8. accord'. Also the supposal was in the first writ that he was son and heir of A. for that, etc. And upon the said precedent the judgement afterwards was; quod per error' praedict' Judic' per edict' revocetur; sans & in reeordo, for that is an error in deed and not in the record. There holden that an infant shall be punished for contempt; for frustra legis auxilium invocat qui in legem committit. As 2 H. 8. outlawry is good against in infant if he exceed the age of 14 years, 30 H. 8. if he make default after the mile joined judgement final shall be given, 3 H. 6. he shall answer a breach of a prohibition of estrepement, 3 H. 7. he shall answer a felony, quia malitia supplet aetatem, 5 Ed. 2. his non-sute in a Quare impedit shallbe peremptory, 14 E. 3. An essoin of the service of the King failed of his warrant at the day, and seisin of the land awarded. And an infant is bound by every statute law unless he be excepted: And infant which prays to be received, which is traversed, he shall found surety for the mean profits, 5 Ed. 3. The plant' in an Ass●● shall be aided by the Court to pled and make his title; Contra, if defend. 3 H. 6. if he appear upon a Grand Cape, he shall not save his default, 5 Ed. 3. & 34 Ed. 3 appearance by Guardian in a Formedon and pray his age, the Demandant averred that he was of full age, (105.) and prayed that he might be reviewed, if at the day he make default, a grand or petty Cape shall issue. There holden that it is not a good return of the Sheriff, that the Tenant is a feme covert or an infant. But 1 H. 6. a good return, that one sued by name of J. Ab. is deposed because it amounts to a death. 272. It was adjudged in an action upon the case brought by Sir John Bonham against the Lord Sturton, for words, etc. that the Justices may not diminish damages which were assessed to 500 marks, because the damages of the principal. But in a Tres. pr Tripcony of assault and battery, & amputac' manus dext ', where damages were assessed but to 40. l. they increased them to 100 pound, because upon the view of the Court, they may judge of it. 273. A common recovery was suffered to bar the issue in tail, where the warrant of Attorney was entered, qd' Alicia po. lo. suo, where her name was Elizabeth, Quaere if it be amendable per stat. H. 6. ca 13. the writ of error brought upon that was de loquela quae fuit in curia nost ' coram Iustic' nostris, p●r brev● nostrum, whereas the judgement was given in time of H. 8. Quaere if the record be well removed. 274. A woman Executor took a husband, which are after divorced upon a precontract, and the woman appealed to the Delegates, pendant which the husband administered, after the wife died, Quaere if the husband be chargeable as Executor of wrong; and if seiser without receiving or disposing of the goods be an administration or no. (106.) 275. The King granted the next avoidance to two conjunctim & divisim, Ita quod liceat 2 present' A. which had the next avoidance, they did according, after granted the Advowson in fee, the Patentee after the death of A. is disturbed of the presentat' and brought a Quare impedit, who made title by the presentation of two only, and not by the King, Quaere if a suffcient title. Vide 9 H. 7. 16. Amy Townsends case, Comment. fol. 111. 276. Champion, Prebend of the Cathedral Church of Chichester, made a Lease by Indenture, the words are, that he with the assent of R. Bishop of Chicester, and of the Dean and Chapter of the same Church, without naming the Dean, etc. n cujus rei testimon' parts praedict', etc. and the seal of the Bishop and the Chapter was put to it, Quaere if a good Confirmation without other words. (107.) 277. The Lady Powes elop' but after she and her husband lay together, & that was holden a reconcilement, notwithstanding they never devil together again, so that if she doth not clope again she shall be endowed. 278. A Man brought an action of debt for damages recovered in Assize, the Defendant pleaded in B●r the entry of the Plaintiff in the land between the verdict and the judgement, Quaere. 279. Saintalbyn brought a Trespass, the Defendant conveyed by 6 descents in tail, per opinion, the Plaintiff may not traverse one of the mean descen●s; up on that he confessed the tail, took the last dying seized by pretestation, and for plea that he which is supposed to be last, etc. enfeoffed A. our ancestor, from whom it descended to him, without that he died seized, and although the feoffement be false, the Defend ' shall be true, if be said not true, for he aught to maintain his first saying, 20 Ed. 4. the plea supra, when the tail is confessed is holden double; for one answer viz. gave not by his deed shall end all. 280. Tenant in tail the reversion in the King, made a Lease for years, and after is Attaint of Treason, having issue, Quaere if the King shall avoid the Lease during the life of the issue. Challenge in Assize between Nudigate and the Lord Derby, Comment. sol. 117. (108.) 281. The Archbish. Cant ' had the catalla felonum dese infra manerium de D. he committed treason, and after the King made a general grant to the Almoner of all goods de fel' de se etc. and after the Archbish. is Attaint; and Hales who had a Lease for years there is selo de se, the Queen granted the term, and doubted whether the Patentee or the Almoner shall have it. And by divers Justices the King may grant that which is not in him at the time, as a ward, or the temporalities which shall fall for that, etc. But others held contrary of Escheats. (R.) Quaere because the Attainter of the Archbish. had ●●ation to the offence committed, etc. 282. Wast was assigned in suffering a Mud wall, and a Brick wall to fall, and in a Manger and planks in a stable loosened and distracted; But because he shown not that the walls were covered, etc. nor the planks, etc. were fised to the franktenement; bolden no waist. 283. A man covenanted to discharge A. of his wardship of the body at the age of 21 years, or before at the request of A. Quaere if A. or the Covenanter shall have election, if it shall be before or after 21, request being made before. (109.) 284. Trespass by Rugway, the Defendant pleaded in Bar that the Plaintiff within age per Indenture, etc. and Letter of Attorney, made a feoffement to the father of the Defendant rendering rend, and that after, etc. per Indenture, etc. he confirmed tenement' praedict'. etc. habend' tenement' praedict' sibi & hered', and that his father died seized and that the land descended to him, Plaint' demur'; And it was holden without argument, that the feoffment which he pleaded was voided by his own showing, for being by Lett●● of Attorney of an infant it is a disscisin: Also he did not show the first Indenture where the warrant of Attorney is contained: Also it is not averred that the Defendant had any thing in the land at the time of the confirmation upon which it might inure. Also he pleaded that the Plaintiff confirm' tenement' praedictum etc. habend' tenement' praed', and that is not true that the land should pass here, but where a confirmation inures by way of enlargement; Also it is not averred that the Plaintiff was of full age at the time of the confirmation. Also he shown not afore the Indenture of confirmation. After the Plaintiff had judgement without argument. And a writ to inquire of Damages. 285. A Bishop with the confirmation of the Dean and Chapter aliened in see, or in tail. It seems that the King being Founder shall have a contra formam collatio, and that although stat. West. 2 cap. 41. gives count. form' collat ' but to a common person, Founder of an Abbey, Priory, Hospital, or other house of Religion without speaking of a Bishopric, Et vide stat. 33. & 34. & 35. Hen. 8. of the Chapters of Lichfield and Wells. 46 Ed. 3. Forfeit 18 for that. Hill. (110.) 286. Replog. Clerk possessed of a term of Abbey land, assigned it to R. rendering 50 pound per Ann' si R. execut' & Assign' sui tam diu occupav' virtute dimiss' & R. Grant' etc. quod liceat distring' si, etc. (note that it is not a rend service) after the King granted the reversion to Dormar, to whom R. surrend', after D. devised the land to his wife for life, upon which the Administrator of Clerk distrained and avowed as upon the Assignee of R. for rent, The Plaintiff pleaded that her husband was seized in fee, and devised to her for life, and the descent of the reversion to her son, and prayed aid of him; who came in by the same Attorney. Note, they pleaded all the matter above in Bar; upon which the Avowant demur'. 1. Because it was pleaded that the reversion was first given to the King, per s●at. 31 H. 8. of Monaster': where the statute gives not an but those which shall be sutrendred, relinquished, etc. and therefore the surtender, etc. aught to be showed; And upon that the opinion of the Court was that the Bar was incurable. 2. Also after speaking of Atturnment 30 Octob. 33 H. 8. vaont ou●●, viz. Et post, viz. 30 Sept. 33 H. 8. which is impossible in time. 3. He pleaded that the reversion descended, which is not true, for till the Feme entered there is not any reversion. 4. Also it was showed agreement to the surrend' R. 5. Also he took not traverse that the Plaintiff nor the assignee R. as is alleged in the Avowry. 287. The husband and the tenant in tail had issue two sons, the husband with the wife made a feoffment to the use of herself for life, and after her decease to the use of the heirs of the body of her husband engendered, the remainder in see to J. S. stat. 27 is made: After she and the youngest son levy a fine of that, with warranty of the feme and her heirs, the Conusees tender to the youngest son for 60 years rendering rend, and they granted the reversion to the wife and to the heirs of her body, and of the body of her husband engendered; the remainder in fee to J. S. The eldest son entered, the feme died, the youngest claimed the lease; seems he had no title. Coward's case. 288. It was found by special verdict upon nothing by descent in fee pleaded per the heir of Musgrave; the father who obliged him and his heirs in an Obligation, that the Grandfather made a feoffement to the use of the heirs of his body and died, stat, 27. is made, the father entered and died, and the land descended to the son Def ' and prayed the discretion of the Court, whether the land descended in fee simple or not. (112.) 289. A man brought a Droit close in ancient Demean, and made protestation to sue in nature of a writ of right at the common law; the Tenant joined the mice upon the mere right, and upon that removed the record by Accedas ad Curiam; but because that is no cause, a procedendo was awarded to the Bailiffs. In the Register is a writ of Jurat' loco Magn' Assis ' in Gavelk' eligend', 1 H. 7.17. E. 3.7 Ed. 3. 290. Trespass, the Defendant pleaded in Bar, that before the trespass D. was seized in fee, and let to him and justified and gave colour; The Plaintiff said that a long time before the trespass B. was seized in fee, and enfeoffed him, and that he was so seized till by the Defendant the trespass was madea, bsque hoc quod dict' D. by the Court it is a Jeofaile, and the Jury discharged. 291. A man made a Lease for ten years, after by Indenture demised the same land for 10 yees, to begin at Michaelmas, the first Lessee purchased the reversion; per Curiam the second Lessee may enter at Michaelmas. 292. Peres brought an Action of Debt upon an Obligation, the Defendant pleaded non est factum, and gave evidence that upon payment of the money, the Plaintiff annulled the seal of the Defendant, Plaintiff demur'. 293. Debt was brought against an Administrat ' of Administrat' and showed not in his Count that the Administration of the first intestates goods were committed to him; and the Defendant also pleaded fully administered of the goods of the second intestate, without speaking of the first, Quaere. 294. A writ of Covenant by Administrat', and counted that Windsor the intestate bargained and sold land by Indenture to the Defendant, and covenanted to make farther assurance, and to deliver evidences, etc. In consideration of which to be observed, etc. the Bargainee covenanted to pay to him a hundred pound; 〈◊〉 indsor died intestate, his Administrator brought a writ of covenant, & counted how Windsor perimpl●vit, etc. tamen d. f. licet sepius requisite. etc. The Defendant pladed a release of Windsor of all actions made after, etc. the Plaintiff said that he was a natural Idiot tempore, etc. and so had been from his birth usque tempus obitus, the Defendant traversed the Ideocy, Quaere if a Jeofaile. The Venire facias was awarded where the action was taken, and not where the release was pleaded. Quaere. Tertio Mariae. Pas. (113.) 295. Justice Marvyn having two sons by divers ventures levied a fine of land holden in capite, to the use of himself and his second wife for life, the remainder to the youngest son in tail, the remainder to himself and his wife in fee, and after died, the wife survived and after died, if the youngest son being heir to his mother shall have the entire according to the fine, or the eldest the third part by stat. 32 H. 8. Quaere. 296. Redman promised to deliver to Deck 20 Quarters of Barley at the feast of St. Michael, every year during their lives, and that the Plaintiff shall pay for every Quarter four shillings; Perk brought an action upon the case for failing three years, and upon issue of non assumpsit, it was found for the Plaintiff: But the Justices were three against three if the damages shall be assessed for the entire time to come, which is uncertain, or for that which is passed only. Debt by Buckley against Thomas, Com. fol. 118. (114.) 297. Hid covenanted with his Lessee without word of Heirs or Executors, to pay Quitrents, and died. Quaere if the Executors are bound to the payment. Divers Justice's herd that they are not, but bound only the person of the Testator which died with him. 298. In Trespass against Parkins, they were at issue if the land, etc. had been demised or demiseable from time, etc. by Copy as the Defendant would: The Jury found that it had been demised for 60 years by Copy, and once by Indenture for years, and after by Copy to the Defenfant, and prayed the discretion of the Court, and by the court the special verdict was voided and a new Venire facias awarded. 299. Milburne sole seized in fee joined in a feoffement with his eldest son, to the use of himself, and to the use of his youngest son for life, provided that he shall permit his eldest son to make Leases for life or years, during his life rendering the ancient rent to the youngest during his life, and after his death to the use and uses patris & heredum, after the father sole made a Lease for 21 years, Quaere if good. (115.) 300. Assize of franktenement in Westminst ' and the plaint was of the Philizers office, and made his title in the plaint, and alleged seisin by taking for one Capias, the post where they were set at first when they are made officers put in view. And holden that the Court may discharge him if the cause be without record, but if there be no cause the Court is not a disseisor. But he that took the office aught to surveyed that at his peril. 301. Sir Thomas Wyatt Tenant in tail to him and his heir males of his body of the gift of the King, made a Lease for thirty years to Austin rendering 20 shillings rend, to him his heirs or assigns, and died having issue S. T. who accepted of the rent, and after is attaint of treason, and is executed, having also a son in life, and the King accepted the rent; yet adjudged upon information of intrusion, and surmised the land to be in the hands of the King by reason of the attainter of S. T. Note that for the inconvenience of two fee simples, in one and the same person at one time, the King is in point of reverter, and so the Lease voided, and so his acceptance cannot affirm it Nota supra, the reservation to the general heirs; but as it seems it shall be intended to go according to the reversion, otherwise the Lease had been openly voided upon the death of Sir Tho. the eldest; the Lessee shown not the Letters Patents of the entail in pleading, Nota. 302. Durine Lessee for years among other covenants that he shall not cut any trees, and was obliged to perform, etc. In debt brought upon the Obligation, and breach assigned in cutting 20 trees; the Defendant pleaded that he did not cut the 20 or any of them; Plaintiff said quod suecidit 20 prout, etc. The Jury found that he had cut ten, yet the Plaintiff had Judgement, for the Covenant is broken if he cut but ten, and the rest surplusage. (116.) 303. Ryder Tenant in tail devised land, etc. it is not discontin' because the devise takes not effect till after the death. 304. Quaere if the Bishop certify in the Court of First fruits and tenths, that a Vicar contumaciter refused to pay subsidy for his Vicarage, if the Vicarage be voided, vide stat. 2 & 3 Ed. 6. & 26 H. 8. of Subsidies granted by the Clergy. 305. A man by Indenture renting a former Lease made by him 6 Aug. 30 H. 8. habend ' from the feast of Sr. Michael than next ensuing for 21 years, he demised the same land to one Hodgekin, habend ' for 21 years, from the expiration of the said first Lease, and the verity was that the first Lease was the 30 of August; now in pleading the second Lease being in question, the first Lease was showed to be made the 30 of August, and issue joined if he demised modo & forma, and the Jury found the special matter and adjudge that modo & forma is not material, but the matter is if he demise. (117.) 306. Ibgrave b●●●ght an Ejectione firmae of a portion of tithes, the Def ' saith that after the ejectment supposed, the Plaintiff granted to him, bargained and sold all his estate, etc. the Plaintiff maintained his count sans quod concessit, etc. per the deed, it is a Jeofaile, and Repleador awarded, for it should be pleaded as a Release or a Confirmation, for a grant is not good to a Trespasser, for it was said that the damages are the principal in that action, and if any part of the term be to come, it is but accessary. Also it is no plea for the party himself that he granted not by the deed, but not his deed, or that he had nothing at the time, etc. 307. In a second deliverance of a Barge taken at Gravesend in loco ibidem vocat ' the Kings stream of Thames, the Defendant shown that he is seized of the Inn called the George in Milton, and that he and his ancestors, and those whose estate he had, etc. they had used to repair a panel of the bridge of G; In consideration of which the Plaintiff being Ferryman there, and his ancestors, and those whose estate, etc. had from time beyond the memory of man, paid to him and his ancestors, etc. 4 shillings yearly at Michaelmas, and for one year being he avowed by prescription to distrain the Ferry-mans' Barge in the same place, and averred the Bridge well repaired, and that Barge to be a Ferry Barge, the Plaintiff demurred. 308. Cestui que us devised to his wise for life, Ita qued non faceret vastum, the remainder to the youngest son in tail and died, and the stat. 27 H 8. as made, the wife made waste. Quaere who aught to enter for the Condition broken, the heir, the feoffees, or he in remainder, or if the remainder shall be defeated by such entry. 309. Tenant in tail made a feoffement upon condition, and died having two sisters inheritable to the tail, the one levied a fine upon Release, with Proclamation to the feoffee of the entire, and 5 years passed, Quaere if the other be barred of her moiety. (118.) 310. In Repleg ' the Defendant made conusance as the Bailiff of Sentloo damage pheasant, supposing that Ed. 6. demised the land, etc. to A. for years, who granted parcel of the years to his Master, etc. the Plaintiff said, that long before Ed. 6. and thing had, one J. Abbot of, etc. was seized in the right of his Church, and with the assent of his Covent by Indenture, date 14 H. 7. witnesseth the said Abbot, etc. demised to him for life habend' post mortens A. & B. and they died, and he put in, etc. and they were at issue upon traverse of the Lease of the Abbot, and the Jury gave their verdict at large, which because they might not do upon a special issue, a Repleader was awarded, & que commencer all avowry; who pleaded as before, and the Defendant demur' upon the Bar to the Avowry. 1. Because there is neither livery nor atturnment pleaded by the Plaintiff. 2. He had not pleaded precisely that the Abbot demised, but that the Indenture, testatur, etc. upon which without argument, judgement was that the Defendant shall have return irreplegable, and a Retorn' habend ' award ' with commandment to the Sheriff in the same to make inquiry of damages. 311. If by Bill of Trespass brought in the King's bench, the trespass be laid in Middlesex; the Defendant need not to be supposed in the custody of the Marshal, after issue of not culpable Hen. 8. died, and a precept was made to the Sheriff, without writ or Teste of the Chief Justice, to reattach the Defendant, and Hab' corp' against the Jury, and very well, & cursus curtae. 312. Barber brought on Action upon the case against Hawley for saying, That men cannot have their cattles go upon the Common but Barber and his children will kill them with B. Dogs. Adjudged that the words will not bear an action. Mich. 313. Whilington being prisoner in Ludgate upon a Capi. utlag. in detinue, Thrower the Jailor took an Obligation of him and two sureties, with condition to save him harmless, and to discharge his fees, and to tender his body at any time upon a summons, etc. And in a debt brought upon the Obligation against one of the sureties, he pleaded the conditions performed, upon which the Plaintiff demur': & holden an insufficient plea, but questioned if the Court ex officio be bound to take notice of stat. 23 H. 6. cap. 10. not pleaded by the party, and to stay judgement. Dyer held that not. 1. Because particular in general, but of a general statute as of a general pardon, the Judges are bound to take notice of that, because it makes a common law, but otherwise of a particular statute if it be not pleaded. 2. But quaere if the Barons of the Exchequer where the action is brought are Judges of the Common law in that case, of an action of debt brought by a subject of privilege in that Co●rt. 3. Also it is not expressly averred that the Plaintiff is Gaoler, otherwise than that the Plaintiff named himself R. Tho. servant to Richard Chomley Mil' capital' Baron. al' dict' R. The. Jailer of Ludgate, which alias dict' are intended false, and only put to agreed with the specialty; than if he be a stranger and not the Gaoler, as the Court may not take notice whether he be or not, the Obligation is good at the Common law, and not voided by the stat. 23 H. 6. cap. 10. although the Judges should be bound to take notice of the statute, for the statute speaks only of Obligations made to officers & color' officii. 4. It is out of the case of the statute, because it was not showed that he was arrested according to the course of the law, according to the words of the statute, but only that he was outlawed at Northampton, tale die, etc. & postea arrestat' apud Lond' & commiss. etc. and shown not by whose authority, without writ of Capias utlag. it shall be unlawful to arrest him, which shall not be intended because it is not shown; but in case of felony every one may arrest. (120.) If he had pleaded the statute to avoid the Obligation; Quaere if the conclus ' of his plea should be, and so voided, or Judgement if the action. Quaere also if the statute where it made the Obligation taken in another form than is limited, of any person or by any person which shall be in their wards, shall be intended per the words of any person general, and voided also against the sureties which are at large; Outlawry is one of the seven exceptions in the statute of which the Sheriff had commandment not to let to Mainprize, yet the Obligation upon that is not out of the statute. Vide Dive & Maningh. case. Com. fol. 60. Appeal by Read de morte fratris, Post fol. 131. (121.) 314. The Lord Montague brought an action upon the case against the Countess of Worcester, supposing by the writ and Count, that whereas he was possessed of a chain of gold, of the price of a 100 marks, & sic poss. illam tali die apud L. in parochia, etc. casualit' amisit, which came to the hands of the Defendant she knowing that chain to be the Plaintiffs chain, and yet machinans him defrauded, and sold it to divers persons unknown, and the money converted to her own use. The defendant traverse quod non vendidit modo & forma, etc. & hoc. etc. Judgement if the action etc. upon which plea the Plaintiff demur. 1. Because the plea is but an argument, but non culpable had answered to all. 2. He aught to have concluded & de hoc 'pon. se super patriam, because a direct negative, and traverse to the affirm ' of the Plaintiff. 3. The Plaintiff is at his election to have this action because of the misdemeanour supposed. Dyer held contrary, and first he held that it should have been ad valentiam & non precii of a dead chattel (Fitzh. N. B. one or other good) as by the Register of a live chattel the form is cepit & abduxit, but of a dead chattel cepit & asportavit. 2. Also it is impossible quod possession' amisit, Quaere. 3. Also he supposeth fraud, where was neither privity, nor confidence, but appears she came to the chain by finding. 4. Also an action upon the case lieth not because he had his remedy by action of detinue, for he had not showed the sale to be in market overt to change the property; And although London be by prescription a mark open every day, this special custom aught to have been pleaded, otherwise the Court is not bound to take notice of the same. 5. That the traverse of the sale is good, for although it be but a conveyance, because by that the defendant is put out of his law, he may traverse the conveyance without answering the point of the action. As in a debt upon a lease for years non dimisit is a good plea if it be of land, otherwise of a Lease of sheep, 1 H. 6. so in Debt for arrearages of Account before Auditors non computavit is a good plea, so in debt against the Sheriff upon an escape, quod non permisit ire ad largum. Also the Defend ' in some case of misdemeanour, may pled generally non culpable, or traverse the point of the writ as not forged, non esecit, or non culpab ', (122.) 6. And at the conclusion although the better form had been to pled to the country, yet a good issue might have joined upon that if the Plaintiff would have replied quod vendidit. 315. A man had issue two sons and a daughter, and devised land to his wife for 10 years, the remainder to his youngest son and his heirs, and if any of his two sons die without issue, etc. the remainder to the daughter and her heir, the youngest died in the life of the father, after the father died per Curiam it is a good remainder to the daughter being upon a devise although the particular estate fails, and it seems the eldest son shall have the entail by the intent. Quaere of this case. 316. Sir Thomas ●y●t in consideration of the marriage of his son made a feoffement, and retook an estate to himself for life, the remainder to Sir Tho. his son, and his wife which shall be in tail, and marriage was accompl', the father levied a fine to the King of the said land, and obliged him and his heirs to warranty and died, the son is attaint of treason and executed, his issue living, after the Queen granted the said land to a stranger in tail, and after the feme is restored, Quaere if the issue shall inherit, after the death of the feme against the Collateral warranty, fine with proclamation, and attainter of his father, per whom he conveys: There was contention in the Patentee, if the feme had right to the entire remainder, or but a moiety, and if she may enter upon the Patentee of the Queen, without suit to the Queen, etc. 317. Issue was joined upon an absque hoc quod talis dimisit, and holden by the Court a good evidence that he had nothing in the land at the time: In a Form ' it is no good traverse that the donor had nothing in the land at the time of the gift, but non dedit, etc. (123.) 318. The opinion of the Court was that notwithstanding a traverse be tendered to an Indictment upon the statute of forcible entry, 8 H. 6. That it is at the discretion of the Justices to stay, or grant a restitution, according to that which the title appears to them. vide also a Supersedeas of restitution granted by other Justices. 319. The Prior of Plympton the 1 of Octob. 30 H. 8. made a Lease for years to Dyer rendering 10 pound (which is the ancient rent, at two Feasts of the year, viz. Purificat. & Invenc' Crucis, per aequales porciones primum terminum soluc' incipend ' at Purificat' Anno 1539. which was the Purificat' a year and more after the Lease began. The question was if the Lease be voided by stat' 31. H. 8. because no rent is reserved to be paid the first year. Per justic ' the word Yeerly is not in the Act, for that etc. And by Whidd' & Port ' If an ancient rent was well reserved, and after was released by the Abbot, yet the Lease is not defeasable by the statute. Pertm ' held in the principal case that the duty is not discharged, but is only deferred, for the reservation was yearly. Dalys. and Whyddon, contra. 320. Poole Dean of E●eceter being attain of treason 31 H. 8. but not deprived by sentence, but his possessions forfeit by 26 H. 8. another was put in his place, he and the Chapter confirmed the Feoffment of the Bishop, and now the attainter of Poole is repealed by Parliament, and the Bishop died, Quaere, if the successor shall be bound by that confirmation. 321. Davie held land in Soccage, and other in Chivalry of F. as of his Manor of S. and F. held over in capite, F. died his heir within age, and in Ward to the King, D. also died & his heir within age, the heir of F. sued his livery, and by office it is found that the heir of D. is of full age, Quaere if he shall sue Livery or Ousterlemain, and if as well for the land in soccage as in chivalry. But it seems the soccage land shall not be in ward by the Prerogative, because the tenant held not immediately of the King as the statute speaks Fitzh. N. B. when the wife of D. hath her dower assigned in the Chancery, she shall not be sworn the King's widow. (124.) 322. In debt against the heir, upon issue of nothing by descent in Fee simple, the Jury gave a special verdict, that the father devised all his chivalry land to his wife, till the Defendant his heir was of the age of 24 years, and than that the entire shall be to him and his heirs, and his wife to have the third part during her life, and if he die before he hath accomplished the age of 24 years, it shall remain to the Feme for life, & after her decease to the heirs of the Devisor, the heir being 24 years of age the wife died. It was holden that there was no in tail, but the entire was in the heir in Fee by descent, and not only the third part, and that he is liable to the obligation of his father. 323. A man who was indebted to the Queen in 200 marks upon Recognizance, was attaint of Treason, the Queen pardoned the treason, and gave, granted, and restored all his goods, chattels, etc. which he had forfeit by this attainter, (125) the debt is not gone by this pardon, nor by the suspension, per Justices. (126.) A second deliverance by Throgmorton against Tracy, come 145. Hil. (127) 324. A man devised land to his wife upon condition to bring up his eldest son, and after the decease of his wife to his second son in tail, the wife entered but educated not, the eldest son entered upon her, It seems here his entry is congeable. And first that a Condition may be annexed to a Will, by the Statute of Wills, which gives free liberty to a man for to device for advancement of his wife, etc. Littlet ' that a devise that the Executors shall cell land, and they retain it, the heir may enter for breach of the condition, 18 Elizab. 345. A devise of land upon condition to pay rend to his wife, and added to it a clause of Distress, yet both penalties shall stand, and a particular estate may well be upon condition, although the remained ' be without condition, and he in remainder shall not take advantage of the condition, but the heir because he is prejudiced in his inheritance by the devise. And the heir by his entry shall defeat only the estate of the feme, and remainder may well stand by the devise without the particular estate: but if the estate had passed by livery, otherwise it had been, because the livery is defeated by the particular estate being defeated. Also a condition may defeat part, as a Feoffment of two acres upon condition, that if he doth not such an Act, that the Feoffer may enter in one; and if tenant for use and he in remainder join in a Feoffment upon condition, that if such an act be not made, that tenant for life shall re-enter, that shall not defeat the entire, 11 H. 7.6. A gift in tail the remainder to the right heir of the Donor, upon condition that if he alien in Fee, it shall be lawful to enter, upo● condition broken the estate tail is only defeated, Quaere. vide News and Scholast ' case, like adjudged limitat' and that he in remainder may enter. (128.) 325. A woman servant conspired to rob her Mistress, and in the night she let in the Felon at the Door, and him had to the bed of her Mistress, where he killed her Mistress, the Servant holding the candle, but said nothing: Quaere, 3 to 3, if she be principal, and if it be petty Treason. 326. Three Parceners of a Reversion, one aliened her part, the particular Tenant died, the eldest entered into the entire per curiam, the Grantee and the other Co-parcener, may not join in a rent of partition against the third, because one of them is entitled by the common law, and the other by Statute 31 H. 8. Quaere if the entry of the eldest parcener gives seisin to the Grantee, as he doth to the other, because of the privity. Ballards' case. 327. Wilford was bound in an Obligation without day of payment limited; and devised land to his Executors upon condition, that if they paid not the said sum according to the obligation, that the devise should be voided; and that than A. shall have to him and his heirs upon condition to pay it, and A. died, the Executors are requested to pay it, Quaere, if the Heir of A. may enter, and pay, etc. 328. John Constable pointed to one, and said to his friends, Ecce Reg' Edw. he had sent to the Queen to tender the Realm to him, and the Queen answered the got it by the sword, and yet she acknowledged she had right to it. It was holden that it was not a direct affirmation, that another besides the Queen had right to the Crown, within 1. Mary: per griender opinion, yet he had judgement and executed as a Traitor, Quaere if it be not within the Declarat. 25 Ed. 3. 329. A Subject by licence departed the Realm, and upon a privy Seal sent to him ●e did not return, his Chattels and lands were seized to the use of the Queen. Tempore Ed. 2. (129.) 330. Teste of a writ of Entry in le quibus was 13. Feb. and it was returnable crastino Purifica● ' and to the return before the Teste, and upon that error the Judgement reversed. 331. A Grandfather tenant in tail made a Feoffm' to the use of himself for life, the remainder to a stranger in tail, the remainder to the right heirs of the Grandfather, the Grandfather died, the Father died, stat. 27. is made, the stranger enters, dies without issue, his wise with child. The son entered as right heir of the Grandfather, Quaere if he be remitted for the first in whom the remainder in Fee is vested by the statute; in which estate it behoves of necessity to be judged in, if than the entry of the son be not congeable upon him, Quaere, Bonvilss case. 332. Quaere, if wast brought by the Bishop shall be ad exheredat● Epis. or add exheredate Ecclesiae, for the Register varies. Pas. 333. Haydon brought an Attaint upon the statute 23 H. 8. against I upon a verdict in Assize. I. died hanging the writ, notwithstanding proper stat ' the writ shall not abate. The false oath was assigned, because it was found that certain land in S. was not contained in the letters patents made to A. etc. and the plaintiff averred that it wes contained, and the verity was that the letters patents misrecited the town, and name of the last tenant of that, but the misrecital was aided by stat. 35 H. 8. in that case as it seems. But because the Justices of Assize would not have the statute given in evidence to the Jury in the country for troubling them, because it was not pleaded, it shall not now be given in evidence, pur que pl. nosme. 334. A Church being voided upon 2 stat' 11 H. 8. for taking another of 8 pound value without qualification: now the Patron granted the first and next presentation, which first and next should hap to fall: holden that the present avoidance shall not pass. Agards case. (130). 335 Tenant for life, remainder in tail, remainder in Fee, of land holden in Chivalry of the King, he in remainder in tail died his heir within age, the King granted over the Seignory, and tenant for life died. Quaere, if the Grantee shall have the Guard, for the interest began by the death of the father, which was before the Grant of the Seignory. Sir Thomas Shares case. 24. Ed. 3.33 Simile, where the Grantee had the Ward. Nota hic, tha● although the issue be the first in whom the remainder vesteth, yet he had it by descent. Trespass by Hill against Grange, come. fol. 164. (131.) 336. The possessions of the Abbey of Combe came to H. 8. divers parcels being in lease for years, the King made a lease for life of all to the Duchess of Richmond and died, Ed. 6. granted the reversion, the Grantee made a Feoffment of all and a letter of Attorney to make livery, the Attorney made livery in one parcel which was in lease in name of all without Atturnment, or agreement of the Termers, Quaere, what passeth: per six justices if there be not words & omnes inde expellend ' it is a desseisin for the Attorney to make livery where other had state for ●●se, for the authority shall be intended to make a lawful act, ●●x others held contrary. 337. R. Read brought Appeal of the death of his brother against 5 principals and one accessary, 3 principals and the accessary appeared, the Plaintiff counted against, the Principal who appeared, and two others absent, (but upon no Indictment): and against the other of procurement and abetment, two principal and the other pleaded non-culpable, and so at issue, the 3 principal pled non-guilty ready to defend' by his b●dy; upon which Plea the Plaintiff Demur' Venus fac. everal warded to try the plea of the others, said cess ' versus p●ecess' qu●usque princip' legit' modo cenvine. In the mean time they were put to Bail, after the Demurrer was adjudged against the Plaintiff; and the Defendant had Judgement to go without day: And one of the Principals which appeared not is returned dead, the other outlawed; Also the Plaintiff at the Nisi prius was non-sute against the two. And according to the statute the Jury at their request were command' and found damages tam occasione appelli quam infam' & impris. severally; for the Plaintiff had not sufficient, for which they found the Abettors per name, viz. quod procuraverw●t, instigave' & abbet ' etc. sed non dicit' per malitiam, Nota. Another was charged at the same time against the accessary, but it was not recorded, that they wereclected, tied, sworn, but per curtam discharged, and the Plaintiff was non-sute and inquiry of the Abettors ut supra, and at the day in the bank Judgement given according as to the 3. & qued ireut sine die; sed quoad sectam Re●is, they were severally brought to their trials, but one made a default, upon which a Capias issued against him and his Mainpernors, the accessary and the other principal pleaded non-culpable, and were acquitted, and the Abettors inquired of as supra, severally, vide West. 2. cap 12. for the authority of the Justices of Nisi prius, to inquire of damage and abettors; ●ide also 10 Ed. 4.14. that they may not give Judgement of the damages by the stat. 8. H. 6. cap. 1. vide the opinion Fairfax 22 Ed. 4.18. And now he that was discharged upon demur supra was arraigned at the suit of the King, for it was no acquittal, (Nota) and was found not culpable, and had Judgement of acquitail: now he which made default, and appeared at the suit of the King ut supra, came in by the Exigent, and because the Inquest first returned was discontinued upon the Roll, a new Venire facias issued, he was also by that non-acquited, and damages found newly to ten pound, and that the Plaintiff was sufficient, and at the request of the accessary, because upon the acquittal of all the principals he is discharged. The Jury again found damages for him to two hundred and twenty pound, and that the Plaintiff was insufficient, and found 6 abettors ex malitia, so three several times damages had been inquired for the Accessary, but Seir● facias, agard ' against the abettors upon the last, because before the acry was not lawfully acquitted before. And exception taken because in the Scire facias he had not made mention of the acquittal, of the principals, and lome pleaded quod non abettaver ', others justified by common same, and the Plaintiff averred of his wrong without such cause, and both found for him, and damages assessed, and had Judgement. Trin. (132.) 338. The stat. 1 & 2. Ph● & Mary cap. 10. that trials in treason shall be according to the course of the common Law, takes not away the force, 35 H. 8. cap. 2. for trial of treason committed over the Sea, because it was not triable at all at the common Law; But it takes away the force of 33 H. 8. of trial in a foreign county, per Justices, but the intent of the said statute was only as it seems to take away the force of the statute 5 Ed. 6. cap. 11. for the two accusors. 339. A. & B. Surveyors to the marquis Dorses made leases by Indent' witnessing that they as supervisors demised &c. rendering rend to the marquis, with condition of reentry to the marquis, and clause of warranty of the marquis in cujus res testim' etc. the Surveyors, sigil. appos. Quaere, if a good Lease in the name of the Surveyors, and if the words ut supervisores, do not imply, that they were not surveyors in deed. (133.) 340. The Plaintiff in the Court of Pypowders counted of a contract made the last Fair; whereas there was no plaint begun and no judgement of amercement of the Defendant was given: and holden an error in both per touts le Justices. Quarto Mariae. Mich. 341. After grant of the next presentation, the parson made a Lease rendering rend which is confirmed by the Patron and Ordinary, after the parson was deprived for marriage, so that the Grantee of the said turn presented, it seems the entry of this Incumbent is congeable upon the lessee. 342. Tenant in tail, the remainder in Fee, Tenant in tail levied a fine with proclamation, he in remainder died his heir within age, and tenant in tail died without issue, so that title incurred to the enfant, and 5 years passed and yet he is within age; notwithstanding statute 4 H. 7. saving the action to the infant till full age, and than he shall have 5 years, yet he may use his action within age if he will, per all the Justices. Petic' Basset. vide plus. 136. 343. The year of the delivery of the warrant to the Chancellor of the grant of an Office was omitted; viz. the entry was; Mem●rand. 1. De. an. H. 8. ista billa deliber' fuit Demi. Can●. Angliae; But it was filled among the warrants of 37 H. 8. and the Letters Patents bore date, 1 De. 37 H. 8. vide statute thereupon 18 H. 6. cap. 1. and Ludfords and Grets' case, Com. adjudged a good Patent where the day of the delivery was not entered. 344. 5. & 6. as principals and Benjamin Smith and his wife as accessaries were found culpable in the procurement of the death of Rutford, at the suit of the Queen, and the principal was executed, and Benjamin the accessary, for his Clergy was tolle per Parliament. and the Queen pardon the woman; Quaere if an appeal lieth against him, for the principal is not named, neither in the appeal, nor in life. 345. Gavelkind land was devised to the husband and wife for life; remained. prexim. hered. mascul. corporibus suss legitim. procreate. imperpet. the husband and wife had three sons and died, if the eldest shall have the entire Demur'. Vide remained ' seniori puero, and in another deed in English eyen child. Post. Eliz. 337. (134.) 346. It was resolved by the justices, that notwithstanding 1 & 2 P. & Mary (trials) of treasons shall be according to the common Law, there shall be accusors upon the Indictment upon 5 Ed. 6. cap. 11. Also in misprision for concealment of Treason, there shall be two as well upon the arraignment as upon the Indictment; And the words of the stat' 5 Ed. 6. except he voluntarily and without torture confess it, that shall be intended before the arraignment. And the accusation under the hands of the accusors, or testified by others is sufficient, and if the accusation be upon Record, it sufficeth although the accusors be dead. 347. In trespass the Defend, said the place, etc. is and was the Frankten. of A. at the time; and as servant, etc. The Plaintiff said that a long time before the trespass B. was seized in Fee, and enfeoffed him; and we were thereby seized till by A. disseised, upon whom we reentered, and were seized till defend, die & Ann. predict. made the trespass, the Defendant maintained the Bar, and traversed the Disseisin, Holden by the Court a jeofail, because in the replication he had not denied the Franktenement at the time of trespass. 348. Traps disseisor made a Lease for years, rendering rend, the disseisee reentered, the Lessee, continued possession, and paid his rent to the Disseisor; notwithstanding he is by continuance of possession a Disseisor, for he may not limit his wrong, per curiam. (135.) 349. In a Quare impedit by Poyner, issue found for the Plaintiff, but by his negligence the jury were not charged to inquire of the 3 points, viz. de plenitud. ex cui. present. & si temp. semest. trans●●t. Also the justices of Nisi prius gave not judgement as they might by stat. West. 2. cap. 30. Now in the Bank the Plaintiff prayed a writ to the Bishop, to inquire of the 3 points. Lib. Intrac. fol. 110. the writ is such, Et quod interim cesset execuc' de breve Epis. habendo. And at the last the Plaintiff relinquished his damages and had Judgement; Et breve Episc. suo periculo, Nota. 350. The Grantee of the next avoidance died, his Executors granted that to a stranger, the Grantee brought a Quare impedit, he need not to show the testament, for the Grant is good notwithstanding they never prove the testament, and it is administration. 351. Stat. 5. & 6. E. 6. will that the Quarter Sessions in the County of Anglesey in Wales shall be kept at Beaumares only, & non alibi, they held them at another place; holden that the Indictments were voided per Justices, because a negative prohibit': And the Justices were fined in the Star-chamber every one at 5 pound for the contempt, because that the statute exemplified (for it was not printed) was shown to them before they sat, yet they would not surcease. (136.) 352. Quid juris clamat against Elizabeth Turton, she sued a Dedimus potestatem with supposal that she aught not to atturn because Tenant in tail and with sugesti' quod adco impotens & senio, etc. that she could not travel to the Bank to pled that, for that the writ (which was directed to Saunders Justice) was to resort to the Defendant, and to receive attorney for to appear for her, which was allowed by the opinion of the Court, yet rare in that case: although there are precedents that it lies to receive atturnment; so of a recluse, & for a woman with child. Hill. 353. Arthur Basset son and heir of Sir John Basset within age, per petition of right for land, whereof a recovery was suffered before 27. the which is averred to be to the use of the Lord Dawbeny in tail, the remainder to Sir John Basset in fee; also it was averred, that the tail to the Lord Dawbeny, was determined by the death of the Earl of Bridgewater, son of the Lord Dawbeny he dying without issue, and conveyed to himself the same remainder as heir to Sir John Basset. Note that the Indentures which declared the use, were made four years after the recovery, & holden good; also it appeared by the Indentures that the Lord D. had authority in default of issue, in his life, or by his Will to nominate the use in tail to two of his next blood, the remainder in fee to Sir John Basset. But no mention was made in the Petit ' of any such Indent', nor averment, that there were any such nomination. And it was holden by all the Just ' that it needs not, because nothing was given by the authority if no execution was; but if the Indent' had been disclosed than they aught to aver, because the Petition, which is in nature of a formedon in remainder, was for default of issue of the L. D. only. (137.) and it was demur' if the plea aught to abide during the time of the nonage of the Plaintiff upon plea pleaded in Bar of the Petition, which is not any matter of any of the ancestors of the Plaintiff (which was prayed for the Queen). First it was agreed that if he recover the remainder he shall have it by descent, for by stat 27. it was a remainder executed in his ancestor, and shall make him to become in ward when he comes to the possession, although it never was in the possession of his ancestor. Tamen per 2 Just●● ' q. est tanq' p●●q●e ' all heir nesteant unqs. en launc. & lacc. ne descend. Also especially the Petition of right shall not targe, as 21 Ed. 3. & 43 Assize is; for it may not be revived, or a summon lies not in the original, therefore a resummons lies not to revive it, and it is a mischief to the heir, for a Collateral warranty may descend to the heir in the mean time, where there is a principle, that in all things the age of an infant shall be favoured and have aid, but in no case take disadvantage by his age But 5 Justices held contra, and that the Petition targera. At the Common law in all actions founded upon a right descended to an heir within age, and one whose seism and espees aught to be showed in the ancestor, the Tenant by exception to the person of the Demandant, shall targera the plea till, etc. without plea pleaded (contra, if the King being within age brings a Droit 6 Ed. 3.) but as it appears by the stat' Glocest' cap. 2. it was otherwise of an action ancestrall possessory, founded upon one dying seized where he need not to show the esplees; as besaiel. aiel, & cozenage; except he had pleaded a feoffement, to which the heir for tenderness may not answer; and because the circumstances shall not be inquired as in Mordancest. and Assize, but that case is also remedied by the statute, and notwithstanding such feoffement pleaded, the inquest shall be taken as of another man of full age. And West. 2. cap. 46. is to be intended where the heir of the Disseisee makes fresh suit, per 24 Ed. 3. Also notwithstanding that the heir of the feoffee of the Disseisor, the Vouchee, the prayee in aid, & tenant by receipt within age shall have their age. The like case brought by a husband infant, and his wife in reversion, upon alienation of tenant for life, because it is in the right of the wife the plea shall not abide. But in a Formedon in reverter the plea shall abide. So in an appeal of Murder, because he may not deraign battle, and although he may have a champion in a Writ of right, yet the plea shall abide; because he may not discern his right ancestrall. Contra, if he brings a Droit of his own purchase, because it is intended he may as well defend as purchase, p●r 40 Ed. 3. as it is also in Assize, and Entry in nature of Assize. And if an infant be Signior, and the Tenant cease, or disclaim in Avowry made of his own seisin. Also in Escheat the plea shall not abide because no right descends in the land, and reason will that he shall have the land in recompense, where the survisees; and in some case though the ancestor might have had the action, yet the plea shall abide, as if one had cause to have a Dum fuit infra aetatem, upon an estate made by his ancestor who died within age, for at the time of his death the ancestor might not have the said writ, because within age. And now by the nonage of one of the Demandants the plea shall ahide: The same law in a Dum non suit compos mentis. So in a Formedon in Discender, the ancestor might not have the action; where he himself was the man from whom the descent was; (138.) And the heir in soccage shall not have an action of Account against his Guardian till full age: also a Formedon in Descender is a writ of right, and the Count quod remansit jus, and so out of the stat. of Glocest. and West. 1. for after theseisin once had, Formedon in remainder is gone, for that, etc. 354. The Countess of Surrey Tenant for life surrendered to the King with an intention that the King should give to her other lands in recompense; The King aliened those, and gave others in recompense, which being upon defeisable title they are after evicted, the entered upon the Patentee, and it was decreed that her entry was not congeable; for it is no condition but only a confidence. (139.) Also there was not any request made before the gift made by the King, which aught to be when the condition is to be performed to the party himself, contra if to a stranger. Also the King in this case is entitled by double matter of record, in which she may not enter upon the Patentee without petition, not more than upon the possession of the King. Also here was a recompense & fine executed, and if a man be barred in a Formedon upon warranty and Assets' pleaded it is perpetually a Bar, although the Assets' are after evicted. Quaere. Also it was her folly to accept of it, Bracton, Scito qu●d (ut) modus est (si) conditio (quia) causa. 355. The Earl of Huntingdon covenanted with the Lord Clinton to infeoff him of the Manor of D. before Easter, discharged of all former encumbrances but Leases whereof the ancient rent is reserved, after, and before the feoffement he made a new Lease rendering the ancient rent, 4 contra 2 that it is no breach. 356 Cranmer Archbishop of Canterbury made a Lease for years of parcel of the Manor of P. after he granted a Rent-charge out of the same Manor to Dr. Butts, who also after devised the rent to the same Archbish. till 100 pound be levied per retaining, the remainder to D. and died, the 100 pound is levied and the rent is behind, and D distrained upon M. Lessee of H. for one year, who pleaded in Bar to the Avowry the Lease made to H. before the charge, who let to him, and shown not the original Lease, nor shown not the place where the confirmation of the said Lease was made, upon which the Avowant demur●, and exceptions were also taken to the Avowry. (140.) Because he pleaded the confirmation to the grant of the rent quod Prior ecclesiae Cant' & ejusd' loci Capitul' confirm ', and said not Cathed ' nor named the Saint, whereas there were divers Priors and Churches in Canterbury; and said also, as in the same writing bearing date at Cant. in the Chief house, or in domo capitul ' fully appeareth, where it may be delivered in another place. And for the imperfection in the pleading both parties Repled' agard. But as to the matter in law it was moved; If a Rent-charge for years shall pass by a devise paroll, because local, but agreed it shall go to the Executors, as it is of a Relief due to a Lord, because they represent the Testator. And a devise of a Wa●d and a Villain is good per paroll because transitory, and if a new Rent-charge being against common right be deviseable as land is, because it shall charge the Tenant without atturnment, and not per prescription. Also if the remainder be good, depending upon a particular estate in suspense, for if a Seignory be granted to the Tenant for his life, the remainder over, it is a voided remained ', and if it be granted to the Tenant and a stranger it shall not stand for benefit of survivor, but is extinct as to a moiety; also it was said that by the regrant to the Arcbishop the annuity was suspended, and a personal thing or action once suspended by the act of the party it is gone for ever. But otherwise if by the act of the law; Than also he may not after have resort as to a Rent-charge, for although it be at his election to charge in whose hands soever, yet if he discharge ●ny of the hands both is gone. Also after the archbishop aliened the Manor whereof, etc. to the King, and by that the rend granted is included; and as to the Devisee of a term for life, and if he die before expiration that shall remain, etc. if the first alien the entire, he that should have the remainder is without remedy. Quaere if a Quem redditum reddat lieth where termor of a Rent-charge grants that by fine. 357. Sir John Gates having see, made a feoffement of certain land, and after committed treason and is attaint and executed, although the land is not forfeit nor escheated, yet adjudged his wife shall not have dower. A. Browne contra vehement ' according to the opinion of Vavis. in Littl. stat. 5. & 6 Ed. 6. which bars the wi●e of Dower in case the husband commits any manner of treason, extends to petty treason per Stanf. fol. 193. per generalty. (141) 358. A man made a Lease by a Indenture for 90 years to Goug●, and after made a feoff●ment, and after took an estate in tail to him and his wife, etc. after Gough took a new Lease of the husband per paroll for 18 years, the husband died. The opinion of the Justices was that the wise may enter, for the acceptance of a new Lease is a surrender of the old. 359. Ed. 6. granted to Lady Maryce ●e Manor of D. so long as she should continued sole, she granted a Rent-charge, Ed. 6. died, and she is made Queen, and the reversion descend' to her, and now she married, Quaere if she shall avoid the rent. Pas. 360. In a verdict upon a writ of Forcible entry brought against 7. upon the stat. 8 H. 6. that sour disseised, and put out by force, but only one detained, the 4 joined in an attaint upon the expulsion and disseisin, and adjudged well, and that for the Detainer the other is to have an attaint if he will sole. 361. A man avowed for damage fesant, they are at issue, and after the Plaintiff is nonsute, doubted if the avowant shall have costs and damages, because the stat. 7 H. 6. cap. 4. speaks only where the Plaintiff is barred; and also where the a vowry is for rent, customs, or services, but by 21 H. 8. it is clear that he shall, for this extends to a nonsute, as well as where the Plaintiff is barred, and as well where the avowry is for damage fesant as where it is for rent, customs or services. 362. Sir William. Cuts disseisor commanded his termor to keep possession against the Disseisee as his termor, and after went over the sea, the Disseisee entered, and is ousted by the Termor, who after paid the rent to the use of C. after Cuts died, if that be a descent, viz. if the Lessor be a Disseisor till agreement after the disseisin, in divers opinions, The Inquest to try the traverse coming to give verdict, the Traverser is non-sute, Quaere if receivable, and Quaere if peremptory. 363. Tenus in the Star-chamber, that he which had quiet possession 3 years upon good title, if after he be put out by force, & restored again, yet he may not justify to detain with force, by the proviso of the said statute, because his possession was interrupted, neither may he recome with multitude with him to put himself in posses. Per Sanders chief Justice, if a Termor be expulsed by force, (142.) he in reversion may not have an action upon 8. H. 6. for although he be disseised, yet he is not expulsed. Vide the stat. for the disjunctive. 364. The husband conveyed two parts of his lands held in Knight's service to his wife for advancement, which he intended to marry, and after married the wife, and after enfeoffed a stranger of the moiety of the third part and died his heir within age, if the supply to satisfy a full third part may be taken out of the said two parts per the Signior, Quaere, pro domino Paget. 365. A man made a Lease rendering rend at the feasts of St. Mich. and of our Lady, or within a month after, and if it be behind after the said feast, and a day limited by the space of eight weeks, it shall be lawful to enter, Quaere of the 8 weeks are accountable from the feast day, or from the month; per divers from the month, which is the 28 day after the feast, because the most reasonable intendment for the Lessee, and the 28 day is as well a day of payment as the feast day at his pleasure. And Quaere, because the month is a time entire, whereas the words are Feasts, and Days, Nota also the copulative. 366. Trevilian and A. his wife joint-tenants in see suffered a recovery 23 H. 8. averred to be to the use of the husband only, (Quaere) after in 24 H. 8. he devised the said land to A. his wife for life the remained ', etc. and died not till 37 H. 8. Holden a voided devise, for the devise was not within the sta. 1 Rich. 3. to convey the possession, till the statute 27 H. 8. which transfer the use in possession, (143.) was a countermand of the devise per drowning the use in the possession, & the possession may not be devised till 32 H. 8. which inables to device the possession, and that shallbe intended to enable in time to come. So for the weakness of the foundation, etc. and that from the beginning, etc. and it was adjudged voided. yet it had been good by a new publication after 32. The ville before and after juxta, is always intended a Town of itself, and not a Hamlet. Quaere after an estate in see pleaded, to enable to device per stat. 34. & 35. of explanation, it behoveth to conclude & de tali statu suo obiit seisit', and not & sic seisit' obiit, for that shall not relate to the estate mentioned, for it may than be intended he died seized of an estate in tail, whereas he which is sole seized of an estate in fee may device by the statute of explanation. (144.) 367. A man being over sea is disseised, and after recomes and departs again, and a descent is had, Quaere if he shall be bound, except it be proved he had notice of the Disseisin, but if an infant be disseised, and after he be of full age goes over the sea, he shall be bound, but otherwise if he goes over sea within age, per opini. 2 H. 7. Patent of an office of a Justice of the Bank, the habend ' is quamdiu nobis placuer. 368. John Sherley's a Frenchman one of the rebels with Stafford, who rebelliously took the Castle of Scarborough in Yorkshire, was now arraigned in the King's bench upon an. Indictment of treason, which was contra legeanc' su●e debit, Nota, it was well, although he was no subject, because in a time of peace. But if it had been in a time of war between our two countries', he shall be ransomed, and not arraigned, and the Venire fa●●as awarded in York was general, and not the medietate linguae, for there are no precedents of trial in treason per Med ling '. Also the stat. 1 & 2 Ph and Mary is, that all trials in treason shall be according to the Common law. But for felony and murder it is otherwise, as in the case of Gavarre of the death of Gamba, 3 Edw. 6. The criall per Med. ling. first by the stat. 27 Ed. 3. cap. 8. was made for aliens which were Merchants of the Staple, who moved plea before the Mayor of the Supple. But by stat. 28 E. 3. c. 13. it is made general for all aliens, and in all pleas before whomsoever, yea although the King be a party. But after there was a statute 2 H 5. cap 3. which is, that in a plea real or personal where debt or damages amount to 40 marks, that it should be a good challenge that the Jury had not freehold 40. s. per year, and because an alien may not have freehold here this statute was declared per H. 6. cap. 29. not to extend to such trials; Quaere of the said statute, for the King and the Lords only made the said declaration, and the Commons are omitted in the words of the act. The Plaintiff 21 H. 7. after Venire facias, and al. destringas shown that the Defendant is an alien, and to avoid delays for that, and prayed a Venire facias of new the med' lings ' according to the statute, and he had it. (145.) Quaere if an alien Plaintiff suffer a Venire facias to be returned before he requires med' ling ' if he hath not passed his time, for the statutes were made for their benefits if they would require them. 369. Information upon arrearages of account adjudged before Auditors assigned by Commission, was put by the Attorney of the King against the Receiver of Irel ', the Defendant may not wage his law, but aught to pled ad patriam, nihil debet. Vide Stat. 5 H. 4. cap. 8. 370. Land was given to the father and son in tail, the remainder over, the father died, and his son heir to the in tail, after the son discontinued and died, 3 Justices that there needs not several Formedons for he in remainder, Quaere. 371. A Dean made a Deputy per paroll who in his absence with the Chapter confirmed a grant made by the Bishop, Quaere, if it shall bind the successor. 372. The stat. 8 H. 6. cap. 16. that a demise or a grant to ferm by the Lord Chancell' &c. before office fully returned (or within a month after, if any tender traverse, and offer to take it to ferm) shall be voided; after till 18 H. 6. cap. 6. there was a evasion used, viz. to take to ferm before any title found for the K. 146) which is remedied by the said stat. 18. Those statutes are not to be intended but that such grants are good, where the King is well entitled without office. Also an estate in fee or tail is not within the statute. 373. Villers Assize, It was found upon special verdict, that the husband and wife seized in the right of his wife per Indenture, in consideration of 60 pound demised, bargained, and sold land to B. for 30 years, the remainder to themselves for life, the remainder to their son, and to the daughter of B. in tail, and suffered a recovery to the said uses, and it was found besides out of the Indenture, that the said assurance was as well in consideration of the marriage to be between their son and the daughter of B. as for the said money: and over it was found that the father and mother died, the term expired, the son having issue died, his wife levied a sine as that, etc. to a stranger with warranty of the said land, the issue within 5 years entered for the forfeit, (147) upon 11 H. 7. against whom an Assize is brought, Dyer. The money is the sole consideration expressed, than the other shall not be averred, as an use shall not be averred against an use expressed. Neque causa matrimon' prelocuti or other consideration is expressed, but if no consideration had been expressed, than a consideration might have been averred without deed; also the land went from a feme covert who may not limit an use but by writing, than the consideration with her assent shall be only in writing. Therefore before 32 a Lease paroll made by husband and wife, and the husband died, and she accepts the rent; yet the Lease is not affirmed because it could not be assented to at the first, and than the finding of that by the Jury, which may not be averred, nor given in evidence, in voided; Than it is not within the 11 H. 7. for it is not a Jointure although made by the ancestor of the husband, for a Jointure shall have no other consideration than love and advancement, where nothing was the cause here, but the money of the King, or the King's coin. Also a Jointure shall be a present sustentation, and not a remainder as here. But three held contra, and that another consideration which is not repugnant to that mentioned in the Indenture may be averred, and it shall be within 11 H. 7. although money be part of the consid', for well-nigh all marriages are made for money. Dyer, that a gift in frankmarriage may be before, or at the time, or after marriage, and upon divorce the feme shall have the entire; and it is said frank, because the dispositi' free from services: (148.) notwithstanding the stat. of Gloce● ', yet warranty by tenant of the courtesy, continues collateral, notwithstanding it be no Bar without assets, and it seems if he enters not in the life of the father he shall be bar' without assets, so by a release with warranty, for that is not an alienation, as the words of the statute are; and the statute is where the husband aliens the inherit' or marriage of his wife, so that it seems that land purchased by the wife is not within. But the stat. 11 H. 7. is more hard against women, because they have no voice in Parliament, and eradicate and made voided all; and where a woman had jointure in tail, there warranty lineal, & no bar without assets, which is reasonable, and yet by the said statute that is destroyed, which is hard, and therefore the statute shall be taken strictly; there it is said a man may not revoke a gift Causa matrimonii praelocuti as a woman may. Trin. 324. If a woman covert be tenant for life, and a fine levied of that to her and her husband, who renders for years, Quaere if a forfeiture; It's clear if a feme be before in tail within 11 H. 7. and accepts such a fine, it is not a forfeit. Penycocks case. (149.) 375. Debt against the heir upon the obligation of his father, who aliened the assets hanging the writ, and pleaded nothing by descent the day of the writ purchased, etc. it was found against him, and a general judgement, and an Elegit de mediet' omnium terrarum the heir as his proper debt. But this Elegit according to the ancient Formedons without limitation of time, and upon return nihil habuit, etc. another Elegit issued to extend that, quod habuit die of the Nisi prius, for this day, and the day in the Bank are all one in law. Brooke if he had aliened of covin hanging the writ, if that be returned by the Sheriff, a new writ shall issue reciting that. Note the execution was ruled by the court ut supra, yet elsewhere special judgement, etc. and execution of the entire assets, quod durum. Assize Hunt of the office of Register of the Admiral Court post fol. 153. 376. Before 27 H. 8. an use was limited to Alice at S. and J. N. in special tail, they enter-mary, the stat. 27 H. 8. made, makes them not joint-tenants by individed moities, for that executes the possession in such form, quality, and condition, etc. Therefore where the husband after aliens the entire to one of the feoffees and die, the wife shall have a Cui in vita of the moiety, per Curiam: but if she dies the son may maintain a Formedon of the entire. Note the use changed supra upon the posses ' of the feoffee without claim, etc. Beadles case. (150.) 377. A man made a Lease by Inden' in which are words provisum est quod si Lessee die within 60 years, that the Executors shall have it in his right, till 60 years from the date, per Curiam it is but a covenant and not a Lease, Graveners' case. 378. A man bound in 20 pound for the payment of 10 pound he pleaded tender at the day and place in a debt brought upon the said Obligation, and upon demur' adjudged, that he behoves to pled always ready, although there be a place certain where the payment shall be, otherwise it is of a thing collateral, Panells case, Catling, & Griffith contra, because the place is parcel of the obligation, 7 H. 4. tamen 11 H. 6. contra. vide good diversity, 19 H. 8.12. 379. Eton College incorporate by name of Praepositi & Collegit Regalis Coll' beatae Mariae de Eaton juxta Windsor, they made a Lease by name Praepositi & sociorum Colleg ' Regalis de Eton, etc. leaving out Beatae Mariae, and adjudged voided. 380. Umpton after 31 devised the entire land held by Knight's service, and in the 34 of explanation of such a devise to be good for two parts, Umpton is specially except, yet adjudged good for two parts. Quinto Mariae. Mich. 380. Brooke Chief Justice of the common place revoked a grant made by himself before of the office of the chief Protonotary, became. the Grantee inidoneus, & gave it to another, and there is a precedent put 5 E. 4. (151.) where the office of the clerk of the Crown in the King's Bench was granted to a Vintner, and another, and after died, and the Vint' exhibited his Patent, & it seemed to the Justices because he was never exercised in the office that his Patent is voided, and refused to admit him, for the benefit of the King and his people, and after signified his disability to the King, and commended another to him as sufficient, which the King o'er tenus them commanded to admit and swear. 381. Sir John Savage Sheriff in fee, was indicted in the King's bench for escape of two felons felonice & voluntary, and of hold ' his Turn in loco consueto against the statute of magna Charta, The Attorney of the Queen put in an Information upon the Indictments, and by the Court his office was seized without a Scire facias quousque, etc. (132.) 382. Per touts les Justices where a man deviseth that his Executors shall cell land, and of the sum coming, shall give such a portion to his daughters, it is not a Legacy, because out of land, and an action of Account lies, and not suit in the Court Christian, upon which a prohibition was granted, contra 9 Eliz. 383. A man being in execution in the Fleet for a debt recovered in the Common pleas, being before condemned in the King's Bench for another debt, he was now removed by a Corpus cum causa condemn; It was holden that the Plaintiff may acknowledge satisfaction for both debts in the King's bench, for he is in the Ward of the Marshal for both, and if he escape the Marshal shall be chargeable for both. 384. A Proviso semper, and it is covenanted and agreed, and the Lessee covenants and grants, that neither he nor his Executors or Assigns shall not alien or grant the term to any without the assent of the Lessor, otherwise than to his wife, or to one of the children of the Lessee, the Lessee died, and his Executors granted the Term to one of the sons of the Lessee: And 3 held that he may not that grant over to a stranger without licence, but two held contrary, and that the restraint is determined by the grant to the son, Quaere also if it be a Condition or but a covenant. 385. Thymolby & another arraigned upon an indictment of robbery, pleaded none culpable and a Venire fac ' awarded, and 3 of the Jury were sworn against both; T. challenged 4 others without showing cause or saying peremptory, and the other would not challenge them, upon which T. was taken from the Bar, and more till 12 sworn against the other, and found him culpable; and by all the Justices it is a good trial, for he was not discharged but stood aside for a time; ruled 1 H. 5. for although it be one panel indeed, yet it is several inquests in law, and may proceed against one sole, contra in an appeal, & this Venire facias had not words, & qui nulla affinit' atting', etc. as in an appeal. (153.) 386. In assize Hunt ' of the office of the Regist ' of the Admiralty it was prescribed, quod quilibet hujusmodi persona, which shall be named by the Admiral, shall be Register of the Admiralty for life, and it was found that the Admiral named two by deed habend ' for life, and that one is dead; quaere if the prescription be performed, viz. si quilibet shall be taken singularly, that but one shall be officer; where is a name collective, and understood of many. Or if where one dies so that the other aught to claim in by the first Grantor, as by a Grant made to him sole, if that maintain the prescription. It seemed to divers that it shall. Quaere also if two may be Joint-officers, the Grantor by deed of an office shall not altar the prescription to nominate per paroll, for a man may speak or nominate by his deed. A Corody uncertain may not be granted but to one, but certain may be granted to many. Fitzh. N. B. (154.) There it is holden if a man assign dower to his wife by deed, habend ' for term of his life rendering rend, it is voided habend' & reddend ' for she is in by her husband. 387. In a writ of entry in the Per, an essoin of the service of the K, in partibus transm. was put by Knivet for the tenant in octab. Tr. and he had day till crastin' Martin', Quaere if the day to bring in the essoin shall be given to the essoiner, or to the termor; also if the grant of the absence shallbe die Lu. in cra ' oct. Trin. and octab. because die Dominico; The warrant to the Justices is by writ close and recites the essoin, but not that the essoiner is sworn, yet it behoves to swear him of the verity of that. 388. Tenant in Chivalry of a common person made a gift in tail, the remainder to the Queen in fee, Tenant in tail died, his issue within age, per opin.. he shall not be in ward to any, for the Tenure of the ancient Seignory is extinct, and the services gone by the fee simple in the King, who may not hold of any. (155.) 389. Oldnold indicted for slanderous works of the Queen three months passed, contra the form of divers statutes generally, and without mention unde scandalum in Regno inter Dominam Regin' & Magnat' vel populum suum oriri poterit, he was after arraigned and convicted of that; the question was, what Judgement he shall have, and by what law, for he is not punishable, per 1 & 2 P. & M. because the three months passed, and the 2 & 12 Rich. 2. are only of punishing slanders of the Nobles. So it is only punishable by West. 1. cap. 4. and according to that he had judgement of fine and imprisonment at the Queen's pleasure till he had found out the author. 390. Tyrrell for 400. l. paid by G. by deed indented and enrolled, bargained and sold, gave, granted and covenanted land to the said G. and his heir habend ' to the use of the Bargainer for life, the remainder in tail to G. the remainder to the right heirs of the Bargainor, this limitation by the haben ' is voided and impertinent, for by the Justices it is of an use rising out of an use. 391. Land deviseable came to H. 8. by dissolution, who granted it to hold in Chivalry in Capite, the Patentee devised the entire, it is a good devise against the heir for all, for no words in the 32 H. 8. restrains the authority to device land deviseable before the statute, but peradventure not against the King for ward and primer seisin. 392. At the Common law a Melius inquirend. is grantable per Register, where found was by office quod tenementa tenentur of the heir of J.S. and named him not; (156.) where A. is heir of the part of the mother of he which is dead, but of the part of the father ignora '. And also where the value was too little. But doubted upon the clause in the 2 Ed. 6. c. 8. that where de quo vel de quibus ignorant, where tenure of the King is found, but by qu. servic' ignorant, that a Melius inquirend ' shall be awarded as is used, any late custom to the contrary notwithstanding. If non obstant, the proviso in the Act which extends not to prejudice or take away the title of the King, or of any another accrued by any other inquisition before the said day, but they shall enjoy as if that Act had not been made, if upon such ancient offices menti' Melius inquiren ' lies; the better opinion that it doth not, notwithstan' Saunders vouched a precedent to the contrary. If a man be found by office of the age of 15 years, and when he comes to 20 he is found by Aetate probanda of full age, if the Queen had no remedy but aught to make livery. vide the words of the statute, that at his very full age indeed, he shall have an Aetate proban ' and if it be granted before it seems a traverse shall be admitted, and so ruled. 393. Greiswold seized in fee by Inden' made a Lease for life, remainder to the heir males of his own body, the remained ' to his heirs, he died having two sons, tenant for life died, the eldest son entered and died having a daughter: Adjudged that she shall have the land as heir general, for it's clear the tail is not good, for he may not make his own right heir a Purchaser, without departing with the fee (4 H. 6. Chapman's case) but admitting it good, in various opinions if it ends upon the death of the eldest son without heir male, viz. if he was purchaser, or had it as heir male of the body of his father by descent. Vide Robridges case, 1. 2. & 4. Ed. 3. and Littleton in tail and conditions, where land is given to the son and to the heir males of the body of his father which is dead. (157.) 394. Annuity was brought against the successor of the Bishop of Ely, who granted for life to the Plaintiff the Stewardship and fee of 40. s. pro, etc. percipiend' de manerio de D. and the Plaintiff shown that he kept the Court, but averred not the engrossing of the rolls, and that after the Bishop discharged him, etc. It seems he aught to tender his service to every successor, an it is issuable that such successor non exoneravit. The Bishop came by Attorney and made no defence, but his Bailiff demanded conusance, and was allowed; and yet the words de licet ipsimet sit pars, are not in the Patent, because so it had been allowed before. Hill. 395. Puttenham by Indenture granted land in fee ferme with condition of reentry for non payment, and covenanted to make further assurances, and by another Indenture bearing like date, he covenanted to levy a fine to the use, intents, effects and conditions in the first Indenture, and to no other, now he levied a fine as that to the Grantee; It was decreed against the opinion. Baker, Catlyn, & Kelway, that neither the fine nor condition is gone, for the Indenture rules that, as if it had been an express proviso to save the rent. (158.) 6 R. 2. Simile in Assize, and 23 Eliz. Bradborne levied a fine of land rendering rend, and now for further assurance a writ of Entry in the post was brought against J. S. who vouched Bradborne, who entered into the warrant generally, the opinion of all the Justices that the rent is not gone. 306. In a writ of Entry en le quibus against Marrow of 70 acres of land in H. the tenant pleaded that one C. was seized in fee, and demised the land to him for life, the Demandant entitled himself by absque hoc quod dimisit modo & forma. It was found that C. and 6 others were seized to the use of G. of the said 70 acres, and of a house in H. which house and lands had been from time called W. and that the said C. and the others 16 H. 8. joined in a Lease of the said house called W. with the pertinenc' to the Tenant, etc. It was moved in arrest of Judgement, 1. That this demise found, will not maintain the issue for the Tenant. 2. It is not expressly found that the 70 acres are appertaining to the house called W. which is found to be demised. 3. A Juror which had his appearance of record, and was not discharged by challenge, he being sworn upon another inquest; 3. de circumstant. were put in to make 12. whereof one was in his place. 4. Quaere if issue for the 7 part of the land be sufficient found for the Tenant. 397. In action upon the case against an Ostler, issue was joined if the goods of the Plaintiff were rob in default of the Defendant. Per Curiam it is a good evidence that the house was full, upon which he refused the Plaintiff, who said he would make shift, etc. and if the cause be false, an action upon the case lies against the Ostler upon refusal. 398. A man made a Jointure of soccage land to his wife, after he purchased Capite land, and devised two parts of it, none of the soccage shall supply the 3. part to satisfy the statute of Wills, except covin may be averred. Pas. 399. Dyer justice of the common Bank had a Patent and was sworn Justice of the King's Bench, because Morg. which aught to keep the essoynes were absent, per melior. (159) opinion per this superior auth ' the inferior is resumed, as a parson created Bish. Also the entry shall be impertinent, because Judgement than before him in the common Bank shall be reversed before himself in the Bank of the King. But one hath been Justice of the common Pleas and Baron of the Exchequer together. (160.) 400. The husband & wife by Indenture, let the land of the wife for years rendering rend, her husband died, and she before any day of payment took another, who accepted the rent and died, the lease is affirmed, 3. contra. 401. Action upon the case against one, where two sued in the Admiral Court of a thing done in the body of the County and well, for there vexation is several, and there are precedents of suit one or both as it pleaseth them where too were sued there; And the writ was tam. pro Domina Reg. quam party. And the effect of the surmise in the libel shall be put in the writ, so the Judgement was of costs and damage double for the Plaintiff, and but ten pound to the Queen, & Capiatur. And holden that the action may either be brought where the Contract was, or where the citation was served, The writ and the Count were Coram C. Lieutenant of the Court of Admiralty, whereas the Court had no Deputy. It is not the form to put the Damages in the writ. In precedents three statutes, viz. 13 Rich. 2.15 Rich. 2. & 2 H. 4. are put, where here the 15 Rich. 2. was omitted. 402. It was found by Inquisition that a Customer purchased land with the Queen's money, and by covin had caused the Estate to be made to a friend, that seized into the hands of the Queen till etc. so of a Collector of tithes or fifteen although he dies without heir or Executor, process made against the Feoffees to answer and satisfy the Queen. 403. A man made two Executors, one refused, the other proved the will, and made Executors and died, his Executors brought an action of debt, for a debt due to the first testator; and well by Brook, for the election of him who refused and determined, & now the first testator is dead intestate, 21 Ed. 4.28. Curia, that the action is not maintainable by the Executor of an Executor, ideo quaere. 404. A Lease to 3 by the premises habend. to the first for life, remainder to the second, the remainder to the third, the opinion of the Court that they shall take successively and not jointly. 405. A man bound with two sureties for 40 pound to be paid at two days, for their assurance he sold to them beasts for 40 l. paid, provided if he them discharge and save harmless etc. the sale shall be voided, and it is agreed that he shall occupy (161.) He failed the first payment, after he is felo de se, And awarded in the Star-chamber that the Almoner shall have the beasts and discharge the sureties, Dyer contra. to all, because the property is in the vendees upon breach of the said condition, Quaere, if a woman which continues her Quarentine may defend the possession with force. Trin. 406. The Lord North Chancellor of the Augmentation Court delivered an Obligation of the Queens to his servant to deliver to the Clerk to whom the custody appertained, the obligor and the servant conspired to cancel the Obligation, the Master is chargeable by the justices. 407. Trespass, the Plaintiff made a new assignment, and gave a special name and put buttels, by plusors he aught as well to prove the Buttels as the name, quaere. (162.) 408. Offic' virture brevis was, that A. died seized of landholden of the King per Knight service, the heir within age, it shall be intended in Capite; It was found by the Escheator in another county, that the same A. held of B. other land by Knight's service, B. is put to traverse of the tenure in Capite by the common Law. 409. The Lady Vere covenanted with A. by Indenture in consideration of etc. to assure by Recovery to A. and his heirs, land to the uses subscript, And A. also covenanted that within 8 Months, he would remake an Estate to the Lady for life, remainder, etc. Recovery is had, the use is not changed after the 6. months, but a Covenant lies: Baron alien joint-purchasor during the coverture, and died, the wife may enter in all, by 32. for it is the franktenement and inheritance of the wife. 410. One in execution shall not be dismissed by the protection of the service of the King, because sub salva custod. per Justices, And if by 1 Rich. 2. cap. 12. he be put at large by writ or commandment of the King by Bail. Quaere, if the Gaoler be chargeable against the party. 411. He which is condemned in debt or damages had land in several Counties, the Plaintiff may have an Elegit in every of them for all, or he may divide his debt. (163.) 412. A Feoffment of land holden by Knight service, to the use of himself & his wife in tail, the remainder to the use of himself and his heirs, stat' 27 H. 8 is made, the husband dies, If the heir shall be in Guard during the life of the wife; Sanders held he should, for the ancient reversion remains. Dyer, if the land had been on the part of the mother, yet the use shall go to the part of the Father, for that a new use. But otherwise if the King had made the use, as is a diversity upon a tenure especially reserved upon a Feoffment before statute quia emptores, etc. and where it is created by the Law. 413. The Justices of Nisi prius die, the Clerk of Assize may bring in the verdicts without Certiorare. vide West. 2 cap. 30. 14 Ed. 3, 6 stat. Eborum. (164.) 414. A man devised the moiety of his goods to his wife and died, she shall have the moiety as they are at the time of the death, if the Executors have Assets' ultra. 415. Record came out of ancient Demean into the Bank by writ of false judgement, the form of which Writ was sub sigi llo tuo & sigil. 4. legal. homin. ejusdem curiae, etc. where it should be & per 4. legal. hom. etc. Also it wanted the words (& aliud breve) ante le Teste. And because the Defendant would not assent to the amendment, the Court doubted what he should do, 4 H. 6. the Plaintiff may have a Procedendo to the justices. 416. He which had two several Commons in one place, and appurtenant to one house, another to another, he may not make a joint prescription: An Indictment that where A. such a day made a Felony at H. by that W. him apud H. predict' arrest' & in salva Custod ' adtunc & ibidem habuit quousque defend' in predict' A. adtunc & ibid' insult' fecit & eundem adtunc & ibidem felonice rescussit, etc. It's doubted if the first adtunc etc. make the time of the arrest certain, also if the last adtunc etc. may not be referred to some part of the said day, as well before and at the instant of the said said Felony, as after. Expliciunt Anni Reg. Mariae. Anno primo Elizabethae. Mich. 165. 417. REsolution of all the justices upon the statute, 1 Ed. 6. c. 7.1. That the King may begin his reign the day of the death of his Predecessor. 2. That the Patents of the judges, Sheriffs, Escheat', Commissioners of Oyer and Gaol delivery, and justices of the Peace, are determined by the death of the King. Contra of the Coroners office who is chosen by writ. 3. Original writs not returned at the death of the King are not helped. 4. Quare, if repris after judgement may be put to execution by new justices. Hil. 418. Queen Marry inhancred the impost upon cloth without Parliament, Quaere, and if before stat' 5. Rich. 2. (166) it was lawful to go over the Sea without Licence; Magna Customa was for Wool, Woolfels, and Leather, for which only custom was paid at the common Law, and Parva customa was that which Aliens paid over the rate of the Denizens. 419. Anno 8. H. 7. the Lord Audly made a feoffment, after by Indenture he recited the Feoffment to be to the intent that his Feoffees should perform his last will, and over, Know ye that my will is, that they shall stand seized for the payment of my debts, and after shall make an estate to me and to my wife in tail, etc. that is no Will because it limits an Estate to be executed in his life: also the wife was a stranger to the land and ancient use, and for that cause without a state remade by the Feoffees, the use shall not be changed by the declaratur supra. But it shall remain to the husband and his heirs general as it did before, because the Feoffment was without consideration, per curiam, vide 11 H. 4. & 31 H. 6. 420. Debt against Porter as Executor of wrong, and because he received per debt, and made an acquittance, it lies well per Justices: so if he takes goods into his possession, for Devener ' draweth the charge, be it Executor or Administrator, (167) And a debt lies against an Executor which hath possession of the goods, It lies also against a woman which takes more than necessary apparel. And if one hath colour by overseership, Letters ad Colligend. or by will countermand? so that he expends about the Funeral, and a Feme Covert which refuseth after the death of her husband, all those aught to pled the special matter, without they administered in other manner; But he which claims inteerest aught to conclude absque hoc quod ut executor. 421. The Patentee himself shall have a Constat per sta● ' 3 & 4 Ed. 6. cap. 4. by the first sentence of the purview, S. T. Wroths case, where there are joint Patentees, surrender the entire Patent of an office in the Forest. Trin. 422. Yaw brought an action of debt as Executor upon an Obligation made and dated 12. Jan. The Defendant said, that the first day of May he caused the Deed to be written, and delivered that as his Deed to A. to be delivered to the testator, and A, proffer it, and the Testator refused it, so not his Deed, Plaintiff demur', 1. It may not be intended the same Obligation whereof the action is brought, otherwise if the Plaintiff had spoke of it as his deed bearing date etc. 2. The refusal made it not no Deed, but that afterwards he may accept it, and for that he aught to have pleaded the special matter, Judgem ' if the action. Centra if it had been delivered as an escrow, to be delivered over as a Deed, and he refuse. (168.) 423. Error by Barret, the Judgement in a Scire facias upon a Recognisance was reversed, 1. because the Execution awarded upon one nihil returned. 2. Also the writ bore date die solis; And holden that there shall be two nihills returned to have pardon of outlawry allowed. But one countervails Sci. feci against he who had lost debt or damages, yet there shall be two against his Executors, because they are no parts to the Judgement. It is a custom in the King's Bench if any thing is assigned for an error, which is not, to mark that with a cross. 424. Guard by tenure of an Honour or Manor and not in Capite, he shall not sue livery till a year after his full age, he shall have cum exitibus de tempor' plenae aetatis, and tha● by the name of Oustr. le main per usum curiae ward run. 425. An Information of perjury for the Queen against Bronkard Sheriff in the Star-chamber for returning one who was not chosen a Knight of the Parliament, and he was fined and imprisoned according to the statute for the false return; But it appeared that he took not his Oath at the entry of his office per perswason of Hide to whom the Dedim' potestat' etc. and they were both fined and imprisoned for the contempt of the ancient law. 426. Distress in the county of Wiltshire in a place which is within the honour of Wallingford, is driven to the castle of Wallingford, which is in the county of Oxford, Accedas ad curiam to remove the plaint into the Bank, was directed to the Sheriff of Oxford and the Court of the taking in Wiltshire, which well per Court, Note. (169.) 427. Wilts by Deed reciting falsely that in consideration of 7000 pound paid, he infcoffed A. and B. habend. iis & hered. to their proper use & uses of A & B. ●mperpetuum: After it was found by Office that Wilkes died seized and held in Capite, and I. of full age found his heir. It was holden that the heir shall not be received to aver the false consideration against the Conusance of his ancestor, and that the Master of the Court of Wards may not remove the Feoffees upon examination of the consideration, and retain the land quousque etc. But in justice the Queen aught to tender livery to him who is found heir, if he proceeds as he had tendered suit of livery, otherwise she aught to grant the farm to the tenderers of the traverse, etc. by star. 34 & 36 Ed. 3. & 8 H. 6. & 3 H. 8. holden that the Feoffees have the use for life supra●on●●a if the words ad opus, etc. had been omitred. Secundo Elizabethae. Mich. 428. Hen. 8. let to Sir Richard Cromwell the Forests of Waybridge and Sapley, the game passeth, the Lessee covenanted to keep 100 Deers continually during the term, (170) and such a number at the end of the term to leave, the King granted the reversion, the Grantee may not kill the Game there, for than it is impossible for the lessee to perform the covenant. 429. A Mandam●● issued after the death of the Lord Powes, the Jury gave their verdict to the Escheator in paper, and after came a Supersed' per paroll, the Supersed ' is good for the time, because by stat' 34 & 36 Ed. 3. cap. 13. & 3 H. 8. cap. 2. it shall be delivered by Indenture under their seals, and so holden in the Chancery, where the Escheator returned all the matter supra, But if executed although not returned, the Supersedeas had been too late. But holden that the writ shall not be amended, Postea it was resolved it lies not in this case, nor in a diem clausum extremum, but the party was put to his traverse. (171.) 430. A Prohibition was sued upon the stat. 2 & 3 Ed. 6. upon suit within the 7. years in Court Christian for tithes of wheat in 60 acres of barren ground improved, It was found that all was barren, but that of 30 acres, tithe of Wool and Lambs had been paid, and because he had brought his suit of wheat, where he aught to have such tithes as had been paid Per 7. years for those 30. acres, Consultation lies not. 431. Frencham devised land to his wife for life, the remained to C. F. and to the heirs of his body, and if it hap he to dye without heirs of his body than to H. and to his heir males in Fee simple, the remainder to the next heir males of the kin, Adjudged that the si contingit altars not the tail because the intent is apparent. 432. Replegtare, the Plaintiff supposed the taking to be at N. in a place called the Common Field; the Defendant as termor of the demise of P. of the place in which, etc. containing 300 acrees, avowed damage sesant, the Plaintiff said that long before P. any thing had, the Bishop of E. was seized of the scite of the Manor of D. whereof the 300 acres are parcel per Indenture, etc. which was confirmed, both which deeds remain on Record in the Chancery, and demised to A. for 50. years, whose estate we have etc. and put in our beasts, and the Defendant them took; Defendant demur' and Judgement given against the Plaintiff without argument, 1. Because the avowry is at large, except that long before be a confession and avoiding of the lease, Quaere. 2. Also 300 acres may not be intended but parcel of the scite of a Mannorand over he had supposed the taking to be in the common field. 3. Because he aught to have showed either the Deeds themselves of the demise and confirmation, or else the exemplification, for nothing may pass from a corp' without deed. 4. He may not pled que estate of a term & he is actor & by way of title, 5 etc. He said not by force of which he entered and was possessed. (172.) 433. Outlawry upon judgement in debt, the Chancellor not being certified that the Plaintiff was satisfied, had pardoned the outlawry, ita quod stet recto where it should be satisfac. querent. and upon two Nihils returned, it was allowed, Quaere, of the remedy for the party: vide the exposition of the stat. 5 Ed. 3. cap. 12. that where one is outlawed for fine to the King in trespass, he shall not have a Charter till the Chancellor be assured that the party is satisfied. After the year the Plaintiff sued a Scire factas, and had execution by default, and a capias and an Exigent, and if upon the Captas utlag ' the Defendant shall avoid the outlawry by plea without writ of crror, Quaere. 434. Lane tenant in chivalry of C. as of his Manor of D. in the county of N. holden in capite levied a fine and retooke by the same for life, the remainder to his wife for life, the remainder to the right heirs of the husband, and C. being within age, was upon office found in the county of M. that he held the Manor of O, etc. in Guard, & the King granted the wardship during the Minority to P. excepting Wards and Marriages, Lane died having two sons, his wife entered, the eldest died, the youngest within age, if the King shall have the ward, and the 3. part of the land out of the hands of the wife; The 32 speak not but in case where the husband and wife have joint estate and to the heirs of one of them, and speaks only of land holden of the King. Also the youngest was not heir at the time of the death of his father. The grant to P. voided because no Office in the county where the Manor is. And quaere, if the exception be good of incidents, etc. or if but a covenant. And if a Fine with tender be a disposition of the husband for advancement of his wife. Ruled for the Queen. (173.) 435. Al' plur reple ' the Sheriff returned that the Defend ' claimed property, upon that a proprier ' pro band ' issued, Quaere if yet there shall be proceeding in the bank, for it may be the Plaintiff had cause to have possession of the beasts, although the Defendant had the property as a gage, or let to compass his ground. 436. Reentry is made upon tenant at will, by a servant and the lessor, who notwithstanding continued possession, and his rent is accepted, he sowed and severed, the servant of the lessor by his commandment entered and took the corn. It is a good commandment where the Dissessor sows, etc. But in the case supra, doubted if the acceptance of the rent shall waive the advantage of the Disseisin, and made them tenant at sufferance. 437. Sir John Parrot outlawed upon a Judgement in debt whereas in the original the Plaintiff had addition, Sadler, and the Scire facias to have execution was Salter, he brought a writ of Error in which he named the Plaintiff Salter, directed to Sir Anthony Brown by name, the error' in record' process. & in redditione judicii quam promulg' utlag'. Sir Anthony was removed & a new chief Justice of the Common pleas made who certified all: And holden without Warrant, also there is no such original with addition of Salter, (174) upon which a new writ was awarded to the new Justice, and he certified the process of execution only, and no such Record of the rest. 438. A termor brought a Quo minus, and in his count entitled the King, that his lessor granted the reversion to N. who by his deed in rolled granted the same to the King, and alleged not that the grant made to M. was by deed, (R.) it seems well because he is a stranger. Also he doth not convey title to himself by this, and when he speaks of a Grant it shall be understood a lawful Grant, and if he had not pleaded well, the Court aught to aid him for the benefit of the King; And in Assize the tenant conveyed to him by the Grant of A. in tail, the remainder to the King in Fee, and prayed aid without speaking of the deed, and had it. Also in waist that the Plaintiff had granted his reversion to whom we atturned, its good without saying by deed. 439. Cestui que use of land holden in capite before the 27. died seized of other lands holden of other Lords in soccage, the King shall have the Ward of them by his prerogative. 440. J●osail in debt against Executor of Executor, first because the bar is not concluded with nothing in the hands of the first Executors, whereas he had pleaded that he in his life had fully administered. (175.) 2. The Plaintiff in his replication had not alleged that the Executor had Assets' at the time of his death, but in his life, and issue upon two affirmatives, replied. 441. Between the Teste and return of an original writ, may be two or three terms, because no damage to the Defendant, contra of a Capias for the long imprisonment. 442. Repleg ' nor a trespass shall not abate by the death of one of the defendants. 443. Serogs case in time of vacation of the chief Justice of the Bank; Queen Mary granted the office of the Exigenter of London, and holden voided, for it is incident to the office of the chief Justice, which office the Queen herself may not use, after the Queen granted a commission to order the interest, and a bill was exhibited before them, upon which, and the Jurisdiction S●r●gs demur' and would not answer, and they committed him to the Fleet, but the Justices of the Bank after granted a cerpus ●um causa, because he was a necessary minister of the Court. Hil. (176.) 444 A Juror was challenged because he was within the distress of the Plaintiff, viz. within the Precinct of his Leete, and holden a principal challenge although no tenure. 445. The office of the Chiregrapher and Custos brevium, is in the gift of the King Vide form of the parent. 446. Sir Mauri●e Barkley 1. Ma. surrendered the office of Banner bearer to a Master of the Chancery, who recorded a Memoran●●on of that, But S● M●urtee delivered not up his Patent of that, It seems the Record is not sufficient to make a surrender. 447. Queen Marry licenced Bartue to go over Sea to recover deb●●, provided that if he resort to the fugitives, the licence to cease. One was sent with a privy Seal to command him to return who being misused recame and certified a resort, etc. into the Chancery, which by Mirtt●us was certified into the Exchequer, they there made Commission to seize all the lands, goods, and tenements, etc. and after B. rename, he may not traverse the certificate, because it may not be tried, but Quaere, if the Messenger shall not be sworn, as it is in an Aff●id. for serving a Sub. pena. It was holden that the Queen might not revoke the Licence, because for a certain time, and that the resort to the Fugitives made not the licence voided from the beginning, but (denque) shall be intended (de illonque) 10 H 4.5. simile. 448. Cestui que use before 27 devised that A. B. and C. his Feoffees should fallen, etc. A. died, now B. and C. may not cell: contra, if he spoke generally of his Feoffees without naming them. 449. An action upon the stat' 1 & 2 P. & M. for leading distress into a Foreign country, because the stature giveth five pound, and triple damages, the Plaintiff shall not have judgement of costs, although they are assessed by the Jury, Quaere, if the Judgement shall be that the Defendant shall be taken, or in mercy. 450. The Sheriff returned a panel, and falsely; that it was executed by his Predecessor; the party may challenge the array for cozenage notwithstanding the fall return. (178.) Ej●cti●ne Firma by Wrotesley against Adams, Com. fo. 451. A Termor is ejected and make regress, yet the disseisin remains to the lessor if he william. 452. The Queen under the Seal of the Co●●t of Wards granted the land of T. her Ward, to Willoughby habend ' during the Minority of T. or any other his heir male. Decreed that the stat. 32 H. 8.4. of the erection of the Court of Wards, gave not authority to grant Wards which may hap after, but only of words in possession during their minority, and after till livery, or if that Ward die till office found of the next Ward. (ou) supra had construction of (&) Quaere. 453. A Divorce causa frigid' natu● ' & perpet ' dissolved the marriage from the beginning, they both married again, and had issue, & quia accepta ecclesia, they shall be compelled to cohabite again; and great suit was to stay the engrossing of a Fine, tamen fuit irgrosser de cent eyanc dl 2 Baren. Burys case. (179.) 454. Dower against divers, some confessed the action, others demand' the view and granted, Quaere, for although they agreed in dilatories, yet in Dower which is favoured, it is elsewhere, denied. Pas. 455. A man convict was reprieved before judgement for the difficulty, if he shall have Clergy, he is not Bailable, for it is intended in bail, that it is indifferent whether culpable or not, as it stood here. 456. Two joim-tenants in Fee made partition after star. 3 H. 8. by parol out of the county: It was doubted if good, for the statute is only to compel them by writ to make partition, as of Coparceners, and for the rest it is as all the common Law. 457. The Clerkship of the Hamper was granted to Sir Ralph Saler and to one Hales, and H. having a duplicare, Sir Ralph surrend' the Patent itself, and retook, etc. the duplicate shall not aid H. for it is made by the Chancellor without warrant. 458. A Feoffment of land in Borough English after 27. to the use of the Feoffer and his heir males, secundum cursum comm' legis, yet the youngest shall inherit one, 26 H. 8. (180.) 459. The form of a Fine levied upon a writ of customs and services where it is repeated, that whereas there was a contention for Murage and Castle Ward, now the signior concessit quod fit quietus de predict' servie ' salvis omnibus al' servic', Knight's service still remains, for the discharge of the murage and castle Ward, which it may be are usurped, is no discharged of the renure in Chivalry. 460. Debt against two by several Praecipe, and several issues joined upon no such Record, and several Judgements given for failing at the day, now one joint writ of error was brought, and therefore the certificate refused. And holden that now it is sufficient time, to enter the Warrant of Attorney for the first suit, and the Attorney shall forfeit every of them 10 pound by the statute of Jeofails, for there was an issue joined supra, although triable by the Record. 461. The Conusee of a statute Merchant had certified into the Chancery upon Certior. directed to the Mayor; and there sued a Capias returnable in the Bank, and an Alias, and after died; and his Executors because it was doubted if they may have a Seire facias or an Eoctent upon the first proceeding, upon oath that the testator was not satisfied, they had a Cert●●r ' to begin again. 462. A man bargained and sold land, Proviso, that if the Bargainer pay to him, his heirs or Assigns, 10 pound before Nowell, that the bargain shall be voided, the Bargainee died, and the Bargainor paid to the Executors. It was doubted if good, contrary to the express words. And it seems the word Assigns shall not help him, for although Executor be Assignee in law, yet he is not Assignee in the land. (181.) 463. Moodies case, the father by act executed conveyed estate in Capite land to himself for life, the remainder to his second son in tail, the remainder to a stranger in Fee, and died, There shall be a wardship of the 3 part and of the body of the heir per 32. Quaere, if but a state for life had been limited among the children, the remained ' to a stranger. (182.) Error by Fish against Brocket, Com. fol. 464. The Sheriff made an array in Attaint duly, and delivered the writ and the panel to the Plaintiff, to take counsel of the formal return, who delivered that to the Messenger of other writs, who at the nomination of the Plaintiff returned divers others, (183) the Sheriff being removed, 3 terms after disavowed the return, but too late after the same term, and the array shall not be quashed because duly made at the time; But the Defendant may challenge the polls because put in at the denomination of the Plaintiff. 465. A woman having a term as Executor, the husband submitted to an Arbitrim. upon that a moiety is award to the Pretendor of title, it seems that the wife is bound, But because the Defendant in an action of Detinue brought by the feme for the Indenture of the Lease, pleaded none de●●et, and not the special matter, judgement was given against him. 466. Repleg ' the taking supposed in K. the Defendant said that the place is 40. acre's parcel of the Manor of K. which is his Franktenement, and avowed for damage fesant. The Plaintiff: said the place is parcel of the Manor of K. in K. and conveyed to himself title to that; a bsque hee quod dictum maner' de K. unde ' etc. fuit liber' tene ' of the Defendant, he is estopped to give evidence that the Defendant had not any Manor of K. for the absque hoc, and the word unde implies that he had such a Manor, but he aught to have taken by protestation that the Defendant had no such Manor of K. for plea that it is parcel of the Manor of K. in K. to which he himself conveyed title absque hoc quod dict. 40 acres was the franktenement of the Defendant. 467 A man indicted as accessary upon giving to one counsel to commit Burglary, and there was not the word (malitiose) in the indictment, which is in the sta. of 4 & 5 of P. & M. which takes away Clergy, and it seems for that reason he shall have his clergy; but by some, counsel to rob burglar●ter is not of malice but covetousness. 468. Account was brought by an Executor of receipt by the hands of the Testator, and the Defendant was ousted of his law because it was a receipt by the hands of another. (184.) 469. H. 8. made a Lease for years to Col●h●●st excepting great trees, and after granted the reversion and trees to the Duke of Northumberland, who demised the land and trees to B. without impeachment of waist, the Duke is Attaint, etc. the Queen granted the see to S. who infeosted D. in fee, and was obliged to save harmless the parson of D. and the premises touching any interest of B. per the Lease supra B. felled trees; D. brought a debt upon the Obligation, but because he shown not in his replication that B. claimed the trees by virtue of the Lease, nor made conclusion with so damnified, adjudged against him for form. And as for the matter it was doubted if that be a breach of the Condition; for if it had been by virtue of a Lease of trees, ●he aught to have cut but branches, or take the fruit; & if by exception in the Lease of Colth ' the trees are but a chattel in the Ki. & what profit or property the Duke had by words of the dem ' of the trees without grant. And the words without impeachment of waist, made not a property in him, for if they be cut, in a Trespass brought, he shall but only recover damages for the Trespass upon the land, and for the branches. (185.) 470. In dower, issue was taken upon the death and life of the 〈◊〉. of the Deman ' and day given, ad docend' curi ' by proofs, & there were no proofs of his life, but some presumptions given by the Plaintiff of his death in evidence, upon which the Plaint. had judgement to recover seisin; Bracton, this trial is not peremptory, but the Tenant shall pled over to the right of the dower. Trin. 471. Debt against Sir John Chichester Executor of B. Executor of A. upon an obligation of A. the Defend ' A. did own upon a statute to B. 100 pound after whose death goods to the value of a 100 pound came to the hands of B. as Execut. of A. with which he paid himself, & ultra dict. bona the said B. in vita. sua fully administered, and so nothing in the hands of B. etc. (186.) the Plain. said that assets in Bond. ultra, etc. tempore mortis B. it was found for the Pl. A. and he had judgm. of the goods of A. in the hands of the Def. and damages of the proper goods of the Defendant. The Sheriff returned Devasi ' upon the Defendant, because he found assets in the hands of B. tempore mortis, and not upon B. Upon which judgement was given, that execution shall be of the proper goods and cartels of the Defendant, and if nulla bona be returned, it seems the Plaintiff may have a Capias or an Elegit. 472. Stat. 1. Ma. c. 7. is that although a term be adjourned, so that a fine may not be proclaimed accord. to the 4 H. 7. yet it shall be also available, and holden if part be adjourned it is also aided, for it is a statute for a general benefit, and shall be taken by equity. Tertio Elizabethae. Mich. 473. A Lease to A. for life to the use of B. for life. Per Curiam, if A. die, the estate of A. is determined, Quaere before the sta. 27. 474. The Adulterer counselled the woman to kill the infant when it should be born, the infant was born and murdered by the Midwife, in the presence and by the commandment of the woman, the woman and the Midwife are principals, and the Adulterer accessary, because the counsel before the birth continued till after, it not being countermanded, and may not have Clergy, vide the precedent of the Indictment there. 475. Debt upon a counterbond to save harmless of an obligation against A. the Defend ' pleaded non dammf. the Plaint' shown that A. recovered upon a plaint in Lond. etc. issue upon no such record, and day was given to the Plaint. to have the record at his peril, Note they shall not writ to a base Court, Quaere if the Plaintiff had required it. At the day per Mittimus out of the Chancery he brought the tener of the record and it sufficed. 476. Two Jointenants for life, one let his part for years rendering rend and died, the term shall continued against the survivor, but the rent is gone. 477. Indictment of forcible entry upon stat. 8. H. 6. was found at the Quarter Sessions and a writ of restitution granted, Quae. if the Justices which were absent may grant a Supersed. But if it were at specal Sessions none may but they who were present, except the Justices of the King's bench who have supreme authority, the King himself sitting there as is intended. 478 Two Executors one disposed his own money for the testator in pious uses and died, possessed of goods of the testator to the value, the other Execut. shall not have them, and for that cause issue was joined in detinue, that the value of them was greater than the expenses. 479. Dower against 8. two confessed the action, the rest pleaded in Bar, the Plaintiff had judgement presently for the third part of two parts in 8 divided, and after upon the Bar found for her had judgm. of the 3 part of the 6 parts in 8 divid. (188.) 480. Assize, the Defendant pleaded outlawry in the Plaintiff, issue upon no such record, at the day to have the record the tenor was brought, in which appeared variance in the day of the return of the exigent, and in the place where the outlawry was pronounced; The Plaintiff also brought the tenor by a Mittimus, to adnull the action, Quaere if to the purpose, because it was after the issue, notwithstanding for both causes together it was adjudged a Failer, and defend' disseis' absque Recogn' assisae according to the statute. 481. Sir Ralph Rowlet tenant in tail, the remainder over in tail suffered a recovery, he himself benig sheriff, to the use of Sir Nath. Baron, and for to avoid Error released all errors, and also after brought a writ of Error, and was barred by the release, yet this no bar to the issue of a writ of Error, for the right of the tail is not gone, and it seems if the issue fails he in remainder per stat. 9 Ri. 2.3. may maintain a writ of Error, although no party to the record, 4 H. 8.2. 482. A fine of land to be amortised to St. John's College in Oxford was refused for defect of a writ directed to the Justices to pass such a fine. 483. In the time of Ed. 4. one Davies cut one with a dagger in Westm. Hall sitting the Court and threatened to hung him if he gave evidence against such a fellow, the which upon indictment he confessed, and he adjudged to perpetual imprisonment, forfeited his lands, tenements, goods and chattels, and his right hand cut of at the Standard in Cheapside. 484. Array made by the Predecessor of the Sheriff was challenged, and quashed for cozenage, now the Plaintiff is at his election to have a new Venire facias, to the Coroners, or to the new Sher. the trial between the Voucher and the Deman. is out of the statute of Jeofails, being not between the parties to writ. 485. At the Pluries' Repleg. the Sheriff returned in the Bank catalla elong' & quod nullum aliud breve, etc. (189.) upon that a Withernam was awarded, and according to the said writ the Sheriff returned that the Plaintiff found pledges to prosecute, and return; and that he took 6 beasts in Withernam, which he had delivered to the Plaintiff, quousque, etc. and that he had attatched the Defend. Both did now appear, and the Plaintiff declared of the taking, and yet detaining of the Cattles, and the value of them, and they are at issue upon the property, and the Defendant shall not gauge deliverance, etc. But the Plaintiff ferr ' d' aver' pris en Withernam. Note, because it appeared by the return (quod nullum aliud breve) that no plaint is before the Sheriff, for the first Repleg ' gave authority to him only, and not the Alias or Pluries, for the parties have day in the Bank upon the Replevin without Pone, etc. It was doubted if the Plaintiff had not appeared if he shall be nonsure, and if it was upon the Replegiare. And if upon such default the Defendant suggesting property, he shall have a special writ for to re-have the beasts taken in Withernam, or that a return shall be awarded of the first: Donard said, of the first, to the intent the Plaintiff may have a second deliverance, and it may be that after the return, he Sheriff had made a Repleg. 486. The Lord Bray for 800 pound bargained and sold the custody and marriage of his eldest son to 4 of the Privy Council per name, in behalf of the King, to the intent to be married by them or their assigns, appointment and nomination without disparagement; (190.) and he seized of divers lands in Berkshire and Buckinghamsh●re, those in Berkshire he held in Chivalry in Capite, he covenanted to assure the land in Buckinghamshire to them four, to the intent to found him and such wife as he should marry by their appointment till 21 years of age, and than the land to remain to his son and such his wife, and to the heir males of the body of his son, and a fine was levied to them in fee to the same intents, one of the 4 died, and the Lord Bray died, after which the King upon office in Berkshire seized the Ward, and granted the marriage to the Earl of Salisbury, who married his daughter to the said son by the King's assent, and by the appointment of the survivors, after the age of 21. the son sold the land in Berkshire to Butler by fine and recovery, and died, the wise entered; and Butler brought an entry en l● qu●bus, and all the ma●●●● supra given in evidence, upon which demur'. 1. If the father may grant the marriage of his son. Weston, Carlyn, & Saunders held he might not, it being a prerogative inseparable in his person, and therefore the grant is but an authority which is ended by the death of the Lord Bray; as also by the death of one of the Grantees, for authority may not survive as an interest may: But Browne and Dy●r held it is an interest and the words without disparagement is parcel of the contract and not confidence only, but Dyer agreed that the death of the Lord Bray had determined the Grant, in respect of the interest of the King by office since found; also by the Grant of the King under the seal of the court of Wards, the King shown that he waived the other interest, & than the joining in marriage of the son is not to the purpose, but it shall be the marriage of the Earl of Salisbury only; ●s where one had the nomination, and another the presentation to an Advowson, (191.) grant an annuity to H. till advanced to a Benefice by him; although he present A. at the nominat. of the other, the annuity is not gone, for it is no promotion but of the nominator. So of a Clerk that had been in above six months upon presentment, usurper resigns, and the patron made a grant ut supra, and after the Grantee is presented by the usurper and patron, for it is the presentment of the usurper. So in the principal case the wife is not married by the appointm. of the 4. for where divers join in an act, the law only adjudgeth them actors which have authority to do the same, for that reason the land is only in the son, and his Grantee shall enjoy it against the wife, and so adjudged; It was moved the wife was not known at the time of the estate conveyed, which she shall never have. But clear being by way of use, as by Brown the word intention countervails an use, she shall take very well after she is known. 487. The King gave land to the husband and wife, and to the heirs of the husband, the husband made a feoffement to the use of himself and his wife for life, and after their decease to the use of their youngest son for life, and after his decease to the use of himself and his heirs and died, now because the woman claimed her ancient estate, and her entry was congeable upon 32 H. 8. she is remitted, and the 3 part shall not be in ward. (192.) 488. Ejectione firmae against a woman, who justified because the wife of a copyholder, which aught to have for life, the custom was traversed, the defendant gave evidence of a Widow's estate only, it shall not maintain the issue, but if (tantum) had not been, Quaere. 489. An attachment of privilege in a Trespass by an Attorney against Kemp, returnable at a certain day, and not at a common day, and the Defend. was after condemned in another Trespass of privilege, and a capias ad satisfac ' issued returnable after the said day, the Sheriff at the first day brought the party, and returned both the writs, but said that his intent was not to return the execution before the day, and that for policy of escape, yet at the Prayer of the Plaintiff the Sheriff was discharged, and the Defendant committed in execution to the Fleer. Quaere of a Capias ad satisfac ' in an attatchment of privilege, because a Capias nor process of outlawry lies in the original; Quaere also upon a recognizance. 490. Brown upon a Capias utlag. in debt returned against him Non est inventus, he came gratis, and would have pleaded that he was not abiding at the place alleged the day of the purchase of the original, nor never after, etc. he shall not have the plea, for the Plaintiff is out of the Court, and it is not known whether he be the Defend if he came not in by ward by return of the Cepi corpus. 491. Tenant was obliged to A. to the use of a feme sole, which be intended to marry, & delivered the deed to the woman, saying, This will serve, she delivered that to A. and married T. who died, in debt against, etc. adjudged a sufficient delivery. (193.) 492. Tenant in Capite in Chivalry to defraud execution of 300. l, recovered against him, made a feoffement with condition to redeem per himself or his heirs for 20. l. he died, his heir within age, he shall not be in guard, for it is not within the clause of the 32 for advancem. of his children, etc. and it only to defraud the execution and not the King (which is inquirable) shall not be inward. 493. Avowant before the Venire facias with Proviso served, now he prayed decem tales, and by the Court he shall have it as well as the Plaintiff because the first panel at his suit. 494. Kemp in execution for damages in trespass brought an attaint, and had a writ de manucap ' to ●he Justices of the Bank to let him to Mainprize to pursue with effect, and to tender his body if etc. which was doubted because it had not been used in the Common pleas, although precedents of that in the King's bench, at length upon Manucap ' taken as well for the King as the party, he was dismissed. Another time the Guardian of the Fleet was commanded to have the party in the Court quolibet die pendente placito. After upon agreement satisfaction acknowledged, and recognizance discharged as to the party, yet they would be advised as to the King. 495. Sir William Gascoigne acknowledged a statute, and after enfeoffed the Conusee of part of his land, and conveyed the other part to his son, and to the wife of his son for jointure, the Conusee sued execution and was barred upon an Audita querela brought by the son alone without his wife. Nota the Venire facias to the Conusee gave not day to the Plaintiff, and the Defendant answered upon the writ of Audita querela, without hearing of the writ, and without declaration: In an Audita querela the Plaintiff shall not recover costs or damages; and tor that interlesse in the Judgement although found by the Jury. The Venire facias had a Supersedeas in it. (194.) 496. The Bishop of Coventry, etc. patron of two Prebends, granted the next avoidance alterius carum primo vacant ', the Dean and Chapter confirmed, the Bishop died, a Prebend voided, the Successor presented, the Grantee brought a Quare impedit within six months; and two years after the issue was found for the Plaintiff, and the avoidance plenary, and the writ brought within six months, and the value of the Church per the year, the Bishop died, yet the Plaintiff had judgement, and is at election to have a writ to remove the Clerk to the new Bishop, or to the Metropolitan, and holden that the Quare impedi● shall be brought where the Cathedral church is, and not where the body of the Prebend is. 497. Trespass in two closes, the Defendant justified in one and pleaded non culpable in the other, the one found for the Plaintiff, the other for the Defendant, the Defendant may have judgement for his part of the verdict though the Plaintiff will not, and the Plaintiff may also pray judgement for the Defendant to the end to bring Account. Hil. (195) 498. Queen Mary reciting the grant of the custody of the Castle of Colchester by H. 8. to the Lord Darey (misreciting the date) which premises in manib. nostris sunt per serisfact siv sursum red. the Lord Darcy granted the custody to Kemp, and said not the office of the L. Darcy, and Queen Mary died, the Queen now granted the office to Mackwill, who entered upon Kemp, and he brought an assize, and the Jurors challenged to be within the distress of Mack. at the time of disseisin, viz. suitors to the hundred there holden by the Defendant. Quaere, but upon the verity they never made suit, etc. and so they were sworn, Kemp gave in evidence a surrender of the Lord Darcy before Hare Master of the Rolls, which was not recorded, nor the patent canceled, nor the vacat entered in the life of Hare, and doubted if it may be recorded after his death. Also no time is showed of the surrender, and if it were not before the Patent of Kemp, viz. his patent is voided: And for the Defend ' the misrecital and non-certainty by which means the Queen came to the office were given in evidence, for the stat. 4 & 5 P. & M. excepted misrecital in Ooffic. and it was found for the Defendant no disseisor. It seems that the Grant of the custody of the Castle is as good as the grant of the office of the Constableship. 499. Recovery against Batman per Non sum inform ' in an action upon the case brought in the King's Bench for turning a Water course from the Mill, the Plaintiff for damages found upon a writ of inquiry, etc. had a Capias ad Jatisfac ', and an Exigent, and Thrice exact' returned, and no more counties holden between the Exigent and the Return, upon which Exig. alloc' com' issued, and the party outlawed, and the outlawry returned into the King's bench, upon which the Defendant gratis rendered himself to the Marshalsee, and made suggestion of errors in the judgement, and had a Scire facias returnable two terms after, & the court took 4 Mainpern' every in the entire sum, and he put at large to pursue, & in the mean time he shown a writ of Error tamburlaine in judic' quam in promulg. utlag. quae coram nobis, etc. and at the day of return he assigned Errors, because no day given to the Complainant, when the writ of inquiry of damage was awarded, Quaere if it be needful, sed quoad hoc, because the Court may not correct their own judgement, the writ abated, but for the awarding of process and promulg' the outlawry before the Coroners, the writ maintained, and the outlawry reversed, for process of outlawry lies not in the original, and than a Capias ad satissac ', and a Capias upon that is an Error, for in this action he shall have an Elegil, or a Fieri facias. 500 Sir Robert Catlin purchased land in Capite, to him and his wife, and the heirs of the husband without licence, (196.) the Queen pardoned all offences pro quacunque alienac' sibi facta, and although without speaking of the wife, the pardon allowed, and he discharged in the Exchequer. 501. The Condition of an Obligat' was if the obliger pay all sums which J.S. stands obliged in to J.D. per deed obligatory to pay, that than the Obligation shall be voided, the Obliger in a debt may not pled that J.S. stands not obliged in any obligation, but he is estopped to deny the special recital of the Condit', adjudged upon Demur'. 502. Lee Citizen of Lond. was indebted to a Foreigner upon an obligation, and the Foreigner to him upon a simple contract, the Foreigner died, the citizen (as he may by the custom) upon oath that it is a due debt, had an action against the Executor of the Foreigner, and upon 4 defaults recorded he attatched the debt in his own hands, according to the custom of foreign attatchments, and the Execut. found Mainprize, that if he could not disprove the debt within a year and a day, that so much should be recovered upon the obligation, and in a debt brought by the Executor of the obligation, and this attachment pleaded, it was demur' whether it be a good custom, and as well between Forainers as Citizens; also because judgement was, that the Plaintiff shall have execution upon the debt attatched, and no judgement that he should recover. 503. Hungerfords case, A man delivered money to deliver over, and after brought an account against the Baylee, by his own hands, the Baylee pleaded never his receiver, the matmatter supra is not a good evidence, (197.) for it proves he was a receiver conditionally, viz. if he had not delivered over; and before Auditors he shall not have allowance but aught to pled the special matter. Pas. 504. Lassels was taken in execution upon a Capias ad satisfac ' out of the King's bench, and there issued a writ of Prerogative out of the Exchequer to have his body, teste day before the arrest, and the return before the Capias, upon which the Sheriffs of London where he was taken brought his body into the Exchequer, and there shown the cause of the detainer, to have the body at the day of the return, etc. and thence the prisoner was committed to the Fleet in execution for the said debt, and also for the debt to the Queen which he also confessed in court: after Hab●as c●p ' came from the K. Bench, it a day, etc. the Warden brought the body, and shown all the matter in his return, Ideo remaunde. 505. Scire facias ejusmodi, For the first Patentee of a Parkship upon disturbance, to revoke a latter patent. For the King to adnull the Auditorship upon breach of the condition. For the K. to adnul the remembrancer of the Excheq. offi. granted upon false suggest. viz. to the son of Baron Blage, haben ' after for'rs. surren' &c. his father, where in verity the taking of the Baronship quamdiu placue ' determined the offi' of the Remem ' which the father had for life. (198.) For the King to adnull the office of the Sergeant at arms to be exercised cum Cancellario for not attending: For he which had a Bailwick of inheritance, where the Patent is made of the said office, and the Patent was revoked salvo jure cujustibet. For the first Patentee of the clerk of the Crown upon disturbance by the second: It seems that by the said Scire facias, that the officer of record shall not be removed without a Scire facias of record. In a Scir. facias to adnull a Patent the cause is put: contra for a subject. 506. Upon a Scire feci returned and default, or two Nihils which countervail a Scire feci, judgement shall be that the Patent shall cease. 507. The Plaintiff and Defendant both challenged one person, and before the court would have him drawn out, the Plaint' would have released his challenge and might not as it seems. 508. Upon a distress in attaint the Sheriff made a panel but returned not that till the essoin day of one return after this writ returnable, and for that he was amerced 20. l. and the Jury discharged although the parties requested the contrary. 509. Lessee covenanted to repair at his proper costs, the house decayed in the Grunsells, the Lessee cut trees upon the same land and repaired, he Lessor brought a writ of Waste, the Lessee justified for reparations, the Lessor may not reply by the covenant, for as to that he is put to his action of covenant, so if the Lessor covenant to repair and did not, the Lessee may cut trees, and justify in waist. (199) 510. The Sheriff attatched one by his goods, he aught to return the certainty of the goods, and the value, and it is not sufficient to return attatched by his goods to the value of 10. l. for the goods shall be forfeit if he make default at the day of he return. 511. Gales case in a fine as that, the Conusee rendered to the Conusor in tail, the remainder to himself in fee, the Conusor died without issue, the Conusee brought a Scire facias to execure the remainder, and holden that it is no remainder but a reversion, and also it is a fine execut' being as that; But if it had been a fine executory, he shall have a Scire facias in reverter, but now he is put to a Formedon. 512. A man justified in a trespass, by seizing of beasts by the custom that the Lord shall have the best beast, etc. and said not pro heriotto, and if the best beast be essoined, he may seize the beast of a stranger levant and couchant upon the land, and show that the best essoined; and that tenant, etc. and it was adjudged an unreasonable custom, also the form was evil. (200.) 513. Before statute 27. a man enfeoffed divers, one being his own wife, to the use of himself and his wife for life, etc. the statute of 27 is made, the husband died, if the feme shall have the possession by the feoffement, or the use and possession by the statute, Quaere. 514. At the Nisi prius a full Jury appeared, but yet but two Hundredors', the two were sworn, and the Plaint' had a Tales de 2 circumstant. Hundred. they were sworn and annexed to the 8 of the principal panel, and had not a Decem tales de circumstant. for that the principals were approved indifferent, saving that he failed of Hundredors'. 515. The King let a measuage rendering rend for years, the Lessee after took a Patent of the office of the custody of the said house, it seems it is a surrender of the Lease. Trin. 516. Cheney levied a fine, and after brought a writ of Error to reverse it, and assigned nonage and had a Scire facias against the Conusee, and upon two Nihils returned the court proceeded, and by witnesses and inspection they reversed the fine: Cheney sold the land to others, upon which the first conusee entered, and the vendees brought an entry upon disseisee, and against the judgement before, the tenant gave an exemplific. of examination. of witnesses in the chancery, proving him to be of full age in evidence, and although to the court it seemed not available against the judgement, yet the verdict passed with those witnesses, which was after affirmed in Attaint. Vide postea. 202. 517. Austin brought an attaint against Executers upon verdict given in a Quo minus brought by the Testator at termor of the K. supposing they held the land, and per Cur. it lieth well against the Exe ' by the equity sta. 23 H. 8. for the stat. was made in mitigation of the rigour of the common law, and shallbe taken by equity; and the words against the party, which hath judgme ' the superfluous, for it lies against whosoever hath the thing which was lost; the Executors pleaded a concord by their Testator for the interest of the Pl. upon which the Pl. dem. the Petty Jury pleaded the general issue, and by the stat. 23. the Grand Jury shall be charged upon this issue hanging the other matter indiscussed. Note two of the Petty Jury challenged the array, which was tried against them; if the other challenge the poll● they aught to show cause presently, for as if they had been quash ' all should have had advantage, so shall they have disadvant' now. 518. Ellen Lambert brought an appeal of Rape, and doubts were upon the count, because it was not averted that she did not assent; for than the suit is given to the K. by way of Indict' nor the conclusion is not contra sorm. statuti; also it was not said felonice rapuit; & holden that the Def. may have his Clergy now although Bigam '; but it was Quaere being in appeal, if he shall without purgation, vide Stans. 139. also if the Queen may pardon the imprisonment and burning in the hand. (202.) 519. Clere brought an account as Administ the Def. pled that the dead made Exec. who proved the testam' & administ ' at D. who is in full life, judgement if the action, and because he did not traverse the dying intestate, the Plaintiff demur. 520. Attaint upon verdict in Norwich upon stat. 29. H. 8. the Corporation demanded conusance of attaints by special name in their Charter, but the statute is that all attaints hereafter to be taken, shall be taken in one of the Banks, and in no other court, therefore it was denied. 521. Thomazin Grace brought a dower, the tenant vouched the heir in the same county, who entered as he who had nothing by descent in see to tender dower, the tenant averred that he had assets by descent, Quaere if he aught not to say in see, for by Weston and Browne, if he had in tail that shall not save the land of the tenant, Quaere, the opin. of the court was that the wife should have judgm' presently against the heir if he had it, and if not against the tenant, and that before issue tried of the assets. (203) 522. An indictment for celebrating private Mass against the stat. of 1. of Eliz. and note that wherein the printed book the Parliam. began the 23 day of Apr. in verity it did not begin till the 25 day, for the Q. propter aegritudin. discharged the appearance for two days. Also clerk is a sufficient addition for a Priest or Minister, and he is within the stat. had he cure or no. 523. Execut' recovered in an account, and the Def. in Execution for the arrearages, and after the testam' was anulled because the Testat. an Idiot, and he in execution sued an Audit. Querela comprehending this matter, upon which the Exec. dem. (204.) 524. Courts holden at Hartford castle, yet the Warden of the Fleet shall have the prisoners of the Common pleas, Star-chamber, Exchequer and chancery. But it was doubted of the Duchy court, because the castle is parcel of the Duchy, that the constable of the castle shall have them. Quarto Elizabethae. Mich. 525. Upon Nihil dicit in waist, a writ issued that the Sheriff in proper person should go to the place wasted, and inquire of damages, and holden good, and not to inquire of waist, for that is confessed, and requires not that he should go in his own person according West. 2. c. 25. for that is only to inquire of waist, where the Defendant makes default at the distress. 526. Debt upon an obligation against the heir, it is no plea that the Executors have assets, per Curiam. Capell. 527. Tresp. upon 5 R. 2. in 3 acres, issue upon gift in tail for 2 acres, and upon alotment upon partition for the third. The Jury gave open verdict of 2 acres, one for, and the other against the Pl. and they were sent back to agreed of the residue, and after they gave private verdict of all for the Plaintiff, and in open court on the morrow only gave verdict of the the third acre, without speaking of the alteration, yet upon great deliberation the Plaintiff had judgement of all. (205) 528. One arraigned of Treason stood mute, he shall have judgm' as upon conviction. 329. Justices of Gaol delivery who had commanded respite of execution of a prisoner, they may in vacation after adjournment of the commission, command the Sheriff to respite over the first day, by the custom of the realm. 530. If it be entered of record at one Sessions quod non legit, and the prisoner is for some cause reprieved, & at the next sessions he can read, he shall than have his clergy in favour of life. And by the 34 H. 6. he shall have his clergy allowed under the gallows, and the Jailor shall be punished for his contempt in suffering him to be instructed. 531. The Conusor of sta. had a Rent-charge, and before extent, he purchased parcel of the land, the rent is gone, and shall not be in execution, but otherwise it had been if he had purchased after extent of the rent as it seemeth: and see that tenant by sta. or Elegit may make Avowry for Rent-charge; a writ of Extent was awarded in the time of Qu. Marry returnable Quind. Mar. the writ executed by inquisit. in time of the Q. but before the return she died, and yet it was returned, and a Liberate granted in the Queen's time which now is. Quaere if the return of the extent were without waarant. (206.) 532. Outlawry was reversed upon sta 6. H. 8. without a writ of Err. because the usual words put in the writs of Proclamat' viz. fac' tribus separalib. dieb. unde una proclam' etc. were omitted by negligence of the Exig. by which the writ was not sense. 533. A man made a lease for years to begin at a day to come, and before the day the reversion is granted over divers times; after the termor entered and made waist, & the fourth Assignee brought a writ of waist, and counted upon assignm' and tenure of every one of them, to whom the land came after the Lease, although no tenure before the Lease begun, yet well, and so the Register. 534. A Certiorare to remove a record capta in Curia nostra, etc. where it was taken in time of the predecessor, the record shall not be removed by that. (207.) 535. A Lease within the year of 31. of woods saleable by the common woodward of the Abbey per parcel every year, and 〈◊〉 miles distant from the house, and there was not any estovers of that employed at the house; because it never was in Lease before it was voided by the star. for although it be not immediately spent in hospitality, yet it may be it was reserved in store for that purpose. In an Assize the Termor may not pled in bar, but justify by the Lease, so in without wrong, and if the Tenant of the freehold be not named, he shall say no Tenant of the franktenement named in the Assize. 536. One brought a Wast, and counted that an Abbot was seized, etc. of one house, and 30 acres of land, etc. and demised to the defend' and that after by surrend' and the act of the 31. the K. was seized, and granted to the Pl. and his heirs the aforesaid tenement by name of the Manor of C. with appurt '; the Exception that there are not words sufficient in the count to carry to him the lands let, so as that he may maintain a writ of waist, for the per nomen may not maintain the Grant of the land in Lease without averment that those in the Less are parcel of the Manor, yet judgement given to the contrary, and Error brought upon the same. (208.) 537. Owins case, debt and damages recovered, the Defendant died before execution, a Scire facias issued against the heir and all the lands which were to the Defendant the day of the judgement, and upon that an Elegit as upon a recogniz. And it seems not to be needful to have a Scire facias brought against the Execut' no more than upon a recogniz' per st. W. 2. c. 18. as well goods as lands are subject to the Elegit, Ideo Quaere if he wave to have execution against the Executors, and have it sole against the heirs, etc. 538. In debt against Executors, issue assets in their hands the day of the writ purchased, etc. evidence for the Plaintiff that the same day 100 l. was paid to the Executors in the Prerogative court, and a good proof for the day is entire; and although the Def. shown that by order of the same court he presently paid i● over; that is not to the purpose, but peradventure upon special pleading it shall not be assets. 339. The form of awrit of waist against the Assignee of a term per 3 Ass. of the reversion. 540. Array challenged by the Lo. Hastings, because he is a Lo. of the Parliam. and no Knight returned, and a writ issued to the coroners to make a new panel. (209.) 541. Inquisition taken of D. of land in S. without showing in what county D. or S. is; adjudged insufficient, for it may not be tried if it should be traversed, for fault of conus ' whence the visne should come, Office found that he died seized, but argumentive, not, good. 542. The Precedent of Magdelin College in Oxford deprived by the Bishop de Wine, their Visitor shall not have an appeal to the Delegates, for that deprivation is temporal, not spiritual, therefore out of the stat. 25 H. 8. and he is put to Assize. 543. Quid juris clamat by Saunders against Freeman, Blow. come. A Lease for years upon condition that if the Lessor grant the reversion, the Lessee shall have fee, the Lessor levied a fine, the Conusee brought a Quid juris clamat; the Termor claimed fee, it is no forfeiture, for the condition was repugnant. Nota the judgm' there that the term shall be forfeit, the Conusee may enter, & the fine shall be engrossed. Phelingtons case 6 R. 2. 544. Tresp. against 2. the Defend ' severally claim to have common in the place where, &c, appendent to the Manor of D. whereof they are several tenants, which Manor was holden of the K. as of the Duchy of Lancaster in chivalry, and which was in ward to the K. by nonage of the heir, the ward of which the K. had granted to one of the Defen. under the seal of the Duchy, rendering 20 l. per an. and prayed aid of the K. and had it, per words scquatur penes Dom. R. & proceden ' after awarded in the name of the K. and not Duke, so by the name of the K. the name of Duke is drowned, for he may not be a Sovereign and a Subject, 3 H. 6. (210.) 545. Debt against 2 Execut', one appeared & confessed the Action, the other made default, and judgm' given to recover of the goods of the Testator in both their hands; and to the same effect issued a Fieri facias, the Sher. returned Nihil, but he which made default had and devastavit ante receptionem brevis, upon which a Scire facias issued only against him who had wasted, and upon default, upon Scire feci returned, execution was awarded of his, own proper goods only, without his companion, 3 H. 8. fol. 〈◊〉. Hill. 546. A devise that the Execut' shall rake the profits of his land until the heir shall be of full age to pay, etc. one died, after the other made his Executor and died, the Executors of the Executor last dying, shall take, for it is an interest which survives; contra if it had been but authority. 547. Dubitatur upon stat. 13 H. 4. c. 7. If Justices of Peace are bound to inquire of a Riot within a month at their peril of 100 l. without notice given, for the stat. speaks not of notice, a Township shall be amerced for escape of a Murderer in the day time, although the murder be committed in the field. 548. Scire fac. to execute a fine, an estrepement was granted, one which had ancient woods before the Scire fa. was prohibited by the Sheriff to cut, Quaere what remedy, both writ's issue out of the Bank. 549. In a plea of land view is not grantable, nor jointenancy, nor nontenure pleadable after imparlance. (211.) 550. Sir R. Ch. Patentee of a Receivorship upon condition, he broke the conditi. there needs not to be an office found of that to repeal the Patent; notwithstand' the Patent is not voided, for being an officer of record, it behoveth to have Scire fac ' of rec. to repeal it. Vide saint 11 H. 8. which made the of of those who shall be absent when the K. is in distress with the rebels to be voided, etc. and than notwithstand' the opin. of Rast. War. 8. that star. is not determ' by the death of H. 7. and attendance shall be only (upon that penalty) to that K. which advanceth, vid. 19 H. 8. c. 1. 551. If the Jury in a Leet refuse to make presentment the Steward may assess a fine upon every of them for contempt & concealment, and if the homage in court Baron refuseth, if they are copyholders it is a forfeiture. 552. Exigent is returnable by the roll oct. Mich. but the writ of Exigent was returnable Mensae, the Defendant was outlawed at the county day between octab. & Mensae, Adjudge an Error, for the roll is of more credit. Pas. (212.) 553. By the better opin. though the stat. 28 H. 8.15. ordained that commissions of Oyer and Terminor of Piracy, shall be awarded to the Admiral and others to be named by the Chancellor, yet the Lo. Keeper being no Chancellor may grant; for it is not a judicial act, but only as an Officer, and for necessity of Justice also. But others held Contra, because penal statute. 554. If the Defendant in attaint give new matter in evidence to enforce the first verdict, as they may, the plaintiff shall have a respite to disprove that, but the Plaintiff may not give new evidence, nor enforce the first by new matter disclosed. 555. Quid juris clamat the tenant claimed Fee, in part, and ●●turned for the other part, and yet the entire Fine engrossed sans forspris: yet 18 Ed. 3. in Per quae servitia, where it was found that one of the tenants name non tenuit, etc. was engrossed tantum quoad resid '. 556. If the Sheriff return Rescous, the party shall have traverse per parol Convincatur in West. 2 cap. 40. 557. A lease for years of the Greyhound in Fleetstreet, with divers implements, rendering rend, the lessor entered and made a Feoffment, the Lessee reentered, and for rent behind the Feoffee brought a debt, & adjudged maintainable although no privity. And this by 5 H. 7. where the Devisee brought a debt. And it was not extinct but only suspended, till the termor by his regress revived the Reversion, and shall not be apportionment for the implements, for magis dignum wahit, and not the reversion of the Chattels, & it is not like where they are evict, for here the lessee continued his term in them. (213.) 558. Office found that the tenant died seized of land holden in soccage in Capite, and also of other lands holden in Soccage of a common person, his heir of full age: It was ruled he shall not pay primer seisin of those holden of others, nor of other lands holden in soccage of the King, if not in Capite. 559. A woman tenant for life, the remainder in tail, tenant for life with her husband levied a Fine as that etc. and by that released and quite claimed to him in remainder, who by the same Fine rendered to the Conusors' a rent, proclamation passed, the woman died, tenant in tail died, the issue shall avoid the rent as it seems; so Thornton, Com. 435. for the rent is not a thing entailed. 560. Officium Hostiarii de Scaccario cum diversis officiis ad idem speci ' is holden of the King by Grand Sergeanty as appears in records de tempore Ed. 4. Vi●● 8. Assi. 561. Tales of 60 was awarded in appeal of robbery, 15 H. 8. 562. In an action brought in another county than London or Middl. the writ of proclamations as it seems needs not, and if ●e had false addition of the county he may avoid the outlawry, by the stat. of Additions, 1 H. 5. But if an action be brought in London or Middlesex (214) and the Exigent awarded there, it behoves that the writ of Proclamation go to the place where the Defendant is abiding at the time of the Exigent awarded by statute 6 H. 8. But if he be named nuper de London, alias dict' de N. in comit' K. gent', there if the Proclamations go into K. where in verity the Defendant is dwelling in Middlesex he shall without writ of Error avoid the Outlawry per 6 H. 8. for the alias dict' is not any part of his name. Trin. 563. A man condemned per non sum informat ' in action upon the statute 8 H. 6. forf. triple damages, for this condemn ' is a conviction, So in waist upon nihil dicit, non obstant, stat. Glo. cap. 5. speaks of attainter in waist. And there if diem ad jurat ', although the panel be not returned, the Plaintiff appears not, he shall be non-sute, for the parties are demandable before the Jury. 564. Four years after Judgement in debt, the Defendant being in the Fleet for another cause, he was brought into the Bank by Hab●as Corp ' and upon examination it appeared he was the party against whom the Judgement was given in the action of debt, for that he was resent into Execution for the debt; Note without a Scire facias after the year and day. (215.) 565. Stones case, a man committed two Felonies whereof for one Clergy lieth, but not for the other, viz. Murder and robbery, he was first arraigned of the Robbery & found culpable and prayed his Clergy, and had it, and non legit, Afterward at another day being repry without judgement, he was arraigned for the Murder and found culpable, and now prayed Clergy again for the Robbery, and had it, and legit, etc. But not burned in the hand, nor delivered to the Ordinary entered, which is the judgement, and therefore after had judgement to be hanged for the Murder; but if the said judgement had been entered, he had been discharged of all other Felonies before this conviction. Vide now flat. etc. Eliz. cap. 7. 566. Venire facial with proviso not grantable to the defendant, but where he is actor, or otherwise where there is laches in the Plaintifle, but one time laches sufficeth for all the suit. But if after the Venire facias with Proviso pursued by Defendant, the Plaintiff sued another which is returned, and not that of the Defendant, because, here the laches of the Plaintiff appear not upon Record, the Defendant shall not have a Habeas Corp● cum Nisi prius cum proviso, except there be a new laches in the Plai'. 567. After the 4 H. 7. of a man pled upon a Scriesaci●s to execute a Fine, quod pantes finis nihil habues '. he aught to say in possession or in use, according to the same statute. 568. Tenant in tail levied a Fine, error in the Proclamat' is no cause to reverse the entire Fine, but it shall be a Fine at the Law notwithstanding, (216.) 569. Sir Robert Chester's case, that where the stat' 1 Mar. dissolves the augment' Court, the office of the receiver for the lands of the said Court is dissolved, for it is incorporate to the said Court, But by Proviso in the Act the Fee remains. 570. Formedon in reverter, the Donor need not to show the Pedigree of the issues of Donee, nor who was last seized, but quod post mort ' of the Donee without issue, &c, for he is a stranger to the Pedigree, Contra in Form in descender, Quaere, of a Form. en remainder. 571. An Obligation with Condition to perform the award of A. arbitrator indifferently chosen by the parties to the arbitration, for Dilapidations, etc. and of all other suits, Quaere, etc. between the parties, so that the said award be made and delivered in writing, etc. A. made Arbitrim' in this form, viz. The award of A. indiffer' chosen by 1. for the behalf of the Obligor on the one part, and by the Obligee on the other part, and that was only of Dilapidations, with protestat' that he would not moddle with the rest; and upon nullwn seen arbit ' in issue, that supra was the special verdict; And it was doubted if the award may be intended between the parties to the Oblig' or that the words in the behalf etc. shall be voided; But it seems good between the parties But it seems the Arbitrator had disabled himself, because he had not arbitrated all, for the submission was conditional, so that the same award; But if it be a subm. absolute of 2. things, the award of one only shall be good. (217) 572. Five things incident to an award, matter of controversy, subm', parties to the submis. Arbitr', and rendering up the ward. 573. A Venire facias with Proviso was returned served, and put upon the file, and two hours after a Venire facias which was after pursued by the Plaint' was returned, and filled also, every part pursued a Hab. Corp ' which are returned, now the Plaintiff failed of his Iurat' continuand ' is not a discontinuance, for the continuance by the Defendant sufficeth, and no diversity is between the entry of the one or other. Quinto Elizabetha. Mich. 574. A Transc. of Recognizance in the Chancery came into the Bank, & non allocat ' to have a Scire facias upon that. 575. A Covenantee released actions, suits, quarrels, debts, executions and trespasses before covenant broken, he is not be that barred in an action of Covenant. Querela is a case of action, Actio est jus prosequend' in judicio, etc. (218.) 765. A Conned ' of an Oblig', that the Obligor upon request shall do all such Acts which seem reasonable to the counsel of the Obligee, to release the Obligat', in which the Obligee stands bound to the Obligor, request was made to seal a release of all demands to the Obligee, and to one M. and averred that no other matter between them, but spoke no of M. the request adjudged unreasonable, although there be no matter between the Defendant and M. Fortescue against Strede. 577. At Nisi prius. the Jury after departure recame, and said that they all but one who had eat Pyer and drunk Ale were agreed, who would not agreed; they were sent again at the request of the Plaint', and gave verdict for the Plaint. and good, and day given in the Bank to assess the fine upon the said Juror, & there it was assessed to 20 l. and the Plaintiff had judgement. 578. Submis. by Oblige. So that the award be made and given to the parties, or one of them before etc. in debt upon the Obligation, is was holden it might be delivered by word, and to one only of one part. 579. Pophams' case, a man bargained and sold to one, and after to another, the first deed was enrolled, after the second and also the last day of the 6 month, accounting the day of the date for none, and yet by the Court the first Barganee shall have. So see, from the date which are the words of the statute and the same sense, as from the day of the date, 28 days are a month. (219.) 580. The opinion of all the Justices, that the stat. of 32 H. 8. cap. 33. shall be understood of the descent upon every Disseisin, although the words are of entries with strength. 581. A man devised that after the death of his wife, his land should be sold by his Executors, una cum assensu A. and made his wife and a stranger Executors, and died, the wife died, A. died, the authority is determined. 582. A man bound to deliver the Key of a house and quiet possession to the Mayor of London to the use of the Obligee; every one being out of the house, he insealed the door, and delivered the Key to the Mayor out of the view, a stranger pretending title entered, It seems that it is in delivery of possession, yet the verdict, contra, and after ass●rmed in attaint. 583. A man declared of a debt of 20 l. upon a sale of Woods, and gave evidence but of 20 Marks, it shall be sound for the Defendant, as if there had been variance in the things sold, Quaere, if no diversity, for the issue is, quod nullam denar. inde debet; In Detinue of a chain of 3 ounces where it is but two, wager of Law lieth. 22 Ed. 4. (220.) Hill. 584. A man seized of land in Fee holden in Soccage, and of land in tail holden in Chivalry in Capite, he devised the 3 part of all his Lands and Tenements to his wife in recompense of Dower and died, Quaere, if the wife shall have her 3 part of all out of the Fee simple land. But because she had entered into the 3 part of the Fee simp. land, before she brought a writ of Dower, she was barred by 27. of Dower in the Court of Wards. 585. Recovery was had to the estate of Sir Nich. Bacon, and because Dedimus potesta. to make Attorney for the tenant bore teste after the return of the original, an error; for per Curiam, the judgement had relation to the return of the writ, which is before the warrant of Attorney made. Pos. 586. Recogniz. to Sir Nich. Bacon, and two others, acknowledgeth before Sir Nich. Bacon, being L. Keeper, adjudged that voided to himself but good to the other. (221) 587. Knowledge of a Fine by carel and his wife, of the land of his wife who was but of the age of 19 years, was taken in the vacation after Hillary term by Dedimus potestatem, the writ of Covenant bore Teste in january, returnable Crastin. purificat. and the Dedimus potesta. bore Teste, 3 days after the original, And the Queen's silver was entered in Hillary term 4 days before the death of the wife, viz. Die veneris in septimana Paseh. But yet the fine was not engrossed till diem Mercur. Prokim. upon which the heir of the woman in the term of Pasch. prayed that the Fine be not delivered to the party, nor recorded, and yet was notwithstanding the undue practices of the husband, because the Queen's silver entered, and the Fine engrossed another term. 588. Tenant in tail made a Feoffment to the use of himself in Fee, and after devised the same land to his wife in Fee, and died, the son is not remitted although the Father die seized, for the Devise takes away the descent, Bishop's case. 589. Warr. Chart. where the land lies in two Counties, it is not well brought in one. Also the Plaintiff counted that he is impleaded in Assize before Judges in the other County, therefore evil also, and this writ lieth not upon special warranty. viz. against the warrantor, and his heirs only, except there be Dedi & concessi, in the deed. 590. After admission and before induction a Prebend charged and adjudged voided, for he had yet but a jus ad rem, and not in re, so of a Parson. Dyer. If a man pled per faclum suum datum. 1 jan. & deli. 4. he aught to say del. 1. for otherwise sum imports it was an effectual deed, 1 jan. (222.) If a man brings a writ of Annuity, and counts of seisin in his demean as of Fee, it shall be taken et his election to have a rend Charge. 591. The Bishop of York made a lease for years of divers lands in Battersey, rendering rend at Battersey, Proviso in time of vaction the rent shall be paid to the Chapter ut in iure suo, the rent was behind seed vacant. The Bailiff of the Successor reentered and distrained, and avowed damage sesant. First, holden that the Proviso was not a Condition, but a Forspris not being annexed to the thing given; Also if it should, yet it is an impossible Condition, for rent may not be paid to the Chapter, because they have not the reversion. Also in jure suo may not be, because the Queen had the right during the vacation. Quaere also if a Chapter may receive rend because a body politic, and imperfect. And it seems the rent shall not be paid at York, nor at the Mansion of the Bishop at Batters●y, but upon the land, and upon demand, Quaere, if the state shall cease, because in the time of vacation that the Condition was broken, (if it be a Condition) so that neither predecessor nor successor may avoid it by reentry, because the Condition is not broken in the time of the one or other, and upon payment of the rent which is not due to any of them. But clear that it aught not if Frantenement. And holden that the Bailiff may not re-enter for his Master without express command' though it be not expressed who should pay the rent, yet it shall be intended the tenant, And the Desendant● shown not the distress to be taken damage pheasant after the regress, which is male. 592. If a man be Obliged to pay money at a day and place certain and that pay before, and at another place, by the acceptance he is discharged, notwithstanding if he pled payment according to the Obligation the same day and place, the jury is not bound to found for him, for the verity is contrary. (223.) 593. Proctor was returned outlawed by the Coroners, upon a Certierare per Curiam process of Outlawry lieth not in detinue of Charters although judgement of the Outlawry is given by the Coroners, because the Sheriff returned that he appeared the 5 county, & proiulit Supersed. and he had the custody of the Record and of the Exigent, which is the Warrant to the Sheriff to proclaim, whereas the Coroners make but a brief remembrance of that in his Book, Adjudged that the return of the Ceroners is not a sufficient Record to make the party outlawed, and it was reversed without writ of error, & in another termer, and a writ of restitution granted of the goods of the Desendant which were of the value of a hundred pound, and the Sheriff returned that he had sold them for 40 li & protulit. pretrum inde, & the return adjudged insufficient, for in the writ it is not warranted V●ndic. expenere. Yet 3 Justices doubted, for the writ is in●manus. nostras cap. ut de verovalore, etc. A Thief took 40 shillings from the person of another in the High way, and it is no robbery without fear of death, and so had his Clergy. A Venirefacias' reourn' quinque Pas. the parties appeared, but the Sheriff returned not the writ, (224) therefore a Venire facias awarded returnable as at first this continuance made upon the Roll of the Plea, and yet a the said quinque Psa. the Defendant was essoyned unde ventre facias, and the Plaintiff demand' appeared not, There is entered a nonsute upon the Lessors Roll, notwithstanding the Plaintiff proceeded with the issue and had Judgement, for the recording of the appearance confounded the essoign. 594. A man levied a Fine with Proclamations and died, and 5 years incurred before his wife brought a writ of Dower, Quaere, if she be barred, Quaere also if it need to aver that the woman was of full age, and sound memory, etc. 595. A Bastard born at Turney, when it was under the obedience of H. 8. was a Denizen as the issue born within the Realm between aliens, per Curiam. 596. The Attorney of the Queen took Conusance of a Fine without special Dedimus potestatem; being Justice of Assi●e, by force of a general Patent with non obstante, & been. Note it was in derogation of the chief Justice of the Bank, who only is preferred in that. Trin. (225.) 597. Sir William. Candish Treasurer of the Chamber seized of land, covenanted to be seized of that the use of himself & his wise, and the heirs of the husband, and died, the wife took another husband, process computa. issued against the second husband and the wife (because returned the landtenants in jure ●●oris) account for the arrearages due to the Queen for the said Office, a die dat' litter' patt ' usque mortem, etc. co quod est return' in de Chancery, quod nulli sunt execut. nec administ. And agreed that they shall accounted, because the landtenants of this land of the said Sir Will. was sole seized after an Office granted. But if the wise had been Joint-purchasor during the covertue and before Office, the land shall not be liable, and that account is by the Prerogative against those who are not privy to the writing vide now the statute 13. Elizabeth. Mich. (226.) 598. Recovery against the heir by nihil dicit in debt, he brought a writ of Error for fault of Warrant of Attorney per himself, the writ was not delivered to the Clerk of the Treasuty till six days after the return, for that the Plaintiff was now suffered to put in a Warrant of Attorney for the default, which was commanded to be entered. Note after a writ of Error brought. Sexto Elizabethae. Mich. 599. Divers ad journments of the term, viz. of the entire term, of two returns, etc. (226.) and holden that the Queen may by her Prerogative make a Sheriff, without the usual assembly and election in the Exchequer, quod accidit hoc Anno. 600. Assizes adjourned in the Bank, were without day by the not coming of the Justices, notwithstanding the adjournment of the term, though they are not discontinued per reas. of the stat. 1 Ed 6. And after upon an Reatrachment against the Defendant and Resummons or Habeas Corp ' against the Recoguizors returnable the next Assize. 601. Ejectione Firmae against two, the one appeared and pleaded the general issue, process continued against the other, who now appeared, and pleaded entry after the last continuance, in abatement of the writ, upon which the Plaintiff demur'. After the issue supra was found for the Plaintiff, he shall not have Judgement; for the Demur' confesses the entry, which abate his own writ, for in this action the term is to be recovered. Contra, if he had been imparled. (227.) 602. Where adjournment of the term was to Hertford 20. jan. because between this day and some of the 3 Returns there are not 18 days, the original for Fines and Recoveries were made returnable Octab. Hill. at Westmin. and notwithstanding the final accord was made at Hertford. 603. A Scire facias to have execution of Damage, recovered in an Assize, the Defendant said that the Plaintiff entered after verdict, and before Judgement, and no plea, but if he had said and seized it amounts to a non-tenure. 604. Sir Gi. Capell granted an Annu' too B. for; life out of land, & si contingat aretro fore; liceat distring. for the Annuity 6. s. 8. d. in nomine poenae, B. died, his Executors brought a debt of the arrearages and penalty against the Executor of Sir George: who pleaded, no such land out of which, etc. The Plaintiff demur' the count was, vir●ute cujus Grantee was seized in his demean of a Freetenement, whereas it was but an Annuity. Also the person is not charged with the words supra sub vomine poenae: Besides there are no words of Grant of that, but only si conting ' etc. Quaere although the person be not charged: For if a Rent-Charge be granted for life, Proviso, non onera bit personam, if the Grantee die, debt lies against the Executors for arrearages: also it appears that the son of Sir George was named in the Deed as Grantor, but because he sealed not it needs not that the Executor should make mention of him, Quaere. 605. General pardon discharged all post Fines under 6. lively Two Originals of Covenant, but only one Concord was of lands in two Counties, and the Post Fine exacted entirely, exceeded 6 póund, whereas if it be divided it is under, which although Sackford requested, yet the Concord being entire, the Post Fine shall be but one. (228.) 606. Debt upon the statute 24. H. 8. of apparel, tam pro Domin a Reg' quam pro se ipso, the Defend ' pleaded outlawry in the Plaintiff, who replied no such Record, and day given to, bring in the Record, (But because in the same Court it is so that the Justice may in the mean time see the Record in the usual form) before the day, the recovery was removed by wri● of Error; and now at the day he brought an exemplification without writ and without other Seal than of the King's Bench; And it seemed to some a Failer; So it should have been by relation if the Record had been reversed, although there was such Record at the time of the Plea; But than it seems it is not peremptory but that he may pled over, Quaere. 607. Ashten in accomplishments of covenants of Marriage of his son with A. made a Feoffm. to the use of A. for life, the marriage succeeded, the Father died, Office found that the son was seized in Fee of the land supra: and of other lands holden of the King in Chivalry as of the Duchy of Lancast ', his heir within age, the wife sued a Petition of Dower to have other lands, per ouriam, the conveyance supra, is a so within 27. although not father of the Baron at the time, But if the said Feoffment had not been found by Office, also not being expressed in the Indentures to be for. Jointure, it may be averred for the Queen, and also to be for Jointure, Quaere, and if the wife shall be received by Commission in the Court of Wards, to aver it is not for Jointure. 608. Q● are impedit per Sir H. Sidney, the Church voided by making the incumbent Bishop, per tours les justices deal common Bank, the Queen shall have the presentment by her Prerogative. And there that the issue for avoidance shall be tried by the Country; for the avoidance is open to the country, and the resignation which is spiritual is but an evidence. Pas. (229.) 609. The wife died before livery sued, the husband shall be tenant by the courtesy, and he shall sue livery. (229.) 610 Chibbornes case, Lands in London may be bargained and sold by paroll without Indenture, or enrolment, as before the 27. by proviso in the statute. 611. An Obligation to ratify, confirm and allow all times the estate of the Obligee, it is no Plea he had not ratified, confirmed, etc. for the confirmation aught to be pleaded by deed. Trin. (230.) 612. A man having a Charter which concern' 4 acres of Soccage land, he devised 3 to his youngest son, and the 4. to his wife for life, the remained ' to a stranger and died, the wife entered in the acre and happened upon the Charter, and brought a Dower of 3 acres, against the youngest son, who pleaded detinue of Charters in Bar, and that if she would doliver, he was ready to tender Dower, but in conclusion he said yet ready to tender, in●●rlessant the condit' if etc. which is a confession, and adjudged for the complainant, and none shall have the plea but the heir of the husband, and in by descent and not by purchase, and he aught to be landtenant and not Vouchee: Tenant by Receipt, nor yet pry in aid, for than he may not pled all times ready si etc. Also Guardian in Chivalry shall not have the plea, because he may not maintain detinue of Charters, and the plea is not good for more lands than the Charters concern: The certainty of the Charters aught to be showed if they be not in a Box. Also he which shall have the plea aught to show that he is heir, otherwise it shall be intended he is not. 613. Judgement of Treason for clipping money, is to be drawn and hanged only. 614. Alfords case a Servant made a Bill testifying buying wax to the use of his Master, and that was without seal; in which he obliged himself to pay the debt; Debt lieth not against the Servant but an action upon the case, for it is the debt of the Master and the Assumpsit of the servant. 615. Signior in Chivalry, released and confirmed to the Tenant to hold per esperu ': the new reservation voided upon estate before created, and here the tenure of Fealty abides 616. In debt because no warrant of Attorney entered the Judgement reversed, and this although the writ of Error brought the same Term, the record remaining in the breasts of the Justices, and the Plaintiff had prayed entry of that, Note the first action and the writ of error brought in the King's bench. Septimo Elizabethae. Mich. 617. A grant of the next avoidance between the statute of Monasteries of 31 H. 8. and the surrender of the Abbey seems voided; for the saving in the act, shall not be understood of future titles, tamen dubitatur, if a lease be made ut supra rendering the ancient rent. (232.) 618. The Defendant challenge. for● the hundred he aught to show in what place the hundred is, and shall not drive the Plaintiff to show it. 619. Sir Edw. Walgrave upon forfeiture of a 100 marks for hearing private Mass it was estreared into the Exchequer, be died before the 6 month past, Quaere, if the Executors shall be charged with the 100 marks, because he himself was at election to pay or to be imprisoned per 6 months, which is now discharged by the act of God. 620. If debt be brought against the Ordinary for the debt of the intestate, after notice he may not administer to others if he had not sufficient to satisfy that debt. 621. When fine and ransom is imposed, ransom is triple, the fine is the less. 622. Leases by the Chancellor of the Duchy without the usual Proviso viz. si● quis plus dare vol ' are voided by the ordin. of the said Court, 20 H. 6. yet where there is in such Lease those words qued Dominus Rex, with the assent of the Counsel without words supra, (although falsely) the Lease is good, because Leases made by the Counsel of the Duchy are excepted out of the Ordinances. Leases under the seal of the Duchy Chamber of lands within the county Palatine of Lancaster, newly annexed by the intendment of the statute 37 H. 8. cap. 7. which will, that such as pass under the County Seale are voided: And in the time H. 8. it was holden, where an Office of the same Court was granted by the King under the great Seal, it was voided; Yet the words of 27 H. 8. of erection of the said Court are in the affirmative. And Leases of Possessions within the survey of the said Court shall be by seal of the said Court. Quaere, of the Chancery land within the Duchy, (because of the Proviso of 1 Ed. 6. which shall be in the survey of the Duchy Court, as other land shall be in the order of the Augmentation) If the Counsel of the Duchy may grant the Reversion or make a Lease above 21. years, for the Augmentation by the Letters Patents of the erection were restrained. 623. Harrison at full age brought an Audita querela in the Chancery to avoid a Recognizance, in nature of a stature Staple made by him within age; But because his age shall be tried by the inspection of the Court, which now may not be, it lieth not, so also if he die within age. (233.) 624. A Prior made a Lease for life of the demean of a Manor, rendering rend, the King after dissolution made a Lease for years of the Manor; And adjudged that by name of the Manor, the rent and reversion of the demeans shall pass. 625. A Prior and covent may not make livery, per the view. 626. A dispensation per Archb. Cant. is sufficient for one who is created a Bishop, ●●o hold a Benefice in Commendam, although the dispensation is not enrolled according to 25 H. 8. in any Court but only in the Register Archbishop. 627. An Ordinance of the College of Windsor was, that if the Dean be to be absent, that he shall choose on of the Commons to be his Lieutenant, q. suum in omnib' exerc' & gerat' offic' in person' & Colleg ' memorat', such Deputy with the Chapter made a Lease, and it seems without authority. For College is to be intended but the scite of the College, and sometimes but the circuit of the house. 29. Ass. Rend granted percipiend. de Abbath. the scite shall be only put in the view. 628. The Steward of a Leete which was holden per prescription once in the year when it pleased the Lord, (Quaere, if a good prescription out of the Mensae Pasche & Mich.) assess a Fine by one for assault only in his presence, Quaere, clearly the indictment found there. So in the Turn of the Sheriff on Assault and Battery is not good there without blood spilt. (234.) 629. Bonner by Addition of Doctor & in sacris ordinibus constitut ' was certified per Bishop Wint ' Recusant of the Oath of the supremacy upon the 1. Eliza. And the certificate challenged because there is not addition of Clerk nor Bishop, But non allocat. The entry of the certificate was that it was brought by A. Cancel ' of the Bishop without speaking of his commandments, yet challenged for that non all●cat ' because the recording of that is not of necessity: The Indictment was in Middlesex according 5 Eliz. in that county where the King's Bench; the Defendant pleaded not culpable. And because the 5. of Eliza. warrants not the trial there, the Inquest was of Surrty where the proffer of the Oath was; And per Curiam upon that issue it is a good evidence that he which certified was not Bishop of the time of the offering of the Oath, and the Jury may take notice of that. 630. In a Form ' in descend ', a Fine with Proclamation 30 H. 8. was pleaded in Bar, and issue upon no such Record: at the day the tenant had the Record, but in the Proclamation 5, 6, 7, 8. made in Trinity term, the year of the King is not put; But because in Pasch. before, and Michael. after, was put the 30 H. 8. of necessity it ensued that the said 4 procl' were in the said year; for that holden, that he had not failed of the Record. 631. The wife of Nichol. Po. without the Assent of the husband she bought Velvets and Silks of one W. for her apparel, But the husband paid the Tailor for making; And in debt, brought by the Executors W. against Sir Nicholas upon issue of non det●●et, all the matter supra in evidence, the defend' demur'. But the Jury charged, for that the Plaintiff nonsuit; D. doubted if the issue shall be found for the Plaintiff. 633. Nudigays case, Lessee for lift, and he in reversion made a Lease for years by indenture, this is the confirmation of the reversion now. But if the tenant for life die, he shall have a waist ex demis. prop. 2 contra 2. (235.) 634. Petty treason is discharged per general pardon as to the Queen, but murder excepted; one who had killed his Master was indicted of Murder only without proditor ' and found culpable and reprieve for the difficulty. 635. The Lady Manners case, before 27. a man covenanted in the consideration of the marriage of his daughter, that he would retain land for life, and after his death, that his daughter and her husband, shall have it in tall, and that he and all others, than, or after selsed shall be seized to the said use, & over that he would make assurance to the said use, the marri. is had, after he bargained & sold the land for 300 l. (But nothing paled) to one who had notice of the use, and upon that levied a Fine and suffered a recovery, but retained the land during his life, and died; The Bargain to one who had notice changeth not the use, which was well raised by the Covenant; for that the son and his wife entered and made a Feoffment, and adjudged good. 636. Land in Capite given to the Grandfather for life, the remainder to the father in tail, the remainder to the right heirs of the Grandfather, the father he died, the Grandfather and son levied a Fine as that, etc. in which it was rendered to the Grandfa ' for life, the remained ' to the son, and M. his wife in tail, the remainder to the right heirs of the Grandfather, the Grandfather surrend' and released to the son and his wife, and to the right heirs of the son and died the son at full age, the opinion of the Court he shall sue livery. 637. Attain upon the stat. 23 H. 8. for false verdict in Assize given against the Plaintiff, where issue was no wrong, etc. by the Grand inquest the Disseisin found and damages and costs assessest after the Assize brought, and the Judgement was to recover the seisin, etc. but not per visum jurat ' and the penalty of the statute. (236.) 638. If a stat. makes a thing an offence which was not at the common Law, and inflict pain for that to be recovered in any of the Courts of Record, that offence is not to have penalty, nor determines before Commission of Oyer, etc. nor out of the 4 usual Courts at Westminister, but if ro Court limited the King shall have the Prerogative in any Court. Hill. 639. In an action upon the case for calling the Plaintiff Murderer and Thief, the Defendant justified Murder, because he was indicted of Murder at Chester, holden that it is not a good justification, but the Plaintiff passed that, and said that he was acquitted of that by the Jury, and shown the exemplificate under the great Seal of the County Palative, to which the Defendant said no such Record, Quaere, it he may against such exemplification: And for thief the Defendant justified, because there was a Robbery done, and the common fame was that the Plaintiff etc. and holden no Justification here but good in false imprisonment. 640. Executors refused, the Ordinary committed the Administration, the Administrators brought an action of debt, and the writ supposed dying intestate; Quaere if the Defendant may traverse that and say he made a testament, etc. 641. The Qu. shall recover damages in Quare impedit per st. west. 2. c. 5.34 H. 6 Wangf. contra, and that in a worse case than a common person, Fitzh. Quare imped. 181. Dam. 17. accord. Pas. 642. Benefice for the first fruits valued at 6. l. by the year, where it was worth 8. yet it shall be voided upon stat. 21 H. 8. for taking another, Quaere if there need notice to the Patron, but voided upon stat. 26 H. 8. for refusal to pay tithes because the words are, that it shall be voided to all intents, as by death, the Ordin. need not to give notice. 643. Mackwill had land holden of the King in Chivalry, to him and his wife, and to the heirs of the husband of the body of his wife; the remainder to the right heirs of the husband; and he had other lands holden in soccage in capite, and enfeoffed divers persons to the use of himself for life, the remainder to the youngest son in tail, the remainder to his own right heirs and died, & his eldest son for the body was in ward, per stat. 32. where two have an estate and to the heirs of one of them, after the son came to full age, and than the wife died, he shall not sue ousterlemain of the Chivalry land, because it was never in the hands of the Qu. but was a bore remain. during the life of the feme; and for the soccage he is not bound to use livery because the youngest son is in life and had issue. 644. The husband seized of land in fee, a fine is levied of that to him and his wife, and to the heirs of the husband, and they rendered for the life of the husband, the remainder to a stronger for life; the remainder to the right heirs of the husband; the husband died, & the tenant for life died; it seems the wife shall have the land for life, for the tender to his own right heirs by the husband is no remainder, but the ancient reversion, for it is a voided limitation per him and to his own right heirs; notwithstand' judgm' was given with the heir as a Purchaser, but it was compounded, but such a fine refused 13 E. 3. Bromlys' case. 645. In an action upon the second branch of 1 & 2 of P. & Ma●y of impounding entire distress in several pounds, the place where the distress was taken is not material, not more than in a Trespass of goods taken, 2 Just. contr. but upon the first branch the place is material, because distance of the place causeth the offence. (238.) 646. The Lo. Shandoes' brought a Trespass upon the stat. West. 1. c. 26. de Malef. in parcis, etc. but upon issue found for him the Court advised for the entry of the judgm. because the action was not also brought in the Queen's name according to the precedents; also there is no double recital according to the words of the stat. of finding surety: The bond that by the stat. shall be taken of the Defend ' quoth non ampl' malefa. extendeth also to all other parks; and it seems the Bond shall be by Recognizance to the King and not to the party. 647. The Coroners inquest indicted a man of murder, & quod fugam fecit, and upon his arraignment he is acquitted, and another found guilty ut oportet, and also found that he did not fly, yet he shall forfeit his goods, for upon his arraignment in this place the flying shall not be given in charge, for they were forfeit by the Indictment. 648. The Defendant in intrusion in the Exchequer aught to make title, for that he pleaded que estate of a term; The Queen's Attorney traversed the original Lease, which was found against the Queen, he may not now take advantage of the insufficiency of the plea. (239.) 649. A Customer in the Creek according 1 Eliz. made a Deputy, the deputy concealed the custom, the customer himself upon his oath certified the custom according to the misinformation of the Deputy; adjudged that the customer himself shall be charged with the triple value upon stat. 3 H. 6. c. 3. for false concealment. Trin. 650. In a debt against three heirs in Gavelkind, upon the obligation of their ancestor, the one being within age, they were outlawed, the two of full age purchased a charter; and upon a Scire facias the Plaintiff counted against them all together, etc. the plea shall not abide for the nonage of the third, because by the outlawry the original is determined against him, and it is not voided because an infant, but voidable by Error. 651. The Provost of Wells Parson imparsonee of the Parsonage of Winsam, he let the tithe for 50 years rendering rend, which was confirmed by the Dean and Chapter, but not by the Patron and Ordinary; the Provostship was by Parliament united to the Deanery, cum primo vacare conting. the Provost died, the Dean accepted the rent, and adjudged that the Lease is not affirmed, for the Lease of the Provost is voided by his death; as it is of a Parson and Prebend; contra of a Bishop, Dean, Abb ', etc. who are elective and may make a discontinuance. But if the Lease supra had been for life, it should not have been voided without entry. Also the acceptance supra is not to the purpose, for the reversion is determined, and the name of the Successor altered, as if Tenant in dower, or other particular tenant made a Lease and died, and he in reversion or remainder accepts, (240.) that shall not affirm it, for the reversion is altered; and holden that the Jurors may take notice of the special act without an except ' under the great seal given in evidence of that. 652. The wife had 3 part of the land of a Termor delivered to her by the Sheriff in Dower, the Termor gave, granted and assigned all the land comprised in his Lease to A. and covenant that he had not done any act, but that the assignee may enjoy it against every act, and was obliged to perform the convenant, the obligation is not forfeit; for the words (mes que) they have relation to the words that the Lessee had not done any act; and are not absolute words. 653. To build a new house in his waist or several within a forest is purpresture and nuisance to the game; and finable at the discretion of the Justices of the Forest, for suffering to stand where it is to be razed at their pleasure. (241.) 654. The Lessee of a Parson brought an ejectione firmae, the Defendant pleaded that the Parson was deprived; the Plaintiff said that the Parson had appealed to the Bishop of Cant. in Curia prerog. suade arcub. and because the words of the st. 24 H. 8. cap. 12. are, that an appeal shall be to the Archbishop of the Province, where etc. without limiting any court in certain, the Plaintiff demur' and holden per Just. that to the Archbishop Canterbury are words sufficient and the rest but surplusage, and shall not prejudice. Also it appears that the Arches is not the Prerogative court: but because the Def. shown not but demur' generally, the temporal Judges may not take notice of their jurisdiction. 655. It is not a good return for the Sheriff, quod mandant balivo itinerant ' who answered that the arrest and Rescous is made, for it is the arrest of the Sheriff himself: And if it be upon a Capias ad satisfac ' or a Capias utlag ' after Judgement, he Sheriff himself shall be charged with the escape, except it be by the King's enemies; and he shall have his remedy over against he which made rescous, by his action upon the case; but if it had been a Bailie of a Franchise the return had been good, and Non omittas shall issue. 656. A Quare impedit against the Archbishop of Cant. the Bishop of Linc. and the Incumbent, they made default at the Grand distress; upon that the Plaintiff made title, and had a writ to the Bishop, and the writ was awarded to inquire of the damages, of the plenarty, and at whose presentation, and how long time since the vacation, and of what value the Church is per annum, all which points are returned by inquisition, and accordingly judgement given that the Plaintiff shall recover the presentation, and had a writ to the Bishop of Lircoln, and damages to the value of the church for half a year, and the Defend ' in misericord. 657. Cobham indicted of Piracy stood mute, for he answered not directly, and had judgement of pain, fort, and dure, by stat. 28 H. 8. c. 12. and after had his Clergy after he demanded it per stat. 1. E. 6. c. 12. Octavo Elizabethae. Mich. (242.) 658. A Capias ad satisfac' return ' tres Trin. is not served, the Factor of the Plaintiff took it from the Sheriff, and one of the pronot. clerks made tres Trin. tres Mich. and now the Factor delivered it to the Sheriff unsealed, viz. to the Sheriff of London, who made a warrant to the Sergeant, who arrested the Defend ', and after the writ was sealed; the offenders for the practice were committed to the Fleet, but the writ was received, after it appeared upon examination that the Plaintiff was ignorant of the practice, and the Defendant was committed to the Fleet in execution. The practice supra appeared, because the writ was sur testatum, and than it is entered upon the award of that, which was not amend'. 659. Two submitted to arbitrament by Recogn. for the right and interest in 200 acres of land called Kelstorling; and for all other actions and suits concerning the same, Ita quod arbitrium etc. before a certain day: The Arbitrators awarded that the Defendant shall have brakes during his life in the waist of the Town of Kelstorn, rendering to the other 2. s. per annum, and upon demurrer adjudged a voided award for 3 causes. 1. Because the Arbitrators had disabled themselves, their authority being upon condition, viz. Ita quod; insomuch they had made award but of one thing; where the submission was of two; but if the submission had been per parol the award had been good for part. 3. Also they had not awarded the property of the land of which the submission was, but one profit out of the land. 3. They had not named Kelstorling, and although they that intended, yet the averrement of the parties may not declare the intent of the Arbitrators. (243.) 660. Perjury in suggestion to obtain a prohibition is not punishable in the Star-chamber, vide stat. 3 H. 7. c. 1.21 H. 7. c. 25. & 5 Eliz. c. 9 for the authority to punish perjury in the Star-chamber. 661. Three Coparceners, one aliened her part, the other brought a writ of partition against the Alienee, and the three coparc. upon the stat. and per Curiam it shall abate, because in this case a writ of partition lies at the common law. But yet if they join against and Alienee, and one of them had been non-sute, she shall be summoned and severed, and yet her part shall be allotted; If the husband of one of the coparceners, or one of the coparceners themselves had purchased part of the other coparceners, they shall have a special writ at the common law against the third. 662. Submission unto award by obligation, so that it be made and yielded in writing at or before Michael. etc. the Plaintiff said that the Arbitrators by arbitrament in Script. fact. and made the delivery of it to the parties before the day, etc. and assigned breach; Defendant demur'; Curia against the Plaintiff. 1. It is not direct, but only an argument that the Arbitrators delivered the award. 2. Also he aught to have pleaded the delivery according to the condit' viz. that it was delivered at or before Michael. etc. and not before only. 3. Also reddit. had been more apt a word to answer to yield than deliberate '. (244.) 663. A Bill of debt against an Attorney of the Common Bank by name of husbandman, upon which he was condemned and brought a writ of Error, and after per Capias ad satisfac. seized with the seal of the Bank of the K. (where it issued out of the common Bank) he was taken, but upon suggestion of those matters he was brought into the Bank upon Hab. c●rp. awarded in London, and upon examine. apparent ut supra, was discharged, and the Attorney of the Plaintiff committed. 664. Four Defendants in Assize, where the plaint was of 3 houses; and 3 Defend ' took the tenancy severally of a house, and pleaded several Bars, and to the residue no wrongs, the fourth took the entire tenancy of all without that, etc. and pleaded also Bar at large, the Plaintiff is at his peril to choose his tenant. 665. Ed. 6. granted to a Bishop and his Successors an Advowson, and that he shall hold to his proper use, after the death of the Incumbent, the Bishop by Indenture made a Lease, to begin after the death of the Incumbent, which is confirmed and died, the Incumbent died, per touts Just. it is a voided Lease against he successor, for he had nothing to let during the life of the Incumbent, who survived him. 666. The Factor of the Plaintiff and the Sheriff conspired to arrest one condemned in debt, and after procured a Capias ad satisfac ' and the prisoner brought into the court upon the return of the writ he had the matter examined, and found ut supra: notwithstand, because the Pl. was not party to the crime, he remained in execution, and the Sheriff and Factor amerced, the Sheriff to 10. l. the Factor to 5. l. (245.) 667. If a writ of Error be delivered to the chief Justice or to the clerk of the Treasury, that is a perclose, to the awarding execution, but if the Plaintiff pursue not to have the record removed before the writ of Error returnable, the Justices after may award execution; but otherwise it is of a Cerciorare to the Justices of Peace, to remove an indictment, which had words de non vult fel illam terminari alibi qu. coram se. 668. Upon st. 35 H. 8. c. 6. one of the principal panel may be joined to the 11 of the Tales de circumst. or one upon Tales joied with 11 principal, and yet the words of the st●are plural, viz. proceed with those added, and if two of the principal appear, & Tales the 12 circumstantibus be granted, if the two be drawn out, the trial may be all per Tales, per Brown. But Quaere if upon the said stat. 669. Varney 34 H. 6. in execution in the Fleet for divers debts, as also for fines for the King returned in the Exchequer, caused himself to be indicted of felony, to the intent to confess that, and to have his clergy, and so to be out of the temporal law, and after to make purgation, and this to defraud his creditors, and upon a Corpus cum causa all was removed into the K. Bench; the King understanding that, per privy seal commanded the Justices to stay the arraignment. After one of the creditors acknowledged satisfaction in Kings hench, of a debt recovered in the Exchequer, and note the judgement was quod esset inde sine die for esset inde quietus. 670. A Plur. Repleg. out of the Chancery returnable in the Bank, the Sheriff of London returned that they aught to make Repl. by custom upon plaint, in the Sher●court, and not by writ out of the Chancer. & by all the Just ' the return is insufficient, and another Plur. Repleg. award ' to the Sher. now, and process of contempt to attach the late Sheriff, vide stat. Marlb. ●. 21. and it seems at the common law the Sheriff may not make a Repleg. without writ; Quaere if upon Plur' Repleg ' the Defends had day in the court to pled. (246.) 671. After the Teste of a writ of Covenant, and Dedim' potestat. and Conusance of a fine taken of a feme sole, and before day in the Bank, to record and engross the record, the wife took husband, yet it shall be now recorded as the fine of the feme foal, for she had done all which was in her to do, and it shall bind the wife and her heirs, and also the husband as it seems, for the marriage of the feme is her own action, but if she had died the writ of Covenant had abated being the act of God, than otherwise had it been. 672. Tenant in tail made a Lease for 20 years to begin at Mich. Quaere if good within 32. Hill. 673. Repl g. against a Bishop and others, they were at several issues, but one Venire facias awarded, the Bishop challeng' the array because no Knight, and it is a good challenge for all, because the Venire facias was entire, although the issues several. 674. Assize of land in Middlesex, the Defendant pleaded a Lease for years to him made by one F. per name of a message in Surrey, and of all lands lately with that demised, and averred that to be the land in plaint, and in without wrong; the Plaintiff demur'. 1. Because no colour is given to the Plaintiff by F. Quaere if it needs because the plea is no Bar to the assize, for not being tenant of the franktenement, he shall say assisa non. 2. Also the house and land are in several counties, therefore the per nomen is not well pleaded; (247.) But by the Justices upon the Lease for years supra, the land in both counties shall pass, but otherwise of an estate for life, for there shall be several liveries. It had been a better form to have pleaded, that F. was seized as well of the lands in view, as of the house, and demised, etc. per nomen, etc. 675. The Ordinary after administration committed was sued in debt by plaint in London, and being returned Nihil habet, upon suggestion the debt was attached in the hands of one W. who was indebted to the Testator, and after 4 defaults of the Ordinary, being returned non est inventus, and oath that the debt is due, the Plaintiff had judgement and execution against the said W. against whom now the Administrator brought an action of debt, who pleaded the matter supra, the Plaintiff demur. and adjudged he shall recover, for after the Administrat. committed, an action of debt lieth not against the Ordinary, nor yet for him, and it lies not at all till West. 2. cap. 19 which is within memory, and may not make a custom. Toasts case. 676. If by the private statute of a College, special persons of a corporat. may dispense with the absense of a Fellow, the greater part of the said special persons dispensed, etc. it is not good upon the stat. 33 H. 8. c. 17. which is that Grants, Leases, and Elections of the greater part of the body, which is of the entire body; and not the greater part of the part of the Corporation, etc. ut supra. 677. In a Writ of Right, the mice joined upon the Grand Assize, the jury and four choosers appeared ipso die Essoin. and oath given to them being sixteen in number precise dicer' verit' etc. & because the mice is joined and prayed by the Tenant first, he shall first give his evidence. 678. Land was given to the Grandfather, and the heirs of the body of the Grandfather, who was dead, the son brought a Formedon in discender, he aught to make him cousin and heir to the Grandfather: for otherwise it was intended that the gift was made to the youngest son and besayell. Alii, it shall not be intended without showing of the Tenant. 248. 679. A Termer granted over his estate, rend incurred, debt lies not against the first Lessee, for the privity is dissolved and gone with the Land, Quaere being but a personal Contract 44 Assize Chall. 49. very Tenant remained Tenant to the Avower till the Alienee atturn Tenant to the Lord. 680. Per Catlyn, Sanders & Dyer, a state limited in Fee simple, by the husband to the wife, may be averred to be for lointure for Bar of Dower within 27. H. 8. Brown and Whiddon Contra B. Dower 69. that the opinion of the justices 6. Ed. 6. was, that it may not, so of a devise which is but a benevolence: But holdon that an estate in Fee is not within the Statute of 11. H. 7. the case of the wife of Sir Maur. Dennis. 681. A Steward or Bailiff may be retained without deed, and shall have a debt for wages if he exercise the office; but he shall not have a writ of annuity without deed. 682. Quaere if but an action of the case lies for he which had Freehold in a Mill for diverting multam aquam, or he shall have an Assize. 249. Pas. 683. Upon a Commission in nature of a Diem clausit extremum tenure of the Queen, as of the Barony of S. in soccage was returned. After a second Commission found Chivalry tenure, as of the said Barony. After that a third Commission issued; reciting quod compertum est per inquisit' capt' post mort' A. tempore H. 5. that said Land was holden of the King in Chivalry, in Capite, upon which Chivalry in Capite is now returned prout per dictam inquisit de tempore H 5. liquet. 684. It was holden that the heir needs not to traverse the two last inquisitions, for they were without warrant, but that the first office although against the Queen, shall be allowed, till disproved by Scire sacias, which shall issue out of the said Record of H. 5. according to the Statute of Escheators, 29. Ed. 1. Basset's case. 685. Breretons case, A Manor holden in Capite, being in lease for years and rents reserved, descended to the heir, he entered and took the ●ents. The general pardon of the 5. of Eliz. came and discharged all intrusions and entries: and holden that by consequence the mean issues and liveries to be sued, are discharged; and the exception of those who had rend' and aught to sue liveries out of the hands of the Queen, shall be intended in the Copulative and not in the Disjunctive, and holden that actions of account, and of debt excepted, neither excepting homages, reliefs, rents, and services, are to the purpose for those mean Rents here, for at the time of the Act she was not entitled to any action or rent by the Law for those. 686. Harrison in execution for Debt in the Counter, because the Fleet is an easier Prison, caused himself to be sued in the Common Bank upon an obligation of 20 l. and confessed the action, and caused one in the name of the supposed Obligee (being brought into the Bank by Corpus cum causa) to pray that he might be committed to the Fleet an execution which was done for both executions. Now the matter was revealed, but the Obligee knowing nothing of the matter was discharged, and the Prisoner was resent to the Sheriffs of London, and a fine of 10 pound assessed upon him for the fraud, vide Stat. 1 Rich. 2. cap. 12. and how Prisoners shall be kept strictly: and 24 H. 8. in Star Chamber, the Keepers of London were enjoined upon pain of a 100 pound that no person should go at liberty within nor out of Prison with a Keeper. 250. 687. Error was brought in the Common Bank upon judgement given before the justices of Assize for the County of Monmouth, the Defend ' demm' upon the Iurisdict' to hold plea of Error, upon judgement in Assize before the justices per Letters Patents of the King, by all the justices of the said Bank it lies not; vide Britton cap. 1. And there are divers cases vouched of the jurisdiction of the Common Bank to hold plea of Error or attaints upon false oath, in other Courts, and to writ to other Courts to have the record certified to try a thing depending before them. 688. Tenant for life of a house brought an action upon the case against one who stopped a way in his Land, which from beyond time, memory, etc. had been a passage between the house and a Park, and although the Park was to the Lessor, and not to the Tenant for life, It was holden by the Court that that action lieth not, but an assize of Nuisance. 251. 689. The Custom of a Manor was, that the Lord and Surveyor, or his deputy, might demise by Copy. The Lord granted authority to two to make customary estates for payment of their debts, and died. They held Court in their own names, and granted Copies in reversion according to the custom. The wise of the Lord had one of the Copyholds assigned by the Sheriff upon recovery of the third part of the Manor in Dower; and holden that she shall avoid the Grant by the two Assigns. 690 Lessee for years rendering rend, the reversion is granted, for life remainder over in Fee, the Grantee released all his right to him in remainder, he in remainder granted the reversion in Fee, the Tenant for life also released to this Grantee ut supra, and holden that the releases are voided because there are not words of Surrender, yet Quaere if the second release shall not inure as an Atturnment to make the remainder pass. 691. ●ar●well covenanted to assure all his Copyhold Lands to A. after he Surrendered to the Steward out of the Court, according to the custom, of divers parcels per particular name, but concluded generally by name of all his Copyhold Lands there: D. that no more passeth, but that which was named in the Surrender. 252. 692. Tenant for life is content and agreed by words, that he in reversion shall have his interest, rendering 20 shillings by the year, and that without deed or livery, it is no surrender per Curiam. 693. If a Formedon be returned tarde, and the Demandant sue an alias Summons, there shall be 9 returns between the teste and return of that, and upon the tarcle supra return ' the Tenant may not be essoigned, for he had no day in Court. Note in the alias Summons shall be words si demand' fec●r ' te secur. except there are sureties found in the Bank. Trin. 694. The incumbent of a Frank chapel or Chantry donative made a Lease for 99 years, A. being Patron of the Donation appendent to a Manor of Awas seized in ●ail, confirmed it; the Stat. 1 Ed. 6. of dissolutions is made, the Patron and Incumbent died, It seems the King may avoid the Lease as the successor might. But because the Patron had discontinued the ancient tail, which he had at the time of the Confirmation, and took a new one 33 H. 8. the Lessee for the King. shall not have judgement. 253. 695. The Queen granted to Sir William Cordall the custody of the heir of one Kniveton & omnium terrarum, to him descending or appertaining, as son and heir of the said K. If the said K. hap to die, his son and heir being within age. After Kniveton conveyed his land to the use of himself for life, and after his deceased to the use of his wife in tail, the remainder to the right heirs of him and his wife. After Kniveton and his wife made a Lease for 40 years, and suffered a common recovery for the assurance of the Lease. The husband having issue a son within age died, after the wife died: if the Grant in the life of the father be good, yet the Grantee shall have any land in Guard, for he had nothing in descent as heir of his father, but the body and the marriage he shall have which is vested immediately after the death of the father, and this by Stat. 32. H 8. because the disposition for preferment of the wife, But he may not have the the third part of the Lands by the words of the Grant, for he had the tail, and the Fee simple expectant also now by descent from the wife, and by the Court the heir may avoid the Lease, for the w●fe had nothing in the Frank tenet at time of the recovery. There by Kellaway, that childrens children, per opinio ' Curi ' have been intended of strange blood to the dispos ' and are not within Stat. 32 of Wills. 696. Swinton granted Rend to F. by Fine habend' si●i & assignat' durante vita Cassandrae wife of the Grantor, and that if it be behind quoth been ●●ccret F. & haered' durante vita Cassandrae distring ' F. demised the rent and died, if the Grantor shall return it as occupant, or the Devisee shall have it, Dier. that the Devisee shall have it for the clause of Distress made, and that the Grantee had Fee determinable, upon the death of Cassand ' vide Quintons' case 26 Assize, and Collingbrooks' case 8. H. 4. accord. 697. A Termer without impeachment of waist, covenanted after selling, to enclose, land in debt upon the obligation for performing of covenants, pleaded that he had not felled, the Plaintiff said he had felled two acres, and that he had not made defence, the Defendant that he had made defence, & de hoc, etc. tenus a departure and feofail, and the jury discharged. 698. A Lease is made for 41 years to W. Cicell if he live so long, and if he die within the aforesaid term, that the wise to the said C. shall have it for the residue of the said year, etc. per Dier & Catlyn, the term is ended upon the death of Cicell, and than there is no residue to remain to the wife, and therefore that limitation is voided. 254 699. Where other time convicted is objected against Clergy, and the justices per the Stat. 34, and 35. H. 8.14. shall writ to the Clerk of the Crown to certify the first conviction, this writing shall be in their own names: But where the justices of one County or Circuit writ to the justices of the other, to certify the attainder of the principal for arraignment of the accessary, there the better form is per Writ in name of the King, vide Stat. 2. and 3. Ed 6. Cap. 24. which had words as supra. M●stris Sanders was accessary to the murder of her husband, because the principal was but a murderer, it shall not be pery treason in the wise, 40 Assi 25. accord. 700. Conusance of a Fine was taken Hill. 20. H. 8 where the deed ' in potestat ' made not mention of the County, and all is certified the same Term, and the King's silver entered, but the Fine was not engrossed, but remained in the office of the Chirograph ' And it was resolved that it may be now engrossed: but because it is at the election of the party to have it either with, or without proclamation as before 4 H. 7. and he is dead, so that now no election may be made, it shall be a fine without proclamation, as at the Common law. Cromptons' Case. nono Elisabethae. Mich. 701. Debt by Bowls for rend behind, and counted that his Termer devised to the Defendant the term and died, and that the Defendant entered and was possessed, and for arrearages, etc. the Defend ' demur' 1. because he had not alleged that the Devisor had made executors, and that the Defendant entered with their agreement. 2. Now he saw not virtute Cui ' leg. the Defend ' was possessed, and if by other title (as the most strange shall be taken against the pleader) he shall not be chargeable of any such rent. 255. 702. Bell recovered in a Quare impedit against the Bishop of Norwich, and upon the alias breve Ep. he returned that before the receipt of the Writ, the Plaintiff presented, but he refused, because criminous, viz. a haunter of Taverns and unlawful games, But it was holden by the justices that no evil prohibited, but only malum per se is criminosity, also he had not excused the not return of the first Writ per this, etc. 703. A Forreiner as well as a Freeman may demise his Lands in London per the Custom, but not in Mortmain without licence of the King, and where Licenses shall be only to Corporations, spiritual or temporal within the City, vide 38. Assi. 18. que sirrah de Citizen. 704. The Condition of an Obligation was, that if the Obliger suffer the Obligee his Termer to enjoy, etc. and that without trouble, vexation, or interruption of himself or any other, etc. A Copy holder who had Elder right entered, the condition is not broken by the Court, for (suffer) is a Passive word, and imports not that he aught to do any act; Notwithstanding if he proves disturbance the Obligation is forfeit, and all the subsequent words depend upon the word suffer. 705. He which had a benefice over 8. pound, took another without dispensation, the first is voided per Stat. 21. H. 8. as by death or resignation. And per Curiam needs not notice, for the Patron may here as well take notice as the Ordinary. 706. Value of Marriage lies without tender per Welch and Brown and 31 Assis. Weston and Dier doubted because of 21. Ed. 4. 51. 40. Ed. 3. 1. H. 7. and the words of the Statute of Merton, Cap. 6. but because the Plaint, Here in his Writ and Count supposed tender, he gave advantage to the Defendant to traverse it. 707. Per touts justices, a demise made 4 and 5. P. & M. to the Master and fellows of Trinity College in Cambridge for to found Grammar Schools and poor Scholars, was good by Stat. 1. and 2. P. & M. which enabled to device to spiritual Corporations, for the said Statute aught to be favourably expounded. 256. 708. The Commissary of the Bishop of the Diocese granted Letters ad colligend ' without his proper name & add vendend' ea quae peritura essent & compotum inde, etc. he to whom the Letters were granted sold things that would perish, he is executor of his own wrong adjudged, For the Ordinary himself had not such authority, and also the proper name of the Commissary, to the Ordinary aught to be express. 709. Dower by Elizabeth Michael, Tenant vouched (as Lessee for life of a Lease of the husband with warrant) the heir of the husband in ward to the King, for cause of Guard, and prayed aid of the King, and had it, and after a procedend ' and he had judgement, and the Demandant recovered against the Tenant, and Tenant against the heir, sed expectet executio. If the infant aught to warrant till he come to full age, and till the hands of the King be amoved. It may be discontinuance per entry of the aid, prayer and procedend ' for the parties were sine die. 710. Entry of proclamat' upon Fines notwithstanding 4. H. 7. begin not till 6. 711. Trespass de muliere rapta, & abducta cum bonis viri, as it seems shall be brought where the abduction and detention was, and not in another County, judgement was stayed because the Original was returnable coram nobis, being brought in the common Bank. 257. 712. Tenant for life surrendered one moiety, the Lessor granted the entire land to a stranger, habend ' the one moiety for life, the other for 40 years after the death of the Tenant for life reddena ' annually 40 pound, he may distrein and avow for the entire rent presently although that one moiety be but land reverting, for the reservation is entire, but because he avowed as in land charged to his distress which is the Form in a rend charge, and so he shall avow upon him as his Tenant per the Manor, and because he did not sever the Moiety, but said generally that the seis ' in Dominico suo ut de feodo les. etc. where the moiety was not in demeasne, the Avowry holden insufficient. 713. A writ of Pleg. acquiteand. for that the Plaintiff was obliged with the Defendant, as surety by Bill obligatory, and was arrested etc. defend' cognovit astionem judgement given that he shall acquit the Plaintiff of the same and damages. Quaere which damages, because it appeared not that he had paid the money to the Creditor. 714. Tenant for life, the remainder in Fee, tenant for life demised for 15 years and died, he in remainder entered, and the Termer brought a covenant against the Executor of the Lessor upon the demise, and adjudged that it lieth not, although the Lease was by Indenture, except it had been broken in the life of the Testator, otherwise it is of a covenant expressed, But than if the heir aught the Termer of his Father, a covenant lies against him upon the demise for the privity. By Brown the Assignee of a Termer, shall have an action of covenant against the Lessor upon the Demise, and without words Assignee in the case. Quaere & vide Stat. 32. H 8. cap. 34. 258. 715. In trespass the Defend ' said the place where is within the Forest, of which the Queen is seized in Fee, & himself is Forester and had walk there by patent, and he prayed aid and had it, and ex asseasu of the Plaintiff. Quaere 11. H. 7. tenant at will of the Queen who was Patentee of the King shall not have aid in trespass because a stranger, also no loss to the King in this action. Hill. 716. In ejection● firma de decimis garbarum, qmodam horreo & gardino Rectoriae, judgement entered that the Plaintiff shall recover the term to come in Rectoria horreo & gardin ' and a writ of seizin, or to inquire of damages awarded, which was returned more than the Plaintiff counted, and judgement upon that given, and divers exceptions to the judgement. 1. Because it is of a rectory of which he had not complained, but that holden but surplusage. 2. because no express judgement for the tithes. 3. Damages are assessed for the in the rectory whereof there is no complaint. 4. The writ of Seisiin was awarded without prayer of the parties. 5. Also the writ was, quod querens recuper asset possession'termin. ' which is false. 6. Also because more damages were found than the Plaintiff did count for. And if this judgement be erroneous and emendable the same Term, or good as it is, Quaere 717. He in reversion received in default Tenant for life pleaded to the issue which was found for him at the Assizes, and before day in the Bank, Tenant for life died, if the writ shall abate, Quaere County Sussex case. Pas. 718. Sir John Savage granted a Stewardship for life, after he granted to another the reversion post mortem primi cum feod' pro excere. with clause of distress: Adjudged that the second grant is voided, because there is no reversion of that; so in case of the King, yet the King may grant an office exercend. after the death of the first, which a subject may not: also the Fee above is voided, for it was an executory recompense for the execution of an office. 719. Two advowsons are in Illesfields, viz. Saint Martin's appendent to the Manor of E. and to All Saints, which was in gross, both being voided, All Saints by assent of the Patrons and Ordinaries were united to Saint Martins, and it was ordained that the Patron in gross should have the first presentment, & sic alternis vicibus, which had been done according many times. Now the Patron in gross granted his patronage to the use of himself for life, the remainder to his wife for life, the remainder to his right heirs, and died, the other Patron presented twice together and died, which was an usurpation (for it is not as amongst Coparceners, who are privies of that blood) the wife died, the church voided, and the right heir presented, who was disturbed, and brought a Quare impedit of the Church in Ills. without naming of Saint Martins, and well, for after the union there was but one Church there. Quaere if the right heir be to have as purchas; ere o● by descent, for if as purchaser it seems he is without remedy, and it seems notwithstanding the union, that the advowson of Sain Martin's appendent for every second turn, according to 43. Ed. 3. and there are not moities as between joint tenants or tenants in common, who make composition to present per turn, for there one time is a moiety. 260. 720. In a Quare impedit brought by Basset against the Ordinary, Patron, and Incumbent, the Ordinary claimed but as Ordinary, and issue between the others, tried for the Plaintiff, and the common points ex officio, and judgement given by the justices of Nisi Prius, according to the Stat. West. 2. and a writ to the Bishop was awarded, and the record being remained ' to the Bank another writ was awarded to the Bishop retournable in the Bank, upon which the Bishop returned, that hanging the Quare impedit per an office title was found for the King by minority of the Plaintiff being his ward, and the King presented, of which the Church is full, which excused the not performing both writs, and he shall not be estopped of this Return, for his plea supra is not any plea of plenarty, as it is of the Patron and Incumbent, and if this Return be false the party may have a Quare non admisit, and also he may have a Scire facias against the first and new incumbent according to 21 H. 7. and there came the title of the King in debate. 721. Debt upon a Lease for years of several parcels, the parties to the issue upon non demisit, it was found de demis. but one such a parcel, and of that non demisit, and assessed damages, the Plaintiff must not have judgement. 722. The Queen granted the ward and marriage of the body. saving the land, the Grantee tondred marriage which is refused, for which the Grantee prayed detainor of the land at the full age of the heir. But holden that the Statute 32. H. 8. for the erection of the Court of Wards gives not authority to retain, but only for livery to be sued. Also that the Statute of Marbridge gave not authority to retain for the value, where the body and land are severed. 261. 723. Partition against two, the one confessed partition, the other pleaded to the issue, and in the record of Nisi Prius, the name of the Defendant is omitted, per negligence of the Clerk, and written & praedict. Similiter, and no more: also the Jury were between the Plaintiff and both the Defend. whereas one of them is no party to the issue, but because apparent it is amendable, and for that the jury taken three justices agreed but Brown held it is not amendable, because the justices of Nisi Prius are only authorised to a certain purpose, and are not justices before whom the Record resides. 724. Cuthbert Musgrave in an appeal of murder upon nothing culpable pleaded, is acquitted of murder, but found culpable of Manslaughter; it was doubted; if he shall be discharged of the appeal, but after he prayed Clergy, the Queen may not pardon the imprisonment, for it is the execution of the party, and the Defendant shall not make purgation: But Quaere of the burning in the hand. Voluntary & ex malit. praecogit. intersecit, is not sufficient in an Indictment of murder, without murdravit. per Catlyn. 725. A man seized of land in a town, and in two Hamblets of the town, demised all his lands in the town and in one of the Hamlets, nothing of the Land in the other Hamlet passeth because of the intent. 262. 726. A man made a Lease for 30 years. and four years after made another Lease by those words, Noverint, etc. no. dict. 30 annis finitis dedisse & concecisse B. habend. à die confection. present. termin. praedict. finito, us. que finem termini 31 annorum, and the words à die confection. were drawn through with a Line per the Lessee, but remained legible, and the Justices of the common Bank subscribed their opinion in Hibern. that the lease gins at the end of the thirty years, and it shall not be intended de consume. in the first term; because most strong against the Lessor, but clear the defacing being the Act of the Lessee himself, although it be not in a place material, makes the lease voided. 727. The Condition of an Obligation was, that if I S. prove not a suggest on of a Bill depending in the Court of Requests before utas Hillarii, than if he pay 20 pounds, etc. it is a good plea in Bar, that I.S. died before the utas. 728. Debt due to a Felo de se per contract. is not forfeit to the King; for than the party shall be rebut of his law. Trin. 263. 729. False judgement in a judgement given in ancient Demean upon a droit close, there prosecute in nature of an Aycll. one Plaintiff was nonsute and severed: the Suitors would not make Record to the Sheriff, but would be advised, Distress issued against 7 named in the Return who refused, upon that they only brought the Record, and Errors assigned. 1. Because in the stile of the Court no mention is made before what judges. 2. There is no officer named in the award or return of the Summons. 3. No day prefixed to the tenant in the Summons, but ad proxim. Curiam. 4. The tenant made Attorney within age, 5. no warrant of Attorney entered for the plaintiff. 6. Not names of the Summoners returned. 7. Tenant within age, and in by descent ousted of age. 8. Refusal to receive Demurrer: and upon non sum inform ' the Court proceeded to the examination of Errors, and reversed the judgement, and award that he should be restored, but no costs or damages, and the Suitors were amerced to 7 pound: and there where the Custom is that an infant may make a Feoffment at 16. years of age, yet he may not answer to actions, but the plea shall abide. 730. The husband and wife, and A. purchased to them, and to the heirs of the Husband and A. A. he released to the husband without words of enlargement, the husband and wife made a Lease of all rendering Rend, the husband died, the heir of the husband award to have one moiety of the Rent, for the release inures to the husband only, and not to the wife, and there needs no words of enlargement, because he had Fee, contra if the Release had been to the wife who had but for life. 731. Dower by the Lady Arundel against F. who made default after appearance, and a Termer per Stat. of Glocest. cap. 11. came to save his Term, and was received to pled, who said that the husband of the wife was attaint of felony by the Parliament, and a Commission issued out of the Court of augmentation, which assigned the third part of the lands of the husband in Dower, upon which the Rent reserved upon the term by her husband was assigned to her, the which the woman accepted; Also after the King granted the Dower under the Great Seal, and averred Collusion between the Demandant and Tenant, to make him loose his Term. And holden that if it had been good matter, it should be allowed to the Termer to save his Term, quamvis pu. all title del dower. But the assignment of Dower is voided in the Augmentation Court, for it should be in the Chancery. Also the Authority is not pursued in Assignment of Rent, and than the Confirmation of a good Assignment is voided, and the plaintiff had judgement. 264. 732. A woman Coppyholder for life took a husband, the Reversion of the said Coppyhold was granted to three, viz. to A.B. and C. cum acciderit post mortem Surrend. or forisfact. for their lives successively according to the Custom, The husband surrendered to the use of A. for life, to whom the Lord granted a Copy for the life of A. And B. died, and the opinion was, that C. shall not be admitted, for after the death of the husband the wife may enter, or have her plaint in nature of a Cui in vita, and during the life of her husband the lord shall not have it in nature of an occupant, after the husband and the wife would have released to C. and the Lord would not hold Court, till he was enjoined in Chancery to hold Court or in avowed possession. 733. A new Assignment of Trespass was in one acra terr. sive prat. in camp. vocat. N. the Defendant pleaded none culp. but for the incertainty of Land or pasture, and also because no abbuttells the ●ury was discharged. 734. The husband, and wife, Termers of the three Coneys in Fleetstreet, the husband let part of the Term per those words, the house called the three Coneys, with all the chambers, cellars and shops, except to the husband the shops ad proprium opus & usum, the husband died, the wife entered into the shops, and being brought an ejectione firma and by the Court, the exception is but temporary to the husband himself, where there are no words of Executors or Assigns, and the exception voided touching the shop, because it is repugnant to the Lease of the shops 3 H. 6.53. for the first part. 735. A man demised Land to be sold by his Executors, and that the money shall be disposed in Legacies specially expressed, and died, they sold, the Legatory sues in Court Christian, prohibition lies not, for the money is assets, and no remedy but in spiritual Court for a Legacy. 5. P. & M. Decimo Elisabethae. 265. Mich. 736. The jury demanded did not appear full, and the Defendant came not, opinion ' the inquest shall be awarded by default, for the parties are demandable before the jury, and if the Plaintiff had made default, he should have been nonsute. 737. In account as receiver by the hands of the Plaintiff the Defendant waged his law, and at the day, etc. he would have confessed the action for part, and made his law for the residue. Curia praeter Harper, that the confession shall not be received. 738. The justices of Peace aught to certify into the Chancery, their agreement made upon servants wages, six months after Pasche, according to the fifth of Elisabeth, upon penalty of 10 pound, and that by the words and the intention of the Statute. 739. In Debt against the Lord Cobham they were at issue, and a venire facias returned, served, and process continued against the jury till the Distress, and the Plaintiff perceiving the array quashable, because no Knight returned, he prayed a venire facias de novo, and might not have it, for no better writ could issue than at the first. 266. 740. A. B. Tenants in Common of a Manor, A. purchased a Franktenem ' so mixed with the Demeans that it was unknown. B. brought writ of Partition of the Manor notwithstanding, and judgement given that they shall make Partition, and a writ to the Sheriff according, tenus per Justice ' that A. aught to show the bounds of the Franktenement and B. needs not to show the bounds of the Manor to the jury: but if evidence be given of no part, if the jury make Partition of so much quant. praesumitur & dignnoscitur, it sufficeth, for they are compellable to serve the Law and the Court; at the day appointed to give verdict, one juror made default, the Sheriff returned a Fine of 40 shill. upon him, and the difficulty of the maatter, & quod nihil ulter. fact. propter brevitatem temporis Quaere of the return and of the Fine. Temple against Cook and Wotton. 741. The husband being Cesty que use before 27 caused the Feoffees to execute estate to him and his wife, and to the heirs of the husband, and declared not in the deed to be for jointure, Quaere if it shall be intended for jointure except it be now averred. 742. Entry in the quibus against 3, one being Sheriff returned that he might not summon himself. Quaere for he appeared and after pleaded that in arrest of judgement 18. H. 8. Fitzh. the Sheriff may summon himself. 743. An Inholder commanded one of his guests to put his goods in such a place under lock, otherwise he would not warrant them; the guest suffered them in the outward Court, where they were taken away, per opin' Curiae, the Inholder shall not be charged. And it behoves to show in writ and Count that the Defendant is a common Hostler. 744. I.S. built upon the waste of a Manor whereof the Queen was seized, the Queen granted the Manor to the Earl of Leicester, after I.S. died seized, Mel'opin ' that it no descent against the Patentee, because at the first it was a disseisin against the Queen. 267. 745. A Lord seized not, nor claimed his villain nor his issues within a hundred years, so that a Nativo habendo lies not against the issue of the villain, because of the Statute 22. of Limitation. It seems in favour of liberty he may not seize; notwithstanding by and Dyer, Quaere well between Butler and Crouch, vide 11. Eliz. 28.3. where in Assize the justices admitted foreign trial ex assensu partium in favour. libertat. And holden, Error. Also they received a special verdict upon issue joined upon traverse: also because the issue is not upon Frank, & etc. but upon seizin of the villain. Also Butler prescribed in seizin, where he and his Ancestors failed after 1. H. 7. till now, although seized of the Manor to which, etc. for that, etc. Error. 746. The Bishop of Saint Davids by licence of appropriation made a Church Collegiate, and Prebends in that, and appropriated to every Prebend a Church, and that was after confirmed by the King, that was taken a College within the Statute 1 Ed. 6. Collegium est quando plures simul colliguntur. etc. 747. In trespass the Defendant said that he had piscary in one County from time beyond, etc. and prescribed to draw into the Soil of the Plaintiff in another County, and both were travers. The issue is triable by both Counties. 268. 748. Tenant in Capite made a Feoffement per collusion to defraud the Executions of his Creditors, with condition that when the sums shall be discharged, that high Feoffees should convey to such uses, as he or his heirs should appoint, which is found upon Mandamus, & quod nulla alia causa aut intentio suit. The Queen shall not have the ward of the heir, for it was not to defraud her of the ward, decree vid, Marleb. cap. 6. & 34. H. 8. cap. 5 749. A writ of false judgement shall be re. fa. lo. quae suit in eadem cur. and not which is, for the plea is determined upon the judgement. 269. 750. A man held a Messualty of the King in Chivalry in Capite, and the Tenant held certain Lands of the mesne in Chivalry, and also held other Lands of the Durchy of Cornewal in Chivalry. The King granted the Duchy to his eldest son simul cum wardis & marriag. non obst. Praerog' Regis; the Mesne died and his heir in ward to the King, the Tenant also died, and his heir within age, the King shall have the prerog. of the ward of the body and marriage, because of the Guard, for general words in the King's Patents shall not have a special intendment as that supra in special case. And divers notable cases put, where a general Patent shall not extend to special cases. And by Saunders chief Baron, Issues, and amercements are not allowed any in the Exchequer, upon their Charters of general grant, except they be specified in what Court. And upon grant of Fines, Issues, and amercements sont Tenants, A Fine upon a Constable, Sheriff etc. shall not pass, except there be clause, licet ministri sive officiari● nostri fuerint. 751. Cases vouched where words ex gratia speciali, certa scientia, & mero motu suis, make general Patents of the King, to have special intendments, vide the difference between false suggestion, false informat' false consideration, and false cause. Hill. 752. The Prior of Saint Johns of Jerusalem, and his confrers made a Lease by Indenture to three at will, one died, the Lessors 4. H. 8. per indenture reciting the death of one, and that the first Indenture is surrendered and canceled, they made an estate to the survivers, habendum iis & haeredibus, but no Letter of Attorney to make livery, & adjudged voided, for by the surrender of the Indenture the estate at will is determined, so that now the second grant cannot inure by way of confirmation. D. Quaere if the death of the one determine not the will, for an estate at will may not survive. 270. 753. A writ of Covenant to levy a Fine is retornable in crastino Purificat ' one of the middle returns of the Term, and the concord is made and recorded, the same Crastino ut oportet, and the third day after, viz. before the fourth day after, the first Proclamat' was made, and well, for die Crastino is the return day, and the fourth day after, is but a day of grace, but if it had been return Octab. Hill. Quaere, because the justices sit nor, being the first Return of the Term, till the fourth day, whereas the Statute 4. H. 7. is, that it shall be in full Court. 754. Queen Mary granted one a Licence to cell wines by retail with non obstant ' the Statute 7. Ed. 6. and limited not how long, but there is a commandment in the Patent to the Officers to permit him for life, and holden by Dyer and Sanders, it shall be durante bene placito only, an that the pleasure is determined by the death of the Queen: also the command by her death ceaseth. 755. The husband and wife, seized of a Manor, and to the heir of the husband, the husband granted the Stewardship to Walton for life, the remainder by the same deed to the son of the said Walton for life, and a Rent Charge jointly to them for exercising the same out of the same Manor; a Copyhold being by escheat in the hands of the husband and wife at the same time, the rent is behind, the Grantor died, Walton died, the wife granted the Copyhold upon which the son distrained for arrearages in the life of his father, and the Plaintiff in Bar to his avowry averred not the life of the wife, per Curiam it is maintainable, for the Copy holder came under the Charge. But contrary if a Copyhold had been surrend' to I.S. who after had been admitted, and if he avow, it seems he aught to show that he continues to exercise the office, for if it cease, debt only lieth for the arrearages, etc. 756. In a writ of Right, the four Knight's retor' panel, venire facias in nature of a habeas Corpus shall issue to the Sheriff which names their names, and if they appear upon that they shall be taken. 757. In debt upon an Obligation with condition to perform Coven' brought in Land, the issue was if the Defendant was true possessor of certain Lands in Bedford at the time of the Indent. the trial shall be in Bedford. 271. 758. Debt upon escape lies not against the heir of the Gaoler, for the heir shall not be charged with a debt, due either by the Common Law, or Statute Law, except he be named, neither although it be recovered in the life of the father, but by Elegit, where he shall be charged as Land Tenant per Scire faciae, vide 21. Assize, Debt upon escape against the Execut. of a Guardian lieth nor. 759. Arrearages of a rend Charge be due to a feme sole, she took a husband who made an acquittance of one feast after the coverture, and by that, all the arreages is gone, per Dyer and Harper for per. 11 H. 4. 24. it is a positive Law, that an acquittance for the last day dischargeth the arrearages, but Weston and Welsh contrary, especially the arrearages being when the woman was sole, 1. H. 5. 7. per Norton. 760. The husband and wise outlawed, the wife came in ward by Process, and had a Charter of pardon, she shall be discharged of the Imprisonment, but the Charter was not allowed, because she may not have a Scire facias against the Plaintiff without her husband. 761. A Guardian during the minority of the issue in tail (which is but of the age of one year) let for 10 years, the Land never being in Lease before, that is not such a Lease for 20 years, which inables Tenant in tail to make a Lease with 32. to bind the issue; so of a Tenant in Dower, or per courtesy, or the husband in Right of his wife, for they have no inheritance, but Quaere the Donor. 272. 762. Debt against the heir who pleaded nothing by descent, the Plaintiff replied that he had assets in Lond ' and now at the Nisi Prius gave in evidence assets at Cornal. Quaere if it shall maintain the issue, and if Lond ' jury may take notice, but of goods the evidence shall be good, because they are transitory. 763. A Termer granted his Term habend ' after the death of the Granter it is a voided habend ' and the Term passeth presently by the premises adjudged. Pas. 764. The servant of A. was arrested in London, upon a Trespass, & two which knew his Master bailed him, after A. promised them for their friendship to save them harmless of costs and damages, etc. If afterwards they are charged, yet an action upon the case lieth not, for it is no consider' for the bailing of the servant was of their own heads, as was executed before the assumpsit, but if the Master had requested it before, and promised after ut supra, peradventure otherwise it should be, as in consid, that one hath married my daughter at my request, I will give, etc. it is a good consid' because the marriage ensues and follows my request, and Land may be given in Frank marriage after espousals. 765. The Executors of a Termer rated the Copp●● or furnace fixed by the Termer himself, it was holden waste, and if waste be assigned in domibus & hoscis, the Plaintiff may not so abridge the waste to relinquish all in the houses or contra. And if many issues are joined, and one be a Jeofall, yet the other issues shall be tried by the same jury, but the new issue shall be tried upon a venire facias, Dominus Burgavenny. 766. A Lessor Covenanted and granted to a Termer that he should hold the Land to him, and his present wife, and the wife which after he shall marry, for term of life of the Lessor, and no livery made, three lustices, that it is not a Surrender of the Term, nor a confirmation, but a mere Covenant only; but Weston held contrary, because of the word grant. Sackford. 273. 767. The Deanery of Wells was dissolved by Parliament, and a new Deanery erected, to which the possessions of the Prebend of Cory were annexed, (note the Prebend itself was not annexed) therefore Quaere if the Dean after was justly deprived, for the Prebend of C. was not extinct: And by the said Act it was ordained, that the King may make a new Dean, and that the new Dean may make Demises, as the ancient Dean did. The King made Goodman Dean who took the Prebend, of one of the Prebends of the same Church, upon which the Bishop per Commission of Visitation did deprive him, for taking of two dignities in the same Church, against the Canon of the Civil Law, which was also affirmed upon appeal to the Arch-Bish. Cant. and a new Dean made, upon which he appealed to Queen Mary, and by Commissioners Delegates the said deprivation was disallowed, upon which he made Demises which were confirmed by the Bishop and Chapter, and after upon another appeal to the Commissioners Delegates he was removed, and the other Dean restored, who would have avoid the leases, upon which issue was joined if Goodman was Dean at the time of the making, and found that he was, and so the jeases good, also it was agreed, that a Deanery is a spiritual promotion, and not temporal. It was doubted if the taking of a dignity in the same Church, made the Deanery voided, or but voidable by sentence. Also it was said by the interest of the Bishop taken away by the Act, the Bishop is not bound for the spiritual ●urisdiction to Visit, but temporal personage. Also that the Demise of the Dean need not the Confirmation of the King, nor of the Bishop, but only of the Chapter, for Deanery is not donative, as is of a person and Prebend. 274. 768. Cestuy que use in tail before 27. suffered a Common Recovery with single voucher, and died without issue, the Feoffees may now enter or have an action to revive the use to him in remainder. 769. Two brothers and the eldest had cause of Petition to the King for Lands, and the youngest had issue a son, and is attaint, and executed for treason, the cldest died without issue, the son of the youngest is restored in blood only, as to his father, but so as that he shall demand the Land of any Collateral ancestor, as if no such attainter had been provided that it shall not extend to land in the hands of the King by attainter, and saving to every person their interest, it was holden that is enabled to Petition supra. 770. John Mutton levied a Fine of Lands, to the use of himself, and of such wife or wives, as he shall marry, and after he married one A. she shall take in jomture per Wray, Mead, Plowden and Onslow being upon use, contrary upon an estate executed, and so it seems that feme is a good name of purchase; but Quaere if this be a jointure before or after Coverture, and in whom the use was before the marriage, and of what estate. 15. Ed. 44. possession of the brother of an use made the sister heir. 275. 771. A Certiorare was awarded out of the King's Bench to the Custos brevium, to remove the very Record of a Fine, after Error adjudged upon the transcript, and that to the intent to take away the Fine to the Filaciis, and Cancel it in the King's bench, and allowed, But another of removing a Record of Nisi prius, whereof Attaint is brought in the King's Bench, but that was not allowed, but it shall be by Certiorare out of the Chancery, of the tenor of the Record, and so shall come into the Bank by M●ttim '. 772. The Marshal suffered one in Execution to go at large by commandment of the chief Justice, the Plaintiff agreeing to that, after he recame, he is in execution again, so if he put at large by Writ of Priviviledge from the Parliament, for the going at large ut supra, is not an escape, and therefore if after he recomes again, he be suffered to escape, debt lies against the Gaoler. Hil. 773. False imprisonment was brought by Foreman, the Defend ' pleaded that the Plaintiff is excommunicate, for malicious drawing of his dagger in the Churchyard, to the intent to strike A. and is indicted of that. Quaere, if the words of the statute 5. Ed. 6. cap. 4. that he shall be excommunicated ipso facto, shall be intended without sentence or proof. But it was agreed that without Conviction or outlawwry the Indictment is not sufficient for to make him to sustain the corporal punishment in the statute to loose his ear. 276. Trin. 774. The Lo. Dacres let land and a stock to Friends, who Covenanted to pay 100 pounds per an to him, and his Wife, his Heirs and Assigns during the term, and 2000 l. at a certain day for marriage money of his Daughter: The I.o. Dacres died his son within age, and he suffered more than the third part of all his land to descend; Adjudged that the Queen shall not have the 100 pounds per ann ', but the Executors of the wife, for it is no rent which should go to the heir, but remains in gross, and adjudged no Collusion to defeat Wardship, because the third part left, which satisfies. 34. & 35. H. 8. 277. 775. A Scire facias by Bosset against the Corporation of Torryton for repealing their Patent of Fairs and Markets: But holden the younger Patentee shall not have a Seire facias to repeal the ancient, but contra. And if the last Patent be of Fairs and Markets to be holden at other times than the first, it is no cause of repealer, for it is a distinct thing from that first granted. 776. After title of laps came to the Queen, one is presented by the Patron, and admitted, instituted, and inducted, per the Metrapol' Quaere if prejudice to the Queen, or if the Queen herself be holden to admit such a present. of the Patron. 777. The Bishop collated by laps, the Patron presented before induction, yet the Bishop may refuse to admit him. 778. A Ward fell to the Bishop of Durham by a tenure of him in Chivalry, who died before seizure, his Executors shall have it, and neither the King nor his Successors. 779. A Formedon in remained ' per Estoft, upon a remainder in use, limited after 27. per Just. he needs not to she the Deed of the remainder for two causes; First, because in this case a remainder may be created without Deed. Secondly, because the deed appertains to the Feoffees, and not to C●stuy que use. 780. Lessee for years demised his term to his Executors for life, the remained ' over to A, and died. The Executors entered, and made Executors and died, the Execut ' of the Execut' entered, but in remainder brought an Attempt of the profits, and it lies not, for fault of privity 2. because the Executor had not Declared to the term as Devisee or as Executor, and it shall be intended as Executor till the contrary be showed. 3. Because the remainder of a term is voided; Weston, Welsh, and Harper that good, of a Device voided of a state executed. 278. 781. The Prior of St. John's, had privilege from Rome that he should not pay Tithes of any lands, quae prop' m●nibus aut sumptibus excolunt, but the Termors they paid tithes; The Prior made a Lease for years before the dissolution; The King after the dissolution granted the reversion. Tenus that after the term expired, the Patentee shall hold discharge, if the Prop' manib' excol'. But if he make a Lease, the Termor shall pay by statute 31. H. 8. cap. 13. Undecimo Elizabethae. Mic. 782. A Corporation per the name of the Dean and Chapter Ecclesiae Cathed' sanctae & individ' Trinit' Caerlil', made a Lease by the name of Decanus Ecclesiae Cathed' sanctae Trinit. in Caerlil' & totum Capitul' de Ecclesia praedict. six were against three, that it is good notwithstanding the variance, which is not in substance of the name, vide 35. H. 6. 5. & 6. a Prior sued by name Ecclesiae sanct' Pet. where the foundation was Peter. and Paul, and holden evil. 783. A Formedon in discender, is out of the statute of Limitations, 32. H. 8. and was not in any other of the ancient statutes of Limitation. 784. Habere facias seisinam, upon Recovery in Dower, the Sheriff returned that he proffered seisin to the Demandant of the third part by meals and bounds, who refused; Notwithstanding by Harper and Dyer the entry of the Demand ' is now congeable, for the certainty is known, & alias Habere facias seisinam, never granted by any precedent. 785. The Duke of Norff. being Marshal of England, and having authority to make a Deputy, he made one Gaudy his Deputy, who was sworn in Court, etc. after Gawdy licenced a Prisoner in upon Execution, to go into Norfolk with a Keeper, for which the Plaintiff brought a Debt against Gawdy for the escape, and recovered notwithstanding he was but the under Marshal, and notwithstanding the action brought in Middlesex, supposing the escape at Shoreditch, and not in the County of Surrey where the Marshalley is. 279. 786. A Scire facias upon a Recognizance, to perform Covenants where one was to permit his tenants to have common in D. an other that he would not do any act to altar the courses of the fields in D. the Defendant said that he had permitted, etc. and that he had not altered the course, etc. and it was Ruled that this general pleading was very good. 787. Tenant for life, the remainder in tail, a stranger levied of that, as that, etc. to he in remainder in tail, who rendered to the Conusor rendering Rend, and died, and after the Proclamations passed, the tenant for life died, and the issue in tail accepted the rent, the Fine and also the acceptance of the Rent affirms the Lease, for the Causes in Stapletons' case, Comment Manwood. If tenant in tail made a Lease for years to begin after his decease, rendering rend, the acceptance here is no Bar to the issue in tail, because the Lease took not being in the life of the father, Catlyn denied it. 788. The next avoidance is granted to two, who join in a Quare impedit, the one dies, the next shall abate, Fitzh. Brief, 665. 789. William Shotholt was obliged by name of John, and an action brought upon that against William alias dict. John, the Defendant pleaded non est factum, and the matter found upon special verdict, and adjudged that the Plaintiff shall not recover upon this Verdict, but that his action aught to be against John, and the Defendant shall be estopped by the Obligation to say that William, etc. 280. 790. The Citizens of York incorporate by Richard 2. by name of the Mayor, Sheriffs, and Citizens, they now prescribed, that Wares foreign bought, and foreign sold, have been of time beyond memory, etc. seisable by the Mayor, Sheriffs and Citizens. Whereas before the time of Rich. 2. they were Mayor, Bailiffs, and Citizens. Quaere, yet it is admitted a good prescription ut supra & travers. and the veni●e facias issued to the Sheriff of the County, for the officers of the City were Citizens. 791. The Prior and Covent of Norwich made a Lease for 24. years 24 H. 8. to A. after 26. they made a new Lease to Corbet for 99 years, And in the 30. the Priory was translated into a Deanery, and now they made a new Lease to Corbet for 99 years, and that within the year of the statute of dissolution, 31. H. 8. and 1. Ed. 6. the Dean and Chapter surrendered to the King. 1. The Dean and Chapter is holden to be a body within the statute, for it is spiritual which had succession, although they are not specially mentioned, nor yet the Cathedral Church. Also the words that it shall be surrend. to the King, is intendable as well of Ed. 6. as of H. 8. Also the taking of a second Lease by Corbet is a Surrender of the first, although it be not in esse at the time as 37. H. 6.4. is, And also to the other purposes the second was voided, because it was within the year of 31. H. 8 792. In a Repleg ' the Plaintiff is nonsute, and the Defendant had return, and the Plaintiff sued a second deliverance, and is also nonsute upon that, and a return irrepreg. is to be awarded, some held without avowry, others without avowry showing the certainty, etc. to have a writ to inquire of damages, others held he should detain the Cattles till mends proffered for the damages: and in divers opinions, if he might now work the Distress, but he put them in pound overt, and if they die, he may take another Distress for the first cause. 793. In Repleg ' the Defend ' acknowl ' the taking as Bailiff of Sir Anthony Cook, as in his Frankten ' damage pheasant, the Plaintiff said that he and his Master are Coparceners, and shown how, and traversed not sans ceo that he sole Tenant of the Franktenement: And at length Issue was joined upon the Coparcenership, and not upon the entire place to the Franktenement; for but a supposal as a Declaration, etc. and that plea of Coparcen, is but in abatement of the avowry, alibi the opinion in Avowry of a Rend Charge, suppos ' the Granter seized in Fee of the place, etc. If the Plaintiff said, that the Grantor was seized in rail, and he Issue, etc. he aught to traverse absque hoc he seized in Fee. 281. 794. The Bishop of Salisbury made a Feoffement to Bullock of a house and 17 acres of wood in Bearwood (the great wood containing a thousand acres) at the election of the Feoffee and his heirs, before election Bullock died, and 5 descents after the heir would have made election, but it was adjudged against him for 3 causes. 1. Because the Feoffement is pleaded without deed, and election may not be annexed to an estate without deed, not more than a condition, covenant, licences, assent or liberty. 2. Because it is an estate which passeth by livery, and that made the thing certain which passed, and if it be incertain it is voided, for after livery there abides no election to make the Frankren' in abeyance. 3. Because election aught to be made in the life of the parties, for before election there is no property, and therefore before election it may not descend. But exception was taken for the pleading, because the Defendant pleaded virtue cujus Feoffement' his ancestor was seized in his Demean as of Fee, whereas ●e had not made election, etc. 795. A Lease upon condition that the Lessee shall not make any waist, he suffer waste in the decay of the houses, Dyer and Welsh held that the condition is broken, for the Statute of Glocest. is vastum facere, and yet permissive waft is punishable by the Statute, and (any waft) general. Quaere. 382. Hill. 796. Resolved per touts lustic. upon Stat. 5. Eliz. that if a man imports books over sea written against the supremacy, knowing the effect of them, and utters them to any Subject, that he is within the danger of of the Statute 5. Eliz. 2. That the Receivers if they in conference of them, do not allow them, they are not within. 3. If in conference they do allow of them, they are within particulars. 4. The same of them who hearing the contents affirm them to be good. 5. So also of him which conveys the books secretly to his friends, to persuade them to be of the same opinion. 6. The same of them who print and utter such books within the Realm. 7. Also if such books written within the Realm are conveyed out, and those are bought, read, and conference had upon them. 283. Pas. 797. The Arch-Bish. of Dublyn, had two Deans and Chapters, to the Sea, the one surrendered without assent of the Bishop all his possessions to the King, after the other alone confirmed a Lease made by the Bishop, and well, contra if both had been in esse. 798. A Patron granted the next and first avoidance, and the right of presentation to the same, jam vacant. ita quod liceat to the Grantee, hac unica vice tantum praesentare, the Church being voided at the time, the Grantee shall have the next avoidance, and not that, for it is a thing in action, and therefore not of an Avowson not the Avowson itself, yet the execut' shall have it, and the King might grant it in such case. 799. Cestay que use of 3 acres in several places in one County, he made a Feoffement, and a Letter of Attorney to make livery; the Attorney made livery in one in the name of all, and adjudged good. 25. H. 8. Rot. 71. But it seems if the Feoffer had been seized in Demean of one acre in which the livery was, it should be of no value, for the rest Brooke. Feoffem. 77. 800. King enfeoffed two, viz. an Alien and a Dezen, to his own use, it seems if office be found of that, the use to King of the moiety is gone, and the Queen shall be seized to her own use by the Prerogative. Bu●ler against Crouch abridge before. 267. 284. 801. Damages shall not be recovered in Dower, but in case where the husband dies seized, so Statute Marleb. cap. 1. 802. A Venire facias awarded return' Mensae Mich. it was not returned at the day, upon which the Defend, sued a venire facias with proviso return' Octab. Hill. but in the mean time the first venire facias upon the file of Mich Term with post diem; after, the second veni●e sacias was returned, and upon that a second panel, the Plaintiff pursued a Habeas Corpus, and the Jury appeared and found for him: and although that be erroneous at the Common Law, yet because of the Statute of seofail. 31. H. 8. judgement was given for Grey the Plaintiff, upon consideration of the point of misconveyance of the Process. 803. In Attain the Defendants had hearing of the Record being in the same Court, upon which the Plaintiff assigned the false oath, upon which they were at Issue, and now the record was removed into the King's Bench, by Writ of Error, yet it seems they may proceed. 285. Trin. 804. A general pardon which discharged suing of liveries and intrusions, it is available although office was not found at the time of the pardon. 805. A Writ of Scandal is Magnatum lies not, for bringing an action which imports slander, as a forger of false deeds, especially the Writ hanging indiscussed. 806. An Indictment of an assault and Battery, in one John parish Priest without his surname is good as in quendam ignot ' in an Indictment of murder, and if after he be vexed upon an Indictment in which his very name is put, he may aver it is but one and the same Assault. 807. Humphrey de Bohem Earl of Essex who held Manors of the King by service to be the Constable of England, who had issue two daughters and died, the daughters took husbands, and the husband of the youngest is made King, they made partition. Here were three questions. 1. If it was a good tenure reserved, and it was holden that it was grand Serjeanty. 2. It was holden that the daughter before marriage might exercise the office by deputy, and after marriage it shall be exercised by the husband of the eldest only. 3. By the unity of the Seignory, and parcel of the tenancy in the King, the services are not suspended, but the entire shall issue out of the residue because it is the Act of the law to be King. As where a man who had two daughters held of the eldest by Homage, and died, and after Partition the youngest shall hold in Homage of her sister of her part: so of every other service not apportionable. And after King H. 8. refused the service supra, because of the great fee, and because very high and dangerous, that was the Claim of the Duke of Buckingham. 808. The Patentee of the Herbage of a Forest, may maintain a trespass, or distrain Damage pheasant, and per 2. Justices he may enclose. But he shall not have an action for the trees, nor of the profits or fruit of them. 809. Upon an exigent after Judgement, the Defendant may not appear gratis, and pled release of Executions, and have a Scire facias, etc. But upon a Cepi or Redd ditie. But he shall have an Audita Querela being at large. But at the Exigent to answer, he may appear gratis. 286. 810. A Pardon by the King of intrusion is not good to the he●re without exitus & proficua. 811. In an Enjectione firmae, the Plaintiff declared of a Lease made to him the 8. day of May, to have and to hold for 21. years, than next coming, by virtue of which after, viz. the same 8. day he entered; And it seems very well, and that he had not entered as Disseisor before the Lease began, for than is immediately after the delivery, and it shall not be intended, before the date; and the Postea declares, he entered not before the Lease made. Duodecimo Elizabethae. Hili. 812. At the day of Return of the Habeas Corp ' or distring ' the Jury and Defendant appeared, and although the Writ be not returned, if the Plaintiff make default, he shall be nonsuite, for the parties had day by the Roll. But doubted in the King's Bench. 813. The stat. 33. H. 8. for indictment and trial of Treasons, confessed before 3. of the Privy Counsel to be in a Foreign Country, is repealed per 1. & 2. Ph. & Ma. And now that the Rebels than in the North shall be indicted in the County where the offence is, and the indictment removed before the King in the Bench, or the Justices of Oyer in Midlesex, and there shall come of the Country where the Indictment was, or of the Freeholders of the County where the Indictment was. 287. 814. Tenant in Capite conveyed by act executed for natural affection the entire land to his uncle for preferment, or to his son, his brother, or other collateral cousin; And upon a great assembly it was holden by 6. that it is not within 33. which giveth to the King Wardship and primer seisin of the 3. part. But otherwise if it had been to Childrens children in a right line: But 6. others held contrary in both. 815. But Dyer held that both were within the statute, and that it is not to be construed or thought that a man should be more beneficial to one remote, than to a more nigh Kindred in blood; And a gift in Franck-mariage may be as well to the Cousin as to the Daughter. 2. sid. 6. Brok. Testa. and holden by the Justices, that although the state executed be to a stranger, that by the generality of the 3. article of the 34. of explanation, the Wardship and primer seisin of the 3. part is saved to the King. 816. A Writ of Privilege for Office is with a flat Supersedeas, and a Procedend ' lies not, if he may pursue where he is attendant; Contrary of he which is privileged, because he had a suit depending in a higher Court, as Plaintiff, or Defendant. 817. Indictments and Outlawries of Treason against Rebels, which fled into Scotland, is very good per stat. 26. H. 8. cap. 13. and 6. Ed. 6. cap. 11. And as well for Treasons mentioned within the 25. Ed. 3. as treasons made by the said statutes. 818. The Bishop of St. David's by Licence founded a College of 13. Canon's secular, and one Chantry, and reserved the office & vicem Decani to himself. And assigned the Benefice of Lannarth, of which he was Patron and Ordinary, for the living of one of the Cannons, and made a Apprehend of that: And after by Licence of the King, without licence of the College, he translated the Benefice to the Deanery and died, and the King presented and restored to the Successors, who had always enjoyed it as an Impropriation, parcel of the possession of the Bishops. And now upon stat. 1. Ed. 6. the Benefice shall be to the King or Bishop, and found that the Bishop is seized in the right of Bishopric, and not of the Deanery, upon issue joined upon that. Notwithstanding by the Civilians his translation, especially to his own use, is voided by the Civil Law. As also that there wants sufficient words to make the Bishop Deane. Pas. 288. 819. A Bill of Perjury may be sued in the Chancery, for perjury committed there; but it shall be in Latin, and the issue shall be tried in the King's Bench, but the Defendant shall not be sworn to his plea of non Culpable, nor examined upon interogatories. But if before the statute 5. Eliz. 9 this Court had authority to examine perjury, it shall be now, as it was accustomed by the last proviso of the statute, which reserves the Jurisdict' also of the Star-chamber. 820. If one who writ the Will of a sick man, and he insert a clause without Warrant, after the Testator is speechless, it is not forgery of a Will within 5. Eliz. 821. Bygot an Attorney of the Common Bank sued one per Attachment of privilege, he shall found pledges ad prosequend ', as a stranger shall do, who sues an Attorney or Clerk thete by Bill. And otherwise it is an Error as was adjudged. 822. The King let a Manor to Orme excepting the Courts and perquisites, after he Granted the Reversion to a stranger with the perquisites and Courts, the Grantee made another Lease to begin after the first excepting Courts and perquisites, and holden that the exception is good in the Lease of the King, but not of the Grantee, and therefore the Grantee of the Reversion during the first term may Grant Copies, but when the second Lease gins he may not, but the Lessee himself. 289. 823. Jura Regalia were granted to the Bishop of Durham, in the Time of Ed. 2. with escheats for Treason within a certain Precinct. After the stat. 25. Ed. 3. gave all Escheats for Treason to the King. Also the statute 26. H. 8. that he which commits treason, shall forfeit to the King his Heirs and Successors, all their lands and tenements, in which they have any estate of inheritance. But as to the stat. 25. pe●●touts Just. that is but an explanation of what was forfeit by the Common Law, therefore notwithstanding that, the Grant to the Bishop remains good, but as to the stat' 26. H. 8. 4. Justices held it destroyed the state of the Bishop, yet five held contrary, because there is a saving in the said act of rights to strangers. But agreed that lands entailed, and lands in the right of the Church: which were not to be forfeit at the time of the Grant, supra, but now by the stat. 26 H. 8. they shall be forfeit to the King. And so is the forfeiture for new treasons made by statutes after the Grant, and it is there holden that the stat. 26. H. 8. when as to treasons at the Common Law, is not repealed by 1. Ed. 6. & 1. M. 824. Her Curiam, Ravishment of Ward shall be brought where the wrong was committed, and not in the other County whither the Defendant had carried the Ward. But by the statute West. 1. cap. 35. a Writ shall issue to the Sheriff where the body is, to have the body in Court at a day. 825. Signior Paramont avowed for services of his tenant, the Plaintiff who is a termor said, that he held of the tenant for ten years, whereas he had 40. and prayed aid, etc. that shall not conclude him of the rest of the term after 10. years expired; for in the aid prayer the number of the years is not material nor traversable; Also the services, and not the land, were in demand, therefore the estoppel is not for the land per Curiam. Therefore the Lessor shall have advantage of that. 826. The Bishop of Lond ' being high Commissioner, was translated to York, yet the authority remains by 1. Ed. 6. cap. 2. implicitly. 290. 827. Husband and wife suffer a Recovery in a Writ of right in London of a tenement there (which by the Custom binds as a fine at the Common Law) This was to the use of the Recoverers, until they had made a Lease for 40. years, and after to the use of the husband and wife, and the heirs of the wife, the Lease is made, the husband died, the wife shall not avoid the Lease by the limitation to the Recoverers until, etc. But shall hold under the Recovery, so that the term precedes her estate. But Quaere what remedy she hath for the rend reserved, for the wife came in, en le post, and the rent was reserved before her use created. 291. 828. A Formedon in Remainder by Fitzwilliams. 1. The tenant for the moycie vouched B. as son and heir of A. son and heir of C. It is no good Counterplea to the Vouchee, that C. the Grandfather of the Vouchee, nor any of the Ancestors of the Vouchee whose heir etc. never had nothing except jointly with M. who survived, with averrement that the Grandfather aliened not, etc. without also Counterpleading the seize of the Vouchee himself, except he be Vouched as within age, for that the Plea aught to abide, adjudged. 2. And as to the other moiety, except the moiety of 7 houses (some held that evil forspris out of a moiety for a forspris goes to the entire) he pleaded a Fine with Proclamation, and five years incurred in Bar, the Plaintiff counterplead that the parties to the Fine nothing had, etc. that may not be verified by an use in a party to the Fine, for that is a departure, and it aught to have been pleaded first, for it is well levied by Cestuy que use after the Statute Rich. 3.3. As to that in the forspris, he pleaded joint-tenancy by Fine, which shall abate the Writ presently except the Demandant can that confess and avoid: but by all the justices, jomtenancy, of parcel shall not abate all the Writ, although the Demandant be of an entire thing, as of a Manor, but otherwise of nontenure, because the Writ aught to have a forspris there: Contra of jointenancy, and holden that because jointenancy was pleaded after voucher and Bar, it is preposterous and shall not be regarded: And the last seizin in a Formedon or in a Writ of Right shall not abate the Writ, as in a Mord. Ayell, etc. which are Ancestrall, possessary, for in a Formedon the gift, and not the seizin of the ancestor is the title, and it is not within the statute of limitation 32. H. 8. to be brought of seizin within 50 years, idco, etc. And after judgement that the Voucher shall stand, and to recover seizin of that whereof the Fine is pleaded, and before the jointenancy discussed, the Tenant prayed that he might remove the Record upon a Writ of Error, but the Court would not departed with the Record till the entire matter was discussed, for than they should proceed without warrant: also the Writ of Error is, quod si judicium inde redditum sit, & inde imports the entire demand. 292. 829. A Coppyholder in fee had Issue two daughters by several ventures, and died, the daughters entered, and the eldest died without admittance, yet holden possess. fratris, which shall make heir collateral here inherit, so the custody committed to a Guardian during the minority, although the eldest son died before admittance, it is possess. fratris. 830. The King presented (ratione temporal. don Eveschery) a Prebend, and after repealed his Presentment, notwithstanding the Clerk is instituted and installed by the Dean and Chapter, guardians of the Spiritualties, during the vacation: after the King reciting quod fuit canonice institut. ratified the Presentment; after the Bishop is created, and the Incumbent dies, and holden that the King shall have the presentation now, for by reason of his repeal the Church was not full before, than if the presentment is voided, the Confirmation is also voided; but a common person may not revoke his presentment. Quaere in the case of the King supra, if it needs to be averred that the Guardians of the spiritualties had notice of the Repeal. 831. Upon a Diem Clausit extremum, tenure of the King is found, but by what services they are ignorant, upon that a melius inquir. issued: upon that it was found that the tenure was of a subject, the opinion of the Court was, that the first office needs not to be traversed, but it is voided by the fence of the Statute 2. and 3. Ed. 6. cap. 8. and the melius inquirend. is in the nature of the first Diem Clausit Extremum. 832. The parish of Hurst extended into two Counties, viz. into Berkshire and Wiltshire, one let his close called Calais in the parish of Hurst, in the County of Berkshire, where the close was in the County of Wiltshire, yet adjudged a good Lease: and it is not like where a men let his house in the Parish of Saint Buttolph's without Algate, late in the tenure of R. where he had no such house there, but in Saint Buttolph's without Aldersgate, the Lease is there voided, for they are two distinct Parishes, and the house had no other name but by the Parish which is mistaken. Tertio decimo Elisabethae. 293. Mich. 833. A Patron presented a mere Lay person, the Ordinary refused him, he needs not to give notice to the Patron, for it is notorious, he is not capable, but if he refuse because of criminosity or inability, he behoves to give notice: But if the Lay man be admitted, instituted and inducted, that is a plenarty, and the Church is full, for he is Incumbent in facto, and behoveth to be an adnullation per sentence, before a new Presentment, and of that the Ordinary shall give notice as of a resignation, and other avoidances, where the Bishop is privy or party. Adjudged also that Bastardy and perjury are causes of refusal, but exception was taken to the pleading, because the Incumbent said actio non before he shown who was possessor, for otherwise per Stat. 35. Ed. 3. he is not able to pled in Bar. 294. 834. Goodman gave, granted, and rendered to Ed. 6. totum Praebend. suam de Cory, & terras, & possessiones, & omnem authoritat' & potestat' etc. dict. Praebend' spectant. etc. and over for the interest and right of the Prebend, ut decet subjicio & submitto, etc. Harper & Weston held it was a resignat. and so other justices: but the Civilians held that the resignation aught to be by words renunciare, cedere, or dimittere, and that resignare is not an apt word, Dyer contra, but Harper and Weston held at the first, that the King although supreme he may not take a resignation, without notice given to the Patron, for so it were a wrong to the Patron, si, etc. yet after judgement was given with their assent according. 835. The Commissary of the Bishop of London committed the administrat' per poll, and gave oath to the Administrat. and made entry of the same in his Register, the Administrat. sold the goods and died, and a new Administrat. to whom was committed by letters of Administrat' and he sued for the goods, and issue joined, si Epifc. Lond. commisit Administrat. etc. found non commisit, so that for default or pleading the matter came not in question, it was doubted if the committing per word is a sufficient warrant. 295. 836. In debt upon an Obligation the Defendant pleaded the conditions performed, and upon a certain point they are at Issue, and before trial knowing the verdict would go against him, he conveyed his lands to others upon condition of payment of 20 pounds, etc. and took the profits continually, and the Plaintiff sued an Elegit to have the moiety of that land, and the Sheriff returned that he and the jury upon finding this are in doubt, if the land shall be extended, and prayed the discretion of the justices, vide there more cases and Statutes to prove it liable. 837. A Capias ad satisfac. upon testatum, is returned non est inventus, upon that an Exigent issued into a foreign County: per opin.. it is an error, for it aught to have resorted to the first County, and aught to have another Capias returnable there, and upon that an Exigent. 838. Two Closes adjoined, the one being by prescription bound to fence, the owner of one, purchased the other, and suffered the hedges to decay, and died, having two daughters his heirs, who made Partition. Quaere if the prescription for the enclosure be revived 11. H. 7.25. the like of a Gutter. 296. 839. A Merchant went over the Sea to be free from the Laws and government of the Realm, and not for Merchandise, and that without licence, and by the greater opinion he shall not be punished without a prohibition, or ne exeas regnum, vide now Stat. 13. Eliz. 840. Upon an indictment of murder, Stanley was found Culpable, and after the wife of him who was killed, entered an appeal. the Defendant pleaded that she had taken another husband at Exeter, so depend' per an. After it was removed by Certiorare, and the prisoner demand. quamobrem he shall not have Judgement of death, he pleaded that there was an appeal hanging, but upon no such Record pleaded by the King's Attorney, it appeared the suit was discontinued, and after the woman was nonsute, upon Judgement was given that he shall be hanged. 841. A Father in consideration of the Marriage of his youngest son, promised to the friends of the woman, by word, that after his death, and the death of his wife, the son should have the land in Fee, and no use was altered by this bore promise, and so adjudged. 842. A man conveyed Capite land to his Bastard son, by act executed, and died, office found, but not that he is a Bastard, nor son to the donor. 1. It was holden that the third part shall not be in ward, for a Bastard is not within 32. H. 8. for it shall be the lawful generation. 2. But the King's Attorney may supply the defect of the office by averment, that he is son of the Donor; for it is but a supplement, and not repugnant. 297. 842. A man Condemned in the Exchequer for a debt to the Queen was committed to the Fleet, and after was condemned in the King's Bench upon a Bill in Debt, at the suit of a subject, and he was brought into the same Bank per Corpus cum causa, and by them is committed again to the Fleet, as also for the Debt of the subject. The Gaoler per the commandment of the Treasurer and Chancellor of the Exchequer, suffered the prisoner to go into his Country, with a Keeper, for to collect and get his Debts to pay the Queen; The subject brought a Debt upon the escape, but holden that it lies not, for the King's Bench had no authority to commit him to the Fleet, for the marshalsea is their proper prison, and so the Prisoner was never in Execution for the party, for, etc. But if he had, yet the Execution for the subject gins not till the Queen be satisfied; For she may not have a subject a compan' in the interest of the body of any; But if he had been in Execution, no Commandment although of the Queen herself, without Writ, is sufficient warrant to discharge the Keeper per touts Justices. 298. 843. Putnam made a Lease to his youngest brother, who acknowledged a statute, with Defeasance of performing the Covenants, the Conusee sued Execution, and the Lessee sued an Audita Querela, shewin the Defeasance, and that he had performed all the Covenants, as he could show, upon that Process issued, and the Conusee shown the Indenture, and the breach of one, and prayed that he might proceed to the Execution, and upon that they are at Issue, which is found for the Conusee. And it was alleged in arrest of Judgement, that here is no sufficient Declaration by the Plaintiff in the Audita querela, and an insufficient Declaration is not aided by the statute 32. of Jeofailes. But after Judgement was given that the Conusee may proceed to Execution. Hill. 854. The particular tenant writ to the Grantee of the Reversion by Fine, before the ingrossng of the Fine, and after the Queen's silver was paid; que le Conusor mesne nayent that he is joyous to have so good an heir, and holden a good Attournment. 845. If the Subjects of the King levy War, they are not enemies, but traitors and Rebels: He which is over sea at the time of the Rebellion, and after there succours a rebel who did fly thither, and knowing it, is a Traitor with 25. Ed. 3. per 4. Justices against 4. 846. The Conspiracy of Story, he being beyond sea, he practised with a Foreign Prince to invade the Realm. Also he practised the destruction of the Queen. And it was holden that both are Treason, and tryable by 35. H. 8. which is yet in force obstant' the repeal, M. and the Clause. 1. & 2. P. & M. that trials of Treason shall be according to the Common Law, and not otherwise. 299. 847. Tenant in Capite made a Feoffment to the use of his Feoffees and their heirs, till the Feoffor pay a 100 pounds, to him or his heirs, and than to the use of the Feoffor and his heirs, the Feoffee died, his heir within age, the 100 pounds is paid to the heir, and office found, and per Monst. de droit, the hands of the King amoved, and of the mean issues after the payment, And holden although this heir was in ward, it shall now be divested, and the King shall not have the value of his Marriage upon tender of marriage to him, for all mean Contingents are removed, which hap in the mean time, so upon a Condition performed. Pas. 848. The Executors of the Conusee of a statute sued Execution, upon which Writ, the death of the Conusor is returned, and also an inquisition of the Extent of the Manor of B. of which he was seized the day of the Recognizance, and holden that the Executors, or the Executor of this Executor, if he received no profit of B. he may have a reextent, although liberate executed, for it behoves that the estate be found, for he not being dead, as is returned, no estate is liable to the Execution but Fee, and not Tail, nor for life. 849. Evileigh made title in a Quare impedit by the Grant of the next presentation by one who had two parts of the Advowson appendent to the Manor of D. and a stranger which had the 3. append' to the Manor of S. he needs not to show, how the Torns of the Grantor begun, because being appendent it is apparent it is by prescription, and so adjudged. The Court was that the avouson pertained to the Manor of the Grantor ad praesentand ' 2. vicibus, & quoth advocat' pertin ' to the Manner of a stranger to present the third time. Dyer, it should have been that he was seized of the parts of an Advowson; and the other of the other part of the advowson, for it is but one advowson and one Church. Notwithstanding by him per stat. 36. Ed. 3. cap. 15. the Court having substance, it shall not abate for form. 850. Tenant in Capite of a Manor in Chivalry before the stat. of quiaem ptores, made a feoffment of parcel of the Demesns, without saying any more, the Feoffee made a Feoffment over, to hold of his Feoffor per 10. sh. for all services, this land is not holden in Capite clearly, and the first Mesnalty is holden of the Feoffor as of his Manor by Knight's service. 851. Debt for Damages recovered, the Defendant said, that the Plaintiff had an Elegit served, but spoke not of the return. And it seems good, for his election of the Execution is of record. 300. 852. Issue was joined quod T. West Miles dominus Delaware non dimisit, in verity he is now Dominus, but at the time of the demise was but a Knight, yet it seems by 3. Justices that the dignity is parcel of the Issue, so that it may not be found with him who pleaded his Lease. 853. Suggestion to have a Writ to the Coroners aught to be a principal Challenge, and not for favour, and in Ejectione firmae, it is no principal Challenge, that the Sheriff is Cousin to the Lessor, or that he is Master of the Bailiff who made Conusance in Replegare, 9 H. 7.22. 854. The Advowson of an Hospital of St. Katherine is append' to the Manor of B. the Hospital being voided, the Queen Granted Manerium ac omnes advocat' cum pertinent ' the present presentation shall not pass. 855. In Debt upon an Obligation, the Defendant after hearing of the same, imparted, and now pleaded tender at the day and place, and none there to receive, and now ready, and said not at all times, and a good Plea, for he had excused the Forfeiture by the Plea, and he shall not be estopped by the imparlance to pled now ready. 856. Story Indicted of Treason Committed at Antwerp, said upon his arraignment, that he is a subject of the King of Spain, and would not answer to the Indictment; But because he was openly known to be born in England, because he would not pled otherwise, Judgement of Truason was given against him. Quaere by Callyne, if a Spaniard commit Treason over the sea against out King, if he came into our Realm, if he shall be indicted and arraigned of that. 857. A Feoffment to the use of himself, and after his decease to the use of Alice, who he intended to marry, till the Issue which he shall beget of her be of the age of 21. years, and after the son comes to that age, than to the use of his said wife during her widowhood, the husband died without issue, adjudged that the woman shall return, for there the estate is good, although he never have a son. And if a Feoffinent be made to one and his heirs until I. S. pay a 100 pounds, if I. S. dies, the Feofee shall hold in perpetuum. Trin. 302. 858. Plus de cas Cheney devant fol. 201. Now the vendees of Chency being duly Barred in a Writ of Entry sur disseisin, and in Attaint, they brought a Writ of Right, where Paramour the tenant chose trial by Battle, and the Lifts of the Champions being all prepared, the Plaintiff being remanded was nonsure, and so final judgement given against him. 859. Elisabeth wife of Vyvion had two sons born in espousals, both named John, the eldest being reputed by the father to be begotten by one Mayo, and by him and others called John Mayo, the wife of Vyvion died, after the Earl of Devon died without issue. Office found that John Vyvion son of Elisabeth was coheir to the Earl, upon that John the youngest sued livery with the other coheirs, and held Courts, and recovered Rents, and after John the eldest, released, gave and granted all his right, interest and demand, in all the Manors, etc. to John the youngest, and after that the Tenants paid their rents to John the youngest as before; It was holden that this John who is heir indeed, shall be intended so by office, and that neither the common reputation, nor the meaning of the Inquest shall be otherwise averred. 2. Also that the suing of Livery, holding of Courts, nor yet receipt of the Rents, had gained him any possession, either per wrong or by right, upon the release may inure. If words of gift and grant shall pass the reversion, yet that payment as before by the Tenants not knowing of the Grant, is no Attournment. Ploughed. would have the gift and Grant mure pro fraterno amore to raise an use to the youngest. Also he moved, that John the youngest by name of John Vyvion had levied a Fine, per which the eldest shall be intended Conusor and estopped. Quaere of those to the purpose. 860. Forgery of a Testament by which any Lease for years is devised, is within 5. Eliz. by the word writing, for there is not express mention of a Testament, but of a will concerning Franktenement in the statute. Quaere if perjury in Court Christian about probare be punishable in the Star Chamber per the proviso of the Act of 5. Eliz. 303. 861. The Coppyhold of an Idiot is not within the survey of the Court of Wards, but it shall be ordered in the Court of the Lord of the Manor as to that. 862. Office found by Commission of Mandamus out of the Church at Westminster of Lands in Chester is not good, but the Commission shall be out of the Chancery there, and of Lands in England and Ireland, there aught to be several liveries, and several Seals. Quarto decimo Elisabethae Mich. 863. The Office of the Aulneger, viz. ulnator pannorum, may not be granted by the King without warrant of the Treasurer. Quaere if the King put in a clause of non obstant. Stat. vide the Statutes of that matter 17. Rich. 2.5. 1. H. 4.13. 4. H. 4.18. 31. H. 6.5. 17. Ed. 4.5. 9 H. 4.2. 2. Ed. 3.15. 27. Ed. 3.4. 31. H. 8.15. 304. 864. A man devised two parts of his Land to his four youngest sons in tail, and if the infant in the belly of his mother be a son, that he shall have the fifth part, as coheir with the fourth, and if the fifth die without issue, that the two parts shall revert, the father died, the son is born, and after he and three other of the said sons died, by Saunder, Dyer, Bendlo and Mead, the infant in the belly of the mother shall take nothing, because he was not capable when the Devise took effect, Whiddon contra, and holden that none of the two parts shall revert till the five sons are dead without issue. 865. Grevill pleaded a forged acquittance in Bar of a stature of 600 pound, for payment of 300 pound, after in the Star Chamber he is convict of the Forgery, damages double the penalty, and not of the 300 pound shall be assessed by Stat. 5. Eliz. for the Plaintiff aught to have recovered the penalty, and by the release he is so much damnified. 866. In an Ejectione firmae of the Lease of a rectory verdict passed for the Plaintiff. And in arrest of judgement it was alleged it was not shown that the person was in life; but because that was averred by implieation viz. and scisit ' yet it is in Dominico in the Court, the Plaintiff had judgement. 867. Tenant in made a Lease for years rendering 20 shillings rend, and after released 19 shillings and died, and the issue accepted, 12 d. if he may distrain for the 19 shillings more, was the question, Sanders and Catlyn held he might not, Dyer and Whiddon contra, but clear if the Lessor had granted after the lease, that the Lessee shall hold without impeachment of waist, that it had not been good. 868. The next avoidance is granted to 3 habend' iis & uni corum conjunci●m & divisim, the first presents the third, who is admitted, instituted, and inducted, and adjudged well, but if the Bishop had refused his sole presentment, peradventure he might have failed in his Quare impedit, for the severance of the habend. supra is voided in law as it seems. Simile 21. Ed. 4.18. 869. Tenart of the King in soccage in Capite made a feoffement and retook to him and his wife for life, the remainder to his son and heir, and the husband and wife died, the son of full age, Quaere if he shall sue livery by the first branch of 32. 870. An indictment was that the defend' ex malitia praecogitat' felonice percussit A. whereof the eighth day after he died, and there were no words Murdravit, holden per Curiam that but homicide which was pardoned per the general pardon. 305. 871 Ejectione firmae and counted of the Demise of 300 acres of land per nomen Manerii, habend. Manner. & catera praemis. virtute cuius in Manerium & caetera praemis. intravit, etc. It had been better to say in the said three hundred Acres, he entered, yet very good, and the word Manerium is surplusage. 872. A man gives to me all his trees, and after he himself cuts and I them carry, and he brings a Trespass, I may pled as to the cutting none culpable, and justify the residue. Quaere if the first plea goes not to all. 873. Luker Merchant of Ireland was obliged in eighty pounds to one D. of London, the Obligation was made in Ireland, but all times remained in London. D. died intestate in the County of Bedford in England, the Bishop in Ireland committed the Administration to the son of D. and he released. The Archbishop of Canterbury committed the Administration in England to the wife of D. who had the Obligation, supra, and recovered upon that, for the Administration shall be committed in the place per the Ordinary, where the Obligation is at the death of the intestate, and not where the Debt began, for it is not local. 874. Trespass by the husband and wife of the Lands of the wife whilst she was sole, and the writ was add grave damnum ipsorum, and the Count was with continuando usque diem brevis of depasture. Quaere. 875. A Writ issued to the Bishop upon Issue in Dower, to certify if ever accoupled in lawful matrimony, he certified the espousals to be of the age of twelve years of the husband, and 16 of the wife, and the Bishop was amerced for the return, for he aught to return the lawfulness of the marriage which is triable by the Spiritual judge. 306. 876. A man pleaded never Executor, and gave evidence of Administraton by Letters of Administration, and well, yet he might have pleaded that in abatement of the Writ, which named him Executor. Quaere. 877. Puttenham condemned per default in a Scire facias in the Chancery upon a Recognizance there, the Court commanded the Guardian of the Fleet where Puttenham was in ward, for other causes, for him to detain in Execution for the Condemn. supra. the Guardian took Recognizance of Puttenham to save him harmless against every one, and suffered him to escape, the Conusee sued the Guardian for the escape, who imparled and sued Puttenham upon his Recognizance: Issue non dampnif. The justices held he was not damnified for three Causes, 1. Because the Capias hes not for Execution upon Recogniz. because not in the Original, but he shall have a Fieri facias or an Elegit. 2. Because Puttenham came not in upon Habeas Corpus, nor was recorded by the Court, nor opposed if he be of the same person before he was awarded into Execution. 3. Also it was not add petic. petent. whereas peradventure he would choose another manner of Execution. It was agreed if the Plaintiff had brought the Original of Debt that he might have an Execution by Capias, but he shall not have an Elegit-there, but of Lands which the Conusor had the day of the judgement given, whereas in a Scire facias, he shall have those things which he had die Recognit. etc. it was admitted supra, and by the Original brought against the Guardian, and imparlance that he was damnified. 878. It was sound upon a Melius inquirendo tenure of the Queen as of the Manor, etc. but by what service, they were ignorant, it shall be intended service in Chivalry as of a Manor, for stat. 2. Ed. 6. cap. 8. excludes only tenure in Capite per such office. 879. The Queen granted the Ward of the body of A. who died at full age, and no tender of Marriage made, the land shall not be returned in the Court of Wards upon the prayer of the party, for it was his folly. 307. 880. Fines lost a Hawk, and I. S. sound it, and sold it to A. and he gave it to Sir John Spencer, who fold that over, and though he knew the Hawk, he is not chargeable with an action upon the case for Trover; And the Plaintiff aught to count expressly that he is tame and reclaimed, But by Southcote, ●he words that he was possessed, ut de Bonis propriis, import so much. Hill. 881. A Statute was acknowledged 26. day of May, the Conusee made release bearing date the 25. day of all demands usque confectionem present ', and delivered the same first upon the 27. day, the statute is discharged, for the day of the delivery is the day of the making. But if the Words had been usque datum present ' the statute had not been discharged. 308. 882. In action upon the case against one in the King's Bench in the Custody of the marshalsea, who pleaded to the ●ssue, which is found against him to the damage of 45 ●pound, after he confessed himself debtor to the Queen in the Exchequer; upon which he was committed in Execution to the Fleer, and now Judgement i● given in the King's Bench, and by Habeas Corp ', the 〈◊〉 was brought into the King's Bench, and the Worden of the Fleeted scharged, and the Prisoner committed for both Executions to the marshalsea. The Excheq' Writ to the Marshal, ad Habend' Corp ' by Prerogat'. Quaere, if he be bound to obey. 883. A Termor of a house for 40. years devised the house to I. S. without limiting any estate, the Devisee shall have the entire term, for he may not have for life, nor at will, nor for lesser term of years, per opin' Cur '. 884. Lessee for 99 years, made a Lease for 40. years, rendering rend, the Lessee for 40. years made a Lease for 15. years, rendering rend, the Lessee also for 40. years, granted, all which is in him to the Less for 99 years, the Lessee for 15. years would not atturne, nor pay rend. Quaere Broughtons Case. Pas. 885. A woman seized of Land by descent from her father, suffered a recovery 6. H. 8. to her own use in Fee, and after by Indenture between her and A, willed and granted that after marriage (which she intended with the said A.) that the recoverers shall be seized to the use of her, and of A, and their heirs, the marriage took effect, and the Feoffees executed estate according; After the husband and wife by Indenture made between them and the next heir of the part of the mother of the feme reentring, that the land was inheritable by her, on the part of her father, and that she had no issue of her body; and that she was deceived in the first Judgement, for she intended always that for default of issue of her body, that the heirs of the part of the father should have the land, upon the husband and wife concluded and agreed, to be seized to the use of themselves in special tail, the remander to the right heirs of the wife, and the husband covenant if the wife died without issue, that he would execute estate to himself for life, the remainder to the use of the heirs of the wife, and the wife died without issue the 27. is made, the husband died without executing an estate, and yet holden that the heir of the wife shall have the land, and not the heir of the husband, and that per omnes Just. For the Correction of the limitation of the use, in which the wife was deceived, was lawful; And the consideration in the last Indenture of the husband and wife, was sufficient to raise an use of the entire land to the heirs of the wife, because the land moved from the feme, and it was for advancement of the ●l●ne from whence the land descended. 886. Cobham Indicted of Piracy stood mute, and had judgement of pain, fort, and dures, the Parliament pardoned all contempts, pains and Executions, etc. and excepted Piracies. If he may be newly indicted of the same Piracy; there were divers opinions of that, for it is no Judgement for the Piracy, but for the Contempt, But holden that he may be indicted of another Piracy committed at the same time, or before, so that it is no Conviction. 887. The Lo. Paget levied a Fine as that. etc. of land holden in Capite in Chivalry, in which rend●e● to himself for life, the remainder to his eldest son, and his heir Males, remainder to the youngest and his heir males, the remainder to the right liars of the Lo. Paget, and died; The eldest son entered, and at full age sued livery of the third part upon 32. because a disposition for advancement or his children, and after that, he paid the value of the 3. part in possession, and for the remainders to the right heirs sued livery, as he who had a remainder by descent from his father, and paid the value of the Moiety of the Remained in Fee, according to the usual rate, after he had issue a daughter, and died without issue male, the daughter in Guard for the remainder to the right heirs; the second brother entered for his remainder ●n tail, the daughter died without issue, the youngest brother being he ●heir. Plowden it seems he aught not to sue livery of the 3. part, as the eldest son did, because the statute is satisfied for livery for the injury for fault of Wardship, and the statute extends not when there is many issues advanced on after another, that every one aught to sue livery, one after another, but once for all: Quaere for they Compounded as to that point, and as to the remainder to the right heirs, the youngest brother sued livery, for though he took as heir to his father, for which his eldest brother had sued Livery, and not as heir to his Niece, for such a remainder may not be possess. fratris, for default of possession, yet because the King's tenant is dead, and another in by descent, the Queen shall have her Duty, adjudge vide 40. Ed. 3 9 Provost de Beverleys' Case, and 15. Ed. 4.10. Skreens' Case. 309. 888. Winter's Case, a Lease of three Manors, rendering for one 6. pounds, for another 5. pounds, for the third 10. pounds, with Condition of reentry for nonpayment, the Lessor granted the reversion of one Message, and the Lessee atturned, after the Lessor bargained and sold the Reversion of all, and the Lessee atturned, and Ren●●n one Manor is behind, the Grantee may not enter. A three questions were here, 1. If they are several rents, and three held they were, but Dyer contra; because the reversion is entire, and the rend accessary. 2. If the Bargainee of the reversion be Grantee within star. 32. H. 8. to take advantage of a Condition, And they held all but Mounson that he is. 3. If the Bargainee of parcel of the reversion shall have benefit of the Condition, and upon that, adjudged not; And holden that the reversion within 32. aught to be expectant, upon a terme●● Franktenement, and not upon tail; And also a Grantee of the entire estate in Reversion as was in the Lessor himself. vide Kidwells Case in the pleading of it. 310. 889. A Reversion upon a term is granted to the use of the Grantor for life; after his disease to the use of his Executors and Assigns, for term of 21. years, the remainder over in tail, the Grantor is attaint of Treason, and died intestate, and without assignment, and holden that the Queen shall have the term as forfeit, for it was an Interest in the Grantor, and may well stand in himself in expectance, notwithstanding his estate for life, and if the Executors shall take by it, they have it not as Purchasers to their own use, but shall have it as Assets'. 890. Three were obliged per words Obligamus nos & utrumque nostrum per se & pro toto, & in solido, two of them went, sued and pleaded non est factum, it was found against them, and in arrest of Judgement, it was said, that one or all shall be sued, and not two, but it appeared not to the Court, by the Roll, which was quod querens protulit script' praedict' quod debit. etc. witness that three were obliged, upon that Judgement was given for the Plaintiff. 891. Keite devised Gavelkind land to Harrison in writing, and after revoked his Will by word in that point, and adjudged a good revocation. And where Harrison was hanged for the Murder of Keite and his son had entered by the Custom of Gavelkind, viz. the father to the bough, the son to the plough, this entry was not lawful. 311. 892. In a Mortdancest ' if tenant of the land, or tenant by the Warranty pled Bar, viz. matter of Record, Release, Collateral warranty, etc. and it pass against the tenant, it is peremptory, But if he pleads in abatement of the Writ or Vourcher, which is Counterplead, and found against him, there the 3. points shall be over inquired, viz. if the ancestor died seized, if the Demandant is next heir, and if the ancestor died within 50 years, and those aught also to be found for the Demandant, otherwise he shall not recover, and it seems if issue be joined on one of the three points, and found against the Tenant, that yet the two others shall be inquired 9 Assi, 3 accord, though 33. Ed. 3. & 27. H. 8. the opin. of Fitzh. be contrary, and that the others shall be holden not denied, and that he is Barred. But that is not so, because he said not quod assisa non. 212. 893 A man bargained and sold a Manor with an Advowson append ' in Fee, to have to the use of the Bargainee and his heirs in such manner as after in these indentures is covenant' and covenanted to suffer a recovery, to the use of the Indenture rendering Rend, to the Bargainer and his heirs, with distress, & nomine poenae, and moreover for further security, it was concluded that the Bargainer and Bargainee shall levy a Fine upon grant of the land to the Bargainee with tender of Rent to the Bargainer, provided that the Bargainee shall regrant the Advowson to the Bargainer for life, and also covenanted that all estates after to be made should be to those uses. The recovery was suffered, and a Fine levied, but variant from the Covenant, the Bargain died before regrant of the Advowson, 1. It was nolden that the proviso, though it be placed among the Covenants, yet it was a condition to defeat all the Bargain and sale. 2. That the regrant shall be upon request, but yet in the life of the Bargainee, for that his death is a breach of the condition. But Dyer held 〈◊〉 for want of conveyance within six months, the condition w●s broken, and it is not like to a Feoffement where livery 〈◊〉 to be made; and if so, than the Fine, (for it was levied after the 6 months) conveys this again to the vendee absolutely. 3. Although the Fine vary from the Covenants, yet by the general covenants that all estates after to be made shall be to the said uses, the condition shall be well preserved, so the Rent. And it is there holden that tender of a Fine, which implies consideration, may be averred by writing to be to the use and so also may a gift in tail: and a gift in tail made by a woman to a man, rendering rend by writing, my be averred causa Matrimonii praelocuti. Trin. 894. A writ of Entry in l● quibus against A. and B. found was that A. disseised and not B. yet judgement shall be given of the entire, and not of the moiety only against A. and the Plaintiff in misericordia against B. 895. Trespass upon the Statute that none shall distrain the beasts of the plough, so log as other reasonable distress may be had, and declared of taking contra formam Statuti, and shown not specially how he had other Distress, yet it is adjudged good, and employed in the words, contra formam Statuti, and it shall come of the part of the Defend ' after he hath showed the cause of the distress: He shall also show that there was no other distress, adjudged 4. E. 3.1. & per Ed. 2. that a Tenant shall have that action against the Lord, although he had made agreement for the thing for which the distress was taken, and the issue was joined here quoth defend. non cepit nec imparcavit contra formam Statuti. 896. Cestui que use in tail, the remainder in tail after 27 tenant in tail in possession levied a Fine and died without issue, a stranger in the name of the Feoffees or survivor of them, without naming any of them, entered within the 5 years, for to revive the use to him in remainder. Quaere if well. 897. Upon Statut. 21. H. 8. a Clerk one time qualified as a Chaplain to a Baron, although his Master die, or that he departs his service, he shall not loose his plurality. If a Chaplain allowed by the Statute take two Benefices, and sue not a dispensation of the Metropolitan, yet he shall not forfeit the Plurality; for the statute is, that he may sue a Dispensation, and not that he aught. Also, if a Lo. allow by his letters Testimonial 6, to be his Chaplains, where he aught to have but 3. the first three shall be his Chaplains. 898. A Lease for 20. years to 3, after two of them took a new Lease for ●30. years, to begin after the 20 years, or immediately after the death of their Companion, if he die within the 20. years, and he died within 3. years; Quaere if it be in the election of the two, to begin their second Lease, or not, till the 20. years expired. 899. In Avowry for Rend Charge, the Defendant said that the Grantor was seized in Fee, etc. The Plaintiff said that the Grantor was his father, and seized in tail, etc. it seems he shall traverse the Fee. 213. 900. A Seignory and tenure de obite and chantry land, is extinet per possession of the King per stat. 1. Ed. 6. notwithstanding the saving of the Statute, but the Rent remains distrainable, and the Lo. shall avow upon the matter, but not upon the person, as within his Fee and signory. 901. In Dower issue was never coupled in lawful Matrimony, the Bishop certified, that the woman at 16. years, and the man at 10. years, the Marriage was solemnised at such a place, & sic legitim' matrimon' Copulat', and holden no answer to the Writ, in point of the Writ, and a new Writ issued to the Bishop. 902. The Lo. Powes conveyed land in capite, to one Grey his Bastard in remainder after his own death: The Lo. Powes died, holden by Dyer and Sanders, that the Bastard shall not sue Livery, for the 3. part, for he is not the lawful generation, as 32 mentions. 314. 903. Lessee covenanted at his proper charges, and after cut trees upon the Land, and in waist pleaded that the house by tempest, etc. and that he cut to repair, etc. the Lessor replied by Covenant. Quaere, vide 40. Ed. 3.6. 21. H. 6.50. 12. H. 8.1. Wast by Clere 'gainst Haddon Comment. 904. A Fine was levied by A. to the use of B. for life, the remainder to E in tail, the remainder in fee to B. provided if B. pay 100 pound, that he shall have tail and fee expectant, upon payment the use is transferred. 905. A recovery was suffered to the intent that the recoverers should perform his will, and said not his last will, after he made Declaration of the uses by Indenture, yet he may altar them, for his will, and last will are all one. 315. 906. The Lord Cromwell's Case, a Lord of the Parliament shall not be impanelled without special commandment of the King, or that their presence be of necessity. 907. Error, Trespass supposed in D. iuxta S. where in English it is called beside S. yet good, and the Defend ' taken pro fine, omitted in the judgement, and well, because the Defendant a Bishop, and a Capias lies not against him. Quaere if the omission de misericordia or e contra, which is only for the King, shall make all the judgement voided to the party 29. Assize. 908. A Scire facias in the Chancery to have execution upon Recog. the Defendant pleaded a defesance which was dated before the Recognizance, but it was first delivered afterwards, and was not received, but the execution awarded, upon which he brought an Error in the King's Bench, and reversed the judgement. Note, yet both Courts are coram Rege. 909. In a Formedon in reverter or remainder, the Demand. need not allege seizin within 50 years upon Stat. 32. nor in a Scire facias to execute a fine of such nature, for they shall come in upon traverse of the part of the tenant as in avowry, viz. not selfed of the services after the limitation Quinto decimo Elizabethae. 316. Mich. 910. A Formedon against the husband and wife, who after summons and essoin, levied a fine to a stranger, and after the husband made default, upon the wife prayed to be received, the Demandant Counterpleaded the receipt by the fine, and proved that the land is not the right of the wife, yet by judgement she was received, for the right shall be intended that which was at the purchasing of the Writ. 911. The husband made a feoffement to the use of himself and his wife for life, the remainder, etc. the husband sowed the land and died, the wife shall have Crop, and not the Executors of the husband, because the wife was joint purchaser with her husband, contrary it had been if a remainder had been limited to the wife. And if the husband sow the land of the wife, and the wife die, the husband shall have the Crop, so shall Tenant for another's life, if Cestuy que vie die. And if the husband sow land and die, and the third part is assigned to the wife for dower she shall have the emblements, because de optima posses. of the husband per 5. contra. 4. 912. A Juror was challenged, because he had nothing within the hundred, at the day of the Venire facias returned, and it appeared that he had at the day of the Distress, but Harper and the Clerks held that he shall be sworn, because the Challenge is in the present cense, quod nihil habet, etc. Dyer held that the entry of that shall be referred to the day of the Pannell, the third part of which shall be Hundreders. But if he had at the time of the Pannell, and yet had not at the time of the distress, yet he shall be sworn, for his notice is not altered, and by Common intendment upon the sumons upon the Venire facias, he aught to take notice. Quaere. 913. A Commoner because of Vicinage, may not put in his beast immediately in the drift into the other soil, but it behoves they stray thither, being put in his own soil. 13 H 7.10. lib. Ent. 567. Contra. 317. 914. Land in Gavelkind is demised to the eldest son upon Condition that he shall pay 100 pounds to the wife of the Devisor, he failed of payment, Quaere by Manwood, ●f the youngest may enter in the Moiety, as by employed limitation. 915. If a man be Outlawed in London, Judgement is not given by the Coroner, which is the Mayor, but by the Recorder by the Custom; And if the Exigent be not returned, the Outlawry is not pleadable in disability of the person, notwitstanding upon witness Process issues to the Sheriff, (and not to the Coroners according to the Custom) who certify that, and it is sufficient for the Queen, but not for the party. 916. By Dyer, Mounson and Manwood Justices, a Jointure may be upon Condition, viz. to perform the last Will of the husband, or so long as she shall live sole or unmarried, and that shall be a Bar in Dower, and although it be a remainder after the death of her husband it is a good Jointure. And by Dyer an estate in Fee is a good Jointure within the words stat. 27. H. 8. viz. for the life of the wife or otherwise, and may be so averred, if there be not express words in the Conveyance to the contrary. 917. Hawley brought an Action upon the Case against Sydnam for words, viz. he is infected with the Robbery and Murder lately committed, and smells of the Murder, and it lieth for the words infected, and Hawley had Judgement and 300. pounds' damages. 318. 918. Two had Closes adjoining, the one from time, etc. had always been bound to enclose, and now for insufficiency of the Enclosure, the beasts of the other escaped in, and immediately before they were driven out, they were distrained for Rent. But because it was but by a Termor, who had granted part of his term, rendering rend; and besides no default in the owner, It was adjudged that the distress was unlawful, But it seems liable to the distress of the Lo. if he did not make fresh suit. 919. The Earl of Kent being reputed but an Esquire, brought a Writ of Entry by the name of Esquire, and the Pannell was returned, and now by the Herold's he is declared to be an Earl, and he challenged the array, because no Knight returned, etc. and not allowed, because no default in the Sheriff. The Jury was upon Habeas Corp ' with proviso, in default of the Demandant, and yet the Tales shall not be granted at the suit of the tenant, before some default be again showed in the Demandant, for the proviso aught to be quando duo brevia sunt in codum gradu & qualitate. 920. A man was obliged to perform Covenants contained in an Indenture of a Lease of tithes; and there was a Proviso in the Lease, that if the Lessee attempt and prosecute an action against A. who pretended a former Lease, if Verdict pass against the Lessee, that the rent shall cease. In debt upon the Obligation for not payment of the rent, it is no plea, that A. enjoyed the tithe by virtue of his former Lease; so that the Defendant could not have according to his Lease, and so no article ex parte sua per implead per Curiam, for the Rent is payable till the Verdict pass against the Defendant. 319. 921. A man bargained and sold land, provided that the Bargainor shall have and retain for 20. years, without interruption. The Bargainee disturbed the possession of the Bargainor within the 20. years. Quaere if the entire estate of the Bargainee be defeated, or that the proviso be but a reservation, grant or agreement. Challenge in a Formedon per Vernon against Manner's Comment '. 922. Capite land is extended upon a Statute, the tenant died, the heir within age, the dying seized is found by office, but not the title of the Conusee. Quaere if he shall answer of the profits to the King, or hold them per stat ' 2. Ed. 6. 923. Two Executors brought an action of Debt, the one is Summoned and severed, yet he may release before Judgement. But after Judgement he may not acknowledge satisfaction, because he is not privy to the Judgement. 924. Queen Mary had Rend of 20. pounds out of land, whereof the husband and wife are joint-tenants, and gave, granted, Remised, released and renounced the rent, to the husband and his heirs, the husband Devised the rent, and well by Dyer, and that shall be a Declaration of the election of the husband, to have the Deed inure as a grant, and not by way of extinguishment. Quaere if he had not made election, if his heir might, and that the Patentee shall have election to use his Patent, as to him seems best. 9 H. 6. 320. 925. In a trespass upon the case against the Lady Browne, for the divided part of the course of water, which ran from, etc. to the house of the Plaintiff, and it appeared that the Diversion was of a main pipe, but of which the Husband of the Lady, made a quill with a Cock to serve his house in his life, and because it is with a Cock, so that upon every opening of the Cock is a new diversion, the action lies against the Lady; but Judgement was longer stayed, because the Plaintiff did not show, that he was seized of the house to which, etc. at the time of the Diversion; sed cum existat, etc. and after Error brought. 926. In an Ejectione Firmae, the Defendant prayed aid of the Queen, because the reversion after the term which he claimed was to the Queen, per the Attainter of the Earl of Northumberland, and was granted. And in the Chancery the Defendant prayed Search for the Queen. And after long argument agreed, that he shall not have search, for no damages shall be to the Queen; And it had not be seen that search should be in aid prayer, but only in Petition of right, upon that a procedendo granted, sed non ad Judic' Regina, inconsult. Hill. 321. 927. The Grandfather, Father, and two Daughters were, the Grandfath. levied a Fine as that, etc. in Chester, and that with tender to himself for life, the remainder to the Father, and the heirs Males, the remainder to the eldest Daughter in tail, remainder, etc. the Grandfather died, and the Father died without issue Male, the eldest Daughter entered, the youngest in her own name, and in the name of her eldest Sister as Cousins and heirs to the Grandfather, pursued a Writ of Error, out of the Chancery, returnable in the King's Bench, to revers the Fine (the Writ was directed to the Justices, and not Camerario Cestriae nota) which was returned with the Record, and the eldest Daughter came not, upon that she was summoned and severed, and a Scire facias issued against the heir of the Conusee to hear the Errors (note where he had nothing in the land) and none against the tenant, And the Errors were assigned. 1 for default of entry and nonpayment of the Qeens' silver in the Roll, but it appeared upon the back of the Writ of Covenant, what was assessed. 2. Because the Concord is not signed by the Justices who took the Conusance, according to the course in the Bank, where the Conusance is taken out of Court. 3. For default of Entry of a note of the Fine, which is usual in the Common Bank, and remains with the Chirographer before the engrossing. But as to that, one of the parts of the Chirographe remained amongst the Records, as the use is there, and no other Foot of the Fine there, as remains here with the Custos brevium upon the back of which the Proclamations are entred. And it was moved that a writ of error should first be brought in Chester, But it was not to be so for there are errors in their Charters excepted. But the plaintiff aught to bring his writ there at the next County, where they may see the writ, and proceed and reverse if there be error apparent, or affirm it, it upon a scire facias returned the Defendant do not appear, without receiving Plea of Release. And if the Defendant be grieved he may have a special writ to remove both Records unto the King's Bench; It was holden that the Plaintiff aught to have a scire faeias against the land tenant, for otherwise if he had judgement quod restituat, he may not have execution, for if the tenant be outed without being Garnished, he shall have an Assize. Also it may be the Defendant had a release to pled, which would be an ease to the Court of the examination of errors, upon that a scire facias was awarded against the elder Sister as landlord tenant, who appeared, but said nothing to the errors assigned. The heir of the Conusee of the Fine before rejoyner to the erroes alleged dimunition, upon that process was awarded to the Justices of Chester, who returned that all was certified, and after the heir of the Conusee rejoined to the Errors assigned, In nullo est erratum, and upon surmise of the Plaintiff a Mand. was awarded Camerario de Chestria to make a writ to the Sheriff, there to garnish the land Tenant ad audiend. errores si, etc. Another time it was directed to the justices of Chester. After the Fine was affirmed good. 928. Tenant for life by Fine granted all his estate to A. and his heirs, the Grantee died, the heir impleaded in a Praecipe, prayed aid and might not have it, because but an occupant. 322. 929. The Lord Cromwell avowed Distress for breaking of a Bylaw made by the Homage of his Manor of A. as they may by the custom pro meliori ordinat. averiorum cum opus erit. which was that he which put in his beasts into the certain Common before pulsation of a Field, etc. should forfeit 10 shillings, and shown that the Defendant Tenant there, and one of the Homage had broken, and that the Lord had used to distrain the beasts of the offender in any place of the Manor, etc. Adjudged a good justification. It is not showed that the breach was presented, nor that it was needful, nor that it was pro meliori ordinatione, etc. 930. Whitacres brought a Debt against the Guardian of the Fleet of an escape in the life of the Testator, and adjudged that it lies not, for the offence is but a Trespass, which dies with the person, and by the Common law Debt lies not against a Guardian, but an action upon the case, till 1 Rich. 2.12. which gave a Debt against the Guardian, and it speks not of the heir nor Executor, but if there be a Recovery in the life of the Guardian, so that it be reduced to certainty, etc. contra. 223. Pas. 931. Taverner was sued in the Star-Chamber, for forging a customary, so usage of Coppyholds, which tended to the disinheritance of the Lord, and put divers Seals to it, and adjudged Forgery within 5. Eliz. by the word writing, the Damages were levied by English Bill to the Sheriff, and by four Justices the Queen may pardon the corporal punishment which is but in example, but 3 held contrary without a release of the party. 932. Linguen made a Feoffement to his own use, and after devised that the Feoffees should be seized to the use of his daughter A. who in verity was a Bastard, that is not a good devise of the Land by the intention, for by no possibility may they be seized to her use; and a man will that his Feoffees shall give in tail, that is a good devise of the Land. 933. Per nomen omnium haereditament. scituat. iacent. & existent. in D. the Advowson of the vicarage passed, for although the Advowson be not visible nor palpable, nor lies not in Livery, yet in Droit the Avowson the Church shall be put in view, so that it had a being in the town and Church. 934 He which was convicted for three Masses, forfeits but 100 pound upon the Statute 1 Eliz. vide verba Statuti. 324. 935. The under Martial took an Obligation of one in Execution, and a stranger, to save him harmless of escapes, and let the Prisoner at large, and although the Statute 23. H. 6. toucheth only the Sheriff, Guardians of the Fleet, and Palace, and ministers of the Sheriffs, the opinion was, that the Obligation was voided, and the written Statute is, that the Sheriff nor none of the officers, and not of his officers as it is printed, also it seems the Condition is against land, and than the Obligation is voided by the Common Law. 936. A Termer covenanted for him and his Executors to repair and sustain a house at his own charges, principali macremeo (in laeso vel in decasu pro defectu reparac ' or otherwise in default of the Lessee or his Executors) only excepted, and died, the house is burnt in default of the Executors, and adjudged that a covenant lies against them, and damages recovered of the goods of the Testator, and not conditional, if they had not of their proper goods, and this was upon great advisement. 937. Tenant for life, the remainder in tail, the tenant for life levied a Fine, as that, etc. to the use of himself in Fee, which is a forfeitrue, after tenant for life, and he in remainder joined in a Feoffement by Letter of Attorney, it is a discontinuance of the tail, for first it was entry for the forfeiture, and than the Feoffement of he in remainder, and not a confirmation of Lessee for life. 938. Tenant essoined after issue joined in a real plea. 325. Trin. The Lord Audley's Case abridged before. 1 Eliz. fol. 166. 939. Sir William Say seized of land, and having issue two daughters, made a gift in tail to the eldest, the remainder to his own right heirs, and died, that daughter entered and is attaint of treason 31. H 8. by Parliament, & it was enacted that she should forfeit, etc. which act saves to strangerrs their rights, titles, reversions and reminders, and no word of Entry: It was resolved that the Entry of the other daughter for her moiety was congeable upon the Patentee of the King. 1. Because the Act of Parliament had not put the Queen in possession without office. 2. because Statute 33. and 34. and 35. H. 8. for Confirmation of Patents without inquisit, wills that the Patent shall be good against the King and his heirs, but it speaks not of subjects, upon which she entered without Petition or monstrance of Right. 940. A writ of estrepment was granted in a quid Juris clamat between Judgement and Execution. 941. Assize of two acres, the tenant pleaded two several Bars, and the Plaintiff made several titles, and the tenant said the Assize to come upon the title in the singular number, and they found for the one with the Plaintiff, for the other with the tenant, and judgement shall be given for one for the Plaintiff, and shall be Barred for the other only, notwithstanding his plea in the singular number. Sexto decimo Elisabethae. 326. 942. Huntley devised a house to a woman, and to the brother of the woman, and to the heirs of every of their bodies, and for default of such Issue of the brother and of the sister, the remainder to the right heirs of the Devisor, and died: The brother died without issue, the sister had issue and died, the issue shall have a moiety and no more, for it seems the word (every) made several estates. Quaere if the right heir shall have in reversion or remainder. 327. 943. The sea left a great quantity of Land upon shore. Quaere whether the owner next adjoining or the Queen shall have it. 944. The Queen was seized of Waddon Chase, and the Lord Grace was Lieutenant there in fee, and he and his Ancestors, and their Keepers, had by Prescription used to hunt vagrant Deer in the Demesns of the Manor of S. adjoining, as in purlieus, the Mauno● of S. came into the hands of the Queen, who granted that to Fortescue in Fee with a free Warren within his Demesns, Ita quod null' intret in Warrennam illam ad sugand sine licentia F. It was holden that he unity doth not extinguish the purlew, and that the clause of Ita quod, etc. is not to be extended against the Keeper of the Queen, but other subjects. So that where Fortescues servant, killed a servant of the Keepers for chase there, it is not Justifiable by the Statute of Malef. in parcis. 945. If a Chaplain qualified for two benefices, take a third by triality, Quaere if the first be voided upon the Statute 21. H. 8. also Quaere if the penalty of twenty pound, and profits, incur but upon the last Benefice, so that the second only remains. Also if the presentation of the King with a false supposal, that the King had title by lapse, where he had not, is voided, And if the King present one, and after present another before induction, if without express repeal, and recital of the first accord, Statute 6. H. 8. cap. 9 if the second shall repeal the first, and if the ordinary not having notice of the repeal, proceed to induction, if the repeal be now of force. The King had the presentation, the Bishop of Norwich the Nomination, the Bishop Collated without presentation, and in a quare impeait he pleaded not disturbed. Quaere of the Plea. 328. 946. A Church voided by death, the Patron presented to the Archbishop of York, who refused because illiterate, and that was given notice of by intimation fixed at the Church door, and after the six months presented by lapse, the Patron brought a Quare impedit. First it was resolved that the six months shall be accounted from the death of the incumbent and not from the notice, But if the Church be voided by resignnat. or deprivation, it shall be accounted from the notice, Also holden that the notice after this manner is not sufficient, except the Pat●on inhabited ●n a foreign County, so that he cannot easily be ●ound, also that the issue may be joined upon he ability, and that shall be tried by the Archbishop of Canterbury Primate of all E●gland, and not by the Dean and Chapter of York as side vicante. Q●ae●e if not so e converso if the Bishop if Canterbury disturbs, and if the Cle●k be dead b●fore issue tried, than it shall be tried by the Country. After it was found for the Patron that the Clerk was sufficient, and a writ to admit him awarded to the Archbishop of Canterbury. 947. Mountford let, promising that the lessee shall quietly and peaceably have and enjoy without interruption of ●ny one as a doer of wrong entered, an action upon the case lies upon the promise, and is not like to a warranty for that is against titles and not against wrong. 26. H. 8.3. 948. A Receiver of the Queens impleaded in the Common bank for debt, had a Writ of privilege out of the Exchequer to the Justices of the Bank to cease, because he first aught to satisfy the Queen, but it was disallowed. 949. A lease is made to one, his Executors and Assigns, for the life of another, the lessee made a lease for years rendering rend, to him his Executors and Assigns, and died. Quaere if the less●e for years shall be occupan●, and the rend extinct, or that the frank te●. shall revert to the first lessee, and the term shall be in esse, but it seemeth the rent is gone. Vide 38. H. 6.4. 950. A Termor devised his term to his son when he shall come of full age, and in the mean time that his wife shall have the occupation and profits, the wife executor sold the term. Quaere, what remedy for the son. 329. 951. The Dean and Chapter at Gloucester made a lease of a great wood rendering rend, with recentry, and by letter of Attorney under their Common Seal, they demand at an open place of the Wood, the Lessee made tender at another place; Issue shall be taken upon the demand in the most open place. But for rend payable out of land issue shall be of the tender in the most open place. 952. Upon submission by obligation, it was Arbitrated that the one shall pay to the other twenty shillings for six years towards the finding of A. An action of debt is brought upon the obligation, and default assigned in the nonpayment of the twenty shillings in the fourth year, and shown not that A. is in life, and yet adjudged good for it shall come in on the other part. Also the Annuity is not determined by the death of A. being a Grant for six years, and is a duty to the obligee himself towards the, etc. 953. A writ of false Judgement upon a Recovery upon an action upon the case, and after the Record was removed the Plaintiff was nonsute, a scire jacias issued to have execution of the damages, for the Record shall not be remand. 954. Talis tenet dimid' fcodi Mil' vocat. Bacoy in London de haered. que tenet ultra de Rege this shall be intended in Chancery per moiety of a Knights Fee. 955. A man entitle himself as devisee of the entire land by the Statute 33. H. 8. although he shown not the tenure, yet it is very good, for that shall come of the other party, and prima fancy it shall be intended Socage, because the greatest part of the land in the Kingdom is so: Tamen Sanders cor●ra. 330. 956. Before 27. H. 8. Cesti que use in tail, the remainder in tail, the remainder to the first in Fee, he made a Feoffment to the use of himself for life, the remainder to his eldest Son and Wife for life, and after their decease, the remand' to the uses of their bodies in remand', etc. 27. is made the Father died, so that the eldest Son and his Wife are seized of estates tail executed. If the Feoffees may enter and revive the ancient use in tail in the Son: But it was agreed they must not for two causes. First because Statute of 1 R. 3. the Feoffees are bound by the Feoffment of cestuy que use. Secondly because the Son came in by his own acceptance, and by the Statute, and he is not remitted to the ancient use. 957. An Essoune was entered in the Roll in Common Bank, but not in the essoign Roll, and upon that it was adjudged Error, And the plaintiff in Error of policy alleg●● dimunition of the Record in that point, and had a Certiorare directed to the Chief Justice of the Common place, to certify if he had any such essoign, for if he certified that he had not, than his adversary shall not allege dimunition in that point, although he had caused the essoign to be entered in this term●. Admission of a Guardian or next friend, is without any talis po●lo. s●o, for it is the act of the Court. 958. Avowry for Fealty and ten shillings rend, and suit, and alleged sesin within fifty years, the plaintiff said that he held by fealty twelve pence and suit absque h●e, etc. found that the seizin of the rent, but not of the sidue, he shall not have judgement, for all is in the affirmative, Traverse is not found D. Quaere if it shall not be after fifty years. Quaere if the seizin of the rent be not seizin of the other services also. 331. 959. C●ache devised a house to Alice his eldest daughter and her he●es, and if she die having no issue, than to Thomasin his youngest daughter and her heirs, and other lands he devised to Thomasin his daughter and her heirs of greater value, and if she die within sixteen years, that A. shall have her part to her and her heirs, and if A. marry such an one, that Thomasin shall have her part to her and her heirs, and if Thomasin die having no issue, that all her part shall go to two others which were Nieces, and if Alice die without issue, that Thamasin shall have her part, to her and her heirs, Thomasin after sixteen years died without ●ssue, and it was adjudged that Alice shall not have her part but the Nieces, for notwithstanding the cross limitations, it appears that the intent was not, that Alice shall have by Thomasin, if she survives sixteen, for as it appears he bore more affection to Thomasin, and besides the words so import, and when his intent is expressed it shall not be taken by implication. Dyer said that so there is no estate tail in the case but fee upon limitation, but two held contra. Hill. 960. A man devised that after debts and legacies paid, that his wife shall have the residue to distribute for the soul of the testator, and made his wife executor and died, she took another husband who made executor and died, against which she brought a Detinue for the goods of the first husband, and adjudged that it lies, for she shall not have the goods as legatory but a executor to distribute, etc. 961. This Statute. 34. H. 8. cap. 21. of misnomer shall not aid non no●mer. 332. 962. The Conuser of a Statute enfeoffed A. B. and of several lands, the land of A. is extended and he brought an audita querela against B. to have contribution, he pleaded in abatement the omission of the lands in possession C. sed non allocatur, for the Plaintiff is not bound to take notice of that, but every one grieved may have an audita querela, but upon a Statute Staple the course is to have a● Audita que●ela to the Chancellor, but upon a Statute Merchant it shall be directed to the justices of the Bank. Pas. 963. A woman conspired with her servant to kill her husband, which he did in her absence, it is petty treason in the woman being accessary, because petty treason in the servant, contrary if the conspiracy had been with a stranger, vide Mist. Sand. Cases. 964. Wast was assigned in the cutting 10 trees, the Defendant as to three justified, for that he employed them in six posts, ad separand. separalia clausa ibidem, and said not quot clausa, and alleged not that by prescription there was such a kind of enclosure there, nor that all the three Oaks were there so employed, nor that the enclosure is made indeed, upon which it is adjudged against the Defendant, and to the seven he justified, because they were dry, hollow, and putrified in the top, none being sufficient maeremiam pro aedifici●s; Mounson & Harper, it seems the ●lea is insufficient; but Dyer held contra, because it amounts to that which is usual in Precedents, viz. that they were dead, not bearing fruit, ●●que folia in aestate. Sed quod non fuit suffic. maeremium, it is not to the purpose, for it may be otherwise employed. 965. Husband and wife, Donees in special tail, the husband is attaint of treason and executed, having issue, the wife dies, the issue shall not have the Land, for he aught to make his conveyance by both, per opin.. justices. 333. 966. One Citizen sued another in the common-place for debt upon an Obligation, for which and because he would not stand to the order of two Aldermen, he is disfranchised, and because here is no cause to disfranchise him, a Writ was awarded to the Mayor to restore him. 967. Chapman devised his house in which I. inhabited to his three brothers, and the house which T. his brother inhabits to the said brother, and he to pay 10 pound to Chr. C. or otherwise to remain to the house, provided the houses shall not be sold but go to the next of blood being male, that is an estate tail, and shall go to the house, and shall be construed to the most worthy person of the Family, and being males it shall be construed in the future time. 334. 968. Tenant in Tail levied a Fine, as that, etc. and retook in special tail to a second wife, the issue of the first may not aver continuance of possession against the Fine, which is a Feoffement upon Record and discontinuance. Quaere of a Fine with Conusance of Right only. vide the Statute of fines 17. Ed. 1. cap. 1. Trin. 969. A lease for years upon condition that the Lessee shall not alien to any person without licence of the Lessor, the land, nor any part of that, the Lessor gave licence to alien part, the Lessee aliened the other part without licence, and adjudged that the Lessor may enter, notwithstanding the dispensation with the Condition in part. 335. 970. Sir Francis Calthrope 26. H. 8. not having any issue by Indenture tripartite between himself and one Windam, & one Edward Calthorp his nephew, covenanted with Windam sole, that Arthur the son of Edward, shall marry the daughter of Windam before Michaelmas, and Windam also covenanted for the daughter, in consideration of which marriage to be had, and other agreements for the said marriage, Sir Francis covenanted with Windam sole, that he would make an estate to a stranger of so much of his Manor of Northmorton as amounted to 40 Marks by the year, to the use of himself for life, the remainder to the use of Edward for life, remainder after his decease, & carnal copulation between the said Arthur and the daughter of A. Windam to their use, and to the use of the heirs of Arthur, of the body of the daughter, the remainder to Arthur in general tail, the remainder to Edward in tail, the remainder to the right heirs of Sir Francis, and the residue of the said Manor of N. to the use of himself for life, and after to the use of Edward in tail, the remainder to the use of his own right heirs, and covenanted with Edward only to make further assurance within the year, and agreement that the said uses shall not be altered without the assent of Windam, for which Covenants and agreements Edward covenanted in the same Indenture to pay to Sir Francis a 100 Marks, which after he satisfied, and a Fine and recovery was had to the said uses; the marriage took no effect, Sir Francis had after issue one son and died, If the son being the heir general shall have the land by descent, or Edward shall have by remainder ut supra, came in question upon the demurrer, upon that above given in evidence in an Ejectione sirmae brought by the Lessee Edward. Note there is no Election showed by the Feoffees of the part of the Manor of N. which amounts to 40 Marks, as it seems there must be, before it can be in Cestuy que use. And note although here is money paid in Consanguinity, yet because the principal cause of the entering into this conveyance was the marriage which took not effect, Quaere if all be destroyed. Windam never agreed to altar the uses. Compound. 971. Humphrysons' case, the use upon a recovery was limited in Latin, made to the use of H. he against whom the recovery was had for life, remainder seniori puero de corp. H. in tail, etc. After H. covenanted by English Indenture to levy a Fine to the use supra, where the remainder was to the use of the eldest child of the body of H. etc. H. had a daughter elder, and a son youngest, the opinion was, that the daughter shall have the land, for though the word puero be indifferent to every sex, and than the male for dignity shall be preferred, yet the English had declared the construction to be to the eldest child. 972. A disseifor of land in three several towns A. B. and C. he levied a Fine of that in A. the disseisee within five years made a Letter of Attorney, to enter in all the three, the Attorney entered in B. and C. in name of all, per Curiam it is not an Entry of that in A. for the Conusee had there distinct Franktenement by title, and for every franktenement, a several Entry is needful. 9 H. 7.25. 973 A Parson 28. H. 8. made a Lease for life rendering Rend, and that is of Land given to him and his successors to found lights, etc. the Rent was employed till Statut. Ed. 6. after the Statute the successor accepted the Rent; the opinion of the Court was, that the patentee of the King may enter upon the Lessee as the successor might have done before the statute, if he had not accepted the Rent, the acceptance supra was voided, as to the affirming of the Lease, for he had no reversion at the time, it seems that the acceptance before the statute by any successor shall bind the Patentee by the saving in the Act. 338. 974. Cook, Wotton, and Dannet purchased jointly in ●ee, and every of them covenanted with the other, and his heirs and Assigns, & ut●ique corum, to make such conveyance, to the other heirs, who should first die, as they shall device, D. & W. died, the heir of W. devised an Indenture of bargain and sale, and tendered to C. to seal and deliver; And C. he required time to confer with his counsel, upon which W. brought an Action of Covenant, as heir, and recovered 200 pounds damages. Note a Covenant lies for the heir where it is not annexed to the Land, and also that the Covenanter is bound peremptorily upon request to seal, and utrique is as several as alteri. 975. In a franchise where a Lord had Waifs, a thief waived sheep which before the Lord seized, they strayed into another liberty, where the Lord had Estrays: Gerrard held that they appertain to the first Lord, and that the property was in him as it should be in the King, upon the Waivier without seiser; Catlin, it is in the King by Prerogative without seiser, but the Prerogative is not grantable over for that. Decimo septimo Elisabethae. Mich. 976. An Infant which was Plaintiff by his next friend' and now at full age made an Attorney and is nonsute, he shall be ●amerced, contra if he had continued within age. 339. 977. At the Nisi Prius 12 jurors appeared, but no hundredor, and 4 were challenged, and upon a tales de circumst. 4 hundredors returned, and joined with the residue, and it passed for the Plaintiff. Quaere if it be a lawful trial according to 35. H. 8. Cap. 6. 978. The Prebend of Salisbury made a Lease, for 70 years, the Bishop, Dean, and Chapter confirmed, (the Bishop being Patron and Ordinary) quoad 51 years & non ultra, the Demise and all that is in the Indenture, adjudged good for 51 years, and Quaere except for all. 979. Tenant for life, the remainder for life, the remainder in tail, the remainder in Fee to the remainder for life, Tenant for life, and he in remainder for life joined in a Feoffement by deed, per Curiam he in remainder in tail may enter for forfeiture of both their estates, for he in remainder joining, is particeps criminis. If the Tenant for life himself had made a Feoff●ment he in remainder for life, might not enter, because he had not estate of inheritance. 980. One had a common appendent in a great west, the Lord improved parcel of the waist, and after enfeoffed the Commoner of that which he improved, it is no extinguishment of the Common. Hill. 981. A woman and her husband, as Administrators of the first husband, recovered a Debt, while that suit was depending, the son of the intestate by Coven between him and the Defendant, procured new Letters of Administration to him and his mother jointly, and after judgement released to the Debtor: The husband and wife sued Execution, the Debtor brought an Audita querela, hanging which the second Administrator was repealed per sentence, and the Coven and the repeal pleaded in Bar, upon which the Defendant demur, and against the Defendant. 982. The Ordinary collated A. to the Vicarage of Ya●ton, after two years where, the title of the lapse was come to the King, after the King presented B. who brought a Quare impedit against the Bishop and Incumbent, upon refusal to admit him, hanging which, A. procured another Presentment in the name of the Queen without mention of the first, and adjudged no revocation of the first, vide Statute 6. H. 8. cap. 15. that where a Patent is ad bene placitum Regis, the second Patent aught to rend the first, and that the will is determined. 340. 983. After Statute 27. H. 8. a man made a feoffment to the use of Alice his wife for life, and if she dies leaving the husband, than to the use of the husband and such wife as he shall after marry, for life for her jounture, The remainder over to a stranger, and after with privity and assent of the Feoffee, he in remainder joined with the Feoffees in a feoffment, by letter of Attorney, to new uses, and after the Feoffee levied a fine according; the first wife died, the husband took another wife and died, and five years after the fi●e, the second wife by commandment of the first Feoffees entered to revive the first use. Mounson and Harper said, that the entry is lawful without possession, or commandment of the Feoffees, which had nothing therein, but the future use is in the custody of the Law, and 27 H. 8. hath given the possession to the use, and so the feoffment of the Feoffees voided; But if they had right or title in the land, their feoffment had given it, per Mounson, It was the Lady Vmptons' case, That a Feoffment of he in reverson, and livery in absence of the Tenant for life will pass the Fee; Manwood and Dyer held that the use is drowned, for the second Feoffees had not their possession for any such confidence, for they have not notice, and the feoffment had taken away the entry of the first Feoffees, where their entry aught to execute the dormant use; And although the Statute concern the Franktenement and Fee, yet they have a mean interest in regard of the dormant use, the which is conveyed by the Feoffment, and it is no injury to the woman which was than unknown. Dyer said, the second wife shall not take in jointure, nor otherwise, for she was not in esse when the particular estate ended, by the death of the first wife. 341. But all the Justices held the contrary, for there is a difference between an use and possession; Also Dyer thought that the remained ' after the death of the husband, is no jointure, but it shall be an estate in the life of the husband. Quaere accord. Pas. 984. A Formedon against husband and wife, the husband made default, the wife rescued and vouched, the demand' counterplead ' the voucher in parcel for joyntute with her husband, non allocat ', for the default of the husband shall not prejudice her, and it shall be intended by the undivided moyties; And to another parcel because the Vouchees not his Ancestors had nothing after the title of the Demandant, except jointly with A. and B. who are in full life & non allocat ' because he aught to allege by name that the Vouchees or his Ancestors were joint-tenants, and aver the continuance of the Jointure and survivor, for otherwise he acknowledgeth the possession whereof he may make a Feoffment: And the Demandant did counterplead in another parcel, because the husband and wife have levied a fine, as that he hanging the Writ non allocat ' for he is stopped by his using his Writ against them, to say they are not Tenants; But if he will counterplea, it should be in the place and Garranty, because she shall not have in value if she had nothing in the land demanded. 985. The Statute 27. H. 8. of Suppressing, is, that Leases made by Governors within a year of the Statute, by which the houses are decayed, shall be voided, and there are affirmative words, that Leases with the ancient Rent shall be good. A Lease was made within forty seven days of the statute, for threescore years, without reserving the ancient Rent, and holden that is shall not, be intended Covenous without express averment of the Covin, for it may be bona fide. And the affirmative words shall not be intended, and no other. Also peradventure the value was decayed. 342. 986. Four Letters for the inception of the four first words in a Patent of the King, were interlessed and space left for them, viz. H. R. F. & H. yet it was adjudged a good Patent, for it's for the honour of the King, and it is usual in many Patents, that after they may be depict or limmed with gold. Trin. 987. A man having two daughters by divers ventures, he demised the moiety of his land to his wife for seven years, and that the eldest daughter aught to enter in the other moiety, ad the day of her marriage, and if his wife be with child with a daughter, that she shall have an equal portion with the other sisters, and he died, the wife entered and had no daughter, the eldest daughter took a husband and entered in the moiety, the youngest daughter died without issue, the seven years expired, adjudged that the collateral heir of the youngest shall have the moiety of all, and not of the moiety only by liberty of Entry Devised to the eldest, the property is not devised, but occupation for a time, for the minority of the youngest, and it appeared that his intent was that every daughter shall have equal advancement. 343. 988. The Earl of Arundel granted a Manor to the Earl of Northumberland in tail, the remainder in tail, upon Condition that they, nor neither of them, the Manor or any part thereof, shall alien, discontinue, or do any thing in any manner, or permit directly or indirectly, but that without impediment it may and shall revert, if they die without issues: The Earl of Northumberland took w●e, also he granted the reversion of a Copdyhold according to the Custom, and after he committed treason, and after he is attaint of that by outlawry, and died without issue, the Coppyholder in possession died, the Earl of Arundel entered into the Manor, upon which the Grantee in reversion entered into the Coppyhold land, and the Lord of Arundel brought a Trespass, and the opinion of the Justices that it lies not. 1. By all besides Geoffrey's the taking of the wife although her Dower may hinder the immediate reverting, yet it is no breach of the condition, for if there had been an express condition that the donee shall not taken wife, or that his wife shall not be endowed, it shall be repugnant to the estate and voided, and besides, be cause the wife may not enter in her Dower without assignment, that shall revert absolutely without impediment. 2. Also by the better opinion the reverting is not hindered by the reversion granted of the Coppyhold, for the Coppyholder is but Tenant at will according, etc. so that the Frank tenement may revert, but peradventure an express condition that he shall grant a Coppyhold, in reversion he would be restrained; etc. But the general condition here as it seems, because the condition shall be taken strictly, it shall not comprehend, a private Custom upon the land hath not an eye, warrants of Land in Burrough English shall bind the heir at the Common Law only; so the heir at the Common law, shall take advantage of the Condition. 344. 3. Also the Treason committed without Attainter is no cause of entry, for the Condition, and when the attainter came as it seems per melior. opin.. it is no breach of the Condition, for the quo minus reverti debeat & possit, had mitigated the precedent words of the Condition, for otherwise if it had been an impediment to the descent, to the issues, it shall be a breach of the Condition, but the quo minus, etc. it shall mitigate that if it may revert as it should, for the King had estate but during the issues, and than it may revert immediately with Petition or sure, as the Lord Barkleys' Case is that his Entry was adjudged congeable upon the failing of the Issue male of the body of H. 7. But all agreed, that although there be a Cause of Entry for some of the matters, and yet the Grantee of the Reversion of the Coppyhold shall retain, for it is a thing incident to the Custom of the Manors, which the Lord for the time may grant, etc. Decimo octavo Elisabethae. Mich. 989. In debt upon an Obligation against the daughters and heir of Henningham upon the Obligation of their father, the Plaintiff recovered upon nhil dicit and Judgement general, and upon a Scire facias to have Execution the Defend. pleaded nothing by descent in Fee, at the day of the first Writ purchased, nor after; But the Opinion was, that after recovery per nihil dicit, non sum informat. or confession, the heir shall come too late to pled nothing by descent, etc. But he aught at the first to pled that, or she the certainty quant. etc. An by Dyer, that if the profits received after the death of the Ancestor till the Writ purchased, are sufficient to satisfy the Debt, that the Plaintiff shall have a general Judgement against the heir: Manwood contra, and the Judgement supra shall be special lib. Intrac. 151. Debt against the Executors of the heir without averment the assets descended to the heir, for it shall not be intended, if the contrary be not showed. 345. 990. A man grannted a Rend Charge without words prose & haered. and died, the Grantee brought an annuity against the heir, and after discontinued his suit, and distrained, and well adjudged, because the election to make that an annuity is determined by, the death of the father. 991. It was found by office that tenure which was holden of the Queen, as of her principality of Wales, by service to go into the Wars of the Prince, at the Charge of the Prince, and per Curiam, it is not tenure in Capite. 992. Thorntons' Case, it was decreed that a Bastard to whom the mother conveyed the entire Chivalry land by act executed, It is not a Child advanced within 32. yet certain side. 993. A quarter of a year is 91 days, half a year 182. a year 365. and to the 6 hours the Law had not regard. Ter centum, ter viginti cem quinque diebus, Sex horas neque plus, integer annus habet. 346. 994. Upon Error in Chester the Writ shall be directed to the Judge there out of the Chancery at Westminster, returnable in the Kingsbench; and they themselves may reform that without defend. present. and make restitution, or award a Scire facias against him if he will, but if he affirm the first Judgement, all shall be removed, and if it be found erroneous they shall forfeit 2 hundred pound. 995. Quare impedit by Bacon Tenus that if an Incumbent be deprived for not reading articles (according to 73. Eliz.) that the Ordinary shall give notice to the Patron, Intimation that comprehends that the Incumbent had not read the articles and subscribed, it is not sufficient; But he aught to say late Incumbent, and he is bound to show that he aught to subscribe, and that he is deprived for default of that, also the Limitation is omnibus, etc. where special notice aught to be given to the Patron, and it is not sufficient to have the intimation read at the Church door, and in pulpit, but it shall be special notice given to the person of the Patron for that. 347. 996. A Subpoena 1. Out of the Common Bank against Waller, upon information exhibited against him there for usury, contra formam Statuti. 2. There is no mention what Statute 3. that by the Attorney pleaded non-culpable, and was found against him, and Judgement gave according, for the Statute of Jeofailes, which speaks of misconveyance of process, and misjoyning issue. 997. A Condition of an Obligation was, that if the Obliger before Mich. make a Lease for 31 years, if A. will assent, and if he will not assent than for 21 years that the Obligation shall be voided, A. would not assent, the Lease for 21 years aught to be made before Michaelmas. 348. 998. Westons Case, If the first benefice became voided by ●anceptance of another per 21. H. 8. for although Weston had a dispensation from the Pope, that was made voided by the statute, and though after dispensation be purchased of the Queen within the Act of the statute, 28. H. 8. yet the party shall not be restored without a new presentment, notwithstanding the said stat. 28. made the Bulls of the Pope good for one year, and that if within the year surrender them, that the Chancellor of the augmentation may make a dispensation to them per Mounson & Manwood But Dye●contra, for by him as 21. made the benefice voided, so the 28. restores it again, and both stand if it may be, Tenus if the Queen had two titles, to preserve one as Patron, and another by lapse, and granted the Fee of the Avowson of the Church, being voided, and spoke not of the Presentment hac vice, he himself shall present. And if the King had title to present by lapse, or, etc. and he presented, end the Clerk is instituted and admitted, and dies before induction, the King shall present again. Quaere, Otherwise it is in the Case, of a subject: and the Queen after institution and before induction may revoke her presentation. And it was adjudged in the Exchequer chamber, that if the Church be voided per resignation or upon 21. H. 8. for that no notice is given to the Patron although the lapse incurs to the Queen, she shall not present, for than the Prerogative shall do wrong. 999. A man devised Lands in London, to two upon condition to pay Rend to his wife at four Feasts of the year, and if the heir be behind, by 40 days being demand' that it shall be lawful for the woman to distrain and holden that if the Rent be behind, the wife may not distrain till it be demanded, and yet the heir of the husband may enter for condition broken, although the wife never made demand, and as to that they are bound at their peril to pay. And holden that the subsequent words of distress doth not qualify the Condition, but jointly both penalties for the non payment. 349. 1000 An appeal of the death of a brother against I S. of M. etc. as principal, and one F. as principal, whereas the name of the principal was T. S. the accessary appeared, and pleaded no such in rerum natura as I S. the day of the writ purchased nor never after. The two chief Justices held that although there be another I. S. in another County, if there be not in the same where the Town of M. is. Or if they be dead before the writ put chased, the plea is good: and holden there that in favour of life a man may traverse the return of the Sheriff. 1001. The Conusee of a Statute took a Fine of the Land of the Conusor to another use, it is not discharged of the Execution, for the Statute 27. had a saving of elder rights, etc. which the Feoffees have, or may have. Pas. 1002. Lands in the hands of an Abbot, and of the Farmers of an Abbot, were time beyond memory. etc. charged but of tithe of Lamb and Wool, and now the Parson sued to have tithe hay, and grain, prohibition lies by the Statute 31. H. 8. per the parolls discharged in the Statute Parson Pekirks' Case. 1003. A. Tenant in Tail, the remainder to B. and C. in tail, A. discontinued and died without issue, B. brought a Formedon in remainder of the Moiety, the Writ was, that after the death of A. B. and C. to the Demand. Filio & Haered. B. remained. etc. eo quod A. obiit sine Haered. de corp. and well without mention in the eo quod in the death of C. for the clause of eo quod is used always to determine the former Tail, and for the estate for life that is emplyed sufficiently determined per the words quae post mortem, etc. 350. 1004. A man let 10 acre's parcel of a Manor for 10 years rendering Rend, and after let his M●nour for 20 years to begin at Michael. and the Lessee for 10 years never atturned, the 10 years expired, the Lessee of the Manor had 10 acres during his term, because the Franktenement and the Fee abides parcel always. 1005. Upon recovery in a Quare impedit a Writ to admit the Clerk was directed to the Guardian of the Spiritualties, which is not returnable before it is executed, the Bishop is created, it was doubted if their authority cease, But it seems upon the suggestion of the matter supra, the Plaintiff may have another Writ to the Bishop returnable if he william. 1006. A man obliged to two in 200. pound, to be paid 100 pound to one, and 100 pound to the other; the one died, Quaere, if the survivor, or the executor of the other shall have his 100 pound. 1007. A man devised land to his two daughters in tail, they by word made partition, the one died, per Curiam, the other shall have the entire: Peradventure of a term, partition may be made by words. 351. 1008. The Rectory of West Bodin aught to come to Edw. 6. per attaindor of Felony, to which the advowson of the Vicarage was appendent, and was concealed, the Queen granted the Rectory & omnia haereditamenta. parcel. spectant. vel pertin. dictae Rectoriae; and because the Patent was in tam amplis modo & forma quam the Felon had it. Also there are words ex certa scientia, etc. so that the Queen is not deceived; Adjudged that the advowson passeth without special naming: and so it was moved that some books are, that by an usurpation the King shall be out of possession, and put to his droit of advowson; But 35. H. 8. is clear that the Queen may gain possession, per presentment and plenarty six months, against an infant which is a purchaser. Trin. 1009. A man which held by Herriot Custom of divers Lords, he made a fraudulent gift of 20. horses, one of the Lords brought a debt for him and the Queen, for the value of 20. horses, upon the Statute 13. Eliz. Dyer and Harper held it was maintainable, but Manwood contrary; For the other Lords are grieved, and the statute shall not be construed to aid one only concerning his grief. Quaere if the Lords may join in an action. 1010. Husband and wife tenants in special tail, the husband only levied a Fine to his own use, and devised the land to his wife for life, the remainder over rendering Rent, the husband died, the wife entered and paid the Rent and died. The Issue is Barred for a causes, first by the Fine which had Barred his conveyance and the entail. 2. By the remitter waived by the mother. 352. 1011. The Chaplain of the Arch-Bish, of Canterbury having a Benefice of the gift of the Queen, he procured a dispensation of the Archbishop of Canterbury to have a triality, the Queen confirmed the dispensation with a non abstante in aliquo statut. the Chaplain took two others, the first adjudged voided by the Statute 21. H. 8. vide 1. and 2. P. & M. 25. H. 8. and 1. Eliz. 1012. An Abbot made a Lease to another Abbor for 60 years, the Lessee and his Coven. made a Lease for 60 years, the reversion came to the Queen, the 60 years expired, the second Lessee surrendered to the Queen ex intention that the Queen would grant to him for 20 years remaining, the Queen citing the Indenture and surrender ex certa scientia, etc. granted for 20 years, Wray, Southcote and Manwood, held, that the Queen may avoid the Grant because she was deceived, Dyer contra, for it is not upon suggestion but consideration, the which ●s not to the put pose be it true or false. 1013. The custom of granage in London is, that the Mayor shall have the 20 part of fault, brought into the Port of London by an alien, the alien brought salt, and promised to satisfy Granage, In an Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared that for so much being the 20 part not satisfied, etc. and yet as well, as if he had said he had not satisfied the 20 part, for it is employed in the words supra. 353. 1014. Information was exhibited for intrusion into 15. houses, the Defendant conveyed to himself title by the Letters Patents of H. 8. by name of the great Garden, etc. containing in length from the East, etc. 100 feet, and in latitude from, etc. 200 feet. The Attorney of the Queen replied and maintained the information absque hoc, that H. 8. granted the 15 houses by name of the great Garden containing in length 200 feet (where the Defendant had pleaded the 200 feet in latitude, and he made no mention of the latitude, & hoc petit quod inquirat, &c, and upon that they were at issue, and verdict found that H. 8. did not grant by name of the great Garden containing in length 200 feet prout Defend. in Barra allegeth; where it should have been as the Attorney of the Queen had alleged, insomuch that verdict was found for the Queen and judgement given: and after by error was reversed, for error in the Issue and verdict of more feet than in the plea; And there it is said that it is not formal, that be which traverses absque hoc, which is in the negative, should join issue first, but aught to be a rejoinder: so that the party affirmative, aught first to join issue, viz. praedictus Def. us prius dicit, etc. & de hoc ponit se super patriam. And there it is a Quaere if by the Statute of Jeofailes 32. H 8. discontinuance in the Case of the Queen, after verdict be aided. Decimo nono Elisabethae. 354. Mich. 1015. Blower being a Lay man with●●● 24 years of age, was instituted and inducted into a Benefice, a stranger sued a citation out of the delegate to deprive him, hanging which one W. brought a Quare impedit, and against Blower and the Ordinary, and had judgement by default at the grand distress, B. and the Bishop brought a writ of descent upon non summons. W. pleaded in Bar to both (which was evil) the deprivation of Blow. supra; also holden no plea, for the incumbency was not in question, but the disturbance, for which upon demurrer it was adjudged that the first Judgement shall be voided, and the Plaintiffs restored to that which they lost. 1016. A Fine was levied by Edward Barrows to one Anne Barrows to the uses in an Indenture, where there was a proviso, if Edward pay or tender 20 pound during his life at the Fontstone in the Church of Salisbury to Anne, that it shall be to the use of Edward in Fee. 1017. And holden that because the day is not limited that tender shall not be to the purpose, except he give notice to Anne, that she or her deputy may be there to receive. 1018. Cestuy que use 12. Ed. 4. devised his land in E. to his son and his heirs, provided that if he die without issue, or the issues fail living his Executors, they shall cell the land, per Curiam, that is not an estate tail, nor any gift of the land itself, in a Formedon. 1019. A woman covert with her huband, levied a Fine of the land of the wife holden in Capite, and that to the us of her Children, An holden by the greater ere number, that the Wardship is saved by the Stature upon the parties compounded. Notwithstand. Plowden and Dyer contra. 1. Because a woman covert is not solely seized. 2. Also a woman covert hath neither power nor william. 3. Also the Statute was made only for advancement by husbands of their wives, or children, but not contra, and such cases rarely hap, for that they are not provided for. As the 11. H. 7. provides not discontinuance by the husband of the land given to him by his wife, and the chief intent of the 32 was, to give a liberty to make a will of land. Hill. 1020. A Termer is ejected, the Lessor may enter every year for to save a descent, or to have an Assize. but shall not recover damages: by Bell and Dyer, if the Lessor be upon the Land, and the Lessee will make a Feoffement, it is no disseisen. Manwood and Wray contrary, Dyer said if the Lessor after his regress be ousted, he shall have an Assize and recover Damages. Quaere 15. H. 7.5. Lord Cromwell against Andrews. 1021. If a Writ of Discharge of the ancient Sheriff be delivered to the County Clerk sitting in the County Court, the authority of the said Sheriff although absent shall presently cease, for if a man be pronounced outlawed of felony in the County Court, and any of the County do afterwards receive him, they are accessary, for it is a public act of which every one aught to take notice. 1022. The Duke of Somerset bargained and sold land to King Edward the 6. and acknowledged the deed before the Master of the Chancery, but it was never enrolled but put in a Chest; now in time of Queen Elisabeth, it was holden that the enrolment will not make it to pass to the Queen, neither as purchaser, nor as heir, because never in her Ancestor. Pas. 1023. Only brought an Action upon the Case against the Earl of Kent and his wife, and declared upon an assumpsit of his wife whilst she was sole, in Consideration that he had employed great travel and expended 1500 pound about businesses and suits of the wife, that she would repay the 1500 pound, and besides 200 l. more: The Defendants per Protestation that the Plaintiff did not expend 1500 l. and by Protestation that the Feme did not promise' the aforesaid 200 l. over expenses, an for plea said that the Plaintiff expended 10 pounds about, etc. and not above, and that the heir in recompense of part of the Dower of the Feme concluded to make a Lease for years to the Feme to begin after her death, which the Feme caused to be made to the Plaintiff to the use of the Feme; and after marriage the Earl agreed that in satisfaction of the Plaintiff of the said assumpsit for expenses and travel, the Plaintiff should retain the Leases, and that at the request of the Plaintiff, upon which the Plaintiff demur. Mounson and Manwood held the Consideration was against Law, because it imports maintenance, also the Plaintiff aught to have showed what business, etc. Dyer, it seems not to be Maintenance to aid a Widow in her business, but Charity, and that is no satisfaction to retain the Lease which was his own before, and of which no use may be limited. Also it no advantage till the death of the wife, where the amendss upon accord aught to be executed in the life of the Trespassour and aught to be executed before the action brought, and not at a day to come, for although such agreement had day to come, the party may refuse, but otherwise in arbit: ement, and yet arbitritrement aught to be in appearance commodious to both parties, Manwood agrees that it is no satisfaction 1023. A writ of Error is brought against B. upon Error in a Writ of Covenant, where in the Writ of Covenant B. was named Assignee of C. Barh. & Manwood, the word. Assignee enables the Plaintiff, etc. & come j●y nest. gar. per le record, for that, etc. Mounson Dyer, Wray and Bell, and here is the entire name of the Plaintiff, which sufficeth. 357. 1024. A Parson made a Lease for 40 years, the Bishop of London being Patron and Ordinary confirmed it without the Dean and Chapter, the Incumbent died, the Bishop collated another, who made a new Lease, which is well confirmed, the Bishop is translated, the resolution of the Justices was certified to the Counsel, that the first Lease stood good, and not the second before both lives of the Bishop & Incumbent which found the Church charged. 1025. There was a private Statute made 35. H. 8. that all Leases made by A. of the Land of his life for 3 lives or 21 years rendering the ancient Rent, shall be good. The husband made a Lease for 21 years, to begin after a Lease in Esse, and it seems good, for in the Act is no restraint of Leases in reversion, as is in the 32. Mounson contra. 1026. Chick devised a house in Soper lane to Alice his Cousin in Fee simple, and after her decease to W. her son, which W. was heir apparent to A. It was adjudged that the woman is but Tenant for life, the remainder to the son for life, the remainder in Fee to the woman, so the husband of the wife was not tenant by the courtesy. 1027. Spinosas Case, if an Alien born d●e not pray Mediate. Imguae before the venire sacias awarded, he comes too late after, for it appears not to the Court, that he is an alien. 358. 1028. Salfords Case, a Custom was alleged that tenant in Fee might make a Lease but for 6 years, and adjudged a voided Custom, because repugnant to the Fee, and unreasonable. 1029. A Lease to a spiritual person against the Statute of 21. H. 8. c. 12. it was adjudged, that it is not voided, for although the Statute said that none shall take, said not it shall be voided, but ordained penalty, vide for that the first part of the Stat. and the proviso for hospitality. 1030. He in reversion enfeoffed Tenant for life without deed that shall inure first, as a surrender of the Lease for life, and than as a Feoffement, as Tenant for life surrendered to the Grantee of the reversion, that is first an Atturnment, and than a Surrender. 1031. Jointure after the coverture, the husband and wife levied a Fine of the jointure, it seems clear, if it be as that which the Conusee had of the gift of the husband, that it is no Bar in Dower. And the election is not given to the wife till after the death of the husband, according stat. 27. H. 8. 359. Welcden against Elhington. Com. fol. 516. Vicesimo Elizabethae. Mich. 1032. He which held of a Manor in soccage, which Manor is holden over of the King in Capite, purchased a release of the measualty, he shall now hold in Capite, Quia volenti, etc. 1033. Upon a pluries' distress 3. only appeared, the Plaintiff prayed another Distringas, without praying a Tales, If the Defendant pray a Tales, the Court aught to grant it at his request. 360. 1034. A tenant of Prince Arthur as Earl of Chester in Chivalty in Capite died, B. his eldest son is in Ward, B. died without issue, after upon Devenerunt, C. was found brother and heir to B. and within age; C. at full age pursued livery per a Writ to the Escheator, per name of C. son and heir of A. and now it came in question, if the possession continued in the Queen now, etc. And adjudged not. But it is a good livery, for if he had not been named heir to any it is good, for it is a petition; And it is in verity, he is heir to his father, his brother being dead without issue: Also by livery the King shall not part with any thing which is his own, but to do a thing only to which he is holden in Justice, and for that the Advowson appendent shall not pass without naming: Contra in a Grant. But if it be a voided livery the entry of the heir is intrusion, which is pardoned by divers Parliaments, as also by the death of Prince Arthur. 1035. A Peer of Ireland committed treason in Ireland. it may not be tried in England, per stat. 26. H. 8. 32. H. 8. 35. H. 8. 5. Edw. 6. for he is no subject of England but of Ireland; And trial in Ireland is by Parliament, not by Peers. 1036. A Church voided by taking a second Benefice upon 21. H. and lapse came to the Queen, who presented A. who was admitted, instituted, and inducted, after which the Queen presented B. A. died, the Pat●on brought a Quare impedit against B. and counted of the avoidance and lapse supra, and that the Queen presented A. who was admitted and instituted; and that the Church is voided by the death or A. if that be sufficient without saying inducted; and it seems because they said that the Church was voided by the death of A. that it implies an induction, and than it is not revokable, for that etc. 361. 1037. A lease to the mother and son habendum ijs pro ●ermino vi●ae successive uni eorum post alterum sicut nominantur in Indent. & non conjunctim, It was ruled that they are not joint-tenants, but it is a remainder to the son. Hil 1038. Windsor Bargainee of land for 600. pound, by another Indenture covenanted to remake to the bargainer and his heirs, such assurance as the Counsel of the Bargainer shall device within a year; Provided that if the Vendee make default in assurance, than if he do not pay 500 pound to the Vendor, that he shall stand seized to the use of the Vendor, the Vendor did not tender assurance, and the 500 pound is unpaid, the Vendee had the right of the land, because it was the folly of the Vendor not to require assurance. 1039. In Trespass, upon issue of not Culpable the Jury appeared the first day of Hill ' Term, the Defendant said, that the Inquest aught not to be taken, for the Plaintiff had released after the last continuance, but because the release was after the essoign day of the utas, it came not between the last continuance and the utas, therefore the inquest taken, contra if in the mean; But than also he shall say, actio non, and not that the inquest shall not be taken. 1039. Dower by Beamond, the Tenant pleaded assignment of rent out of the land, etc. But because he said not, that it was the land of the Tenant at the ●●me, adjudged against him upon demurrer. 1040. Altons' case, digging of a trench in meadow, by which the pasture is ●ettered, is no waste. Quaere if he pled no waste made, if that be a good evidence, or that he shall pled in Bar. 1041. A Bill of deceit against an Attorney for appearing without warrant, per covin and fraud, in an action of debt, brought against the now Plaintiff, and pleaded non sum informatus, the Defendant said, that he was retained for the Plaintiff and another, and the other him retained for both, and for want of information, he pleaded ut supra, per Curiam, he aught to traverse the fraud. 1042. Tenant of King in Chivalty, enfeoffed his brother, to the intent to infeoff his heir male at full age, whereas at that time he had no male, but his wife was with child, the father died, a male is born, If this Collusion be found by office, Quaere it all, or but a third part shall be in Ward upon 32. 33. and 34. H. 8. 1043. The Jury found that the Executors had taken the rent which was reserved upon a Lease per tenant in Fee, made of a house and implements, and so assets the (so) holden voided, for the rent goeth with the reversion of the land as magis dignum, and it doth belong to the heir. 362. 1044. The second husband and his wife, by Fine did alien the jointure of the wife, the heir within age entered, adjudged that he shall not be in Ward, for he is in as a purchaser, during the life of the wife. If the husband die, Quaere if the wife may enter against the Fine. Pas. 1045. The Queen granted Manor and all woods before this time used or repured, as parcel, etc. and the wood which was parcel of the Manor in the time of Edward 6. and by him granted in Fee, and now recome to the hands of the Queen, shall pass per the word ●ntehac, etc. 1046. Tenant in socage in Capite died, his heir within the age of 14. years, he shall not sue livery, but shall have Ouster le main, together with the issues; Also if the heir be of the age of 14. years or above, there he shall sue livery and pay relief, for that is his full age for socage. 1047. Tenant in Capite levied a Fine, declared by Indenture to be to his use in tail, the remainder to the Conusee in Fee, the issue shall be in Ward to the Queen and not to the Conusee, for by the use the Fee is as a remainder, not as a reversion in the Conusee, although by the Fine the Fee passed to the Conusee, and the Conusee is Donor here. 1048. Termer for a 100 years made a feoffement per words, Dedi, concessi & confirmavi, and by letter of Attorney made Livery, the Lessor being upon the land, yet by Dyer and Wray the land passeth by the feoffement and livery by Attorney, and the dedi & concessi will not make it pass as a Grant of the term. 1049. After 27. a Fine was levied of land, declared by Indenture to be to the intent that the Conuser shall have 10. pound there out of that during his life, and the opinion of the Court was, that he may distrain for Rent by the clause in the Statute of uses, without clause of distress. Trin. 1050 Tenant in Tail made a Feoffement by Letter of Attorney, the Atturner ousted the Termers servant, and made livery, after the Termer agreed, saving his Term, that is a discontinuance. 1051. A man recovered by verdict in Assize, and because no warrant of Attorney was found for the Plaintiff, adjudged Error. 1052. The Sheriff by Fieri facias & vendie. exponas, sold a Term, the first Judgement is reversed, yet the money and not the Term shall be restored, for the sale was lawful. Mich. 1053. Indictment upon the 1. and 13. of Elisabeth upon a praemunire for aiding B. knowing him to be a principal maintainer of the Sea of Rome, and the Indictment was contra formam Statuti praedicti, and yet it is not sufficient, because it was alleged to be to the intent to extill the authority, etc. according to the words of the Statute. Vicesimo primo Elisabethae. Hill. 1054. A Custom in Denbigh that a feme covert with her husband, by surrender in the Court there, may alien her land, it is not abrogated by the Statute of Wales 27. H. 8. for it is an usal● Custom in our Kingdom. And if husband alien the land of the wife, after issue, and the wife die, the heir may not enter till the death of her husband per 32. H. 8. per Curiam. 1055. A Coppyholder prescribed for Estovers in annothers' soil, and said that all Copyholders eiusdem tenementi usi sunt, where he should lay eiusdem Manerii, and for that adjudged a voided prescription. 264. Pas. 1056. One brought a Quare impedit against the Queen, the Ordinary and Incumbent pendente lite the Queen upon resignat. presented another, who is instituted and inducted, and in by 6 months, yet he is removable by a writ to he Bish. although he be not party nor privy to the Judgement in the Quare impedit. Plusors' contra. Vicesimo secundo Elisabethae. Mich. 1057. The Sheriff took an Obligation with condition that if the Obligee shall appear, etc. and than and there (shall) answer, that the Obligation shall be voided, adjudged upon demurrer that it is a good obligation according to the Statute 23. H. 6. for it amounts to as much as than and there to answer. 1058. Attaint was brought in the common Bank upon a verdict in the King's Bench in an information of usury, and the Defendant who brought that being in Execution of the marshalsea tam pro Rege quam ex parte for the penalty was removed by corpus cum causa. And now a writ of manucapt' sufficient securitate came from the Chancery to the common Bank for enlarging the prisoner ad prosequend. etc. And agreed that the recognizance shall be to the Queen & the party, and as well to discourage suitors who are in Execution by trial, to bring attaints, as also because the warrant was in the copulative, that he shall found Mainprize to tender his body, & satisfy the sum, they would have the recognizance of the Mainpern. copulative. 365. And because the party could not found mainprize according he was licenced by the court to go with a Keeper to instruct his counsel after the first verdict was affirmed. 1059. A vowry for damage Felant in, etc. the Plaintiff said that he is seized in Fee of the close adjoining, and the Defendant and those whose estate he had, etc. time beyond, etc. were holden to enclose, the Defendant said that the Close where, etc. was the Franktenement of A. without that the Plaintiff was seized of that in Fee, the Plaintiff demur. And holden that this special traverse of the estate in Fee is good, because the Plaintiff had given advantage of that; Yet if he had but an estate for years, or at sufferance, or common, or licence, hac vice, it sufficeth, contra it but a trespaster. S. F. leek. 366. 1060. Ejectione firmae, supposing a demise per the Lo. Cromwell, the Defendant said, that before the Plaintiff or the Lo. Cromwell any thing had, one B. was seized in Fee, and feoffed one Andrews, who died seized, and his son left to us, by which we were possessed till ousted, and le fils deseisi per dit B. which B. after enfeoffed the Lo. Cromwell, who demised to the Plaintiff, upon which the Defendant re-entered, etc. the Plaintiff took the feoffment and descent by protestation, and for plea before the ejectment B. enfeoffed the Lo. Cromwell, absque hoe quod B. diss. the son and the Defendant demurs; But it was holden a good traverse by the superfluous folly of the Defendant, for in this action it behoves either to confess and avoid, or else to traverse the title in the Court; for a bore colour as in Assize and Trespass, which do not contain title in the Writ, nor Court, (as that action doth in both) it is not sufficient, so that the desseise here shall be intended a confession and avoiding of the title, and of necessity it behoves to be traversed. Et 9 H. 6. it is a maxim, that a disseise alleged in Bar, or replication, is always traversable; yet it may be the feoffment of B. to Andrews, and the dying seif●ed, are also traversable at the election of the Plaintiff. 1061. In Avowry Vernon conveyed to himself the land, as collateral heir of the Lo. Powes, co quod dom. Powes obiit seisitus in feodo sine exitu, etc. The Plaintiff confessing the dying seized, conveyed to him by the devise of the Lo. Powes, absque hoc quod terra descendit to the Defendant; But it was adjudged against the Plaintiff, because he had not traversed the dying seized, but the descent. 1062. A man seized of 10. pound land in capite, and five pound in soccage of a subject, he devised all the capite land, and died seized of the soccage. The Queen shall have the 3. part of the capite, and all the soccage in ward; for otherwise the statute 32. & 34. H. 8. shall be defrauded. 367. 1063. A term is devised to the Executor, who entered and died before probate, yet his entry was Ruled to be a good Executorship, and his Administrator shall have it. 1064. Upon issue joined in Ejectione sirmae, the Plaintiff suggested, that he and the Sheriff, and one of the Coroners were all of the livery of the Count' Wigorn, and prayed a venire sacias to the other Coroner, and the Defendant confessed the suggestion, for that process was made according to the prayer, and the Jury found for the Plaintiff. Now in arrest of Judgement, because it is not a principal challenge, yet because ex assensu partium, and also the statute 32. H. 8. of Jeofails helps the misconveyance of process, Judgement was given. 1065. In a Formedon the Tenant vouched one as cousin and heir, the vouchee without demand of the view entered freely, as he who had nothing by descent: Dyer said, that if the Plea had been prayed to abide, that had been a good entering, but now it may be he is vouched upon his own warranty: But the Tenant said, that he assets, and so at issue. Dyer held that the Plaintiff shall now count presently against the vouchee, before that issue be tried; yet some held this issue triable presently. Hil. 1066. Vincent made a feoffment to the use of himself and his wife in the tail, the remainder to the wife and her heirs for ever, of land holden in Knight's service and died, having issue a son within age, the Lord shall have the Ward of the body and the 3. part of the land. 1067. Error brought in the Exchequer chamber, upon Judgement given in the Exchequer upon information of usury against Ken proacc ptak 80. pound pro accommodatione & damtione diei soluc. 500 pound, etc. 1. Error was showed, because it was not expressly showed if Ken or other accomoda● '. 2. Also the Verdict was, that Ken accepted for accomod ' and day given. 3. Also and so the information also where the Statute is in the disjunctive Curia advisare. The said information was at the commandment of our L. the King only, where it should be an information qui tam pro dom. Reg. etc. and the venire facias was awarded to the Sheriff of the County of Somerset, where the offence is supposed in the information to be in Middlesex in part, where the Defendant joined issue quod non habuit nec accepit, the Verdict was none Culpable, and the said information was exhibited before a Baron only in the vacation. 368. 1068. Upon a trespass upon the Case in Ipswich, where according to the custom the Defendant was committed for default of Mainpernors, and after upon Verdict was condemned, and after upon request of the Plaintiff, committed for the Execution, but that was not entered of Record, and he escaped. Now in debt brought by the Plaintiff in the Bank upon the Record, the Defendant confessed the Judgement supra, and averred the second committing at the request of the Plaintiff for execution, the Plaintiff said, Quod non habetur tale record ' of his request, the Defendant demurred, and good cause, for he had not alleged that it was of Record, and the Plaintiff had good cause to demur, if the committing in Execution by the Bailiffs out of the Court had been insufficient. Quaere hoc. Pas. 1069. A man seized of land in Fee had issue two sons, and obliged him and his heirs in an Obligation and died scised, the eldest entered and died, the youngest shall be charged as heir of his father notwithstanding the mean descent, so of Grandfather, father and son: And so of a Grandfather, and two daughters, which have two sons and do not make partition, for they shall join in Assize notwithstanding several descents, and they are one heir to the Grandfather, if the daughter becomes heir to the father by the possession of the brother, or the father heir to the son by a mean descent to the uncle, which by no means may be heir to the the Obliger. Quaere. 1070. Lands to the value of fourteen pound per annum were conveyed to the Dean and Chapter of Pa. to found ten Marks annually to a Priest to sing, etc. and the other profits for an obite, they maintained the Priest with ten Marks, but they observed not the obite within five years of the Statute, the Rent of ten Marks is only given to the King, by the first of Edward sixth, and not the land, for that belongs to Dean and Chapter of Paul's. 1071. The form of a Certificate the Bishop of accoupled in Matrimony, & solutio Doctorum, that the wife of full age married to the husband at the age of twelve years who died after he was put into the bed to her, and within age of consent, he aught to certify lawful espoused in case of Dower, quamvis alias sint spensalia de futuro. 1072. By all the Justices, if a Termer grant all his estate to A. to the use of himself and his wife for their lives, if now he grant all his interest it is voided, for he had nothing, for the 27 executes not the possession to that use. 1073. Morgagee of Capite land died, his heir within age, and the King seized, and also certain socage land, the Morgager performed the Condition, he may enter, and divest the Wardship of the King, of the body, and of the land. Knightley's Case. 1074. The Tenor of a Recognizance by mittimus came out of the Chancery into the Common Bank, and it was holden that upon the tenure a Scire facias shall not issue: but an original Writ of Debt, and declare upon the Tenure. 1075. Plomer Grantee of annuity pro consilio impend. was of counsel with the adversary of the Granter, not being requested to give counsel to the Granter, the annuity is not gone. 1076. The Statute 13. Eliz. cap. 12. which ordains that he which reads not the articles of Religion shall be deprived ipso facto, ordains also that no lapse per deprivation ipso facto shall incur, but after notice given by 6 months, the Patron is knowing of the not reading, and suffered two years to incur, yet because he had notice by the Ordinary the King may not present. 1077. In an Ejectionae firm because no evidence was given touching damages the Jury found the damages according to the Count, which was excessive, yet attaint lies not. 370. 1078. Clifford brought an Ejection Cusiod. ter. & haered. they are at issue upon traverse of the Tenure which was tried for the Plaintiff, and damages assessed, in arrest of Judgement it was said that the Writ lies not, for the ejectment of the body, but of the land only, upon which the Plaintiff relinquished the damages and costs for that which was assessed for both, and had Judgement for Ejectment of the Land. 1078. The Ward and marriage of the heir only may not be granted without deed. 1079. Two are obliged coniunctim & divisim as principal Debtors, without words that the one is pledge for the other, a Writ of plegi●s acquietand. lies not. 1080. Two being rob of one joint sum of money, they may join in an action upon the Statute of Wint. but otherwise, if it be of several sums. The Hundred pleaded that they freshly pursued the Felons per three Towns to the Town of A. which is in the Hundred next adjacent, and there they gave hue and cry to the inhabitants: Adjudged not plea, for the Statute is not satisfied without apprehending or answer of the malefactor, or of knowing their names, that so they may be indicted and outlawed, vide new Stat. 27. Eliz. 1081. Tenant in Capite made a Feoffement to use of a woman which God should give in marriage to his son for life, the remainder to the son in tail, the marriage took effect, the father died, the son sued Livery for the third part in the life of his wife, for the conveyance intended for his advancement, he taking the profits and being also the principal cause of the estate. Trin. 1082. The Statute of Glocest. cap. 1. warrants costs and damages to be given in a Writ of Entry in le post upon disseiser made to the Demandant in mean, otherwise if to the Ancestor of the Demandant. 1083. The Bishop of Winchester granted annuity out of a Manor to Doctor Dale for life pro consilio impenso & impendendo, The Dean and Chapter confirmed, the Bishop died. Quaere if the Grant be voided against the Successor per Statute 1 Eliz. made against Grants, Feoffements, and Conveyances, etc. Also if a Debt lies against the Executors of the Bishop for the arrearages incurred in his life, during the life of the Grantee. Vicesimo tertio Elisabethae. Mich. 1083. An Indenture of covenant between A. and B. in which A. covenanted in consideration of a marriage to be between his son and the sister of B. that he at the costs of his son by his sufficient deed, would before Michaelmas assure land to his son, and B. did covenant if A. performed it, that than he would make a general release to him. Although A. was ready, and his son tendered not the assurance, yet if the conveyance be not made, B. is not bound to make a release, the Defendant pleaded in Bar perform. of all covenants ex parte sua, etc. and in the rejoinder he only shown that he was ready, it is a departure. 1084. A man devised all his Lands to his sister, except one Manor, which I appoint to pay my Debts, and made two Executors by name and died, the one Executor died, the other may cell and pay the Debts for the intention. 1085. Certificate of Excommunication under the Seal of the Commissioners Delegates, to which is appeal from the Prerogative Court of Canterbury was allowed. 1086. They father Tenant for life, the remainder to the son, the son devised the land which he had or may have in reversion, after the death of his father, to his wife, rendering for her natural life 40 shillings Rend to the right heirs of the father and died, living the father, by the Court no other estate shall pass but for life when the remainder falls, viz. after the death of the father, and than also gins the payment of the 40 shillings by the year, for the father had no right heir during his life. 1087. The Condition of an Obligation being upon divers points, in Debt if Issue be joined upon one point which is found against the Plaintiff and he barred, although after all the other are broken, yet he shall never sue his Obligation again per Cnri●●m. 1088. An action upon the Case supposing promise to reassure Land, was brought by the Lord S●●ff. against Alderman Haward. The Jury found that the D●s●ndant did not promise' in manner and form, notwithstanding if H. and W. witnesses have sworn true, as it seems to us they have, we say that he had promised, and if the court think so they assessed damages: Dyer and Ayl●se assembled in the Chancery, held it clear that the verdict shall be for the Defendant. 1089. An Executor made Executor and died before probate, his Executor is not Executor to the first testator. Notwithstanding if the goods after Debts and Legacies paid were bequeathed to his testator, the Administration shall be committed to him with the testament annexed, and if they were not bequeathed to him, the Administration shall be committed to him to whom they were bequeathed, and for default of ●he such to the next of blood of the first testator, which demands that, Is●●des case. 1090. Two provisoes were in two several Indentures of conveyance of several Manors to A. and B. that if the Feoffer pay or tender 20 shillings to A. and B. or to the heirs of A. that the conveyance shall be voided. A. died, tender to B. is not sufficient, but to the heir of A. and it shall be 20 shillings for every proviso. Otherwise of another collateral Act; one only sufficeth for both as a carve of land descended is Assets' for three several Formedons. 1091. The Lord of a Waste of 200 acres, he inseof●ed one of 50 acres towards the North, the Feoffee put in his beasts and they estrayed into the residue, and they are distrained damage pheasant, and well: for the purchasers aught to enclose, or to keep the beasts within the 50 acres, and so aught the Lord of the residue. Adjudged. 1092. A Parson made a Lease by Indenture for 12. years, and covenanted to suffer the Lessee and his assigns to enjoy for those years, and that he would not do any act by which the Benefice should be voided: and that one A. Farmer of part of the tithes should pay 8 pounds annually for 7 years, and was obliged to perform the Covenants, and now in a Debt brought upon the Obligation, he pleaded performance of the Covenants, ex parte sua perimplend. till 20 of Eliz. at which time he himself was absent by the space of 80 days generally, and spoke not of the Statutes 13 Eliz. c. 17. and 14 Eliz. cap. 11. And as to the Covenant in the negative, he said nothing ut oportet, but it seems there needs not express mention that the Farmer paid the 8 pounds, for it seems employed in ex parte sua perimplend. Quaere if the Covenants and Obligation are voided from the beginning, or but after the absence. 373. 1093. In ancient demesh Tenant in Tail levied a Fine with Proclamation, and in a formedon there brought the Tenant pleaded the Fine to be a Bar to the Tail, by the Custom, and Judgement there given according, upon which a writ of falsee Judgement was brought, and if the Custom of Barring Tails be averrable against the Statute de donis condi●. which is within memory was assigned for Error. It was said if the Judgement be reversed; Judgement shall only be that he shall be restored to his action, and than they will adjudge again according to their Custom. 1094. Debt against a Niece, as Cousin and heir upon an Obligation, she said that only a reversion descended, etc. And Judgement was given that he shall recover the Debt and damages of the aforesaid reversion to be levied when it falleth, and shall have a special Writ to extend the entire land, it seems it was by the Common Law before the Statute West. 2. cap. 18. 374. 1095. Tenant in general Tail having Issue two sons, the eldest had issue a daughter and died, h●s wise with child of a son. the father suffered a common recovery to the use of himself for life, the remainder to the recoverers for 24 years, the remainder to the heir maies of his body; the recovery was had returnable, Octab. Mich. viz. 9 day of Octob. upon day at the hou●e of 9 of the clock in the morning, he himself died, yet it seems very good, and the Writ of Habere facias s●isinam was awarded and returned served, and after the so●● the belly of the mother is born, if the uncle or the son now born, or the daughter of the eldest son shall have the land was now the Question. And it was resolved by the Justices that the son posthum. shall have it as Issue male of the body, for if it be by purchase because of the mean estate for years, the uncle may not have it, for it behoves to be heir as well as male, who shall take: And the daughter of the eldest son is heir: But it seems that it shall be taken by descent till the son born, also by all the Justices but only Dyer and Peryam, that the recovery is executory against the Issue in Tail, because of the recovery in value. 1096. Worsley covenanted with his eldest son and two others, to stand seized to the use of himself for life, the remainder to his eldest son in tail, the remainder to himself in tail, the remainder to Bichard Worsley his bastard son in tail, and if any in the remainders shall make discontinuance or other prejudice, to any of the remainders, his estate shall cease, and they shall stand seized to to the use of the next in remainder, according to the limitation. The father surrendered and granted all his estate to the eldest son, who levied a Fine with Proclamations, and 5. years possed, the bastard supposing that he had title without entry made a Lease to try the title, and within the year information upon the staute 32. H. 8. for buying of titles was exhibited. And by all the Justices being but a term, it is within the statute, as in Partridge Case; And it was holden that for the use to the bastard there aught to be a valuable consideration, for natural affection is not sufficient, for he is a stranger in the law, although a son by nature. Besides if the bastard had title, yet that the non claim within 5. years of the Fine, had barred that. And as it seems, if the consideration had been sufficient, that he had title in the life of the father, for as it seems the estate tail of the father in remainder was in abyance by grant of all his state; so that the bastard who had failed in remainder is immediate to the advantage. Hill. 375. 1097. A man demised divers closes per words demi●eth, granteth, and to farm letteth, together with all manner of timber, wood, underwood, and hedge rows, except the great Oaks in such a close, the Termer cut where they are not excepted, it is waste Adjudged, for he which had timber demised may not cut, and the word Grant in the Lease altars not the same from being a Demise. 1098. Error brought in the King's bench upon recovery in Assize, and the judgement affirmed, now they brought a Writ of Error in the Parliament of the judgement in the King's bench, and the chief Justice brought the Record in the Parliament, and also the transcript, and after that there examined, the record was remand, and the transcript remained, upon that a Scire facias awarded. The Errors assigned in the King's Bench were because the parties were adjourned in a foreign County to pled, and upon that issue joined, the Assize passed without Writ of resummons awarded: also no place was in the teste of the Hab. Corp. Pas. 1099. A man made a Lease for life rendering Rend, and died, if the Executor shall distrain or have an action of Debt, for the arrearages in the life of the testator, per 32. H. 8. cap. 37. Some held that the Statute is to be understood, of rents in gross, and not incident to the reversion: Others held contrary by 37. H. 6.39. and 10. H. 6. that Debt lies by the common Law for the Executor or administrator of the Lessor. 376. 1100. The Act of 13. Eliz. against Fugitives, and the statute of Explanation 14. g●ves no greater interest to the Queen in the lands of a Fugitive, than he had before, by seizure, for not returning after Licence determined, upon receipt of the Privy seal: And therefore where the Queen seized before 13. and granted the land by Patent, quam diu in manibus nostris, etc. and after the 13. seized again, and one as his steward grants a Copy it is voided, for it shall be steward to the Patentee. 1101. The Statute of Usury 13. Eliz. Cap. 8. is made to continued 5. years next after the end of the said Parliament, and than to the end of the first Session of the Parliament than next ensuing, if (next ensuing) shall be referred to the Session, or to the Parliament. And adjudged that to the Parliament, which is the principal substantive, and it is for the Commonwealth; So that 3. Session of the Parliament began 14. being the 13. did not end it; But it shall be a new Parliament after the 5. years ended; And that it was so holden was published by Proclamation. 1102. Judgement given in the 5. Ports. False judgement lies not in the King's Bench, nor in the Common-Pleas; But it is reversable in the Court of the Guardian of the Cinque Ports upon examination, apud Curiam Sh●pware. 1103. The Justices of Assize have authority by statute 25. H. 8. Cap. 6. to award Tales de circumst. Coronat. for favour in the Sheriff. 1104. A man seized of a message in D. by purchase of T. Cotton, he made a feoffement by letter of Attorney, of the house in D. nuper Ric. Cotton, & the opinion of the Court was, that it is a good feoffement, for Cotton without other name is very certain, and so is the message in D. without other name; so that T. Cotton is but surplusage. 1105. Tenant in tail suffered a Common Recovery, and died before Execution, a Scire facias lies against the issue for Execution, because of the value. Vide Manxels Case. Trin. 377. 1106. A man grants a reverlion for life or years, rendering when the reversion shall hap 10. pound rend; that is to be understood, when the possession of the reversion shall fall, or hap, because most strong against the Reservor. 1107. Annuity was granted for exercise of stewardship, and after Recovery in Annuity the rent was again behind, and the Grantee brought a Scire facias, the Defendant said, that the Plaintiff hanging the W●●t, had refused being requested to bold Court; and adjudged a good Plea; for upon the Scire facias he had judgement of the arrearages before, and hanging the Writ, where if he refuseth the Annuity ceaseth, and than he shall recover the arrearages by Writ of debt only. 1108. Office was found after the death of the Lord Powes, that he died seized, and Vernon is his cousin and heir, and within age. C. tendered traverse of the dying seized, and that V is not heir, and had the land in Fee ferme, Vernon came of full age, the Queen is at election to drive him to sue general livery non obstant ' statut. 33. H. 8. and that the land is of the value of a 100 pound per annum, and if the traverse be not found for G. at the next Assize, Vernon may proceed after with his livery. 1109. Paul's Case: Husband and wife are sued in the Bank, the husband being a Clerk of the Chancery, they shall not have the privilege, for the woman is not impleadable there. Otherwise it is where the husband is impleaded in the Bank, & veniendo, etc. he and his wife be arrested into a base Court. 1110. A Clerk which had a Benefice over the value of 8. pound per annum, without dispensation took another, and he was to that instituted and inducted, but did not subscribe to the Articles of Religion, according to 13. Eliz. and after died. tenus per Curiam that the first Benefice voided by death. and not by the statute 21. H. 8. because never lawful Incumbent of the second. The end of the Reports of the Lo. Dyer. FINIS. A perfect Table of the principal matters contained in every Case in this Book. Casus prim. IN debt where acceptance of another thing is a bar. 1. Attaint or Error, where maintainable by him in reversim. 2. In whose name the Kings Grantee of a Recognizance may sue. 3. A Clerk cannot pled in Bar before Induction 4. An Annuity pro Consilio, etc. by what Act forfeited. 5. If an Executor redeemeth goods pledged, it shall be allowed. 6. Where an A●iennce is a plea in disability. 7. Where issue in tail is barred as privy by 4. H. 7. 8. What proviso good, and what no●. 9 Dye●h luth not till the reversion be recontinued. 9 Where the rend sh●●● apportioned. 10. No remitter against a Record. 11. What act by the servant is felony within 21. H. 8. 12. Idemp itate nominis where it lieth, 13. A rent de novo where it is deviseable. 14. Where payment is a plea without an acquittance. 15. No judgement till the issue be tried. 16. Where the ●u band shal●e said to be an Assignee. 17. Where the tenant may vouch at large. 18. A devise of a ●erm where good, and where not. 19 Where an essice of trust is grantable. 20. Where the Heir of Cestuy que use shallbe in ward. Where the Writ may be general, and Count special. A ●●●tenancy may be, and yet no survivor. 21. A Lease for life the remainder to the donor in Fee, Quaere whether a discontinuance 22. Upon a divorce goods restored to the woman. 23. When a Presentment in a Leet must be traversed. 24. Where a proviso makes a Condition, and where a Covenant. 25. Where Executors liable to a Covenant without naming, but not the heir. 26. In Debt where Non habuit, etc. is no plea. 27. A Feoffement without deed to 4. and livery to one, nothing passetth to three. 28. Much good matter touching Relations. 29. A Feoffement to the recoverer to an use, how in 30.31. Livery in one acre in the name of all where good 32. Where a Plea amounts to the general issue. 33. Where waste lieth for cutting of wood. 34. Two cannot join in an action of slander. 35. An Obligation good without in cujus rei, etc. 36. Obligamus nos & utrumque nostrum, is several. 37. a Covenant to take hedge boot and fuel by the assignment of the Bailiff how to be expounded. 38. Debt against Executos for money delivered to the testator, where wager of Law lieth, and where not. 39 One executor grants all his part, the whole passeth. 40. In Trespass where the Plaintiff must make a new assignment. 41. Where there shall be a Remitter, and where not. 42. Where Debt lieth for a penalty. 43. A Lease for three years, and so from 3 years to 3 years. 44. Where a Petit. Cape doth lie. 45. To whom the present action belongeth. 46. Where the Defendant must pled always ready. 47. Where the Process shall issue to the next Hundred. 48. A man arrested must appear notwithstanding a Supersedeas. 49. A Demise to two sons equally, Quaere if Jointenants. 50. Where a man shall be tenant by courteste. 51. Where payment is a plea without acquittance. 52. An attaint good, notwithstanding a Variance. 53. A dog killeth Sheep, where the Mast. is punishable. 54. Where a thing vested shall not be revested. 55. A Lunatics lands shall not be to the King's use. 56. A thing in action is not grantable. 57 If the Tenant may be averred pernor of the profits. 58. Where Grantee of a reversion shall have the Rent without atturnment. 59 Where an Essoin doth lie, and where not. 60. A Devise that A. shall have the Government of his children. 60. An action for saying he was a false thief. 62. In action of Debt upon a Bond seven exceptions taken. 63. What is a good plea in an account. 64. A Composition to present where good without deed. 65. A dog killeth sheep without incitation. 66. Not Scire facias without a new mittimus upon a Transcript. 67. ' Where in pleading the Patent must be showed. 68 In detinue where a traverse is necessary. 69. Where Cestui que use may distraiu without Attournment. 70 A Condition for quiet enjoying, when broken. 71. A Jury in M. take notice of Assets' in any County. 72. Acceptance of Rent affirmeth a voidable Lease. 73. Grantee of an Obligation may sue in his own name. 74. A Warren passeth not without cum pertinentiis. 75. Where recove●●rs may avow for Rent by 7. H. 8. cap. 4. 76. In waste what pleas the lessee may pled. 77. Where Jointenancy shall abate a Formedon. 78. What plea maketh a departure. 79. Disseisee reenters, he shall have c●●ne severed. 80. The issue barred by a Fine, and yet no discontinuance. 81. Fully administered pleaded, yet the plaintiff had judgement. After debt brought upon one bond, executors cannot pay another. 82. Where 27. H. 8. of uses aught to be pleaded. 83. Debt for costs after the Record removed, good, although the judgement be reversed. 84. Debt for rent of 26. acres, verdict found but 21. demised. 85. Covenant to repair banks, after broken by suddeu floods. 86. Land deviseable by the custom of L. in Mort main. A remainder may not be limited after an estate in fee. 87. Livery made the Termor being upon the land. But of a livery within view, quaere. 88 Where privilege allowed to a Chancery man. 89. Variance between the pardon and Indictment. 90. In Dower a special Scire facias and Writ of seisin. 91. An obligation delivered to the Obligee himself. 92. A seoffment to divers without deed and livery to one. 93. Feoffee of a Conisor of a statute, brings Audita querela. 94. After recovery tenant in tail dieth before execution, the issue not remitted, nor can f●lsif●e. 95. The next presentation granted to one, after to another. 96. Much good matter touching waist, and pleading therein. 97. Jurors agreed, and after eat and drink, if good. 98. Array challenged, because the Sheriff Cousin, etc. 99 Appeal of robbery where it must be brought. 100 Lease by a Dean where good without the Chapter. 101. In Donor, issue never seized, etc. what is good Evidence. 102. A second deliverance is but a revivor of the first plaint. 103. A proclamation upon the exigent returned by the Sheriff out of office at the time is voided by 6. H. 8. 104. A condition to enjoy lands peaceably, good matter. 105. A Parson shall pay tithes notwithstanding an unity. 106. Great variety of learning, of Customs and Subsidies. 107. A Tenure in Capite, and by whom it must be created. 108. A destructive condition taken strictly. 109. A Condition not to assign, and he deviseth. 110. He who should take advantage i● party to the breach. 111. Construction of the word Conjunctim 112. A man wounded in one County dies in another there the Appeal brought. 113. Where a lease is voided by the death of the Bishop. 114. If a Reversion pass by the name of a Remainder. 115. Indictment for murdering his wife, very good matter. 116. By recovery of land● the buildings thereupon are recovered. 117. Where a condition voided because it is repugnant. 118. Debt against the Executors of an Administrator. 119. How and when two Towns may intercommon. 120. An Obligation to a Dean and his successors is good to them. 121. The King cannot be a disturber. 122. A Juror laboured to give a verdict according to his Conscience. 123. Issue if a villain regardant, what is good evidence to prove it. 124. Several Grants in one Deed. 125. Where after discontinuance the Issue may seize a villain. 126. Every man is party to an Act of Parliament. 127. What Acts are countermandable. 128. Exposition of the word (shall) 129. Poisoning made Treason by 31. H. 8. 130. Where a release good, and where not, a good difference. 131. Alias dictus is no part of the name. 132. What is a good Accquittance, and where a deed may be twice delivered. 133. A lease by Tenant in Tail where voidable only by his Issue. 134. Where Rent must be demanded upon the land. 135. In Partition too little is allotted, Quaere what remedy. 136. Where a non obstante is good by the King. 137. Tenant in Chivalry gives land, rendering 10 shillings only, what tenure. 138. A Confirmation of the Patron and Ordinary where it is good. 139. Where the particular estate and remainder are voided. 140. A will of land devisable by the Common Law good without deed. 141. If a man claims under a Patent, it must be showed. 142. 143. A Remitter where it shall be, and where not. 144. Where the Issue of Tenant in Capite shall not be in ward. 145. Two parceners of an Advowson, which of them shall Present. 146. The Plaintiff in a Quare impedit made a Knight. 147. Summing which is the office of the Clerk is not necessary. 148. A Feoffement by a man deaf and dumb, if good. 149. Where Rent shall be apportioned. 150. Where final Judgement shall be given in a writ of Right. 151. Where acceptance of a thing collateral barreth a Bond. 152. If a Bond be once for feited a release after will not help. Very great plenty of matter touching Releases. 153. What Estate Cestui que use may make by 1. R. 3. c. 154. Tenure of an Honour, is not Tenure in Capite. 155. A Grant by a Bishop good as a new Lease without Attournment. 156. A Grant of a Rectory discharged of all Pensions, portions, etc. 157. The nature of a Forspris, what it is. 158. The plea of non est factum where it is good. Of what Cattles the second deliverance must be. 159. The Lord Latimers' will, and divers acquaint points in it. 160. A Burgess of the Parliament what Privilege he hath. 161. A lease by a Prebena if it bindeth the Bishop. 162. Where the wife may waive her Jointure. 163. Information for Pluralities, what Hundredors' must be returned. 164. Where a plaint in an assize may be abridged, and of livery by letter of Attorney. 165. An annuity pro Consilio if assignable. 166. Waste in cutting ashes. 167. Assize for rend divers errors assigned, very good matter, Non licebit maketh a condition. 168. Debt upon an escape, and upon a demurrer, divers resolutions. 169. No occupancy a difference between a lease for life and years. 170. If a man deny his deed, judgement is quod capiatur. 171. Upon an exteat no property is in the Cognizee till the Liberate awarded. 172. Tenant in tail infeosseth his issue within age, quaere if a Remitter. 173. An Indictment of an Assault, and divers exceptions taken. 174. A Parson grants a rend charge to begin after his death, which is confirmed, quaere if good. 175. Three brothers, and the middle of them slain, the eldest ●ieth within the year, who shall bring the appeal. 176. Where a Scire facias lieth to execute a remainder by Fine. 177. Where a man may vouch in a sorraine County. 178. Acceptance preventeth a breach of a Condition. 179. Trespass for depasturing of swine, divers exceptions taken, and much excellent matter thereupon. 180. The form of a Sergeants Wrtt. 181. Where a Will shall be good within 32. H. 8. 182. Where a wife is hound by a fine levied by her husband. 183. Where the nature of Gavelkind is altered by a fine. 184. Where a new Incumbent shall avoid a Lease made by the Parson. 185. An action of the Case for words. 186. Where a new writ of partition shall be awarded. 187. Where an Avowry for damage pheasant lieth. 188. Exceptions to an information upon a Will. 189. Deviser of a Term without remedy. 190. An action of the Case for words 191. Where a concord executed is a good bar. Where an Arbitrement is a good plea. 192. A writ of Error by Administrators, quaere. 193. Entry in parcel after the last continuance a bar in dower, and she must show the death of her huusband certame. 194. Upon Judgement in a Quare impedit, Errors assigned. 195. A Patent must mention a former Lease. 196. The exposition of videlicet. 197. No Remitter if possession be executed by the statute of 27. H. 8. 198. A lease by an Abbot where voided by the statute of 31. H. 8. 199. Where a Tales is well awarded and served. 200. An assize is but a supposal. 201. Where a Traverse is well taken. 202. What words make a Condition. 203. If one be vouched as Cousin, he must show how Cousin. 204. By exception of timber & great woods, what is excepted. 205. A Prohibition for tithes where it lieth. 206. In a Writ of Right, where a Habeas corpora shall issue. 207. A Writ of Partition, and much good matter upon it. 208. In what order Administrators must pay debts. 209. Five notable questions for the Lord Willoughby. 210. What Lease is good by 31. H. 8. in the Court of Augmentations. 211. What lands are liable in the hands of the heir by descent. 212 What College is given to the King by 1. Edw. 6. 213. An Attaint is no Supersedeas as a writ of Error is. 214. Debt against Executors in the Debet & Detinet. 215. Where a Tender in base money is good. 216. The custom of London in Attachments. 217. 218. Who shall bear the imbasement of moneys. 219. The Sergeants case full of excellent Learning. 220. A Bishop hath title by lapse and is deprived, who shall present. 221. Where a Patentee must make a demand of rent. Rend reserved upon inhes good. 222. Multiplication Felony by 4. H. 4. c. 41. 223. The Plaintiff after verdict abridged the plaint of two acres. 224. Spinster no good addition for a Gentlewoman. 225. A Petition sued to revive an use. 226. Several material errors assigned in an Ejectment. 227. Divers Errors alleged to reverse a fine. 228. In waste four notable exceptions taken. 229. What is a good Bar in Dower. 230. Challenge in an Attaint, and Demurrer for two causes. 231. An agreement and the construction thereof. Quaere. 232. General issue in waist and special matter in Evidence. 233. In a Grant the King's Successors bound without the word Heirs. 234. Two Writs depending for the same thing. 235. What manner of Royal assent will make an Act. 236. Judgement in waist reversed for four Causes. 237. A Lease in futuro when it shall commence. 238. Where the King may defeat an estate at william. 239. Where E. 6. shall avoid Leases made by his father. 240. Before Livery passed the wife died, if the Baron Tenant by the courtesy. 241. Where the Court ex officio must take notice and give judgement. 242. What manner of plea is a departure in law. 243. Where an use may arise upon a Covenant. 244. What estate is a Jointure within 27 H. 8. 245. What Exception is good, much good matter there. 246. Verdict taken after the day of return is an Error. 248. The Q. writ of summons without supremum Caput, good. 249. In a writ of right the Inquest shall not be taken by default. 250. What partition is good, and where compellable. 251. Two conspire in Treason, both are Traitors. 252. Where a Venditioni exponas shall be awarded. 253. Indictment of Burglary voided without Intravit. 254. Clergy allowed to an accessary in horsestea within 1 E. 6. 12. 255. What escape is Felony by the Common Law. 256. Indictment quod cepit bona Cujusdam Ignoti, is good. 257. justices of Assize hold plea of an appeal of Murder. 258. Indictment of murder, etc. if good without Percussit. 259. The husband may not have an heir in his life: 260. What pardon dischargeth a felony. 261. Stolen goods bought out of the market, the property remaineth. 262. Trial by Peers hath always been in ure. 263. Who may be an accusor in Treason. 264. Challenge of a Juror for the hundred. 265. Lands given to the honest men of I. rendering rend makes a Corporation. 266. Upon Elegit the extent must be by oath of 12. men, where a procedendo in loquela may be awarded. 267. A Petition of Right sued, and when it aught to be. 268. Where a Signiory in suspense of a Wardship may be. 269. Where a Lease in reversion by Dean and Chapters good. 270. In a writ of right where and how the demandant may be none. 271. Where a judgement by default against an Infant is error. 272. Where the Court may diminish or increase damages. 273. A warrant of Attorney errontous if amendable, Quaere. 274. Where the Husband is Executor of his own wrong, and what Act by, him amounteth to an administration. 275 What is a good title to bring a Quare impedit. 276. A Lease by a Prebend, with the assent of the Bishop, if good. 277. When Act is a recencilement after an elopement. 278. The Plaintiff enters between verdict and Judgement if the damages, he list, Quaere. 279. What should be said at double plea and a good traverse. 280. Tenant in tail, leases for years and is attainted having issue, if the King shall avoid the Lease. 281. Where the King may grant a thing that is not in him. 282. What is waste in a Stable, and what is not. 283. Who shall have election. 284. Of Feoffment by letter of Attorney by an Infant, and much good matter there. 285. Where Contra foreman collationis lieth. 286. In a replevying for rent a demurer and divers exceptions taken 287. Questors of land entailed. 288. In an action of debt nothing by descent pleaded, Quaere. 289. In a writ of right Close where a Procedendo lieth. 290. What pleading as a Jeofail. 291. When a second Lease for ten years shall commence. 292. In an action of debt non est factum pleaded. 193. Debt against an administrator of an administrator. 294. What Traverse maketh a Jeofail. 295. A fine levied of land Capite by just Mervin. 296. In an action upon Assumpsit for what time damages must be assessed. 297. A Covenant without the words Heirs or Executors. 298. Where a special verdict may be found. 299. A power to make Leases for life to years. 300. An assize of the Filizers office. 301. Where an acceptance of rent barreth. 302. The Plaintiff declareth of twenty trees cut, the Jury found ten. 303. Tenant in tail deviseth land it is no discontinuance. 304. A Vicar refuseth to pay a subsidy, if the vicarage be voided. 305. Where modo & forma is not material. 306. Where a Repleader shall be awarded, and where a grant is good to a trespasser. 307. A prescription to distrain a Ferrymen Barge for repairing of a Bridge at Gravesend. 308. Who shall enter for a Condition broken. 309. Where a fine by one Sister barreth the other. 310. Demurrer upon ●ar to the Avowry. 311. Where the Defendant need not to be supposed in the custody of the Marshal. A Precept to the Sheriff without writ or Teste of the Chief Justice. 312. An Action of the case for words. 313. If the Court ex officio are bound to take notice of 23 H. 6. c. 10. Outlawry is excepted in that statute. 314. An Action of the case for a chain of gold: very good matter. 315. A good estate in remainder although the particular estate fail. 316. If the issue shall inherit against a Collateral warranty, fine with proclamations, and attainder of his father. 317. Absque hoc quod talis dimisit, evidence that he had nothing in the land at the time. 318. Where it is in the discretion of the Judges to grant restitution. 319. What is a good Lease by a Prior within 31 H. 8. 320. P. a●t●●ined but not deprived, a new Dean confirms a Lease. 321. Where an Heir shall sue Livery, or Ousterlemain. 322. Upon nothing by descent in fee, a special verdict given. 323. A debt due to the Q. is not gone by suspension. 324. A Condition annexed to a Will, and where it may defeat part only. 325. A woman conspired to rob her Mistress, if principll, and it petit Treason. 326. One entitled by the common law, and another by sta. cannot join in partition. 327. Executors refuse to pay debts, if the heir may enter and pay. 328. J. C. ●ointed to one and said, Behold King Edward. Treason. 329Vpon a Privy Seal a subject refused to return into England. 320. 〈…〉 ●●ste of a writ of Entry before the return, It is Error. 321. I● the ●e●● being in by 27 H. 8. be remitted. 332. W●●● by the Baf it shallbe ad exhaeredationem Episcopi, or ●●●lesiae. 333. The Act of 23 H. 8. not suffered to be given in evidence. 334. If a Church voided by the grant of the next avoidance it passes 〈◊〉. 335. If Grantee of a Seignory shall have a Wardship fallen before. 336. Attorney makes livery upon Tenant for life in possession. 337. An appeal of death, and much good matter therein. 338. The statute of 1 & 2 Ph. & M. taketh not away 35 H. 8. c. 2. 339. A Lease made by the Surveighors of the marquis of Dorset. 340. A plaint must begin the same Fair the contract is made. 341. A Parson makes a Lease, and is deprived, the Incumbent may enter. 342. Issue in remainder may have an action within age if he william. 343. The year of delivery of the warrant to the Chancellor omitted. 344. If an appeal lieth against the accessary. 345. Device of Gavelkind, remainder proxim. haered. masculis. 346. Notwithstanding 1 & 2 P. & M. Trials according to the Common law. What accusation is sufficient within 5 Ed. 6. 347. A Jeofaile for defect in the Replication. 348. Lessee of a Disseisor continueth possession after entry of the Disseisee. 349. In a Quare impedit three points inquiralde. 350. Executors grant a next avoidance, it is an administration. 351. Justices fined in the Star-chamber for sitting contrary to the stat. of 5 & 6 E. 6. 352. A Dedimus potestatem to receive an Atturnment. 353. A Petition of Right in nature of a Formedon in remainder, good matter. 354. A difference between a Condition and a Confidence; also where a request must be made to the King. A Bar by warranty and assets which are after evicted. Quaere. 355. What is a breach of a Covenant. 356. If a Rent-charge for years pass by a devise paroll, and what it deviseable by apparel. If a Remainder be good depending upon a particular restate in suspense. 357. A. makes a feoffement, and is attainted, his wife shall not have Dower. 358. Acceptance of a new Lease is a surrender of the old. 359. E. 6. grants to his sister the manner of D. dum sola, etc. she grants a rent, etc. 360. A writ of forcible entry upon the statute of H. 6. 361. A diversity where the Avowant shall have costs and damages upon 7 H. 8. and where 21 H. 8. 362. If the lessor be a disseisor till agreement to the disseisin where a man may justify a detaining with force. 363. Where a man may be detained with force. 364. Where a supply to satisfy A. third part may be taken out of the wife's two parts. 365. A lease rendering rend at the Feast of St. M. or in a month after, good matter. 366. A device not within the statute of 1 Rich. 3. 367. A man over sea is disseised and after recomes and departs A Patent of the Judges Office. 368. An alien arraigned for Treason contra ligien' sum ' debi ' good. No trial in Treason per emdiatatem linguae. 369. Information upon arrears of account the defendant may not wage his Law. 370. Where several Formedons must be for him in remainder. 371. Deputy Dean by paroll confirms a grant by the Bish ' Quaere. 372. The remedies provided by 8 & 18 of H. 6. 373. An use shall not be averred against an use expressed, what is a Jointer within 21 H. 7. 374. What fine levied to a Feme Covers maketh a forfeiture. 375. A judgement in debt against the heir what manner of Elegit shall issue. An assize of an Office of Register of the Admiralty. 376. 27 H. 8. executes the possession, form, quality, etc. 377. What words maketh a Covenant and not a Lease. 378. Where a man must pled in debt always ready. 379. Variance in a grant in the name of a Corporation. 380. Where a device shall be judged good for two parts. A grant made by the Chief Justice of the Office of Prothenetarre revoked, because the Grantet was unfit. 381. A Sheriff's Office seized, for an escape without a Scire facias. 382. Where an action of account lieth and not a sure in the Court Christian for a legacy. 383. A man in execution in the Fleet being before condemned in the King's Bench, is removed into the King's Bench, he is in the custody of the Marshal for both. 384. What words make a Condition, and what a Covenant. 385. One panel and its several Inquests in Law. 386. The construction of the word quilibet to maintain a prescript. 387. Where Essigneor must be sworn. 388. Whereby a remainder in the Q. an ancient signory is extinct. 389. A man pleads slanderous words of the K. how he shall be punished 390. An use cannot rise out of an use. 391. Not words in 31 H. 8. restrain a power to device land deviseable before that statutes. 392. Where a Melius inquirendum lieth at the Common law. 393. A man cannot make his right heir a purchaser without departing with the Fee. 394. An Office of Stewardship granted by a Bishop to A. he aught to attend his service to every successor. 395. Where by a Fine, a Condition is not taken away in a former Indenture. 396. In writ of entry in the quibus, divers material things moved in arrest of judgement. 397. An action upon the case against an Ostler, what is good evidence for the Defendant. 398. Where no part of the Soccage shall supply the third part except covin may be averred. 399. A chief Justice of the Common pleas made a Judge of the King's Bench the former place is voided. 400. Where an acceptance of rent affirmeth a lease. 401. Two sue in the Admiral Court, for a thing within a County, an action upon the case lieth against one. 402. A customer purchaseth land with the Queen's money, the land shall be ceased in the Queen's hands till, etc. 403. Where an action is not maintain ' by an executor of an execu ' 404. A lease to three, to the first for life, the remainder, etc. they are not joint Tenants. 405. A man bound with two sureties for their security sells them beasts, he faile●● of payment, and is Felo de se. 406. The Master is chargeable for the Servants offence. 407. Where the Plaintiff makes a new assignment he aught as well to prove the Buttells as the names; Quaere. 408. What shall be imended a tenure in capite, and where it must be traversed. 409. Husband alten joint purchaser with his wife dyeth, the wife may enter into all. 410. One in execution shall not be dismissed by the protection of the King's service. 411. A man condemned in debt hath land in several Counties, the Plaintiff may have an Elegit in every of them for all, or may divide his debt. 412. Where the heir shall be in ward during the life of the wife. 413. Where the Clerk of Assize may bring in the verdict without Certiorari. 414. A devise of the moiety of his goods to his wife, what she shall have. 415. Where the Plaintiff may have a Procedendo to the Justices. 416. Where a man cannot make a Joint prescription. 418. Custom upon cloth enhanced without Par. Magna customa & parva customa. 419. What words amount to a Will. 420. What Act maketh a man Executor of wrong. 421. The Patentee shall have a Constat by 3 & 4 E. 6. 422. Non est factum, pleaded, and upon demurrer much good matter. 423. Judgement in a Scire facias upon a Recognizance reversed. 424. How and when livery shall be sued of land holden of an Honour. 425. An information of perjury. 426. An Accedas ad Curiam how it shall be directed. 427. Where the Queen aught to tender livery to him who it found heir. 428. By the grant of a Forest the game passeth. 429. Where a Supersedeas by paroll is good. 430. A prohibition for tithes of barren land improved. 431. The construction of Si contingar. 432. A Replegiari, and much good matter. 433. A pardon of an Outlawry. Ita quod stet rectus, where it should be Satisfaciat querentes. 443. Whether incidents in a Grant may be aceepted. 435. In an Alias Replevin the Sheriff returned that the Defendant claimed property. 436. Where acceptance of Rent shall wave the advantages of a disseisin. 437. In the Original the Plaintiff was named Sadler, and in the Scire facias Psalter. 438. In quo Minus if the party pled not well, the Court aught to aid him for the benefit of the King. 439. Cestui que use of land in capite before 27. died seized of Soccage, the King shall have the ward of them. 440. A Jeofail in debt against the Executor of an Executor. 441. Where there may be two or three terms between the Teste and return of an Original. 442. A Replevin nor a Trespass shall not abate by the death of one of the Defendants. 443. The office of Exegenter of London is incident to the office of Chief Justice. The Exegenter of London was committed to the Fleet, but the judge's Bank granted a corpus cum causa because he was a necessary Officer. 444. What cause maketh a principal challenge. 445. The Offices of the Chirographer and custos Brevium are in the King's gift. 446. A memorandum is not sufficient to make a surrender of an Office. 447. A Licence to go beyond sea, upon refusal to return, his lands and goods are to be seized. Where a Certificate may not be traversed. 448. A device that A. B. C. may cell, etc. if A. die B. and C. cell, otherwise of his feoffees in general. 449. If a statute giveth a penalty and triple damages the Plaintiff shall not have costs. 450. The party may challenge the array for cozenage, notwithstanding a false return. 451. A Termo● is rejected and reenters it, the disseisin remaineth if the Lessor pleaseth. 452. The statute of 32 H. 8. of the Court of Wards giveth no authority to grant wards which may hap after. 453. A divorce Causa frigiditatis, dissolveth the marriage Ab initio. 454. In dower some confessed the action, others demand the view and granted. 455. A man reprieved before judgement, if he shall have Clergy. 456. Jointenants make partition after the stat. 32 H. 8. by paroll, Quaere. 457. A duplicate of a Patent, and the effect of it. 458. A feoffment Borough English to the use of the feoffor and his heirs, yet the youngest shall inherit. 459. A fine levied upon a writ of Customs and Services. 460. A debt against two by several precipes and several judgements given, a joint writ of Error lieth not. 461. Upon oath the Testator was not satisfied, Executors had a Certiorari and begun de novo. 462. Where payment to an Executor as an assign is good. 463. Where there shall be a Wardship of the third part and of the body of the heir, by 32. 464. A Sheriff being removed disavoweth a Return. 465. A woman bound by the act of the husband. 466. Distress for damage seasant, and a traverse taken: Indictment of one as accessary without Malitiose. 467. Aneceipt by the hands of another, no wager of Law. 468. Isrdgment against a Plaintiff in debt for want of form. 469. Jua Lease of Trees are excepted, Quaere. 470. In dower issue upon life and death, trial by proofs in that case. 471. The Sheriff returns a Devastavit, what judgement and execution. 472. 1 Mar. c. 7. touching adjournment of the Term expounded. 473. A Lease to A. for life to the use of B. for life. 474. Adulterer contriveth the murder of the Infant. 475. Debt upon a counterbond to save barmlesse. 476. The term continueth but the rent is gone. 477. If Justice's absent may grant a Supersedeas. 478 Executor may pay himself by retainer. 479. In Dower 2 confess the action, the rest pled in Bar. 480. Outlawry pleaded, the tenor was brought in. 481. A Sheriff suffers a recovery, and releaseth Errors. 482. A fine of land to be amortised refused, and wherefore. 483. One cutteth another in Westminster Hall sitting the Court. 484. What trial out of the statute of Jeofails. 485. Although the Plaintiff appear not, yet no non-sute. 486. If the Father may grant the marriage of his Son. 487. Where a woman shall be remitted. 488. Justifieth for life by custom a widow's estate no good eviden. 486. If a Capias ad satisfaciendum in attachment of privilege. 490. After an outlawry the Plaintiff ●s out of Court. 491. What act is a sufficient delivery of a deed. 492. What is an advancement of a child within 32 H. 8. 493. Where an Avowant shall have decem Tales as well as the Plaintiff. 494. Where a man in executi. may have a writ of de manu capt. 495. A Conusor of a stat. infeoffees to Conusee part of the land. 496. A Quare impedit shall be brought where the Cathedral Church and not the Prebend is. 497. In trespass in two Closes, the Defendant justified in one, and pleaded not guilty in the other. 498. Whether a surrender of an office by the Master of the Rolls may be recorded after his death. 499. An action upon the case for turning a watercourse from a Mil, good matter. 500 A purchased Capite land to him and his wise without licence, the Qu. pardoned all offences for any alienation made to him. 501. Where a man estopped to deny a recital of a condition. 502. Whether the custom for an attachment be good between a Foreigner and a Citizen. 503. In an account what is a good plea for the Bailee. 504. A man in execution in the King's Bench committed to the Fleet upon a writ of Prerogative. 505. An Officer of Record shall not be removed without a Scire facias of Record. 506. Upon two Nihils of returns judgement that the Patent shall cease. 507. The Plaintiff and Defendant both challenge one person. 508. The Sheriff amerced for not returning the Pannell till after the Essoin day. 509. The Lessee covenants to repair at his proper costs, cuts trees upon the same land and repairs. 510. In attachment of goods the Sheriff must return the certainty and the value. 511. Where the Conusee may have a Scire facias to execute a fine. 512. Where the Lord may seize the Beasts of a stranger for Heriot. 513. Before 27 H. 8. a man enfeoffed himself and others. 514. A Tales de circumstantibus Hundredi. 515. The Patentee of a house, accepts a grant of the custody thereof. 516. An exemplification of Examination of witnesses in the Chancery given in evidence to prove a man of full age. 517. An attaint brought against the Exec. by the equity of 23 H. 8. 518. A woman brings an app. of Rape, and divers good Excep. taken. 519. The Administrator brings an account, the Defendant pleads that the dead made an Executor. 520. Cognizance in attaints denied to a Corporation. 521. In a writ of Dower the Tenant avoucheth the heir who pleadeth nothing by descent in fee, the Tenant averreth Assets'. 522. Clerk is a good addition for a Priest or Minister. Executor recovered in account. 523. The will made voided because the Testator was an Idiot. 524. Duchy Court, what prison belongeth thercunt●. 525. Upon nihil dicit in waste, a writ to the Sheriff to inquire of the damages only. 526. Debt upon a bond against the heir, is no plea that the Executors have Assets'. 527. A private verdict where good. 528. If a man stands mute in Treason he shall have Judgement as convicted. 529. The power of Justices of Gaol delivery on respitting a prisosoner. 530. Notwithstanding an entry quod non legit, the Prisoner after may have his Clergy. 531. Conusor of a statute hath a rend charge, and before extent purchaseth part of the Land. 531. A writ of extent executed by inquisition in the time of Q.M. and returned in the time of Q.E. 532. Outlawry reversed upon 6 H. 8. without a writ of error. 533. Before the entry of the Lessee the reversion is granted ov●● to several, the Termor enters and maketh waste. 534. A Certiorari to remain a record capta in Curia nostra taken in time of the predecessor. 535. What Lease made by an Abbot is voided by 31 H. 8. 536. A Per nomen cannot maintain a grant of Land in Lease without an averment. 537. If a man may wave execution against the Executor, and have it against the Heir only. 538. Debt against the Executors, Issue taken upon Assets', a good case. 539. The form of a writ of waist against an assign of a Term. 540. An Array challenged by a Lord because no Knight returned. 541. An Inquisition must be certain. 542. A Precedent of a College is deprived, he shall not have an appeal to the Delegates but an Assize. 543. A condition where it is repugnant. 544. By the name of King the name of Duke is drowned. 545. Upon a Devastavit returned against one Executor xeecution awarded against his own goods only. 546. An interest may survive but not an authority. 547. If Justices of Peace are bound to inquire of Riot without notice. 548. A Scire facias to execute a fine, estrepment granted. 549. A Plea of Land is not grantable after imparlance. 550. Where there must be an office to repeal Patent, but there must be a Scire facias. 551. If the Jewrie in a Leet refuse to present, the Steward may fine of every of them. 552. The Roll of Exigent is of more credit than the writ. 553. The Lord Keeper may grant a Commission to determine of piracy as well as the Chancellor. 554. In an attaint the defendant may give new matter in evidence, but the Plaintiff cannot. 555. In a Quid juris clamat, the Tenant claimed fee in part, and atturned for the rest, if the whole fine was ingressed. 556. A party may travers upon return of a Rescous. 557. Debt mentionable without privity. 558. Of what lands the heir must pay primer seisin. 559. Where issue in tail shall avoid a rent reserved by fine. 560. Office of Doorkeeper of the Chequer holden by grand Serjeanty. 561. A Tales of 60 awarded in an appeal. 562. Where a man shall avoid an outlawry for Error in the Proclamations. 563. A condemnation by Non sum informatus, in an Action upon 8 H. 8. is a conviction. 564. A man committed in execution four years after judgement without a Scire facias. 565. A man committeth 2 selonies whereof for one Clergy lieth. 566. Where a Venire fac. was, a proviso is grantable to the Def. 567. He that pleads Quoth parts fines nihil habuerunt, must say in possession nor in use. 568. Notwithstanding error in the Proclamations it remains a fine in the common law. 569. By the dissolution Augmentation Court the Receivers Office is dissolved. 570. In a formedon in the reverter, the donor needeth not show the pedigree of the issue of the donee. 571. An Obligation with Condition to perform an award, much good matter. 572. Five things incident to an Award. 573. A Venire facias with a proviso was served, and 2 hours after a Venire facias by the Plaintiff was filled also. 574. Not Scire facias upon a transcript of Recognizance. 575. By what words a Covenant is not released. 576. A Condition that the obligor upon request shall do all a●ts reasonable. 577. A verdict good although one disagree, who was fined for eating, etc. 578. A Condition that the ward being given by parties, may be done by word. 579. From the date, and from the day of the date are all one. 580. By the opinion of all the Judges the stat. of 32 H. 8. is understood of a descent on every disseisin. 581. A devise that his land shallbe sold after his wife's death. 582. A man bound to deliver the key of a house, and quiet possessi. 583. A man declared of 20. l. and gave evidence but of 20 marks. 584. A man seized of Soceage in see, and of Capite in tail devised a third part of all to his wife for her dower. 585. A Dedimus potestatem dated after the return of the Original. 586. The L. Keep. cannot take a Recognizance to his own use. 587. The fine settled after the Queen's silver paid. 588. Where a Devise taketh away a Descent. 589. Warrantia Chartae must be brought where the land lieth. It lieth not against the Warrantor and his heirs except Dedi be● in the deed. 590. A charge by a Prebend voided before Induction. 591. Where a proviso maketh not a condition but a forspri●. Plenty and variety of good matter in that case. 592. Condition to pay money at a place, where acceptance barreth. 593. A return by the Coroners of an outlawry is no sufficient record. No robbery without fear of death, and Clergy lieth. 594. Proclamations upon a fine and 5 years passed before Dower brought. 595. A Bastard born at Tourney in H. 8. time, is a Denizen. 596. The Q. Attorney Justice of Assize, took a fine without a Dedimus. 597. If the wife be joint Purchasor before her husband be an Officer. 598. The land is not liable to an account, stat. 13 Eliz. A warrant of Attorney admitted after error brought. 599. The Q. may by her Prerogative make a Sheriff. 600. Assizes adjourned without day notwithstanding the adjournment of the Term, and yet not discontinued. 601. Diversity between a Demurrer and an Imparlance. 602. Concerning adjournment of the Term. 603. A Scire facias to have execution of Damages, Non tenure a good plea. 604. A grant of an Annuity and 6s. 8ds. nomine poenae, debt for the arrears and penalty. 605. If the concord be entire, the post-fine shall be but one. 606. Debt upon 24 H. 8. of apparel, outlawry pleaded in the Plaintiff. 607. What estate may be averred for a Jointure within 27 H. 8. 608. If a Church become voided by session, the Q. shall present. 609. The wife died before livery sued, Baron shall be Tenant by the courtesy. 610. Land in L. may be sold by Paroll without enrolment. 611. Obligation to confirm the estate of the obligee, confirmation must be pleaded by Deed. 612. In Dower where the Tenant may pled detinue of Charters. 613. Judgement for clipping money is to be drawn and hanged only. 614. A servant buyeth was for his M. it isa debt of the M. and assumpsit of the servant. 615. A new reservation voided upon estate before created. 616. No warrant of attorney, and Judgement reversed although Error brought. 617. A grant of a next avoidance between 31. H. 8. and surrender of the Abbey. 618. In a challenge for the hundred, he must show where it is. 616. A. forfeited 100 marks for hearing Mass and died within 6 months, if the Executors be liable. Quaere. 620. Debt brought against the Ordinary for a debt of the intestate. 621. a Ransom is triple to a Fine. 622. Duchy Leases without the usual proviso si quis plus dare voluerit are voided. 623. H. at full age brought Audita quaerela to avoid a Recognizance made within age. 624. Where by the name of a Manor the Rent and the reversion of the Demeans shall pass. 625. A Prior in Covent cannot make Divery by the view. 626. Where a Dispensation by the Archbishop is sufficient to hold a Benefice in comendam. 627. A Deputy Dean and the Chapter made a lease it is not good. 628 If a prescription to hold a Leet when it pleaseth the Lord, be good. 629. B. Certified to be Recusant of the Oath of supremacy by the name of Doctor, and good, and rther notable matter therein. 630. Where a man shall be said to fail of a Record. 631. The wife of N. without her husband's ascent bought velvets and silks if the husband be liable to pay. Quaere. 633. A Lessee for life, and he in Reversion may make a Lease forgeries by Indenture. 634. Petty treason is pardoned, but a murder excepted, one who had killed his Master is indicted of Murder only. Quaere 635. A bargain to one who had notice changeth not the use well raised. 636. Where livery shall be sued by the Form. 637. Attaint upon the Statute 23. H. 8. for false verdict in an assize. 638. Where the King may sue in any Court upon a penal Law. 639. An Action on the case for Wards. 640 Executors refuse, the Administrators bring Debt, the Defend, saith he made a testament. 641. If the Queen shall recover damage in a Quare impedit. 642. Where a Benefice shall be voided by taking of another. 643. Where the son shall be in ward for the body. 644. Where the heir is in by purchase, and where by ancient reversion. 645. Where the place of impounding a Distress is material and where not within 1. and 2. Ph. and Mary. 646. A Trespass brought upon the Statute de malefactoribus in parcis good matter. 647. Where a man shall forfeit his goods upon a fugam facit. 648. The Defendant in intrusion in the Exchequer must make a Title. 649. A Customer liable to the abuse of his Deputy 650. By the Outlawry the original is determined against an Infant. 651. Where a Lease by a pro. Parson imparsone, is good. 652. Where a Covenant for enjoying is broker. 653. What Act, within a Forest is a purpresture. 654. Where words of Surplusage shall not prejudice. 655. What is a good return for the Sheriff in case of Rescues. 656. A Quare Impedit against A. he maketh default at the grand Distress. 657. A man indicted of Piracy stood mute, and had Judgement of pain, fact, and dure, and after had his Clergy. 658. Where notwithstanding a practice between the Clerks and Attorney, an Execution stands in force. 659. An Award adjudged voided for three causes, good matter. 660. Where perjury is punishable in the Starchamber. 661. Where a writ of Partition lieth at the Common Law. 662. Submission to an award by Obligation upon Demurrer. three resolutions. 663. A Bill of Debt against an Attorney by the name of husbandman void. 664. I. an Assize where the Plaintiff is at his peril to choose his Tenant. 665. Grantee of an Advowson maketh a Lease to begin after the Incumbent voided: 666. A Sheriff amerced ten pounds and a Factor five pounds for a practice. 667. After a Writ of Error delivered, no Execution can be awarded. 668. Where one of the Tales may be joined with the eleven principal. 669. One in Execution in the Fleet, caused himself to be indicted of Felony. 670. If at the Common Law the Sheriff may not make a Replevin without a writ. 671. Where the marriage of a woman shall hinder the recording of a Fine. 672. Tenant in Tail makes a Lease to begin in futuro. Quaere. 673. A Replevin against the Bishop and others and several Issues, the challenged, the Array because no Knight, a good challenge for all. 674. Assize of land in M. when he pleads a Lease Of a house in S. and avers that to be the same Land a Demurrer. 675. After Administration committed, no Action lieth against the Ordinary. An Avowson cannot commence since West. 2. Cap. 19 676. What persons by a private Statute of a College may dispense of the absence of a fellow. 677. In a writ of Right where the Tenant shall first give his Evidence. 678. In a Formedon when a man shall make himself Cousin and heir to a Grandfather. 679. Where Debt lieth against the first Lessee for Rent after assignment. 680. Where an Estate in Fee may be averred to be a Jointure. 681. A Steward or Bailiff may be made without deed. 682. If he which hath a Freehold in a Mill may have an Action of the Case or Asssise for turning the water. 683. A commission in the nature of an Extremum Clausit. 684. What is pardoned by 5. E. of all intrusions and Entries. 686. Prisoners must be kept strictly by first Rich. 2. and 24. H. 8. 687. No error in the Common-pleas for a judgement before the Justices of Assize at Monmouth. 688. Whern an action of the Case lieth not, but an assize of Nuisance be stopping the way. 689. Where a grant Copyhold is by authority of the Lord. 690. Where a release is voided for want of words of surrender. 691. A surrender of divers parcels by particular names, and concludeth generally, what passeth. 692. Tenant for life is content that the reversioner shall have his interest. It is no surrender. 693. If a formedon be returned stared and an Alias summons sued, the tenant cannot be Essoyned. 694. The Incumbent of a Chantry made a Lease for 99 years, whether the King may avoid it. 695. If a grant of a War ship in the life of the father be good. 696. A rent granted to one and his assigns during the life of C. the grantee devised i●, who shall have it. quaere. 697. What shall departure and Jeofall. 698. A Lease is made for 41. years to A. if he live so long, and if he die, that his wife sh●●● have the residue, avoid limitation. 699. Where the Clerk of the Crown must certify a conviction in the name of the Justices, where the principal was but a murderer, it shall not be petty treason in the wife. 700. If the Kings Sil. be entered the fine may be engrossed. 701. A Termer deviseth his term and dieth, the devisee enters, the lessor brings debt for rent, and barred for 2 causes. 702. What is a good cause for the Bishop to refuse a Clerk. 703. Who may device lands in I. by the custom, but not in Mortmain. 704. A condition was, that if the obliger suffer, the obligee to enjoy, etc. 705. He which hath a benefice above 8. pounds, takes another, it is voided without notice. 706. Value of marriage lieth without tender. 707. A demise made 4. and 5. Philip and Mary to a College to a charitable use is good. 708. If the Commissary of the Bishop grant letters ad Colegendum & etendendum ea quae peratura essent, it is voided. 709. If the infant in ward aught to warrant till the hand of the King be amoved. 710. When entry of proclamations upon fines begin. 711. Where a trespass de mali erl raptu & deducta, shall be brought. 712. An Avoury for rend holden insufficient, for divers causes. 713. A Writ of pleges accquetandes brought, and judgement given for the plaintiff. 714. A difference between a Covenant expressed, and a Covenant employed. 715. Where aid of the King shall be granted. 716. In an ejectment of tithes judgement for the plaintiff, but 6 good exceptions taken. 717. A reversion received pleadeth and found for him, and tenant for life dieth before judgement, quaere. 718. Where a man may grant an office in reversion. 719. By an union 2 Churches become one, good matter. 720 What is a good excuse for the Ordinary for not returning a writ. 721. Debt upon a Lease for years of several parcels and non demised pleaded. 722. The Queen grants the Ward and marriage of the body saving the land, the grantee tenders marriage, which is refused, he cannot retain. 723. Where an error in the record of Nisiprius is amendable. 724. Upon an appeal of murder a man is sound guilty of manslaughter. 725. A man demised all his lands in the Town and in one Hamlet. 76. A Rasure in a lease by the Lessee himself, where it maketh a lease voided. 727. A condition of an obligation become impossible by death. 728. A debt due to a faelo dese by contract is not forfeited. 729. A false judgement in a judgement given in an ancient demeane. Several errors assigned. 730. Where a release is good without words of enlargement. 731. In a Writ of dowry the tenant maketh default, and a termer was received to fine his term, by the statute of Gloster, Chap. 11. 732. A woman copyholder for life, takes a husband, who surrenders the copyhold, and dieth, the wife may enter. 733. A new assignment of trespass must be certain. 734. Where an exception is but temporary, and where repugnant. 735. A man deviseth land to be sold, and the money to be disposed in legacies. 736. Where inquest shall be awarded by default. 737. I accounted, the defendant wageth law, and afterwards have confessed part and made law, for the residues, it cannot be. 738. The Justices of peace must certify their agreement upon servants wages. 739. In debt against a Lord, a venire was returned, if the Array be quashable, a venire facias de novo shall not issue. 740. At the day appointed to give Verdict, one Juror maketh default, the Sheriff returned a fine of 40. shillings on him. 741. What shall be intended a jointure without Averment. 742. Whether a Sheriff can summon himself. 743. Where the Inholder shall be charged with the loss of his guests goods. 744. No disseasin against a Patentee, because at the first no diseasin against the Queen. 745. Where a Lord may loose his villain for want of claim. 746. What is a College in the statute of 1. E. 6. 747. Where an Issue is liable by 2 several Counties. 748. Where notwithstanding a feoffement with collusion, the Queen shall not have the ward of the heir. 749. The form of false judgement. 750. Where the King shall have a ward, because a ward, and divers notable cases where a general patent shall not extend to special cases. 751. Construction of the words, ex gratia speciall certa scientia & mera motu suis, a difference between false suggestion, false information, and false cause. 752. Whether the death of ono tenant at will do not determine the estate. 753. Where the first proclamation upon a fine is well made by 4. H. 7. 754. A command by the Queen ceaseth by her death. 755. Where a Coppyholder is subject to distress for rent Artar, a diversity. 756. In a writ of right, where a venire facias in the nature of a habeas corpus shall issue to the Sheriff. 757. In debt to perform Covenants, trial shall be where the land lieth. 758. Debt upon escape lieth not on the heir of the Jailor. 759. Right due to a feme soul, she marrieth A. who makes an acquittance on feast after the marriage. 760. Husband and wife outlawed, and she is pardoned but not allowed, because she cannot have a Scire facias without ●er husband. 761. What is a lease for 20. years by a tenant in tail within 32. to bind the issue. 762. In debt the heir pleads nothing by descent, the plaintiff pleads Assets' in Land, gives in evidence at C. quaere a diversity. 763. A termer granteth his term a begin after his death, it is voided. 764. What promise is a good assumpsit in Law. 765. What shallbe a waist raising Coppers. 766. What words do not amount to a surrender but to a covenant. 767. A deanary is a spiritual promotion and not temporal if the taking dignity in the same Church by a dean maketh a deanary vo●d. 768. Where feoffees to use may enter and have an action to revive the old use. 769. Two brothers & the eldest had cause of petition to the King for lands, the youngest had issue and is attainted. 770. A fine levied to the use of the cognizer and to the wife that he shall marry, it is a good jointure, otherwise of an estate executed. 771. Where a certio●ari shall issue out of the King's bench to remove a fine. 772. By what comandment or authority the marshal may suffer one at execution to go at large. 773. False imprisonment is brought the defendant pleadeth that the defendant is excommunicated. 774. No collusion to defeat the queen of wardship if a third prart be left. 775. Where a Scire facias lieth against a Corporation to the repeal of a patent of fairs. 776. After laps to the queen one 〈◊〉 instituted and inducted cu●●re. 777. The Bishop collateth by laps, the Patron presents before induction the Bishop may refuse. 778. A. ward fell to the Bishop of D. who died before seizure, his executor shall have it. 779. A formedon upon a remainder in use, he needeth not show the deed for 2 causes. 780. A term devised to an executor, who enters generally he is in as executor, where the remainder of a term is voided. 781. Where a Patentee of the King shall hold lands discharged of tithes. 782. Where a grant by a Corporation is good notwithstanding a variance in the name. 783. A formedon in defender is out of the statutes of Limitations. 784. Upon an habere facias seizinam feizen preserved of a third part by the Sheriff, by meats and bounds and refused it, the demandant may enter. 785. The deputy of the Marshal of England liable to an escape in debt. 786. A Scire facias upon a recognizance to perform covenants, what pleading for the defendant is good. 787. Where acceptance of a rent affirmeth a lease. 788, A next avoidance is granted to 2 who join in a quare impedit. and one dieth. 789. W. bound by the name of I. the Action must be brought against him by the name of I 790. What is good Prescription foreign bought and foreign sold. 791. The Dean and Chapter is holden to be a body within the Statute of 31. H. 8. 792. How a Distress upon a return irrepledgable shall be ordered. 793. In a Replevin the Defendant acknowledgeth taking as Batliffe of I.S. good matter. 794. A Feoffement of a house and 17 acres of wood (in a great wood) at the election of the Feoffee and his heirs before election, the Feoffee died the heir cannot make election for 3 causes. 795. A lease upon condition not to make waist, and he suffereth waste. Quaere. 796. Divers resolutions upon the Statute of 5 Eliz. c. 2. touching of importation of books written against the Queen's Supremacy. 797. The Archbishop of D. hath 2 Deans and Chapters, the one surrenders to the King, the other confirms a Lease made by the Bishop. 798. The Church being voided, the Patron granteth the next avoidance, it passeth not, but otherwise in the case of the King. 799. A Feoffement of 3 acres in one County, and livery made by one in the name of all. 800. A. Infeoffs an alien and denizen to his own use, if the office be found, the use to A. of the Moiety is gone. 801. Damages shall not be recovered in dower but where the husband died ceased. 802. What misconveyance of process is aided of a Jeof all within 31. H 8. 803. Where the plaintiff may proceed in an attaint, although the record be removed by error. 804. Where a general livery is good, 805. Where a writ Scand●●is Magnatum lieth. 806. An indictment of assault against one without a surname. 807. A tenure of land to be Constable of England, as Grand Sergeant if such an office descend to daughters how it shall be executed. 808. Whether the patentee of herbage may maintain a trespass. 809Vpon an exigent of a judgement the defendant cannot appear gratis. 810. Where a pardon of intrusion is good, and by what words. 811. Where a lessee may enter the same day the lease is dated. 812. Where the default in the plaintiff shall make a nonsuit. 813. Trial of treason where it shall be 814. What shall be conveyance within 33. to give wardship to the King. 816. What writ of privilege is with a Supersedeas. 817. Outlawries against Traitors which fled into Scotland good. 818. What Benefice is given to the King by the first of Edward the sixth. 819. Where a bill of perjury may be sued in chancery 820. What act may amount to Forgery of a Will within 5 Eliz. 821. Where an attorney in attachment of privileges shall found pledges. 882. An exception shall be good in the Kings grant but not in the grant of a Subject. 823. Jura Regalia granted to the Bishop of D. and the ●●tent of the grant. 824. A ravishment of Ward lieth where the ward was done. 825. Where an estoppel shall not bind him that pleadeth it. 826. Bishop of L. being high Commissioner is translated to Y. 827. What remedy one hath for rent, who cometh in, in the Post. 828. What is a good counterplea in voucher, much good matter. 829. Where Possessio fratris may be of a Copyhold before admittance. 830. Where one may revoke his Presentation. 831. Where the first Office must be traversed, and where it is voided. 832. The Parish of H. extends unto the County of B. and W. one made a Lease of H. in the County of B. whereas it lay in W. good. 833. If the Patron present a mere Lay man, notice is not necessary to be given by the Ordinary. 834. What words amount to the resignation of a Prebend. 835. Whether a Commission of an administration be good or not. (Quaere.) 836. The Defendant before trial of Issue maketh a fraudulent conveyance of his land, (Quaere) if the land be liable. 837. Where an Exigent shall issue into a foreign County. 838. (Quaere) if Prescription to enclose be destroyed by unity. 839. If a man go beyond Sea without licence, whether he be punishable or not. 840. Where a man shall be executed upon indictment an appeal depending. 841. Where an use may be raised upon marriage to a younger son upon a bore promise. 841. A bastard is no lawful child 32. H 8. 842. The King's bench hath no authority to commit a man in execution to the Fleet. 843. An insufficient declaration is not aided by 32. of Jeofals. 844. What Act amounts to Attournment. 845. What act makes a man a traitor within 25. of E. 3. 846. A conspiracy beyond the Sea, of a subject to invade the Realm is high treason. 847. A wardship and marriage divested out of the King. 848. Where an Executor may have an Extent. 849. The Grantee of the next avoidance needeth not shwe the title of the Granter. 850. What Conveyance will created a Tenure in Capite. 851. An Elegit served and not Returned, is a good Election. 852. The name of Dignity is parcel of the Issue. 853. A Suggestion of a writ to the Coroners aught to be a a principal Challenge. 854. The Queen grants a manor and all Advowsons' belonging the Presentation passeth not. 855. The Defendant in Debt upon a Bond shall not be estopped by an Importance to pled now ready. 856. If a Spaniard commit Treason beyond Sea against our King, and after come into E. if he may be arraigned. 857. If a Feoffement be made to one and his heirs until J. S. pay 100 pounds, if J. S. die, the Feoffee shall hold it for ever. 858. In a writ of Right the Tenant chose Trial by battle, but the Plaintiff was non-sute. 859. Two Johns sons, one reputed a bastard, and John found heir by office, it shall be intended the right heir. 860. Forgery of a will by which a term is devised, is within 5. Eliz. 861. The Copy held of an Idiot shallbe ordered in the court of the Lord of the Manor. 862. For lands in Chester the commissian of Mandamus must issue out of Chancery there. 863. Who may grant the office of an Almager. 864. A Devise to an infant in his mother belly, if good. 865. Upon a conviction of Forgery what damages shall be given by 5. Eliz. 866. Verdict passed for the plant. in an erectment moved in arrest of judgm that the Lessor was not in life. 867. Tenant in tail maketh a Lease rendering 20. s. rent, and releases 19 and dyeth. 868. A next avoidance is granted to 3. habendum iis & uni eorum conjunctim & divisim. 869. Where the heir at full age shall sue Livery, 32 H. 8. 870. An Indictment of wilful murder voided without Murdravit. 871. An Edictione firmae declared of a Lease of 300 Acres by the name of a Manor. 872. Where a man may pled not guilty to part, and justify for the residue. 873. By whom & where administration shallbe committed. 874. A trespass by husband and wife of the lands of the wife, while she sole, Ad grav. damna ipsorum. 875. A Certificate by the Bishop of Espousalls voided. 876. What Ac● maketh a man Executor. 877. A Recognizance to save a Gaoler harmless, the Gaoler not damnified for three causes. 878. What office shall make a Tenure in Chivalry. 879. A ward died artful age before tender of marriage. 880. An Action of Trover brought for a Hawk, the Plaintiff must declare that he was reclaimed. 881. The day of the Delivery of a Deed is the day of the making thereof. 882. A Debtor to the Queen is in execution in the Marshalcie, the Exchequer Writ to the Marshal ad habendum corpus by prerogative. 883. Lessee for yoers deviseth without limiting any estate. 884. What remedy to compel Lessee for years to atturn. 885. Where the heirs of the wife and not the beirs of the husband shall have the land. 886. A man indicted of piracy stands mute, if he may be indicted again. 887. If many issues be advanced, yet one livery shall suffice for all by the statute. 888. A Lease for three Manors rendering for one 6 l. one 5 l. another 10 l. a case full of much good learning. 889. A Tenant for life, the remained. to his Exec. & Assi. for 21 years is attainted the Q. shall have the remai. 890. Three were bound by Obligamus nos & utrumque nostrum per se, how it shall be sued. 891. A devise in Gavelkind land in writing may be guided by words. 892. In a Mordancester a diversity where the Tenant pleadeth at Bar, and where abatement, the writ. 893. Where a proviso maketh a Condition. A gift in tail made by a woman to a man rendering rend may be averred causa Matrimonii prolocuti. 894. A writ of Entry in the quibus against A. & B. and found that A. only deceased, judgement shall be given for all. 895. A Tresp. upon the stat. that none shall restrain the beasts of the Blow, if other distress may be found. 896. A Tenant in tail, the remainder in tail levied a fine and died without issue, a stranger enters to revive the remainder (Quaere). 897. Several good resolutions upon 21 H. 8. of pluralities. 898. A Lease for twenty years to three, and two of them take a new Lease for 30 years to begin after the 20 years. 899. The Defendant in avowry for rent said, that the Grant was seized in Fee, the Plaintiff said, he was seized in tail. 900. A Seignory Chancery lands is extinct by possession of the King but the rent remaineth. 901. What is a good Certificate of lawful matrimony by a Bishop. 902. A Bastard is no lawful generation to sue livery within 32 H. 8. 903. A Covenant by the Lessee to repair at his proper costs and charges cuts trees, and pleads the house fell down by a tempest. 904. Upon payment of money an use is transferred. 905. A recovery to the intent the recoverer should perform his will intended his last william. 906. A Peer shall not be impanelled without special command of the King, or necessity. 907. If the omission in Misericordia shall make all the judgement voided to the party. 908. A judgement in a Recognizance in Chancery reversed in the King's Bench. 909. In a Formedon in reverter or remainder, he need not allege seisin within 50 years. 910. Where a Counterplea of a receipt of a wife in Formedon is good. 911. The Husband soweth the land and dieth, whether the wife shall have the land and not the Executors. 912. A Juror challenged because be had nothing within the Hundred at the return of the term, good matter. 913. A Commoner because of visenage may not put his beasts into the other soil. 914. Gavelkind is devised to the eldest son upon condition, which is broken, if the youngest may enter into the moiety. 915. An outlawry in London, judgement is given by the Recorder. 916. An estate upon condition is a good jointure. 917. An action of the case for words. 918. Where the beasts of a stranger are liable to distress for rent. 919. The Earl of K. brought an action by the name of Esq the trial good although no Knight be returned. 920. A Covenant that if a verdict pass against the Lessee the rent shall cease. 921. A bargain and sale proviso that the bargainer shall retain for 20 years. 922. Capite land is extended, the Tenant dyeth, is heir within age. 923. Two Executors Plaintiffs, one is summoned and severed, he may release before judgement, but not after. 924. A man hath a rend charge and grants, and releaseth it to the Tenant of the Land. 925. A tre●passe upon the case for diverting a water course. 926. The Defendant in ejectment shall have aid of the Queen in reversion, search lieth not in aid prayer but only in a petition of right. 927. Several Errors assigned upon a fine levied at Chester, very goodmatter. 928. A special occupant shall not have aid. 929. A distress by the Lord by the custom for breach of a Bylaw. 930. A debt lieth not against Executors for an escape by the Testator. 931. Forgery of a customary of Copyhold is within 5 Eliz. 932. What is a good devise of land by intention. 933. By name of all Hereditaments an advowson of a Vicarage passeth. 934. A man convicted for three Masses forfeiteth but 100 l. upon 1 Eliz. 935. The under-Marshall within 23 H. 6. for taking security. 936. A Termor covenanted to repair, and the house is burned down. 937. Where a feoffment by him in remainder in tail maketh a discontinuance. 938. Tenant effoined after issue joined. 939. A. seized of land giveth in tail to one of his daughters who is attainted by act wherein there is a Saving, the other daughter may enter. 940. A writ of Estrepment between judgement and execution. 941. Assize of two acres two several Bars pleaded. 942. A devise of a house to a woman, and her brother, and to the heir of every of their bodies, they are several estates. 943. The Sea left a great quantity of land upon the shore, Quaere. 944. Whether Unity doth not extinguish a Purleiwe. 945. A Chaplain qualified for two benefices takes a third, Quaere. 946. In laps how the six months shall be accounted, and what is a good notice. 947. A promise that the lessee shall hold against a wrong doer. 948. A writ of privilege disallowed to a Receiver. 949. A Lease made to one his Executors, and assignment for the life of another, who made a Lease for years rendering rend, Quaere. 950. A Term devised to his son at his full age, in the mean time is sold by the Wife, what remedy, Quaere. 951. In what place a rent must be tendered. 952. Debt upon a Bond to perform an award. 953. In a false judgement the Record was removed, and the Plaintiff non suit, a Scire facias shall go for damages. 954. What shall be intended a Knights fee. 955. In a will the land shall be intended Soccage. 956. Where Feoffees may enter to revive the ancient use. 957. Essoyn entered in the Roll of the Court, but not in the Essoine Roll. Diminution alleged in policy in a writ of Error. 958. In Avowry Seisin alleged within Fifty years. 959. In a Will if the intent be expressed no implication shall be taken. 960. Detinue by the wife against Executors of the second husband for the goods of the first husband. 961. 34 H. 8. of Misnosmer shall not aid non nofmer. 962. Upon an Extent where Audita Querela layeth for Contribution. 963. Conspiracy with a servant to kill her husband is petite Treason in both, otherwise with a stranger. 964. Wast in cutting 10 trees, the Defendant justified as to three. 965. Issue in special tuile must convey by Father and Mother. 966. What is a good cause of disfranchisement of a Citizen. 967. What words make an Estate tail in the William. 968. Where issue in tail may aver continuance of possession against a fine. 969. A Condition the Lessee shall not alien without licence, he aliens part with licence. 970. Feoffees to use must make election before itself in Cestui que use. 971. A Remainder seniori puero indifferent to both sexes. 972. A Letter of Attorney to enter into 3 acres, who enters intotwo in the name of all, where not good. 973. Where an acceptance of a rent is voided. 974. Where a Covenant lieth for the heir although not annexed to the land, and the Covenanter is bound to seal upon request. 975, Whether property in an estray be in the Lord before seizure. 976. An infant after full age nonsuit shall be amerced. 977. What is a lawful try all by a Tales by 35 H. 8. ca 6. 978. A Prebend maketh a Lease for 70 years, which is confirmed as to 51 years, & non ultra. 979. Tenant for life maketh a feoffment, he in remainder for life cannot enter. 980. The Lord improveth parcel of a waist, and infeoffeth the Commoner of the improvement, no extinguishment of the Common. 981. Execution sued, and an Audita Querela brought. 982. What act is a revocation of a former presentation. 983. A feoffement of him in reversion, and livery in the absence of tenant for life will pass the fee. Where a wife shall take a jointure before she was in esse. 984. Where a counterplea of Vourcher lieth. 985. What lease is Covinous within 27 H. 8. 986. The four first letters in a Patent interlessed, and yet good. 987. Where the Collateral heir of the youngest shall inherit. 988. Divers excellent matters resolved in a case between the Earl of A. & N. 989. After recovery by Nihil dicit the heir cannot pled nothing by descent, What judgement shall be given against the heir. 990. Election to make an annuity is ended by the death of the Grantor. 991. Tenure to serve the Prince in his wars is not capite. 992. A Bastard is not a child within 32 H. 8. 993. A quarter of a year 91 days. 994. Error to Chester returnable in the King's Bench. 995. Deprivation for not reading the Articles, notice must be given. 996. Information for usury, divers exception taken. 997. A Condition of a Bond to make a Lease. 998. A dispensation from the Pope made voided by 28 H. 8. The Q. shall not present by laps if no notice be given to the Patron. 999. Two penalties for rent, a distress, and a condition to enter. 1000 Appeal against I S. and his name was T. S. In favour of life a man may traverse a return by the Sheriff. 1001. Conusee of a statute takes a fine of the Conusor to another use. 1002. Where a Prohibition lieth upon a prescription for tithe. 1003. A formedon in remainder of a moiety, and the form thereof. 1004. A Lease in futuro, the first lessee never atturned. 1005. When the authority of the Guardian of the Spiritualties ceaseth. 1006. A bond to two in 200 l. Solvendum 100 l. to one, and a 100 l. to another, Quaere. 1007. Two make partition of land in tail by word only. 1008. Where an advowson passeth by patent without special name. 1009. One held by Heriot custom of divers Lords and made a fraudulent gift of 20 horses, one Lord brought debt. 1010. Husband and wife, tenants inspeciall tail, the Husband levies a fine to his own use issue is barred. 1011. A Benefice voided by 21 H. 8. notwithstanding a dispensation. 1012. The Queen may avoid her grant, if she were deceived. 1013. An action of the case for Granage by custom of L. 1014. He which traverseth absque ho, must not join issue first. If discontinuance in the case of the Queen after verdict be aided by 32 H. 8. Quaere. 1015. The Incumbency not in question, but the disturbance. 1016. 1017. A fine to certain uses in an Indenture with proviso, and because no day is limited, notice must be given to the Conusee. 1018. What words make an estate tail in a last william. 1019. A fine by husband and wife of her land to the use of her Children, if the Wardship be saved by the statute. 1020. Termor erected the lessor may enter to save a descent. 1021. If a man be pronounced outlawed of Felony in the County Court every one must take notice of it. 1022. A bargain and sale to E. 6. acknowledged but not enrolled. 1023. What is a good consideration to maintain an assumpsit. 1023. Error upon a writ of Covenant. 1024. A Lease by a parson for 40 years confirmed by the Bishop, Patron and ordinary, but not by the Dean and Chapter. 1025. The husband makes a lease to begin, after a lease in Esse of his wife's land by virtue of a private Act in 35 H. 8. 1026. Where the husband shall not be tenant by the Courtesy. 1027. An alien must pray a medietatem linguae before the venire facias. 1028. A custom that tenant in Fee can make a Lease but for six years. 1029. A Lease to a spiritual parson against 21. H. 8. c. 12. not voided. 1030. Reversioner infeoffeth tenant for life without deed. 1031. A jointure after the Coverture where barred by a fine by a husband and wife. 1032. He which holds in Soccage, and purchaseth the mesualty in Capite, shall hold in Capite. 1033. Where the Court aught to grant a Tales at the Defendants request. 1034. The elder brother dead without issue, the younger is heir to the father. 1035. A Pere in I. must be tried in I. for Treason. 1036. After Induction the Q. cannot revoke a Presentation. 1037. A Lease to A. and B. habendum protermino vitae successive, they are not jointenants but it is a remainder to B. 1038. The folly of the vendor not to require an assurance. 1039. In trespass, the plaintiff releaseth after the Essoine day of the utas, therefore the inquest taken. 1039. In Dower assignment of rent out of the land pleaded. 1040. Digging of a trench in a meadow no waist, Quae. how it must be pleaded. 1041. A bill of deceit against an Attorney. 1042. If Collusion be found by office how much shall be in Ward by 32. 1043. Rend goeth with the reversion, and so no assets in the Executors. 1044. Where the heir is in as a purchasor during his mother's life, he shall not be in ward. 1045. The Queen grants a manor and all woods heretofore reputed as parcel, etc. 1046. An heir of Soccage in Capite within the age of 14 shall not sue livery but an Ousterlemain. 1047. Tenant in Capite levied a Fine to his use in tail the remainder to the conuse in Fee the Queen shall have the Wardship. 1048. Termer maketh a Feoffment by Dedi & concessi, and maketh livery, the lessor being upon the land. 1049. When a conusor of a fine may distrain for rent by the statute of uses without clause of distress. 1050. Tenant in tail made a feoffment and in making livery outed the termer. 1051. Error in assize because no warrant of attorney. 1052. The Sheriff by a Fieri facias sells the Term, them judgement is reversed. 1053. Indictment for a Prenumire upon 1. and 13. of Eliz. 1054. Where a custom in Wales is not abrogated by 27 H. 8. 1055. A copyholder prescribed for estovers in another soil. 1056. Where an incumbent is removable by a writ to the Bishop although no party to the judgement. 1057. What is a good Obligation and condition for the Sheriff within 23 H. 6. 1058. In an attaint the Plaintiffs recognizance shall be to the Queen and her party. 1059. In what case a special traverse of an estate in Fee simple is good. 1060. An ejectment what is a good traverse, and what in an assize of Trespass. 1061. Where a man must traverse the descent, and not the dying seized. 1062. A man seized 10. l. land in Capite, and 8. l. in Soccage devised all the Capite, the Queen shall have the 3 part of the Capite, and all the Soccage. 1063. An Exec. being Devisee of a term enter before probate, it is good. 1064. Where a mis-convey. of process is helped, 32 H. 8. 1065. In a Formedon the Ten. avouched one as Cousin & heir, who entered without demanding of the lieu, etc. 1066. Where the Lord shall have the Lordship of the body, and the third part of the land. 1067. Upon judgement given in the Exchequer upon inforform. for Usury divers errors assigned, and good mat. 1068. The custom of Ipswich is that the Def. in trespass must be committed for default, Mainpernors. 1069. If the elder brother die the younger shall be charged as heir in an Obligation of his father. 1070. How much of a superstitious use is given to the K. by 1 E. 6. 1071. Where a Bishop must certify, lawfully espoused in case of Dower. 1072. In 27 H. 8. doth not execute the Lease of a term. 1073. If the Morgager redeemeth Capite land he shall divest the Wardship from the King. 1074. A Scire facias shall not issue upon the tenure of Recognizance but a Writ may. 1075. Grantee of an annuity pro consilio may counsel the adversary if the Grantor do not request him. 1076. If a man be deprived for not reading the Articles if notice must be given to the patron. 1077. Where an a●●ai. lieth not for finding excessive dam. 1078. No ejectione custodia lieth for ejectm. of the body. 1078. The ward & mar. of the heir not gran. without deed. 1079. Where a writ of pleg aq vietandis doth not lie. 1080. If 2 be rob of a joint sum they may join in an act. What is a good hue & cry within the saint. of Win. 1081. Where the son shall sue livery for a third part upon a conveyance for his advancement. 1082. Where the stat. of Gloster chap. 1. giveth costs and damages in a writ of Error in the Post. 1083. The Bish. of W. grant an annuity pro consilio, etc. which is confirmed (Quaere) if voided against the Successor by 1 Eliz. 1083. What is a Departure. 1084. Where the surviving Exec. may cell and pay debts. 1085. A certificate of excommunication by the Deligates. 1086. The Son deviseth the land he hath or may have after the death of his father. 1087. If issue be joined upon one point, and the Plaintiff barred they shall never sue his bond again. 1088. A double verdict. 1089. An Executor made an Executor, and died before probate, his Executor is not Executor to the first Testator. 1090. What is a god tender to make a conveyance voided, a diversity. 1091. The Lord of a Wast of 200 Acres infeofeth one of 50 Acres, the Feoffee must enclose. 1092. Where Covenants and Obligations are voided from the beginning or only after non residence by 13 E. 14 of Eliz. 1093. If the custom of Barring Tails be averrable against the statute de donis conditionalibus which is within memory. 1094. In debt against an heir judgement given, that the Plaintiff should recover the debt of a reversion to be levied when it falleth. 1095. The recovery was had returnable the 9 of Octob. which day the recoveree died it seems good. 1096. A Termer within the statute, of 32 H. of maintenance. 1097. The Termer cut trees not excepted it is waste. 1098. Error in Parliament for a judgement in the King's Bench, good matter. 1099. Lessor for life rendering rend died, if the Executor shall distrain or have an action of debt. 1100. The statute of 13 Eliz. against fugitives giveth over a seisurt the lands. 1101. Next ensuing bow expounded. 1102. judgement given in the ●inque ports is reversable as the Warders Court at Ship way. 1103. justices of Assize may by 35 H. 8. award a Tales to the cortners. 1104. Sufficient certainty to make a Feoffment good. 1105. Tenant in tail suffers a recovery and dyeth before executon● Scire facias lieth against the issue. 1106. A reversion granted rendering rend, when it shall hap, that is, when it falls in possession. 1107. If a Grantee for Stewardship have judgement in an annuity and refuse how the Arrearages shall be recovered. 1108. A. an infant is f●und heir by office, B. tenders a traverse of the dying ceased, A. came of full age, the Que ●nnay cou●pell A. to sue general livery. 1109. Husband and wife are sued in the Bank he being a Clerk in Chancery, they shall not have privilege. 1110. A Clerk of a benefice above the value of 8 l. per annum, took another and was insti●tuted, but did not subscribe according to 13 Eliz. and died, the first bonefice is not voided by 21 H. 8. FINIS. The perfect Table of the Cases. A. ABbot of Westm. 62 Audley Lord. 72 Andrews. 191 Ailiffe Sir Jo. 213 Arcbish. of Cant. 281 Agarde. 334 Audeley Lord. 419. 938 Austyn. 517 Ashton. 607 Alforde. 614 Archbish. of Cant. 656 Arundel Lady. 731 Arundel Earl. 988 Altons' case. 1040 Andrew's. 1060 B. Bokenham. 20 Bishop of Worcester. 45 Brickhead. 46 Banister. 116 Bridgwater Earl. 126 Borough Lord. 144 Buckingham Duke. 154 Bishop of Bath & W. 155 Buckler. 173 Boucher Lord. 188 Bishop of Sarum. 194 Barkley marquis. 268 Bonham Sir Io. 272 Barber. 312 Ballard. 326 Bonville. 331 Bassett. 342 Beadles. 376 Barrett. 423 Bronkard. 425 Barkley Sir Maur. 446 Bury. 453 Bray Lord. 486 Bateman. 499 Bacon Sir Nic. 585. 586 Bishop. 588 Bishop of York. 591 Bonner. 629 Brereton. 685 Bell. 702 Bowls. 701 Bassett. 720 Bassett. 775 Butler. 745. 800 Bohun Humphrey. 807 Bygott. 821 Brown Lady. 925 Bodin Rectory. 1008 Blower. 1015 Barrows Ed. 1016 Beaumont. 1039 C. Cook's case. 3 Catesby. 45 Chaffin. 100 Cockerell. 132 Chapman. 143 Clifford. 226. 245 Cromwell Lady. 238 Chafyn. 239 Culpepper. 266 Constable. 267 Champion Prebend. 276 Clerk. 286 Constable Jo. 328 Cranmer. 356 Cutts Sir William. 362 Cromwell Sir Rich. 428 Colthurst. 469 Cichester Sir Jo. 471 Coventry Bishop. 496 Cathyn Sir Robert. 500 Cheyney. 516 Clere. 519. 858 Chester Sir Robert. 569 carel. 587 Candish Sir William. 597 Capell Sir Giles. 604 Chiborne. 610 Cobham. 657 Cordall Sir William. 695 Compton. 700 Cobham. 739 Citizens of York. 790 Cook Sir A. 793 Cobham. 886 Cromwell Lo. 906 Cromwell Lo. 929 Clack. 959 Chapman. 967 Calthrop Sir Fra. 970 Cook. 974 Chester Error. 994 Chick. 1026 Cromwell Lo. 1060 Clifford. 1078 Cotton. 1104 D. Dean of Sarum. 100 Davies. 225 Durine. 302 Davie. 321 Duchess of Richmond. 336 Dorset marquis. 339 Dawbeny Lord. 353 Davies. 483 Darcey Lord. 498 Dennis Sir Maur. 680 Davies Bishop. 746 Dacres Lord. 774 Durham Bishop. 778 Dean & ●. of Carlis●e. 782 Dublyn Archb. 797 David's Bishop. 818 Danett. 974 Denbigh Custom. 1054 Dean & Ch. of Paul's. 1070 E. Empson. 4 Eps. 187 Eden. 222 Ed. 6 to Lady Mary. 359 Eton College. 379 Estost. 779 Eweleigh. 849 F. Farrington. 169 Fulmerston. 270 Frencham. 431 Foreman. 773 Fitzwilliams. 828 Fines. 880 G. Gawen. 99 Greenliffe. 104 Gilbert. 107 Graistock College. 212 Gravesend. 307 Gates Sir Jo. 357 Gravenor. 377 Greiswold. 393 Gasco●gne Sir William. 495 Gales. 511 Grace Thomazin. 521 Greyhound fl. 557 Goodman. 834 Grevill. 865 Gloucester Dean. 951 H. Hampden. 140 Haywood. 158 Harwell. 176 Harward. 207 Hide. 297 Hodgekin. 305 Haydon. 333 Huntingdon Earl. 355 Hunt. 375. 3●6 Hungerford. 503 Hartford Castle. 524 Hastings Lord. 540 Harrison. 623 Harrison. 686 Hurst Parish. 832 Hawley. 917 Huntley. 942 Humphrison. 971 Hendingham. 989 hayward. 1088 I Isham. 179 Islington. 265 Ibgrave. 306 Illesfielde. 719 johns Priov. 752 Ireland Peer. 1035 Ipswich Custom. 1068 I●leds case. 1089 K. Knowles. 13 Kempe. 185 Kempe. 489 Kempe. 498 King. 800 Keite. 891 Kent Earl. 919 Ken. 1067 Knightley. 1073 L. Latimer Lord. 155 Lane. 434 Lee. 502 Lassells. 504 Lambert Ellen. 518 Leicester Earl. 744 London Bishop. 826 Luker. 873 Lingen. 932 London custom. 1013 M. Maleveret. 96 Minors. 110 Milbourne. 111 Minors. 168 Marvyn. 228 Mannering. 230 Moore. 250 Musgrave. 288 Marvyn Just. 295 Milburne. 299 Montague Lord. 314 Marrow. 396 Moodie. 463 Magdalen College. 542 Manners Lady. 635 Mackwilliams. 643 Michael Elizabeth 709 Mulgrave Cuthbert. 724 Mutton john. 770 Mountforde. 947 N. North Lord. 406 Nudigate. 633 Norfolk Duke. 785 Northumberland E. 988 O. Oldnolde. 389 Owins. 537 Orme. 822 Ontley. 1023 P. Prior of St. Bartholom. 86 Powes Lady. 207 Peppes. 211 Potter. 214 Powes Lady. 277 Peres. 292 Peck. 296 Parkins. 298 Plympton Prior. 319 Poole Dean. 320 Poyner. 349 Pannell. 378 Puttenham. 395 Porter. 420 Powes Lor. 429 Parrett Sir Io. 437 Popham. 579 Proctor. 593 Prior of St. john's 781 Prior of Norwich. 791 Putnam. 843 Puttenham. 877 Pagett Lord. 887 Powes Lord. 902 Plomer. 1075 P●wles case. 1109 R. Ready. 5 Read. 313. 337 R●sden. 9 Rosse Lord. 20 Russell. 61 Rolfe. 140 Richards. 141 Read. 152 Richmond fee. 195 Rugway. 284 Redman. 296 Rider. 363 Rutford. 344 Bowlett Sir Ralph. 481 S. Saccombe. 129 Symons. 143 Saunders. 153 Sackvill. 181 Seintloe Sir Io. 210 Sturton Lord. 239 Seymor. 243 Somerset Duke. 244 Saintalbyn. 279 Seintloo. 310 Share Sir Tho. 335 Smith Benjamin. 344 Sherleys john. 368 Savage Sir john. 381 Scr●ggs. 443 Saddler Sir Ralph. 457 Saunders. 543 Stone. 565 Sidney Sir Henry. 608 Shandoes Lord. 646 Swynerton. 696 Saunders. 699 Savage Sir john. 718 Shatbolt William. 789 Sarum Bishop. 794 Stanley. 840 Story. 856 Spencer Sir Io. 880 Sydnam. 917 Say Sir William. 939 Sarum Bishop. 978 Somerset Duke. 1022 Spinosa. 1027 Salforde. 1028 Stafford Lord. 1088 T. Taverner. 156 Trewynnard. 160 Townesend. 203 Thomas William. 262 Traps. 348 Turton Eliz. 353 Trevilian. 366 Thymolby. 385 Tyrrell. 390 Tawe. 422 Tourney. 592 Trinity College. 707 Taverner. 931 Thornton. 922 V U. Vincent. 192 Varney. 227 Villiers. 373 umpton. 380 Vere Lady. 409 Varney. 669 Vivion. 859 umpton Lady. 983 Vernon. 1061 Vincent. 1066 Vernon. 1108 W. Woody. 38 Waineforde. 131 Whorewood. 162 Windsor Lord. 166 Willoughby. 209 Woodhouse. 237 Whitton. 241 Windsor Lord. 249 Winton Dean. 269 Windsor. 294 Wyatt Sir Tho. 301 Whittington. 313 Wyatt Sir Tho. 316 Wilford. 327 Wilts. 427 Walgrave. 619 Windsor College. 627 Wells Provost. 651 Walton. 755 Wells Danry. 767 West Kni. & Lord. 852 Winter. 888 Whitacres. 930 Waddon Chase. 944 Westons case. 998 Wyndsor. 1038 Winton Bish. 1083 Worsely. 1096 Y. Yatton Vicarage. 982 Z. Zouch Lord. 193