LENT, 1638. The Learned READING OF John Herne Esq Late of the Honourable Society OF LINCOLNS-INNE UPON The Statute of 23 H. 8. Cap. 3. CONCERNING COMMISSIONS OF SEWERS. Translated out of the French Manusctipt. LONDON, Printed for Matthew Walbanke, at Grayes-Inne-Gate in Holborn, 1659. The Right Hon.ble S. Thomas Trevor Knight Lord Chief justice of Her Majesty's Court of Common Pleas & one of Her Majesty's Most Hon.ble Privy Council 1702 TO THE RIGHT HONOURABLE, AND RIGHT WORSHIPFUL, THE COMMISSIONERS OF SEWERS FOR The City os Westminster, and parts near adjacent. I Here present you with a Reading, the Author whereof may be known to most of you; it is not for me to write Ercomiums on his worth; for his eminency f●… other learning, besides his great knowledge that appears in this, speaks him more to the judicious and intelligent than I dare take upon me to express, lest I do too little, knowing my inability of doing him honour enough: I humbly beg your pardon in obtruding so rude a Composure, (as to the translation) upon your Patronage, the sense of my own weakness, making me conscious of some mishaps, but reflecting upon the greatness of your judgements and learning in this Law, together with your candour to my years, will first rectify and then pardon: Let the world shoot their bolts, I have my end if in this or any other act I may be esteemed Your humble Servant, TO THE READER Reader, I Can neither find nor learn that ever any but Sergeant Calais ever writ upon this Statute, therefore this is the rarer. I have that reverence both to the Author and his work, that I profess to my best knowledge I have not wronged him in the translation, but what the smallest judgement may correct. You'll find not much Rhetoric in regard the Law obliges me to singular terms. Farewell: LENT 1638. The Reading Of that Learned Lawyer john Herne, Esquire Late of the honourable society of LINCOLN'S INNEVpon the STATUTE of the 23. H. 8. Cap. 3. A General Act concerning Commissions of SEWERS. OUR Sovereign Lord the King, considering the daily great damages and losses which have happened &c. as well by reason of the outrageous overflowing surges and course of the Sea, provided this Act in prevention of that and other incursions. All Statutes of Sewers are made in aid of the ancient prerogative of the King; and how be it they are penal, as well to the Person as to the Franktenement of the offender, yet because intersunt reipublicae, they shall have a large & benign construction. 6. R. 2. Fith 46. Avow. 122. 5. Rep. Sr. H. Constable's case. This Prerogative hath its original from the Law of Nations, which in truth is the original of Monarchical Government, and the same Law gives to such Governors Jura Regalia, as well in respect of sea as land, as to have Sturgeons, Whale, Wreck, etc. And as to that, the statute that gives the prerogative is but declaratory of the Common Law, and in respect of these prerogatives the King ought always both as well upon the sea as Land, to govern and protect, so that always the King was bound ratione dignitatis Regiae, to provide for the safeguard of his Kingdom etc. and so it is recited in the ancient Commission of Sewers; N. B. 113. a. Sir john Davis' Reports case of Royal piscaryes; The principal differences between the ancient Commissions, and the Commissions grounded upon our statute, are three. 1. The first is Enumeratio delicti, for at the Common Law the commission did not extend but to eight particular offences, but there are added by this statute damages, by banks, streams, mills, etc. and in conclusion it is penned with these general words, [All annoyances.] 2. Admensuratio extenti, for the commission upon this statute extends (not only) to maritine parts, but to the reforming all Nuisances in any part of the Realm of England, as well of Rivers navigable as not navigable, to streams etc. but always with this Caution that the proceeding tends to a public good and not to a private benefit; and for this reason there ought not to be any impedement to navigation or to a River which by industry may be made navigable, or for the overflowing of land so of rivers newly made for navigation, or draining for a Country, as in Lincolne-shire: In these cases it concerns the general benefit of the subject, otherwise of private waters, and so is it of the King's highway, which is only within this statute, and not for the ways for private use among particular persons. 3. Aggravation of the penalty, as by this statute it may be by abatement, fine, imprisonment, etc. so that this statute may truly be said to be quasi tyrannical, and yet just, for it is but a tyrant opposed against tyrant (ss.) the rage of the sea. For explanation of this statute there are to be considered the principal & the verba operativa within the statute. There are seven words respecting the means (ss.) ad Supervidendum. ad Inquirendum. ad Tapandum. ad Assignandum. ad Arrestandum. ad Ordinandum. ad Determinendum. There are three conducing to the end, (sl.) ad Defendendum. ad Amovendum & ad Distruendum. Within the exercise of this day it shall be shown, who may be a good Commissioner to make a survey, What may be a good enquiry, and what shall be a good Tax. The King is supreme Justice through all the Realm, & yet he cannot be a good Commissioner within this statute, for all the fines accrue to the King, & then he should be judge in his own case; a blind man cannot be a Commissioner, for he cannot be a Surveyor, who ought to be in the person of a commissioner; as in an action of waste the Sheriff ought to inquire in propria persona, so in the case of Redisseism, it lies not in ancient demesne, 7 H. 35. 61 Fith. Red. 4. rep. 6. 5. but only before the sheriff; for in this case the Sheriff is made Judge by the statute: So here the commissioners ought to be Judges upon their Survey, which is the office of the eyes; ●. ●. 197. and so Marry 〈◊〉 of Richmond, was in commission of the p●ace, cited per Mr. Taylor. In the Survey there ought to be ●estes Occular●s: A Feme may be a commissioner, and this differs from the case of a Justice of peace upon the statute of 13. R. 2. 7. for our statute is general and does not design any person in-particular; Then I do not conceive any natural disability in a woman, as to a temporal government, though we see the is excluded a spiritual; Neither is it rare, that temporal Government hath been given to Women as well as men; Deborah was judge in Israel, and Semiramis in Syria, and it was adjudged in B. R. 5. Car. That the office of Marshal of the court well descended to a Feme, and that she might well execute it by her Deputy etc. Inquirors, are designed by the statute, that they shall be honest and lawful men; so that a Feme cannot be an Inquiror, for she is not a man: probus homo excludes one convicted of conspiracy, attainted of Perjury or other notorious crimes Legalis homo excludes Alien, Villain or man outlawed, etc. 14. H. 4. 19 41. Persons to be taxed are, 26. Ass 28. 36 H. 8. 35 1. By Whose default some damage happens. 9 H. 6 53. 2. H. 6. 30. 4 E. 4. 16. 2. Who receives any profit adjoining. 3. Who have damage by the Surrounder. A lease for years of land left by the sea to B. the remainder to C. in fee, Livery is given & taken by attorney within view to the Ocean; a sea-bank within the Level is broke, and B. & C. are taxed with other Levellers, to repair it; R. & C. have good estates, but not well taxed within this Law; A wall for defence of private ground decaying, shall not be taxed to be repaired: He who hath a ferry-over the 〈◊〉, or river shall be taxed; otherwise of one who hath a private boat. A market, or fair not within in his statute, for they are but a liberty, and not a profit of the soil; otherwise of a common. The new river of Ware is not within this statute, because it tends neither to navigation not to dreyning, but by the statute of the 5. Jac. there is a special provision for it. The Case. A seized of an acre of Meadow in Sale by tenure from B. by 5. s. rent, and to repair the wall between that and the sea. And C parson of the Rectory of S. and of a Mill (which could not grind, because of the inundations by defect of the said wall) and of the tithe corn in S. of which mill & tyth-corn the rectory consists only, the wall is broken, per impetum maris, B. distreins for the service, A. brings a replevin, B. avows, and A disclaims; six Commissioners whereof three of the Quorum, are but of the age of 20. years, survey Die Sabbat. and there is an inquiry at Court die Sol. by 12. Jurors, whereof six are outlawed; The Commissioners pull down the mill and tax A. B. & C. and all having land within the level to repair the breach. Here is a good survey, a good inquiry, and also a good levelling the mill within this law, and also there is a good tax of A. and all the levellers, but not of B. and C. within this Law. The Points. An Infant may be a good commissioner, for there is a special trust by this statute to the Chancellor Treasurer, etc. and other great persons to assign commissioners according to their discression; but it was objected, that these persons cannot know men in every County, and for that reason they often nominate upon information of others: but it may be answered, that they in matters of so great importance, will not depend upon ordinary information, so that in effect these persons which have the nomination, judge them sufficient; And then, they have no time to find. And therefore it differs from the cases of Dower, Leases, etc. which have their prescribed time; also of Judicial offices, an infant generally is incapable; for offices at common Law, by presumption of the same Law an infant is incapable; otherwise is meant by office from the General words of the statute; for under the general words of the statute an infant is enabled to the same office; an infant may qualify a Chaplain Rep. 4. Acton's case; an infant cannot be a steward of a Manor, but that requires more skill & experience, for the same steward ought to enter all pleas; 21. H. 4. 12. 13. he may be Major of a town in the civil law Coecussurdus & pubes &c. are disabled in respect of Judicial offices, and yet in the same Chapter he allows an infant of the age of 20. years to be a competent Judge, and so admiting them disabled, yet the survey is good defacto. See stat. in H. 4: That no inquest shall be taken by tithes outlawed Wil Scots case who pleaded that he was indicted by persons outlawed: and the Judges of the Bench-R would not proceed about indictment. 2. The inquiry by men outlawed is good, the objection that he is not Legalis Homo; and to that I answer, that he admitting six outlawed persons disabled, yet the inquiry by the six others only, is good, because the statute designs not any number; but I agree that as well within this statute as at Common Law, there ought to be twelve to make an inquiry; for the inquiry upon this statute is of the same consequence, being the ground of the commissioners decree, and which concerns the liberty and estates of men; also I agree an outlawed man not to be a good Juror, but Distinguend a sunt tempora, for if it appears before oath, there he shall not be sworn, but being once admitted to his oath, there he shall be judged Legalis Homo, for one before oath may be thought a partial man, who after oath shall be thought indifferent, so as after solemn debate one was admitted to his oath in Parliament, notwithstanding outlawry. 3. The Commissioners of Sewers have a Court incident, true it is that a court by this statute is not expressly ordained. And upon this hath been objected the consequence of Dr. Bouhams' case Rep. 8. 8. Rep. 11. 9 the case of the City of London which have not a court; so the commissioners upon the statute of Bankrupts, have not a court upon their commission out of Chancery, ad audiendum & terminandum, yet they are enabled to hold a court; but these cases depend upon their particular reasons, as if a commission out of Chancery gives a power to have a court, than the same case would depend in two courts, as well in this new court, as in Chancery, and as to the commission upon the statute of Bankrupts, and the cases of the 8. Rep. they are but ministerial offices, and not Judicial offices, but this statute calls the commissioners Justices of Sewers, which implicitly also gives a court of record; as also the statute appoints legal proceed, process, Bailiff, a clerk, a register, their power to make distresses etc. And Error cannot but be brought before these commissioners, and upon these is the authority grounded, in the 6. Rep. Gregoryes case. 4. This court is well held die solis; the statute of W. 1. hath been urged of my part to warrant it: but I agree Sunday not to be within this law, for the statute does not mention the particular day of Sunday, but only any continued Feast, as in Advent, etc. And within these holy times etc. Essoyns hath been well taken; and than it hath been objected, that here is a Judicial act, whereas Dies Solis is not Dies Juridicus, as a Proclamation upon that day void, and the pleas ought to be entered, Crastinum Quind●n. Pasc. and not Quin. Pasc. because Sunday: So a scire fac. die solis not good, but the difference does not hold only between ministerial and judicial acts, but between judicial acts and civil cases, and cases of necessity; for judicial acts, propter necessitat. & pro bone publico, upon that day are good, as upon the approach of an enemy, the taking up of arms lawful; so if fire happen, the same reason of water, which is an enemy not to be repealed but in this court, and the danger as well in one case as in the other, equal & imminent; Mich: 16. jac. the Hundred of Stoke was charged with a robbery, Die solis, & it is common experience that Coronors (Die solis) sat upon the dead corpse, which by delay would become noisome. 5. The Mill erected during the time of inundation well prostrated; for it was an impediment and hindrance of water, so that the land for a long time continued surrounded, and then it is a nuisance to be prostrated: And it was lately resolved, where the Lord Popham having a Mill which did not grind during the inundation, he was advised to re-edify a new one to grind for such a time, the Mil so continued until the time of Sir Francis, and after observing the prejudice and nuisance (as aforesaid) the pulling it down was resolved to be good. 6. The tenant disclaims the avowry, yet well taxed; for notwithstanding the disclaimer he continues tenant, and there is a difference between a disclaimer in real actions, 18. H. 6. 10. and in avowries: for in real actions there being a demand of the tenancy upon a disclaimer, it shall be judged to the demandant: 16. H. 7. 10 and the plea of the disclaimer in the case of the Abbot is not because Mortmain which implies mutation of possession, but in an avowry the Frank tenemnt is not altered by the disclaimer, but the Lord ought to have his writ of right of disclaimer, and by that shall recover the land. The Lord after the disclaimer, cannot be taxed neither for the land or for the rent, for the tenancy continues, and yet the rent by the disclaimer is immediately lost; and as to this, there is a difference between a Cesser and a disclaimer for after Cesser, the tenant may tender his rent to save his tenancy, but after disclaimer, the Lord notwithstanding any tender shall recover the Land. That C. is not well taxed within this Law. 1. He cannot be charged in respect of the Mill, for the damage did not happen by his default; neither hath he damage by the inundation; Qu●s. wherefore he is not taxed for the land on which the Mill stood. for than he might only grind; neither hath he profit by the reparation, because the mill is pulled down: As to tithes, I conceive them not chargeable; for notwithstanding the general words of status cujusque status etc. yet without particular words of Ecclesiastical live, they shall not be charged onere seculari, as they are excepted from toll. Otherwise of Glebe land, for that is not so sacred; but comes through temporal hands: And as to the cases of contribution for finding of arms, relieveing of the poor, N. B. 228. is in respect of particular cases concerning it; so of subsidies in respect of their particular grants; so of ways: so that without a special statute, tithes shall not be contributory to temporal charges; otherwise as to Ecclesiastical: but if they shall be contributory to shipmoney, Querie, For there was instructions taken with the writ, that the tax upon Clergy men, should not be any prejudice as to their legal exemption from temporal charges: Also tithes are liable to a temporal charge or tax, after that they come into temporal hands; but here they continue spiritual, wherefore not well taxed; Also the arable land doth not appear to be surrounded, and then neither damage or profit. 8. The Levellers chargeable, notwithstanding particular tenure; yet I agree the tenure to be good, 11. H. 7. 12. 1. Rep. Porter's case: But here it appears the tenant to be unable, for he hath but an acre, where all the wall is broken; also the Diruption is per impetum maris The Second Day. How a tax shall be assessest by this Law. A Man shall not be taxed according to his ability by no Law or Statute, but the 27. Eliz. Cap. 13. where by the express words (upon a robbery done) those of the Hundred shall be taxed according to their abilities, 12 jac. B. R: the parishioners of Tuttenham, assess a Merchant of London a parishoner there for the repairing the Church, and the tax was according to his abilities; and notwithstanding they pretended custom, yet the King's Bench awarded a prohibition, because the customs was against law; for if so, then perchance one or two should only be burdened, where the benefit would be in common; against this reason, Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus supportari debet, shall be expounded according to the quality, as in the statute of Quia reputores etc. for the rate ought not to be Arithmetical, but Geometrical: And note the intention of the Statute is not magna or parva but media. He cannot be double charged, as a Copyholder can, nor be taxed for his Copyhold, 11. H 4: 35. and the Lord for his Franktenement and if there be a distress upon the Lord trespass lies against the Officer non obstante, the colour of this Commission. Lord and Commoners may be both charged, for they have several profits, the tenant may be taxed for the land, and the Lord for the rent; so the Grantee of a rend charge, or a Rent seck, but the commissioners are not bound to examine the particular estates or incumbranees; but they may tax the land severally; and upon complaint of the tenant he shall be received by equity, and the tax shall be divided; for otherwise the tenant might be charged above the value of the profits of the land by him received. Differences of repair; They are annual and accidental, ordinary and extraordinary: A Reversioner having a rent shall be taxed for the rent, as well to ordinary as extraordinary repairs; and if he have no rent, yet he shall contribute to extraordinary; but if it be a remainder or a reversion upon a lease for years only; there shall be a contribution to ordinary repairs. The Case. After Survey and presentment made, that the port of A. was greivously in decay, and not repairable but upon unusual charge; and that B. for cause of frontage, and C. for cause of a passage, and the Village of A by custom have used jointly to repair it, and that D. a Merchant of London tradeing there, had promised to one of the commissioners, that if they duly executed their commission, he would stand charged to pay 100 pounds towards the repair: The commissioners thereupon tax B. and C. and the Village of A. and four other Villages in the Highlands adjoining, severally to repair the part, and D. the 100 pounds and make warrants to the officers to levy the sums by distresses and sale without allowance of replevins, where by law it might be denied. The Officers destreyne D in London; and all the Vills pay but B. and C. Being distreyned bring replevins, which the Officers refuse to allow, and they sell the distress. All these taxes good and well levied within this Law. 1. First the Upland-towns adjoining, are well taxed by this Law; for, first the inhabitants are adjoining, and then they may suffer damage by decay of the Port, or they may receive benefit by the repair, as well in tradeing by import, and export in time of peace, as in time of war opporunity for exporting of Soldiers. Then these Inhabitants have Salvationem Defensionem & Commodum; 31. As●. Pla. 10. otherwise it is of towns remote; which (non obstante) damage or profit received, shall not be taxed because they are not adjoining. 2. Town-ship may be taxed generally, against the case of the Isle of Ely, Rep. 10. For although the first words of the statute seem to direct a particular tax to be assessest upon every possessor of land, etc. yet the clause concludes generally, according to the directions, etc. 35.38. As●… So that it may be convenient for the Commissioners to assess a sum in gross upon a Village; and after sub-divide the same; Magna Charta 15. A tax levied in the same manner, and upon the Statute of Winchester; an amerciament of a town, good. 4. Jac: A decree from the Council Table with advice of all Judges, Dr. & Student: 74. that such a tax is good. 3. D. Tradeing there, and promising, etc. is well taxed; true it is that loss in tradeing is sustained by inundation: yet I agree, that loss only does not suffice, unless he be an inhabitant also; ● Rep. Witemen case. but I rely upon his promise, which as well makes a man chargeable, as a tenure or prescription; and it is a legal consideration to support that promise. The objection, that to the King it is no good consideration, because he is bound ex officio, so here; for the good execution of commissioners: First the case objected may well be doubted; but admitting it good law, yet the cases differ; For the King is bound without election, so no consideration; otherwise of a commissioner, who may refuse to be a Governor: But admiting no good consideration in law, yet he is bound in conscience. And as to that difference between nudum, & pactum simply, and promise to good uses, or pro bono publice, the commissioners may make it cumpulsitory, for they have a court of equity, and may as well charge as receive by equity. A distress of D. in London, or in any other town good within this law: as to the lands or goods to be taxed, they are limited to their Jurisdiction; But upon a refusuall of payment, a distress in any part of the Realm, is a lawful distress; of common right it is upon the land, or where there is a charge ratione tenurae, and upon presentment before the commissioners ratione tenure; awarded to Officers, it is ministerial only, and shall not be taken but upon the land; but if so judicial a distress be awarded there in any part of the Realm (non abstante) the tenure shall be good. B: and C: are well taxed, and the Tax well levied by sale, without allowing the Replevin; in respect of the Frontage or Passage they might have damage or profit, (for it is intended of a private passage) and then the tax without question is good, and the sale without the Replevin, for the levy is not satisfied by the distress of the Officers, because they ought to collect and lay out; but they cannot lay out without sale. And although a Distress is not generally saleable in so many days, yet being here in this case where a Replevin does not lie at common Law; it shall be good: 3 H. 7. 4. A Distress for an amerciament in a Leet may be sold. 2● A●…. 7●. 7. H. 4. 25. 21 H. ●. 40 11 H●4. 6. And admitting a Replevin did lie, yet being a Distress made by a superior Court, the sheriff cannot make a replevin: Otherwise of the C. C● Dyer 67. 5 Rep. Rooks case. The third Day. What shall be a lawful Arrest, Ordinances, Denovo, where good; and what Cases are determinable by the Commissioners. IN these particulars the Power of these Commissioners extend further than all other statutes; for the Authority is not bounded by prescribed rules, but it is left to their discretion; and yet absolute power given them to compel obedience to their Ordinances: Wisdom is here coupled with Discretion, and also the addition [Good] according to their good discretion and wisdom; discretion is Generalis specialis aut legalis: Every wise man dispatches every business with a general discretion, and yet that discretion submits to others; for Nemini opportet esse sapientiori legibus. The touchstone of their proceed within this statute, aught to be Discretio specialis & legalis, and between sense and discretion to know what is just, 34 H. 6. 24 19 H. 6. 27 and ubicessat lex, to have recourse to reason, and that also but in cases of necessity, potest as ordinandi, gives power to erect new defences: they have power to arrest the body of a man; and in many cases where he may be fined, he may be imprisoned. Opposition to the legal Ordinances of the Court, is a rebellion, and punishable by fine within this Law. An Officer for his neglect finable. Otherwise of an Officer not sworn. 10 H. 6. 6. ● Rep. Gregory's case. One that makes payment at the time appointed, is not finable, but to be amerced. One for non feasance amerciable only: Otherwise for misfeasance. The case for which a Fine is imposed by Act of the court, not traversable; Otherwise it is of a Fine upon a presentment of the Jury; but all Fines ought to be reasonable. Fines may be assessest only in Plena curia; for out of court they are not Judges of Record. Fines are not leviable by the Commissioners, 11 Rep. Godfreye case. but shall be estreated into the Exchequer. Otherwise of Justices of the peace. And the difference arises upon the several pennings of the statutes. Commissioners have power to impose perpetual charge, (ss.) an annual charge for keeping in repair, and to sell the land upon refusal of payment; the Commissioners may not only decree right, but do right; as well repeal, as expound ancient laws. The Case. The Village of A upon a coast of the sea (which had an ancient Bridge upon the river, time out of mind of man, &c: utterly decayed) is incorporated by the king that now is, and therefore hath a grant of Pontage; B. erects purpresture, and enhances a Mear within the river by force, which by former order was destroyed; The Commissioners upon surv●y and presentment, upon their discretions decree a new bank to resist the Mere, and fortify the bridge, and the Levellers to make it; the county to re-edify the bridge, the Village to keep it in repair: B is arrested and imprisoned, and C to pay a hundred marks. The POINTS. 1 All these acts are justifiable by the commissioners within this Law; Grant of Pontage good. It hath been objected, that the King may grant a thing tending to charge people, and Davis' Reports, fol: 15. it is express, that Pontage cannot be granted, but it lies only in prescription, Rep. 1. Al●…nwoods case. Plow. 426. Rep. 5 55. Rep. 11. 73. as of other things lying ingrate only, and not in prescription; but clearly, Pontage as well lies in grant, as in prescription. But true it is, that Pontage for a bridge before built, is void; for there it is but a charge to the subject; but Pontage for a bridge to be erected new, is warrantable; for there it is, Quid pro quo. Also admitting the ancient bridge, than Pontage is incident, unless prescription lie under; as the case between Heedy and Wheeler, it is resolved, that toll is incident to an ancient fair, 38 Eliz. ●. R. Rot. 9●3. unless prescription to the contrary: So of Pontage to a bridge etc. 2 Commissioners may erect a novo. The objection, That an ad quod damnum ought to issue first; but here is a great circumspection; for it is not a trust to a single person only, as Escheator, but after survey of commissioners oaths. Another objection, That the statute of H. 6: gives this power by Express Words: so that without express words, power is not granted. But I conceive, although the statute of H. 6 be temporary, yet it continues, and our statute hath some coherence with the words of the statute of H. 6 and upon the same reason was a solemn Decree grounded at the Council table, That commissioners might erect de novo; and the difference was there taken between a statute expired, and a statute repealed; for where a statute is repealed, there an inconvenience appears, and a repeal is made in disallowance; but where a statute expires only, there it hath once an allowance, and no check in disallowance. 3 The county is well charged to re-edify the bridge, and the village well charged to repair it: the question is grounded upon 22 H. 8. of Bridges, by which it is enacted, that every village incorporate shall repair bridges of the same village, and the others are left to the county charge, unless there be a particular tenure or prescription, than there cannot be prescription, because the decay is before time of memory, &c: neither is the village bound to repair it, because that the corporation was made after the decay, also it was a village in the county charged at the time of the statute; for it is corporate in the time of the King also: although it be a village incorporate, yet not being a county-town, it continues within the county at large; but after erection, the charge of the village to repair it is good, for the village hath Pontage: Et qui sentit emu debet sentire commodum. B: was well arrested and imprisoned for the purpresture; Kelw. 141 7 H. ●. 33. 19 H 6. 8; 33 E. 3. 8. Da. Rep. 6. De Roy. P●schar●s. for purpresture may be as well in water as in the highway, and this without force, but amerciable: but pupresture or anusance with force fineable, and then if finable, imprisonment follows of consequence. 5 The fine of C. to an hundred marks, is reasonable: and I shall not help myself by aggravating of the offence with contempt, being to re-edify after pulling down by Decree: but I hold, that here he cannot be fined to a greater or lesser sum, and the words of the statute are express, scil. Statute 1 Hen. 4: cap. 12 The fourth Day, What cases are to be determined within this Law. IF a tax be imposed upon A: and the goods of B. are distrained for it, B: shall have an action of trespass in the court of Sewers. Officers and servants, as Carpenters and Masons, etc. employed by the commissioners, shall recover their wages of the commissioners in this court, because the original cause arises by this court: Otherwise where it arises out of this court, as the case of Vaux and Gibbons, which was referred to the Council-table: but where a thing originally belongs to the court of Sewers, 1 R. 3.4. that shall warrant all the proceed also, for the accessary follows his principal. Where a township is taxed with a sum in gross, and a man distrains for it, he shall have process out of this court for assessing of the sum after sale of the land for nonpayment, where the Officers by Decrees of this court, taketh trees upon the land of one man, and digs a trench upon the land of another man, both shall recover damages for the land, and also for the trees, against the levellers in this court: But if A: was chargeable by this law, and B disseises him, yet B. shall have no remedy by this law. A presentment in a Leet or Turn not traversable unless they concern the franktenement, and then I conceive it ought to be removed into the King's bench; and the reason why personal torts are not traversable, is I conceive, two Rep. Bags case. 8 Rep Bonhaws case. because de minimis non curat lex, and therefore no process to compel him to answer in this court. No traverse against a return of a sheriff, or a Major and commonalty, but presentments before Justices of the peace are traversable: So a presentment before Justices of Oyer and Terminer, Sta●t. 183. 83: 30 Ass. 57: 37 Ass. part: 45: E. 3: 26. Plowd. 397. Charter of Rumney Marsh, fol. 23, 24 and Godfrey was presented for not repairing, and his traverse was admitted to be good, for otherwise the words of the statute were in vain: All traverses framed according to Law, shall be allowed in this court. The Case: Upon survey against A upon a presentment against B & C upon decree for sale against D and against the father of E A tenders his traverse, B prescribes in non reparando, C pleads that he and F ought to join in repairing, D pleads that he was within age at the time of the decree, and E that he is son and heir of the donee, against whom the decree was made: All these traverses and pleas are disallowed by the Justices of Sewers, and well within this law. The survey of the Commissioners not traversable. M. Holborn A survey is supposed to be by the court, and so it is a record. But I doubt if the commissioners may make a record to charge the subject, they may by the statute come and prostrate; but they are restrained by the other words for charging: If they be Judges of the default, yet they are not Judges upon what the default lies. for the statute says it shall be by enquiry: Also it is not possible they should upon coming determine upon any cases, for they cannot view if the will was made before the time of E.M. and then they ought not to prostrate it; but if they can make a record, that is not traversable, for it is made by them as Judges; for commissioners of Sewers are a court of Oyer and Terminer; 14 H. 8. 7 H. 4. and what a man does as Judge, that is not traversable, for it is presumed to be just. If Justices of Peace view the highways, i Mar. Dyer Vernous case. 19 Ass. 6. 1 H. 4. and make entries of it, it is equivalent to a presentment, and there no traverse: So of surveys of the commissioners who are made Judges: But a presentment of a Jury without question is traversable. The commission of Sewers is part of the general power of the general commission of Oyer and Terminer; Rep. 2. Marquess Winchest. case. but the question is, If the prescription of a non reperando, be good, it is void at common Law, for it is against reason: but as before, Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus deb●t supportari, a Clergy man may prescribe in non decimando, but a Layman cannot, because he was not capable of taking of tithes; and of a clergy man it was reason, because it might be that he was discharged anciently by contract, but in our case the King has interest, and therefore it belongs to him to discharge, & prescription is not good against him; but if it were good at common law, yet this statute takes it away, because the words are general, Rinney Marsh Cham fol. 13. 39 (Every man, rich or poor, etc.) For Wreck there may be a prescription, Non obstante, the statute of prerogative: In London there is a custom, and they prescribe, That he that serves an apprenticeship to one trade, may set up any, 5 Eliz. 5. Noy said, That that statute being general in the negative, takes away such customs. But the same was over all the realm. C. pleads that he and F. aught to join in the repair: No good plea; For among joint-tenants, every one is charged with the repair of the whole, for there is to be no division amongst them; for when one possesses all, it would be inconvenient and difficult to find all the joint-tenants: True it is, for avoiding of damages joint-tenancy is a good plea, for there he cannot help himself; but in our case the commissioners have a court of equity, and have power to relieve and make distribution. There might have been the Writ De reparation faciend. N.B. 234. 235 de onerand. pro rata portion; so the statute of Marleborough for suit, to have the other tenants contribute. So upon 27 Eliz. 13. upon Hue and cry contribution. 3 Infancy at the time of the Decree, no good plea; but the sale shall bind the Infant in perpetuum. Littleton says, that in such a case Latches shall not prejudice the Infant. Now where the benefit of the Commonwealth is concerned, and the words of the statute are general, there the infant is to be bound, for the Commonwealth is the greater favourite of the Law, statute 4 H. 7. of Fines that shall bind Infants; for there is no express saving for them: So the statute of Limitations, 19 H. 8. but there is a difference where the statute charges the possessions, of the Infant, there he shall be bound, but the person of the Infant is more favoured. But though they may not during his nonage, 7 E. 3. age 88 Plow. 359. 459. 21 E. age 54. yet at his full age they shall be charged for the default of his infancy; so of the statute of waste; but the person of the infant shall be excused. As the statute of Westm. 2. enacted, that he that pleaded a record, and failed of it, should be imprisoned, yet an infant shall not. Now in our case where the statute is made pro bono publico, 4 H. 7. 1●. Fitz. ass. 443. Imprison. 17. 14 Ass. 18. 21. and the infant's person not touched by the Decree, neither is there any prejudice to the infant because the commissioners are Judges entrusted by the Law to do equity. Also so it is of a Feme Covert, so I conceive for the reasons aforesaid that he is bound by this statute. 5 The heir of a gift in tale, is chargeable upon a Decree against his ancestor; but that aught to be supposed upon a complaint to be relieved in equity, that it cannot be a plea against the decree is determined: The question is grounded upon the statute De donis conditionalibis, which says, that neither Factum, nor Feoffament of the Donee shall prejudice his issue. Now there are many statutes that do not extend to prejudice these Estates, the statute of 16 R. 2. of forfeiture of all lands upon Praemunire, extends not to tail, because the general words of the statute are merely penal; but statutes that are for the public good, if they be general, extend to it, as 4 H. 7. of Fines, 3 Rep. 8. and the Law takes it, that a demise of a tenant in tail, should bind the issue, until the 34 H. 8. and upon the 42 Eliz. of charitable uses, a conveyance by Donee shall bind the issue in tail, because it is beneficial to him, but the 26 H. 8. for forfeiture for treason shall not bind the Estate tail, because 'tis penal: Now our statute being (any Estate) if it should not reach to estates tail, the words would operate nothing; and it may be all the Lands chargeable may be in tail, at the same time, and then there would be no lands chargeable if the statute did not extend to tails, and so be sold; yet I conceive there be some lands that cannot be sold by this law, as of a corporation that makes default, their lands shall be sold within this law, if it be such a corporation which may perpetually charge their successor: otherwise of a corporation that cannot bind themselves, as a Prebend, Parson, Dean, and Chapter, and Bishop, etc. For the statute of 13 Eliz. says, that no act or conveyance by them to be made or suffered, shall bind their successors: But the general words of our statute makes the successors chargeable. And although the statute de Donis, etc. protects the issue, yet they may be well charged within this law. The Reader. If A. by survey being found faulty for nonfeasance, he may traverse it by this law; this law hath two surveyors, the commissioners themselves, who may come and survey. 2 Officers, as assistants and Jurors. If the Jury make a presentment that J. S. ought to repair by reason of his tenure, that presentment is void, for the jury ought not to inquire of that; but if they present that J. S. hath nor repaired as he was charged to do, that's good; and in this case to the presentment of the Jury the party may tender his traverse, because the Jurors are only assistants to the Court for occasion, but not Judges; but the survey of the commissioners themselves shall not be traversable, because it is the act of the court, and it is done as Judge, and not by special authority, as commissioners of bankrupts. And if a Justice of peace survey the force, and makes a record of it, that is not traversable, because 'tis done as Judge of it. Prescription for non reparando, is good; for the words of the ancient commission are Cujuscunque status condition. etc. so the words of the statute, Every man which shall reap benefit, although a prescription pro modo is good; and according to the special matter his prescription may be good, as if B. had pleaded that his land had lain between the sea and the sea-bank, & prescribes for discharge of his land, there the prescription is good. Otherwise of a prescription generally, joint-tenancy, is not a good plea; for reparation being a public work, and of necessity it shall not be pleaded; but all the land shall be charged in gross. 9 Rep. Conyers case. 4 Infancy no good plea for the manner, because it is after the Decree, which is the final judgement, and he is put to his bill of review before the commissioners. 44 E. 3. 22 5 That the issue shall be bound as aforesaid. A rent granted by tenant in tail for release of him who had the right, this shall bind the heir because 'tis for his benefit. And in our statute there is the word (Heir) which would be void unless it included the Estates tail. Also this plea is void for the manner, Rationa predict. of Infancy. The Fifth Day. Was upon the power of the Commissionsioners to determine, and what Lands, and for what causes they may be sold, what persons liable to be charged. Land's to be charged within the decree, aught to be within the bounds of the Commissioners; but there is a difference between locality for a decree, & for a distress; for the distress may be in any part of the Realm, Non compos mentis, Infants, &c are bound by this statute; so of a Parson, Prebend, etc. and other corporations; but as to their successors, the corporation within the statute of 13 Eliz. is out of this statute, for they cannot by any act to be done or suffered, prejudice their successors. The Case. A. seized of lands left by the sea, B. and C. tenants in common of other lands, and D. copyholder of another acre; A. is assessest 2 d. B. & C. 20 s. for their acre, and D. to 20 s. for his acre; A. B. and D refuse payment, and the commissioners decree the sale of the acre of A and the moiety of the acre of C and D The POINTS. The Decree for none of these sales is good. Lands left by the sea is not within this commission; for there is a difference between lands gained from the sea, and land left by the sea; for the lands absolutely gained, may be more beneficial, and it is within the level; but this land left, is between the sea, and the sea-banks, so that there can be no benefit by the reparation. 2 The sale of the copyhold land is not good, for then the copy hold estate should be altered without the privity of the Lord: Otherwise of a tax. 3 Tenants in common being taxed, and refuse, the sale of the moiety is not good, for the tax is joint, and shall not double, as upon a grant of a rent; and then the tax being entire, (and no partition of the Estate) a division by sale of the moiety, is not good and warrantable; for a tenant in common cannot prejudice his companion as to his land; and upon every sale Commissioners ought to take notice of Estates. Otherwise upon a tax. The sixth day nothing was done, but repetition of the former days exercise. FINIS.