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A87798 Jurisdictions or, The lawful authority of courts leet, courts baron, court of marshallseys, court of pypowder, and ancient demesne : together with the most necessary learning of tenures, and all their incidents, of essoynes, imparlance, view; of all manner of pleadings, of contracts, of the nature of all sorts of actions, of maintenance; of diverse other things, very profitable for all students of innes of court and chancery : and a most perfect directory for all stewards of any the sayd courts. / Heretofore writ in French by the methodically learned, John Kitchin of Grays-Inne, Esq; and now most exactly rendred to more ample advantage in the English tongue; with a demonstrative table, pointing out all matter of consequence, throughout the whole work. Whereunto is added the authentick formes of all manner of writs, with their severall returnes in English, very usefull for all men in this Common-wealth, as they be now used.; Court leete et court baron. English Kitchin, John. 1651 (1651) Wing K656; Thomason E1225_1; ESTC R211060 481,896 637

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Ignorance and wilfulnesse and some Stewards to please their Lords and for feare of loosing their Fee being but Stewards at the will of their Lords and some for Letters and other causes that Justice many times hath not place there to the perillous example and overthrow of Estate and for that that henceforth hereafter Justice in these Courts may be the better administred before that I shall treat of the Courts aforesaid I think it is convenient to write to the Stewards these sentences insuing to be a Glasse to Stewards to reade their better remembrance to administer Justice and for that it thus followeth Who worketh Justice he shall be advanced Eccles 20. Blessed are they which hunger and thirst for Justice for they shall be satisfied Matth. 16. Justice advanceth a Nation and it maketh a miserable people to be pacified Prov. 19. He that justifieth a wicked man and condemneth the just man he is most abominable with God Pro. 17.15 Unless your Justice abound more then that of the Scribes and Pharisees you cannot enter into the Kingdome of Heaven Matth. 18. The soules of the Just are in the hands of God Wisedome In the streight path of Justice but the contrary way leadeth to death Prov. 12. Love God and thy neighbour as thy selfe then if you doe not Justice how doe you love him who is Justice and truth and how doe you love your neighbour as your selfe Matth. 22. Justice surely is immortall and everlasting Injustice is the wages of death love Justice you that Judge the Earth Wisedome 1. Riches doe not prevaile in the day of revenge but Justice shall free from death Prov. 2. God shall give to the Just the reward of their labours Wisedome 10. And if any love Justice his labours have great vertues sobriety and vertue then which there is nothing more profitable in this life to men Wisedome 1. Nothing truely can be honest which wanteth Justice Tully in his Offices From Justice as out of a certaine Fountaine all rights doe spring for a just man hath a will to give to every man his owne Bracton Another Cause of doing Justice It is appointed for all men once to dye and afterwards to come to Justice And as Athanasius saith At whose comming all men shall rise with their bodies and shall give a reason and account of their owne workes and they that have done good shall goe into life everlasting but they that have done evill into everlasting fire What men have done this present time of life Shall reap the Harvest when Goe and Come is rise Rev. 14. Blessed are the dead which dye in the Lord for their workes follow them Corinth 1. Chap. 3. Every one shall receive his reward according to his worke 2 Corinth 4. Who soweth in blessednesse shall reape in blessednesse if Christ had not been borne of the Virgin Mary and dyed for us no man could have come to eternall life therefore beleeve and doe Justice and then shall yee have the aforesaid thing promised And note That though Christ hath redeemed us yet if we doe evill it is written We shall goe into everlasting fire and for that obey and feare to breake the Commandements of God and then in doing of Justice you doe the Commandement of God for which you shall have the thing promised that is to say Eternall life for not all which say unto me Lord Lord shall enter into the Kingdome of Heaven but those that doe the will of the Father saith Saint John Therefore if you will have eternall life doe Justice and also remember that death doth not delay no man knoweth his day and therefore prepare your life and doe Justice because no man knoweth his end and as Fishes are taken with a hook and Birds taken with a Snare so the body of a man in the day of evill The third Cause of doing Justice is to have a good Report Have a care of a good name It is better to have a good name then much Riches Cursed is the man that neglecteth his good Name It is better to have a good Name then precious Oyntments and to conclude he saith What profiteth If you shall gaine the whole World if you shall loose your owne soule First the Steward shall make a Precept to warne the Court by reasonable warning as by six or more dayes as followeth and it is the better if it be by fifteene dayes according to the common dayes in the Bench. The Precept J. K. Steward to the Bayliffe thereof health Prebenda de Islington I command likewise and appoint that diligently you give to understand the view of Frankpledge of the Court there to be held against the Thursday that is to say the sixteenth day of October next comming after the date of these presents and have there this command And as c. Dated under my Scale the first day of this moneth of October the yeare of the Reigne of Queen Elizabeth by the grace of God of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. 21. Then enter your beginning of your Court-Rollin manner following The view of Frankpledge with the Court J. F. Prebenda de Islington Order de tenor Leet Clerk there held the Thursday Viz. The sixteenth of October the yeare of the Reigne of our Lady Elizabeth Queene by the grace of God of England France and Ireland Defender of the Faith c. the 21. held by J. K. the Steward there It is good to make this entry that is to say Held by J. K. Steward there If there be any Copiholders there for that the Name of the Steward is in the Copy to the admittance then after this entry the Steward shall cause the Bayliffe to make Oyes three times if it be a Leet for this is the Kings Court though the other hath that by Grant or by Prescription In the yeare 21. Edw. 4. fol. 37. is that where either adjournment of the Terme or other matter for the King B. Proclamation 6. is There at the beginning there shall be three Proclamations made and in all other matters which are not for the King but one Proclamation and for that at the beginning in the Court-Baron shall be but one Proclamation and in Court Leet for that it is the Kings Court shall be three Proclamations Scilicet O yes three times shall be made Note that none may make Proclamation but by authority of the King or Maiors and such like where they have used it by Custome 22. H. 6. fol. 19. Then forthwith after the three Proclamations made the Steward shall make the Bailiffe to say All manner of Persons which are resident or Deciners and doe owe Suit royall to this Leet come in and make your Suit and answer to your names every one upon paine and perill which shall ensue And after that all are called and all which are absent are marked to be amerced then the Steward shall cause againe if it be in a Leete to be made three
Recognition of the Assise and in evidence that the Plaintiffe is Bastard it is not good for it is contrary to this thing admited and imployed 22 Book of Ass 3. Covenant Issue was If the Defendant had made an Estate sufficient to the Plaintiffe of Higgens Close or not and evidence that it is not so much in value it is not good for it is not answerable to the matter in Issue 27 H. 8. fol. 35. Trespasse The Defendant justifies for Common appendant and gives in evidence that he hath Common by reaion of Neighbourhood it is not good for it is not answerable to the matter in Issue 13 H. 7. fol. 13. 11 H. 4. fol. 63. Trespasse of beating not guilty and evidence that it was in his defence it is not good for it is a matter of justification and contrarying 7 Ed. 6. tit 14. In Debt upon an Obligation made for Usury If the Defendant plead it is not his Deed he cannot give in evidence that it was made for Usury for it is contrarying 5 Ed. 4. fol. 5. Debt upon obligation for letting him to baile and doth not name Sheriff the Defendant gouht to plead that and so not his Deed but not generally not his Deed and give that in evidence for it is contrarying 3 H. 7. f. 5. Where two are bound joyntly and severally and one Seale is broken yet in Debt against the other or against him he cannot plead not his Deed and give that in evidence for it is contrary but he may plead the speciall matter and conclude so not his Deed. 5 H. 7. f. 2. If one plead nothing passed by the Deed he cannot after give in evidence that it is not his Deed for it is contrarying 9 H. 7. fol. 3. Derinue the Defendant saith he doth not detaine and he cannot give in Evidence that he hath that in pawn for it is contrarying Where the Evidence proves the effect and substance of the Issue is good THE Plaintiff Pleads a Lease simply and gives in evidence a Lease upon condition and for that that the condition is performed it is good for the evidence proves the effect and substance of the Issue and for that it is good 14 H. 8. f. 20. 38 H. 6. f. 9. The Array was challenged for that that was made at the denominating of the Clerke of the Plaintiff Evidence that it was made by the Bailiff of the Franchise at his denomination is good 44 Ed. 3. fol. 39. J.S. pleads a Feoffment made to him and gives in evidence that there was a Fine which is a Feoffment of Record and is good 27 H. 8. fol. 29. Action upon the case by the Husband of an Assumpsit made to him and given in evidence that it was made to his Wife to which he agreed and is good 14 H. 8. fol. 18. False Imprisonment If the Defendant justifie by Warrant if the Warrant were after the Arrest the Plaintiff may say of his own wrong without that that he had any warrant and may give this matter in Evidence Forraine matter plead in Court-Baron IF a Plaint be in the Court-Baron of a Debt or trespass and forraine matter is pleaded there it shall not be tried in Bench though that this Court shall be out of the Jurisdiction but it seems shall be tried in the County where the Court-Baron is or the forraine matter is alleadged to be done 1 H. 5. f. 12. A man cannot remove a Plea out of Court-Baron into Bench but in a Replegiare and not in Debt or trespasse unlesse that the Damages are not to forty shillings 14 H. 8 f. 17. by Fitzh Note more before that Fine Where it shall be paid by Copy-holder that I have seen used is as insues NOte that it is commonly said and the ground of paying Fines is that a Fine is due to the Lord upon every alteration and change of Tenant that is to say upon every admittance of every new Tenant to the Lord by copy as upon every alienation by surrender and admittance upon that and upon every discent and admittance upon that also if a Copy-holder surrender into the hands of the Lord to the use of diverse and their Heires as to 2.3 or 4. and their Heires upon the admittance of them the Lord shall have but one Fine for it is but one surrender and one admittance of a Tenant and upon the death of the Survivor and the admittance of his Heire then an other Fine so that the Fine is to be adjudged due alwaies upon admittance of Tenant and not without admittance And for that if two be admitted and one dies the other shall have his part by Survivor without new admittance and shall not pay a Fine Also where a Surrender is made to the use of a Husband and his Wife and to the Heires of the Husband upon their admittance the Lord shall have but one Fine for it is one surrender and both are but one new Tenant and after the death of the Husband and the Wife upon admittance of the Heire of the Husband the Lord shall have another Fine Also where a surrender is made to one for life and after his death the remainder to another and the Heires of his Body begotten and for default of such Issue remainder to a third and his Heires in this case admittance of the Tenant for life vests the remainder in the others and divers learned Stewards take but one Fine only of admittance of a Tenant for tearme of life and nothing of those two in remainder when the Remainder falls but I have seen that every one in the remainder when they come to the Land shall make Fine though it be not the whole fine but a halfe and every one is admitted when a remainder falls but it need not for by the admittance of the Tenant for life the remainder is so vested that he in remainder need no other admittance and they are but one Estate and one surrender the same Law is where there is a surrender to one for life the remainder to another and his Heires there shall be but one Fine But then it is good that both be admitted together according to the surrender at the time of the surrender made Also where one out of the Court by custome surrenders into the hands of two Tenants to the use of himselfe for life and after his death to the use of J.S. and his Heires and dies before the next Court and then all this is presented at the next Court he in the remainder shall be admitted and pay but one Fine for it is impossible to admit one which is dead and by the act of God his Fine is gone and now there is but one to be admitted and upon one surrender and one being to be Copy-holder shall be paid but one Fine Also where a Copy-holder is admitted upon surrender he shall pay a Fine but if it be so that he have common recovery in plaint in nature of a VVrit of entry in the
where the Lord prescribes to have the best he may seise for that that it is certaine 6 Ed. 3. Tit. but inquire Who shall pay Hariot and who not and when it shall be paid and what remedy upon putting it away ISsue in avowry if he die his Tenant for the Lord shall have Hariot though that the Tenant do not dye scised for it is sufficient if he dyed his Tenant though that he did not dye seised 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Br 1. and 7 H. 4. fol. 17. The Husband and Wife and their Son purchase lands joyntly hariotable and the Husband dies the Lord shall not have a Hariot till after the death of the last of them 24 Ed. 3. fol. 50. Br. 4. and Fitzh 3. 25 Ed. 3.7 and 19. R. 2. tit Hariot 5. Where a man dies seised of two Houses hariotable the Tenant shall pay two Hariots and note there the prescription that a Parson shall have the best Mortuary and the Lord the second best and if the Lord shall have the second best was the Issue taken 7 H. 6. fol. 26. Br. 3. Beasts which are remaining within the Fee of the Lord if they be removed out of the Lordship the Lord may take them for Hariot where he is to have Hariot after the death of every Tenant 27 Book of Ass 24. If my Tenant which holds of me by a Hariot aliens parcell of his land to another every one of them shall pay Hariot for that that it is intire 34 Ed. 3. Fitzh 3. After the death of a Prior Hariot shall not be paid for that he hath no property in the Beasts 32 Ed. 2. Fitzh 7. If a Husband Wife and their Son are seised for their lives the remainder to their said Son in taile after the death of the Husband the Lord shall not have a Hariot for he was not sole seised 24 Ed. 3. Tit. 3.19 R. 2. Tit. 5. The same for it is said there that if one do not dye sole Tenant there shall be no hariot paid Recordare longum If the Lord purchase the Tenancy held by hariot service then the hariot is extinct by the unity of possession for that that it is service annexed to the Land but I intend that it is otherwise of hariot custome where the Lord grants over the land 14 H. 4. f. 8. and 8 H. 7.11 Note that hariot is due immediately after the death of the Tenant Trespasse the Defendant as Lord may justifie taking of hariot within his Fee or if the taking were out it is good and the conveying it out is to no purpose but that the Lord may seise hariot out of his Lordship for it is not in case of the Statute where the Lord distraines within his fee for his services 19 R. 2. Fitzh 5. The Lord may seise Hariot which is the best Beast that his Tenant hath which held of him by hariot though they be in some place out of his Mannor for that that it is certaine 6 Ed. 3. Fitzh 4. If one which holds by hariot service to pay the best Beast dies and hath a Cow at the time of his death which is the best though that the Executors sell that the Lord may seise that in the hands of him to whom shee is sold if the Sale be not in an open Market and not there if without fraud 16 Ed. 3. Fitzh 2. By the custome of some Mannor and of most Mannors the Lord shall have only one hariot upon the dying seised of his copy-holder and discent and not upon every surrender But by the custome of some Mannor hariot is due upon every surrender for life in taile or in Fee as well as upon discent and that in nature of a hariot custome at the Common Law and by the custome of divers Mannors the Lord hath no hariot of some of his Tenants within the Mannor and of some he hath The Lord may seise for hariot custome the hariot and is to seise that of the Goods of the dead and for hariot service to distraine upon the land If a Copy-holder of Inheritance of lands hariotable lying in extreamity upon his bed surrender into the hands of two Tenants to the use of his eldest Son in Fee and dies before that surrender be presented in the Court the Lord shall have hariot but if this surrender had been presented in Court and the eldest Son had been a●●●ted accordingly and after the Father had dyed there the Lord shall have no hariot unlesse it be hariot custome due to him onely by custome upon every alteration and exchange of Tenant for life and in Fee The same Law is if the Father copy-holder of Land hariotable surrencer in the Lords Court to the use of himself for life of the Son of his Daughter for life and after to the use of the Son of his Daughter and to the Heires of the Son and they are admitted accordingly and after the Father dies the Lord shal not have hariot unlesse it be hariot by custome due upon every Estate for life in tail and fee upon every surrender which is due by the custome but in this case if the hariot were due by the death of his Tenants and discends to the heire only then the Lord shall not have the hariot If the Father being a Copy-holder of Inheritance or by the custome the Lord is to have Hariot upon every discent only and he lying in extreames surrenders into the hands of the Steward to the use of his eldest Son and his heirs and dies and after that surrender is presented in Court and he is admitted accordingly it seems that the Lord there shall have a hariot But if the Father being Copy-holder of Inheritance or by the custome the Lord having Hariot upon every discent only surrender in full Court to the use of his eldest Son and his heirs and the eldest Son is admitted accordingly and after the Father dies there the Lord shall have no Hariot So it seems if in this case the Father surrender to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to the use of his eldest Son and his heires and they both are admitted accordingly and after the Father dies there the Lord shall not have hariot 34 Ed. 3. Statham If my Tenant which holds of me by a hariot alien parcell of that land to another every of them is charged to me of a hariot for that it is intire and though the Tenant purchase the land again yet if I be seised of a hariot by another man I shall have of him for every portion a hariot and that by the opinion of Wilby and Sharde 4 Ed. 3. Statham Tit. Avowrie one avowes for hariot Plaintiff demands Judgement for that he doth not allead ●●eisin of the hariot and it seemes of hariot custome he need not to alleadge Seisin but otherwise it is of hariot service 6 Ed. 3. Statham Tit. avowrie if one avow for hariot custome he shall recite the custome in his Avowrie 24 Ed. 3. Statham
Steward or the Jury of any petty Treason Felony petty Larcinie Annoiances or Blood-shed Pound broken or of Rescous or of any other thing made against the Peace or of any person of common ill behaviour within the Leet or any workmen using common deceit or of any common Misdemeanour of any Officer or other person there or of any Weife Estrey Treasure found or of any other thing here inquirable come you in and you shall be heard Then if any come in let him be sworn to give evidence to the Jury And after that the Steward shall say to the Jury go together and inquire ye of the matter of your Charge and when you are agreed I shall be ready to take your Verdict The end of the Charge A breviate of the Charge HEre followeth a breviate of the Charge which will suffice for the Steward which is perfect in the Charge for his remembrance is sufficient And first what Articles are inquirable by the Statute 18. Ed. 2. fol. 82. Which follow Fairfax 22. Ed. 4. fol. 82. Which follow saith There is no Statute but rehersall of Lawes inquirable in Leet Petty Treason As clipping of Money And falsifying Money Felonies As common Theeves Receivers of Felons Of small Theeves as of Sheep Hens and Corne stolne Escape Of Theeves and men imprisoned and let goe without warranty Rape Of ravishing a Woman which is not presented before the Coroner Sutors that is to say Resiants which owe sute royall And capital pledges and Deciner Of these of twelve years and not sworne Customes and Services forborne Annoyances made in Lands Woods and Waters of Walls Houses Ditches Hedges made or pulled downe to the annoyance of the people Of Wayes and Paths taken away or stopped of Waters wrong turned or stopt or taken away of corrupters of Water by Lyme Flax c. III persons for the Common wealth Of them that go of errands for Theeves Of common breakers of Hedges Of maintainers and keepers of Bawdry Of those which sleepe in the day and walke in the night and have nothing to live on Of those which daily haunt Taverns and have nothing to live on Of those which catch Pigeons in the Winter with Nets or Ingins Trespasse Of blood spilt Of Play made Of common Barretors and Scolds Of breaking the common Pound Of outcries against Lawes Misdemeanour of Officers Of rescuing from the Officer of the King Of Constable which keepeth not the peace Bayliffe Purveyor Constable Apprehend Felons See the Watch kept That he arrest men armed For good Government let there be Stocks Pillory Cuckingstoole Suspect Persons Vagabonds and Rogues Assise of bread and Beere Inholders Of false measures Deceit in Artificers of Butchers False Ballance and weights of Victualers Double measures and weights of Millers Treasure found of Outlawes Of Hue and Cry raised and not pursued Of flyers to Sanctuaries and Churches Profits for the King and some for the Lord. Goods of Felons Estreys and Weifes Scilicet If they flye Exigents upon Indictments Felony Common Fine These Articles ensuing are inquirable by expresse words of the Statutes here ensuing that is to say Apprentice which hath not Land to the value of twenty Shillings 7 H. 4. chap. 17. Apparrell by 24 H. 8. chap. 13. and by 1. 2. Phil. Mary chap. 2. Artificers by 2 Edw. 6. chap. 15. and by 24 H. 8. c. 12. Archers by 33 H. 8. chap. 9. Butts by 33 H. 8. chap. 9. Crosse-bowes and Hand-guns by 33 H. 8. chap. 6. Shoomakers and Tanners by 5 Eliz. chap. 8. Crow-Nets by 24 H. 8. chap. 9. Frie of Fish by 1. Eliz. chap. 17. and by 5. Eliz. chap. 21. Games unlawfull by 33 H. 8. chap. 10. Horses by 32 H. 8. chap. 13. Hue and Cry by 18 Edw. 2. High wayes by 2. 3. Phil. Mary and by 5. and 18 Eliz. Hats and Caps by the 13 Eliz. chap. 19. Hemp and Flax by 33 H. 8. chap. 17. Musters by 4. and 5. P. and M. chap 3. Mortmaine by 7. Ed. 1. Rastal 3. Riots by 1. Mary chap. 12. Takers of the King by 20. H. 6. chap. 8. Tracing Hares by 14. H. 8. chap. 10. Wines by 7. Ed. 6. chap. 5. Waifes and Straies Goods of Felons Decayed House of Husbandry for the benefit of the King and Lord of the Mannor 4. H. 7. chap. 19.50 Eliz. c. 2. Then let us see what things are argued and allowed in our Bookes to be inquirable in Leet and what not FIrst Things at the common Law are inquirable and not defended by Statute unless that the Statute maketh mention by expresse words what are inquirable 1. R. 3. fol. 1.3 H. 7. fol. 1.6 H. 7. fol. 4. and 11. H. 7. fol. 22. the same Petty Treason is inquirable but as Felony at the common Law 6. H. 7. fol. 4. It is said that Treason Petty Treason as forging of Money is inquirable 9. H. 6. fol. 44. Clipping of Gold and Silver are inquirable 22. Ed. 4. fol. 22. Petty Treason and ancient Felonies that is to say Felonies at the Common Law but not the death of a man Fellonies And Rape as Felony is not inquirable but as Trespass 7. H. 6. fol. 13.6 H. 7. fol. 4. Presentment in Leet of Felonies Rape at the common Law is good but presentment there of Felonies by the Statute is not good 22. Ed. 4. fol. 22. Felonies You cannot inquire there of the Death of a man 41. booke of Assises 30 and the Lord which inquires of that shall be fined forty shillings Death You may inquire there of all Felonies at the Common Law but not of the death of a man 22. Ed. 4. fol. 22. You may inquire there of all Felonies at the Common Law and not of Felonies by Statute unlesse it be by express words given 6. H. 7. fol. 4.11 H. 7. fol. 22. The Steward may certifie presentment of Felony taken in Leet before him at the next Sessions 27. H. 7. fol. 2.8 H. 4. fol. 18. Of Felonies and Fraies Trespasse are inquirable 10 H. 6. fol. 7. Adjudge that assault upon a person only is not inquirable there but of Bloodshed it is 8. Ed. 4. fol. 5. and 4. H. 6. fol. 9. Common Nusance to a number of men is inquirable but not an assault made to one but Frayes If a Stranger make a Fray within the Leet and be not taken the Deciners shall be amerced and it is inquirable there 50. Ed. 3. fol. 5. Bloodsheds are inquirable 1. R. 3. fol. 1.22 Ed. 4. fol. 22. the same Presentment that one hath received one by the yeare into his service Age of 12 yeares not sworne not sworn to the Queen is good and he shall be amerced 41 Ed. 3. fol. 26. Purprestures are inquirable Purpresture Nusance Laborers but the Steward hath no power to inquire of Liveries nor of things defended by Statutes 1 R. 3. fol. 1.3 H. 7. fol. 1. You cannot there inquire of the Statute of
nothing there but the passage and 8 H. 7. fol. 5. by Keble the Soile and Free-hold in the way is to those which have Land adjoyning 2. Ed. 4. fol. 9. Where there is a common way throughout a Feild the Free-hold of the Soile is to the Tenant of the Land adioyning and not to the King for he hath but passage for his People Incidents A Man cannot dispence with a Suite to a Leet unlesse by speciall words 8. Ed. 2. tit 28 2. H. 7. fol. 4. Partition is made of foure Mannors which descend to foure coparceners that every one shall have a Mannor except the Advowson and by that the Advowson is ingrosse and severed and if all dy but one it shall be appendant again 8 H. 7. fol. 1. By grant of a hundred Leet passeth as Incident for a Hundred cannot be without a Leet for a Leet is parcell of it and to a Mannor a Court Baron is Incident and to homage fealty and to a Faire a Court of Pipouders and it seemeth these cannot be severed Perk. fol. 22. Common appendant cannot be severed nor Estovers to be burned in a House but a Villian regardent may be severed and an Advowson appendant and made in grosse for an Incident inseperable cannot be severed by grant as in the case next before but Incidents seperable may be 40 Ed. 3. fol. 22. Beasonable aid to make his Son Knight or to marry his Daughter and releife for soccage after the death of his Tenant cannot be released by generall words therefore release of all actions and demands besides fealty and Rent by the Lord to the Tenant shall not extinct these Incidents the contrary is said if it be by speciall words 19. H. 8. tit Incidents 34. Court-Baron is so incident to a Mannor and Court of Pipowders to a Faire that they cannot be severed by grant for if they grant the Mannor or Fair they cannot reserve such Courts 7. Ed. 4. fol. 11. Lord and Tenant the Lord releaseth to the Tenant the distresse this is void for the distresse is Incident the same of release of Fealty to him which holds by Homage for Fealty is Incident to Homage and is inseperable 26. booke of Assises 66 Lord and Tenant by Fealty Escuage and Rent and the Lord grants the Rent this is Rent seek and severed for Fealty remaines with the Homage as Incident to it the same Law where a Rent is Incident to a Reversion and yet these may be severed by speciall grant 29. booke of Assises 20. the same Littl. fol. 40. Where the Tenant holds by Homage Fealty and Rent if the Lord grant the Rent saving to him the Homage this Rent is Rent Seck and severed the same Law if he grant the Homage saving the Rent and where he holds by Rent and Fealty and grants the Rent saving the Fealty or left for life rendring Rent and grants the Rent saving the Reverson the Rent is Seck Rescous and pound breach is another branch of the Charge HE which destraines Beasts may put them in a close House if he will give them meate for the putting into the open pound is that the owner may give them meate 33. H. 8. tit distresse 66. If a man destraine without cause the owner may make Rescous but if he put them into the pound he cannot breake it for they are in custody of the Law see 40. Ed. 3. fol. 33. and Fitzh fol. 102. E. It seemes if a Lord destrain where Rent is not behinde the Tenant shall not make Rescous 4 Ed. 6. tit distress 74. If a man destraine wrongfully the owner may make Rescous 5. Ed. 4. fol. 7. by Danby 39. Ed. 3. tit 20. If Beasts put into the pound dye it is at the losse of the owner though he have tendred sufficient mends for he might have a Replevin Doctor and Student fol. 8.113 I may impound a dead thing where I please but if that corrupt by my default I shall answer for it 9. Ed. 4. fol. 2. Fitzh 102. L If the Lord do destraine where is no Rent nor service behinde the Tenant cannot make Rescous 9. Ed. 3. fol. 35. If a man destraine wrongfully the owner of the Beasts may make Rescous but by 4. Ed. 6. it was agreed if he destraine and impound them the owner cannot take them out for they are in custody of the Law 5. Ed. 4. fol. by Danby the same 2. H. 4. fol. 18. If a man destraine my Beasts which escape into his Land out of the great waste I may rescue them but if I keep them or put them there or by Hankford if I have notice that they use to go there this is no escape and there I ought not to make Rescous see 7. H. 7. tit 1. 2. H. 4. fol. 24. In Rescous nothing behinde and also that he was never seised and are good Pleas Quere 5. Ed. 4. fol. 7. Seising is not Traversable in Rescous by opinion there 6. Ed. 4. fol. 12. The same 8 H. 4. fol. 1. 21. H. 4. fol 40. By the Court where the Lord comes to destraine and sees the Beasts and the Tenant perceiving that chaseth the distresse out of his Fee the Lord shall not have a Writ of Rescous for he hath no possession of the Beasts but he may follow them and destraine them but if they were chased out of his Fee before the Lord see them there he cannot destraine them 44. Ed. 3. f. 20. the same Fitzh N. B. 102. G. 33. H. 6. fol. 58 A man attacheth a Horse in a corporate Town and there he is rescued and chased into another County upon fresh Suite the Officer may take him againe 6. Ed. 4. fol. 12. By Yelverton in Rescous nothing behinde is no Plea for if the Lord destraine where no service is behinde the Tenant is at no mischeife for the Tenant may have a Replevin and in this Writ recover his damages Fitzh 101. Rescous lieth where a man destraines for Rent or for services or damage doing and those would impound and another Rescues them and if a Collector or under Collector distreine for a fifteenth or a Bailiff or a Sheriff or other Officer distraine for the King and Rescous is made they shall have a Rescous and not the King but if a Bailiff of a Liberty distraine for the King and Rescous is made the Lord of the Liberty shall have Rescous and if the Bailiff or Officer of a common person distraine Rescous is made he which causeth the distresse to be made shall have Rescous 39. H. 6. fol. 42. Redisseisin to Coroners and one alone maketh a precept Rescous upon that is Justificable Assaults and Fraies For that that Assaults and Fraies are inquirable let us see which are punishable in a Leet and what not AS Saults are not inquirable and punishable by presentment in Leet but blood-shed is 8. Ed. 4. fol. 5. By Fairefax Leet hath no power to inquire but of those which make common annoyance at the common Law as of
preserved and you shall live in quiet and hold your Goods Lands and Lives in peace and quietnesse and you shall be accounted after this life among the Saints of God and shall have life eternall and over that observe you that I may by the Law charge another Jury immediately to inquire of your concealments and perjuries and that you shall finde by putting great Fines and Amerciaments upon you and imprisoning your bodies And to conclude first now if you remember your duties to God as I have said that will move you to keep your Oathes and the love that you owe to the Common-wealth with consideration of your selves wives sonnes and posterity and the fear of God and regard of honesty and all these well considered then you will present justly and truly the things which I shall give to you in Charge and I make an end and the Articles of your Charge follow Then followeth the Charge in Court Baron The Charge in Court Baron FIrst you ought to inquire of all persons which owe Suit to this Court and who make default and present their names and you ought to note that all such persons which hold any Land of the Lord by Suit of Court in what place they dwell and of what age he is that should make Suit to the Court or otherwise he ought to be amerced and Amerciament is by custome for by the Common-Law they shall be distrained and that is called Suit-service and that is by reason of the Tenure and if any such person which oweth Suit to the Lord be in Ward to the King neverthelesse he may be amerced for not making Suit to the Court of the Lord but the Lord cannot destraine for this Amerciament during his Wardship yet after Livery the Lord may destraine for the whole Amerciament And if there be two Coparceners Coparceners Joynt-Tenants for which one Suit ought to be made the eldest sister ought to make the Suit onely and the other shall be contributary Fitzh 159. B. And so it is of Joyn-Tenants the Suit may be made by agreement by one and the other shall be contributary by Marleb chap. 9. but if one holds twenty acres by Suit of Court and alien that to twenty severall persons by the Statute of Quia emptores terrarum every one shall make Suit severally 2. Rastal Suit 1. Also if any Tenant be dead after the last Court or before and his death not presented you ought to inquire what Lands he holds of this Mannour and if they were held by Knights service Ward Releif Soccage or by Copy and what advantage the Lord shall have by his death Scilicet Wardship Marriage Releif Escheate or other Profits and who is his next Heire and of what age and in whose custody he is 3. Also if any Tenant which holds by Knights Service alien his Land by collusion to defeat the Lord of his Ward and other Profits it is inquirable 4. Also if any Tenant which holds by Knights service be disseised and dieth disseised his Heire within age the Lord shall have him in Ward and if any Tenant which holdeth by Knight-Service die his Heire male within age of 21. years the Lord shall have the Land in Ward till the age of 21 years and also his Marriage unlesse he be married Littleton fol. 19. 5. If the Father which holds in Knights Service marry his daughter within age to a husband of full age and dies the Lord shall not have the Wardship of the Land and if she were of full age the Lord shall not have the Wardship of the Land but if she were within age and marry to a husband within age the Lord shall have the Land in Ward till the age of 14. years Natura brevium fol. 98. But if such Tenant die his heire female being of the age of 14. years or more and not married she shall not be in Ward nor her Land but if she were within age of 14. years and not married she shall be in Ward of Body and Land till the age of 16. years and if she were married in the life of her father within the age of 14. years her land shall be in Ward till the age of 14. years and no more Littleton fol. 19. 6. And you ought to note that there is Knights Service of a common person that is where one holds of his Lord by Homage Fealty and Escuage that is to say when it is assessed to more more and when to lesse lesse Littleton fol. 19. and where one holdeth by keeping a Castle or by blowing a Horn that is Knights service 7. And Soccage Tenure is where one holds by Homage and Fealty or by Fealty and Rent or by Homage Fealty Rent and by Suit of Court for all manner of Services or in Burgage and if such Tenant die his issue within age of 14. years then the next freind of the heire to whom the inheritance cannot descend shall have the Ward of the Land and of the Heir till 14. years and then give an account to the Heir of the profits taken but this Gardian shall have his reasonable allowance for his costs and expences Littleton fol. 22. See Natura Brevium fol. 97. 8. Releife by Soccage is as much as the cheif Rent is by the yeare which he payes to his Lord and this is due forthwith after the death of his Tenant in Soccage so that the Heire be past his age of 14. yeares Littleton fol. 24. 9. And if Land be held by Knight Service and his Tenant dies his Heire of full age the Releif is due to the Lord and if he hold by an intire Fee of a Knight the Releife is one hundred shillings and if he hold by the halfe of a Fee fifty shillings and so according to the rate Littleton fol. 21. and all these profits are inquirable 10. Also if any Rent Custome Rent not paid or Service be withdrawne which ought of right to be made by whom it is with-drawne and what Custome and Service it is and in what Bailiffs time it was with-drawne and where the land is that the Lord may distrain for the Arrearages and what Rent that is and how many years it hath been with-drawn 11. Lands concealed Also if any Land of the Lord be withdrawne or used by any without license of the Lord by whom it is and how much Land hath been so used and of what value by the yeare that is is inquirable 12. Also if any Villaine of the Lord be and what Goods Villaine Chattels and Lands he hath what estate he hath in them that the Lord may seise them and what other things he hath And if any Villaine withdraw his Goods out of the Lordship without license of the Lord or if a free man marry a Villain woman without the license of the Lord it is inquirable Note If a Villaine purchase Lands and doe not alien them before the Lord enter into them the Lord shall have them
other Free-holders that is also inquirable for that no Tenant of the Lordship shall loose his Common in that 27. Also if any keep and withdraw any Evidences Evidence of the Lord. Court Rolles Rentalls or Evidences pertaining to the Lord of the Mannor is inquirable 28. Also if any thing pained before to be done Punishment and is not yet done in whose default that is and you ought to present his name 29. Also if any Coppy-holder Coppy-holder lets his Coppy-hold Land for longer time then for a yeare and a day without surrender unlesse it be by the custome that he may let for longer time and if he do it is a forfeiture and inquirable 30. Also if any Coppy-holder make a change of the possession of his Coppy-hold for Charter Land or otherwise that the Lord may have any disadvantage in mending of one and impairing of another that is inquirable 31. Also if any Coppy-holder alien any of his Coppy-hold by Deed and make livery of Seisin acording to the Deed it is a forfeiture and inquirable Lit. fol. 14. 31. Also if any Coppy-holder cut any Tree which is a Hedg-row without license of the Lord is a forfeiture if not by the custome of the Mannor used time out of mind c. This Coppy-holder hath used to cut his Trees and Wood at his pleasure it is inquirable 33. Also if any Coppy-holder which hath not his Wood by custome of the Mannor to himself but his Lord hath that there if he lop or top any Trees of his Coppy-hold in unseasonable time by which that starveth that is a forfeiture and is inquirable Note that Tenant at will by the Common Law may take House-boote Hedg-boote and Plough-boote and cut that in seasonable time and so may Tenant by Copy of Court Role do of a Coppy-hold 34. Also if any Coppy-holder suffer his House which is Coppy-hold to decay and fall down or do not repaire that but suffer that to be uncovered by which there is wast that is a forfeiture and inquirable if it be not by the custome of the Mannor that they may suffer their Houses to decay and fall down and yet no forfeiture by the custome and also in some Mannors the Tenants may suffer waste in their Houses and also cut their Trees at their pleasures and shall not be punished for it is lawfull by the custome of diverse Mannors 35. Also if any Coppy-holder dye seised of any Coppy-hold who is his next Heir and of what age he is or if any Coppy-holder by the custome of the Mannor hath surrendred any Coppy-hold into the hands of the Bailist or any Tenants after the last Court to the use of another for of every such surrender the Lord ought to have a Fine and the parties in whose hands the surrender was made ought to come to the next Court and present the same surrender so taken and give it into the hands of the Lord to the use of the Alienee or otherwise he ought to forfeit his Coppy-hold if he have not a reasonable excuse insomuch that he doth not bring in the surrender by him taken but doth what lieth in him to make the Lord loose his Fine and also to dis-inherit the other party to whose use the surrender was made 36. Also if any Tenant which holds by Harriot service or Harriot custome dye seised of any Land or Tenement so held and that a Harriot is due to the Lord and also if any such Tenant hath aliened any parcell of his Land so held the Lord shall have for every of their severall parts diverse Harriots at their severall deaths as if a man hath two parcells of Land held by Harriot service and by severall Titles and dye seised of the same the Lord shall have two Harriots and also you shall present if any Harriot be carried out of this Lordship by whom it is and where they are 37. Suit to the Mill. Also you shall inquire if any Tenant of this Mannour which ought by reason of his Tenure to make Suit to the Lords Mill do make his Suit there or not 38. Also you shall inquire if any one have fished souled hawked or hunted within this Mannor or within the Demesnes of the Lordship without license of the Lord and present their names 39 Also if any hath taken Pheasants or Partridges in their nests or the egges of them within the Demesnes of the Mannour or the egges of the Swans of the Lord and present their names 40. Also you shall inquire if all the defaults and plaints which were presented at the last Court were sufficiently amended or not and if all the Lawes and Orders before by you made be observed and kept or not and further you shall inquire of all other things which in your consciences you beleive to be convenient to be inquired of and you shall bring in your Verdict in writing such an hour And now you may depart and inquire of your Charge having regard to that which you have sworn and note that you keep well your Oath Hawkers and Hunters WEst 1. ch 1. forbiddeth that none shall chase in anothers Park nor fish in anothers River and if he do he shall be imprisoned and fined and if none will sue the King shall have the Suit as in a thing made against the Peace and the King shall make inquiry from year to year c. Fitzh 67. D. Westm 1. chap. 20. It is provided for Offenders in Parks and in Rivers that if any of them be attaint by the Suit of the Plaintiff it shall be accounted good and amends made according to the manner of the Trespasse and shall have imprisonment for three years and then shall be fined and if he hath not to pay a Fine he shall be banished or out-lawed and if the party sue not within the yeare the King shall have the suit 39. H. 7. chap. 11. If any person not having a Parke Chase nor Forrest keep any nets called Deer-Hayes o● Buc●stalls or stalk with bush or beast in anothers Park Chase or Forrest without license he shall forfeit ten pound to any person which will sue for the same 31. H. 8. chap. 12. Where Hunters in the day or night with vizards or painted faces it was felony now it is not 5. Eliz. c. 21. Every one which wrongfully taketh Hawks or their egges by night or day and be convict shall pay treble damages and suffer imprisonment three years but these Statutes aforesaid are not inquirable in a Leet 43. Ed. 3. fol. 24. Trespasse why by force of armes his Deer price forty shillings where it was wilde he took and the Writ abated 18. Ed. 4. fol. 14. the same 3 H. 6. f. 58. Trespasse he entered into his Warren and took a 1000. hares and doth not say his yet it is good Fitzh 86. L. 89. R. Trespasse lieth by force of arms the young hawkes of his hawkes price so much he took and why he entered his Warren
work or three pence and of every one which hath a Gate into the Wood a Hen is a custome allowed 11 H. 6.2 Custome or prescription to have House-boote in the Lords Wood is good but not to have Wood to sell 11 H. 6. f. 11. Custome that within the Mannor of D. the Wife shall have the whole Land of her Husband in Dower whilest he is unmarried and if she marry that she shall forfeit that is good and allowable 21 Ass 11. Custome that a Woman covert may demise and surrender her Copy-hold to the use of her Husband this custome is not allowable but custome that an Infant at his age of discretion may surrender his copy-hold that is good but contrary of an Infant within age of discretion to make a surrender 21 H. 7. fol. 26. Lord to prescribe that every Tenant of his Mannor ought to Impound distresse taken within his Mannor in his Pound is not good for he may Impound in his owne Land 8 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Those which are Fishets in the Sea may prescribe to goe upon the Land adjoyning to the Sea to Fish for that is for the Common wealth but to digg to fix the Stakes to dry their Nets is against common right and is not good 21 Ed. 4. tit 50. Custome to turne his Plough upon the head-land of another is a good custome 40 Edw. 3. fol. 9. Custome to pay to the Lord five Marks for Releife and not more hold he more or lesse is good 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. Custome that the Tenants ought to choose a Beadle amongst them to geather the Lords Rents is good 2 Mar. tit Prescription B. 100. Custome may be alleadged where there is no person that may prescribe as Inhabitants cannot prescribe but alleadge custome there to have Common in D. for one goes with the person and another with the place and prescription with the person by 21 H. 7. fol. 13. that is That all the Tenants have used to pay after their death a Harriot is not good but that the Lord hath used to have after the death c. he may prescribe 18 H. 8. fol. 2. Inhabitants by Fitzherbart cannot prescribe to have Common but the Lord may prescribe for him and his Tenants c. of time out of minde c. 7 Ed. 4. fol. 24. It seemes that Inhabitants cannot prescribe to Intercommon because of Neighbourhood but Inhabitants may prescribe to have easement that is to say That they have a way or other thing of easement but not to take profit 12 Ed. 4. fol. 2. It seemes by Catesby that the Inhabitants of D. may prescribe that they have used to pay but three pence for Toll 18 Ed. 4. fol. 3. It is sayd that the Inhabitants of D. cannot prescribe that they have used to have Common in anothers Freehold but that they have used to have a way 15 Ed. fol. 28. the same 40 Ed. 4. fol. 18. Schollers of Oxford and Justices of Assise may prescribe to have principall of Houses notwithstanding they are not corporate for that they are for the Common wealth 26 H. 8. fol. 6. Parishoners may prescribe to choose two Church-wardens of a Church every yeare and good 11 Ed. 4. fol. 2. Serjeants at the Law may prescribe that they have used to be Impleaded by Originall and not by Bill and so prescribe in usage 20 Ed. 4. fol. ult Officer which hath his Office at will may prescribe as Cheife Justice of the Bench and other which have used to give Offices 22 Ed. 4. fol. 18. The Lord Chancellor of England which is at will may prescribe in usage that is to present to all Benefices under forty Marks which are in the Kings right but he ought to prescribe in his Office that is that all Chancellors c. and so many Justices prescribe 20 H. 6. fol. 9. the same 12 H. 7. fol. 14. Officers may prescribe that they and all the Officers whose Estate c. Have used and so forth c. Note how one shall have a Rent or a thing which cannot be granted without Deed by prescription 13 Book of Ass 4. Rent was recovered by Verdict in Assise where the Assise found that he and those whose Estate he hath were seised of time out of minde and so note Rent recovered by title of prescription and the party shews a deed by which he purchased the Rent but not a Deed of the beginning of it Littleton fol. 34. saith Such things which cannot be granted nor aliened without Deed or Fine a man which will have things by prescription he cannot otherwise prescribe but in him and his Ancestors whose Heire he is and not in him and those whose Estate he hath for that that he cannot have his Estate without Deed or other writing which he ought to shew 12 H. 7. fol. 14. One avows for that that he and all those whose Estate he hath in the Hundred have view of Frank pledge and that by reason of ten Acres within that he ought to make Suite at the view c. 22 Book of Ass 53. Ass One makes Title to Rent that he and his Ancestors Lords of the Mannor of D. and those whose Estate he hath of time out of minde have used the Rent and this is good without shewing a Deed of purchase of that being appurtenant to the Mannor 11 H. 6. f. 14. To say that he is seised of a Messuage and twenty Acres and to prescribe that he and all those c. have used House-boote and Wood to sell it is not good to prescribe to sell it Custome shall be taken strictly Custome of London is that a Citizen and a Free-man may devise in Mortmaine but a Citizen which is a forrainer cannot devise in Mortmain for it shall be taken strictly 5 H. 7. f. 10. 5 H. 7. fol. 41. Custome that an Infant of the age of fifteen years may make a Feoffment yet a Lease and Release which mounts to so much is not good 22 Ed. 4. Tit. 17. Infant by custome of Gavelkinde at the age of fifteen may make a Feoffment yet he cannot make a Will upon the same Feoffment for custome shall be taken strictly Perkins f. 83. Where the custome is that the Wife shall have halfe the Lands of her Husband for her Dower yet shee shall not have the halfe of a Faire or a Bailiwick for they are not Lands and shall be taken strictly 38 Ass 18. By the custome of London a Citizen may devise Lands which are within the same City in Mortmain but not Lands out and Forrainer cannot devise Land in London in Mortmaine Costs against the Plaintiffe THat in every Court in trespasse upon the Statute of 5 R. 3. chap. 7. Debt covenant by specialty or upon contract Detinue of Goods account action upon the case or upon the Statute for personall wrong ought to be remedied if after appearance of the Defendant the Plaintiff be nonsuited or a Verdict passe against him the Defendant shall recover his costs
23 H. 8. chap. 15. If any be troubled by attachment or arrested by Latitat or in London or in a Court which hath liberty to hold Plea and no Count be put in within three daies after the Baile put in otherwise appeares unlesse the Court of discretion gives longer day the Defendant shall recover costs and dammages the same Law is if a Suite be discontinued after Count or that the Plaintiff be non-suited then the Defendant forthwith by discretion of the Court shall recover costs and the Statute gives Debt for the costs 8 Eliz. Chap. 2. But one arrested by Bill of Middlesex shall not recover costs though the Plaintiff do not count to be nonsuited If a matter passe against an Informer by Verdict or Judgment the party shall have costs and shall have execution by a Capias to satisfie fieri facias or Elegit but these two last Statutes do not extend to a Court-Baron 18 Eliz. C. 5. 22 H. 8. B. Tit. Costs 25. in quare impedit the Plaintiff shall not recover costs for that the dammages are great 35 H. 8. Tit. 258. 2 Ma. Tit. Costs 23. Debt by Lessor if he be non-suted or bar'd the Defendant shall recover costs by the Statute for it is upon a contract for Rent 2 H. 7. f. 13. Account the Plaintiff shall not recover costs but where the Defendant is adjudged to account and pleads Barr c. It is otherwise 9 H. 6. fol. 66. He shall not recover costs for that the dammages are tremble by the Statute 14 H. 6. fol. 13. forcible entry the same In London by act of common Councell in trespasse by force of Armes and in all other Actions personalls if the Plaintiff be non-suited or a Verdict against him and Judgment upon it or Judgement upon demur against him the Defendant shall recover his costs by discretion of the Court but if the Plaintiff sue as Executor or Administrator which is not upon his own act the Defendant there shall not recover costs and yet trespasse by force of Armes is not within the Statute 23 H. 8. chap. 14. to have costs Damages IT seems if one take my Beasts and after they return to me again I shall have trespasse for taking but upon the evidence I shall not recover the value though the value be in the Writ 11 H. 4. fol. 23. 1 H. 6. fol. 8. 19 H. 6. fol. 34. In what plaints Damages shall be recovered in Court-Barons and in what cases in Court-Barons and other Courts and in what not In plaint in nature of Assise of novell disseisin Grandfather and Great Grandfather Entry by disseisin Dower Nuper obiit Mortdancester Cozenage Replegiare Covenant Debt Action upon the Case Deceit and trespasse Damages and costs shall be recovered by the Plaintiffe Eight Marks were given in plaint of Land in Court-Baron Plowdens Commentaries f. 394. B. If any avow for Rent or doing damage custome or service if the Plaintiffe be non-suited or otherwise barred then the Avowant shall recover damages and costs as the Plaintiffe ought See 19 H. 8. fol. 8. 12 H. 8. chap. 19. Rast tit Avowry 1. Discent THen for that that the second Article is to inquire who is Tenant and what advantage the Lord shall have by the death of his Tenant It behoveth to know who is in by discent to be your Tenant that you may know of whom to have releife and who to be in Ward and who not and who shall be sayd in by discent and where by purchase and where hee shall not be in by discent Gift to one in taile remainder to the right heires of J. S. which was dead T. S. hath that as right heire and is in by purchase and shall not pay releife nor be in ward 40 Ed. 3.9 32 Ed. 3. Fitzh Discent 8. Lord and Tenant the Tenant aliens in Mortmain and the Alience is disseised and the Disseisor dyeth seised his Heire is in by discent yet the Lord may enter within the yeare for he hath only a Title to enter and cannot have an action but contrary of him that hath right of entry and may have action 1 Ed. 6. Tit. Mortmaine 6. Bro. Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. the Tenant for life dies living J.S. the remainder is void and J.S. nor his Heires shall not be said in by discent to pay releife nor otherwise shall have the Land as purchasor 9 H. 6. f. 24. Perkins f. 12. the same Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. and J.S. dies Tenant for life hath aid of T.S. Son and Heire of J.S. and though he were within age he shall not have his age and shall not pay releife nor be in ward if they hold by Knight service and be within age for that he is in as a Purchasor 11 H. 4. f. 74. Lease for life the remainder to another in taile which dies his Issue within age and after the Tenant for life dies the Issue is in by discent and if he be within age and hold by Knight service he shall be in ward to the Donor 33 H. 6. f. 5. And for that that in the said second Article of Charge you ought to inquire if any Tenant be dead who is his next Heire Let us now see where a Woman is with child at the time of the death of her Husband Tenant and by whom she shall be Judged with child and who shall be said in after the death of the Husband as Heire and shall be Tenant to the Lord and who not IF the Husband Tenant dye seised and his Wife with Child and a Brother of the Husband enter as Heire as he may and after Issue is born this Issue is Heire to the Husband and Tenant to the Lord and not the Brother though he were Tenant and Heire before the Issue was borne 41 Ed. 3. fol. 11. A man Tenant hath a Daughter his Wife with child with a Son and makes a Feoffment upon condition and dies and the Daughter enters for the condition c. and after the Son is born this Son shall not be Heire nor Tenant of this Land the same Law is where there is a Lease for life the remainder to the right Heires of J.S. Tenant for life dies the Daughter enters and after the Son is born he shall not be Heire and Tenant of that Land 9 H. 7. f. 25. Plow f 56. Daughter enters after the Death of her Father Tenant and takes profits and after the Son with which the Wife was with child is borne he may enter and have that as Heire and shall be in by discent and Tenant but hath no remedy for the profits taken by the Daughter before he was born 9 H. 6 fol. 26. If a Woman Tenant seised in Fee hath a Daughter and being with Child with a Son the Husband dies and after the Wife is ravished and consents to the Ravishor and the Daughter enters by the Statute as next of blood as
Book of Assises 10. Escheats Where it shall Escheat and not discend and where not And for that in the same second Article is also inquirable what advantage the Lord may have by the death of his Tenant that is to say Ward or Escheat Now let us see what is impediment by attainder and otherwise that the Issue of the Lands in Fee cannot be heire by discent not that his Father and Mother were marryed and where the Lord shall have that by Escheat and where not IF an Infant of the Age of seven or eight yeares marry a Wife and his Wife have Issue within one yeare or two after marriage this Issue shall not be his heire and if he have no other heire generall or speciall the Land shall Escheat 38 Book of Assises 24. If the Father being an Alien hath a Son and after the Father is made Denizen and after hath another Son and after purchase Lands and dyes the youngest Son is heire and if he dye without Issue the Lord shall have the Land by Escheat and not the eldest Son for he is an Alien Doctor and Student fol. 12. The eldest Son is attaint of Felony in the life time of his Father and is hanged the Father dyes the youngest Son shall inherite and it shall not Escheat But if the eldest Son be attaint in the life time of his Father and survive the Father the Land shall Escheat 20 Booke of Assises 2.46 Ed. 3. tit Discent 6.49 Ed. 3. fol. 11. 31 Ed. 1. tit 17. accordingly If the Son be attaint of Felony or Treason and after is pardoned and after that his Father dyes seised of land the Lord shall have that by Escheat rather then the Son 13 H. 4. fol. 8.1 E. 3. lit 15. accordingly See before that Doctor and Student fol. 25. Where the Husband is attaint of Felony and purchase his pardon and after dyes his Wife shall not be endowed of Land which he had before the attainder but it ought to Escheat but of those which he purchases after shee shall have Dower and shall not Escheat Littleton fol. 11. If the Husband seised of Land commit Felony and after alien and after is attaint the Wife shall have Dower against the Feoffee but otherwise it is if it were Escheated Nat. bre fol. 7. If the Son be outlawed of Felony in the life time of his Father and hath a pardon and after the Father dyes seised of Land the Son shall not have these Lands but the Lord by Escheat though he hath diverse Sons 31 E. 1. tit 17.11 H. 4. fol. 11. 22 H. 6. fol. 38. The Father outlawed of Felony purchaseth a pardon and after purchaseth Lands the Son hee had before the Felony may inherite them and the Lord shall not have them by Escheat 9 H. 5. fol. 9. If one dye Tenant to the Lord without heire generall or speciall as if the Tenant be disseised and dyes without heire generall or speciall the Lord shall have the Escheat of this Land though he did not dye seised for that that he dyed Tenant 2 H. 4. fol. 9. 7 H. 4. fol. 18. accordingly 32 H. 6. fol. 31.36 H. 6. fol. 1.6 H. 4. fol. 5. the same And Nat. bre fol. 103. the same Where an Alien purchases the King may seise 11 H. 4. fol. 25. 14 H. 4. fol. 20. accordingly And if a Denizen purchase and dye without Issue born within the obedience of the Queen this Land shall Escheat to the Lord. If an English Tenant marry an Alien she is forthwith upon the marriage of the Kings allegiance and their Issue shall inherite and it shall not Escheat Abridgement of the Book of Assises fol. 39. Where there is Lord and Tenant and the Tenant grants Rent charge and dyes without heire generall or speciall the Lord shall have the Land by Escheat Rastall Escheat 15. but hee shall hold it charged 3 Book of Ass 1. The same Law is of the Kings Tenant which grants Rent and dyes c. and his heire in Ward by the Statute 2 3 E. 6. chap. 8. Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and the disseisor dyes seised and the disseisee dyes without heire the Lord shall not have that as by Escheat for I intend hee dyes not in his Homage 32 H. 6. fol. 31. B. Lord and Tenant the Tenant lets for life and dyes without heire though he dyed not seised the Lord shall have Escheat 2 H. 4. fol. 9. If one be attaint of high Treason the King shall have Escheat of whomsoever he hold notwithstanding if it be of petty Treason the Lord shall have the Escheate 22 Book of Ass 49. If the Tenant be beheaded for Felony the Lord shall have Escheat and shall say for which he was hanged Natura brevium fol. 100. 8 E. 3. in the Register f. 165. accordingly If my Tenant within age alien to one in Fee and within age dye without heire the Lord may enter by Escheat 16 E. 3. tit Statham fol. 84.3 E. 3. Journey to North See 6 H. 4. fol. 3. North that he cannot enter but he may have Escheat It seemes that the Lord cannot enter by Escheat where his Tenants entry is taken away as if the Husband discontinue the Lands of his Wife and the VVife dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter by Escheat 32 H. 6 fol. 27. by Littleton If a man goe over the Sea without license and there takes a Wife and there by her hath Issue if the Issue survive his Father the Land of the Father shall Escheat 22 H. 6. fol. 38. by Newton 1 R. 3. fol. 3. by Hussey He which is borne beyond the Sea and his Father and Mother were English that their Issue shall inherite by the common Law but by the Statute aforesaid it is cleer The same Law is where an Alien borne purchase lands of the King before he be made Denizen or if hee be a Denizen and purchase Lands and dyes without heire borne under the obedience of the King there the King shall have that Land as Perquisite in manner as Escheat Where the Tenant hath an Estate in fee and dyes without heire generall or speciall his Land shall Escheat to his Lord Fitzh 143. T. 32 H. 6. fol. 31. The Lord cannot enter but where his Tenant might enter and for that if the Husband and the Wife discontinue and the Wife dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter by Escheate And if the Tenant be disseised and the Disseiser dyeth seised and his heire enter and after the Disseisee dyes without heire the Lord cannot enter 37 H. 6. fol. 1. It seemes by Fortescue that the Lord shall have Escheat or Ward though his Tenant did not dye seised 2 H. 4. fol. 9. The Lord shall have a Writ of Escheat though his tenant dyed not seised for if he dye his tenant that sufficeth If my tenant lets for life and dyes without heire he doth not dye seised and yet the Lord shall have the
she be of the age of 14 years there she shall be in ward but to the age of 14 yeares and then may sue Livery for the two years to make 16 years are not given but to tender marriage and for that she shall be out of ward at 14 years The husband seised in fee of Lands held in Knights service enfeoffs diverse at this day to the use of himselfe and his Wife and the heires of their two bodies begotten and for default of such Issue to the use of the right heires of the Husband and the Husband and the VVife have Issue within age and the Husband dyes though the VVife live and hath the Land the Issue shall be in VVard of the body as it is sayd The same Law where a man seised in Fee of Lands held by Knights service makes a gift in taile to J. S. the remainder to his right heires and dyes his Issue within age he shall be in ward of the body though Tenant in taile have the Land If a Reversion of an Estate for life or for yeares be in my Father and that discends to me I shall be in ward but otherwise it is of a Remainder but if a Remainder of an Estate for life be in my Father and that discends to me and after Tenant for life dyes I shall be in ward 11 H. 7. fol. 19. 33 H. 6. fol. 6. 8 Edw. 3. tit 23. and 33 Edw. 3. tit 8. By Choke If Infant be Tenant for life and the Reversion discends to him he shall not be in VVard 9 Ed. 4. fol. 19. Where an Estate is to an Husband and his VVife and to the heires of the body of the Husband the remainder to the right heires of the Husband the Husband hath Issue within age and dyes the VVife is Tenant to the Lord and for that the Issue shall not be in ward And if Lands be let to one for life the remainder to the right heires of J. S. the same J.S. dyes and Tenant for life dyes T. S. being right heire of J. S. and within age shall not be in ward for he is a purchasor 15 Ed. 4. fol. 10. Tenant for life the remainder to another in taile he in remainder dyes his Issue within age the Issue shall be in VVard if Tenant for life be dead 33 H. 6. fol. 6. Tenant for life the remainder in Fee dyes his heir shal not be in VVard for Tenant for life is Tenant Lord and Tenant the Tenant is disseised and dyes his Issue within age he shall be in VVard Fitzh fol. 142. B. C. D. Stamf. fol. 8. the same 3 H. 4. fol. 16. the same Littleton fol. 87. the same Lord and Tenant the Tenant hath a Daughter within age being his heire and he marries that Daughter to a Husband of full age and dyes the Lord shall not have VVard of the body but if he marry his Daughter to a Husband within age shee shall be in VVard Natura brevium fol. 98. Tenant for life the remainder in taile to the Husband and his VVife the remainder to the right Heires of the Husband the Husband and the Wife dye his heire within age living the Tenant for life the heire shall not be in ward Fitzh 143. A. A man makes a Feoffment before the Statute of Uses to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to W.S. in taile the remainder to the right Heires of the Feoffor the Feoffor dyes and W.S. dies without Issue the right heire of the Feoffor being within age shall be in ward for he is in by discent for the Fee was not out of the Feoffor But where one makes a Feoffment in Fee upon condition to re-enfeoffe him and the Feoffee gives to the Feoffor for life the remainder to another in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Feoffor and the Feoffor dyes and he in remainder in taile also dyes without Issue the heire of the Feoffor within age he shall not be in ward 32 H. 8. tit Ward 93. Estate is made to one for life the remainder to the Husband and Wife in taile the remainder to the right heires of the Tenant for life the Husband and the Wife have Issue a Son which hath Issue two Daughters and after the Son and the Wife dyes and after the Son dyes and after the Tenant for life dyes the two Daughters within age shall be in Ward 28 Ed. 3. tit 48. Marlebridge chap. 6. Gives the Lord remedy where his Tenant aliens by Collusion to defraud the Lord. Marlebridge chap. 16. Gives Mortdancester for the heire in Ward against the Lord unlesse he may have his Land at full age Prerog chap. 6. If a Woman before the death of her Ancestors which holds of the King in cheife before the yeares of marriage be marryed then the King shall have the Custody of her body till the age that shee may consent and then let her choose c. If an Infant be marryed before the yeares of marriage in the life of her Father and the Father dyes and the Wife dyes before the dayes of marriage of an Infant yet the Infant shall be in VVard and shall be marryed againe by the Lord Stamf. fol. 27. 5 Mar. tit Ward 124. it is held That marriage is as nothing for shee may marry another without Divorce within the yeares of marriage A gift is made to one in taile the remainder to the right heires of J. S. which was dead T. S. hath that as right heire but if he be within age he shall not be in VVard for he is in as purchasor 12 Ed. 4. fol. 2. 7 H. 4. fol. 5. 11 H. 4. fol. 72. 15 Ed. 4. fol. 13. the same A VVoman of the age of fifteen yeares at the time of the death of her Ancestor shall not be in VVard for the Lord shall not have VVard there till sixteen 35 H. 6. fol. 48. 28 H. 8. tit 86. If the King hath a woman in VVard and shee marry before fourteen shee shall be in VVard but to fourteen for the two yeares are given to tender marriage and shee is marryed See Westminst 1. chap. 22. Merton chap. 6. Gives ravishment of VVard and double value And Merton chap. 7. gives the value of the marriage West 2. chap. 12. Magna Charta chap. 6. The heires shall be marryed without disparagement Merton chap. 7. Of Lords which marry those that they have in their custody to Villaines or others as Burgers where they are disparaged If such an heire were within fourteen yeares and of such yeares that shee cannot consent to the marriage then if the Parents complaine of that Lord the Lord shall loose the custody till the age of the heire c. But if shee were of fourteen yeares and more and agreed to such marriage no punishment follows Littleton 21. See what are disparagements and what not Now let us see where your Lord shall loose the ward for that that he holds part in cheife and what
that 40. Ed. 3. fol. 34. If Rent of a Lessee for yeares be behinde the Lessor cannot avow upon the Termor as of Tenant upon the Land but upon the matter 47 Ed. 3. fol. the last 24 H. 8. Tit. Fealty 8. In the Exchequer held that if Lands discends to me which is held of J.S. by Homage and I make to him Homage and after other Land discends to me by another Ancestor held of J.S. also by Homage I shall make Fealty but not Homage again for I am become his man before the same Law is if both the Tenements are held of the King by Homage he shall not have two Homages but one Homage only Lit. f. 29 Tenant at will by the common Law shall not make Fealty to the Lessor but Tenant by copy at will according to the custome of the Mannor shall make Fealty to his Lord Lit. in the end of the first book and f. 29. and 10 H. 6. f. 13. accordingly If there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant holds three Acres of the Lord by Fealty and Rent and aliens all the three Acres the Lord is not held to change his Avowrie without notice and to avow upon the Feoffee for Fealty and Rent But if he will he may the same Law if he alien but one Acre not that the Statute of Westminster the third is that he shall hold for that particular yet this is upon notice 8 Ed. 4. fol. 12. and 47. Ed. 3. fol. 4. If the Tenant make a Feoffment and there is no notice made to the Lord and the Tenant dies the Lord may distraine the Issue for Fealty and Rent and avow upon him for it sufficeth that he dies Tenant though he doth not dye seised of the Land 44 Ed. 3. fol. 13. If the Tenant be disseised and the Disseisor dyeth seised the Lord there cannot distraine the Tenant for Fealty but the Issue of the Disseisee 32 H. 6. fol. 31. and 34 H. 6. fol. 51. If the Tenant hold by Fealty and Rent if the Tenant make a Feoffment in Fee the Lord may distraine the Beasts of the Feoffee for Fealty and Rent And make avowrie upon the Feoffor till notice be given and after notice given he shall avow upon the Feoffee if he tender the arrearages otherwise not for by the Feoffment and notice he shall not loose the arrearages but may distrain as above and avow upon the Feoffor for the arrearages But I intend if the Lord accept Fealty of the Feoffee he hath lost the arrearages 47 Ed. 3. f. 4. Note that by the Statute of 21. H. 8. chap. 9. One may avow the taking in the Land if he will as within his Fee and Lordship as in Lands held of him without avowing or justiffing of any person certaine Where one in ward of the King holds of a common person also by Homage or Fealty the Lord cannot distraine for Homage or Fealty during the time that it is in the Kings hand and yet the Signiorie is not suspended but only from distresse so that after he may distraine 13 H. 7. fol. 16. If Tenant in taile which holds by Fealty makes a feoffment yet the Donor cannot avow upon the Feoffee for Fealty but if one recover against a Tenant in taile the Donor ought to avow upon him which recovers for the Fealty and if there be Lord and Tenant and the Tenant were disseised and the Lord accepts the Rent of the disseisor yet that shall be but as a Bailiff to the Disseisee and ought to avow upon the Disseis otherwise I suppose of Fealty 41 Ed. 3. f. 26. If there be Lord and Tenant by Homage and Fealty and the Tenant be disseised and the Lord accept Homage of the Disseisor he cannot avow for Homage upon the Disseisee Fitzh 142. E. Hariot For that that diverse Lords of Mannors have Hariots and these are to be inquired for the Lord in Court-Baron in the second Article of Charge It is to be noted that there are two manner of Hariots that is to say Hariot custome and Hariot service and for that Hariot custome is properly as it seems after the death of the Tenant for life and for yeares and of every Estate and also is upon altenation IT is properly Hariot custome after the death of the Tenant for life 8 H. 7. fol. 11. To have a Hariot after the Death of every Tenant that is to say for life and for yeares is a Hariot custome 21 H. 7. f. 16. f. 13. the same To have a Hariot after the death of the Tenant for life is Hariot custome for Hariot service is after the death of the Tenant in Fee 21 H. 7. Tit. 5. Br. Custome that every Tenant of every Estate ought to pay Hariot after his death is Hariot custome 14 H. 4. f. 5. Where the Lord is to have Hariot upon every surrender or upon every alienation is Hariot custome 3 H. 6. Tit. 8. b. Note that a Hariot custome may be due after death or alienation as the custome will serve It seems Hariot service is properly after the Death of Tenant in fee upon discent and not upon every Estate as before is said HAriot service is by reason of the Tenure 8 H. 7. fol. 20. Hariot service is by the Tenure and if the Tenant alien the Land without notice yet the Lord may distraine upon the Land for the Hariot for it is by reason of the Tenure and the Land is charged 8 H. 7. f. 10. B. 6. that is by prescription Hariot service is after the death of the Tenant in fee and not of every Estate 21 H. 7. f. 13. B. 5. You shall see more for payment of Hariot service title discent before and title releife after Where a Ha●iot is certaine the Lord may seise that as Hariot custome and note that for Hariot service he may distrain it seems where it is certaine to have the best Beast that he may seise THE Lord may seise as well for Hariot service where he is to have the best Beast as for Hariot custome But it is said in another place that for Hariot custome he shall alwaies seise and not distraine for the property is in the Lord forthwith 38 Ed. 3. fol. 7. Br 2. For Hariot custome the Lord may seise and if it be conveyed away he shall have a Detinue and for Hariot service if it be conveyed away he may distraine time of H. 8. Br. 6. Doctor and Student f. 65. The Lord hath property in Hariot custome and may seise that and for Hariot service he may distrain and not seise 8 H. 7. f. 10. Br. 7. He cannot prescribe to distraine for Hariot custome though that it be conveyed away for that that he may have a Detinue for the Law adjudges possession in him 13 Ed. 3. Br 9. It is adjudged that the Lord may seise Hariot service as well as Hariot custome See Plowdens Commentaries fol. 96. between Woodland and others and 16 H. 7. f. 5. It seems
Tit distresse 6. He which distaines beasts may put them in a close house if he will give them meat for the putting them in open pound is but to the intent that the owner may give them meat 1 2 Phil and Ma chap. 12. tit Distresse That no distresse shall be driven out of the hundred unles to the open Pound nor above 3 miles and one distresse shall not be impounded in severall pounds upon forfeiture of 5 l. And for poundage of an Intire distresse a man shall not take above 4. d. poundage 20. H. 7. fol. 1. Where the Lord destraines beasts and they are taken out of the Pound the Lord shall have a Parco fracto and the party may have trespasse for the property lies in him by Forwick Fitzh 101. Where a man distraines for doing dammage Rent or service and puts them into the common Pound or into an other lawfull Pound and he which owes the beasts or another person takes them out of the Pound then he which distrained shall have a Parco fracto and if a man send his servant to distrain for rent or service and the servant distrain and put them into the Pound and a stranger takes them out of the Pound now the Master shall have a Parco fracto for it is the pound of the master 21. Ed. 4. fol. 19. Fitzh 101. E. if a man distrain for Rent doing dammage or services and puts the beasts in the ground or close of another his friend by his license and he which ows them takes out the beasts he which distrained shall have a Parco fracto and not he which hath the close Fitzh 101. H. For amercement in hundred one cannot distraine but the proper goods of him that is amerced not others but for rent or service is otherwise for the party may distrain the beasts found in the Land which are rising and lying and Impound them Releife IF one have a tenement in chief and dyes c. and after such Heir be in Wardship when he shall come to age that is 21 years he shall have his Inheritance without releife But by the stature of Marlebridge chap. 10. and by the Prerogative of the King the 3. chapt the King shall have the first seisin nor the Heir shall not enter before he hath received it out of the Kings hands whatsoever Age he be of Magna charta 2. 3. 4. Where one holds of a common person by Homage fealty and escuage and dies his Heir male being within Age of 21 years he shall be in ward untill 2● years and if he were not in ward but were of ful age that is 21 yeers then the Lord shall have a 100 s. for a whole Fee for relief and if he hold by a moitie 50 s. and so who by more more and who by lesse lesse Litt. fol. 24. But by Marlebridge chapt 17. If the Heir within age be in ward and at full age the Lord will not suffer him to enter without Suit but holds him out to have relief or otherwise holds him out that he cannot enter without plea he shall have a Mortdancester against his Guardian and recover his dammages Fitzh fol. 196. F. If one holds of the Lord in Socage that is by fealty and 10 s. payable at a certain day and dyes then the Lord shall have 10 s. for relief over the 10 s. which he paies for his Rent and such relief is due forthwith of what age the Heir be so that he passe the age of 14 years But if he hold by a Rose that shall not be paid forthwith but when the time of the year is that they grow Litt. fol. 28. And this releif by Bracton and Britton is not so properly to be called releif as that which is paid at full age by him that holds in Chivalrie 16. H. 7. fol. 4. and 18. Ed. 3. Tit. Avowrie 99. Note when a man holds of the King in chief and of other persons by Knights service The King shall have the Ward of all and the Heir shall pay relief to every Lord at his full age 24. Ed. 3. fol. 8. fol. 24.39 Ed. 3. tit 1. the same 26. H. 8. fol. 8. the same and Nat. bre fol. 95. notwithstanding see Stamf Title Prerogative The Father dyes seised and the eldest brother of full age dyes before that he enters and before that he hath possession in deed the yongest brother being of full age he shall pay two releifs one for the death of the Father the other for the death of the Brother for that that both were Tenants to the Lord Time of Ed. 1. Tit. 12. and 13. Ed. 3. Tit. 6. the same If my Tenant enfeoffes his son and Heir of full age and dyes before the Son gives notice to me I shall have releif of him for that that his Father dyed my Tenant to the avowrie 7 Ed. 3. chap 11.17 Ed. 3. fol. 3. Enquire See 3. H. 6. fol. 47. Where Land is given to the Father for life the remainder to his right Heirs the which tenements are held by Knight service the Father dyes his Heir of full Age he shall pay releif 32. Ed. 3. fol. 4. Estate is made to the Father for life the remainder in tail to his eldest Son and his Wife the remainder to the right Heirs of the Father in fee the father dies the eldest son and his Wife die without Issue the youngest son is in by discent and shall pay releif 40. Ed. 3. fol. 9. Gift is made to one in tayl the remainder to the right Heirs of J. S. which was dead Donee dyes without Issue T. S. had that as right Heir but is in as a purchasor and for that shall not pay releif 12 Ed. 4. fol. 2. A Lease for life the remainder to the right Heirs of J.S. tenant for Lease dies living J.S. the remainder is void and J.S. and his Heir shall not be said in by discent to pay releif 9. H. 6. fol. 23. Lease for life the remainder to the right heirs of J. S. and J. S. hath Issue T. S. and dyes T. S. shall pay no releif for he is in as purchasor 11. H. 4. fol. 72. Lease is made to one for life the remainder to another in tail the remainder over to J. S. in fee he in remainder in tail dyes his Issue of full age he shall pay no releif for tenant for life is tenant but when tenant for life dyes he shall pay releif 33. H. 6. fol 5.6 Lord and tenant the tenant lets for life the remainder in fee to another and he in remainder dies his Heir of full age shall pay no releif for the tenant for life is tenant to the Lord Fitzh 142. B. Where an estate is to the husband and to his Wife and to the Heirs of the body of the husband the remaindet to the right Heirs of the husband the husband hath Issue of full age and dyes the Wife is tenant to the Lord and for that
iustifie by command of him to whose use he ought to say that at the time of the commandement they were seised to the use c. the same Law if one plead a Lease and Release he ought to say that he was possessed at the time of the Release made 10 H. 7. f. 26. 7 H. 7 f. 3. the same That which is Issuable ought to be pleaded certainly ONe avows for that that the Plaintiffe held of him by a Knights Fee and this is not good for that he doth not shew by what Knights Fee 12 H. 8. fol. 13. 3 H. 7. f. 2. One traverses the Office found after the death of the Lord Greystock the Kings Tenant which was found that he died seised and he said that the Dean of York recovered against the Lord G. in a Writ of Right long before the finding of the Office and it may be he recovered against him long before the finding the office and it might be after the death of the Lord Greystock and for that it is not good for it is uncertain So if one plead that he entred for that that his Tenant aliened in Mortmain he ought to shew that he entered within the year otherwise it is not good 26 H. 8. fol. 2. Debt upon Obligation indorsed with condition if he make an Estate as it shall be devised by the Plaintiffe Defendant saith that he hath made an Estate and it is not good without shewing what Estate 1 H. 7. fol. 13. One comes to reverse an Outlawry of Felonie and pleads that he was in the Castle of Oxford at the time of the Outlawry published and for that he doth not shew in what County the Castle is nor under whose custody it is uncertain and not good for these are Issuable 2 H. 7. f. 6. Dower against the Heire he saith that he was ready to render Dower if she would deliver to him the Writings concerning his Land and for that he doth not shew what Writings incertain it is nor good for it is Issuable Affirmative and Negative Issue shall be upon the Affirmative and Negative and it shall not be answered by Argument DEbt against the Administrators of J.S. Defendant saith that J. S. made him Executor Judgement of the VVrit he shall say without that that he died intestate for this is alledged by the Plaintiffe 9 H. 6. fol. 7. 11 H. 4. fol. 88 Trespasse of taking six beasts the Defendant iustifies the taking of them by agreement the Plaintiffe saith they were other six and ought to traverse without that that he took those six in the Negative 11 H. 6. f. 1. VVrit upon the Statute of Labourers and counts that the Defendant was a Vagrant and he required him to serve and he refused Defendant saith that he was in the Service of J. S. and shall say without that that he was a Vagrant 1 H. 6. f. 15. Formedon in Reverter and counts of a gift in Tail the Defendant saith that the Donor gave in Fee and it is not good but he shall say without that that he gave in Tail 10 H. 6. f. 7. Account for the Heire against a VVoman Guardian in Socage Defendant saith that the father of the Insant held of her in Knights Service and died and Defendant seised him and he ought to say without that that he held by Knights Service 14 H. 8. fol. 4. The Avowant saith that W. the tenth day of February year twenty five granted his Interest to him and avowed doing damage Plaintiffe saith that W. the first day of Feb. year twenty five granted his Interest to him and he put in his beasts without that that he granted that to the Avowant before he granted that to him and good 38 H. 6. f. 17. Action upon the Case of that that he hath Leet and Fines and Amerciaments of the same Defendant saith true it is that the Plaintiffe hath Leet but that he the Defendant hath Fines and Amerciaments he ought to say without that that the Plaintiffe hath the F●nes and Amerciaments 18 H. 6. f. 8. Debt upon an Obligation dated the twentieth of Aprill and first delivered the second of May the Defendant pleads Release the last day of April and that the Obligation was delivered when it bore date and for that that he hath not traversed in the Negative that is to say without that that it was first delivered the second day of May it is not good 32 H. 6. f. 4. Debt and Counts of a Lease of a House rendering twenty shillings Defendant saith that he let the House and four Acres rendering twenty shillings and ought to traverse otherwise it is but an Answer by Argument 32 H. 8. f. 8. Debt against Executors Defendant saith that the Testator died intestate that the Administration was granted to him he ought to say without that that he is Executor or administred as Executor 1 H. 7. f. 13. Debt upon a simple Contract Defendant saith it was upon Condition and shall say without that that he sold in manner and form 4 H. 7. f. 9. Partition Defendant saith that he was onely seised and shall say without that that he held as undivided 6 H. 7. f. 5. 4 H. 6. fol. 4. Debt against J. S. of D. Defendant saith that he is dwelling at S. and shall say and not at D. 19 H. 6. f. 1. the same 7 Ed. 4. f. 16. Scire facias against a Parson for Arrerages of an Annuity Defendant saith that before the Writ purchased he resigned to the Bishop of L. and so that remaines in his hands Judgement of the Writ and it is no Plea for it is but an Answer by Argument and for that he shall say without that that he was Parson day of the Writ purchased or afterwards 11 Ed. 4. fol. 4. Action upon the Statute of Rich. by J. Freestone Defendant saith that the Master of the Colledge of Maidstone and his fellow-brethren let c. Plaintiff saith at the time of the making of the Lease there were not any fellow-brethren of the said Colledge and this is but an Argument and for that he shall say without that that the Master and his fellow-brethren let 14 H. 8. f. 29. Issue shall be upon Affirmative and Negative 9 H. 7. fol. 13. Trespasse Defendant justifies for Fealty not made the Plaintiff saith it was not unmade and good in the Negative Material Let us see what things are material in pleading Evidence and Verdict and otherwise and what not ACtion upon the Case in London and counts that he was possessed of Wine and Stuff and shews that certain in such a Ship and the Defendant at London assumed for ten pounds that if the Ship and Goods did not come safe to London and are put upon the Land there that then he shall satisfie one hundred pounds to the Plaintiff and counts that aftewards the Ship was ●obbed upon the Trade in the Sea and for not satisfying Action did accrue and though that the Plaintiff doth not shew where
Steward that W. N. lying very sick 10 day of A. the year of the Reign of the aforesaid Lady the Queen 19. surrendred into the hands of the Lord by the hands of the said steward the Court being absent in the presence of R. C. R. P. and C. H. one tenement called Miles in which lately dwelt W. G. with all his lands and tenements within the prebend of J to the use and behoof of M. his wife for tearm of her life and aster the desease of the said M. the remainder to W. T. son of the foresaid W. the father and E daughter of the said W the father and sister of the aforesaid W. their sons and heirs upon this condition notwithstanding following that if it happen any of the aforesaid W. the son and E the daughter to dye without heirs of their body issuing that then he or she which did survive shall have enjoy the tenement aforesaid to them and their heirs for ever And upon this came into this Court the aforesaid M. did desire to be admitted into the Tenement aforesaid with the appurtenances to whom the Lord by J. K. his steward granted thereof seism by the rod to have to him in form aforesaid at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor and gave to the Lord for his fine for his entrance there had as it appears c. and made his fealty and is admitted thereof Tenant Item The death of a Coheir at this Court it was found by the Homagers that one W. W. one of the sons and Coheirs of R. W. dead which surely W.W. held of the Lord to him his heirs according to the custom of this Mannor the half of two messuages or tenements and one garden with the appurtenances in J and long before this Court dyed thereof seised within the age of 10 years and in the keeping of one R. M. according to the custome of the Mannor and that S. W is brother and sole heir of the aforesaid W. W. and of full age who being here present in the Court desired to be admitted Tenant to all the lands and tenements customary of which the said W W dyed thereof seised that is to the half of two messuages or tenements a Toft and garden with the appurtenances within the Mannor to which the Lord by his steward J. K. granted to him seisin thereof to have and to hold to him and his heirs of the Lord by the rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid by the rent custome and services there first due and accustomed and gives to the Lord for his fine for his entrance as it appearsin the head and made to his Lord fealty and is admitted tenant thereof Also to this Court came J T Surrender in Court and surrendred into the hands of the Lord 10 acres of land either more or lesse with the appurtenances called S. 4 acres of pasture either more or lesse called B. and 4 acres of meddow be it more or lesse called K. customary to the use and behoof of R. B. Gentleman his heirs and assigns for ever by the rod at the will of the Lord according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid to which R.B. the Lord by his Steward granted to him thereof seisin to have to him and his heirs of the Lord by the rent of 10 s. yearly and other services then first due and he gives the Lord for a Fine for having this entry therein 4 l. and made to the Lord fealty and is hereof admitted Tenant Also the Homagers say upon their Oath that on R S Death which held of the Lord as a Parcener by the custome of the Mannor nine Acres of customary Land with a grange together with T S his brother to him and to his Heirs dyed since the last Court so seised and that one J S his son and next heir of the said R. to the half aforesaid of the Land and Grange aforesaid and is of the Age of 8 years And upon this as wel the custody of the aforesaid F as the Land and grange aforesaid were committed to one S I as his next freind c. And found surety to the Court E N to restore to the aforesaid J. of the profits thereof when he should come to the age of 14 years Also they say upon their Oath that R W Encre● ment encroached upon the wast of the Lord at C in length 20 rods and in bredth one rod therefore he in mercy c. And it is ordained that he shall lay out the same before the feast of St. John Baptist next under the pain of forfeiting to the Lord for every Rod c. Also they say upon their Oath that G B Re●●ous Bayliffe of the Lord such a day and year c. within the Lordship distrained H S for the Lords rent then by that foresaid H behind and not paid and that the aforesaid H then and there made Rescous upon the said G B therfore he in the mercy c. Pleas in Court Baron R. H. complaineth against C E and A his wife Formedon in Remainder of a Plea of Land that is to say of one house two Cottages 20 Acres of Meddow and 20 Acres of Pastor with the appurtenances in J within the Jurisdiction of this Court and made protestation to prosecute the Suit in forme and nature 〈◊〉 a Writ of the Queens of the forme of a gift in remainder at the common-Law and found sureties to prosecute that Suit in forme and nature aforesaid that is J.H. and R M and desires forthwith processe to be made for him according to the custome of the Mannor aforesaid against the aforesaid C and A his wife c. Therefore according to the custome of this Mannor used time out of minde It is commanded to the under Ba●liffe of thi● Mannor aforesaid and the Officer of the foresaid Court that he should summon by good summoners the aforesaid C A that they should be before the suitors of the Court aforesaid the next Court of the Mannor aforesaid the Tuesday such a day held at the Mannor aforesaid to answer to the aforesaid R H of the aforesaid Plea c. The same day is given to the aforesaid R here c. To which truly next Court came aswell the aforesaid R H as the aforesaid C and A by J R their Attorney And the aforesaid Officer of the Court aforesaid returned here in the Court that that he by vertue of the command aforesaid to him directed had sunimoned the aforesaid C and A by good summoners that is by J D and R R to be here at this Court to answer the aforesaid R H of the aforesaid Plea of the aforesaid one house ● Cottages 20 Acres of Land 20 Acre of Meddow and 20 Acres of Pasture with the appurtenances as it was commanded him c. And upon this the said R H demandeth against
Guardians of Churches Shall have Account against the old VVardens and Trespass of Goods taken 382. Shall have Indictment Appeal of Robbery and are a Corporation for Chattels 383. Church-yard and Church Free-hold of them seems are in the Parson 383. Church-yard and Church not inclosed shall be for that Complaint to the Ordinary 383 Grant of the King See mis-recitall false consideration and false svrmise 60. VVhat is good and what not where the King is deceived 61 General Issue In what Actions he shall have it and what it is 446 Hares TRacing of hares 309 Hawkers and Hunters VVhat is lawfull and what not 115 Hariot Custome is of every Estate aliened and Death 262. Service is properly by reason of Tenure and of every Discent 262. Custome esloigned the Lord shall have Detinue and distrain for hariot service 263. Lord where he may seise and where not and always for hariot custome seise 263. Of Copy-holder Surrender in extremes or aver 265. Hats and Caps 35. High-wayes 34. Hemp. 35. Homage 259. It shall be made to him that hath Inheritance and who shall make it 259. Horses 37 Hue and cry 33 Inmates WHo are and who not and who shall not have Common 90 Incidents VVhat they are and what Incidents may be severed and what not 70 Justice Justice should be made to every one 5. Justice should be ministred 5. And Letters to Justices 5. Judge Steward in Leet and Iustices of Peace are Iudges of Record 81. Iudge in Leet and Court Baron and how there 82 Imparlance Imparlance and day given 394. Imparlance generall and speciall 394. Pleas after Imparlance and last continuance 395. Hee shall have Plea which proves a writ abated or Barr 398. Pleas after the last continuance and day in Bench 399 After Issue matter for last continuance 399 Leet THE precept to warne that and the order to hold that 11. 12. It is ordained to be held twice in the yeare Scilicet within c. 14 The anthority of that inlarged by 18 Ed. 2. c. 13. The charge here begins in that 15. The Breviate of the Change begins 40. Cases argued and agreed to be inquirable there 42. Presentment there which toucheth free-hold traversable and otherwise not 24. Things there not presented shall be presented in Torne and if not in Eyre and if not in the Kings bench 84. It shall be held within a moneth unlesse by prescription and place 88. Form of entring the presentment there 88. The Steward there is Judge of Record 83. Record and his authority there Liberties VVhat the Lord shall have by Charter and what he shall have by prescription 59. Not using and misusing of that is a cause of seisure 58 Livery and Seisin 267 Delivering the Deed within the view in name of Seisin 268. Where give and grant is confirmed and good without Livery 269. Two infeoffed and Livery to one 270. Lex Law Law is ordained to the King for Government 4 The necessity of that and of charity 4 Mannor How that began 7 Materiall What in pleading and what not 456 Maintenance Not by Letters nor otherwise 460 To imbrace Iurors and suborn VVitnesses is 400. To say he will maeintain and doth not is no maintenance but to say that he will spend 20. l. c. is 400. To give money before Suit and covenant to have part of an Obligation for travelling with a stranger born is not 401. VVhere he hath an Obligation delivered for his Debt or Interest as Reversion or Remainder may 401. Servant arrested Master may give of his wages and lend him money 402. It is said that one learned may be of Counsel without Fee and give Evidence for his Fee but not labour the Iury. 404 406. VVho may pray a learned man to be of Counsel with one and who not 404. The Father may his Son Cozen and Kindred in action real and poor but not promise to a Iuror 402. For Burials in Church-yard all Inhabitants may 405 Manucaptor cannot retain Counsel and do nothing but see him appear 402 VVhat an Attorney may do and maintain 404 Modo forma VVhere it is material and where not 460 Mortmain VVhat is Mortmain and what not 36 75 273 Mortdancester Issue upon one point shall not inquire of more 271 Resummons and Process upon that 272. VVhere that lieth and where not and where it is devisable 273. Musters Non-tenure IN what action it shall be pleaded and non-tenure of parcell is not abatement for all 276 Nuper obiit VVhere it lieth between Sisters of halfe blood 277 Negativa preignans VVhere Issue shall be of that and where ntt 462 Obligations How the Conditions of them shall be pleaded 464 Office Grant to one which doth not know to execute void and where to two 282. Assignee and Deputy and where mis-using is Forfeiture 282 Officer How he ought to demean himself in executing Process 278. Executing erroneous Process he excuses and where it is out of their Jurisdiction and where not 279. Arrest in a Church and Bailiff errant without warrant 279 Plaints IN Assise 137 Of Mortdancester and Barr Of entry in the per and cui and Precipe of Summons In Formedon Precipe of Summons and the Count. 8 Pleadings Issue shall not be if he abated or not 422 Issue shall not be upon Affirmative and Negative 423 Diversity between pleading in Trespass and Assise 424 Barr good to common intent and First Face good 426 Barr shall be as high as the matter which is counted 427 Where the Defendants confess and avoids he need not traverse and where he ought 431 Detinue or Trespass the Defendant saith that they were delivered in pawn or by Replegiare and good without Traverse 431 VVhere the Defendant justifies in special manner he ought to traverse 432 Count and Barr good by intendment 445 VVhere the place shall be shewed certain and where not 447 Plea incertain for the year and day and what not 449 A thing issuable ought to be shewed certain 449 What is material pleading and what not 456 Pleading by name and grant and Evidence by name 457 In pleadings where he shall say that is the same 418 Where the Defendant shall say that it is the same Trespass or the same Imprisonment or the same maintenance 471 Conclude in pleading Where the Defendant shall say Judgement if the Plaintiff shall be answered and where Iudgement of the Writ and where to the Iurisdiction and were which so c 433 Order and form how one ought to conclude 433. Where to the Bar there shall be Replication the Defendant ought to conclude and this he is ready c. 433 Where the Defendant pleads to the Issue he ought to conclude and of this he puts himself c. 444 Where the Defendant pleads to the Issue and of this he desireth that c. 434 Where the Defendant pleads general Issue he ought not to conclude and this he is ready c. 434 Pleadings of his own wrong without such cause Where