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A58086 Les termes de la ley; or, Certain difficult and obscure words and terms of the common laws and statutes of this realm now in use, expounded and explained Now corrected and enlarged. With very great additions throughout the whole book, never printed in any other impression.; Expositiones terminorum Legum Anglorum. English and French. Rastell, John, d. 1536. 1685 (1685) Wing R292; ESTC R201044 504,073 1,347

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appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledge in Divinty cannot be well judged of being heretofore held by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome but after his ejection they held them by the Kings Authority by virtue of his Magistracy as the Admiral of England holds his Court whence it proceeds that they send out their Precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Iustices of the Kings Courts do and therefore as the Appeal from those Courts did lie to Rome now by the Stat. of 25 H. 8. cap. 19. it lies to the King in his Chancery Court-Baron COurt-Baron is a Court that every Lord of a Mannor hath within his own Precincts Of this Court and Court-Leet Kitch hath writ a learned Book This Court as it seems in Cok. lib. 4. fol. 26. fs twofold And therefore if a man having a Mannor in a Town grants the inheritance of all the Copyholds therein to another this Grantee may hold a Court for the customary Tenants and accept of Surrenders to the use of others and make Admittances and Grants The other Court is of Free-holders which is properly called the Court-Baron wherein the Suitors that is the Free-holders are Iudges whereas of the other Court the Lord or his Steward is Iudge Coutheutlaugh COutheutlaugh is he that wittingly receives a man utlawed and cherishes or hides him in which case he was in ancient time subject to the same punishment as the man utlawed was Br. l. 3. tr 2. c. 13. nu 2. It is compounded of couth i. known and utlaw outlawed as we now call them Cranage CRanage is a liberty to use a Crane for drawing up wares or Goods out of any Ship Boat or Barge at any Creek or Wharf and to make profit of it It is used also for the Money that is taken for that work Creditor CReansor or Creditor comes of the French Coryance that is Confidence or perswasion and it signifies him that trusts another with any Debt be it money wares or other things This word is used in the Old N. B. in the Writ of Audita querela f. 66. a. Creek CReek is that part of a Haven from whence any thing is landed or disburthened out of the Sea And this word is used in the Stat. 5 El. cap. 5. and 4 H. 4. cap. 20. c. Croft CRoft is a little Close or Pightle adjoyning to an House used either for pasture or arable as the owner pleases And it seems to be derived from the old word Creaft that is Handicraft because these lands are for the most part manured with the best skill of the owner Cucking-stool CUcking-stool is an Engin invented for the punishment of Scolds and unquiet women and it was called in old time a Tumbrell as appears by Lamb. in his Eirenarc l. 1. c. 12. And by the Cases and Iudgements in Eire in the time of Ed. 3. a Pillory and a Tumbrell are appendant to a Leet without which right cannot be administred to the parties within the view Keloway fol. 140. b. And in the Stat. 51 H. 3. ca. 6. it is called Trebuchett Cui ante divortium CUi ante divortium is a Writ that lies when Alienation is made by the husband of the wifes Land and after Divorce is had between them then the woman shall have this Writ and the Writ shall say Whom she before the Divorce might not gain-say Cui in vita CUi in vita is a Writ that lies where a man is seised of Lands in Fee-simple Fee-tail or for life in right of his wife and aliens the same and dies then she shall have this Writ to recover the Land And note That in this Writ her Title must be shewed whether it be of the purchase or inheritance of the woman But if the husband alien the right of his wife and the husband and the wife die the wifes Heir may have a writ of Sur cui in vita Cuinage CUinage See Cuynage Cuntey CUntey cuntey is a kind of Trial as appears by Bract. in these words The matter in this case shall be ended by Cuntey cuntey as between coheirs l. 4. tr 3. cap. 18. And again in the same place In a Writ of right the business shall be determined by cuntey cuntey And thirdly l. 4. tr 4. c. 2. The cause shall be tried by Writ of right neither by Battel nor by the great Assise but by Cuntey cuntey only which seems to be as much as by ordinary Iury. Curfew CUrfew comes of two French words Couvrir to cover and Feu Fire It is used with us for an evening Peal by which the Conqueror willed every man to take warning for the taking up his Fire and putting out his Light So that in many places at this day when a Bell is customably rung toward Bed-time it is said to ring Curfew Curia avisare vult CUria avisare vult is a Deliberation which the Court purposes to take upon any difficult point of a Cause before Iudgement be resolved on For which see the New Book of Entries verbo Curia c. Curia claudenda IS a Writ or Action to compell another to make a Fence or Wall which the Defendant ought to make between his land and the Plaintiffs Currier CUrrier is one that dresses or liquors Leather and is so called of the French word Cuir id est Corium Leather The word is used in all the Statutes made for the good making of Leather as in 1 Jac cap. 22. c. Cursiter CUrsiter is an Officer or Clerk belonging to the Chancery who makes out Original Writs 14 15 H. 8. cap. 8. They are called Clerks of Course in the Oath of Clerks of the Chancery appointed anno 18 Ed. 3. Stat. 5. There are of them twenty four to each of whom is allotted certain Shires into which they make out such Original Writs as are by the subject required and are a Corporation among themselves Curtesie of England CUrtesie of England is where a man takes a wife seised in Fee-simple or Fee-tail general or seised as Heir of the tail special and hath issue by her male or female be the issue dead or alive if the wife die the husband shall hold the Land during his life by the Law of England And it is called Tenant by the Curtesie of England because this is not used in any other Realm but only in England If the Infant was never alive then the husband shall not be Tenant by the Curtesie but if the issue be born alive it suffices If the woman be delivered of a Monster which hath not the shape of mankind this is not Issue in Law But though the issue hath some deformity or defect in the hand or foot and yet hath humane shape if suffices to make the husband Tenant by the Curtesie And in some cases the time of the birth is material and in some not Therefore if a man marries a woman Inheritrix who is great with child by him
had the Government of any such Manor or House was called the Commander who had nothing to do to dispose of it but to the use of the Priory and to have only his sustenance from it according to his degree which was usually a Brother of the same Priory who had been made Knight in the Wars against Infidels and they were lately called Knights of the Rhodes or Knights of Malta of the places where their grand Master did dwell See the said Statute and the old Statute intituled De Templariis whose decay was a great increase of this Order And many of these Commandries are called in the Country by the name of Temple Commandam COmmendam is a Benefice that being void is commended to the care of some sufficient Clerk to be supplied untill it may be conveniently provided of a Pastor And the true original of these Commendams was either evident profit or necessity He to whom the Church is commended hath the fruits and profits thereof only for a certain time and the nature of the Church is not changed thereby but is as a thing deposited in the hands of him to whom it is commended who hath nothing but the Custody thereof which may be revoked Commissary COmmissary is a title of Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction appertaining to him that exercises Spiritual Iurisdiction in places of the Diocess so far distant from the chief City that the Chancellor cannot call the Subjects to the Bishop's principal Consistory without their great trouble This Commissary is called by the Canonists Commissary or Officialis foraneus and is ordained to this special end that he should supply the Office and Iurisdiction of the Bishop in the out-places of the Diocess or in such Parishes as are peculiars to the Bishop and exempted from the Archdeacon's Iurisdiction for where by prescription or by composition there are Archdeacons who have Iurisdiction in their Archdeaconries as in most places they have there this Commissary is superfluous and rather to the prejudice then good of the people Commission COmmission is as much in the Common Law as the word Delegate in the Civil and is taken for the Warrant or Letters Patents which all men using Iurisdiction either ordinary or extraordinary have for their power to hear or determine any matter or action Yet this word sometimes extends more largely then to matters of Iudgement as the Commission of Purveyors or Cakers 11 H. 4. c. 28. But with this Epithete High it is most commonly used for the High-Commission Court instituted and founded upon the Stat. of 1 Eliz. c. 1. for the ordering and reforming of all offences in any thing appertaining to the Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical but especially such as are of highest nature or at least require greater puishment then the ordinary Iurisdiction call afford See the Statutes 17 Car. 1. c. 11. and 13 Car. 2. c. 12. by which the said Court is wholly abolished Commission of Rebellion Com̄ission of Rebellion otherwise called a Writ of Rebellion is used when a man after Proclamation made by the Sheriff upon an Order or Process of the Chancery under penalty of Allegeance to present himself to the Court by a day certain appears not And this Commission is directed by way of command to certain persons to the end they three two or one of them shall apprehend or cause to be apprehended the party as a Rebell and contemner of the Kings Laws in what place s ● ever they shall find him within the Kingdom and bring or cause him to be brought to the Court upon a day therein assigned Committee COmmittee is he or they to whom the consideration or ordering of any matter is referred either by some Court or consent of the parties to whom it appertains as in Parliament a Bill being read is either consented unto and passed or denied and referred to the consideration of some certain man appointed by the House who hereupon are called a Committee But this word is otherwise used by Kitchen f. 160. where the widdow of the Kings Tenant is called the Committee of the King that is one committed by the ancient Law of the Land to the Kings care and protection Common COmmon is the right that a man hath to put his Beasts to Pasture or to use the ground that is not his own And note that there are divers Commons that is Common in grosse Common appendant Cōmon appurtenant and Common because of neighbourhood Common in Gross is where I by my Deed grant to another that he shall have Common in my Land Common appendant is where a man is seised of certain land to which he hath Common in anothers ground only for those beasts which compost the land to which it is appendant excepting Geese Goats and H ● gs which Common is by prescription and of common right and appendant to arable land only Common appurtenant is of the same nature with Common appendant but with all manner of beasts as well Hogs and Goats as Horses Kine and such as compost the ground And this Common may be made at this day and severed from the land to which it is appurtenant but so cannot Common appendant Common because of neighbourhood is where the Tenants of two Lords are seised of two Mannors adjoyning to each other and the Tenants have time out of mind intercommoned each with other with all manner of beasts commonable Yet the one may not put his Cattel in the others ground for so they of the other Town may distrain them Dammage fesant or have an Action of Trespass but they may put them into their own fields and if they stray into the fields of the other Town there they ough to suffer them And the inhabitants of the one Town ought not to put in as many beasts as they will but with regard to the inhabitants of the other for otherwise it were no good Neighbourhood upon which all this depends Common Fine COmmon Fine is a certain summe of Money which the Resiants in a Leet pay unto the Lord of the Leet and it is called in some places Head-silver in some places Certum Letae and was as it seems first granted to the Lord towards the charge of his purchase of the Leet whereby the Resiants had now an ease to do their Suit royal within the Mannor and not be compelled to go to the Sherifs Tourn to do it And for this Common Fine the Lord must prescribe and cannot distrain for it without a prescription as it appears in Godfrey's Case in 11. Rep. fo 44. b. Common Law COmmon Law is for the most part taken three ways First for the Laws of this Realm simply without any other Law as Customary Civil Spiritual or whatever other Law joyned to it as when it is disputed in our Laws of England what ought of right to be determined by the Common Law and what by the Spiritual Law or Admirals Court or such like Secondly it is taken for the Kings Courts as the Kings Bench or Common Place only
have been taken for such as a man retains to speak for him in any Court as Advocates and Pledeurs to be another sort as Attorneys for one that is present himself but suffers another to speak for him Countours according to M. Horne are such Sergeants skilful in the Law which serve the common people to defend their Actions in Iudicature for their fee. Countee COuntee so called a comitando because they accompany the King was the most eminent and high dignity from the conquest untill the 11 year of King Ed. 3. when the Black Prince was created Duke of Cornwall and those who of ancient time were created Countees were of the Blood-Royal aud at this day the King in all his appellations stiles them by the name of Our most dear Cousin And for these causes the Law gives them high and great Priviledges and therefore their body shall not be arrested for Debt Trespasse c. because the Law intends that they assist the King with their counsel for the publick good and keep the Realm by their prowesse and valour Also for the same cause they shall not be put in Iuries although it be for the service of the Country And if issue be taken whether the Plaintiff or Defendant be a Countee or not this shall not be tried by the Countrey but by the Kings Writ Also the Defendant shall not have a day of favour against a Lord of the Parliament because he is intended to attend the publick And of ancient time the Countee was Praefectus or Praepositus Comitatus and had the charge and custody of the County and now the Sheriff hath all the authority for administration and execution of Iustice which the Countee had Cok. lib. 9. fol. 49. and therefore he is called Viscount Countenance COuntenance seems to be used for Credit or Estimation Old Nat. Brev. 111. in these words The Attaint shall be granted to poor men that will take their oaths they have not any thing whereof to make their Fine saving their Countenance In the same manner it is used 1 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 4. in these words Sheriffs shall charge the Kings Debtors with as much as they may levy with their oaths without abating the Debtors Countenance Countermand COuntermand is where a thing formerly executed is afterward by some act or ceremony made void by the party that hath first done it As if a man hath made his last Will whereby he devises his Land to J. S. and afterwards he infeoffs another of the same Land there this Feoffment is a Countermand to the Will and the Will as to the disposition of the Land is void If a woman seised of Land in fee makes a Will in writing and devises that if A. of B. survives her then she devises and bequeaths to him and his heirs her Land and afterward she entermarries with the said A. of B. there by taking him to husband and coverture at the time of her death the Will is Countermanded But if a Baroness widow retains two Chaplains according to the Statute and takes one of the Nobility to husband and afterwards the husband dies the Reteiner of those two Chaplains remains and they without new Reteiner may take two Benefices for their Reteiner was not determined nor countermanded by such Marriage If a woman makes a Lease at will and afterwards takes an husband this Marriage is no Countermand to the Lease without express matter done by the Husband after the Marriage to determine the Will Also if a Lease be made at will to a woman and she takes an Husband the Lease continues notwithstanding the Marriage and is no Countermand thereunto Counterplea COunterplea is when one brings an Action and the Tenant in his Answer and Plea vouches or calls any man to warrant his Title or prayes in aid of another who hath better Estate than he as of him that is in the Reversion or if one that is a stranger to the Action come and pray to be received to save his Estate if the Demandant reply thereto and shew cause that he ought not to vouch such a one or of such a one to have aid or that such a one ought not to be received this Plea is called a Counterplea to the Voucher Aid or Resceit as the case is But when the Voucher is allowed and the Vouchee comes in and demands what cause the Tenant hath and the Tenant shews his cause and the Vouchee pleads any thing to avoid the Warranty that is called a Counterplea in the Warranty Countie COuntie signifies as much as Shire both containing a compasse or portion of the Realm into which all its land is divided for the better government thereof and more easie administring of Iustice so that there is not any part of the Kingdom that lies not within some County and every County is governed by a yearly Officer whom we call Sheriff who among other duties belonging to his Office puts in execution all the Commandments and Iudgments of the Kings Courts that are to be executed within the compasse Fortesc ' cap. 24 Of these Counties there are four more remarkable than others called County Palatines as Lancaster Chester Durham and Ely an 5. El. c. 23. There was also the County Palatine of Hexam an 33 H. 8. cap. 10. but thereof quaere A County Palatine is of so high a nature that whereas all Pleas touching the life or maihem of a man called Pleas of the Crown are usually held and sped in the Kings name and cannot be passed in the name of any other the chief Governours of these by special Charter from the King heretofore did send out all Writs in their own name and did all things touching Iustice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other Counties onely acknowledging him to be their Superiour and Soveraigne But by the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 25. this power was much abridged which fee and Cromp. Jurisdict 137. Besides these two sorts of Counties there are also Counties corporate as appears by the Statute of 3 Ed. 4. 5. and these are certain Cities or ancient Boroughs of the Land upon whom the Princes of this Nation have bestowed such extraordinary Liberties as London York Chester Gloucester and many others County in another signification is used for the County Court which the Sheriff keeps every moneth within his charge either by himself or his Deputy See for this Dal ● on s Office of Sheriffs Of these Counties or Shires there are reckoned to be 37 in England besides the twelve in Wales Court COurt is diversly taken sometimes for the House where the King remains with his ordinary retinue and also the place where Iustice is judicially ministred of which you may find 32 several sorts in Cromp. Jurisd well described And of those the greater part are Courts of Record some are not and therefore accounted Base Courts in comparison of the others Besides these there are also Courts Christian so called because they handle matters chiefly
Finite is that which is limited by Law how often it shall be made to bring the party to trial of the Action as once or twice Old Nat. Brev. f. 43. Distresse infinite is without limitation untill the party comes as against a Iury that refuses to appear upon Certificate of Assise the Process is a Venire facias Habeas corpora and distresse infinite Old nar Brev. f. 113. Then it is divided into the grand Distresse as Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. which Fitzh calls in Latine Magnam Districtionem Nat. Brev. 126. a. and an ordinary distresse A grand Distresse is that which is made of all the goods and chattels which the party had within the County Brit. c. 6. f. 52. But see whether it be not sometimes all one with Distresse infinite idem fol. 80. with whom also the Statute of Marlbridge seems to agree Anno 52 H. 3. c. 7. 9 12. See the Old Nat. Brev. 71. b. Distringas DIstringas is a Writ directed to the Sheriff or any other Officer commanding him to distrain for a Debt to the King c. or for his appearing at a day See the great diversity of this Writ in the Table of the Reg. judic verbo Distringas Also there is a Writ to distrein Iurors to try an issue in a Suit at Common Law And also another Writ to distrein the adjacent Villages to make good Hedges and fences thrown down in the night by unknown men Of which see 1 Cro. Rep. 204. in t ' Reg. Inhabit ' de Epworth Dividend DIvidend is a word used in the Statute of Rutland Anno 10 E. 1. where it seems to signifie one part of an Indenture See Anno 28 ejusdem Stat. 3. c. 2. Divorce DIvorce See Devorce Docket DOcket is a Little piece of Payer or Parchment written that contains in it the effect of a Greater Writing See the Statute 2 3 P. M. c. 6. M. West part 2. tit Fines sect 106. calls it Dogget Dog-draw DOg-draw is an apparent Deprehension of an offendor against Venison in the Forrest There are four kinds of them observed by Manwood part 2. c. 18. num 9. of his Forest Laws that is Dog-draw Stable stand Back-bear and Bloudy-hand Dog-draw is when one is found drawing after a Deer by the sent of a Hound led in his hand Dogger DOgger is a kind of Ship Anno 31 E. 3. Stat. 3. c. 1. Dogger-fish ib. c. 2 seems to be Fish brought in those Ships to Blackney Haven c. Doggermen Anno 2 H. 8. c. 4. Dole-fish DOlefish seems to be those Fishes which the Fishermen yearly imployed in the North seas do of custome receive for their allowance See the Statute Anno 35 H. 8. c. 7. Dominus litis IS the Advocate in the Civil Law who after the death of his Client prosecutes a Suit to sentence for the Executors use Domo reparan ●● DOmo reparanda is a Vr. that lies for one against his neighbour by the fall of whose House he fears some hurt will come to his own Reg. orig fol. 123. Doom DOom from the Saxon Dom signifies Iudgment a word much used in References to Arbitrators Dooms-day DOoms-day is a Book that was written in the time of S. Edward the Confessor as the Author of Old Nat. Brev. saith fol. 15. and before in the title of Ancient demesne containing in it not only all the Lands through England but also all the names of those in whose hands they were at that time when the Book was made Lambert proves that this Book was made in the time of William the Conquerour with whom Cambden in his Britan. pag. 94. agrees proving it out of Ingulphus that flourished the same time who touching the contents thereof hath these words It describes the whole Land neither was there one Hide in all England whose Value and Possessour was unknown nor any Pool or place not describ'd in the Kings Roll and the Rent profits Possession it self and Possessor not made known to the King according to the fidelity of the Taxers who described the same Country wherein they were elected That Roll is called Rotulus Wint. and by the English for its generality in that it contains all the Tenements contained throughout the Land it is surnamed Dooms-day And this Book is sometimes called Liber Judicatorius because in it is contained a diligent Description of the Kingdom and it expresses the value of all the ground thereof as well in the time of King Edward as in the time of King William under whom it was compiled Doomsman SEem to be Suitors in a Court of a Mannor in Auntient demesne who are Iudges there Donative DOnative is a Benefice meerly given and collated by the Patron to a man without either Presentation to or Institution by the Ordinary or Induction by his commandment F. N. B. 35. e. See the Statute of 8. R. 2. c. 4. Peter Gregory de Beneficiis c. 11. num 1. hath these words But if Chappels founded by Lay-men were not approved of the Diocesan and as they term it spiritualized they are not accounted Benefices neither can they be conferred by the Bishop but remain to the pious disposition of the Founders Wherefore the founders and their Heirs may give such Chappels if they will without the Bishop M. Gwyn in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King might of antient time found a free Chappel and exempt it from the Iurisdiction of the Diocesan So also he may by his Letters Patents give licence to a common person to found such a Chappel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be deprivable by the Founder or his heir and not by the Bishop and this seems to be the original of Donatives in England Fitzherbert saith fol. 33. c. that there are some Chauntries which a man may give by his Letters Patents And all Bishopricks were of the Foundation of the Kings of England and therefore in the antient time they were Donative and given by the Kings yet now the Bishopricks are become by the Grants of the Kings eligible by their Chapter Coke l. 3. f. 76. Donor and Donee DOnor is he who gives Lands or Tenements to another in tail and he to whom the same is given is called Donee Dorture DOrture is a common Room place or Chamber where all the Religious of one Covent slept and lay all night Anno 25 H. 8. cap. 11. Double Plea DOuble Plea is where the Defendant or Tenant in any Action pleads a Plea in which two matters are comprehended and each one by it self is a sufficient Bar or Answer to the Action then such double Plea shall not be admitted for a Plea except one depend upon another and in such case if he may not have the last Plea without the first then such a double Plea shall be well received Double Quarel DOuble Quarel is a Complaint made by any Clerk or other to the Archbishop of
King certain Land by the Service of carrying his Banner or Launce or to lead his Host or to be his Carver or Butler at his Coronation or the like and that is the most Honorable Service that a Tenant may do and for that it is called Grand Serjeanty But Petit Serjeanty is when one holds of the King paying him yearly a Bow a Sword a Spear or such like and that is but Socage in effect but a man cannot hold in Grand Serjeanty or Petit Serjeanty but of the King Also if a Tenant by Grand Serjeanty dies his Heir being of full age shall pay to the King for Relief the value of the Lands besides the charges that he pays to the King by Grand Serjeanty but he that holds by Escuage shall pay for his Relief but C. 5. Those that are in the Marches of Scotland who hold of the King by Cornage that is to blow an Horn when the Scots enter England are Tenants in Grand Serjeanty Also where a man holds of the King to find a man in his Wars within the Realm that is called Grand Serjeanty because it is done by a mans Body And if the Tenant cannot find a man to do it he is bound to do it himself But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. c. 24. whereby all Tenures are now turned into Free and Common Socage Gree. GRee comes of the French word Gre good liking and it signifies in our Law Contentment or Satisfaction as in the Statute of 1 R. 2. c. 15. to make Gree to the parties is to give them Contentment or Satisfaction for an Offence done unto them Green hew GReen hew is all one with Vert as appears by Manwood in his Forest Laws cap. 6. sect 5. And for it see Vert. Green Wax GReen Wax is a word used in the Statutes of 42 E. 3. c. 9. and 7 H. 4. c. 3. and signifies the Estreats of Issues Fines and Amerciaments in the Exchequer and delivered out to the Sheriffs under the Seal of the Court to be levied by them in their several Counties Grithbreach GRithbreach that is the Kings Peace broken because Grith in English is Pax in Latine Gule of August GUle of August is the first day or the Calends of August which in the time of E. 1. and E. 3. was called ordinarily the Gule of August as appears by F. N. B. f. 62. l. and Plowdens Com. f. 316. b. It is the very day of S. Peter ad vincula and the reason why it was called the Gule of August is conceived upon a Story recorded by Durandus in his Rationale Divinorum l. 7. c. 19. of a Miracle wrought by S. Peter's Chain upon the daughter of one Quirinus a Tribune of Rome who by the kissing of that Chain was healed of the Kings Evil in her Throat gula And see Hospinian de origine festornm f. 85. b. Gultwit GUltwit is an Amends for Trespass according to Saxton in his Description of England c. 11. H. Habeas Corpus HAbeas Corpus is a writ which a man indited of any Trespass before Iustices of the Peace or in a Court of any Franchise and upon his Apprehenston being laid in Prisost for the same may have out of the Kings Bench thereby to remove himself hither at his own Costs and to answer the Cause there F. N. B. f. 250. h. And the order in this case is first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chancery directed to the said Iustices for the removing of the Indictment into the Kings Bench and upon that to procure this writ to the Sheriff to cause his Body to be brought at a day Reg. Judic f. 81. where you may find many cases wherein this writ shall be used Habeas Corpora HAbeas Corpora is a writ which lies against a Iury or any of them that refuse to come upon the Venire facias for the Trial of a Cause brought to issue Habendum HAbendum is a word of form in a Conveyance to the true understanding whereof it is to be observed That in every Deed or Conveyance there are two principal parts the Premisse and the Habendum The Office of the Premisses is to express the Name of the Grantor the Grantee and the thing to be granted The Office of the Habendum is to limit the Estate so that the general Implication of the Estate which by construction of Law passes in the Premisses is by the Habendum controlled and qualified as in a Lease to two men Habendum to the one for life the Remainder to the other for life alters the general Implication of the Joynt-tenancy in the Free-hold which passes by the Premisses if the Habendum were not See Coke l. 2. c. 55. HAbere facias Seisinam Habere facias Seisinam is a Writ Iudicial that lies where one hath recovered certain Lands in the Kings Court then he shall have this writ directed to the Sheriff commanding him to give him Seisin of that Land and it shall not be retornable Habere facias Visum HAbere facias Visum is a writ that lies in divers Cases where view is to be taken of the Lands or Tenements in question See F. N. B. In Indice verbo View Bract. l. 5. tract 3. c. 8. Half-blood HAlf blood See Demysank Half Seal HAlf Seal is a Seal used in Chancery for the Sealing of Commissions to Delegates upon an Appeal in a Cause civil or marine as it appears by the Statute made in 8 Eliz. c. 3. Halymote HAlymote is a Court-Baron as appears by Manwood in his Forest Laws c. 23. f. 217. a. And it is called Halymote that is the Meeting of the Tenants of one Hall or Mannor Hambling or Hoxing of Dogs HAmbling or Hoxing or Hock-sinewing of Dogs are old Forrest terms for the Lawing of Dogs when the Custom was as appears in Manwood's Forrest Laws c. 16. sect 12. to cut or gash Dogs in the Hamms but now they use to do it in their Feet Of which see Expeditate Hand-gun HAnd-gun is an Engine which is prohibited to be used and carryed about by the Statute of 33 H. 8. c. 6. And though a Dag was invented of late time and after the making of the said Act and is not known by the name of Hand-gun but a special name yet the carrying of a Dag is within the said Act and comprehended within the word Hand-gun So whereas Cross-bows are forbidden by the said Act thereby Stone-bows are also forbidden See Coke l. 5. f. 71 72. Hangwit HAngwit is to be quit of a Thief or Felon hanged without Iudgment or escaped out of your custody Hanper HAnper of the Chancery Anno 10 R. 2. c. 1. seems to signifie as Fiscus originally does in Latine Haque HAque is a little Hand-gun of three quarters of a yard long and it is mentioned in the Statutes of 33 H. 8. c. 6. and 2 3 E. 6. c. 14. There is also mention made of an half Haque Haquebut HAquebut is a Gun mentioned in the
to have and tohold the one half to one and his Heirs aud the other half to another and his Heirs in all these cases none of them knows his several If there be two or three Ioyntenants and one hath Issue and dies then he or those Ioyntenants that overlive shall have the whole by Survivorship If two Iointenants by agreement make Partition between them by Deed then they are several Tenants But if one Ioyntenant grant that which belongs to him to a Strang ●● then the other Ioyntenantand the Stranger are Tenants in common And though two Tenants in common be seised throughly and of the whole and none knows his several yet if one die the other shall not make the whole by Survivorship but the Heir of him that dies shall have the half And so if there be three Ioyntenants and one of them makes a Feoffment of his part to another and the Feoffee dies then his Heir shall have the third part and the other two are Ioyntenants as they were because they two are seised by one joynt Title Also if Lands be given to the baron and his wife and the husband aliens and dies the wife shall recover the whole But if they were Ioyntenants before the Coverture then he shall recover but the half If Land be given to the husband and his wife and a third person if the third person grant that which belongs to him the one half passes by this Grant for that the baron and his wife are but one person in Law and in this case they have right but to half Also if two Ioyntenants are of Lands in a Town that is Borough-English where Land is devisable and one by his Testament devises that which belongs to him to a Stranger and dies this Devise is void and the other shall have the whole by Sutviver for that the Devise may not take effect till after the death of the Devisor and immediately after the death of the Devisor the right comes to the other Ioyntenant by Surviver who claims nothing by the Devisor but in his own right by Surviver But otherwise it is of Parceners seised of Lands devisable causa qua supra Journies accounts JOurnies accounts Dietae computatae is a term in the Law which is understood thus If a Writ be abated without the default of the Plaintiff or Demandant he may purchase a new Writ which if it be purchased by Journies accounts that is within as little time as he possibly can after the Abatement of the first Writ then this second Writ shall be as a Continuance of the first and so shall ouste the Tenant or Defendant of his Voucher Plea of Non-tenure Ioyntenancy fully administred c. or any other Plea which arises upon matter hapning after the date of the first Writ And fifteen days have been held a convenient time for the purchase of the new Writ See for this Writ by Journies accounts Spencers Case Coke lib. 6. fol. 9. b. Joynture JOynture is an Estate and Assurance made to a Woman in consideration of Marriage for term of her life or otherwise as is mentioned in the Statute of 27 H. 8. cap. 10. whether it be before or after Marriage And if it be after then she may at her liberty after the death of her husband refuse to take or have the Lands so assured for her Ioynture and demand her Dower at the Common Law But if it be made before Marriage then she may not refuse such Ioynture nor have Dower according to the Common Law unless that when she brings her Writ of Dower the Defendant pleads such a Plea as will not bar her of her Dower as if he say in Bar that her husband was not seised of such Estate whereof she might be endowed or any such Plea and doth not shew that she hath a Ioynture made c. and therefore demands Iudgment of that Action or any such like Plea c. And this was the opinion of Master Brograve at his Reading in Grays-Inn in Summer An. 1567. 18 Eliz. upon a Branch of the Statute made 27 H. 8. cap. 10. concerning Joyntures and Dowers And of those things whereof a Woman may be endowed she may have Ioynture as of Mines Vesturam terrae Woods Towns Is ● es Meadows and such like Also of an Advowson Reversion depending upon an Estate for Life Wind-mill high Chamber Rectory and such other and they are called Tenements Also of a Villain for he is an Hereditament And of all these profit may come to the woman But of those things whereof no profit will come but rather a charge a Ioynture cannot be made See Coke lib. 4. fol. 1. Vernons Case Jurisdiction JUrisdiction is a Dignity which a Man hath by a power to do Iustice in Causes of complaint made before him Juris utrum JUris utrum is a Writ that lies for the succeeding Incumbent of a Benefice to recover the Lands or Tenements belonging to the Church which were aliened by his Predecessor And see of this Fitz. N. B. fol. 48. R. and see after in the Title Utrum Juror JUror is one of those 24 or 12 men which are sworn to deliver a truth upon such Evidence as shall be given them touching the matter in question of which see Fitz. Nat. B. fol. 165. D. and the Statute 16 and 17 Car. 2. cap. for returning able and sufficient Jurors Justice seat JUstice seat is the highest Court that is held in a Forrest and it is always held before the Lord Chief Iustice ●● Eyre of the Forrest upon m●●ning 40 ● ays before And 〈◊〉 the Iudgments are always given and the Fines see for Offences that were presented at the Courts of Attachments and the Offenders indicted at the Swainmotes See concerning this Court Manwoods Forrest Laws cap 2 ● fol. 238. b. Justices in Eire JUstices in Eire See Eire Justicies JUsticies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some special Cases in his County-Court of which he cannot by his ordinary power hold Plea there And of this you may see Precedents in Fitzh N. B. fol. 117. C. in Account and fol. 152. B. in Annuity and fol. 119. G. in Debt and many others And it is called a Justicies because it is a Commission to the Sheriff to do a man right and it requires no Return or Certificate of what he hath done K. Keelage KEelage in Latine Killagium is a Custom paid at Hartlepool in Durham for every Ship coming into that Port. R of Parl. 21 E. 1. Kiddle KIddle or Kidel is a Dam or Wear in a River All Kidels shall from henceforth be utterly put down in the Thames and Medway and throughout all England except upon the Sea-coast Mag. Char. cap. 24. KIngs silver Kings silver is the Money which is due to the King in the Court of Common Pleas for a License there granted to any man to pass a Fine Coke lib. 6. fol. 39 43. Kintal KIntal is a Weight
avoid a Discent of lands and by it in other cases he may save his Title which otherwise should be lost As if a man be disseised and the Disseisee makes a Continual claim that is if he claim the lands whereof he is disseised within the year and day before the death of the Disseisor then may he enter notwithstanding the Discent Also if a Fine be levied of another mans Land then he that hath right thereunto ought to make his Claim within five years after the Proclamation had made or certified by the Statute of 4 Hen. 7. cap 24. But a Stranger that hath no right cannot of his own head enter or make Claim in the name of him that hath right to avoid the Fine within the five years without commandment precedent or assent subsequent yet Gardian for education or in Socage may enter or make Claim in the name of the Infant that hath right to enter or make Claim and this shall help the estate of the Infant without commandment or assent for there is privity between them Claim of Libertie Is a Suit or Petition to the King in the Court of Exchequer to have Liberties and Franchises confirmed there by the Kings Attorney General Co. Ent. 93. Clergie CLergie is taken divers wayes sometimes for the whole number of Religious men sometimes for a Plea to an Indictment or Appeal and is defined to be an ancient Liberty of the Church confirmed in divers Parliaments And it is when a man is arraigned of Felony or such like before a temporal Iudge c. and the prisoner prayes his Clergy that is to have his Book which in ancient time was as much as if he desired to be dismissed from the temporal Iudge and to be d●livered to the Ordinary to purge himself of the same offence And then the Iudge shall command the Ordinary to trie if he can read as a Clerke in such a Book and place as the Iudge shall appoint And if the Ordinary certifie the Iudge that he can then the prisoner shall not have judgment to lose his life But this Libertie of the Clergie is restrained by the Statute of 8 El. c. 4. an 14 ejusd c. 5. an 18 ejusd c. 4 6 7. 23 ejusd cap. 2. 29. ejusd cap. 2 31 ejusd cap. 12. 39 ejusd cap. 9 15. See Crompt Just of Peace fo 102 c. and Stamf. lib. 2. cap. 41. and the Stat. of 18 Eliz. cap. 7. by which Clerks are not to be delivered to their Ordinaries to be purged but now every man though not within Orders is put to read at the Bar being found guilty and convicted of such Felony for which this benefit is still granted and so burned in the hand and set free the first time if the Ordinary's Comissary or Deputy saith He readeth as a Clerk or otherwise he suffers death for his transgression Clerk CLerk hath two significations one as it is the title of him that belongs to the holy Ministery of the Church that is in these dayes either Minister or Deacon of what other degree or dignity soever although that in ancient time not only Sacerdotes and Diaconi but also Subdiaconi Can ● ores Acoluthi Exorcistae and Ostiarii were within this account as they are at this day where the Canon Law hath full power And in this signification a Clerk is either Religious otherwise called Regular or Secular 4 H. 4. cap. 12. The other signification of this word denotes such as by their function or course of life use their pen in any Court or otherwise as namely the Clerk of the Rolls of Parliament Clerks of the Chancery and such like Clerico admittendo CLerico admittendo is a Writ directed to the Bishop for the admitting a Clerk to a Benefice upon a Ne admittas tried and found for the party that procures the Writ Beg. orig f. 31. Clerk Attaint CLerk attaint is he who prayes his Clergy after judgment given upon him of the Felony and hath his Clergy allowed such a Clerk might not make his Purgation Clerk convict CLerk convict is he who prayes his Clergy before judgment given upon him of the Felony and hath his Clergy granted such a Clerk might make his Purgation Note that this Purgation was made when he was dismissed to the Ordinary there to be tried by the enquest of Clerks and therefore now by the Stat. of 18 Eliz. cap. 7. no such is put to the Ordinary Closh CLosh is an unlawfull Game forbidden by the Statute made in the 17 year of E. cap. 4. and it is inhibited also by the Statute of 33 H. 8. cap. 9. But there it is more properly called Clash for it is the throwing of a Bowl at nine Pins of wood or nine shank-bones of an Oxe or Horse and it is now ordinarily called Kailes or Nine-pins Coadjutor COadjutor to the Disseisin is he who with another disseises one of his Free-hold to the use of the other and he shall be punished as a Disseisor but he is not such a Disseisor who gaines the Freehold but the Free-hold vests and is wholly in him to whose use the Disseisin was committed as appears in Littleton l. 3. cap. 3 of Jointenants Cocket COcket is a Seal pertaining to the King's Custome-house and it signifies also a Scrowl of Parchment sealed and delivered by the Officers of the Custome-house to Merchants as a Warrant that their merchandize are customed This word is used in the old Statutes now expired of 14 E. 3. Stat. 1. c. 21. 11 H. 6. cap. 16. Codicil COdicil is the Will or Testament of a man concerning that which he would have done after his death without the appointing of an Executor Or it is an addition or supplement added unto a Will or Testament after the finishing of it for the supply of something which the Testator had forgotten or to help some defect in the Will Of this you may read more in Swinbourn's Wills and Testaments part 1. Sect. 5. num 2 3 c. Coin COin is a word collective which contains in it all manner of the several stamps pourtraitures of Money And this is one of the Royal Prerogatives belonging to every Prince that he alone in his own Dominions may order dispose the quantity and fashions of his Coin And though this is the sinew of all traffick and commerce yet the Coin of one King is not currant in the Realms of another King commonly unless at great loss If a man binds himself to pay an hundred pounds of lawfull Money of England to another and at the day of payment some of the money chances to be Spanish or French Coin there the Obligation is well performed if those Coins are by Proclamation made currant money of England For the King by his absolute Prerogative may make any forein Coin lawful money of England at his pleasure by his Proclamation In case where a man is to pay Rent to his Lessor upon condition of Re-entry and the
lastly to be out of Court voluntarily Confession of Offence COnfession of Offence is when a prisoner is appealed or indicted of Treason or Felony and broughe to the Bar to be arraigned and his Indictment is read unto him and he is demanded by the Court what he can say thereto then either he confesses the Offence and the Indictment to be true or he estranges himself from the Offence and pleads not guilty or else gives an indirect answer and so in effect stands mute Confession may be made in two sorts and to two several ends The one is he may confesse the offence whereof he is indicted openly in the Court before the Iudge and submit himself to the censure and judgement of the Law which Confession is the most certain answer and best satisfaction that may be given to the Iudge to condemn the Offendor so that it proceeds freely and of his own accord without any threats force or extremity used for if the Confession arise from any of these causes it ought not to be recorded As a woman was indicted for the felonious taking of Bread to the value of two shillings and being thereof arraigned she confessed the Felony and said that she did it by the commandment of her husband and the Iudges in pity would not record her Confession but caused her to plead Not guilty to the Felony whereupon the Iury found that she stole the Bread by the compulsion of her husband against her will for which cause she was discharged 27 Assis pla 50. The other kind of Confession is when the prisoner confesses the Indictment to be true and that he hath committed the Offence whereof he is indicted and then becomes an Approver that is an Accuser of others who have committed the same Offence whereof he is indicted or other Offences with him and then prayes the Iudge to have a Coroner assigned him to whom he may make relation of those Offences and the full circumstances thereof There is also a third kind of Confession made by an Offendor in Felony which is not in Court before the Iudge as the other two are but before a Coroner in a Church or other priviledged place upon which the Offendor by the ancient Law of the Realm is to abjure the Realm Confirmation COnfirmation is when one who hath right to any Lands or Tenements makes a Deed to another who hath the possession or some Estate with these words Ratificasse Approbasse Confirmasse with intent to enlarge his Estate or make his possession perfect and not defesible by him that makes the Confirmation nor by any other that may have his right Whereof see more in Littl. l. 3. cap. 9. of Confirmation Confiscate COnfiscate is derived from the Latine Fiscus which originally signifies a Hamper or Basket but metonymically the Princes Treasure because in ancient time it was put in the Hampers or Frails And though our King doth not put his Treasure in such things yet as the Romans have said that such goods as were forfeited to the Emperors Treasury were Bona Confiscata in like manner do we say of such goods as are forfeited to the Kings Exchequer And the title to have these goods is given to the King by the Law when they are not claimed by some other As if a man be indicted that he feloniously stole the goods of another man where in truth they are the proper goods of him indicted and they are brought in Court against him as the manner and he there asked what he says to the said goods to which he disclaimes by this Disclaimer he shall lose the goods although that afterwards he be acquitted of the Felony and the King shall have them as confiscated But otherwise it is if he doth not disclaim them The same Law is where goods are found in the Felons possession which he disavows and afterwards is attainted of other goods and not of them there the goods which he disavows are confiscate to the King But had he been attainted of the same goods they should have been said to be forfeited and not confiscate notwithstanding his Disavowment So if an Appeal of Robbery be brought and the Plaintiff leaves out some of his goods he shall not be received to enlarge his Appeal and forasmuch as there is none to have the goods so left out the King shall have them as confiscate according to the old rule Quod non capit Christus capit Fiscus And as in the case aforesaid the Law punishes the owner for his negligence and connivency so the Law abhors malice in seeking the bloud of any without just cause And therefore if A. hath the goods of B. by delivery or finding and B. brings an Appeal against A. for taking them feloniously and it is found that they were the Plaintiffs goods and that the Defendant came lawfully by them in this case these goods are confiscate to the King because of the false and malicious Appeal Congeable COngeable comes of the French word Conge id est venia and signifies in our Common Law as much as Lawfull or lawfully done and so Littleton uses it in his 410. sect where he says that the Entry of the Dis● elsee is Congeable Conged ' eslire COnge đ eslire i Leave to chuse or Power of chusing is the Kings Royal Permission to any Dean and Chapter in time of Vacancy to chuse a Bishop or to an Abbey or Priory of his own foundation to chuse their Abbot or Prior. Fitzh Nat. Brev. fol. 169. b. 170. b. c. c. Master Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King of England as Soveraign Patron of all Archbishopricks Bishopricks and other Ecclesiastical Benefices had of ancient time free disposition of all Ecclesiastical Dignities whensoever they happen'd to be void investing them first per baculum annulum and afterwards by his Letters Patents and that in progress of time they gave power to others to make Election under certain forms and conditions as namely that they upon e ● ery Vacation should beg of the K. Conge de eslire that is licence to proceed to Election and after to crave his Royal Assent c. And farther he affirms by good proof out of the Common-Law Books that King John was the first that granted it and that it was afterward confirmed by Westm 1. c. 1. which Statute was made Anno 3 E. 1. and again by the Statute de Art Cleri c. 2. which was ordained Anno 25 E. 3 Stat. 3. Conjuration COnjuration is a Compact or Plot made by men combining themselves together by oath or promise to do any publick harm But it is more commonly used for such as have personal Conference with the Devil or evil Spirit to know any secret or to effect any purpose Anno 5 Eliz. c 16. And the difference between Conjuration and Witchcraft may be this Because the one seems by Prayers and Invocation upon the powerful Name of God to compell the Devil to say or do what he
by Original Writ that is by Writ of Conspiracy and not otherwise which was not so speedy remedy as the Heinous quality of the wrong required the Statute of Westm the 2. An. 13 Ed. 1. cap. 12. for the more expeditious redress thereof was ordained But if the Defendant barrs the Plaintiff of his Appeal then he cannot recover Dammages by the said Statute against the Plaintiff except the Barr be such as acquits the Defendant of the Felony And if the Defendant pleads that the Appellant is a Bastard or hath an elder Brother or like Pleas in barre and thereby barrs the Plaintiff yet he shall not recover Dammages against him because the Defendant may be indicted again of the same Felony and attainted notwithstanding any of those Pleas for by them the innocency of the Defendant is not tried and therefore he shall not have Dammages 27 Ass pl. 25. The same Law is if the Defendant barrs the Appellant by Demurrer in Law And so it is if in Appeal of the death of a man the Defendant pleads to the issue and it is found by Verdict that he killed the man in his own defence or by Chance-m ● dley in these cases he shall not recover Dammages But if the Defendant in Appeal hath the Release of the Appellant or the Kings Pardon and will wave them and plead Not guilty and is acquitted in this case he shall recover Dammages This word Dammage is taken in the Law in two several significations the one properly and generally the other strictly and relatively Properly as it is in cases where Dammages are founded upon the Statute of 2 Hen. 4. cap. 1. and 8 Hen. 6. cap. 9. where Costs are included within this word Dammages for Damnum in its proper and general signification is said a demendo when a thing by Diminution is made worse and in this sense Costs of Suit are Dammages to the Plaintiff for by them his Substance is diminished But when the Plaintiff declares the wrong done to him to the Dammage of such a summe this is to be taken relatively for the wrong which is passed before the Writ brought and are assessed by reason of the Trespass aforesaid and cannot extend to Costs of Suit which are future and of another nature See Co. l. 10. f. 116 117. Dammage fesant DAmmage fesant is when a stranger's Beasts are in another mans ground without licence of the Tenant of the ground and there do feed tread and otherwise spoil the corn grass woods and such like In which case the Tenant whom they dammage may therefore take distrain and impound them as well in the night as in the day But in other cases as for Rent and Services and such like none may distrain in the night Danegeld DAnegeld is to be quit of a certain Tribute which the Danes did levie in England Also the Tribute it self This began first in the time of King Etheldred who being sore distressed by the continual Inivasson of the Danes to purchase Peace was compelled to charge his County and people with great Payments for he first gave them at five several payments 113000 lib and afterwards granted them 48000 lib. yearly Darreine Presentment DArreine Presentment an Assise thereof lies where I or mine ancestors have presented a Clerk to a Church and after the Church being void by the death of the said Clerk or otherwise a stranger presents his Clerk to the same Church in disturbance of me And how it is otherwise used see Bract. lib. 5. tract 2. Regist orig fol. 30. If a husband and wife present to an Advowson in right of the wife which is appendant to the Mannor of the wife and after the husband aliens an Acre parcel of the Manor with the Advowson in fee to a stranger and dies and after the stranger presents and then aliens the Acre to another in fee saving the Advowson to himself and after the Church is void there the wife shall present and if she be disturbed she shall have an assise of Darreine Presentment because the Advowson was severed from the Acre But if the Advowson was appendant to the Acre then the wife ought to recover the Acre before she presents to the Advowson Fitz. Nat. Brev. 32. Darrein Continuance IS when the Defendant or Tenant pendente placito pleads new matter done after the last continuance of the plea. See Thelwel 361. 2. Cro. 261. Dean and Chapter DEan and Chapter is a Body corporate Spiritual consisting of many able persons as namely the Dean who is chief and his Prebends and they together make the Corporation And as this Corporation may jointly purchase Lands and Tenements to the use of their Church and Successors so likewise every of them severally may purchase to the use of himself and his heirs And as there are two Foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the Old and the New the New are those that King Henry the eighth upon suppression of Abbeys transformed from an Abbot or Prior and Covent to Dean and Chapter so there are two means of Creation of these Deans for those of the Old Foundation are brought to their Dignity like Bishops the King first sending his Congee deslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yeilding his Royal assent and the Bishop confirming and giving his Mandate to instal him Those of the New Foundation are by a shorter course enstalled by the King's Letters Patents without other Election or Confirmation This word is also applyed to divers that are the chief of certain peculiar Churches or Chappels as the Dean of the Kings Chappel the Dean of the Arches the Dean of Saint George's Chappel in Windsor c. Debet solet See Custom Prescription DEbet solet are words used in the Old Natura Brevium fol. 98. The Writ of Secta molendini being in the Debet solet is a Writ of Right c. And again fol. 69. A Writ of Quod permittat may be pleaded in the County before the Sheriff and may be in the Debet solet or the Debet only as the Demandant claims Wherefore note That these Writs that are brought in such sort have these words in them as formal words not to be omitted And according to the diversity of the Case the Debet solet are used or the Debet only As if a man by Writ sues to recover any right whereof his ancestor was disseised by the Tenant or his ancestor then he uses only the word Debet in his Writ and it is not apt to use Solet because his ancestor was disscised and the Custom discontinued but if he sues for any thing that is first denied him then he hath both these words Debet solet because his ancestor before him and himself have usually enjoyed the thing for which he sues as Suit to the Mill or Common of Pasture until this present refusal of the Tenant Reg. orig fol. 144. a. Debet Detinet DEbet Detinet Much may be
Court of Iustice Magistracy or Title of land for which the party shall be punished according to the nature and quality of his offence sometimes by Action upon the Case for Slander at the Common Law and other times in the Ecclesiastical Court. As if a man contrive any False news or horrible and false Lies of Prelates Dukes Earls c. then an Action De Scandalis Magnatum will lie against him by the Statute of 2 R. 2. cap. 5. and this being proved the party offending shall be grievously punished But for words of Defamation against a private man there the party grieved shall have his Action upon the Case for the Slander and shall recover in dammages according to the quality of the fault wherein the quality of the person who is so defamed is much to be considered But for Defamations determinable in the Spiritual Court they ought to have three incidents First it ought to concern matter meerly Spiritual and determinable in the Ecclesiastical Court as for calling him Heretick Schismatick Adulterer Fornicator c. Secondly that it concern matter meerly Spiritual only for if such Defamation concern any thing determinable at the Common Law the Ecclesiastical Iudge shall not have conusance thereof As if a Divine is to be presented to a Benefice and one to defeat him thereof saith to the Patron that he is an Heretick or a Bastard or that he is Excommunicated whereby the Patron refuses to present him and he loses his Preferment he shall have an Action upon the Case for these Defamations tending to such an end Also if a woman be bound that she shall live continent for if a Lease be made to her so long as she shall live chaste in these cases Incontinency shall be tryed by the Common Law Thirdly although such Defamation be meerly and only Spiritual yet he that is defamed cannot sue there for amends or Dammages but the Suit ought to be only for punishment of the fault for the Soul's health of him that so offends And as for the Slander of a Title to Land if A. saith that B. hath right in the Lands of C. whereby C. is damnified then he may have an Action upon the Case for the Defamation of his Title against A. And although B. hath a colourable Title yet A. shall be punished forasmuch as he hath taken upon him knowledge of the Law and medled in a matter which concerned him not But if a man saith that he himself hath right to the Land of another in this case no Action for Defamation lies although he knows his Title to be false Cok lib. 4. fol. 18. Defeisance DEfeisance is a Condition relating to a Deed as an Obligation Recognisance or Statute which being performed by the Obligor or Recognisor the Act is disabled and made void as if it had never been done And there is no Warrantie Recognisance Rent-charge Annuity Covenant Lease for years or such like but that they may by a Defeasance made with the mutual consent of all those who were parties to the creation thereof by Deed be adnulled discharged and defeated And the difference between a Proviso or Condition in Deed and a Defeasance is in this That the Proviso or Condition is annexed or inserted in the Deed or Grant whereas a Defeasance is usually a Deed by it self concluded and agreed on between the parties and having relation to another Deed. And therefore if the Condition of an Obligation be repugnant to the Deed the Condition is void and the Obligation good As if the Condition be that he shall not sue the Obligation this is void as well as it is of a Feoffment upon Condition that the Feoffee shall not take the Profits But a Defeasance is a Grant that is made after the Obligation to defeat the same Obligation and this is good though it be repugnant and so not like a Condition 21 H. 7. fol. 24. b. For the form and manner of Defeasances according to the diversity of the Case see West part 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 230 231 c. Defence DEfence is that which the Defendant ought to make immediately after the Count or Declaration made that is that he defends all the Wrong Force and Dammage where and when he ought and then to proceed farther to his Plea or to imparl And note that by defending the Force and Wrong he doth excuse himself of the Wrong against him surmised and makes himself party to the Plea and by defending the Dammage he affirms the Plaintiff able to be answered unto And for the residue of the Defence he accepts the power of the Court to hear and determine their Pleas of this matter For if he will plead to the Iurisdiction he ought to omit in his Defence these words ou quant il devera and if he will shew any disability in the Plaintiff and demand Iudgment if the party shall be answered unto then he ought to omit the Defence of the Dammage Defendant DEfendant is he that is sued in Action personal who is called Tenant in an Action real Defendemus DEfendemus is an ordinary word in a Feoffment or Donation and hath this force that it binds the Donor and his Heirs to defend the Donee if any man go about to lay any Servitude upon the thing given other then is contained in the Donation Braction lib. 2. cap. 16. num 10. See also Warrantizantibus Defender of the Faith DEfender of the Faith is a peculiar Title given to the King of England by the Pope as Catholicus to the King of Spain and Christianissimus to the French King It was first given by Leo. x. to K. Hen. 8. for writing against Martin Luther in behalf of the Church of Rome Stow's Annals p. 863. Deforceor DEforceor is he that overcomes and casts out with Force who differs from a Disseisor first in this that a man may disseise another without Force which act is called Simple Dissesin Britton cap. 33. Then because a man may deforce another that never was in possession as if many have right to Lands as common Heirs and one keeps them out the Law saith that he deforces them though he never disseised them Old Nat. Brev. fol. 118. If Tenant in tail makes a Feoffment in fee by which the Feoffee is in and afterward the Tenant in tail dies and his issue sues a Writ of Formedon against the Feoffee the Writ shall say and also the Count c. that the Feoffee wrongfully deforced him c. though he did not disseise him because he entred in the life of the Tenant in tail and the Heir had no present right Lit fol. 138. And a Deforceor differs from an Intrudor because a Deforceor keeps out the right Heir as aforesaid and a man is made an Intrudor by a wrongful Entry only in Lands or Tentments void of a Possessor Bract. lib. 4. cap. 1. And because Force and Forcible entry into Lands is so opposite to the Peace and Iustice of the Realm and a
bloud that is Brothers by the Fathers side because they had both one Father and are both of his bloud and not Brothers at all by the Mothers side nor of bloud nor kin that way and therefore the one of them cannot be Heir to the other for he that will claim as Heir to one by discent must be of whole ● bloud to him from whom he claims In the same manner it is if a woman have divers issues by divers husbands who are called Brothers by one Mother Denariata terrae DEnariata Terrae See Fardingdeal Denelage DEnelage is the Law that the Danes made here in England cut of which and Merchenlage and Westsaxonlage William the Conquerour composed certain Ordinances to be observed by his subjects Denizen DEnizen or Donaison is where au Alien born becomes the Kings Subject and obtains the Kings Letters Patents to enjoy all Priviledges as an English-man but if one be made Denizen he shall pay Customes and divers other things as Alien as it appears by divers Statutes thereof made It seems that Donaison is the true name so called because that his Legitimation is given to him and not Denizen as derived from Deins nee And the Law is so precise in the making of Denizens that the King cannot grant power to any other to make Aliens born Denizens it is by the Law so inseparably and individually annexed to his Royal person for the Law esteems it an high Prerogative to make Aliens Subjects of the Realm and capable of Lands and Inheritances as natural born Subjects are And therefore the Statute of 27 H. 8. c. 24. which reunites many of the most ancient Prerogatives and Regal Flowers of the Crown makes no mention of any authority to make Letters of Denization to be resumed for that never any claimed it be any pretext whatsoever it being so high a point of Prerogative See Cok. l. 7. Calvins Case Deodand DEodand is when any man by misfortune is slain by a Horse Cart or any other thing that moves to further his death such thing which at the time of his misfortune did move or cause his death shall be sorfeit to the King and that is called Deodand and that pertains to the Kings Almoner for to dispose in Alms and Deeds of Charity But it is not forfeited untill the matter be found of Record and therefore they cannot be claimed by Prescription and the Iury that finds or presents the death by such misadventure ought also to find and appraise the Deodand Co. l. 5. f. 110. If a Horse strikes one and afterwards the Owner sells the Horse and then the party that was stricken dies of the stroke in this case the Horse shall be forfeited as a Deodand notwithstanding the sale for relation shall be had to the stroke which was before the sale Plow Com. 260. b. What move to death or kill the dead Are Deodand and forfeited Departure from a Plea or matter DEparture from a Plea or matter is where a man pleads a Plea in bar and the Plaintiff replies thereto and he after in his Rejoynder pleads or shews another matter contrary or not pursuing to his first Plea that is called a Departure from his Bar. As if a man pleads a general Agreement in bar and in the Rejoynder he alledges an especial Agreement this shall be adjudged a Departure in Pleading So in Trespass if the Defendant will plead a discent to him and the Plaintiff saith that after this the Defendant enfeoffed him and the Defendant saith that this Feoffment was upon Condition for the breach whereof he entred this is a Departure from the Bar for it is a new matter See Plow Com. f. 7. 8. Departure in despight of the Court. DEparture in despight of the Court is when the Tenant or Defendant appears to an Action and hath a day over in the same Term or is called after though he had no day given him so that it be in the same Term if he do not appear but make Default it is a Departure in despight of the Court and therefore he shall be condemned And it is to be observed that Departure in despight of the Court is always of the part of the Tenant or Defendant and the Entry thereof is Quod praedictus A licet solenniter exactus non revenit sed in contemptum Curiae recessit Defaltam fecit and this is when in judgement of the Law he is present in Court and being demanded departs in despight of the Court this amounts to a Bar in respect of the Despight and Contempt of the Court. See Cok. lib. 8. f. 62. Deprivation DEprivation is when an Abbot Bishop Parson Vicar Prebend c. is deprived or deposed from his Preferment for any matter in Fact or in Law As if a Miscreant or Schismatick be presented admitted and inducted there is good cause of Deprivation So if a meer Lay-man be presented admitted instituted and inducted yet he shall be deprived or if the Incumbent hath Plurality of Benefices or subscribe not to the Articles of Religion according to the Stat. of 13 Eliz. cap. 12. By the Statute of 21 H. 8. cap. 13. it is enacted That if any person having a Benefice with Cure of souls of the yearly value of eight pounds or more accepts or takes any other with Cure of souls and be instituted and inducted into the possession thereof the first Benefice shall be void and the Incumbent in this case is outed or deprived by Cession In which case the Bishop needs not give notice to the Patron because the Deprivation is by Act of Parliament to which every one is party and ought to take notice at his peril But otherwise it is if the first Church be not of the yearly value of eight pounds for then it is void meerly by the Ecclesiastical Law See Co. l. 4. f. 76. and l. 7. 43 b Deputie DEputie is he that exercises in another mans right either Office or any other thing and his forfeiture or misdemeanor shall cause the Officer or him whose Deputy he is to lose his Office But a man cannot make his Deputy in all cases except the Grant so be as if it be with these or such like words To exercise or use by himself or his sufficient Deputy or if the words go farther To himself or his Deputy or the Deputy of his Deputy then he may make a Deputy and his Deputy also may make a Deputy or else not As if the Office of a Parkership be granted to one he cannot grant this over to another because it is an Office of trust and confidence and shall not be forfeited And there is great diversity between Deputy and Assignee of an Office for an Assignee is a person that hath an Estate or interest in the Office it self and doth all things in his own name for whom his Grantor shall not answer unless it be in especial cases and a Deputy hath not any Estate or interest in the Office but is only
always put in the latter end of Deeds without which words the Deed is insufficient And because we are about Sealing and Signing of Deeds it shall not be much amiss here to shew you for Antiquities sake the manner of Signing and Subscribing Deeds in our Ancestors the Saxons time a fashion Differing from that we use now in this That they to their Deeds subscribed their Names commonly adding the Sign of the Cross and in the end did set down a great number of Witnesses not using at that time any kind of Seal And we at this day for more surety both subscribe our Names though that be not very necessary and put to our Seals and use the help of Witnesses besides That former fashion continued absolute until the time of the Conquest by the Normans whose manners by little and little at the length prevailed amongst us for the first Sealed Charter in England is thought to be that of King Edward the Confessour to the Abbey of Westminster who being educated in Normandy brought into this Realm that and some other of their Fashions with him And after the coming of William the Conquerour the Normans liking their own Country Custom as naturally all Nations do rejected the manner that they found here and retained their own as Ingulphus the Abbot of Croiland who came in with the Conquest Witnesses saying The Normans do change the making of Writings which were wont to be firmed in England with Crosses of Gold and other holy Signs into an impression of Wax and reject also the manner of the English Writing Howbeit this was not done all at once but it increased and came forward by certain degrees so that first and for a season the King only or a few other of the Nobility used to Seal then the Noble-men for the most part and none other Which thing a man may see in the History of Battel Abbey where Richard Lucie Chief Iustice of England in the time of King Henry the Second is reported to have blamed a mean Subject for that he used a private Seal whereas that pertained as he said to the King and Nobility only At which time also as J. Rosse notes it they used to ingrave in their Seals their own Pictures and Counterfeits covered with a long Coat over their Armors But after this the Gentlemen of the better sort took up the Fashion and because they were not all Warriors they made Seals ingraven with their several Coats or Shields of Arms for difference sake as the same Author reports At length about the time of King Edward the third Seals became very common so that not only such as bare Arms used to Seal but other men also fashioned to themselves Signers of their own devices some taking the Letters of their own Names some Flowers some Knots and Flourishes some Birds and Beasts and some other things as we now yet daily see used Some other manners of Sealing besides these have been heard of among us as namely that of King Edward the third by which he gave to Norman the Hunter The Hop and the Hop-Town With all the bounds upside down And in witness that it was sooth He bit the Wax with his foretooth The like to this was shewed me by one of my Friends in a loose Paper but not very anciently written and therefore he willed me to esteem of it as I thought good It was as follows I William King give to thee Powlen Royden my Hop and my Hop-Lands with all the bounds up and down from Heaven to Earth from Earth to Hell for thee and thine to dwell from me and mine to thee and thine for a Bow and a broad Arrow when I come to hunt upon Yartow In witness that this is sooth I bit this Wax with my tooth in the presence of Magge Maud and Margery and my third son Henry Also that of Alberick de Vere containing the Donation of Hatfield to which he affixed a short black-hafted knife like an old half-peny whittle instead of a Seal with Divers such like But some peradventure will think that these were received in common use and custom and that they were not the devices and pleasures of a few singular persons such are no less deceived then they that deem every Charter and Writing that hath no Seal annexed to be as ancient as the Conquest whereas indeed Sealing was not commonly used till the time of King Edw. 3. as hath been already said 3. Delivery though it be set last is not the least for after a Deed is written and sealed if it be not delivered all the rest is to no purpose And this Delivery ought to be done by the party himself or his sufficient Warrant and so it will binde him whosoever wrote or sealed the same and by this last act the Deed is made perfect according to the intent and effect of it and therefore in Deeds the Delivery is to be proved c. Thus you see Writing and Sealing without Delivery is nothing to purpose Sealing and Delivery where there is no Writing work nothing And Writing and Delivery without Sealing make no Deed Therefore they all ought joyntly to concur to make a perfect Deed. Faitour FAitour is a word used in the old repealed Statute of 7 R. 2. cap. 5. and it is there taken in the worser sense for an Evil doer or an Idle companion and it seems there to be a Synomymon to Vagabond Fardingdeale FArdingdeal otherwise Farundel of Land signifies the Fourth part of an Acre Cromptons Jurisd fol. 220. b. Quadrantata terrae is read in the Reg. orig fol. 1 b where you may have Denariata and Obolata Solidata and Librata terrae which by probability must rise in proportion of quantity from Fardingdeal as a Half-peny Peny Shilling or Pound rise in value or estimation then must Obolata be Half an Acre Denariata the Acre Solidata Twelve Acres and Librata Twelve score Acres Yet in the Reg. orig fol. 94 and 248. you may find viginti Libratas terrae vel reditus whereby it seems that Librata terrae is as much as yields twenty shillings by the year and centum Solidatas terrarum tenementorum redituum fol. 249. And in F. N. B. f. 87. there are these words Viginti Libratas terrae vel reditus which proves this to be so much Land as is rated at twenty shillings by the year See Furlong Farm or Ferm FArm or Ferm is usually the chief Messuage in a Village or Town whereto belongs great Demeans of all sorts and hath been used to be let for term of Life Years or at Will The Rent that is reserved upon such a Lease or the like is called Farm or Ferm And Farmor or Fermor is he that Tenants the Farm or Ferm or is Lessee thereof Also generally every Lessee for life years or at will is called Farmor or Fermor And note That they are calltd Farms or Ferms of the Saxon word Feormian which signifies to Feed or yield Victual For in ancient
their Land of their Lord by Homage And if such Lord hath received Homage he is bound to acquit the Tenant against all other Lords above him of every manner Service And if the Tenant hath done Homage to his Lord and is impleaded and vouches the Lord to Warranty the Lord is bound to warrant him and if the Tenant lose he shall recover in value against the Lord so much of the Lands as he had at the time of the Voucher or at any time after Also if a man that holds his Land by Homage auncestrel alien the Land in fee then the Alienee shall do Homage to his Lord but he shall not hold by Homage auncestrel for that the continuance of the Tenancy in the Blood of the first Tenant is discontinued Homagio respectuando HOmagio respectuando is a Writ directed to the Escheatour commanding him to deliver Seisin to the Heir of his Lands at his full age although he hath not made his Homage Of which see Fitz. N. B. f. 269. A. Homesoken HOmesoken or Hamesoken is to be quit of Amerciaments for Entring into Houses violently and without licence and contrary to the Peace of the King And that you hold Plea of such Trespass done in your Court and in your Land Homicide or Man-slaughter HOmicide or Man-slaughter is the Killing of a Man felonioussy without malice fore-thought It is also defined thus Homicide is the killing of a man by a man But if it be done by a Dog Ox or other thing it is not properly called Homicide It is called Homicidium ab homine cado quasi Hominis caedium Homine capto in Withernamium HOmine capto in Withernamium is a Writ to take him that hath taken any Bond-man or Woman and led him or her out of the County so that he or she cannot be replevied according to Law Reg. Orig. fol. 79. a. Homine replegiando HOmine replegiando is a Writ to deliver men out of Prison upon Bail In what cases it lies and in what not see in Fitz. N. B. f. 66. E. and see here in the Title of Replevin in the end See Replevin Honour HOnour besides the general signification is used specially for the most noble sort of Lordships whereof other inferiour Lordships or Mannors depend by performance of Customes and Services some or other to those that are Lords of them And it seems there are no Honours but those which originally appertained to the King yet they may afterward be given in Fee to Noblemen The manner of Creating these Honors may in part be collected out of the Statutes of Anno 31 Hen. 8. chapter 5. where Hampton Court is made an Honour and Anno 33 ejusd cap. 37 38. whereby Amptil and Grafton are likewise made Honours and Anno 37 ejusd cap. 18. whereby the King hath power given him by his Letters Patents to erect four several Honours Westminster Kingston upon Hull S. Osithes in Essex and Dodington in Barkshire Hornegeld HOrnegeld is to the quit of certain Custome exacted by Tillage through all the Land of whatsoever horn'd Beast Hors de son Fee HOrs de son Fee is an Exception to avoid an Action for Rent issuing out of certain Land by him who pretends to be the Lord or for some Customes or Services for if he can justifie that the Land is without the compass of his Fee the Action falls Broke hoc Tit. 7 8. and 1 Institut 1. b. Hospitallers HOspitallers Hospitularii an Order of Knights first founded at Jerusalem and called the Joannites or Knights of St. John of Jerusalem and they were called Hospitallers for that they built an Hospital at Jerusalem for the entertainment of all such as from any part of the world came to visit the Holy places and did guard and protect such Pilgrims in their Iourneys the Institution of their Order was first allowed by Pope Gelasius the second about the year 1118. And they had many Priviledges granted them as Immunities from payment of Tithes c. And for these they are often mentioned in our Books You shall find their Priviledges reserved to them in Magna Charta cap 37. And you shall see the Right of the Kings Subjects vindicated from the Vsurpation of their Iurisdiction by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 34. Their chief abode is now in the Island of Melita commonly called Malta given them by the Emperor Charles the Fifth And for that they are now called Knights of Malta All the Lands and Goods of these Knights here in England were put in the disposition of the King by the Stat. of 32 H. 8. cap. 24. Hosteler HOsteler is an Inholder Coke Entr. 347. Hotchpot HOtchpot is a blending or mixing together and a partition of Lands given in Frank-marriage with other Lands in Fee-simple discended For example A man seised of thirty Acres of Land in Fee hath issue two Daughters and gives with one of his Daughters to a man that marries her ten Acres of the same Land in Frank-marriage and dies seised of the other twenty Acres Now if she that is thus married will have any part of the twenty Acres whereof her Father died seised she must put her lands given in Frank-marriage in Hotchpot that is she must refuse to take the sole Profits of the Land given in Frank-marriage and suffer the Land to be commixt and mingled together with the other Land whereof her father died seised so that an equal Division may be made of the whole between her and her Sister And thus for her x Acres she shall have xv else her Sister will have the xx Acres of which their Father died seised Housebote HOusebote is necessary Timber that the Lessee for years or for life of common right may take upon the Ground to repair the Houses upon the same Ground to him leased although it be not exprest in the Lease and though it be a Lease by Word without Deed. But if he take more then is needful he may be punisht by an Action of Waste Hue and Cry HUe and Cry is a pursuit of one having committed Felony by the High-way for if the party robbed or any in the company of one that was murthered or robbed comes to the Constable of the next Town and wills him to raise Hue and Cry or to make Pursuit after the Offendor describing the party and shewing as near as he can which way he is gone the Constable ought forthwith to call upon the Parish for aid in seeking the Felon and if he be not found there then to give warning to the next Constable and he to the next to him until the Offendor be apprehended or at least until he be so pursued to the Sea-side Of this see Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. Smith de Repub Angl. lib. 2. cap. 20. and the Statute of Winchester made Anno 13 E. 1. and the Statute of 28 E. 3. cap. 11. and An. 27 El. cap. 13. Huers HUers See Conders Hundred HUndreds were divided by King
keeps an Ale-house to the intent that he may have the Custom of the Inhabitants within the Forrest to come and spend their mony with him and for that he shall wink at their Offences committed within the Forrest Second deliverance SEcond deliverance is a Writ made by the Filacer to deliver Cattle Distreined after the Plaintiff is Non-suit in Replevin Plow Com. 274. Dyer 41. Se defendendo SE defendendo is a Plea for him that is charged with the death of another saying that he was driven unto that which he did in his own defence Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 7. Seigniory in Gross SEigniory in Gross See Lord in Gross Selion SElion comes of the French Sellon that is the Ground rising between two Furrows in Latine Parca a Ridge and it is not of any certain quantity but sometimes more and sometimes less And therefore Crompton in his Jurisdiction of Courts fol. 221. saith that a Selion cannot be demanded because it is uncertain Seneshal SEneshal Steward is a French word borrowed of the Germans and signifies one that hath the dispensing of Iustice in some particular Cases as Stamf. Pl. of the Cor. fol. 152. B. the High Steward of England or of the affairs of a Family as Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 102. Steward of the Kings Houshold and 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 21. and others He is also a learned man appointed by the Lord of a Mannor to hold Courts Leet or Baron Co. 1 Inst 58. 61. Sequestration SEquestration is the Setting aside of a thing in controversie from the possessson of both those that courend for it It is used also for the act of an Ordinary when no man will meddle with the goods and chattels of one deceased as 4 5 M. Dyer fol. 160. b. 7 Eliz. Dyer 232. a. And so it is used also for the Gathering of fruits and profits of a Benefice void for the use of the next Incumbent by the Statute of 28 H. 8. cap. 11. Knights Service TO hold by Knights Service is to hold by Homage Fealty and Escuage and it draws to it Ward Marriage and Relief And note that Knights Service is Service of Lands or Tenements to bear arms in War in defence of this Realm and it owes Ward and Marriage by reason that none is able nor of power nor may have knowledge to bear arms before he be of the age of xxi years And to the end that the Lord shall not lose that which of right he ought to have and that the power of the Realm be nothing weakned the Law wills because of his tender age that the Lord have him and his Lands in his Ward till full age that is to say xxi years But see the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. whereby all Tenures are turned into free and common Soccage Sessions SEssions is a Sitting of Iustices in Court upon their Commission as the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 67. Quarter Sessions otherwise called General Sessions or open Sessions 5 El. c. 4. opposite whereunto are Privy or especial Sessions which are procured upon some especial occasion for the speedy expedition of Iustice Cromp. Justice of P. fol. 110. What things are enquirable in General Sessions see Cromp. as above and fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are held by the high Constables of every Hundred for the placing of Servants An. 5. El. cap. 4. in the end Severance SEverance is the Singling of two or more that are joyned in a Writ As if two are joyned in a Writ De liberate probanda and the one afterward is non-suited in this case Seveance is permitted so that notwithstanding the Nonsuit of the one the other may alone proceed F. N. B. fol. 78. See of this Brook tit Severance Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases Severance is permitted then what it is There is also Severance in Assise Old Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And Severance in Attaint fol. 95. col 2. And Severance in Debt fol. 200. col 1. And Severance in Quare impedit Coke l ● b. 5. fol. 97. Sewers SEwers seems to be a word compounded of two French words Seoir to sit and Eau Water for that the Sewers are Commissioners that sit by virtue of their Commission and Authority grounded upon divers Statutes to enquire of all Nusances and Offences committed by the stopping of Rivers erecting of Mills not repairing of Banks and Bridges c. and to tax and rate all whom it may concern for the amending of all defaults which tend to the hindrance of the free passage of the Water through her old and ancient Courses See the Statute of 6 H. 6. cap. 5. 23 H. 8. cap. 5. for the form of their Commission Shack. SHack is a peculiar name of Common used in the County of Norfolk and Cattel go to Shack is as much to say as to go at liberty or to go at large And this Common called Shack which in the beginning was but in nature of a Feeding because of vicinage for avoiding of Suits in some places within this County is by Custom altered into the nature of Common appendant or appurtenant and in some places it retains its Original Nature Coke lib. 7. fol. 5. Shewing SHewing is to be quit with Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in Plaints shewed and not allowed Soc. SOC is Suit of Men in your Court according to the custom of the Realm Soccage TO holo in Soccage is to hold of any Lord Lands or Tenements yeelding him a certain Rent by the year for all manner of Services To hold by Soccage is not to hold by Knights Service nor doth Ward Marriage or Relief belong to it but they shall double once their Rent after the death of their Ancestor according to that that they be wont to pay to their Lord. And they shall not be above measure grieved as it appears in the Treatise of Wards and Relief And note well that Soccage is in 3 manners that is to say Soccage in free Tenure Soccage in ancient Tenure and Soccage in base Tenure Soccage in free Tenure is when one holds of another by Fealty and certain Rent for all manner of Services as is before said And of all Lands holden in Soccage the next of kin shall have the Ward to whom the Heritage may not discend till the age of xiv years that is to say if the Heritage come by the part of the Father they of the part of the Mother shall have the Ward and contrariwise If the Gardian in Soccage make waste he shall not be impeached of waste but he shall yield accompt to the Heir when he shall come to his full age of 21 years for which see the Statutes of Marlebr ca. 17. Soccage of ancient Tenure is that where the people held in Ancient Demesne who were wont to have no other Writ than the Writ of Right close which was determined According to the ●
of this Sect. Lord in Grosse LOrd in Grosse is he who is Lord without a Mannor as the King in respect of his Crown Fitz. Nat. Brev. fol. 5. A man makes a Gift in tail of all his Land to hold of him and dies his Heir hath nothing but a Seignory in Gross Lotherwit LOtherwit is that you may take amends of him who doth deffle your Bondwoman without your licence Lushburgh LUshburgh was a counterfeit Coin in the time of E. 3. made beyond Seas in likeness of English Moneys and brought in to deceive the King and his Subjects And therefore it is declared to be Treason by the Stat. of 25 E. 3. Stat. 5. cap. 2. for any man to bring it into the Realm knowing it to be false M. Maegbote MAEgbote was a a Recompence for a Kinsman slain Maihem or Maime MAihem or Maime is where by the wrongful act of another any Member is hurt or taken away whereby the party is made unperfect to fight As if a Bone be taken out of the Head or broken in any other part of the Body or Foot or Hand or Finger or Joynt of a Foot or any Member be cut or by some Wound the Sinews be made to shrink or the Fingers made crooked or if an Eye be put out Fore-teeth broken or any other thing hurt in a mans Body by means whereof he is made the less able to defend himself or offend his enemy But the cutting off of an Ear or Nose or breaking of the Hinder-teeth or such like is no Maihem because it is rather a deformity of Body then diminishing of Strength and that is commonly tryed by the Justices beholding the party And if the Justices stand in doubt whether the hurt be a Maihem or not they use and will of their own discretion take the help and opinion of some skilful Chirurgeon to consider thereof before they determine upon the Cause Mainpernable MAinpernable that may be mainprised or delivered to Mainpernors See the Statute of Westm 1. Cap. 15. what persons may be mainpernable what not Mainprise MAinprise is when a man is arrested by Capias the Iudge may deliver his body to certain men to keep and to bring before him at a certain day and these are called Mainpernors and if the party appear not at the day assigned the Mainpernors shall be amerced Maintenance MAintenance is where any man gives or delivers to another that is Plaintif or Defendant in any Action any sum of money or other thing to maintain his Plea or takes great pains for him when he hath nothing therewith to do then the party grieved shall have against him a Writ called a Writ of Maintenance Manbote MAnbote signifies a Pecuniary Compensation for the killing a man Lambert Mandamus MAndamus is a Writ that goes to the Escheator for the finding of an Dffice after the death of one that died the Kings Tenant and it is all one with the Writ of Diem clausit extremum but that the Diem clausit extremum goes out within the year after the death and the Mandamus goes not out till after the year and in case where there was never any Diem clausit extremum sued out or was not sued out with effect Fitz. N. B. 253. B. C. See the Stat. 12 Car. 1. cap. 24. Also there is another sort of Mandamus granted upon Motion in the Kings Bench one to the Bishop to admit an Executor to prove a Will or to grant Administration Stiles Reports 78. Another to command Corporations to restore Aldermen and others to Offices out of which they are unjustly put out Look 11 Report James Bag 's Case Mannor MAnnor is compounded of divers things as of a House Arable Land Pasture Meadow Wood Rent Advowson Court-Baron and such like which make a Mannor And this ought to be by long continuance of time the contrary whereof mans memory cannot discern for at this day a Mannor cannot be made because a Court-Baron cannot now be made and a Mannor cannot be without a Court-Baron and Suiters and Freeholders two at the least for if all the Free-holds except one escheat to the Lord or if he purchase all except one there his Mannor is gon for that it cannot be a Mannor without a Court-Baron as is aforesaid and a Court-Baron cannot be holden but before Suiters and not before one Suiter and therefore where but one Free-hold or Freeholder is there cannot be a Mannor properly although in common speech it may be so called Mansion MAnsion Mansio is most commonly taken for the chief Messuage or Habitation of the Lord of a Mannor the Mannor-house where he doth most reside his Capital Messuage as it is called of which the Wife by the Statute of Mag. Chart cap. 7. shall have her Quarentine Munucaptio MAnucaptio is a Writ that lies for him who is arrested or indicted of Felony and offers sufficient Sureties for his Appearance but the Sheriff or he whom it concerns will not suffer him to be bailed then he shall have his Writ to command them to suffer him to be bailed See of this Fitz. N. B. fol. 249. G. Manumission MAnumission is the making a Bond-man free and may be in two sorts the one is a Manumission expressed the other a Manumission implied Manumission expressed is where the Lord makes a Deed to his Villain to Infranchise him by this word Manumittere which is as much to say as to let one go out of another mans hands or power The manner of Manumitting or Infranchising in old time most usually was thus The Lord in presence of his Neighbors took the Bondman by the Head saying I will that this Man be free and therewith shoved him forward out of his hand and by this he was free Manumission implied without this word Manumitere is when the Lord makes an Obligation to his Villain to pay him money at a certain day or sues him where he might enter without Suit or grants him an Annuity or Leases Lands to him by Deed for years or life and in divers like cases the Villain thereby is made free Marchers MArchers are the Noble-men dwelling on the Marches of Wales or Scotland who in ● imes past had their private laws as if they had been Kings and therefore in the Statutes of 2 H. 4. c. 28. 26 H. 8. cap. 6. 27 H. 8. cap. 26. and 1 E. 6. cap. 10. they are called Lord Marchers Marches MArches are the bounds and Limits betwixt us and Wales or Scotland so called either from the German word March which signifies a Frontire or Border or else from the French word Marque that is a Sign or Token of Distinction these being the notorious Distinctions of two divers Countries Of these you shall read in the Statutes of 4 H. 5. cap. 7. 22 E. 4. cap. 8. 24 H. 8. cap. 9. and others Marshal MArshal is a general word for many Officers in England as the Lord or Earl Marshal of whom mention is made in the Statutes
of 13 R. 2. cap. 2. and 1 H. 4. c. 7. 14. the Marshal of the Kings House of whom you may read F. N. B. f. 241. B. and in the Statute of Artic. sup Chart. c. 3. 18 E. 3. c. 7. 2 H. 4. c. 23. 15 H 6. c. 1. and others There are also other inferior Marshals mentioned in our Books as the Marshal of the Kings Bench in the Statute of 5 E. 3. c. 8. and F. N. B. f. 251. l. who hath the custody of all the Prisoners of that Court and the Marshal of the Exchequer mentioned in the Statute of 51 H. 3. Stat. 5. called the Statute of the Exchequer Marshal is a French word and is as much to say as Master of the Horse for it seems to come of the German Marschalk which hath that signification Marshalsea MArshalsea is the Court or Seat of the Marshal of the Kings House of which you may read at large in Coke l. 6. f. 20. B. l. 10. f. 68. B. It is also taken for the Prison belonging to the Court of the Kings Bench of which the Marshal of that Court is the Keeper for so are the forms of the Bills there that A complains of B in the custody of the Marshal of the Marshalsea of our Lord the King c. Maugre MAugre is a word compound of two French words Mal and Gree so that it is as much as to say with an unwilling mind or in despight of another And so it is used in Littleton sect 672. where it is said that the Husband and Wife shall be remitted maugre the Husband that is in despight or against the will of the Husband Maximes MAximes are the Foundations of the Law and the Conclusions of Reason and are Causes efficient and certain universal Propositions so sure and perfect that they may not be at any time Impeached or Impugned but ought always to be observed and holden as strong Principles and Authorities of themselves although they cannot be proved by force of Argument or Demonstrations Logical but are known by Induction by the way of Sense and Memory For example it is a Maxime that If a man have Issue two Sons by divers women and the one purchases Lands in Fee and dies without issue the other shall never be his Heir c. And it is another Maxime that Lands shall discend from the Father to the Son but not from the Son to the Father for that is an Ascension c. And divers such there are whereof see Doctor and Student Maynour MAynour is when a Thief hath stollen and is followed with Hue and Cry and taken having that found about him which he stole that is called Maynour And so we commonly use to say when we find one doing of an unlawful act that we took him with the maynour or manner Meane MEane See Mesne Mease MEase or Messuage seems to come from the French word Maison or Mansion which is no other but a Place of abiding or habitation And yet Messuage in our Law contains more then the very place of habitation for a House and a Messuage differ in that a House cannot be intended other then the matter of Building but a Messuage shall be said all the Mansion-place and the Curtelage shall be taken as parcel of the Messuage 20 H. 7. Keloway fol. 57. a. And by the name of a Messuage the Garden and Curtelage shall pass Plowden fol. 171. a. Measondue MEasondue is an Appellation of divers Hospitals in this Kingdom which are so named Anno 2 3 P. M. cap. 23. 15 Car. 2. c. 7. And it comes of the French Maison de Dieu and is no more but Gods House in English Medietas Linguae MEdietas Linguae is an Inquest Impannelled upon any cause whereof the one half is of Denizens the other Strangers and it is used in Pleas between parties whereof one is a Denizen and the other a Stranger And this manner of Trial was first given by the Statute of 27 E. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 8. And by the Statute of 28 E. 3. c. 13. it was granted in cases where the King himself was party with an Alien Melius inquirendo MElius inquirendo is a Writ directed to the Escheator for a second Inquiry to be made when there is any doubt made of partiality in an Inquiry made upon a Diem clausit extremum after the death of the Kings Tenant See F. N. B. f. 255. C. Merchenlage MErchenlage is one of those three Laws out of which William the Conqueror framed our Common Laws with a mixture of the Laws of Normandy And it was the Law of the Mercians when they had the Government of the third part of this Realm Mesnalty MEsnalty is the right of the Mesne as the Mesnalty is extinct Old Nat. Br. f. 44. Mesne MEsne is where the Owner of Lands or Tenements holds of one by certain Services and he holds them of another by like or other Services then he who holds the Lands is called Tenant paravail and he of whom it is held is called Mesne and he of whom the Mesue holds is called chief Lord or Lord Paramount And in this case if the Lord above distrains the Tenant for the Service of the Mesne who ought to aequit him to the chief Lord then the Tenant shall have a Writ of Mesne so called against the Mesne and if he acquit not the Tenant then the Mesne shall lose the Service of the Tenant and shall be forejudged of his Seigniory and the Tenant shall be immediate Tenant to the chief Lord and shall do him the same Service and Suits as the Mesne did Messuage MEssuage See Mease Metropolitane MEtropolitane signifies the Arch-bishops of whom Centerbury is stiled Totius Angliae Primas Metropol And York the like Title without the word Totius Miscreant MIscreant is one who is perverted to Heresie or a faise Religion Bro. Presentation 54. Mise MIse is a French word and signifies as much as Expensum in Latine and it is so ordinarily used in the Entries of Iudgments in Personal Actions when the Plaintiff recovers the Entry is that Recuperet damna sua to such a value and pro misis custagis for Costs and Charges so much There is also another acception or signification of this word in the Law where it is taken for the Issue to be tried by Battail of Grand Assise And so it is used in Littleton sect 478. 482. and divers others where joyning of the Mise upon the meer right is putting it in Issue who hath the best or clearest right Misericordia MIsericordia is used in the Common Law for an Amerciament or Mulct set upon any for an offence as where the Plaintiff or Defendant in any Action are amerced the Entry is always Ideo in misericordia c. And it is therefore called Misericordia as Fitzh says N. B. fol. 75. H. for that it should be but small and less then the fault and saving his Contenement as