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A28468 Nomo-lexikon, a law-dictionary interpreting such difficult and obscure words and terms as are found either in our common or statute, ancient or modern lawes : with references to the several statutes, records, registers, law-books, charters, ancient deeds, and manuscripts, wherein the words are used : and etymologies, where they properly occur / by Thomas Blount of the Inner Temple, Esq. Blount, Thomas, 1618-1679. 1670 (1670) Wing B3340; ESTC R19028 517,540 312

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or Grant either in writing or without writing As if I enfeoff a Man in Lands reserving a Rent to be paid at such a Feast upon Condition if the Feoffee fail of payment at the day then it shall be lawful for me to re-enter Condition Implied which is called a Condition in Law Is when a Man Grants to another the Office of Keeper of a Park Steward Bailiff or the like for Life though there be no Condition at all expressed in the Grant yet the Law makes one covertly which is if the Grantee does not justly execute all things pertaining to his Office by himself or his sufficient Deputy it shall be lawful for the Grantor to enter and discharge him of his Office See Littleton lib. 3. cap. 5. Cone and Key Bracton lib. 2. cap. 37. num 3. Foemina in tali atate i. 14 15 Annorum potest disponere Domui suae habere Cone Key Colne in the Saxon signifies Calculus computus and Key clavis So that a Woman was then held to be of competent years when she was able to keep the Accounts and Keys of the House and Glanv lib. 7. cap. 9. hath somewhat to the same purpose Confederacy Confederatio Is when two or more confederate or combine themselves to do any damage to another or to commit any unlawful act And though a Writ of Conspiracy does not lie if the party be not indited and in lawful manner acquitted for so are the words of the Writ yet false confederacy between divers persons shall be punished though nothing be put in execution which appears by the Book of 27 Assis Placit 44. where two w●●e indited of Confederacy each to maintain other whether their matter were true or false and though nothing were supposed to be put in practise the Parties were enjoyn'd to answer since the thing is forbidden by Law So in the next Article in the same Book enquiry shall be made of Conspirators and Confederators which binde themselves together c. This Confederacy punishable by Law before it be executed ought to have four incidents First It must be declared by some matter of prosecution as by making of Bonds or Promises the one to the other 2. Malicious as for unjust revenge 3. It ought to be false against an innocent Lastly to be out of Court voluntary Terms de la Ley. Confirmation Confirmatio Is a strengthning or confirming an estate to one who hath the possession by a voidable Title though not at present void As a Bishop grants his Chancellorship by Patent for term of the Patentees life This is no void grant but voidable by the Bishops death except it be strengthned by the Dean and Chapters Confirmation See more of this in West pa. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 500. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 169. b. and Littleton lib. 3. cap. 9. Confiscate From the Lat. Confiscare and that from Fiscus which originally signifies a Hamper Pannier or Basket but Metonymically the Emperors Treasure which was anciently kept in such Hampers and though our King keeps not His Treasure in such things yet as the Romans said such Goods as were forfeited to the Emperors Treasury for any offence were Bona confiscata so say we of those that are forfeited to our Kings Exchequer And the title to have these Goods is given the King by the Law when they are not claimed by some other As if a Man be indited for feloniously stealing the Goods of another where in truth they are the proper Goods of him indited and they are brought in Court against him who being asked what he saith to the said Goods disclaims them By this Disclaimer he shall lose the Goods though he be afterwards acquitted of the Felony and the King shall have them as Confiscate but otherwise if he had not disclaimed them So 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 forfeited not Confiscate notwithstanding his disavowment See more in Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 3. cap. 24. Note Confiscare Forisfacere are Synonyma and Bona confiscata are Bona forisfacta 3 Inst fol. 227. Confrairie Fr. A Fraternity Fellowship or Society as the Confrairie de Seint George or de les Chivaliors de la bleu Jartier Selden Confréeres Fr. Confreres Brethren in a Religious House Fellows of one and the same House or Society Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 24. Congeable from the Fr. Conge i. Leave Licence or Permission Signifies as much as lawful or lawfully done or done with leave of permission as The entry of the Disseisee is congeable Littleton sect 410. and 2 par Croke fol. 31. Conge d'●●ccorder Fr. i. Leave to accord or agree I finde it in the Statute of Fines An. 18 Edw. 1. in these words When the Writ original is delivered in presence of the Parties before Justices a Pleader shall say this Sir Justice Conge d'Accorder and the Justice shall say to him What saith Sir R. and shall name one of the Parties c. Conge d'Eslire Fr. i. Leave to chuse Signifies the Kings Permission Royal to a Dean and Chapter in time of Vacation to chuse a Bishop or to an Abbey or Priory of his own Foundation to chuse their Abbot or Prior. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 169 170. Gwin in the Preface to his Readings says The King of England as Soveraign Patron of all Arch-Bishopricks Bishopricks and other Eccsesiastical Benefices had of ancient time free appointment of all Ecclesiastical Dignities whensoever they chanced to be void investing them first per baculum annulum and afterwards by His Letters Patent and that in process of time he made the Election over to others under certain Forms and Conditions as namely that they should at every vacation before they chuse demand of the King Conge d'Eslire that is Leave to proceed to Election and then after the Election to crave His Royal assent c. And he affirms that King John was the first that granted this which was afterward confirmed by Westm 1. cap. 1. and again by Articuli Cleri cap. 2. Congius An ancient Measure of Six Sextaries which is about a Gallon and a Pint. Et reddat quinque Congios celia unum Ydromelli triginta panes cum pertinentibus pulmentariis Carta Edmundi Regis de Anno 946. Conisance See Cognizance Conisor alias Cognizor Recognit●r Is used in the passing of Fines for him that acknowledges the Fine and the Conizee is he to whom the Fine is acknowledged Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 5. West pa. 1. Symb. lib. 2. sect 49. and Parte 2. tit Fines sect 114. Conjuration Conjuratio Signifies a Plot or Confederacy made by some persons combining themselves together by oath or promise to do some publick harm But it is more especially used for the having personal conference with
15. this County Palatine of Hexham was stript of its Priviledge and reduced to be a part of the County of Northumberland The cheif Governors of these Counties Palatines by special Charter from the King did heretofore send out all Writs in their own names and did all things touching Justice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other Counties onely acknowledging him their Superior and Soveraign But by the Statute 27 Hen. 8. cap. 24. This power is much abridged to which I refer the Reader as also to Cromp. Jurisd fol. 137. and 4 Instit fol. 204 221. Besides these Counties of both sorts there are likewise unto some Cities some Territory or Lands or Jurisdiction annexed as the County of Middlesex by King Henry the First to the City of London The County of the City of York Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Chester Anno 43 Eliz. cap. 15. Canterbury Lamb. Eiren. lib. 1. cap. 9. Norwich Worcester Coventry Exeter c. The County of the Town of Kingston upon Hull 32 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Newcastle upon Tine c. The County of the Town of Haverford West 35 Hen. 8. cap. 16. County is in another signification used for the County Court which the Sheriff keeps every Moneth either by himself or his Deputy Anno 2 Edw. 6. cap. 25. Cromp. Jur. fol. 221. Bracton lib. 3. cap. 7. and lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. The word Comitatus is also used for a Jurisdiction or Territory among the Feudists County Court Curia Comitatus Is by Lambert otherwise called Conventus and divided into two sorts one retaining the general name as the County Court held every Moneth by the Sheriff or his Deputy the Under-Sheriff The other called the Turn held twice every year of both which you may read in Cromp. Jurisd fol. 231. This County Court had in ancient times the cognition of great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2 3 4. by Bracton and Britton in divers places and by Fleta lib. 2. cap. 62. but was abridged by Magna Charta cap. 17. and much by 1 Edw. 4. cap. unico It had also and hath the Determination of certain Trespasses and Debts under Forty shillings Britton cap. 27. 28. Counting-House of the Kings Houshold Domus Computus Hospitii Regis Commonly called the Green-Cloth in respect of the Green-cloth on the Table where sit the Lord Steward the Treasurer of the Kings House the Comptroller Master of the Houshold Cofferer and two Clerks Comptrollers for daily taking the Accompts of all Expences of the Houshold making provisions and ordering payment for the same for the good Government of the Kings Houshold Servants and for paying the Wages of those below Stairs Vide 39 Eliz. cap. 7. and 4 Inst fol. 131. Courratier Fr. A Horse-courser 2 Inst fol. 719. Coursitour See Cursiter Court Curia Signifies the Kings Palace or Mansion and more especially the place where Justice is judicially administred of which you may finde Thirty two several sorts in Cromptons Jurisdictions well described whereof most are Courts of Record some not and therefore are accounted Base Courts in comparison of the rest Besides these there are also Courts Christian Smith de Rep. Angl. lib. 3. cap. 6. which are so called because they handle matters especially appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledge in Divinity cannot be well judged of being held heretofore by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope because he challenged the superiority in all Causes Spiritual but since his ejection they hold them by the Kings Authority Virtute Magistratus sui as the Admiral of England doth his Court Whereupon they send out their Precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Justices of the Kings Courts do And therefore as the Appeal from these Courts did lie to Rome now by the Stat. 25 Hen. 8. cap. 19. it lies to the King in his Chancery Court Baron Curia Baronis Is a Court which every Lord of a Mannor who in ancient times were called Barons hath within his own Precincts Barons in other Nations have great Territories and Jurisdiction from their Soveraigns But here in England what they are and have been heretofore see in Baron Of this Court and Court Leet read Kitchin Sir Edward Coke lib. 4. among his Copihold Cases fol. 26. b. says That this Court is twofold after a sort and therefore if a Man having a Mannor grant the Inheritance of the Copiholders to another the Grantee may keep a Court for the Customary Tenants and accept Surrenders to the use of others and make both Admittances and Grants the other Court is of Freeholders which is properly called the Court Baron wherein the suters that is the Freeholders are Judges whereas of the other the Lord or his Steward is Judge Court of Py-powders See Py-Powders Court of Requests Curia Requisitionum Was a Court of Equity of the same nature with the Chancery but inferior to it principally instituted for the relief of such Petitioners as in conscionable Cases addressed themselves by Supplication to His Majesty Of this Court the Lord Privy Seal was chief Judge assisted by the Masters of Requests and had beginning about 9 Hen. 7. according to Sir Julius Caesars Tractate on this subject Mich. 40 41 Eliz. in the Court of Common Pleas it was adjudged upon solemn Argument That this Court of Requests or the Whitehal was no Court that had power of Judicature c. See 4 Part. Inst fol. 97. Court of the Legat Was a Court obtained by Cardinal Woolsey of Pope Leo the Tenth in the Ninth year of Henry the Eighth wherein he had power to prove Wills and dispence with Offences against the Spiritual Laws c. And was but of short continuance Court Christian Curia Christianitatis So called because as in the Secular Courts the Kings Laws do sway and decide Causes so in Ecclesiastical Courts the Laws of Christ should rule and direct for which Cause the Judges in those Courts are Divines as Archbishops Bishops Arch-Deacons c. Linwoods words are these In Curia Christianitatis i. Ecclesiae in qua servantur Leges Christi cum tamen in foro regio serventur Leges mundi 2 Part. Inst fol. 488. See before in Court Court of Delegates See Delegates Court of Chivalry Curia Militaris Otherwise called the Marshal Court the Judges of it are the Lord Constable of England and the Earl Marshal of England This Court is the Fountain of the Marshal Law and the Earl Marshal is both one of the Judges and to see execution done See Constable and 4 Part. Instit fol. 123. JEhan filz frere uncle au Roys Duc de Bedford d'Anjou Conte Richemond de Kendal Conestable d'Angleterre a nostre treschere Cousin Jehan Due de Norfolk Mareshal d'Angleterre salus Nous vous mandons chargeons qui vous facez arrestre venir devant nous ou nostre Lieutenant a Westminster a la Quinsiesm du Saint
commanded every Man to take warning for raking up his fire and putting out his light So that in many places at this day where a Bell is customably rung towards Bed-time it is said to ring Curfeu Hil. 3 Rich. 2. Coram Rege Rot. 8. London Curia See Court Curia advisare vult Is a Deliberation which the Court sometimes takes before they give Judgment in a Cause wherein there seems to be any point of difficulty for which see the New Book of Entries on this word Curia claudenda Is a Writ that lies against him who should fence and enclose his ground if he refuse or defer to do it Reg. of Writs fol. 155. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 127. New Book of Entries verbo Curia claudenda Curia Penticiarum Id est Curia in civitate Cestriae coram Vice-comite ibidem in Aula Penticia ejusdem Civitatis Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. It is probable this Court was originally held under a Pentice or Shed covered with Bords and thence took denomination Curnock Is four Bushels or half a Quarter of Corn. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. Cursitors Clerici de cursu Of these there are in the Chancery twenty who make out original Writs and are a Corporation of themselves and to every Clerk are appointed certain Counties 2 Inst fol. 670. Curtesie of England Jus Curialitatis Angliae Is where a Man takes a Wife seised of Land in Fee-simple Fee-tail general or as Heir in Tail special and hath issue by her Male or Female born alive if the Wife die the Husband shall hold the Land during his life by the Law of England And he is called Tenant by the Curtesie of England because this Priviledge is not allowed in any other Realm except in Scotland where it is called Curialitas Scotiae See more upon this word in the Terms of the Law Curteyn Curtana Was the name of King Edward the Confessors Sword which is the first Sword that is carried before the Kings of England at their Coronation Matth. Paris in Hen. 3. And it is said the point of it is broken which may argue an emblem of Mercy Curtilage Curtilagium Hortus olitorius vel ubi olera leguntur A Gardin Yard Backside or as they call it in Herefordshire a Fold Persoluat decimam Lactis hortorum Curtilagiorum Lanae c. Provinciale Angl. lib. 3. tit de Decimis Et si in Curtilagio alicujus bladum seminaretur decimam garbam illius bladi sicut in campis percipiet Inq. 36 Hen. 3. Mihi dici videtur Curtilagium says Spelman à Curtillum ago scil locus ubi curtis vel curtilli negotium agitur It is mentioned Anno 4 Edw. 1. cap. unico Anno 35 Hen. 8. cap 4. and 39 Eliz cap. 2. See Coke vol. 6. fol 64. a. and Bulstrodes Rep. 2 par fol. 113. Custode admittendo Custode amovendo Are Writs for the admitting or removing of Guardians Reg. of Writs in indice Custodes libertatis Angliae Authoritate Parliamenti Was the stile or title in which Writs and other Judicial Proceedings did run in the Rump time that is from the Decollation of King Charles the First till the Vsurper Oliver was declared Protector c. mentioned in the Statute of 12 Car. 2. cap. 3. Custom Consuetudo hath the same signification with us as with the Civilians being by both accounted a part of the Law Consuctudo quandoque pro lege servatur saith Bracton in partibus uhi fuerit more utentium approbata longavi enim temporis usus consuetudinis non est vilis authoritas Lib. 1. cap. 3. Custom is a Law or Right not written which being established by long use and the consent of our Ancestors and those of our Kinred that are Ultra Tritavum hath been and daily is practised So that allowing the Father to be so much older then his Son as pubertas or the years of generation require the Grand-father so much elder then him and so forth usque ad tritavum we cannot say this or that is a Custom except we can justifie it hath continued so one hundred years For tritavus must be so much elder then the party that pleads it yet because that is hard to prove it is enough for the proof of a Custom if two or more witnesses can depose they heard their Fathers say it was a Custom all their time and that their Fathers heard their Fathers also say it was so in their time If it be to be proved by Record the continuance of one hundred years will suffice Sir Jo. Davies Rep. in Praef. fol. 32. Custom is either general or particular General is that which is currant through England whereof you shall read divers in Doctor and Student lib. 1. cap. 7. Particular is that which belongs to this or that Lordship City or Town Custom differs from Prescription that being common to more Prescription for the most part particular to this or that Man Again Prescription may be for a far shorter time than Custom viz. for five years or less Out of our Statute you may have greater diversity which see collected in Cowels Institutes tit de usucap longi temp praescript Custom is also used for the Tribute or Toll called Tonnage and Poundage which Merchants pay to the King for carrying out and bringing in Merchandise Anno 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 1. cap. 21. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. In which signification it is Latined Custuma Reg. of Writs fol. 138. a. and 4 Inst fol. 29. And lastly for such services as Tenants of a Mannor ow to their Lord. Custom-house Is a House in London where the Kings Customs are received and the whole business relating thereunto transacted Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 4. Customary Tenants Tenentes per consuctudinem Are such Tenants as hold by the Custom of the Mannor as their special Evidence See Copihold Custos brevium Is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common Pleas and made by the Kings Letters Patent whose Office is to receive and keep all the Writs retornable in that Court and put them upon Files every return by it self and to receive of the Protonotaries all the Records of Nisi Prius called the Postea's For they are first brought in by the Clerks of the Assise of every Circuit to the Protonotary who entered the Issue in that matter to enter the Judgment And four days after the return thereof which is allowed to speak in Arrest of Judgment the Protonotary enters the Verdict and Judgment thereupon into the Rolls of the Court and afterwards delivers them over to the Custos Brevium who binds them into a bundle and makes entry also of the Writs of Covenant and the Concord upon every Fine and maketh forth Exemplifications and Copies of all Writs and Records in his Office and of all Fines lovied The Fines after they are engrossed are thus divided between the Custos brevium and the Chirographer this always keeps the Writ of Covenant and the Note the
with Camden and sets down the victories whence this Order was occasion'd whatsoever cause of beginning it had the Order is inferior to none in the World in Honor or Antiquity consisting of 26 Martial and Heroical Nobles whereof the King of England is the Chief and the rest are either Nobles of the Realm or Princes of other Countries friends and confederates with this Nation the Honour being such as Emperours and Kings of other Nations have desired and thankfully accepted it being long before the order of St. Michael in France the Golden Fleece in Burgundy or the Anunciada in Savoy The Ceremonies of the Chapter proceeding to Election the Investitures and Robes the Installation Vow with such other observations see in Segars Honor militar civil lib. 2. ca. 9. fol. 65. See Knights of the Garter and Seldens Titles of Honour fol. 792. Garter also signifies the Principal king at Armes among our English Heralds attending upon the Knights thereof created by King Henry the Fifth and mentioned in the Statute 14 Car. 2. ca. 33. See Herald Garth In the North of England signifies a Back-side or a little Close or Homestead also a Dam or Wear in a River where Fish are caught called a Fish-garth It seems to be an ancient British word For Gardd in that language signifies a Garden the dd being liquefy'd in the pronunciation like th Garthman Anno 17 Rich. 2. ca. 9. It is ordained that no Fisher nor Garthman shall use any Nets or Engins to destroy the fry of fish c. Whereby it seems to signifie one that keeps or owns an open Wear where Fish are caught It may haply be derived from the Scottish word Gart which signifies forced or compelled because the Fish are forced by the Wear to pass in at a loop where they are caught Gavel Sax. gafel Tribute Toll Custom yearly Rent Payment or Revenue Of which we had of old several kinds paid by Tenants to their Landlords As Gavel-Corn Gavel-malt Oate-gavel Gavel-fodder As you may read in Mr. Fabian Philip's Book Entituled Mistaken Recompence pa. 39 40. Gavelet Is a special and ancient kind of Cessavit used in Kent where the Custom of Gavelkind continues whereby the Tenant shall forfeit his Lands and Tenements to the Lord if he withdraw from him his due Rents and Services after this manner The Lord must seek by the award of his Court from three weeks to three weeks to fin I some distress upon the Tenement until the fourth Court alwayes with Witnesses and if in that time he can find none then at the fourth Court let it be awarded that he take the Tenement into his hand in name of a Distress and keep it a Year and a day without Manuring within which time if the Tenant pay his Arrears and make reasonable amends for the withholding let him have and enjoy his Tenement as before and if he come not before the year and day be past let the Lord go to the next County-Court with his Witness of what past at his own Court and pronounce there this Process to have further Witnesses and then by the award of his own Court he shall enter and Manure the Tenement as his own And if the Tenant will afterwards re-have it and hold it as he did before let him make agreement with the Lord according to this old saying Neghesith selde neghesith geld v l. for his Were er he become healder i. Has he not since any thing given nor any thing paid Then let him pay 5 l. for his Were ere he become healder again Other Copies have the first part thus written and expounded Nigondsith yeld nigonsith geld Let him 9 times pay and 9 times re-pay Of this see 10 Hen. 3. Fitz. tit Cessavit 60 and the Stat. of Gavelet 10 Edw. 2. which gives this Law to Lords of Rents in London And see Westm 2. ca. 21. which gives Cessavit Gavelkind from the Sax gafel i. Census tributum and cynd Natura Genus But Doctor Powel in his Additaments to the Cambrian History and from him Taylor in his History of Gavelkind fol. 26. would have it derived from the British word Gavel importing a Hold or Tenure however it signifies a Tenure or Custom whereby the Lands of the Father are equally divided at his death among all his Sons or the Land of the Brother among all the Brethren if he have no Issue of his own Teutonicis priscis patrios succedit in agros Mascula stirps omnis ne foret ulla potens This Custom is still of force in Kent Urchenfeild in Herefordshire and elsewhere though with some difference But by the Stat. 34 35 Hen. 8. ca. 26. All Gavelkind Lands in Wales are made descendable to the Heir according to the course of the Common-Law Camden in his Brit. says thus Cantiani ea lege Gulielmo Normanno se dediderunt ut patrias consuetudines illaesas retinerent illamque inprimis quam Gavelkind nominat Haec a terrae quae eo nomine censentur liberis masculis ex aequis portionibus dividuntur vel faeminis si masculi non fuerint Adding further Hanc haereditatem cum quintum decimum annum attigerint adeunt sine Domini consensu cuilibet vel dando vel vendendo alienare licet Et filii parentibus furti damnatis in id genus fundi succedunt c. It appears by 18 Hen. 6. ca. 1. That in those dayes there were not above 30 or 40 persons in all Kent that held by any other Tenure which was afterwards altered upon the petition of divers Kentish Gentlemen in much of the Land of that County by Stat. 31 Hen. 8. ca. 3. See Lamberts Perambulation of Kent and Sumners learned Discourse on this Subject Dedi totam terram quam vendidit mihi Michael de Turnham sicut suum liberum Gavilikinde Stoikikinde ad fundandum ibi Domum Religionis c. Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fol. 640. a. Gavelsester Sax. Sextarius vectigalis Cervisiae scilicet sextarius Manerii vel praedii Domino ab usufructuariis cervisiam coquentibus census vel vectigalis nomine pendendus A certain Measure of Rent-Ale Among the Articles to be charged on the Stewards and Bailiffs of the Church of Canterburies Mannors in Kent according to which they were to be accountable this of old was one De Gavel-sester cujuslibet bracini braciati infra libertatem Maneriorum viz. unam lagenam dimidiam Cervisiae It elsewhere occurs under the name of Tol-sester thus De Tolsester Cervisiae hoc est de quolibet bracino per unum annum lagenam de Cervisia And is undoubtedly the same in lieu whereof the Abbot of Abington was wont of Custom to receive that Peny mentioned by Selden in his learned Dissertation annexed to Fleta ca. 8. num 3. and there by some mistake haply of the Printer written Colcester-peny for Tol-sester-penny Nor differs it I think from what in the Glossary at the end of Hen. 1. Laws is called Oale-gavel
possession or a Benefice Dyer fol. 40. num 72. Says a Dean and Chapter are Persons impersonees of a Benefice appropriate to them Impeachment of Waste Impetitio vasti From the Fr. Empeschement i. Impediment Signifies a restraint from committing waste upon Lands or Tenements See Waste Impediens Haec est finalis concordia facta in Curia Domini Regis apud Westm in Octabis Sancti Hillaris Anno Regni Regis Henrici Filii Regis Johannis Septimo Coram Thoma de Multon c. Inter Willielmum de Mohun querentem Will Brewere impedientem de Manerio de Clynton c. Et unde Placitum de Escambio faciendo summonit fuit inter eos in eadem Curia c. Where Impedientem seems to be used for Defendentem or Deforcientem Impetration Impetratio An obtaining by Request and Prayer It is used in our Statutes for the pre-obtaining of Benefices and Church Offices in England from the Court of Rome which did belong to the gift and disposition of our Lord the King and other Lay Patrons of this Realm The penalty whereof was the same with Provisors 25 Edw. 3. See 38 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 1. Impierment Anno 23 Hen. 8. cap. 9. Signifies as much as Impairing or Prejudicing For the words of the Statute are To the great impierment and diminution of their good names Implements from impleo to fill up Are such things as tend to the necessary use of any Trade or Furniture of a House Implead from the Fr. Plaider To sue arrest or prosecute by course of Law Impost Fr. Tribute Tallage or Custom but more particularly it is that Tax which the King receives for such merchandises as are imported into any Haven from other Nations 31 Eliz. cap. 5. And it may be distinguished from Custom which is rather that profit which the King raises from Wares exported but they are sometimes confounded Imprimery Fr. a Print Impression also the Art of Printing or a Printing-House Anno 14 Car. 2. cap. 33. Impropriation of which there are in England 3845. See Appropriation Improbement See Approve In alto imo The same with Alto basso Inborh and Out-borh Sax. Vide Camd. Britan. in Ottadinis Ubi Patricium Comitem Dunbarrensem aevo Hen. tertii Inborow Out-borow inter Angliam Scotiam appellat i. si fas sit a doctissimi viri sententia recedere fidejussorem omnium ex uno in alterum regnum iter facientium sive inter utraque regna viatorum Simile babes in S. C. de Monticulis Walliae inter LL. Saxonicas cap. 6. Sax. Dict. In casu consimili Is a Writ See Casu consimili In casu proviso Is another See Casu proviso Inchanter Incantator Is he or she Qui carminibus vel cantiunculis daemonem adjurat They were anciently called Carmina because in those days their Charms were in Verse 3 Part. Inst fol. 44. Incident incidens Signifies a thing appertaining to or following another that is more worthy or principal As a Court Baron is so incident to a Mannor and a Court of Picpowders to a Fair that they cannot be severed by Grant Kitchin fol. 36. See Coke on Littl. fol. 151. b. Incroche Admirals and their Deputies do Incroche to themselves divers Jurisdictions c. Anno 15 Rich. 2. cap. 3. See Encrochments Incumbent from incumbo i. to endeavor earnestly Is a Clerk who is resident on his Benefice with Cure Coke on Littl. fol. 119. b. And is so called because he does or ought to bend all his study to the discharge of the Cure 10 Hen. 6. 7. And 1 2 Phil. Ma. cap. 17. Inderimable Indecimabilis That is not tythable or ought not by Law to pay Tythe 2 Part. Inst fol. 490. Indenture Indentura Is a writing comprising some Contract Conveyance or Covenant between two or more and being indented in the top answerable to another part which hath the same Contents it thence takes name and differs from a Deed Poll which is a single Deed unindented Coke on Littl. fol. 229. The Civilians define an Indenture to be Scriptura inter creditorem debitorem indentata c. Indefeisible That cannot be defeated undone or made void As A good and indefeisible estate c. Indefensus One that is impleaded and refuseth to Answer MS. de temp E. 3. Indicavit Is a Writ or Prohibition that lies for a Patron of a Church whose Clerk is Defendant in Court Christian in an Action of Tythes commenced by another Clerk and extending to the fourth Part of the Church or of the Tythes belonging to it For in this Case the Sute belongs to the Kings Court by the Statute of Westm 2. cap. 5. Wherefore the Patron of the Defendant being like to be prejudiced in his Church and Advowzen if the Plaintiff obtain in the Court Christian hath this means to remove it to the Kings Court Reg. of Writs fol. 35. b. and Britton cap. 109. Indictor He that indicteth another Man for any orfence Stat. 1 Edw. 3. cap. 11. And Indictee he that is so indicted Anno 21 Jac. cap. 8. Inditement See Enditement Indivisum Is used for that which two hold in Common without Partition Kitchin fol. 241. in these words He holds pro indiviso c. Indorsed Indorsatus Signifies any thing written on the backside of a Deed as a Condition endorsed on the backside of an Obligation the Sealed and delivered c. on the back of an Indenture is called the Indorsement Induction Inductio A leading into It is most commonly taken for the giving an Incumbent Livery and Seisin as it were of his Church by leading him into it and delivering him the Keys of it by the Commissary or Bishops Deputy and by his ringing one of the Bells See 3 Part. Crokes Rep. fol. 258. In esse Anno 21 Jac. cap. 2. In being Philosophers contra-distinguish things in Esse from things in Posse or in Potentia As a Childe before he is born or even conceived is a thing in Posse or which may be After he is born he is said to be in Esse or Actual being Infangthef Infang-theof or Infangenetheof from the Sax. fangan capere Signifies in the old Saxon Latronem infra captum i. taken within the Mannor or Liberty of any Man having jurisdiction granted by the King to try such Theif within his Fee Anno 1 2 Phi. Ma. cap. 15. A Charter of Henry the First to Sir Benedict Rames and S. Ivo the Archbishop hath these words Cum saka seca cum Tol Theam cum infra capto fure In the Laws of S. Edward the Confess cap. 26. Thus Qui habet Sacam Socam Thol Theam Infangthef justitia cognoscentis latronis sua est de homine suo si captus fuerit super terram suam c. Infangthef i. Quod latrones capti in Dominio vel feodo Prioris de latrocinio convicti in Curia Domini Prioris judicentur ad furcas ejus suspendentur
Curia vel invariare Renovamus etiam confirmamus Privilegia antiquorum Regum atque ob reverentiam Dominae nostrae perpetuae Virginis Mariae Sanctique Benedicti Sanctarumque virginum omnibusque futuris ibidem Abbatibus in tota possèssione Monasterii Sacham Socham Theloneumque suum in terra in aqua concedo Consuetudines ut ab omnibus apertius plenius intelligantur Anglice scriptas scilicet Mundbriche Feardwite Firwite Blodewite Mistzeninge Frithsoke Hamsockne Forstall Forphange Theifphange Hangwite Frithbriche Utlepe Infongenthefe Supbriche Tol Tem aliassque omnes leges Consuetudines quae ad me pertinent tam plene tam libere sicut eas in manu mea habebam Confirm Fundationis Monast de Ramsey per S. Edw. Conf. Mon. Angl. 1 par fo 237. Miskering Hoc est quietus pro querelis coram quibuscunque in transumptione probata MS. LL. Rob. Cot. pa. 262. See Mishering Misnomer compounded of the Fr. Mes which in composition alwayes signifies amisse and nomer i. nominare the using one name for another a mis-terming or mis-naming Misprision Fr. Mespris i. contempt or neglect Signifies a neglect negligence or oversight as Misprision of Treason or Felony is a neglect or light account made of Treason or Felony committed by not revealing it when we know of it Stam. pl. Cor. lib. 1. cap. 19. or by suffering any person committed for Treason or Felony or suspition of either to go before he be indited Misprision of Clerks Anno 8 Hen. 6. ca. 15. Is a neglect of Clerks in writing or keeping Records By misprision of Clerks no Process shall be adnulled or discontinued 14 Edw. 3. ca. 6. Stat. 1. For Misprision of Treason the offenders are to suffer imprisonment during the Kings pleasure lose their Goods and the Profits of their Lands during their lives Misprision of Felony is onely Finable by the Justices before whom the party is attainted Cromp. I. of Peace fo 40. Other faults may be accounted Misprisions of Treason or Felony because later Statutes have inflicted that punishment upon them whereof you have an example Anno 14 Eliz. ca. 3. of such as Coyn forrain Coyns not currant in this Realm and their Procurers Aiders and Abettors Misprision also signifies a mistaking Anno 14 Ed. 3. Stat. 1. ca. 6. v. 3 Inst fo 36 and 139. Mis-trial A false or erroneous Trial. Crokes Rep. 3 Part. fo 284. Delves Case Mis-user Is an abuse of liberty or benefit As He shall make Fine for his Misuser Old Nat. Br. fo 149. Mitta Sax. Mensura decem modiorum MS. In Wich salina redd 30 mittas salis Domesday tit Wirec scire Ego Wulfrun uxor Anketelli Singulis annis vitae meae ad Festum S. Benedicti quod est in aestate decem mittas de brasio quinque de gruto quinque mittas farinae triticiae 8 pernas 16 caseos duas vaccas pingues de terra mea Hicheling pro respectu annuo eidem Ecclesiae Ramesiensi procurari decerno Lib. Rames Sect. 38. Praeterea concessi eis septem Mittas Salis quolibet anno percipiendas apud Wiz Mon. Angl. 2 Par. so 262. b. Mittendo manuscriptum pedis Finis Is a Writ Judicial directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer to search and transmit the foot of a Fine acknowledged before Justices in Eyre into the Common-Pleas c. Reg. of Writs fo 14. Mittimus Is a Writ by which Records are transmitted from one Court to another as appears by the Stat. of 5 Rich. 2. ca. 15. as out of the Kings Bench into the Exhhequer And sometimes by a Certiorari into the Chancery and from thence by a Mittimus into another Court as you may see in 28 Hen. 8. Dyer fo 29. and 29 Hen. 8. Dyer fo 32. Mittimus also signifies the Precept that is directed by a Justice of Peace to a Jaylor for the receiving and safe keeping a Felon or other Offender committed by the said Justice See Table of Reg. of Writs for other uses and applications of this Word Mixt tithes decimae mixtae Are those of Cheese Milk c. and of the young of beasts See Cokes 2 Part Inst fo 649. and see Tithe Mockadoes Anno 23 Eliz. ca. 9. A kind of Stuff made in England and elsewhere Moderata misericordia Is a Writ that lies for him who is amer●●d in a Court-Baron or other Court not of Record for any transgression or offence beyond the quality of the fault It is directed to the Lord of the Court or his Bailiff commanding them to take a moderate Amerciament of the party and is founded upon Magna Charta ca. 14. Quod nullus liber homo amercietur nisi secundum qualitatem delicti c. The rest touching this Writ see in Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 75. See Misericordia Modo forma Are words of art in pleadings namely in the Answer of the Defendant whereby he denies to have done the thing laid to his charge modo forma declarata Kitchin fo 232. The Civilians in like case say Negat allegata prout allegantur esse vera Where modo forma are of the substance of the Issue and where but words of course see Coke on Litt. fo 281. b. Modus decimandi Is either when Land or a yearly Pension summ of Money or other profit belong to the Parson Viccar c. by composition or Custom in satisfaction of Tithes in kind MS. penes Auth. See 2 Inst fo 490. Molendinum bladonicum A Corn-mill for which in ancient Charters we also find Molendinum bladum molendinum de blado So a Fulling-mill is thus variously Latin'd in Re-Records Molendinum fullonicum Mol. fullanicum Mol. Fullere Mol. Fullarium Mol de Fulelez A Windmill Molendinum ad ventum venti Molendinum ventriticum ventricium A Water-mill Molendinum aquaticum aquatilium A Horse-mill Molendinum Equitium A Grinding or Griest-Mill Molendinum molare Ex Cartis Record in Mon. Angl. Molman Prior. Lewens pa. 21. omnis Lanceta omnis Toftman omnis Molman qui non sedet super Ogeland debent spergere unam reiam de fiens c. i. Unam strigam vel tractum stercoris a rew of muck Molasses Anno 12 Car. 2. ca. 25. Is the refuse Sirrop in the boiling of Sugar with which by the said Statute Wine is prohibited to be mingled or adulterated Monetagium Jus artificium cudendi monetas Moniers or Moneyors Monetarii Ministers of the Mint which make Coin and deliver out the Kings Moneys Anno 25 Edw. 3. ca. 20. Reg. of Writs fo 262. It appears that in ancient time our Kings of England had Mints in most of the Counties of this Realm and in the Tractate of the Exchequer written by Ockham we find that whereas Sheriffs ordinarily were ty'd to pay into the Exchequer the Kings Sterling-Money for such Debts as they were to answer they of Northumberland and Cumberland were at liberty to pay in any
and hath given name to a Writ granted to recover damage thereupon Scavage Schevage Schewage and Scheauwing From the Sax. sceawian Ostendere Is a kind of Toll or Custom exacted by Mayors Sheriffs c. of Merchant strangers for Wares shewed or offer'd to sale within their liberties which is prohibited by the Statute 19 Hen. 7. ca. 8. In a Charter of Henry the Second to the City of Canterbury it is written Scewinga and in Man Ang. 2 Par. fo 890. b. Sceawing The City of London does still retain the Custom to a good yearly profit Of which Custom the half endell appertaineth to the Sherifs and the other balfen del unto the Hostys in whose Houses the Marchants ben lodged And it is to wet that Scavage is the Shew bycause that Marchantys shewen unto the Sherifs Marchaundyses of the which Custums ought to be taken ore that ony thing thereof be sold c. Out of an old printed Book of the Customes of London Scavenger From the Belgic Scavan i. To scrape or shave away Two in every Parish of London and its Suburbs are yearly chosen into this Office who hire Men called Rakers and Carts to cleanse the Streets and carry away the dirt and filth thereof mentioned 14 Car. 2. ca. 2. The Germans call him a Drecksimon from one Simon a noted Scavenger of Marpurg Scire facias Is a Writ judicial most commonly to call a man to shew cause to the Court whence it issues why Execution of a Judgment passed should not go out This Writ is not granted before a year and a day be passed after the Judgment given Old Nat. Br. fo 151. See Anno 25 Edw. 3. Stat. 5. ca. 2. and 39 Eliz. ca 7. And see other diversities of this Writ in Reg. of Writs and new Book of Entries Scite Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 20. See Site Skarkalla or Scarkella It was especially given in charge by the Justices in Eyre that all Juries should inquire de hiis qui piscantur cum Kiddellis Skarkallis Cokes 2 Part Inst fo 38. But he does not declare what Skarkalla is Scot Sax. sceat i. A part or portion Is according to Rastal A certain custom or common Tallage made to the use of the Sheriff or his Bailiffs Scot sayes Camden out of Matth. Westm illud dicitur quod ex diversis rebus in unum acervum aggregatur Anno 22 Hen. 8. ca. 3. Bearing neither Scot Lot nor other charges c. Anno 33 Hen. 8. ca. 9. In Records it is sometimes written Scoth Scot and Lot Anno 33 Hen 8. ca. 9. Signifies a custumory contribution laid upon all Subjects according to their ability Hoveden in principio Hen. 2. writes it Anlote Anscote In the Lawes of William the Conqueror set forth by Lambert you have these words ca. 125. Et omnis Francigena qui tempore Edwardi propinqui nostri fuit in Anglia particeps Consuetudinum Anglorum quod dicunt Anhlote Anscote per solvantur secundum legem Anglorum Again Rex omne injustum Scottum interdixit Hoveden in Anno 1088. Scot from the Sax. sceat ut supra Lot Sax. Llot i. Sors WIllielmus Rex Anglorum Herberto Norwicensi Episcopo omnibus Baronibus suis de Norfolc Suffolc salutem Sciatis me dedisse Sanctae Trinitati Norwicensi Ecclesiae rogatu Rogeri Bigoti terram Michaelis de Utmonasterio terram de Tanerham quae ad eandem terram pertinet quietam semper liberam ab omnibus Scotis Geldis omnibus aliis Consuetudinibus T. Eudonc Dapifero apud Westm c. Scotal or Scotale Scotalla Scotalium Is a word used in the Charter of the Forest ca. 7. Nullus Forestarius vel Bedellus faciat Scotallas vel Garbas colligat vel aliquam Collectam faciat c. Manwood Par. 1. pa. 216. defines it thus A Scotal is where any Officer of the Forest keeps an Alehouse within the Forest by color of his Office causing men to come to his House and there to spend their Money for fear of displeasure It is compounded of Scot and Ale which by transposition of the words is otherwise called an Aleshot and by the Welshmen Cymmorth MEmorandum quod praedicti tenentes de South-malling debent de consuetudine inter eos facere Scotalium de xvi denariis ob Ita quod de singulis sex denariis detur 1 denar ob ad potandum cum Bedello Domini Archiepiscopi super praedictum Feodum Ex vetere Consuetudinario Manerii de Southmalling in Archivis Archiep. Cantuar. Scrudland Sax. Terra cujus proventus vestibus emendis assignati sunt Land allotted for buying apparel or cloathing Ita Eadsius quidem Presbyter in Charta sua Ecclesiae Cantuar. data Dedit etiam terram illam apud Orpedingtunam in vita sua pro anima sua Deo in Ecclesia Christi servientibus in Scrudland i. Fundum vestiarium Sax. Dict. Scutage Scutagium Sax. Scildpenig Hen. 3. for his voyage to the Holy-Land had a Tenth granted by the Clergy and Scutage three marks of every Knights-Fee by the Laity Baker in Hen. 3. This was also granted to Henry the Second Richard the First and King John Scutagio habendo Was a Writ that lay for the King or other Lord against the Tenant that held by Knights-Service to serve by himself or a sufficient man in his place in War against Scots or French or else to pay c. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 83. Scutum armorum A Sheild or Coat of Armes Noverint universi per presentes me Johannam nuper uxorem Will. Lee de Knightley Dominam rectam haeredem de Knightley dedisse Ricardo Peshale filio Humfridi Peshale Scutum armorum meorum Habend tenend ac portand utend ubicunque voluerit sibi haeredibus suis imperpetuum Ita quod nec ego nec aliquis alius nomine meo aliquod jus vel clameum seu calumpniam in praedicto Scuto habere potuerimus sed per presentes sumus exclusi inperpetuum In cujus Dat. apud Knightley Anno 14 Hen. 6. Scyre-gemot Sax. scyregemot Was a Court held twice every year as the Sheriffs Turn is at this day by the Bishop of the Diocess and the Ealdorman in Shires that had Ealdormen and by the Bishops and Sheriffs in such as were committed to Sheriffs that were immediate to the King wherein both the Ecclesiastical and Temporal Laws were given in charge to the Country Seldens Titles of Honor fo 628. See Consistory Seal Sigillum Is well known The first sealed Charter we find extant in England is that of King Edward the Confessor upon His foundation of Westminster Abby Dugdales Warwickshire fo 138. b. Yet we read in the MS. History of Offa King of the Mercians Rex Offa literas Regii Sigilli sui munimine consignatas eidem Nuncio commisit deferendas And that Seals were in use in the Saxons time see Taylors History of Gavelkind fo 73. See Wang Anno 1536. Domini etiam atque Generosi relictis
Mareschal dicit quod ipse est communis Serviens Narrator Coram Justic alibi ubi melius ad hoc conduci poterit quod ipse in Placito praefatae Assisae coram praefatis Justiciariis stetit cum praedicto Johanne de concilio suo fuit c. Trin. 25 Edw. 1. Coram Rege Oxon 22. Md. quod Termino Trin. Anno 26 Hen. 8. Tho. Willoughby Johannes Baldwin Serjeants de Roy fueront faits Chivaliers que nul tiels Serjeants devant fuer unques fait Chivaliers Ex MS. Vocat Spelmans Reports The next is a Serjeant at Arms or of the Mace Serviens ad Arma whose Office is to attend the person of the King Anno 7 Hen. 7. cap. 3. to arrest Traitors or Persons of Condition and to attend the Lord High Steward of England sitting in Judgment upon any Traitor and such like Pl. Cor. lib. 3. cap. 1. Of these by the Statute 13 Rich. 2. cap. 6. there may not be above thirty in the Realm Two of them by the Kings allowance do attend on the Two Houses of Parliament whose office in the House of Commons is the keeping of the doors and as of late it hath been used the execution of such commands especially touching the apprehension of any offender as that House shall enjoyn him Crompt Jur. fol. 9. Another of them attends on the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper in the Chancery And one on the Lord Treasurer of England One upon the Lord Major of London upon extraordinary solemnities one attendeth upon the Lord President of Wales and another upon the Lord President of the North. Another sort of Serjeants are cheif Officers who execute several Functions or Offices within the Kings Houshold of which you may read many in the Statute of 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. There is also a more inferior kinde of Serjeants of the Mace whereof there is a Troop in the City of London and other Corporate Towns that attend the Major or other Head Officer cheifly for Matter of Justice Kitchin fol. 143. And these are called Servientes ad Clavam New Book of Entries verbo Scire facias in Mainpernors cap. 3. fol. 538. Serjeants of Peace Et etiam habere ibidem i. Dunham sex Servientes qui vocantur Serjeants of Peace qui servient Cur. Manerii praedicti facient Attach executiones omnium Placitorum querelarum in dicta Curia Placitorum c. Pl. de quo Warranto apud Cestriam 31 Ed. 3. Serjeanty Serjantia Is a Service that cannot be due to any Lord from his Tenant but to the King onely and it is divided into Grand Serjeanty and Petit. The first is where one holds Land of the King by service which he ought to do in his own person as to bear the Kings Banner Spear c. Petit Serjeanty is where a Man holds Land of the King to yield him yearly some small thing towards his Wars as a Sword Dagger Bow c. of which read Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. 37. And Britton c. 66. num 1. 2. Inter feodalia servitia summum est illustrissimum quod nec Patronum aliquem agnoscit praeter Regem says the Learned Spelman Lib. MS. Feodal de Baldwino de Pettour qui tenuit terras in Hemingston in Com. Suff. per Serjantiam pro qua debuit facere die Natali Domini singulis annis coram Domino Rege Angliae Saltum Sufflum Pettum al. unum Saltum unum Sufflatum unum Bombulum And Sir Rich. Rockesley held Lands at Seaton by Serjeanty to be Vantrarius Regis i. The Kings Fore-footman when he went into Qascoign Donec per usus fuit pari solutarum precii 4 d. until he had worn out a pair of shooes of the price of 4 d. Which Service being admitted to be performed when the King went to Gascoign to make War is Knights Service Coke on Littl. fol. 69. b. See the Statute of 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Whereby all Tenures of any Honors Mannors Lands c. are turned into Free and Common Soccage but the Honorary Services of Grand Serjeanty are thereby continued Servage Anno 1 Rich. 2. cap. 6. See Service Service Servitium Is that which the Tenant by reason of his Fee oweth to his Lord which is sometimes called Servage as Anno 1 Rich. 2. cap. 6. Our ancient Law-Books make divers Divisions of Service as into Military and Base Personal and Real Intrinsick and Extrinsick c. But since the Stat. 12 Car. 2. cap. 24. Whereby all Tenures are turned into Free and Common Soccage much of that learning is set aside See Coke lib. 4. Bevils Case fol. 9. a. See Soccage Thomas Leigh Esquire at the Coronation of King Charles the Second brought up to the Kings Table a Mess of Pottage called Dillogrout which Service had been adjudged to him by the Court of Claims in right of the Mannor of Addington in Com. Surrey whereupon the Lord High Chamberlain presented him to the King who accepted the Service and afterwards Knighted him Servientibus Are certain Writs touching Servants and their Masters violating the Statutes made against their abuses which see in Reg. of Writs fol. 189. 191. Service secular Anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 1. Worldly Service contrary to Spiritual or Ecclesiastical Servitium ferrandi Of Shooing a Horse See Palfrey Servitiis Acquietandis Is a Writ Judicial that lies for one Distrained for Services to A. who ows and performs to B. for the Acquittal of such Services Reg. of Writs Judic fol. 27. a. 36. b. Servitors of Bills Are such Servants or Messengers of the Marshal belonging to the Kings Bench as were heretofore sent abroad with Bills or Writs to summon Men to that Court being now called Tipstaffs Anno 2 H. 4. cap. 23. Session of Parliament The passing any Bill or Bills by giving the Royal Assent thereto or the giving any Judgment in Parliament doth not make a Session but the Session does continue till that Session be Prorogued or Dissolved See 4 Part Inst fol. 27. Sessions Sessiones Signifies a sitting of Justices in Court upon their Commission as the Sessions of Oyer and Terminer Pl. Cor. fol. 67. Quarter Sessions otherwise called General Sessions or Open Sessions Anno 5 Eliz. cap. 4. Opposite whereunto are Especial otherwise called Privy Sessions which are procured upon some special occasion for the more speedy dispatch of Justice Cromp. Just of Peace fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are kept by the High Constable of every Hundred for the placing of Servants Anno 5 Eliz. cap. 4. See Statute Sessions Sesseur Anno 25 Edw. 3. cap. 6. Seems to signifie the assessing or rating of Wages Severance Is the singling or severing two or more that joyn or are joyned in one Writ As if two joyn in a Writ De libertate Probanda and the one afterwards be non-sute here Severance is permitted so as notwithstanding the non-sute of the one the other may severally proceed Fitz. Nat. Br.
fol. 78. and Brook tit Severance Summons fol. 238. There is also Severance of the Tenants in an Assise when one two or more Disseisors appear upon the Writ and not the other New Book of Entries fol. 81. And Severance in Attaints eodem fol. 95. And Severance in Debt fol. 220. where two Executors are named Plaintiffs and the one refuseth to prosecute Severance of Corn is the cutting and carrying it from off the Ground and sometimes the setting out the Tythe from the rest of the Corn is called Severance See Crokes Rep. 2 Part fol. 325. Several Tayl Tallium Separatum Is that whereby Land is given and entailed severally to two For example Land is given to two Men and their Wives and to the Heirs of their Bodies begotten the Donees have joynt-estate for their two lives yet they have several inheritance because the issue of the one shall have his moyety and the issue of the other the other moyety Several Tenancy Tenura Separalis Is a Plea or Exception to a Writ that is laid against two as Joynt who are indeed several Brook hoc tit fol. 273. Sewer Severa Sewera Est fossa in locis palustribus ducta ad aquas eliciendas c. A Passage or Gutter to carry Water into the Sea or a River Anno 6 Hen. 6. cap. 5. and 12 Car. 2. cap. 6. And Commissioners of Sewers are such as by authority under the Great Seal see Drains and Ditches well kept and maintained in the Marish and Fen Countreys for the better conveyance of the Water into the Sea and preserving the Grass upon the Land for Food of Cattle See the Statutes 15 Car. 2. cap. 17. and 17 Ejusdem cap. 11. Touching the Draining the Great Level in the Fens called Bedford Level and the authority of the Governor Bailiff c. As Commissioners of Sewers Sextary Sextarius Was an ancient Measure containing about our pint and a half according to the Latin Dictionary the City now Town of Leicester paid inter al. to the King yearly Twenty five Measures called Sextaries of Honey as we read in Domesday And in Claus 4 Edw. 3. m. 26. we finde mention of Tresdecem Sextarios Vini Et unum Sextrium Salis apud Wainflet Mon. Angl. 2 par fol. 849. b. Decem Mittas brasii quatuor Sextarios Avenae ad praebendam Idem 1 par fol. 136. b. Where it seems to have been used for a much greater quantity A Sextary of Ale contained xvi Lagenas See Tolsester Sexagesima See Septuagesima Shack Is a Custom in Norfolk to have Common for Hogs from the end of Harvest till Seed time in all Mens Grounds without control Cokes 7 Rep. fol. 5. Corbets Case And in that County To go at Shack is as much as to go at large Shares See Flotzon Sharping Corn Is a Customary gift of Corn which at every Christmas the Farmers in some parts of England give to their Smith for sharping their Plough Irons Harrow times and such like and exceeds not half a Bushel for a Plough-Land Sherbet Anno 15 Car. 2. cap. 11. Is a Compound Drink lately introduced in England from Turky and Persia and is made of Juyce of Lemmons Sugar and other ingredients Another sort of it is made of Violets Honey Juyce of Raisins c. Sherbert in the Persian Tongue signifies pleasant Liquor Shermans Craft Is a Craft or Occupation at Norwich the Artificers whereof do Shear as well Worsteads Stamins and Fustians as all other Woollen Cloth and mentioned Anno 19 Hen. 7. cap. 17. Shewing Is to be quit of Attachments in any Court and before whomsoever in Plaints shewed and not avowed Terms Ley. See Scavage Shilling Sax. scilling Among our English Saxons consisted but of Five pence Si in capillis sit vulnus longitudinis unius Unciae V. denariis i. uno solido componatur LL. H. 1. c. 39. Ship-money Was an Imposition charged upon the Ports Towns Cities Boroughs and Counties of this Realm in the time of King Charles the First by Writs commonly called Ship-writs under the Great Seal of England in the years 1635. and 1636. for the providing and furnishing certain Ships for the Kings service c. which by Stat. 17 Car. 1. cap. 14. was declared to be contrary to the Laws and Statutes of this Realm the Petition of Right Liberty of the Subjects c. Shipper Anno 1 Jac. sess 1. cap. 33. Is a Dutch word signifying the Master of a Ship We corrupt it into Skipper and use it for any Common Seaman Shire Comitatus From the Saxon Scir or Scyre i. To part or divide Is well known to be a part or portion of this Land called also a County Who first divided this Land into Shires see in Camd. Britan pag. 102. Of which there are in England Forty and in Wales Twelve In privilegiorum Chartis ubi conceditur quietum esse a Shiris intelligendum est de immunitate qua quis eximitur a Secta vel clientela Curiis Vicecomitum quas etiam Shiras ●●cant prestanda vel perficienda Spel. The Assises of the Shire or the Assembly of the people of a County was called dcir-gemot by the Saxons Shirif or Shiref Vicecomes quasi Shire-reve Sax. scire-gerefa i. Pogi vel Comitatus Praepositus the Cheif Offic●● under the King of a Shire or County Camden in his Britan. pag. 104. thus describes his Office SIngulis vero annis Nobilis aliquis ex incolis praeficitur quem Vicecomitem quasi Vicarium Comitis nostra lingua Shyref i. Comitatus Praepositum vocamus Qui etiam Comitatus vel Provinciae Quastor recte dici potest Ejus enim est publicas pecunias Provinciae suae conquirere mulctas irrogatas vel pignoribus ablatis colligere aerario inferre Judicibus praesto adesse eorum mandata exequi duodecim viros cogere qui in causis de facto cognoscunt ad Judices referunt Judices enim apud nos Juris solum non facti sunt Judices condemnatos ad supplicium ducere in minoribus litibus cognoscere in majoribus autem jus dicunt Justiciarii quos Itinerantes ad Assisas vocant qui quot annis hos Comitatus bis adeunt ut de Causis cognoscant Carceratis Sententiam ferant Henricus secundus hos Itinerantes instituit vel potius restituit Ille ut inquit Matth. Paris consilio filii sui Episcoporum constituit Justiciarios per sex partes Regni in qualibet parte tres qui jurarent quod cuilibet jus suum conservarent illaesum Of the Antiquity and Authority of this Officer read Cokes Rep. lib. 4. Mittons Case and Spelmans Glossarium verbo Vicecomes The Shirif was anciently chosen in the County Court by the Suffrages of the People as Knights of Parliament yet are but is now nominated by the the King See Fortescu cap. 24. fol. 53. Vicecomes dicitur quod Vicem Comitis supplet in placitis illis quibus Comes ex suae dignitatis ratione participat cum
Licence granted at the Custom-house to Merchants or others to carry over such Stores or Provision as are necessary for their Voyage Custom-free Bill of Sufferance Is a Licence granted at the Custom-house to a Merchant to suffer him to trade from one English Port to another without paying Custom Anno 14 Car. 2. cap. 11. Billa vera Lat. The Bill is true The Grand Enquest Empanelled and sworn before the Justices of Eyre c. Endorsing a Bill whereby any crime punishable in that Court is presented to them with these two words signifie thereby that the presentor hath furnished his presentment with probable Evidence and worthy further consideration Whereupon the party presented is said to stand indicted of the Crime and tied to make answer to it either by confessing or traversing the Indictment And if the Crime touch his Life it is yet referred to another Enquest called the Enquest of Life and Death by whom if he be found guilty then he stands convict of the Crime and is by the Judge to be condemned to Death See Ignoramus and Indictment Billets of Gold Fr. Billot Wedges or Ingots of Gold mentioned 27 Edw. 3. Stat. 2. cap. 14. Bissextile Bissextilis Leap-year so called because the sixth Calends of March are in that year twice reckoned viz. On the 24 25 of February So that Leap-year hath one day more than other years and is observed every fourth year being first devised by Julius Caesar to accommodate the year with the course of the Sun And to prevent all doubt and ambiguity that might arise hereupon it is provided by the Statute de Anno Bissextili 21 Hen. 3. That the day increasing in the Leap-year and the day next before shall be accounted for one day c. Britton fol. 209. and Dyer 17 Eliz. 345. Birlaw See Bilaw and Byrlaw Black maile Fr. Maille i A Link of Mail or a small piece of Metal or Money Signifies in the Counties of Cumberland Northumberland and Westmerland a certain rate of Money Corn Cattle or other consideration paid to some inhabiting upon or near the borders being persons of name and power allied with certain Moss-Troopers or known Robbers within the said Counties to be thereby by them freed and protected from the danger of those Spoil-takers Anno 43 Eliz. cap. 13. See Mail. Black Rod or Gentleman-Usher of the Black Rod is cheif Gentleman Usher to the King He is called in the Black Book fol. 255 Lator virgae nigrae and Hostiarius and elswhere Virgi-bajulus His duty is Ad port andam Virgam coram Domino Rege ad Festum Sancti Georgii infra Castrum de Windesore He hath also the keeping of the Chapter-house Door when a Chapter of the Order of the Garter is sitting and in the time of Parliament attends on the House of Peers He hath a like habit with the Register of the Order and Garter King of Arms which he wears at the Feast of S George and all Chapters He bears a Black Rod on the top whereof sits a Lion Gold which Rod is instead of a Mace and hath the same power and authority His Fee is now 30 l. per annum This Officer hath been anciently constituted by Letters Patent under the Great Seal Blade Bladum Fr. Bled Nostro foro de segete tantum intelligitur praesertim etiam in herba Spel. But the Saxon Blaed signifies more generally Fruit Corn Hemp Flax Herbs c. or the Branches or Leaves of Trees or Herbs Universis Wil. de Mohun salutem Sciatis me relaxasse quietum clamasse Domino Reginaldo de Mohan fratri meo totum Manerium meum de Torr Salvo mihi instauro meo blado c. sine dat i. e. Excepting my Stock and Corn on the Ground Hence Bladier is taken for an Ingrosser of Corn or Grain Sciant quod ego Willielmus Alreton consensu voluntate Beatriciae Uxoris meae Dedi Agathae Gille pro duabus Marcis Argenti una mensura bladi duas solidatas reditus in villa Leominstr illas scil quas Walterus de Luda solebat mihi reddere pro quadam terra quae est inter soldas Adae Talcurteis Feodum Johannis Rading Habend c. sinc dat Ex libro Cartar Priorat Leominstriae Blancks Fr. Blanc i. candidus A kinde of Money coyned by King Henry the Fifth in the parts of France which were then subject to England the value whereof was 8 d. Stows Annals pag. 586. These were forbidden to be current in this Realm 2 Hen. 6. cap. 9. The reason why they were called Blanks was because at the time these were coyned in France there was also a piece of Gold coyned called a Salus from which this of Silver was in name distinguished by the colour Blanck-Bar Is the same with that we call a Common Bar and is the name of a Plea in Bar which in an Action of Trespass is put in to compel the Plaintiff to assign the certain place where the Trespass was committed It is most used by the practisers in the Common Bench for in the Kings Bench the place is commonly ascertained in the Declaration Croke 2 Part. fol. 594. Blench To hold Land in Blench is by payment of a Penny Rose Pair of Gilt Spurs or such like thing if it be demanded In name of Blench i. Nomine albae firmae See Alba firma Blockwood See Logwood Blomary Anno 27 Eliz. cap. 19. The first Forge man Iron Mill through which the Iron passeth before it comes to the Finary Bloated Fish or Herring Anno 18 Car. 2. cap. 2. Are those which are half-dried Bloudy-hand See Backberend Bloudwit or Blodwite compounded of two Saxon words Blod i. sanguis and wita mulcta Is a word used in ancient Charters of Liberties and signifies an Amercement for shedding Blood so that whosoever had it given him in his Charter had the penalty due for Blood-shed Skene writes it Bloudveit and says veit in English is injuria and that Bloudveit is an Amerciament or unlaw as the Scotch call it for wrong or injury as Bloodshed is For he that hath Bloodveit granted him hath free liberty to take all Amerciaments of Courts for Effusion of Blood Fleta says Quod significat quietantiam misericordiae pro effusione sanguinis Lib. 1. cap. 47. Blodwite i. Si aliqui pugnantes ad invicem in Rudnam extraxerint sanguinem Prior habebit inde amerciamenta in Curia sua Ex Reg. Priorat de Cokesford Blubber Anno 12 Car. 2. cap. 18. A kinde of Whale-Oyl so called before it is throughly boiled and brought to perfection Boc-hord Sax. A place where Books Evidences Writings or other like Monuments are kept as the Rolls quasi Librorum horreum Bocland Sax. Terra haereditaria vel testimentalis quasi Book-land A Possession an Inheritance a Territory Farm or House with Land belonging to it held by Evidence in Writing Bocland verò ea possidendi transferendique lege coercebatur ut nec dari licuit nec vendi sed haeredibus
party attainted lose his Frank-Law to the end he be not empannel'd upon Juries or Assizes or such like employments for testifying the truth and if he have to do in the Kings Court that he make his Atturney and that his Lands Goods and Chattels be seised into the Kings hands his Lands estreaped if he finde no better favor his Trees raced and his Body committed to prison 27 Lib. Assis 59. Cromptons Just of Peace fol. 156. b. This is called Villanous Judgment or Punishment See Villanous Judgment But if the party grieved sue upon the Writ of Conspiracy then see Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 114. D. 115. I. Conspiracy may be also in Cases of less weight As Conspiracies made by Victualers touching selling of Victuals shall be grievously punished See 37 Hen. 8. 23. and 3 Part. Inst fol. 143. Conspiratione Is a Writ that lies against Conspirators Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 114. d. Cromptons Jurisd fol. 209. See also the Register fol. 134. Constable Constabularius Is a Saxon word compounded of Cuning or Cyng and Staple which signisie the stay and hold of the King Lamb. Duty of Constables num 4. But I have seen it derived from Comes Stabuli which seems more probable because we had this Officer and many others from the Caesarean Laws and Customs of the Empire as well as from the Saxons This word is diversly used First for the Constable of England of whose great Dignity and Authority we may finde many proofs in the Statutes and Chronicles of this Realm His Function consists in the care of the common Peace of the Land in Deeds of Arms and Matters of War Lamb. ubisupra With whom agrees the Statute of 13 Rich. 2. cap. 2. Stat. 1. which says To the Court of the Constable and Marshal it appertains to have Conusance of Contracts and Deeds of Arms and of War out of the Realm and also of things that touch War within as Combats Blasonry of Arms c. But it may not meddle with Battel in Appeals nor generally with any other thing that may be tryed by the Law of the Land See Fortescu cap. 32. and 4 Inst fol. 123. Out of this High Magistracy of Constable of England says Lambert were drawn those Inferior Constables which we call Constables of Hundreds and Franchises and first ordained by the Statute of Winchester Anno 13 Edw. 1. which appoints for conservation of the Peace and view of Armor two Constables in every Hundred and Franchise which in Latin are called Constabularii Capitales High Constables because continuance of time and increase both of People and Offences hath under these made others in every Town called Petit-Constables in Latin Sub-Constabularios which are of like nature but of Inferior Authority to the other The making of a Petty Constable belongs to the Lords of divers Mannors Jure Feudi Of these read Smith de Rep. Angl. lib. 2. cap. 22. Besides these there are Officers of particular places called by this name as Constable of the Tower Stamf. Pl. Cor. fol. 152. Anno 1 Hen. 4. cap. 13. Constable of the Exchequer Anno 51 Hen. 3. Stat. 5. Constable of Dover Castle Cam. Britan. pag. 239. Fitz Nat. Br. fol. 240. But these are Castellani properly as Lambert Notes though confounded in name with the other See the Statute Anno 32 Hen. 8. cap. 38. Manwood par 1. cap. 13. mentions a Constable of the Forest Constat Lat. Is the name of a kinde of Certificate which the Clerk of the Pipe and Auditors of the Exchequer make at the request of any person who intends to plead or move in that Court for discharge of any thing Anno 3 4 Edw. 6. cap. 4. and 13 Eliz cap. 6. The effect of a Constat is the certifying what does constare upon Record touching the matter in question and the Auditors Fee for it is 13 s. 4 d. A Constat is held to be Superior to a Certificat because this may erre or fail in its Contents that cannot as certifying nothing but what is evident upon Record Also the Exemplification under the Great Seal of the Inrolment of any Letters Patent is called a Constat Coke on Littl. fol. 225. b. The difference between a Constat Inspeximus Vidimus you may read at large in Pages Case Cokes fifth Report Consuetudinibus Servitiis Is a Writ of Right Close which lies against the Tenant that deforceth his Lord of the Rent or Service due to him Of this see more in Old Nat. Br. fol. 77. Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 151. and Reg of Writs fol. 159. Consultation Consultatio Is a Writ whereby a Cause being formerly removed by Prohibition from the Ecclesiastical Court or Court Christian to the Kings Court is returned thither again For if the Judges of the Kings Court upon comparing the Libel with the suggestion of the party finde the suggestion false or not proved and therefore the Cause to be wrongfully called from the Court Christian then upon this Consultation or Deliberation they Decree it to be returned again whereupon the Writ in this Case obtained is called a Consultation Of this you may read Reg. of Writs fol. 44 45. Usque 58. Old Nat. Br. fol. 32. Fiiz Nat. Br. fol. 50. The Statute of the Writ of Consultation Anno 24 Edw. 1. and 2 Part. Inst fol. 105. Contenement Contenementum As Salvo contenemento suo Mag. Cha. cap. 14. Signifies his Countenance Credit or Reputation which he hath together with and by reason of his Freehold and in this sence does the Statute of 1 Edw. 3. and Old Nat. Br. use it where Countenance is used for Contenement The Armor of a Soldier is his Countenance the Books of a Scholler his Countenance and the like Coke 2 Part. Inst fol. 28. Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. cap. 1. num 3. And Sir Henry Spelman says Contenementum est ●stimatio conditionis forma qua quis in Repub. subsistit Contingent Use Is a Use limited in a Conveyance of Land which may or may not happen to Vest according to the contingency expressed in the Limitation of such Use See Chudleighs Case in Cokes 1 Rep. Continuance Is as Prorogatio in the Civil Law For example Continuance until the next Assise Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 154. F. and 244. D. in both which places it is said if a Record in the Treasury be alleaged by the one party and denied by the other a Certiorari shall be sued to the Treasurer and the Chamberlain of the Exchequer who if they certifie not in the Chancery That such a Record is there or that it is likely to be in the Tower the King shall send to the Justices repeating the Certificate and will them to continue the Assise In this signification it is likewise used by Kitchin fol. 202. and 199. And Anno 11 Hen. 6. cap. 4. And Continuance of a Writ or Action is from one Term to another in case where the Sheriff hath not returned or executed a former Writ issued out in the said
Originally or upon Assignation and sometimes for the Returns of Writs For example Dayes in Bank are Dayes set down by Statute or Order of the Court when Writs shall be returned or when the Party shall Appear upon the Writ served for which you may read the Statutes 51 Hen 3. ca. 1 2. Marlb ca. 12 52 Hen. 3. and the Statute de Anno Bissextili 21 Hen. 3. and lastly 32 Hen. 8. ca. 21. To be dismissed without Day is to be finally discharged the Court He had a Day by the Roll that is he had a day of Appearance Assigned him Kitchin fol. 193 197. Day Year and Wast See Year Day and Wast And see Dies Deadly Feud Feuda Faida Is a Profession of an Irreconcileable Enmity till we are revenged even by the death of our Enemy It is deduced from the German word Feed which as Hottoman in verbis Feudalibus saith Modo bellum modo capitales inimicitias significat It is used Anno 43 Eliz. ca. 13. Dead Pledge mortuum vadium See Morgage De-afforested That is discharged from being Forest or that is freed and exempted from the Forest-Laws Anno 17 Car. 1. ca. 16. Johannes Dei Gratia c Archiepiscopis Episcopis c. Sciatis nos omnino Deafforestaise Forestam de Brewood de omnibus quae ad Forestam Forestarios pertinent Quare volumus firmiter praecipimus quod praedicta Foresta homines in illa manentes haeredes eorum sint Deafforestati imperpetuum c. Dat. apud Brug 13 Martii Anno regni nostri 5. Dean Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 decem Is an Ecclesiastical Magistrate so called because he presides over Ten Canons or Prebends at the least We call him a Dean that is under the Bishop and chief of the Chapter ordinarily in a Cathedral Church and the rest of the Society or Corporation we call Capitulum the Chapter But how diversly this word is used read Lindwood Tit. de Constitut ca. 1. verbo Decani Rurales where Rural Deans are said to be certain persons that have Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical over other Ministers and Parishes neer adjoyning assigned them by the Bishop and Arch-Deacon being placed and displaced by them Such are the Dean of Croiden in Surrey Dean of Battel in Kent c. As there are two Foundations of Cathedral Churches in England the old and the new the new are those which Henry the Eighth upon Suppression of Abbies transformed from Abbot or Prior and Convent to Dean and Chapter so are there two means of Creating these Deans For those of the Old Foundation were exalted to their Dignity much like Bishops the King first sending out his Conge d'Eslire to the Chapter the Chapter then chusing the King yielding His Royal Assent and the Bishop Confirming him and giving his Mandate to enstal him Those of the New Foundation are by a shorter course Enstalled by Vertue of the Kings Letters-Patent without either 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 St. Georges Chappel in Windsor c. Nec Collegio alicui praefecti nec jurisdictione ulla donati nomine tamen velut honoris gratia insignes sayes Spelman De bene esse Are three common Latin words but their signification more mysterious conceiv'd to be thus To take or do any thing De bene esse is to accept or allow it as well done for present but when it comes to be more fully examin'd or try'd to stand or fall to be allowed or disallowed according to the Merit or Well-being of the thing in its own nature or as we say Valeat quantum valere potest So in Chancery upon motion to have one of the less-principal Defendants in a Case examin'd as a Witness the Court not then throughly examining the justice of it or not hearing what may be objected on the other side often orders such a Defendant to be examined de bene esse i. That his Depositions shall be allowed or suppressed at the Hearing of the Cause upon the full debate of the Matter as the Court shall then think fit but for the present they have a well-being or conditionalallowance It is used in Langhams Caso Croke 3 Part. fol. 68. Debentur Was by a Rum● Act in 1649 ordained to be in the nature of a Bond or Bill to charge the Common-wealth forsooth to pay the Souldier-Creditor or his Assignes the Sum due upon Auditing the Account of his Arrears The Form of which Debentur as then used you may see in Scobels Rump-Acts Anno 1649 ca. 63. The word is also mention'd in the Act of Oblivion 12 Car. 2. ca. 8. Sect. 7. and is used in the Exchequer See Auditor of the Receipts Debet solet Are Latin words often used in our Law-Writers In old Nat. Br. fol. 98. it is said This Writ De secta molendini being in the debet and 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 it may be in the debet and solet or in the debet without the solet according as the Demandant claims Wherefore note that those Writs which are in this sort brought have these words in them as Formal words not to be omitted And according to the diversity of the Case both debet and solet are used or debet alone That is if a man sue to recover any Right whereof his Ancestor was disseis'd by the Tenant or his Ancestor then he useth only the word debet in his Writ because solet is not fit by reason his Ancestor was disseis'd and the Custom discontinued but if he sue for any thing that is now first of all deny●d him then he useth both these words because his Ancestors before him and he himself usually enjoyed the thing sued for as sute to a Mill or Common of Pasture until this present refusal of the Tenant The like may be said of debet and detinet as appears by the Reg. of Writs in the Writ De debito fol. 140. a. Debito or De debito Is a Writ which lies where a Man ows another a Sum of Money by Obligation or Bargain for any thing sold him Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 119. This Writ is made sometime in the detinet and not in the debet which properly falls out where a Man owes an Annuity or a certain quantity of Wheat Barley or such like which he refuseth to pay Old Nat. Br. fo 75. See Debet and solet Decem tales See Tales Deceit Deceptio dolus Is a Subtile wily Shift or Trick whereunto may be drawn all manner of Craft Subtilty Guile Fraud Slight Cunning Covin Collusion and Practise used to Deceave another Man by any Means which hath no other more proper or particular Name then Deceit or Offence West pa. 2. Symbol tit Inditements Sect. 68. See
paying Legacies and Debts without Specialties to the prejudice of the Creditors that have Specialties before the Debts on the said Specialties are due for in this Case the Executors are as liable to Action as if they had wasted the Goods of the Testator riotoufly or converted them to their own use and are compellable to pay such Debts by Specialty out of their own Goods to the value of what they so paid illegally For the orderly payment of Debts and Legacies by Executors so as to escape a Devastation or charging their own Goods See the Office of Executors ca. 12. Devenerunt lat Is a Writ anciently directed to the Escheator when any of the Kings Tenants holding in Capite dyed and when his son and heir within age and in the Kings custody dyed then this Writ went forth commanding the Escheator that he by the Oath of good and lawful men enquire what Lands and Tenements by the death of the Tenant came to the King See Dyer fol. 360. Pl. 4. and Keilways Rep. fol. 199. a. Though this Writ in the sence abovesaid be disused yet a new use of it is prescribed by Act of Parl. 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. Entituled An Act for preventing frauds and regulating abuses in His Majesties Customes Devest Devestire Is contrary to Invest for as Invest signifies to deliver the posession of any thing so Devest signifies the taking it away Devise or Divise from the French Deviser to confer or converse with or from Diviser to divide or sort into several parcels Is properly that act by which a Testator gives or bequeaths his Lands or Goods by his last Will in Writing He who makes the Devise is called the Devisor and he to whom the Devise is made the Devisee The words of a Will the Law interprets in a larger and more favourable sence then those of a Deed For if Land be Devised to a man to have to him for ever or to have to him and his Assignes in these two Cases the Devisee shall have a Feesimple but given in the same manner by Feoffment he has but an Estate for term of life So if one Devise Land to an Infant in his Mothers Belly it is a good Devise but 't is otherwise by Feoffment Grant or Gift for in those Cases there ought to be one of ability to take presently otherwise it is void 14 Eliz. Dyer 304. and Coke on Litt. fol. 111. Deboires of Caleis Anno 2 Rich. 2. Stat. 1. ca. 3. Were the Customes due to the King for Merchandise brought to or carried out of Caleis when our Staple was there Paying their Customes and Devoyres to the King Anno 34 Ed. 3. ca. 18. Devoire in French signifies Duty Devorce See Divorce Dictum de Kenelworth Was an Edict or Award between King Henry the Third and all those Barons and others who had been in Armes against him and so called because it was made at Kenelworth-Castle in Warwickshire Anno 51 Hen. 3. containing a composition for the Lands and Estates of those who had forfeited them in that Rebellion Dicker of Leather Is a quantity consisting of Ten Hides The word probably comes from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies Ten. Diem claufit extremum Was a Writ that Issued out of the Chancery to the Escheator of the County upon the death of any of the Kings Tenants in Capite to inquire by a Jury of what Lands he died seised and of what value and who was next heir to him Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 251. Dies In the Common-Law there are Dies juridici Dies non juridici Dies non juridici are all Sundayes in the Year and in Easter-Yerm the Feast of the Ascension of our Lord in Trinity Term the Nativity of St John Baptist in Michaelmas Term the Feasts of All Saints and All Souls and in Hillary Term the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary And this was the Antient Law of England and extends not onely to Legal Proceedings but to Contracts 2 Part. Inst fol. 264. Dies datus Is a Day or time of Respit given to the Tenant or Defendant by the Court Brooke tit Continuance Dignitaries dignitarii Are those who are advanced to the Ecclesiastical dignity of Dean Arch-deacon Prebendary c. See 3 Part. Inst fol. 155. Dieta rationabilis Is in Bracton used for a reasonable days Journey Lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 16. Dignity Ecclesiastical Dignitas Ecclesiastica Is mention'd in the Stat. 26 Hen. 8. ca. 31 32. ejusdem ca. 15. And is by the Canonists defin'd to be Administratio cum jurisdictione potestate aliqua conjuncta whereof you may read divers examples in Duarenus de Sacris Eccles Ministris Beneficiis lib. 2. ca. 6. Of Dignities and Prebends Cam. reckons in England 544. Britan. pa. 161. Dilapidation dilapidatio A wastful spending or destroying or the letting Buildings run to ruine and decay for want of due reparation Anno 13 Eliz. ca. 10. Money recover'd for dilapidations shall be employ'd in repair of the same Houses Anno 14 Eliz. ca. 11. Dioces diocesis from the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies with us the Circuit of every Bishops Jurisdiction for this Realm hath two sorts of Divisions one into Shires or Counties in respect of Temporal Policy another into Diocesses in order to Jurisdiction Ecclesiastical of which we reckon 22 in England and 4. in Wales Dimidietas The one half Sciant quod ego Matilda filia Willielmi le Franceys dedi Waltero de Stetton dimidietatem illius Burgagii c. sine dat Ex libro Cart. Priorat Leominstr Disability disabilitas Is when a man is disabled or made incapable to inherit or take that benefit which otherwise he might have done which may happen four wayes by the act of the Party or his Ancestor by the act of Law or of God Disability by the parties own act is If I bind my self that upon surrender of a Lease I will grant a new Estate to the Lessee and afterwards I grant over my Reversion In this case though I afterwards repurchase the reversion yet I have forfeited my Obligation because I was once disabled to perform it Coke lib. 5. fol. 21. Also if a Man be Excommunicated he cannot during that time sue any Action but shall be thereby disabled Coke lib. 8. fol. 69. Disability by the act of an Ancestor is if a man be attainted of Treason or Felony by this attainder his blood is corrupt and both himself and children disabled to inherit Disability by the Act of Law is most properly when a Man by the sole act of the Law is disabled and so is an Alien born who is disabled to take any benefit thereby Disability by the Act of God is where a man is not of whole Memory which disables him so that in all cases where he passeth any Estate out of him it may after his death be disanull'd for it is a Maxim in Law That a Man of
Laymen were not approved by 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 Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith That the King might of ancient time found a Free-Chappel and exempt it from the Jurisdiction of the Diocesan So also may he by his Letters Patent give Licence to a common person to found such a Chappel and make it Donative not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be deprivable by the Founder or his Heir and not by the Bishop which seems to be the original of Donatives in England Fitzherbert saith fol. 23. That there are some Chantries which a Man may give by his Letters Patent All Bishopricks were in ancient time Donative by the King Coke lib. 3. fol. 75. Donor Is he who gives Lands or Tenements to another in Tail and Donee is he to whom the same are given Doom Sax. dom A Judgment Sentence Ordinance or Decree also sence or signification Substantiva quaedam says Mr. Somner exeunt in Dom ubi compositionis gratia videtur appositum quandoque munus denotat vel Officium item Ditionem Dominium ut in Kingdom Earldom c. Habeat Grithbriche Forstal Dom Som Wreche in Mari. Mon. Angl. 1. par fol. 284. a. Dorture Dormitorium Is the Common Room or Chamber where all the Religious of one Convent slept and lay all night Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 11. Dote Assignanda Is a Writ that lay for a Widow where it was found by Office That the Kings Tenant was seised of Tenements in Fee or Fee-tail at the day of his death and that he held of the King in Cheif c. In which Case the Widow came into the Chancery and there made Oath That she would not marry without the Kings leave Anno 15 Edw. 3. cap. 4. And hereupon she had this Writ to the Escheator for which see Reg. of Writs fol. 297. and Fitz. Nat. Br. fol. 263. These Widows are called the Kings Widows See Widow Dote unde nihil habet Is a Writ of Dower that lies for the Widow against the Tenant who bought Land of her Husband in his life time whereof he was solely seised in Fee-simple or Feetail in such sort as the issue of them both might have inherited Fitz. Nat. Br. fol 147. Dotis Admensuratione See Admeasurement and Reg. of Writs fol. 171. Doubles Anno 14 Hen. 6. cap. 6. Signifie as much as Letters Patent being a French word made of the Latin Diploma Double Plea Duplex Placitum Is that wherein the Defendant alleageth for himself two several matters in Bar of the Plaintiffs Action whereof either is sufficient to effect his desire which shall not be admitted for a Plea As if a Man alleage several matters the one nothing depending upon the other the Plea is accounted Double and not admittable but if they be mutually depending each of other then is it accounted single Kitchin fol. 223. See Brook hoc tit And Sir Tho. Smith gives this reason why such Double Plea is not admitted by our Law because the tryal is by Twelve rude Men whose Heads are not to be troubled with over many things at once Lib. 2. de Rep. Angl. cap. 13. Domus Conversorum See Rolls Domus Dei The Hospital of S. Julian in Southampton so called Mon. Angl. 2 par fol. 440. b. Double Duarrel Duplex Querela Is a Complaint made by any Clerk or other to the Archbishop of the Province against an Inferior Ordinary for delaying Justice in some Cause Eccsesiastical as to give Sentence Institute a Clerk presented or the like and seems to be termed a Double Quarrel because it is most commonly made against both the Judge and him at whose sute Justice is delayed Cowels Interp. Dowager Dotata A Widow endowed or that hath a Jointure a Title or Addition applied in general to the Widows of Princes Dukes Earls and Persons of Honor onely Dower Dos Dotarium The first Dos properly signifies that which the Wife brings her Husband in Marriage otherwise called Maritagium Marriage Goods The other Dotarium or Doarium that Portion of Lands or Tenements which she hath for term of her life from her Husband if she out-live him Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 38. Britton cap. 101. in Princip Some Authors have for distinction called the First a Dowry and the other a Dower but they are often confounded Of the former our Law-books speak little of the later there are five kindes viz. 1. Dower per Legem Communem 2. Dower per Consuetudinem 3. Dower ex Assensu Patris 4. Dower ad Ostium Ecclesiae 5. Dower de la Plus Bele Dower by the Common Law Is a Third Part of such Lands as the Husband was sole seised of in Fee during the Marriage which the Wife is to enjoy during her life for which there lies a Writ of Dower Dower by Custom gives the Wife in some places half her Husbands Lands so long as she lives sole as in Gavelkind And as Custom may enlarge so may it abridge Dower and restrain it to a fourth part Ex Assensu Patris ad Ostium Ecclesiae the Wife may have so much Dower as shall be so assigned or agreed upon but it ought not to exceed a third part of the Husbands Lands Glanv lib. 6. cap. 1. And if it be done before Marriage it is called a Joynture Dower de la Plus Bele Is when the Wife is endowed of the fairest or best part of her Husbands Estate See Coke on Littl. fol. 33. b. Romanis non in usu fuit uxoribus Dotes retribuere ideo verbo genuino carent quo hoc dignoscitur rem ipsam in Germanorum moribus miratur Tacitus Dotem inquit non uxor Marito sed uxori Maritus affert Spelm. To the consummation of Dower three things are necessary viz. Marriage Seizin and the Husbands death Binghams Case 2 Rep. If the Wife be past the age of nine years at the death of her Husband she shall be endowed If a Woman elope or go away from her Husband with an Adulterer and will not be reconcil'd she loseth her Dower by the Stat. of Westm 2. ca. 34. 2 Part Inst fol. 433. Camden in his Brit. tit Sussex relates this memorable Case out of the Parl. Records 30 Edw. 1. Sir John Camois son of the Lord Raph Camois of his own free-will gave and demised his own Wife Margaret Daughter and Heir of John de Gaidesden unto Sir Will. Panell Knight and unto the same William Gave Granted Released and Quit-claimed all her Goods and Chattels c. So that neither he himself nor any Man else in his Name might make Claim or ever Challenge any Interest in the said Margaret or in her Goods or Chattels c. By which Grant when
of the Exchequer the meaning and etmology whereof will appear by what follows Md. quod Anno Dom. 1277 Anno Regni Regis Edwardi filii Regis Henrici quinto misit idem Rex per totam Angliam Ballivos inquirere sub juramento in secreto de universis terris Angliae per Johannem de Kirkby Thesaurarium suum quisquis teneret cujus feodi quantum cujus Regis tempore feoffati essent Ex Registro Glaston Caenobii penes Rad. Sheldon Ar. fo 71. b. Knave Sax. Cnawa Is used for a Man-servant Anno 14 Edw. 3. Stat. 1. ca. 3. It did anciently signifie a Child also a Minister or Servant Matth. 8. 6. Puer meus jacet in domo paralyticus was in the Saxon Translation turned myn knawa Hence seyld knawa pro Armigero quasi scuti famulus seu minister he that bore the Weapon or Shield of his Superior It was sometimes of old used as a titular addition Johannes filius Willielmi Couper de Denby Knave ad satisfaciendum Regi de omni eo quod ad Regem pertinet occasione cujusdam Utlagariae in ipsum in placito transgressionis ad sectam Regis promulgata Original de anno 22 Hen. 7. 36 Derby Knight Sax Cnyt Miles Chivalier or Eques auratus from his gilt Spurs usually worn and thence called anciently Knights of the Spur. Signifies one that bears Arms who for his vertue and Marshal prowess is by the King or one having his Authority exalted above the rank of Gentlemen to a higher account or step of dignity The manner of making them Cam. in his Britan. thus shortly expresseth Nostris vero temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus leviter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallice affatur Sus vel sois Chevalier au nom de Dieu i. Surge aut fis Eques in nomine Dei This is meant of Knight-Bachelers which is the lowest but most ancient degree of Knighthood with us By the Stat. 1 Edw. 2. ca. 1. All Gentlemen having a full Knights Fee and holding their Land by Knights Service might be compelled by distress to procure himself to be made Knight when he came to Mans Estate But by the Statute 17 Car. 1. ca. 20. it is ordained that no man shall be compelled to take the Order of Knighthood c. The priviledge belonging to a Knight see in Ferns Glory of Generosity p. 116. Of Knights there are two sorts one Spiritual so called by Divine in regard of their Spiritual Warfare the other Temporal Cassanaeus de gloria mundi Part 9. Considerat 2. See Seldons Titles of Honor fo 770. Knights of the Garter Equites Garterii or Periscelidis Arc an Order of Knights created by Edward the Third after he had obtained many notable Victories who for furnishing this honorable Order made choice in his own Realm and all Christendom of 25 the most excellent and renowned persons for vertue and honour Himself and His Successors Kings of England were ordained to be the Soveraigns and the rest Fellowes and Brethren of this Order Smith de Repub. Angl. lib. 1. ca. 20. The Officers belonging to it are The Prelate of the Garter which is alwayes the Bishop of Winchester The Chancelor of the Garter the Register who is alwayes Dean of Windsor The Principal King at Armes called Garter whose chief function is to manage their Solemnities at their Feasts and Installations Lastly the Usher of the Garter being the Usher of the Black Rod. This most honourable Society is a Colledge or Corporation having a great Seal belonging to it See Garter Knights Baneret See Baneret John Coupeland for his valiant service against the Scots had the honour of Baneret conferred on him and his Heirs for ever by Patent 29 Edw. 3. part 1. m. 2. Knights of the Bath See the Antiquity and Ceremony of their Creation in Mr. Dugdales Description of Worcestershire fo 531 532. They are so called from their Bathing the night before their Creation Their place is before Knights Batchelors and after Baronets Knights of St. John of Hierusalem Milites Sancti Johannis Hierosol●mitani Had beginning about the year 1119. and denomination from John the charitable Patriarch of Alexandria though vowed to St. John Baptist their Patron They had their primary foundation and chief aboad first in Hierusalem and then in the Isle of Rhodes until they were expelled thence by the Turk Anno 1523. Since which time their chief Seat is in the Isle of Malta where they have done great Exploits against the Infidels especially in the year 1595 and are now called Knights of Malta They had one general Prior who had the Government of the whole Order within England and Scotland Reg. of Writs fol. 20. b. and was the first Prior of England and sate in the Lords House of Parliament Of these Knights mention is made in the Stat. 25 Hen. 8. ca. 2. 26 ejusdem ca. 2. But Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 24. They in England and Ireland being found overmuch to adhere to the Pope against the King were suppressed and their Lands and Goods referred by Parliament to the Kings disposition See Hospitalers Knights of Malta See Knights of St. Iohn Knights of Rhodes Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 24. See Knights of St. Iohn Knights of the Temple See Templers Knights of the Chamber Milites Camerae mention'd in 2 Inst fo 666. and in Rot. Pat. 29 Ed. 3. par 1. m. 29 seem to be such Knights Batchelers as are made in time of Peace because Knighted commonly in the Kings Chamber not in the Field as in time of War Knights of the Shire Milites Comitatus otherwise called Knights of Parliament are two Knights or Gentlemen of worth chosen upon the Kings Writ in pleno Comitatu by the Freeholders of every County that can dispend 40 s. per ann Anno 1 Hen. 5. ca. 1. and 10 Hen. 6. ca. 2. who are in Parliament to consult in behalf of the Commons of England touching the Publick Affairs of the Realm These when every man that had a Knights Fee was customarily constrained to be a Knight were of necessity to be milites gladio cincti for so runs the Writ at this day But now Custom admits Esquires to be chosen to this Office Quod milites Comitat. pro Parliamento extunc eligend sint milites notabiles de eisdem Com. pro quibus sic eligentur seu aliter notabiles Armigeri homines generosi de nativitate de eisdem Com. qui sint habiles existere milites quod nullus homo sit talis miles qui in gradu valetti inferiori existit prout in Statuto continetur viz. 23 H. 6. In breve de Sum. ad Parl. Claus 39 Hen 6. in dorso m. 41. For the choice of these Knights see the Statutes 7 Hen. 4. ca. 15. 23 Hen. 6. ca. 15. with others Their expences are to be born by the County 35 Hen. 8. ca. 11. though now a dayes that is for the
a long time first sending to the Sheriff of Middlesex to Summon the Party and if he could not be found there then to apprehend him wheresoever But afterwards by the contrivance of Clerks and upon a pretence of Expedition of Justice it was at last devised to put both these Writs into one and so to attach the party complained of upon a Supposal or Fiction that he was not within the County of Middlesex but lurking elswhere and that therefore he was to be apprehended in any place else where he was presumed to lie hid by a Writ directed to the Sheriff of the County where he is suspected to be Launcegays Anno 7 Rich. 2. cap. 13. A kinde of offensive Weapons now disused and prohibited by the said Statute Law Lex From the Saxon Lag or Laugh The Law of England is divided into Three Parts The Common Law which is the most Ancient and General Law of the Realm Statutes or Acts of Parliament and thirdly Particular Customs I say particular for if it be the General Custom of the Realm it is part of the Common Law Coke on Littl. fol. 15. b. Bracton defines it to be Sanctio justa jubens honesta prohibens contraria And the Divine Schoolman says Lex humana est quoddam dictamen rationis quo diriguntur humani actus See Merchenlage Law hath also a special signification wherein it is taken for that which is lawful with us and not elswhere As Tenant by the curtesie of England Anno 13. Edw. 1. cap. 3. To Wage Law Vadiare Legem and to make or do Law Facere Legem Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. When an Action of Debt is brought against one upon some secret Agreement or Contract as in an Action of Detinue for Goods Money or Chattels lent or left with the Defendant the Defendant may wage his Law if he will that is swear and certain persons with him that he detains not the Goods or ows nothing to the Plaintiff in Manner and Form as he hath declared which is intended by Law to be onely in case of the Plaintiffs want of Evidence and when he cannot prove his Surmise by any Deed or open Act. When one wages his Law he shall bring with him so many of his Neighbors as the Court shall assign Sir Edward Coke says Eleven to swear with him That they think in their Consciences he hath sworn truly who in the Civil Law are called Compurgators The offer to make the Oath is called Wager of Law and when it is accomplished it is called The making or doing of Law See Glanvil lib. 1. cap. 9. 12. Anciently Laga was used as Latin for Law Lagam Regis Edwardi vobis reddo c. Magna Char. Hen. 1. Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 2. 31 Hen. 6. cap. 6. Coke on Littl. fol. 155. 295. who says it is called Wager of Law because in old time the party did ingage with surety to make his Law by such a day Legem vadiare est cautionem dare de perimplendo Legis exigentiam in re litigata ut de praestando Sacramento ad indictam diem cum indicto consacramentalium seu conjuratorum numero Spelman And was a Custom anciently used among the Egyptians as Boemus in his Book De moribus Gentium informeth us Lawyer Legista Legisperitus Jurisperitus Our Saxons called him Lahman Law of Merchants Lex Mercatoria Is become a part of the Laws of this Realm for if there be two Joynt-Merchants of Wares and Merchandise and one of them dies his Executor shall have the moyety which is not so in the case of others not Merchants Coke on Littl. fol. 182. Anno 13 Edw. 1. stat 3. 27 Edw. 3. cap. 8. Law Spiritual Lex Spiritualis Is the Ecclesiastical Law allowed by the Laws of this Realm which is not against the Common Law whereof the Kings Prerogative is a principal part nor against the Statutes and Customs of the Realm And regularly according to such Ecclesiastical Laws the Ordinary and other Ecclesiastical Judges do proceed in Causes within their Cognizance Coke on Littl. fol. 344. Law of the Staple 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 22. Is the same with Law-Merchant See 4 Inst fol. 237 238. And Staple Law of Marque Anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. From the German word March i. Limes a Bound or Limit because they that are driven to make use of this Law do take the Shipping or Goods of that people of whom they have received wrong and cannot get ordinary Justice when they can take them within their own Bounds or Precincts See Reprisals Law-day Is otherwise called View of Frank-pledge or Court Leet Anno 1 Edw. 4. cap. 2. it is used for the County Court. Et quod terrae eorum imperpetuum quietae sint de sectis Comit atuum Hundredorum nostrorum de visu Franci plegii Lawdayorum de Turno auxilio Vicecomitum c. Carta 39 Hen. 3. m. 5. Lawing of Dogs Mastiffs must be lawed every three years Cromp. Jur. fol. 163. that is Three Claws of the Fore-foot shall be cut off by the Skin Char. Forestae cap. 6. or the Ball of the Forefoot cut out See Expeditate and Pèllota Lawless Court On Kingshil at Rochford in Essex on Wednesday morning next after Michaelmas day at Cockscrowing Is held a Court vulgarly called The Lawless Court They whisper and have no Candle nor any Pen and Ink but a Coal and he that ows Sute or Service and appears not forfeits double his rent every hour he is missing This Court belongs to the Honor of Raleigh and to the Earl of Warwick and is called Lawless because held at an unlawful or lawless hour or Quia dicta sine lege The Title of it in the Court Rolls runs thus Kingshil in Rochford ss CUria de Domino Rege Dicta sine Lege Tenta est ibidem Per ejusdem consuetudinem Ante ortum solis Luceat nisi polus Senescallus solus Nil scribit nisi culis Toties voluerit Gallus ut cantaverit Per cujus soli sonitus Curia est summonita Clamat clam pro Rege In Curia sine Lege Et nisi citò venerint Citiùs paenituerint Et nisi clam accedant Curia non attendat Qui venerit cum lumine Errat in regimine Et dum sunt sine lumine Capti sunt in crimine Curia sine cura Jurati de injuria Tenta ibidem die Mercurii ante Diem proximi post Festum Sancti Michaelis Arch angeli Anno regni Regis c. This Court is mentioned in Cam. Britan though imperfectly who says this servile attendance was imposed on the Tenants for conspiring at the like unseasonable time to raise a Commotion fol. 441. Lawless-Man Sax. Laugheles-Man exlex Is otherwise called an Outlaw Pro exlege tenebitur cum Principi non obediat nec legi tunc utlagabitur sicut ille qui est extra legem sicut Laugheles-man Bract. lib. 3. Corona
Judges of Assise do sit in their several Circuits See Assise In our Statues it is often Printed Oyer and Determiner See 4 Inst fol. 162. Oyer de Record Audire Recordum Is a Petition made in Court that the Judges for better proof sake will be pleased to hear or look upon any Record So likewise to demand Oyer of a. Bond Deed or Covenant O Yes a corruption from the Fr. Oyez i. Hear ye Is well known to be used by the Cryers in our Courts when they make Proclamation of any thing P. PAagium Matth. Paris fol. 769. Fecit equos meos homines restare donec Paagium extorsisset Passagium scil sive telonium exactum pro transitu per alterius ditionem says the Glos Pack of Wool is a Horse-load Which consists of Seventeen Stone and two pound Fleta lib. 2. cap. 12. See Sarplar Packers Anno 15 Car. 2. cap. 14. Are those that barrel or pack up Herrings and they are to be sworn to do it according to the said Statute Packing Whites Anno 1 Rich. 3. cap. 8. A kinde of Cloth so called Pacification Pacificatio Anno 17 Car. 1. cap. 17. A peace-making quieting or appeasing relating to the Wars betwixt England and Scotland Anno 1638. Padnage The same with Pannage In Charta Regis Hen. 1. Ecclesiae S. Martini de Bello Pagaments A sort of Frize-cloth so called I finde it in the Journal Book of the Lords House of Parliament in a Statute of 1 Eliz. not Printed Pain fort dur Fr. Peine fort dure Signifies an especial punishment for those that being arraigned of Felony refuse to put themselves upon the ordinary tryal of God and the Countrey and thereby are mute or such in Interpretation of Law This is founded upon Westm 1. cap. 12. Note that this strong and hard pain shall be in this manner inflicted HE shall be sent back to the Prison whence he came and laid in some low dark House where he shall lie naked on the Earth without any Litter Rushes or other Clothing and without any Rayment about him but onely something to cover his Privy-members and he shall lie upon his Back with his Head covered and his Feet and one Arm shall be drawn to one quarter of the House with a Cord and the other Arm to another quarter and in the same manner it is to be done with his Legs and then there is to be laid upon his Body Iron and Stone so much as he may bear or more and the next day following he is to have three Morsels of Barley-bread without Drink and the second day Drink three times and as much at each time as he can drink of the Water next to the Prison door except it be Running Water without any Bread And this is to be his Diet until he die Stamf. Pl. Cor. lib. 2. cap. 60. Pais Fr. A Countrey or Region Trial per pais quod non intelligendum est de quovis populo sed de Compagensibus hoc est eorum qui ex eodem sunt Comitatu quem majores nostri pagum dixere incolas ind● Pais g in i vel y converso Spelmans Glossar Palatin See County Palatine Palfrey Palfredus Palafredus Palefridus Fr. Palefray Insignioris equi genus nempe qui ad pompam aut honorem vectorum manu ducitur vulgo Palfrey ex Gal. Par le frain And sometimes of old taken for a Horse for a Womans Saddle W. Fauconberge tenebat Manerium de Cukeney in Com. Nott. in Sergientia per servitium ferrandi of shooing Palefredum Regis quando Rex venerit ad Mansfeld says Camden out of an ancient Inquisition See Coke on Litt. fol. 149. Palfrey-silber Custumam ibidem i. at Belvoir Castle vocat Palfrey-silber quae levari debet annuatim de Villis de Bot●lc●ford Normanton Herdeby c. aliis Hamlettis Eschaet 23 Edw. 3. Post mortem Gul. de Roos de Hamlake Palingman Anno 22 Edw. 4. cap. 23. and 11 Hen. 7. cap. 23. Seems to be a Merchant Denizen one born within the English Pale Palls Anno 25 Hen. 8. cap. 20. Are Pontificial Vestures made of Lambs Wool in bredth not exceeding three Fingers and having two Labels hanging down before and behinde which the Pope gives or sends to Archbishops and Metropolitans who wear them about their necks at the Altar above their other Ornaments The Pall was first given to the Bishop of Ostia by P. Marcus the Second Anno 336. And the Preface to an ancient Synod here in England wherein Odo Archbishop of Canterbury presided begins thus Ego Odo humilis extremus divina largiente clementia almi Praesulis Pallii honore ditatus c. Seldens Hist of Tithes p. 217. Palmestry Anno 1 2 Phil. Ma. cap. 4. A kinde of Divination practised by looking on the Lines and Marks of the Fingers and Hands a deceitful art used by Egyptians mentioned in the said Statute and there misprinted Palmystry Palmata A handful Johannes Dei gratia Rex Angliae Sciatis no● pro amore Dei concessisse Leprosis S. Egidii de Salopesbirid quod habeant Palmatas bladi farin● de omnibus saccis qui cum blado farina exponuntur ad vendendum in morcato Salopeshiriae tam diebus mercati quam aliis sicut eas habuerunt tempore Hen. Regis Patris nostri de dono elemosyna ejusdem Regis sc de unoquoque sacco bladi Palmatam duarum manuum de sacco farinae palmatam unius manus sicut eas habuerunt de dono elemosyna praedicti Regis dicbus suis sicut eas modohabent habore debent Quare volumus c. Dat. per manum S. Praepositi Beverlaci Archid. Wellensis apud Wudestoke xix die Marcii anno Regni nostri quinto Pandoxatrix Item utimur de Pandoxatricibus quod nemo potest brasiare sive pandoxare in Villa Burgo nostro nisi per redemptionem aliquam factam ad voluntatem Comburgensium nostrorum si talis Pandoxatrix brasiaverit Assisam Domini nostri Regis in Burgo Villa positam Proclamatam fregerit Tunc debet per Balivos amerciari ad voluntatem Balivorum nostrorum non per pares suos primo secundo si tercia Vice Assisam fregerit debet capi per Balivos Capitales publice Duci ad locum ubi situatur le Gogingstole ibi debet eligere unum de duobus viz. An velit le Gogingstole ascendere an illud judicium redimere ad voluntatem Balivorum Ex Codice MS. de Legibus Statutis Consuetudinibus liberi Burgi Villae de Mountgomery a tempore Hen. 2. fol. 12. b. In Goldmans Dictionary I finde Pandox for a Drunkard or Swilbowl and Pandoxatorium a Brew-house But Pandoxatrix here seems to signifie an Ale-wife that both brews and sells Ale or Beer Panel Fortescu de legibus Angl. cap. 25. And Coke on Littl. pag. 158. b. write it Panellum in Latine but Sir H.
Parish-Churches under Bishops in England but other Authors differ in the number Parle-hill Collis vallo plerunque munitus in loco campestri ne insidiis exponatur ubi convenire olim solebant Centuriae aut viciniae incolae ad lites inter se tractandas terminandas Scotis reor Grith-hail q. Mons pacificationis cui Asyli privilegia concedebantur Vide Stat. Will. Regis Scot. ca. 5. Sect. 1. Et in Hibernia frequentes vidimus the Parle and Parling-hills Spel. Parliament Parliamentum from the Fr. Parler loqui Is the great Assembly of this Kingdom consisting of the King and the three Estates of the Realm viz. The Lords Spiritual the Lords Temporal and the Commons for the Debating of Matters touching the Common-wealth and especially the making and correcting Laws which Assembly or Court is of all other the highest and of greatest Authority as you may read in Sir Tho. Smith de Repub. Angl. Cam. Britan. pa. 112. Si vetustatem spectes est antiquissima si dignitatem est honoratissima si jurisdictionem est capacissima Coke on Litt. lib 2. ca. 10. Sect. 164. And see his fourth Part Inst ca. 1. This great Assembly was anciently called Commune Concilium Regni Angliae As in an ancient Charter of King John Nullum Scutagium vel auxilium ponam in regno nostro nisi per Commune Consilium regni nostri c. The first Parliament in England according to Sir Richard Baker was held at Salisbury 19 April 16 Hen. 1. But see Cottoni Post●um● fo 15. and 2 Inst fo 268. where there is mention of Parliaments held long before that time The Abbot of Croyland was wont to call a Parliament of his Monks to consult about the affairs of his Monastery Croylandensis libri haec sunt verba Concessimus etiam tunc Scrientium nostrae Ecclesiae Semanno de Lek qui veniens coram Conventu in nostro publico Parliamento similiter juramentum prestitit quod fidus fidelis nobis existerit Officium c. And at this day the Community of the two Temples or Inns of Court do call that Assembly A Parliament wherein they consult of the common affairs of their several Houses See Crom. Jurisd fo 1. See Royal assent Parliamentum insanum so called in History was a Parliament held at Oxford Anno 41 H. 3. MS. in Bibl. Cotton sub tit Vitellius C. 9. Parliamentum indoctorum Was a Parliament held at Coventry 6 Hen. 4. Whereunto by special precept to the Sheriffs in their several Counties no Lawyer or person skill'd in the Law was to come and therefore it was so called Walfingh pa. 412. n. 30. Rot. Parl. 6 Hen. 4. Parol Fr. Is used in Kitchin fo 193. for a Plea in Court and being joyn'd with Lease as Lease parol or Lease per parol is a Lease by word of mouth contradistinguish'd from one in writing Parson Persona Signifies the Rector of a Church because he for his time represents the Church and susteins the person thereof as well in suing as being sued in any action touching the same See Fleta lib. 9. ca. 18. Charta Hugonis Pusac alias Pudsey de Puteaco tempore Hen. 2. Hugo dei Gratia Dunelmensis Episcopus omnibus Archidiaconis suis Clericis laicis Episcopatus sui salutem Sciatis nos ad Praesentationem Roberti Capellani in Ecclesiam de Witefield quae in feudo suo sita est Canonice impersonasse Robertum nepotem suum Quare volumus praecipimus quatenus idem Robertus habeat teneat Ecclesiam praenominatam libere quiete tam in decimis quam in caeteris obventionibus sicut aliqui Clerici liberius quietius in Episcopatu nostro Ecclesias suas teneant Salvis in omnibus Episcopalibus consuetudinibus Testibus c. Endorsed thus Praesentatio Roberti de Quitefeld Parson imparsonee Persona impersonata Is the Rector that is in possession of a Church Parochial be it presentative or impropriate and with whom the Church is full For in the New Book of Entries verbo Ayd in Annuity you have these words Et praedictus A. dicit quod ipse est Persona praedictae Ecclesiae de S. impersonata in eadem ad praesentationem F. Patronissae c. So that Persona seems to be the Patron or he that has right to give the Benefice by reason that before the Later an Councel he had right to the Tythes in respect of his liberality in erecting or endowing the Church Quasi sustineret personam Ecclesiae Persona impersonata he to whom the Benefice is given in the Patrons right For in the Reg of Writs judicial fo 34. b. Persona impersonata is used for the Rector of a Benefice presentative and not appropriated and Dyer fo 40. num 72. sayes a Dean and Chapter are Parsons impersonees of a Benefice appropriated to them who also fo 221. num 19. plainly shews that persona impersonata is he that is inducted and in possession of a Benefice So that Persona seems to be termed impersonata onely in respect of the possession he has of the Benefice or Rectory be it appropriate or otherwise by the act of another Coke on Litt. fo 300. b. Parters of Gold and Silver See Finors Partes Finis nihil habuerunt c. Is an Exception taken against a Fine levied Cokes Rep. lib. 3. Case of Fines Particata terrae See Perticata terrae Partitione facienda Anno 31 Hen. 8. ca. 1. Is a Writ that lies for those who hold Lands or Tenements pro indiviso and would sever to every one his part against him or them that refuse to joyn in partition as Coparceners or Tenants in Gavelkind Old Nat. Br. fo 142. Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 61. and New Book of Entries verbo Partition Dorset Placita de Juratis Assis Anno 16 Edw. 1. Motingh EDwardus Kaynel Maria filia Roberti de Camma Johannes Bereset Matilda uxor ejus Johanna soror ejusdem Matildae petunt versus Johannem Alfrith de Warham unum Toftum cum pertin in Warham de quo Johannes Gerard consanguineus predictorum Edwardi Mariae Matildae Johannae cujus heredes ipsi sunt fuit scifitus in dominico suo ut de feodo dic quo obiit c. unde dicunt c. Et Johannes venit dicit quod tenementa in Warham sunt partibilia inter masculos femellas dicit quod praedictus Edwardus habet quasdam Gunnoram Matildam Christianam Albredam Eufemiam sorores participes ipsius Edwardi aliorum petentium quae tantum jus habent in re petita sicut c. quae non nominantur in brevi c. Edwardus alii non possunt hoc dedicere Ideo consideratum est quod praedictus Johannes eat inde sine die c. Partie-Jury Anno 14 Car. 2. ca. 11. See Medictas linguae Partlet Anno 24 Hen. 8. ca. 13. Was a kind of Band to wear about the necks both of Men and Women now out
5 Hen. 4. ca. 14. is termed a cheif Clerk of that Court He of the Kings Bench Records all Actions Civil as the Clerk of the Crown Office does all Criminal Causes in that Court Those of the Common Pleas since the Order of 14. Jac. upon an Agreement made betwixt the Prothonotaries and Filacers of that Court who before did enter all Declarations and Pleas whereunto a Serjeants hand was not required do enter and enrol all manner of Declarations Pleadings Assises Judgments and Actions They make out all Judicial Writs except Writs of Habeas Corpus and Distringas Jurator for which there is a particular Office not much beyond the memory of Man erected called The Habeas Corpora Office They also make out Writs of Execution and of Seisin Writs of Priviledge for removing Causes from other Inferior Courts of Record in case where the party hath cause of Priviledge Writs of Procedendo of Scire Facias in all Cases and Writs to enquire of Damages and all Process upon Prohibitions and upon Writs of Audita Quaerela and False Judgment Cum multis aliis They enter and enrol all common Recoveries and may make Exemplifications of any Record in the same Term before their Rolls are made up and brought into the Treasury of Records in that Court Pro partibus Liberandis Is a Writ for the Partition of Lands between Co-heirs Reg. of Writs fol. 316. Property Proprietas Is the highest right that a Man hath or can have to any thing and no ways depending upon another Mans curtesie Which none in our Kingdom can properly be said to have in any Lands or Tenements but onely the King in right of his Crown Because all the Lands throughout the Realm are in the nature of Fee and hold either mediately or immediately of the Crown This word nevertheless is used for that right in Lands and Tenements that common persons have because it imports as much as arile Dominium though not Directum See Fee Prophecies Prophetiae Are in our Statutes taken for wizzardly fore-tellings of Matters to come in certain hidden and enigmatical Speeches whereby great commotions have been often caused in this Kingdom and great attempts made by those to whom such Speeches promised good success though the words are mystically framed and point onely at the Cognizance Arms or some other quality of the parties Anno 3 Edw. 6. ca. 15. And 7 Ejusdem ca. 11. And 5 Eliz. ca. 15. But these for distinction sake are called Fond False or Phantastical Prophecies 3 Inst fol. 128. Propounders The 85 Cha. of Cokes 3 Institutes is entituled Against Monopolists Propounders and Projectors where it seems to be used onely as a Synonima to Monopolists Proprietary Proprietarius Is he that hath a property in any thing Quae nullius arbitrio est obnoxia But it was heretofore most commonly used for him that hath the Fruits of a Benefice to himself and his Heirs or Successors as in time past Abbots and Priors had to them and their Successors See Appropiation Proprietate Provanda Is a Writ that lies for him who would prove a property before the Sheriff Reg. of Writs fol. 83. 85. For where a Property is alleaged a Replegiare properly lies not Brook Property 1. Pro rata i. Pro proportione Anno 16 Car. 2. ca. 6. Pro rata portionis See Oneranda pro rata portionis Prorogue Prorogo To prolong defer or put off to another day to continue Anno 6 Hen. 8. cap. 8. The difference between a Prorogation and an Adjournment or Continuance of the Parliament is That by the Prorogation in open Court there is a Session and then such Bills as passed in either House or by both Houses and had no Royal assent to them must at the next Assembly begin again For every several Session of Parliament is in Law a several Parliament but if it be but adjourned or continued then is there no Session and consequently all things continue in the same state they were in before the Adjournment 4 Inst fol. 27. Prosecutor Is he that followeth a Cause in an others name See Promooters Protection Protectio Is generally taken for that benefit and safety which every subject denizen or alien specially secured hath by the Kings Laws Anno 25 Edw. 3. cap. 22. And it is used specially for an Exemption or Immunity given by the King to a person against Sutes in Law or other vexations upon reasonable causes him thereto moving which is a Branch of His Prerogative And of this Protection Fitzherbert Nat. Br. fol. 28. makes two sorts The first he calls a Protection cum clasula Volumus Whereof he mentions four particulars 1. A Protection Quia profecturus for him that is to pass over Sea in the Kings service 2. Quia moraturus for him that is abroad in the Kings service upon the Sea or in the Marches Anno 7 Hen. 7. cap. 2. 3. For the Kings Debtor that he be not sued nor attached till the King be paid his debt Anno 15 Edw. 3. And 4. in the Kings service beyond Sea or on the Marches of Scotland Anno 1 Rich. 2. cap. 8. Reg. of Writs fol. 23. And Britton cap. 123. The second form of Protection is Cum clausula Nolumus which is granted most commonly to a Spiritual Company for their Immnnity from having their Cattle taken by the Kings Ministers But it may also be granted to a single person Spiritual or Temporal Protection extends not to Pleas of Dower Quare Impedit Assise of Novel Disseisin Darrein Presentment Attaints nor Pleas before Justices in Eyre See New Book of Entries on this word Proto-Forestarius Was he whom our ancient Kings made cheif of Windsor Forest to hear all causes of death or mayhem there Cam. Brit. pag. 213. A kinde of a Lord Cheif Justice in Eyre Protest Protestari Hath two divers Applications one is by way of cautel to call witness as it were or openly to affirm That he doth either not at all or but conditionally yeeld his consent to any act or unto the proceeding of a Judge in a Court wherein his Jurisdiction is doubtful or to answer upon his Oath further then he is by Law bound Reg. of Writs fol. 306. b The other is by way of complaint to Protest a Mans Bill As if I pay money to a Merchant in France taking his Bill of Exchange to be repaid in England by his Factor or Assignee if at my coming I finde not my self satisfied but either delaid or denied then I go into the Exchange and Protest that I am not paid or satisfied by him And thereupon if he hath any Goods within the Realm the Law of Merchants allows me satisfaction out of them Protestation Protestatio Is as Iustice Walsh defines it a defence of safeguard to the party that makes it from being concluded by the Act he is about to do that Issue cannot be joyned upon it Plowden fol. 276. b. It is a Form of pleading when one does not directly affirm nor
Scite Situs The setting or standing of any place the Seat or Scituation of a Capital House or Messuage a Territory or quarter of a Country As we often find the Site of the late dissolved Monastery of i. The place where it stood The word is found in the Stat. 32 Hen. 8. ca. 20. 22 Car. 2. ca. 11. and is there written Scite Dedi Situm loci in quo domus sua sita est Mon. Angl. 2 Par. fo 278. b. Sithcundman Sax. Sithcundus custos paganus interpretatur Lamb. expl verb. pa. 5. Such a gentleman as had the Office to lead the men of a Town or Parish E classe nobilium erat says Somner Scyvinage Anno 27 Hen. 6. ca. 2. Signifies the precincts of Caleis Smalt Anno 21 Ja. ca. 3. and Pat. 16 Feb. 16. Ja. Ital. smalto Is that of which Painters make Blew Colour Smoke silver Tenemenium Newstede cum pertinen c. in villa de Staplehirst in Cam. Cant. tenetur de manerio de East-greenwich per fidelitatem tantum in libero Soccagio per Pat. dat 3 Febr. 4 Edw. 6. And by the payment for Smoke-silver to the Sheriff yearly the summ of six pence Notes for Lord Wootons Office 1628. There is Smoke-silver and Smoke-penny paid to the Ministers of divers Parishes conceived to be paid in lieu of Tithewood Or it may as in many places at this day be a continued payment of the Romescot or Peter-pence See Chimney-money Soc Sax. Signifies power authority or liberty to minister Justice and execute Lawes Also the Shire Circuit or Territory wherein such power is exercised by him that is endued with such a priviledge or liberty Whence our Law Latin word Soca for a Seignory or Lordship enfranchised by the King with the liberty of holding or keeping a Court of his Sockmen or Socagers i. His Tenants whose tenure is hence call'd Socage This kind of liberty is in divers places of England at this day and commonly known by the name of Soke or Soken Skene says Sok an old word used in Charters and Feoffments which are in sundry old Books containing the Municipal Laws of this Realm is called Seda de hominibus suis in Curia secundum consuetudinem regni c. See Bracton lib. 3. Tract 2. ca. 8. where he makes mention of these liberties Soc Sac Tol Team Infangthef Utfangthef LL. Hen. 1. ca. 22. Sive Sacam totaliter habent sive non Soca id quod Franchesiam dicimus i. Locus privilegiatus libertas immunitas refugium asylum sanctuarium a Sax. Socn socne haec ipsa significantibus Socage or Soccage Socagium From the Fr. Soc i. Vomer a Plowshare or Coulter Is a tenure of Lands by or for certain inferior or Husbandry services to be perform'd to the Lord of the Fee See Institutes of Common-Law 31. Bracton lib. 2. ca. 35. nu 1. Describes it thus Dici poterit Soccagium a Socco inde tenentes qui tenent in Soccagio Sockmanni dici poterunt eo quod deputati sunt ut videtur tantummodo ad culturam quorum custodia maritagia ad propinquiores parentes jure sanguinis pertinebunt c. Skene sayes Soccage is a Tenure of Lawes whereby a man is infeoffed freely without Wardship or Marriage paying to his Lord some small rent c. which is called free-socage there was also base Soccage otherwise called Villenage Bracton adds Soccagium liberum est ubi fit servitium in donariis Dominis capitalibus nihil inde omnino datur ad scutum servitium Regis This free Soccage is also called common Soccage Anno 37 H. 8 ca. 20. Other divisions there are in our Law Writers of Soccage in Capite c. But by the Statute 12 Car. 2. ca. 24. all Tenures from and after 24 February 1645 shall be adjudged and taken for ever to be turned into free and Common Socage Socmans alias Sokemans Socmanni Are such Tenants as hold their Lands by Soccage Tenure But the Tenants in ancient Demean seem most properly to be called Socmans Fitz. Nat. Br. fo 14. b. Britton ca. 66. n. 2. Progenitores Simonis Bokeley omnia sua in Houcton per liberum Sokagium tunc tenebant quieti erant de Sectis Curiarum Consuetudinibus exactionibus demandis Lib. S. Albani Tit. Houcton ca. 1. The word Sokeman is found in the Statute of Wards and Relief 28 Edw. 1. Socna Sax. Socne A Priviledge Immunity Liberty or Franchise Volo ut ipsi sint eorum Sacae Socnae Theolonei etiam Teami privilegiorum scilicet jurium sic appellatorum digni intra tempus extra tempus c. Char. Canuti Regis in Hist Eccl. Cath. S. Pauli fo 189. See Soc. Socome signifies a Custom of grinding at the Lords Mill And there is Bond-Socome where the Tenants are bound to it and Love-socome where they do it freely out of love to their Lord. Soke Anno 32 Hen. 8. ca. 15. 20. Significat libertatem Curiae tenentium quam Socam appellamus Fleta lib. 1. ca. 47. Sect. Soke Soka hoc ect quod Prior habet sectam de homagiis suis ad Curiam suam secundum communem consuetudinem regni Angliae M. S. de libertat Priorat de Cokesford Per Soke Will. Stanley in manerio suo de Knottesford clamat cognitionem Placitorum debiti transgressionis conventionis detentionis infra summ 40 sol de aliis compactibus quibuscunque sine brevi Pl. in Itin. apud Cestriam 14 Hen. 7. Soke i. Aver Fraunche Court de ses homes MS. See Soc. Soken Soca See Soc and Hamsoken Sokereeve Seems to be the Lords Rent-gatherer in the Soke or Soken Fleta lib. 2. ca. 55. Solda Pateat quod nos Johannes Romayne senior de Leominstr Johannes Romayne junior de eadem remisimus Johanni Meole vicario Ecclesiae de Wygemore Ricardo Bocerell Constabular Castri de Wygemore Fouke Sprengehose totum jus nostrum clamium in una Solda cum pertinenciis in Leominstr scituata in alto vico inter Soldam quondam Ricardi Spicer Soldam quae fuit Philippi Collinge c. Dat. 2. Octobre 19 Ric. 2. It seems to be the same with Solila a Shop or Shed Solet debet See Debet Solet Soletenant Solus tenens Is he or she that holds onely in his or her own right without any other joyned For example if a man and his wife hold land for their lives the remainder to their Son Here the man dying the Lord shall not have Heriot because he dies not sole-tenant Kitchin fo 134. Solicitor Solicitator Signifies a man employ'd to follow and take care of Sutes dedepending in Courts of Law or Equity formerly allowed only to Nobility whose maenial servants they were but now too commonly used by others to the great increase of Champerty and Maintenance and Damage of the People Solidata terrae See Farding deal of Land Solidata signifies also the pay or stipend of a Souldier Et qui terram non