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A42922 The orphans legacy, or, A testamentary abridgement in three parts ... : wherein the most material points of law, relating to that subject, are succinctly treated, as well according to the common and temporal, as ecclesiastical and civil laws of this realm : illustrated with great variety of select cases in the law of both professions, as well delightful in the theorie, as usefull for the practice of all such as study the one, or are either active or passive in the other / John Godolphin. Godolphin, John, 1617-1678. 1674 (1674) Wing G946; ESTC R8268 410,843 382

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thousand five hundred pound upon a special Verdict the Case was That W. M. had received annually out of the Exchequer Fifty pound as a Fee for his Diet for Thirty years together which was paid him by the Command of the Lord Treasurer who had Authority by Privy Seal to make allowance and payment of all Fees due but in truth these were not any due Fees And whether his Executor shall be charged with these Summs so received was the Question And after Argument it was adjudged that he should be charged for it was held That this payment of the money by the appointment of the Lord Treasurer was not allowable for the Privy Seal is not sufficient Authority to dispose of the Queens Treasure unless where it is due and he disposing of it otherwise it is out of his Authority 2. It was held That this money delivered by Authority of the Lord Treasurer who is quasi a Judicial Officer and it was quasi a Judicial Act by him yet it shall not bind the Queen for it was without his Authority and without warrant to make allowance thereof not being due and it is at his peril who receives it or demands allowance thereof For these and other Reasons mentioned in the Report it was adjudged for the Queen against the Defendant and although he were Executor he should answer for it as a debt from the Testator 11 Co. 90. b. Errour upon a Judgement given in an Assumpsit against an Executor upon a Promise of the Testators where the Plaintiff declared That the Testator in consideration of Marriage promised to pay the Plaintiff One hundred pound and for non-performance of this promise brought the Action and Judgement there given for the Plaintiff and this matter was assigned for Errour that the Action lay not against an Executor and all the Justices and Barons besides Clark Baron held it to be Erroneous for this cause For Anderson said The Reason why Debt lies not against an Executor upon a Contract of the Testators is because the Law doth not intend that he is privy thereto or can have notice thereof and he cannot gage his Law for such a debt as the Testator might and when debt will not lie it is not fit that this Action upon a bare Promise should bind him for it stands upon one Reason And if these Actions should be allowable it would be very mischievous wherefore the Judgement was reversed Q. Whether a Recovery in this Action against an Executor is allowable against a debt upon an Obligation if it should be an Administration for then it would be mischievous to Creditors and if it should not be an Administration it would then be mischievous to Executors that they should be charged therein and not have allowance thereof against other Creditors for it may be that at the time of the Recovery they did not know of other debts Note that this Term was given the like Judgement betwixt Griggs and Helhouse in an Action brought against an Administrator upon a Promise of the Intestates to pay money c. Debt against the Defendant as Administratrix of J. S. upon plene Administravit pleaded it was found by Verdict That the Testator at the time of his death had Goods to the value of One hundred pound and was bound to another by Obligation in One hundred pound and that the Defendant had taken in this Obligation and made another in her own Name with Sureties to the Obligor And upon the motion of Heale the Court held That this was an Administration and it is in the nature of a payment and so much of the Testators debt is thereby discharged and so it was said to be adjudged in Woods Case Nota fuit Ruled accordingly Pasch 30. in C. B. which was entered Mich. 28 29 Eliz. inter Stamp Hutchins Action upon the Case on Indebitatus Assumpsit doth well lye for every debt implyes a Promise and it is one good consideration in Facto whereon to found an Action But for a debt by simple Contract due by the Testator no Assumpsit lies against Executors and it was openly delivered by Popham Chief Justice No. 44 Eliz. to be the Resolution of all the Judges and to be a President in all Cases that might after happen It was agreed by Yelverton Williams and Crook Justices That if a man by Indenture lease Land to J. D. for years rendring Rent and J. D. dye making A. his Executor the Lessor may have Action of Debt against the Executor for the Rent reserved and the Arrears thereof after the death of the Lessee albeit the Executor never enter nor agree to the Lease for the Executor represents the Testators person and the Testator by the Indenture was stop'd and concluded to pay the Rent during the Term upon his own Contract and albeit the Rent exceeded the value of the profit of the Land yet the Executor cannot waive the Land but notwithstanding that shall be charg'd with the Rent Vid. Opin Ascue 21 H. 6. 24. 11 H. 4 Contr. Action Sur Trover and Conversion of Goods upon demurrer the Case was The Ordinary committed Administration of the Goods of an Intestate to the Defendant afterwards the next of Kin sues out a Citation in the Ecclesiastical Court against the Defendant to Repeal that Administration and he pendente Lite sells those Goods and afterwards his Administration is Repealed and Administration committed to the Plaintiff who for this Conversion pendente Lite brings this Action and it was moved for the Defendant that this Action lyes not for the Administration at the Common Law is well committed and the Statute doth not alter the Law in this point but gives a penalty against the Ordinary if he commits them not to the next of Kin and the Administrator till Administration Repealed hath an absolute Authority to dispose of the Goods as he pleaseth Tanfield è contra The Conversion pendente Lite in the Ecclesiastical Court is not lawful but is a Tort to the Plaintiff and that the Sentence there proves which is that all things attempted or done pendente Lite shall be void and the Justices ought to have regard to the Civil Law in this point as in 27 H. 6. Guard 118. 2 R. 2. Quare impedit 143. and 4 H. 7. 13. And by the Sentence it appears that the Administration is revoked as if it never had been and upon this reason it is in Dyer 339. where an Administrator recovered a debt and afterwards another procured himself to be joyned in the Administration and released the debt and afterwards it being revoked this release was not any bar to the execution And Mich. 25 26 Eliz. in the Common Bench between White and Cary this very point was in question and adjudged that the Action lay Gawdy The Action well lies for the Sentence doth not repeal mean Acts done by an Administrator which are for the Intestates benefit but forasmuch as these Goods were not converted
a Testament otherwise it is for the most part held they may 9. An Action of Debt was brought against J. S. as Administrator of J. D. The Defendant pleaded that the Intestate was Out-lawed at the Suit of J. N. after judgement and so being Out-lawed died Intestate It was resolved That the Plea was not good for it is but a Plea by Implication that he hath not any Goods and so but Argumentative And Trin. 37 Eliz. in C. B. Rott 2954. Wolley and Bradwells Case was vouched to be adjudged accordingly and therefore the Court upon the view of the Record in Wolleys Case gave judgement that in the Principal Case it was no Plea If Debt be brought against an Executor and he pleadeth that his Testator was and died Out-lawed it was holden in that case that this doth not prove a Nullity of the Will for then he might have pleaded that he was never Executor but it tends only to this that no Goods did come to his hands for satisfaction of the Testators Debt by reason of the Out-lawry A man Out-lawed to a personal Action may make Executors for he may have Debts upon Contract which are not forfeited to the King Consequently for the same reason Administration of such a mans Goods may be granted If an Exigent for Felony be awarded against a man whereby he loses all his Goods yet he may make Executors to reverse it for there he is not attainted So Administration of such a mans Goods may be also granted CHAP. XIII Of Conditional Testaments 1. When a Testament may be said to be Conditional 2. What words sufficient to express or imply a Conditon 3. The difference between Conditio and Modus 1. THe Testament may then be said to be Conditional when the Executor is therein Conditionally assigned and appointed for the assignation of the Executor is the Life and Soul of the Testament Now the assignation of the Executor is conditional when such a suspensive quality is added thereto as thereby the effect of the disposition is for the time impeded and dependeth on some future event 2. Many and divers are the words which do express or imply a condition in a Last Will or Testament whereby the Testament it self or the disposition of the Testator therein becomes conditional Such are the words following viz. if when whiles which what person who whosoever and sometimes the Ablative case absolute Also these words following viz. except unless otherwise until whensoever as much as in as much as for as much as seeing that to which end to the end that for this purpose so far as so long as also prepositions when they serve to or govern the Accusative Case as By and To yea and when they govern the Ablative Case as With if it so appears to be the Testators meaning And in a word every part of Speech whatsoever it be that suspendeth the disposition of the Testator in expectation of some future event doth either express or imply a Condition 3. Conditio is an annexed Quality which so long as it dependeth unperformed hindereth the effect of the disposition And Modus is a moderation whereby a charge or burden is imposed by the Testator in respect of some commodity which hinders not the effect of the disposition in so strict and exact a manner as Conditio doth And as Conditio is commonly known by the word if so Modus for the most part is known by the word that CHAP. XIV Of the several kinds of Conditions incident to Testaments 1. The distinction of Conditions 2. The Law of Possible Conditions 3. The Law of Arbitrary Casual and mixt Conditions 4. The Law of Affirmative and Negative Conditions 5. Conditions Impossible Unlawful and Captious are ineffectual 6. Necessary Conditions of no force in Law 1. AS many and various are the words and expressions which are as the signs and landmarks of a condition so no less manifold are the divisions and subdivisions in the Law of Conditions themselves but as to our purpose we shall content our selves with a few and reduce them all to these following viz. Conditions are either 1. Possible and they are either Casual Arbitrary or mixt which consist either in Chancing Giving or Doing and are either Affirmative or Negative Or 2 dly Impossible either in respect of Nature of Law of Persons or of Contrariety Or 3 dly Necessary and that in respect either of Fact or of Law And thus all Conditions relating to this subject may be reduced to one of these Three Heads viz. either Possible Impossible or Necessary As for Captious and Vnlawful Conditions they fall in construction of Law under the second head of this distinction 2. Possible Conditions must first be accomplished before the effect can take place unless it sticks not with nor may be imputed to the party on whom the Condition lies wherefore such Condition is not performed for in such Case the Condition will be accounted as accomplished specially if the Condition be Arbitrary and the party not in Mora nor Culpa why the same is not indeed accomplished And here Note that every Possible Condition ought to be precisely observed or performed neither is it sufficient save in some cases to accomplish the same by any other means or in any other manner than is prescribed unless it may appear that the Testator did more respect the end than the means or unless the party in whose favour such Condition was made doth consent unto other means or unless the Condition be when something is disposed in pios usus or unless the Law allows other means than the precise form which is prescribed And whereas it is true in Law what hath been said That when it doth not stand by him to whom the Condition appertaineth wherefore the Condition is not performed it ought to be for the most part accounted as accomplished though indeed and in truth it remains unaccomplished and whereas this is generally true when the Condition is meerly Arbitrary and the party to whom the Condition was injoyn'd not in fault wherefore the Condition is not accomplished so as that an impediment shall be said to excuse a man from delay in the matter of performance of Conditions yet notwithstanding all this when the impediment may be foreseen and prevented such impediment shall not excuse him who doth not avoid the same But when the impediment of performing a Condition doth proceed from the Testator himself then the Condition is reputed for compleat though not accomplished and in that case it shall prejudice neither the Executor nor the Legatary In like manner when the impediment doth proceed from a third person the Condition is to be accounted in Law for accomplished unless such third person were ignorant of the Testators Will. But when the performance of a Condition is hindered by the Will and Providence of God there the Law doth not allow any
in Reversion whereof no Entry can be made nor can any man therein be Executor of his own wrong and therefore the first Sale to Burgess before Administration is utterly void At the Kings Bench in Debt all the Justices of England being Assembled at Serjeants Inn it was Adjudged That an Executor of his own wrong cannot pay himself either Debt or Legacy Debt against one as Executor the Defendant pleaded that the deceased died Intestate and that certain of his Goods came to the Defendants hands and that Administration was committed to J. S. to whom he delivered the Goods It was adjudged no Plea in regard he had once made himself chargeable to the Plaintiffs Action as Executor of his own wrong he shall never discharge himself by matter ex post facto Note in an Action of Debt brought against A. as Executor in his own wrong he pleaded ne unque Executor and it was found against him and Execution was awarded against him for the whole debt viz. Sixty pound for his false Plea although in truth he had not intermedled but with one Bedstead of small value and so it was said it was adjudged 40 Eliz. in C. B. in Kitchin and Dixons Case CHAP. IX Of a Child in the Womb made Executor and of an Infant-Executor as also of an Executor and Administrator durante Minoritate 1. Whether the Child in the Womb may be made Executor 2. At what age an Infant-Executor may Administer 3. What Acts may or may not be done by an Infant-Executor 4. To whom the Right of Administration doth belong durante Minoritate 5. Divers Cases Reported in the Law pertinent to this Subject 1. THe Child in the Womb may be made Executor insomuch that when such is so appointed if the Mother bring forth Two or Three Children at that one Burthen they are all to be admitted Executors The Law is also the same as to a Legacy given in like manner which is to be equally divided amongst them 2. Though an Infant how young soever he be may be Executor or unborn as aforesaid yet the Execution of the Will shall not be committed to him until he attain the Age of Seventeen years for Administration granted durante Minoritate ceases when the Infant-Executor attains to that Age of Seventeen years And if it be a Female-Infant and married to a man of Seventeen years of Age or more it is then as if her self were of that Age and her Husband shall have the Execution of the Will and Administration thereof This limitation of Seventeen years comes in by the Canon not by the Common Law 3. Although an Administration granted durante Minoritate doth as aforesaid cease when the Infant-Executor doth attain to the Age of Seventeen years yet betwixt that Age and the Age of Twenty one years such Executor cannot Assent to Legacies howbeit upon satisfaction really made he may release a debt due to the Testator for although his Actings unconformable to the duty and office of an Executor bind him not yet such acts as are conformable to such an office done by him during his Minority that is till he be of the Age of Twenty one years for till then the Common Law holds him a Minor are binding and good in Law 4. Until the said Age of Seventen years the Administration is to be committed to some other as to the Father or to the Guardian or Tutor of the Child who during such Minority cannot sell or alienate save in cases of necessity nor Set a Lease for a longer term than the Executors Minority 5. E. R. Executor of W. R. brought his Action on the Case against T. P. supposing that divers of the Testators Goods came to the Defendants hands c. In which Action the Defendant pleaded a Release from the Plaintiff Whereunto was replyed That the Plaintiff was within Age at the time when he gave such Release and whether such Release was a bar upon a demur in B. R. was the question where it was adjudged that it was a void Release The matter was after removed and brought before the Justices in the Exchequer Chamber by a Writ of Errour where all the Justices of the Common Pleas and the Barons of the Exchequer held That the Judgement in that point was good and that it was no Errour for they said that an Infant-Executor cannot Acquit Release or Discharge a Bond without receiving the money due thereupon otherwise he might through his own folly or ignorance charge himself of his own proper Goods which is not allowable in an Infant to do by a Release or Acquittance without some other Act but if upon a single Bond or Obligation he receive the money and make an Acquittance or Release they held that was good and the Infant should be bound thereby but by other means the Obligation could not be discharged and they all held That when a single Obligation is made to an Infant and he during his Infancy receive the money and make an Acquittance he shall be bound thereby Action is brought against the Defendant as Administrator of J. S. during the Minority of D. Issue joyn'd and found for the Plaintiff It was alledg'd in Arrest of Judgment That the Declaration was not good because non constat whether D. were Seventeen years of Age at the time of the Action commenced at which time the Defendant-Administrators Authority is determined but it was adjudged That the Plaintiff is not to shew or set forth that matter 1. Because the Plaintiff is a stranger to the Defendants power 2. Because the Defendant by joyning issue hath admitted that his power continues Biss makes Katherine his Wife and John his Son aged one year his Executors K. Proves the Will alone and marries the Plaintiff and they without the Son bring Action of Debt as Executors against the Defendant who pleaded in abatement of the Writ that John was made Executor with Katherine and that he was yet alive not named c. The Plaintiff replyed That John was not above one year of Age that Katherine had Proved the Will and had Administration committed to her during his minority c. Whereupon Yelv. demurr'd and adjudg'd for the Defendant quod Billa cassetur for that in truth they are both Executors and ought to be named in the Action and albeit that Katherine by the Administration committed to her durante Minori aetate hath the full power yet the Infant ought to be named for that she hath affirmed him to be an Executor Debt as Administrator to A. L. durante minori aetate W. L. the Executor upon an Obligation and averrs that W. L. was within the Age of Twenty one years The Defendant pleaded an ill Bar and it was thereupon demurr'd but because the Court was resolved upon Conference with divers Civilians openly in Court That the power of an Administrator durante minori aetate doth cease at the
Executors Age of Seventeen years and that Administration committed after that Age of the Executor is meerly void and notwithstanding this averment here the Executor might be above the age of Seventeen years and within the age of Twenty one years It was therefore adjudged Quod Quaerens nihil caperet c. 5. Co. 29. Trespass upon a special Verdict the Case was Jackson Lessee for years by several Leases of divers Lands some of them in the Diocess of York some in another Peculiar in the same Diocess devised all these Leases to his Son and made his Daughter within Age his Executrix the Mother takes Administration durante minori aetate of the Executrix in F. the Peculiar where the Testator died ad Commodum proficuum Executricis the Administratrix granted this Term durante minori aetate of the Executrix to the Plaintiff Whether the Grant were good or not was the principal Question The Court resolved that it was not good For such an Administrator hath but a special property ad proficuum Executoris but not a general property as another Executor or Administrator hath and therefore his sale of Goods unless they be Bona peritura or it be for necessity for the payment of debts which he is chargeable to pay it shall not bind But he may sue and be sued and yet his Authority is but a limited Authority and therefore like as if Letters ad Colligendum bona Defuncti were granted to one there he may sell bona peritura as Fruit or the like 2. It was moved whether the Assent of an Administrator durante minori aetate to the devise of a Term or the Assent of the Executor himself during his minority to such a Devise be good Anderson said That an Executor at the Age of Eighteen years may Assent but whether the Assent by such an Administrator be good or not they doubted 3. It was moved whether Administration should in this case be granted at Two places viz. the one within the Peculiar the other by the Arch-Bishop of York Ordinary of the Diocess or whether he should have the Prerogative in both as he had where Bona Notabilia were in divers Diocesses And it was resolved That there should be two Letters of Administration granted for the Arch-Bishop shall not have any Prerogative here because this Peculiar was first derived out of his Jurisdiction wherefore c. 5. Co. 29. Errour of a Judgement in Debt in C. B. The Errour assigned was because the Plaintiff sues by an Atturney where he was an Infant and ought to sue by Guardian But because the Action was brought by him as Administrator so that he sued in auter droit Infancy is no impediment unto him no more than Out-lawrie and therefore he might well sue by Atturney and it was thereupon adjudged for the Defendant that the first Judgement should be affirmed Note that if an Infant sue and not as Executor he must then sue by his Guardian vid. Case Bartholomew vers Dighton Hill 37 Eliz. B. R. in Cro. Rep. part 1. Pl. 22. Debt upon an Obligation made to the Testator The Defendant Pleaded a Release made by one of the Plaintiffs The Plaintiff replyes That this Release was made without any consideration and he who Released was within Age at the time of the Release made and it was thereupon demurred and adjudged for the Plaintiff that it was a void Release being by an Infant without consideration In the Case between A. and M. as Administratrix of J. during the minority of L. It was among other things Objected That the Plaintiffs Declaration was not good because it is brought against her as Administratrix durante minori aetate of L. And it is not averr'd that the said L. was yet within the age of Seventeen years sed non allocatur for true it is that if one brings an Action and entitles himself as Administrator durante minori aetate of one such he ought to shew that he is yet within the Age of Seventeen years as Co. 5. fol. 59. Pigots Case For that he is to take Conuzance how long his Authority shall continue and he ought to shew it to enable himself to the Action But when he brings the Action against one as Administrator durante minori aetate there such Plea need not be shewn for so long as the other continues his medling he shall be sued and the Plaintiffs need not take Conuzance of the age of the other as c. And here if her Authority were determined it should be shewn on the Defendants part therefore the Judgement was affirmed Note it was resolved by all the Justices of England That the Release of a Debt or a Duty by an Infant Executor after Probate made of the Will is not good because it should be a Devastavit and charge the Infant of his own Goods and also it should be a wrong which an Infant by his Release cannot do and also because it is not pursuant to the Office of an Executor Infant Executor Administration was committed durante minori aetate debt was brought against the Administrator and then the Infant came of full age and the Justices very much doubted whether the Action did abate A Guardian Recovered a debt on an Obligation made to an Infant the Defendant paid the Principal and Costs and prayed that the Guardian might be ordered to acknowledge satisfaction The Court said That a Guardian or an Infant or Executor may not acknowledge satisfaction for more than they receive and for so much they ordered the Guardian to acknowledge satisfaction And made an Order that no Execution should issue for the residue If an Administration be repealed from one and granted to another which was only durante minori aetate and that other bring the first Administrator to account and after give him a Release yet the Infant at his full age may compell the first Administrator to account to him again and the former account to such second Administrator shall not Bar him for such Administrators Release is not good unless for some such cause as for which it ought to be made It was by the Chief Justice of the Queens Bench demanded of the other Justices there Assembled upon hearing of Causes If one make an Infant his Executor that Releases a Debt due to him as Executor without receiving the summ due which receipt if it be good will be a Devastavit by the Infant of the Goods in his hands whether such Release shall bind the Infant or not It was agreed by them all That such Release is void for an Infant by his own Laches and Folly shall not prejudice himself Yet a Feme Covert Executrix may receive money without her Husband which was due to her Testator and give an Acquittance for the same and if she gives an Acquittance for debt which causes a Devastavit the Release shall be good and the Wife and Husband bound thereby the reason is
his Suit is in anothers right viz. the Testators But he that is Excommunicate cannot proceed in Sute as Executor yet this Excommunication pleaded doth not abate or overthrow the Sute but makes that the Defendant may stay from answering his Sute until the Plaintiff be absolved and discharged from his Excommunication 5. Although one Co-Executor cannot Sue another for possession of the Testators Goods for that many Executors to the same Testator are but as one man and no man can Sue himself So that when the Testator doth make divers Executors if any one of them doth get the Goods or the possession of the Goods of the Testator the other Executor hath no Action for recovery of the same Goods or any part thereof for the said Reason that one Co-Executor cannot Sue another nevertheless if the Testator make divers Executors and do bequeath to the one of them the residue of his Goods it is not only lawful for him to whom they are so bequeathed to retain the same but also if the other Executor enter thereunto he is subject to an Action of Trespass Also if the Executor of a Co-Executor have any Goods belonging to the first Testator the other surviving Co-Executor of the first Testator may have an Action against the Executor of that deceased Co-Executor for the same Also if there be Two Administrations granted together he that is the rightful Executor or Administrator may Sue the wrongful Administrator for the Goods in his custody 6. Executors may not Sue for the Goods of their Testators in the Court Ecclesiastical but at the Common Law Yet in some Cases an Executor may Sue in the Ecclesiastical Court as touching his Testators Goods as when a man bequeathes Corn growing or Goods unto one and a stranger will not suffer the Executor to perform the Testament for this Legacy he may Sue the Stranger in the Ecclesiastical Court But if a man take from an Executor Goods bequeathed for this the Executor must Sue his Action of Trespass and not Sue in the Ecclesiastical Court Also Tenants may be Sued but at the Common Law by Executors or Administrators for Rents behind and due to the Testator in his life-time or at the time of his death and may for the same distrain the Land charged with the Rent 7. A Woman and another person were made Executors the Woman took Husband who did not alter the property of the Goods of the Testator and then the Wife died it was adjudged That the other Executor might have an Action of Detinue against the Husband for the same Goods Debt brought by an Executor as due to his Testator and Judgment given for him but before Execution the Plaintiff died Intestate and the Ordinary committed Administration of the Goods of the first Testator to another who Sued out a Scire Facias on the Judgement All the Justices agreed That the Scire Facias did not lye For that when the Executor died Intestate the Testator was dead Intestate also whereby the Judgement and Recovery was void Detinue brought by an Executrix against her own Husbands Executor the Case was this One Falconer who was the Plaintiffs first Husband made his Will gave divers Legacies and towards the end of his said Will said The Residue of all my Goods I Give and Bequeath to Frances my Wife whom I make my full and whole Executrix of this my Last Will and Testament to dispose for the wealth of my Soul and to pay my Debts and died indebted to divers persons to whom the said Frances paid the said Debts and all the Legacies having then Goods in her hand for which this Action was now brought she having after married one John Hunks who made the Defendant his Executor to whose hands the said Goods came Whereupon the Court demurred and Judgement was that the Plaintiff should recover for notwithstanding the Devise viz. of the Residue as aforesaid she hath them not as a Devisee but as Executrix because the words of the Devise can have no other intendment than that she should enjoy them as Executrix Debt brought by the Executrix of J. T. against W. B. The Case was this The said W. B. caused a Writing to be made and sealed which he delivered to V. C. to deliver to J. T. as his Act and Deed Accordingly the said V. C. offered the same to the said J. T. as the Act and Deed of the said W. B. But he utterly refused to receive the same as such notwithstanding which the said V. C. there left the said writing which matter the Defendant pleaded and said it was none of his Act whereupon was a demur and Judgement given for the Plaintiff Debt upon an Obligation Conditioned That if the Defendant in Michael Term then next ensuing in the Prerogative Court of the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury at London should give to D. his Executors or Administrators such a Release and Discharge from and against him and his Children for the receipt of One Hundred Marks as by the Judge of the Court should be thought meet That then c. The Defendant pleaded that the same Term one S. was Judge there and that the said Judge did not Devise or Appoint any Release or Discharge c. And it was thereupon demurred and adjudged to be no Plea For that it is not alleadged that he caused a Release to be drawn and tendered to the Judge to be allowed for it is on his part in discharge of his Obligation to draw such a Release as the Judge should allow Wherefore it was adjudged for the Plaintiff 5. Co. 23. b. Mich. 43 44. C. B. Pl. 42. Debt as Administrator to B. upon an Obligation The Defendant pleaded That the Plaintiff was an Alien under the Obedience of Philip King of Spain Enemies to our Soveraign the Queen and demands Judgement whether he should be Answered and it was demurred thereupon and adjudged that he should Answer Assumpsit By an Executor of a Promise made to his Testator The Defendant pleads non Assumpsit and found for the Plaintiff and Judgement for him And Errour was thereof brought and Assigned because he did not shew in Court the Testament in the Declaration mentioned Whereunto it was said That it was but default of Form which is aided after Verdict but all the Court held it to be matter of substance for otherwise he doth not entitle himself to the Action without shewing the Testament For which cause it was Reversed Debt upon a Special Verdict the Case was A Parson made a Lease for years rendring Rent at Michaelmas or within a moneth next after The Lessee Enters the Lessor dies within ten dayes after Michaelmas Whether his Executor hath any remedy for this Rent was the Question and Ruled that he had not for the Rent was not due in the Testators time nor until the end of the moneth And in such Case it hath been adjudged that such
Rent belongs to the Heir where it is reserved by a Lay-person and he dies after Michaelmas and before the moneth ended Wherefore it was adjudged accordingly vid. 10. Co. 129. Action brought by an Administrator for Rent reserved upon a Lease for years by the Intestate and for Rent arrear in his time the Action was brought and he shews how Administration was committed by the Arch-Bishop but doth not say Quod profert hic in curia Literas Administrationis The Defendant pleaded and found for the Plaintiff And it was moved in Arrest of Judgement That the not shewing the Letters of Administration was matter of Substance which made the Declaration vicious and not aided by the Statute of 18 Eliz. or 32 H. 8. by the Verdicts for that enables the Plaintiff to his Action and the omission thereof takes from the Defendant the advantage which he might have by demanding Oyer thereof and c. The Court resolved That it was a matter of Substance which ought to be shewn by the Plaintiff to enable him to his Action And the Defendant shall have advantage thereof at any time wherefore it was adjudged for the Defendant Vid. 28 H. 6. 31. 16 Ed. 4. 8. 21 H. 6. 23. Plowd 52. Errour in a Judgment in C. B. The Errour Assigned for that in Assumpsit brought as Executor although he shews himself to be Executor to him to whom the Promise was made yet he saith not Testamentum hic in Curia prolatum The Defendant pleaded non Assumpsit and found against him and Judgement accordingly And this being assigned for Errour was held to be matter of Substance and not of form only and was therefore Reversed An Executor brings Debt upon an Obligation The Defendant pleads non est Factum and found for him And now the Question was whether the Plaintiff should pay Costs upon the New Statute of 4 Jac. which exacts That in every Action where the Verdict passeth for the Defendant the Plaintiff should pay Costs but it was resolved That this Case is not within the intent of the Statute he being in anothers right and of matter which lay not in his cognizance therefore the Law never intended to give Costs against him And so it is upon the Statute of 8 Eliz. where Costs be given in case the Plaintiff is Non-suted As it was ruled in one Fords Case and so it was Ruled here And although Manne said Costs had been allowed in the like Cases they appointed that henceforth it should no more be so It was held That an Administrator shall have Trespass de bonis asportatis in vita Intestati by the equity of the Statute of 4 Ed. 3. And an Executors Executor by the Stat. of 25 E. 3. On a Scire Facias the Case was this Goth was in debt to one Couper who died Intestate his Wife took Administration and brought Debt and had Judgement to recover and died Intestate Yate the Plaintiff took Administration of the Goods of Couper non Administrat and brought Scire Facias to have Execution on the Judgement But it was adjudged that it doth not lie for want of Privity but it is clear that he may have a new Action of Debt And by Popham and Yelverton if an Administrator recover Dammages on Trespass de bonis asportatis in vita Testatoris and then dye Intestate his Administrator shall have Execution thereon otherwise of a Debt recovered which was due to the Intestate Tenant in Dower makes a Lease for years reserving Rent and takes a Husband the Rent is in arrear the Husband dies and it was agreed by the whole Court That his Executors shall have the Rent If A. make a Promise to B. and after B. die Intestate and Administration of his Goods be committed to C. who after dies also Intestate and after Administration is committed to D. of the Goods of C. In this Case D. cannot have an Action on the Promise made to B. as Administrator to G. For he is not Administrator to B. in that Administration was not granted to him of the Goods of B. unadministred by C. CHAP. XXIII Of Actions maintainable against Executors or Administrators 1. Executors lyable to be sued by Creditors though their Testators Goods not actually possessed by them or imbeziled from them 2. What kind of Servants wages Executors are lyable to pay and discharge 3. How Executors are lyable in Case of breach of Covenant by their Testator in his life-time 4. In what Case an Executor may be lyable to pay his Testators Debt out of his the Executors own proper money 5. Several other Cases wherein Executors are lyable to be sued 6. Certain Cases wherein Executors are not lyable 7. Several Law-Cases touching Actions against Executors and Administrators 1. ALthough the Executor hath not actually and particularly laid his hands upon any of the Testators Goods yet shall he be said to be in possession of them so as to stand lyable to the Creditors so far as they extend in value though afterwards others do purloyne or imbezil them 2. Executors are lyable for the payment of the wages of the Testators Servants retain'd in Husbandry and the like but not for the wages of Waiters or Serving-men the reason of the difference is because of the Statute compelling the one not the other to serve Yet for them also an Action did lie against the Testator himself because of his Covenant 3. Where a breach of Covenant happens in the Testators life-time the Executor stands chargeable Therefore if one make a Lease of Land by Deed wherein he hath nothing and die before an Action of Covenant be brought against him it will be maintainable against his Executor though no express Covenant Also if a Lessee for years Covenants to repair the Buildings or to pay the Quit-Rents issuing out of the Lands Lett the Executor to whom the Term cometh must as well as his Testator perform that Covenant although he did not Covenant for him and his Executors Likewise if one be Lessee for years or for life without any Indenture or Deed as he may be and his Rent being behind dieth In this Case his Executor shall be lyable to the payment of this Rent though without any specialty But if the Lessee for years sell or grant away his Term or Lease and die his Executor shall not be charged for any Rent due after the death of his Testator though himself in his life-time was still lyable for the Rent to grow due after until the Lessor accept the Assignee for his Tenant So that if a Lease for years be made rendring Rent and the Rent be behind and the Lessee die his Executor shall be charged for this Rent or if the Lessee for years Assign over his Interest and die his Executor shall be charged with the Arrerages before the Assignment but not with any of the Arrerages due after the Assignment Also an Executor is chargeable for Tythes due
is that no Action lyeth against the Executor of him who in his life-time carried away his Corn Hay c. without setting forth the Tenth and died before recovery had against him for the same although during his life the treble value were recoverable against him in an Action of debt and this holds true though the Testator were a Lessee for years so as his State came to his Executors The Law is the same and upon the foresaid Reason and Rule in Law if a Lessee for years commit wast and die no Action lyeth against his Executor for this wast Yet the Law is otherwise against Executors of Ecclesiastical persons in case of Dilapidations for if a Parson or Vicar do suffer the buildings of his Benefice to go to decay and dies his Executors are lyable by the Spiritual Law to the Successors Sute 4. An Executor shall not be charged with nor in respect of any other Goods than those which came to his hands after his taking upon him the charge of the Executorship or by vertue thereof And although the Executor of an Executor shall answer others to whom the first Testator was indebted as much as he shall recover of the Goods of the first Testator yet if that Executor did Alienate and Convert to his own use all the Goods which did belong to the former Testator in this Case no Action doth lye against the Executor of the Executor for Recovery of any debts due by the first Testator Likewise where A. makes B. Executor and B. makes C. Executor there the Goods which came from or were left by A. be not in the hands of C. lyable unto the Judgements had against B. Nor on the other side are the Goods of B. in the hands of C. subject to the Judgements had against A. And the like is to be understood of Statutes Recognizances and Bonds Also by the Laws of this Land an Executor shall not be charged by any bequest made by his Testator of the Goods that did belong to another man Indeed by the Civil Law it is otherwise for there it is lawful for the Testator to bequeath another mans Goods which the Heir at the Civil Law must buy or pay the value thereof if the Owner will not sell them 5. If a Woman in debt marry and dye before the debt be recovered against her though leaving to her Husband much more than the value of the debt yet is he not lyable in Law to pay one penny of her debts after her decease because he neither is her Executor nor Administrator nor came to her Goods by wrong Insomuch that a Woman indebted One thousand pound and having Leases and other immoveable Goods to the value of Three or Four thousand pound marrying with A. B. and then dye before the debt be recovered against her In this Case the Husband shall have all the value of his Wifes Estate and yet in Law not be lyable for her debts during her life he is lyable but not afterwards This seems a defect in the Law whereby Creditors are at a loss without remedy therefore let them sue in her life-time for Lex fit vigilantibus non dormientibus 6. If a man be indebted and dye Intestate or if the Executors of one who hath made a Will refuse to be Executors whereby the Goods do come to the hands of the Ordinary the Creditors may have a Writ of Debt against the Ordinary by the Stat. of West 2. cap. 19. and in this case he must be sued by the name of Ordinary But after Administration committed the Ordinary shall not be sued 7. An Executor may make himself chargeable of his own proper Goods either by Omission or by Commission By Omission as when he being sued upon an Obligation or the like there being at the same time a Judgement in force against him or the deceased and hath but just enough in his hands to satisfie that Judgement yet doth not plead this in Bar of the present Action but suffers the Plaintiff to recover against him in this Case he must satisfie the second debt out of his own Estate Or by Commission as when he doth something that is a Wast in him and thereupon a Devastavit is return'd against him in which case he must answer as much as he wasted out of his own Estate or when a sute being against him he pleads such a false Plea therein as tends to the perpetual Bar of the Plaintiffs Action and yet being of a thing within his certain knowledge as when he pleads he is not Executor nor ever Administred as Executor and upon tryal of this issue it be found against him that he is a lawful Executor or Executor in his own wrong in this Case he must satisfie the debt out of his own Estate whether he hath Assets or not and the Execution had upon the Judgement shall be levied upon his own proper Goods Likewise if an Executor or Administrator sued doth plead to the Action Plenè Administravit and upon Tryal it be found against him in this Case if he have any of the deceaseds Goods left in his hands the Execution shall be of them but if he have none such then the Execution shall be and he shall be charged for so much as is found to the value thereof to be in his hands of his own proper Goods But where one is sued upon a Promise made by the Testator and he plead Non Assumpsit to it or where he is sued upon a Deed made by the Testator and he plead Non est factum to it or the like and these issues upon Tryal are found against him or when he shall confess the Action or suffer a Judgement to pass by default against him or plead any vain Plea In all these Cases he shall not be chargeable of his own Estate neither shall the Judgement and Execution in these Cases be de bonis Propriis but de bonis Testatoris only for the Debt and de bonis Propriis for the Costs And yet if an Executor or Administrator shall intreat a Creditor to forbear his debt until a day and then promise to pay him by this promise he hath made himself chargeable as for his own debt howbeit it shall be allowed him upon his account And if a debt be recovered against one who dieth before Execution sued leaving Goods sufficient to satisfie then shall not the Land descended to the Heir be charged therewith nor by like reason any Land conveyed after Judgement Or if a Creditor be made Executor by his Debtor and pay himself part out of the Goods he cannot sue the Heir for the rest because the debt cannot be apportioned but otherwise he may 8. In all Cases where a man is charged of his own Estate and the Execution be de bonis Propriis the Judgement is ever de bonis Testatoris And the method or form of proceedings in such cases is this viz. The first Execution is against
the Executor de bonis Testatoris and not de bonis Propriis And after a Devastavit return'd by the Sheriff and not before against the Executor or Administrator a new Execution is directed to the Sheriff to levy the debt de bonis Testatoris and if there be none of them to be found in his hands then to levy them de bonis Propriis Executoris vel Administratoris Therefore if an Executor or Administrator be sued by a Creditor and the Executor or Administrator plead a Plenè Administravit generally or plead specially that he hath no more but to satisfie a Judgement or the like and upon tryal this issue be found against him and that he hath in all or in part enough to satisfie the debt In these Cases the Judgement is de bonis Testatoris and thereupon an Execution is as in other cases to levy the debt de bonis Testatoris in the hands of the Executor or Administrator and the Costs de bonis Propriis And upon the Return of the Sheriff a special Execution doth issue forth to levy the money de bonis Testatoris And if it appear that he hath wasted the Goods then that he shall satisfie the Execution de bonis Propriis And hereupon also the Plaintiff may if he please have a Capias against the Body or an Elegit against the Lands of the Executor or Administrator and other course of Proceedings cannot nor may be had in this Case against the Executor or Administrator But a Sute Commenced against an Executor as Administrator or against an Administrator as Executor will prove invalid for neither the one nor the other is chargeable with the payment of Debts or Legacies in such an Erroneous Sute But where an Action of Debt was brought against Two Executors whereof the one appeared and confessed the Action the other making default thereupon Judgement was given to Recover against them both de bonis Testatoris in their hands and Execution accordingly And upon this Execution the Sheriff returned a Devastavit against that Executor only that made default and hereupon a Scire Facias went out against him alone and afterwards an Execution against him alone de bonis Propriis And in a Fieri Facias upon a Recovery against Executors the Sheriff Returning a Devastaverunt a Writ of Execution issues against the deceaseds Goods and if there were none such then against the Executors Goods 9. If one by Bond or Covenant oblige himself to pay such a summ of money at such a day not mentioning his Executors at all yet is the Executor also bound as included in the Name or Person of the Testator For if a man bindeth himself his Executors are also bound though they be not named in the Bond but so it is not of the Heir And in this respect the Executor doth more actually represent the person of the Testator than the Heir doth the person of the Ancestor So that every Bond or Covenant by the Testator made for payment of money or the like though he doth not Covenant for nor bind Himself and his Executors by express words reacheth unto his Executor also although he be not named And yet the Heir is not bound if he be not expresly named by the word Heir though there be never so great Assets or Land descended to him And although Executors do so represent their Testators persons that they stand lyable for their Debts though not mentioned in the Bonds yet where a man is bound that he will not sue upon such a Bond and dies if his Executors afterwards sue this is held to be no forfeiture of the Bond. So where one is bound to pay Ten pounds within a moneth after Request made to him and he dies before Request made it sufficeth not to make it to the Executor And although in a Judgment had against a Testator in his life-time no mention be made of his Executors yet are they lyable in that case for to debts upon Record and to debts and dammages already recovered against the Testator and to debts by recognizance the Executor is lyable though he be not named So likewise do Executors stand charged with other inferiour debts upon Record as Issues forfeited Fines imposed by Justices at Westminster or at Assizes Quarter-Sessions Commissioners of Sewers and the like 10. An Obligation made after a Contract dissolveth the Contract So that if a man do make a Contract to pay certain money for a thing bought by him if he make an Obligation for the money the Contract is discharged and he shall not have an Action of Debt upon the Contract And therefore if A. and B. do bargain with C. to pay him One hundred pound for Corn or other things and afterwards C. taketh some Writing Obligatory of A. only and then B. dieth in this Case the Executors of B. are discharged because they stood charged only by the Contract which is extinguished by the said specialty for such writing Obligatory doth determine or drown any duty by a meer Contract because Specialty is of a higher nature And although an Executor not named in the Obligation be notwithstanding bound as aforesaid supposing also that he that is named in the Testament hath in due form Proved the same yet is he not thereby lyable or obliged to satisfie the Creditors of the deceased as one that hath Administred unless also he hath paid the Fees due for the same out of the Goods of the deceased It was Adjuged that if an Executor pay a debt of his Testators with his own proper Goods he may retain as much in value of the Testators Goods And 6 Ed. 6. in debt by Shelley vers Sackvile Executor of H. Brown he pleaded Plenè Administravit and upon Evidence the Plaintiff shewed That the Defendant had a Farm belonging to the Testator in his hands to the value of Two hundred Marks the Defendant shewed how he had expended Two hundred Marks in payment of the Testators debts And the Question upon the Evidence was whether the Defendants Plea was receivable And upon Consultation with the Justices of B. R. it shall be received to maintain the Issue of Fully Administred for so much as it amounted unto because to make such a Retainer and Deduction as to alter the property is one and the same F. H. Executrix of F. brought Detinue of Goods against A. The Case was F. had made a will in writing and thereby given many Legacies and at the end of his Will gave the Residue of his Goods to F. his Wife whom he made his sole Executrix for the payment of his debts and to dispose thereof for the wealth of his Soul F. the Wife after takes H. to Husband who made A. the Defendant his Executor and died and against A. doth F. H. bring Detinue for the Goods of F. And it was adjudged for the Plaintiff because F. H. doth not here take the Residue of the Goods as a Devisee
or Legatee but as Executrix by reason of these words viz. for the payment of his debts and for the wealth of his Soul And the Justices held That all works of Charity were within the Intent CHAP. XXVI Of a Devastavit or Wast in an Executor or Administrator 1. What a Devastavit or Wast is and in what Case the Writ of Devastaverunt doth lye 2. How many wayes a Devastavit or Wast may be committed 3. An Executor or Administrator in a Devastavit or Wast is chargeable de bonis Propriis 4. What Acts do not amount to a Wast also a Wast committed by one Co-Executor shall not charge another 5. The manner of Proceedings against Executors or Administrators in case of a Devastavit 1. A Devastavit or Wast in the Executor or Administrator is when he doth mis-administer the Goods and Chattels of the deceased or mis-manage that Trust which is reposed in him either by the Testator as to the Executor or by the Law as to the Administrator and therefore the Writ of Devastaverunt bona Testatoris lyeth against Executors for paying Legacies or Debts without Specialties to the prejudice of Creditors that have Specialties before the debts upon the said Specialties be due For in this Case the Executors are as lyable to an Action as if they had wasted the Goods of the Testator riotously or without cause Likewise the said Writ lyeth against Executors or Administrators when they deliver the Legacies given by the Testator or make Restitution for wrongs done by him or pay his debts due upon Contracts or other debts upon Specialties whose dayes of payment are not yet come c. and keep not sufficient in their hands to discharge those Debts upon Record or Specialties which they are compellable formerly by Law to satisfie or do deviate from that method or order enjoyned Executors by the Law in the payment of Debts and Legacies In such Cases they shall be constrained to pay of their own Goods those Duties which at the first by the Law they were compellable to pay according to the value of that which they delivered or paid by compulsion for such payment of Debts or delivery of Legacies as is aforesaid before Debts upon Record or Specialties whose dayes of payment are already come are accounted in the Law a wasting of the Goods of the deceased as much as if they had given them away without cause or sold them and converted them to their own use 2. From the Premises it is evident that a Devastavit or Wast may be committed several wayes more particularly thus viz. When more is expended about the Funerals of the deceased with respect had to his Estate and degree than is meet and fit when Executors pay Legacies in money or assent to Legacies given in other things before the Debts are paid not reserving sufficient to pay the Debts also when the Debts are not paid in that order and manner as the Law requires but payment is made of that first which should be paid last when there is not sufficient to pay all when the Executor gives a Release of a Debt or Duty due to the deceased before his Receit thereof when he Releases an Action whereby he might recover the deceaseds Goods or the value thereof when he sells the deceaseds Goods much under value specially if in a fraudulent way as to his near friends to his own use or to have money under hand or the like But be the appreyzment what it will and let the Testator sell for what he will he shall stand chargeable to the best and utmost value towards the Creditors but a Sheriffs sale of the Testators Goods upon an Execution at an under-value is no wast in the Executor If an Executor upon a Bond of Two hundred pound forfeited for non-payment of One hundred pound accept the Principal or Cost or Dammage and give a Release or Acquittance of the whole forfeited Bond or of all Actions or upon Record acknowledge satisfaction upon Judgement had this shall be a Devastavit or Wasting of so much as the penal summ is more than is received by him and so far his own Goods stand lyable to Creditors not satisfied And so doubtless is it if he do but give up the Bond having no Judgement upon it though he neither make a Release nor acknowledge satisfaction The Law is the same in Case of releasing of Trespasses or other causes of Action As if one take away Goods from the Testator or his Executor and he give a Release this is a Wast and makes his own Goods lyable Yet on the other side if an Executor by payment of Two hundred and forty pound or thereabouts get in a forfeited Bond of Five hundred pound it shall be an Administration but of Two hundred and forty pound or of no more than he really paid Also the Executors verbal agreement to require or sue for no more or his giving a Receit for so much as he hath received or delivering of the Bond into a Friends hands or into a Court of Equity by way of Security to the Debtor that he shall not be sued for more is no Devastation or Wast since that the rest in Law still remains as due and suable And upon the Issue of Plenè Administravit the Jury is to find whether the Executor hath Assets or not and not whether a Devastation for that must come in by the Sheriffs Return upon the Fieri Facias Again the Executors submitting to Arbitrement matters of Debt or Duty due to the Testator or touching his Goods taken away is another way of discharging dangerous to Executors for if it happen that by the Arbitrators Award the Trespassers or Debtors be discharged without full Recompence made the rest of the value will subject the Executors to the Creditors because it was their own voluntary act to submit to Arbitrators Or if an Executor allow a Writ to suffer Judgement to be had against him upon a Writ which is abatable he shall not have allowance of that but this shall be Return'd as a Devastavit Yea if money be paid by an Executor upon an usurious Contract it is a Devastavit And it was held by the Lord Hobard That if an Executor pay a Bond made upon an usurious Contract it shall be a Devastavit or Wast in the Executor 3. These and the like Acts are said to be a Devastavit or Wast in the Executor or Administrator which being discovered against him by the Sheriffs Return will charge him de bonis Propriis for so much as he hath so mis-administred insomuch that any Creditor may charge him for the Debt due to him from the Testator as for his own proper Debt and for so much Execution shall be made against him upon his own Body Lands and Goods Yea the Husband shall be charged in a Devastavit for the Wast of himself or his Wife where she is an Executrix whilst
they both live but after her death it may be otherwise yea and if a void Administration happen to be committed and the Administrator wast the Goods and then Administration be committed to another in this case the former Administrator may be charged by the Creditors for the wast done in his time 4. But for an Executor or Administrator without fraud to sell the Goods of the deceased under value especially where more cannot conveniently be made of them is no wast Nor shall one Executor or Administrator be charged for the wast done by another for where there are many joynt-Executors if only one of them doth commit the wast he alone shall suffer for it So the Executor or Administrator committing Wast in the Gift or Sale of any of the Goods of the Defunct shall answer it alone and not he to whom the Goods are so given or sold yet the Executor or Administrator of such an Executor or Administrator shall not be question'd for it after his death Also an Executor or Administrator may lawfully sell or convert the deceaseds Goods to his own use so as he convert the money thereof to the deceaseds use in payment of Debts or the like and pay so much of his own money as the Goods so converted to his use are worth and this shall not be imputed to him as a Wast Yea he may sell any special Legacy that is bequeathed and even this shall be no Wast in him though it be a wrong to the Legatee in case there be Assets to pay Debts besides But when he hath enough to pay all the Debts and Legacies then he may dispose of the whole Estate how he please without any prejudice to himself or others And note That the wasting Executor doth not incurr dammage or make his own Goods lyable for satisfaction for the Wast further than the value of the Testators Goods so wasted or mis-administred doth amount unto An Action of Debt was brought against Two Executors one appeared and confessed the Action the other made default and Judgement was given to recover de bonis Testatoris in both their hands whereupon a Scire Facias issued The Sheriff returned Nihil but he who made default had wasted the Goods upon which a Scire Feci issued against him who had wasted the Goods and upon Return of the Scire Feci Execution was awarded of his own proper Goods only without his Co-Executor 5. If the Executor confess he hath Assets supposing the Executor to be Defendant then may the Sheriff Return a Devastavit If the cause of Action be against Executors or Administrators the Judgement is to recover the Debt and Dammages of the Testators Goods if the Executor hath so much in his hands and if he hath not then the Dammages as was formerly shewn of the Executors or Administrators own Goods And if the Sheriff upon a Scire Facias Return a Devastavit then a Fieri Facias or Elegit may be sued out to levy the Debt and Dammages of the Executors or Administrators proper Goods And if the Executor plead That he never was Executor nor Administred as Executor and it be found against him that he had Administred but one penny the Judgement shall be to recover the Debt and Dammages of the Executors own Goods And in a Case of Debt brought upon a Record the Execution shall be brought where the Record remains Judgement was given against B. in a debt of One hundred pound in C. B. After the said Judgement he entered into a Statute to J. S. and died Intestate his Wife takes Letters of Administration and removes the Record of the said Debt recovered against her Husband into B. R. by Errour depending the Sute she payes the Debt due upon the Statute to J. S. Afterwards the former Judgement is affirmed On a Scire Facias against the Administratrix to have Execution she pleaded payment of the said Statute beyond which she had not Assets Upon this the Justices of the Kings Bench were divided viz. Popham and Gaudy against Fenner and Yelverton It was referred to the Opinion of the other Justices they joyned in Opinion with Fenner and Yelverton and judged it a good Plea and that the paying of the Statute was no Devastavit for at the time of the Execution of the Statute she could not plead the Judgement of C. B. it being then doubtful whether it would be affirmed or not therefore no default in the Wife-Administratrix in paying and discharging the Statute for she could not have an Audita Querela nor any other Remedy to be freed from payment of the Statute at the time of the Execution thereof CHAP. XXVII Of the Executors power in Sale of Lands devised to be sold 1. The difference between a Devise that the Executors shall sell the Land and a Devise of the Land to the Executors to be sold 2. The profits of Land Devised to be sold are not Assets in the Executors hands for a time before such Sale 3. In what Case the Heir may or may not enter upon unsold Lands devised to be sold 4. Executors accepting may without others Refusing make a good Sale of Lands devised to be sold 5. In what Case surviving Executors cannot sell Lands devised to be sold 1. WHere Land is by Will appointed to be sold neither the money raised nor the profits shall be accounted as any of the Testators Goods or Chattels And when a man deviseth that his Executors shall sell the Land there the Land in the mean time descends to the Heir and until the Sale be made the Heir may enter and take the Profits But when the Land is Devised to his Executors to be sold there the Devise taketh away the Descent and vesteth the State of the Land in the Executors and they may Enter and take the profits and make sale according to the Devise Also when a man deviseth his Land to be sold by his Executors it is all one as if he had devised his Land to his Executors to be sold because he then likewise deviseth the Land whereby he breaketh the Descent 2. If a Testator doth appoint by his Will his Executors to make sale of certain Lands for the use and behoof of the said Testator and the Lands after the Testators decease happen to remain some time unsold the Profits thereof in the said time before such sale made shall not be Assets in the Executors hands unless the Testator did devise That the mean Profits till the Sale should be Assets in their hands for otherwise they shall not be so though the Executors in this Case have no Estate or Interest in the Land but only a bare and naked Power and Authority 3. But if the Executors having power to sell the Land of the Testator defer the Sale thereof after the offer of a reasonable price converting the Profits thereof to their own use the Heir may lawfully Enter to the Land and put out the
his Execution shall have the preferment and before suing of Execution the Executor may give precedency to whom he will and may if he please satisfie the Recognizance before the Statute at least if he do it before Execution sued thereupon But Executors under pretence or colour of Recognizances for the peace or good behaviour or the like or under pretence of Statutes for performing Covenants touching the enjoying of Lands not forfeited nor any summs of mony possibly ever thereupon becoming payable are not to with-hold payment of debts by Specialty and thereby defraud the Creditors so that if the Statute or Recognizance be only for performance of Covenants and no Covenant be broken an Obligation for the payment of present money shall be discharged before it Also no Judgement or Statute that is discharged or is left and suffered to lye by agreement to bar others of their debts shall bar debts upon Obligations And here Note That a Statute is a more expedite remedy than a Recognizance for upon a Statute Execution may be taken out without any Scire Facias or other Sute which cannot be in the Case of a Recognizance for there if a year be pass'd after the acknowledgement no Execution can be sued out against the party himself acknowledging it without a Scire Facias first sued out against him and if he be dead then though the year be not pass'd yet must a Scire Facias be sued 6. After Statutes and Recognizances debts due by Obligations and penal and single Bills are to be paid if there be yet Assets And if there be divers Obligations then it seemeth to be in the power of the Executor to discharge which he will first unless the day of payment in the one Obligation be expired and in the other not yet come in which Case the Obligation whereof the day of payment is expired is to be first satisfied or unless a sute be Commenced for one of the Obligations for then it is not in the Executors power in prejudice of that sute to discharge an Obligation for which no Action is brought But if Two several Creditors bring several Actions against the Executor upon Two Obligations he that first getteth Judgement must first be satisfied Yet a debt due upon Record may be paid depending the Action and although in case of several Obligations when the time of payment upon the one was come at the time of the Testators death not so upon the other and he to whom the Obligation is whose time of payment was expired at the Testators death forbear to demand or sue for his debt untill the other Obligation become also payable In this Case it is then in the Executors power to pay which he please if the Goods extend not to pay both for it is the Commencement of the Sute only which intitles to priority of payment or at least restrains the Executors election therefore an Executor may not pay a debt of equal degree to a Creditor that brings no Action for the same after another Creditor hath brought his Action But whether a bare verbal demand without a sute be sufficient to hinder the Executors payment to the other is a question but resolved in the negative Yet an Executor may make payment of any debt due by Record as by Judgement Statute c. after sute begun by another for some other debt And notwithstanding what hath been said an Executor cannot in all Cases pay him first who first commenced sute but he who first hath Judgement must first be satisfied as when one Creditor doth first begin sute and others suing after him get Judgement before him And in such Cases the Executor may expedite the sute of the one by a quick confession of his Action and retard the sute of the other by Essoignes Emplances or dilatory pleas Nay after sute commenced yet until the Executor hath notice thereof he may pay any other Creditor and then plead that he hath fully administred before notice of the others sute 7. For it is a good Plea for the Executor to say That he had fully Administred before he had notice of the Plaintiffs Writ for though he do pay debts upon Contracts the Writ depending against him upon a Bond whereas he had no notice of the sute he shall not be in such case charged Yet regularly in this case of an Action brought upon a simple Contract the Executor is to plead and to set forth those debts upon Specialties yet debts upon a simple Contract are to be paid before debts of Charity Likewise debts upon a simple Contract are to be paid before amends for a Tespass done by the Testator And here Note that between a debt by Obligation and a debt for Dammages upon a Covenant broken there is not any priority or precedency but the Executor may pay which he please first But if one hath a debt due to him from the deceased upon a simple Contract or the like and he sue the Executor for it when there be debts due to others upon Bonds and Bills unsatisfied in this Case the Executor may not pay this debt nor may he suffer the Plaintiff to Recover in his Action unless he hath Assets sufficient to satisfie the Bonds and Bills over and above that of the simple Contract 8. After Obligations Debts due upon simple Bills or Merchants Books or other Specialties are to be satisfied and discharged though indeed Bills are of the nature of an Obligation and charge the Executor as well as an Obligation for whatever words prove a man to be a debtor or to have another mans money in his hands or wherein the Testator if he were alive could not wage his Law shall charge the Executor And under this Head may be placed debts due upon Shop-Books and some verbal Contracts and Covenants Parol 9. Now debts due for Rent upon Leases of Land or Grants of Rent will come into Consideration though some are of Opinion that debts due for Rent in the Testators life-time be the Rent reserved upon Leases made by or without Deed for years or at Will are in equality of degree with debts due upon Specialties if the Rent grew due since the Testators death then it is not in Law accounted the Testators debt for only so much is in Law accounted Assets to the Executor as the Profits of the Lease amounted to over and above the Rent so as for that Rent so behind the Executor himself stands debtor and therefore is sueable in the Debet and Detinet whereas for the Rent behind in the Testators life-time and all other the debts of his Testator he must be sued in the Detinet only For this reason it is that an Executor sued for debt upon Bond or Bill cannot except in some special cases plead a payment or recovery of Rent grown due since the Testators death though of Rent behind at the time of his death it be
That in the Principal Case the substance of it was the Possession and not the Administration It was adjudged for the Plaintiff Pasch 27 Eliz. in C. B. Carter and Crofts case Godbolt 33. Vid. Dyer 304. An Administrator brought an Action of Debt for Rent which was found for the Plaintiff and Judgement given Exception was taken that the Plaintiff had not shewed by whom the Letters of Administration were granted to him But the Opinion of the Court was That it was too late to shew that after Verdict for that the Jury have found that the Administration was duly granted And it was said in the Court That in a Declaration it is not necessary to shew by whom the Letters of Administration are granted or to say that they were granted by him cui pertinuit or per loci illius Ordinarium Yet Note that it was said in another case That if an Administrator bring an Action against an Administrator it is not necessary for the Plaintiff to shew by whom the Letters were granted to the Defendant but he must shew by whom the Letters of Administration were granted to himself to entitle him to the Action for if it appear not to the Court that he is Administrator he cannot Sue If an Infant be made Executor Administration during the Minority of the Infant may be committed to the Mother and the same shall cease and be void when the Infant is of the Age of Fourteen years But such Administrator cannot sell the Goods of the Testator unless it be for necessity of payment of debts because he hath the Office of Administrator only pro bono commodo of the Infant and not to its prejudice Note it was resolved per Curiam That an Administration durante minori aetate of an Executrix was not within the Statute of 21 H. 8. of necessity to be granted to the Widow of the Testator because there is an Executor all the while otherwise if the Executor were made from a time to come An Infant was made Executor and Administration was granted to another durante minori aetate of the Infant who brought Action of Debt for money due to the deceased and had the Defendant in Execution and then the Executor came of full Age. It was moved that the Defendant might be discharged out of Execution because the Authority of the Administrator was determined and he cannot acknowledge satisfaction And it was said That he was rather a Bailiff to the Infant than an Administrator But the Judgement of the Court was That though the Authority of the Administrator was determined yet the Recovery and Judgement did remain In an Account brought by an Administrator durante minori aetate against the Defendant as Bailiff of such a Mannor it was found for the Plaintiff It was moved in stay of Judgement That it is not shewed that the Executor the Infant was within the Age of Seventeen years and it might be he was above the Age of Seventeen years and yet under Age But the Opinion of the Court was That it shall not be so intended unless it be shewed that he was above Seventeen years and especially when the Defendant had admitted him to bring the Action and had pleaded to Issue Between P. and S. the Case was An Infant was made Executor to whom certain Leases among other things were devised and Administration during his Minority committed to one who sold and alienated the Leases It was agreed by the Justices That the Administrator could not sell the Leases unless there were good and reasonable cause moving thereunto as in case there were no other Goods save the Leases wherewith to pay the Testators debts which ought of necessity to be paid the Leases may to that end and purpose be sold otherwise not but Beasts and other things which cannot long be kept or preserved especially fat Beasts Corn or the like may be sold And of this Opinion was the Chief Justice of the Kings Bench and the Chief Baron Debt as Administrator of B. upon an Obligation the Case was That the Intestate died in Lancashire but the Obligation was at London at the time of his death and the Bishop of Chester in whose Diocess he died committed Administration to J. S. who released to the Defendant and the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury committed the Administration to the Plaintiff and this Release was pleaded in Bar and it was thereupon demurr'd Warberton Every Debt follows the person of the Debtee and Chester is within the Province of York where the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury hath nothing to do Anderson Where one dies who hath Goods in divers Diocesses in both Provinces there Canterbury shall have the Prerogative otherwise there would be Two Administrations committed which is Res inaudita The Debt is where the Bond is being upon a Specialty but debt upon a Contract follows the person of the debtor and this difference hath been oftentimes agreed vid. Dyer 305. And if the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury hath not any Prerogative in York but that several Administrations ought to be committed yet at leastwise Administration for this Bond ought to be committed to the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury wherefore the Release is not any Bar. Debt against the Defendant as Administrator of F. he pleads a Recovery against him as Executor and besides to satisfie that he hath not any Assets And it was thereupon demurred and adjudged to be a good Plea and he shall not be twice charged wherefore it was adjudged for the Defendant Debt against the Defendant as Administratrix of T. H. her Husband upon a Lease to the said T. by Indenture for years and how the Defendant is Administratrix to him And for Rent arrear after his death the Action was brought in the Debet and Detinet upon Not Guilty pleaded it was found for the Plaintiff and now moved in Arrest of Judgement That the Declaration was not good for that c. And at another day it was moved That this Declaration ought to have been in the Detinet and not in the Debet and Detinet because she hath the Term as Administratrix and is not charged by her own Contract but by an Act of the Testator and to that purpose was cited 19 H. 8. 8. 10 H. 5. 7. And a President was shewn in C. B. between Barker and Kelsay where the Action was brought in the Detinet only And Godfrey affirmed that in Fenns Case in this Court it was Ruled That the Action ought to be brought in the Detinet Gaudy The Action is well brought in the Debet For this Rent though Arrear after the death of the Intestate begun first in the Administratrix and therefore the Action well lies against her in the Debet For the reason why the Action against an Executor shall be in the Detinet is for that the debt grew due by the Testator and therefore it cannot be said that Executor Debet But in an Action against the Heir it shall
England Two Witnesses without exception are requisite for the due Proof of a Testament and Two such are sufficient So that it is not necessary to have any more than Two and it may be in vain to have no more but One for a Nuncupative Testament must be proved by at least Two Witnesses without exception But 2. A Testament written by the Testators own hand Proves it self without the help of such Witnesses yea though it hath not his Name subscribed to it nor his Seal affixed to it nor witnesses present to it Provided it be undoubtedly known to be his writing or can be sufficiently proved so to be yet shall it have the more Authority if so be it be subscribed by himself and Witnesses and Sealed Nor is it necessary to the Proof of a written Will that the Witnesses hear it read or subscribe it so as they can depose that the Testator declared before them that the self-same writing now produced is was or should be his Last Will and Testament For in a written Will or Testament it is not necessary that there be any Testimony of Witnesses where it is certain and undoubted that the Testament is written or subscribed with the Testators own hand or that the Testator caused the same to be written by another but if these be doubtful then the testimony of Witnesses is necessary Also the Witnesses ought to prove the very identity of the writing that is that the writing now shewed is the very same writing which the Testator in his life-time affirmed before them to be his Last Will or to contain his Will or other words full to this purpose so that it is not sufficient for the Witnesses to say this is the Testators own hand for or because we know his hand neither is it sufficient by comparing other writings of the Testators own hand with the Testament for hands may be counterfeited therefore proof by similitude of hands is not full proof except where the style and practice of the Court runs otherwise Nevertheless if the Witnesses depose that they saw the Testator write or subscribe the Testament and know the same to be his Testament and Hand or that they had heard the Testator to confess that he had made his Testament and that the same was in such a mans Custody or if the Testament were found in the Testators Chest among other his writings in these Cases the proof made by comparing of hands is a full and sufficient proof yea though there appear not any of those helps by probable circumstances yet if there be no suspicion of fraud nor fear of subornation proof made by comparing of hands may be allowed for full and sufficient proof Likewise if it be proved that the Testator in his life-time did acknowledge that his Testament was contained in a writing left in such a mans hands or custody and that man produce a writing deposing it to be the same which the Testator left in his custody such proof is sufficient without any further comparing of hands But if the Testator did also acknowledge that his Testament contained in such a writing left in the custody of such a person was written with his own hand then such proof is not sufficient without comparing of hands whereby it may appear to have been written by the Testator himself 3. Regularly all persons are held competent Witnesses to prove a Controverted Will save such as the Law holds incompetent such are such as are parties interessed or presumed in Law to be byassed in affection or the like also infamous persons as perjured or the like also such as for want of judgement and understanding the Law rejects And if it cannot be proved whether it be a Testament or a Codicil the circumstances being so indifferent to either then is it most safe in regard of the Statute to commit the Administration to the Widow or next of Kin demanding the fame to avoid the forfeiture of Ten pounds in case the Judge before whom such penalty is demandable should adjudge the party to have died Intestate or without a Will 4. A Legatary may be a competent witness for the proof of a Will in all parts thereof saving for what concerns the Legacy therein bequeathed to himself So that suppose never so many Witnesses to a Will wherein each of them hath a Legacy they cannot sufficiently prove the Will as to their own Legacies but for the rest of the Will they may 5. It is very observable that the most considerable Requisite the Law aimes at to the constituting of an Executor and making of a Testament is to be proved more by Circumstances than by Witnesses and that is Animus Testandi or the intent or purpose of the Testator to make his Will For it is the mind purpose and intent of the Testator more than his words that giveth life and being to the Testament The circumstances that prove the intent or purpose must also themselves be proved by Witnesses These Circumstances proving such a purpose in the Testator are many as when the Testator is in any more than ordinary danger of death or that he orderly composeth himself for such a work or that he required the Witnesses to bear witness thereof with many other the like circumstances as to the person time place occasion manner of speech deportment and in whose presence All which the circumspect Judge is to take into consideration for since the mind and intention of the Testator is the essential qualification of every Testament and not capable of a Being otherwise than by such intention and the mind and intention of man not so much as conjecturable otherwise than by outward circumstances it is most necessary that they fall under a due proof by sufficient Witnesses CHAP. XXII Bona Notabilia 1. What shall be accounted as Bona Notabilia 2. Where the Will is to be Proved in case there be Bona Notabilia 3. How or when Debts and Bonds may make Bona Notabilia 4. Law-Cases touching this Subject 1. IT is agreed by all that Five Pounds is the summ or value of Bona Notabilia provided that where by composition or custome in any County Bona Notabilia are rated at a greater summ the same is to continue unaltered as in the Diocess of London it is Ten Pounds by composition Provided also that if any man die in itinere or in a journey the Goods that he hath then about him or with him shall not be as Bona Notabilia to cause Administration to be committed or the Will to be Proved in the Prerogative Nor is it necessary that the party must have five pounds in each and every of the several Counties where his Goods are dispersed but it is sufficient if the party deceased were possessed of Goods and Chattels in some other County than that wherein he lived and
there is then another Executor of right against whom the Creditors may bring their Action and such wrongful intermedlers with the Goods when there is another Executor of right are liable to be Sued by him as Trespassers Also if a man perform only acts of Charity or of Humanity as feeding the Testators Cattle or preserve them by taking them into his custody or dispose of them only about the Funerals or make an Inventory thereof or deliver the Widow only her convenient Apparel or as a meer Trespasser entereth to his Goods whether quick or dead converting the same to his own not to the Testators use he doth not hereby become Executor in his own wrong when there is an Executor or Administrator of right But if one deliver to the Widow more of her Apparel than is convenient to her degree or if she take or another deliver to her more than such he or she thereby becomes Executor in their own wrong But if a man lodge in my house and die there leaving Goods therein behind him I may keep them until I can be lawfully discharged of them without making my self chargeable as Executor in my own wrong Or if I take the deceased's Goods by a mistake supposing them to be my own or under colour of a Title this will not make me Executor in my own wrong Or if one do but take a Horse of the deceased's and tie him in his own Stable this makes him not Executor in his own wrong Or if I do only lay up the Goods of the deceased to preserve them in safety for him that shall have right to them This will make me no more chargeable than if I took an Inventory of all the deceased's Goods Nor is an Executor in his own wrong chargeable as such where an Executor of right or Administrator hath fully Administred the deceased's Goods Nor shall any light acts or intermedlings make one an Executor in his own wrong where there is a rightful Executor and a Will by him Proved or Administration committed or where there is another of right to be sued for whoso wrongfully takes the deceased's Goods from the rightful Executor or Administrator makes himself not an Executor but a Trespasser to them though it would have made him an Executor in his own wrong had there not been an Executor by right who notwithstanding the other stands charged with and is liable for the debts of the Testator 4. Whosoever feareth to be adjudged Executor in his own wrong his safest course is not to meddle at all but utterly to abstain from all manner of use of the deceased's Goods and especially let him take heed that he do not sell any of the deceased's Goods nor receive any of his debts nor kill any of his Cattle And if one after wrongful Administration of some of the deceased's Goods take Administration and after such Administration taken be sued by a Creditor for a Debt as Administrator and after such wrongful Administration there remain not Goods sufficient to pay that debt the Creditor can recover no more than remained after such rightful Administration taken because he sued him as Administrator therefore he should in such case have sued him as Executor because he was Executor in his own wrong before he took Letters of Administration and so then the Goods which were Administred before the taking such Letters of Administration must thereby be included to be liable for the debt due to the Creditor otherwise not Therefore Creditors must look before they sue for else they know not whether he so intermedling be Executor or Administrator nor consequently how to found their Action aright and safely for good success since a sute against an Executor as Administrator or against an Administrator as Executor will prove frivolous one Errour in a Foundation may be the Foundation of many in the Superstructure 5. A. brought debt upon an Obligation of forty pound against L. as Executor of P. The Defendant pleaded That P. in his life time was indebted to him in forty pound and that there came to his the Defendants hands Goods to the value but of ten pound which he retained towards satisfaction of his own debt and averr'd that no other goods beyond that value of ten pound came to his hands to be Administred c. The Plaintiff replyed and shewed That the Defendant is Executor in his own wrong to P. and that he hath much other goods belonging to P. to be Administred at S. in the County of N. conclude hoc paratus est verificare c. The Defendant rejoyn'd and demanded Judgement whether the Plaintiff shall be admitted to Plead That the Defendant is Executor in his own wrong inasmuch as himself hath by his Declaration affirmed him to be Executor Testamenti upon which the Plaintiff demurr'd in Law To which point in Law the whole Court would hear the Plaintiff for he could well Reply That the Defendant notwithstanding the Declaration is Executor in his own wrong for there is no other Form de Court as was adjudged in Coulters Case But per tot curiam the whole Plea is discontinued for the Defendant having Pleaded that as to the goods to the value of ten pound he had retained them for debt to himself and that he had no more goods to be Administred it was an Offer of a good issue and then when the Plaintiff replyed that he had other goods c. conclude hoc paratus est verificare it is not good for he ought to have said hoc petit quod inquiratur per patriam for that there was any surplusage of goods when denyed by the Defendant and urged by the Plaintiff he ought to have come to an issue but could not by reason of the ill conclusion And in the same Term between Weast Plaintiff and Lane the same Defendant where Weast demanded four pound debt against Lane as Executor ut supra and all the rest of the Plea was ut supra Judgement was given for the Plaintiff because the Defendant had confess'd goods to the value of ten pound in his hands which is more than the debt in demand and therefore it being in the judgement of the Law That an Executor in his own wrong cannot retain to pay himself Judgement shall be given only upon the Defendants own confession and so it was Quod nota Yelv. a Counsel pro Quaerent Debt against the Defendant as Executor of J. S. he pleads that he had taken Letters of Administration Judgement of the Writ c. The Plaintiff replyed that the Defendant Administred de son tort and after took Letters of Administration Judgement c. And upon this it was demurr'd Godfrey for the Defendant argued That now the name of Executor is lawfully changed before the Action brought and therefore is to be sued by his new name as Administrator 9 Ed. 4. 33. 21 H. 6. 5. 18 H. 6.
out the Executor unless the money for the Land to be sold be to be distributed in pios usus because in this Case the Frank-tenement after the Testators death is in the Executors not in the Heir for which reason the Heir cannot enter in this Case as he might in the former 3. In an Action of Debt brought against Executors They were at Issue if Assets were in their hands or not and the Jury found by a Special Verdict That the Testator was seized of a House in Fee and made a Lease thereof and of certain Implements of household in it for years rendring Rent to Him his Heirs and Assigns and found that the Executors after the death of the Testator continually received the Rent and prayed Advice of the Court if the same were Assets in the Executors hands And the Opinion of the Court was That it was not Assets for that the whole Rent was to go with the Land in Reversion as magis digne and so did belong to the Heir not the Executors A man Willeth that after twenty years after the death of the Devisor J. S. shall have the Land in Fee the Heir of the Devisor shall have the Land during the Term and not the Executor CHAP. XV. What goes neither to the Heir nor Executor and in what Cases 1. Bona Paraphernalia go neither to the Heir nor to the Exeeutor 2. Things in joynt-Tenancy go neither to the Heir nor to the Executor 3. Things willed by the Testator to be sold for certain uses go to neither of them 4. A Lease simply for Three Lives goes neither to the Heir nor Executor 1. BY the Civil Law those Goods belonging to the Wife called Bona Paraphernalia descend neither to the Heir nor to the Executor neither are they by that Law subject unto the payment of the Husbands debts But now under that notion of Bona Paraphernalia we are not to understand the Wifes Apparel with her Bed Jewels and Ornaments for her person to be comprehended but her convenient Apparel and onely such as is agreeable to her degree and such shall go to the Wife onely the rest unto the Executor And thus much the very word being Etymologized doth imply 2. The Goods and Chattels which one hath in Joynt-Tenancy with another shall not on his death go to his Executor nor to his Heir but to the other surviving Joynt-Tenant and that by right of survivorship Otherwise it is with Tenants in common for if A. and B. have Goods or Chattels in Joynt-Tenancy and if either of them grant what belongs to him unto a Third person in this Case that Third person and he which kept his part unsold are Tenants in Common and therefore if either of them Two die the deceaseds part of such Goods and Chattels shall go to his Executor and not to the surviving Tenant in Common Also if Husband and Wife be Joynt-Tenants of Land and the Husband die the very Corn growing thereon shall survive to her together with the Land and though the Husband sowed it yet shall it not go to his Executor 3. The Monies or Profits arising out of Lands Willed by the Testator to be sold are not accounted as any of the Goods or Chattels of the person deceased and consequently do go neither to the Heir nor to the Executor but to the uses for which it was willed to be sold 4. If one have a Lease simply for Three Lives to him and his Assigns this is no Chattel therefore shall not go to the Executor and it is no Land therefore it shall not go to the Heir but in this Case it shall go to him who first after the Testators death Enters and Claims it as an Occupant if no assignment thereof be made in the life-time of the L●ssee But a Lease for years determinable upon Lives is a Chattel and shall go to the Executor So also doth an Extent upon a Statute CHAP. XVI Of the Indivisibility of the right and interest of Co-Executors Their Indivisibility 1. In point of Power and Authority 2. In point of Interest and Possession 3. In Case of Plaintiffs and Defendants 1. WHere there are more Executors than One or Joynt-Executors to the same Testator One of them cannot give nor release his Interest to the other or if he doth it is void and he who so releaseth shall still have as much Interest as he to whom he released because each had the whole before Therefore if one Executor release but his part of a debt it hath been held that the whole is discharged But if one Executor alone sell Goods of the Testator he alone may maintain an Action of debt for the money So if Goods be taken out of the possession of one Executor he alone may maintain an Action for the same and that without naming himself Executor Also one Executor not joyning in suit with another may any time before judgment release but after Judgement he cannot because then it is altered in nature and turn'd into Rem Judicatam And though many Executors to one and the same Testator make but one Executor yet the devastation wast or misdoing of one shall not charge the rest nor make their Goods lyable for recompence but himself shall answer for it with his own Goods yet no further than the value of the Testators Goods so wasted or misadministred 2. If one of the Executors where there be Two or more grant his part of the Testators Goods all passeth and nothing is left to the other for that each hath the whole and there be no Parts or Moities between Executors Thus if an Horse come to four Executors each hath a Horse and yet all four have but one Also though a Lease for One thousand Years of One thousand Acres of Land come to Two Executors or more no partition or division can be made between them because it is not between them as between joynt-Lessees of Land where each hath but a Moitie in Interest though possession of and through the whole but among Executors each hath the whole and therefore if he grants his part he grants the whole yet one Executor may demise or grant the Moitie of the Land for the whole term and so may the other and this way they may settle a Moitie for each in some Third person intrusted for them but one Executor cannot make a Lease to the other of any part because he had the whole before nor can one of them Sue the other as Executor unless the Testator devise to one of his Executors all his Goods after such Debts and Legacies paid and satisfied for in such Case after satisfaction thereof that Executor may take the remainder of the Goods and maintain an Action of Trespass against the other if he take them from him and consequently an Action of Detinue if he keep or detain them but this he may do not as
from the deceased 4. If an Executor Sued do plead that he never was Executor nor Administred as Executor for that must be added then if Issue be taken upon this Plea and it be found against him the Plaintiff shall have Judgement to Recover not Dammages only but the Debt it self out of the proper Goods of the Executor if none of the Testators can be found Likewise as it is frequent in use for Executors to pay the Testators Debt with their own monies and to make themselves satisfaction out of the Testators Goods So it is most equal that Executors should with their own money discharge the Arrerages of Rent of those Leases the Profits whereof themselves enjoy by vertue of the Testators Will Therefore where an Executor is sued for Rent behind after the Testators death upon a Lease for years made to the Testator and by him left to the Executor here it shall be adjudged and levied upon the Executors own Goods for that so much of the profits as the Rent amounted unto shall be accounted as his own Goods and not his Testators Again if Executors plead Plene Administra and it be found for them and after that certain Goods of the Testator come to their hands in this Case if he which brought the first Action of Debt bring the same against them again the Action is well maintainable It is also to be remembred That the value upon an Appreyzment in an Inventory is not binding nor much to be regarded at the Common Law either for or against Executors for if it be too high it shall not prejudice the Executor if it be too low it shall not advantage him but the very true value as shall be found by the Jury when it comes in question whether the Executor hath fully Administred or hath Assets in his hands or not is that which is binding in the Law 5. Executors are lyable to satisfie the Obligations made by their Testators though they be not therein bound by Name Also an Action of the Case lyeth against an Executor upon an Assumpsit or the simple contract of the Testator especially where the ground of the Assumpsit is a true and real debt Also the Rationabilis pars bonorum by Custome in some places is maintainable for the Widow and Children against the Executors Also a Detinue lyeth against him for the Goods delivered to the deceased if the Executor doth still continue the possession of them Likewise an Action lyeth against the Executor for arrerages of account found upon the deceased before Auditors Also the Executor of a man that recovereth a Debt upon a Judgement had by the deceased shall be chargeable with restitution if the Judgement be reversed for Errour Also where a Prisoner dyeth in debt to a Goaler for his diet during the time of his imprisonment his Executor is lyable Likewise where one hath a Tally of the Exchequer to receive money of some Customer Receiver or other Officer of the Kings and delivereth it to him he then having money of the Kings in his hands if he dye without paying the same his Executor shall stand chargeable with the payment thereof Also the Executors of an Administrator are chargeable where he did neither pay the Debts nor leave the Goods of the Intestate to the next Administrator but otherwise disposed of them Yet an Executor is not chargeable in an Action of Detinue nor of Account except to the King for the Testators detaining and not paying or answering things received or under his charge 6. But an Executor as hath been formerly implyed is not chargeable for any personal wrong done by the deceased for it dies with his person neither will an Action of Debt lye against him upon the simple Contract of the deceased but an Action of the Case only Neither will an Action lye against an Executor upon an Arbitrement made in the life-time of the deceased albeit it be made in writing Neither will an Action lye against an Executor for Costs given in Chancery against the deceased in a Sute there for it is lost when the party dies And where there be many Executors and all have accepted they must all be joyned in the Sute but if some of them have refused possibly the Sute may be good enough against the rest Otherwise one Executor cannot be charged without his Co-Executors except it be in the Case of Severance and in some special Case where one alone doth the wrong as where one Executor doth detain the Deeds from the Heir 7. Debt brought against the Executor of H. W. The Defendant pleaded That he never was Executor nor Administred as Executor The Jury found That the said H. W. died possessed of divers Goods and that one W. A. was indebted Seven Pound to him which the● Defendant had received and for which he had given his Acquittance and that immediately after the death of the said H. W. the Defendant took into his possession all his Goods converted them to his own use enjoy'd them and disposed of them to his own profit at his own will and pleasure And whether upon this matter of Fact the Defendant were Executor or not was submitted to the Court who were of Opinion That this matter of Fact was the Administration as of an Executor and that the Defendant should be charged accordingly Scire Facias upon a Judgement against a Testator in Debt brought against his Executors who pleaded That before they had knowledge of this Judgement they had fully Administred all the Testators Goods in payment of Debts upon Obligations It was adjudged no Plea for at their peril they ought to take knowledge of Debts upon Record and ought first of all unless Debts due to the Queen to have satisfied them It was adjudged accordingly Debt was brought by S. B. against D. B. and others Defendants Executors c. The Defendants pleaded Recovery against them by another in an Action of Debt and shewed the Contents of the Record to which it was Replyed That the Recovery was by Covin to defraud the Plaintiff of his Debt and hereupon Issue was joyned it was found by Verdict for the Plaintiff and agreed by all the Justices That the Judgement should be against the Executor as against the Testators Goods and not as against his own proper Goods being hereunto upon good Advice inclined for several Reasons 1. For that the Plea was a void Plea for the Record which the Defendant pleaded was such as the Plaintiff doth confess and avoid and not like that which is every way false as when one pleads that he never was Executor nor Administred as Executor c. which Plea being every way false and so within his own knowledge also doth for that Reason cause that Judgement in that Case shall be of his own proper Goods 2. Another Reason is That because such Judgement is most agreeable to Reason viz. To give the Plaintiff Recovery of his
Debt out of the Testators and not the Executors Goods which is conceived a more reasonable way than to charge the Executors for that they bear the burthen of the Administration of the deceaseds Will they deserve to have as much favour as Reason will admit and not be charged of their own proper Goods It was further said That if an Executor should be lyable to such Judgement of his own Goods it would be a cause of often refusing the Administration of Testaments for it is a thing of ill consequence to bind Executors in their own proper Goods in any other Cases than have been in fore-time adjudged which Cases were cited out of divers Books but here omitted for brevities sake none of which Cases have any resemblance with this in question Debt was brought against an Executor the Plaintiff Declared upon a simple Contract To which the Defendant pleaded Fully Administred It was found against him and moved in Arrest of Judgement for that the Action was against an Executor who is not chargeable in that manner and it was said That when it doth appear to the Court that the Executor is not chargeable the Court ought not then to Judge for the Plaintiff and to this purpose some Books were cited and it was said That the Reason why an Executor shall not be charged upon a simple Contract is for that he is a Stranger and cannot have notice of the Contract and therefore the Law will not have him to be charged for that alone without somewhat else But in this Case it appears that he had notice of the Contract inasmuch as thereupon he pleaded fully Administred and that Plea being admitted it implyes as if he had known of the Contract and therefore when he pleaded that he had fully Administred which was found against him Judgement ought to have been given for the Plaintiff for proof whereof a Judgment was cited which appears to have been given An. 10 H. 6. fol. 15. and 13 H. 6. As the Book sayes in the like Case against an Executor upon a simple Contract All which notwithstanding it was resolved by the Court That the Plaintiff should take nothing by his Writ giving their Reasons for such their Judgement which for brevities sake are also here omitted Debt against an Administrator upon an Arbitrement made betwixt the Plaintiff and the Intestate in Writing and the Defendant demurr'd thereupon and without argument it was adjudged for the Defendant because the Intestate might have waged his Law But otherwise it were if it had been in debt upon Arrerages of Accounts before Auditors Assumpsit against an Executor upon the Promise of the Testator and in the Declaration it was not averred That he had Assets to pay debts c. But Mich. 29 30 Eliz. It was adjudged that the Declaration was good and the Plaintiff recovered Debt against an Executor upon an Obligation made by his Testator the Plaintiff was Non-suited the Defendant had Costs by order of the Court. Otherwise it is where an Executor is Plaintiff and is Non-suited For it cannot be intended that it was conceived upon malice by him Vid. Stat. 23 H. 8. cap. 15. Debt against an Executor upon an Arbitrement made in the time of the Testator It was demurred in Law whether it lay or not Because the Testator might have waged his Law And adjudged without Argument that it lay not Debt against P. as Executor The Plaintiff had Judgement to recover de Bonis Testatoris And thereupon a Scire Facias was awarded and the Sheriff returned Quod nulla habuit bona Testatoris And the Plaintiff surmiseth that he had wasted the Testators Goods whereupon he prayeth a Scire Facias why he should not have Execution de bonis propriis And ruled by the Court That this Writ shall not be awarded upon the surmise of the party upon a devastation nor in any Case where the Judgement is de bonis propriis unless it be upon return of the Sheriff where he returns a Devastavit Vid. 9 H. 6. 9. 57. Fitzh Execution 9. Scire Facias against an Administratrix to have Execution of a Judgement against the Intestate the Defendant pleaded Quod nulla habet bona quae fuerunt Intestati tempore mortis suae in manibus suis Administranda nec habuit die impetrationis brevis nec unquam postea And it was thereupon demurred and held by all the Court that it was not any Plea for a Judgement cannot be answered without another Judgement and it may be she had Administred all the Goods in paying debts upon Specialties which is not any Administration to bar the Plaintiff Or as some said it may be she had paid Debts upon a Statute or Recognizance which is not allowable against a Judgement But Anderson denied it for there is not any Priority of Debts upon Record unless in Case of the Queens Debt which is first to be paid And here the Defendant ought to have pleaded specially how she had Administred Wherefore it was adjudged for the Plaintiff The Defendant pleaded Out-lawry in the Testator 29 Eliz. not reversed and it was thereupon demurred Herne for the Plaintiff moved That it was not any Plea because admitting it to be a Plea it should be in regard of the Testators being Out-lawed he could not have any Goods but what appertained to the Queen and then the Executors might not have any Goods to satisfie But that is not so for the Testator might have a debt due to him upon a Contract which is not forfeited or it might be the Testator Devised Lands to be sold and which are sold the money is Assets in their hands and in 3 H. 6. 17 32. it was holden to be no Plea And of that Opinion were Walmesley and Owen For a person Out-lawed may well make a Will and have Executors over and besides the Goods forfeited to the Queen as in the Cases before put and others of the same nature But Beamond è contra for the Bar is good to a common intent and these kind of Assets shall not be intended unless they be shewn Wherefore primâ facie the Plea is good Anderson absente Adjournatur Afterwards for defect of pleading without regard to the matter in Law it was adjudged for the Plaintiff 8 Ed. 4. 6. 21 Ed. 4. 5. 39 H. 6. 27. Errour of a Judgement in C. B. against Three Executors The Errour Assigned was That one of them died pending the Writ before Judgement And Warberton moved that this was Errour but when one of the Executors Plaintiffs die this is no Errour for they might be served But the Court held it no Errour 3 H. 7. 1 3. 8 Ed. 3. 11. Scire Facias against Executors upon a Judgement against their Testator in debt They pleaded that before they had any knowledge of this Judgement they had fully Administred all the Testators Goods in paying of debts upon Obligations and it was thereupon demurred and
after Argument at the Bar adjudged for the Plaintiff that it was not any Plea For they at their peril ought to take cognizance of debts upon Record and ought first of all unless for debts due to the Queen wherein she hath a Prerogative to satisfie them and although the Recovery was in another County than where the Testator and the Executors inhabited it is not material But if an Action be brought against them in another County than where they inhabit and before their knowing thereof they pay debts upon Specialties that is allowable wherefore it was adjudged accordingly Vid. 4 H. 6. 8. 21 Ed. 4. 21. Debt against an Executor who pleaded he had reines in ses mains but certain Goods distrained and impownded it was adjudged to be no Assets to charge him The Case was A. Covenanteth with B. to put his Son an Apprentice to C. or otherwise that his Executors shall pay B. Twenty pound A. doth not put his Son an Apprentice to C. and dyeth B. brings debt against the Executors of A. and it was Resolved by the Court That it lyeth not for Two Reasons 1. It cannot be a debt in the Executor where it was no debt in the Testator And if one Covenants to pay Ten pound debt lyeth against him or his Executors as 40 Ed. 3. 28 H. 8. Dyer are but if he doth Covenant that his Executors shall pay Ten pound an Action lyeth not against them 2. The first part of the Deed sounds in Covenant and the second part shall be of the same nature and condition Q. of this Reason Note Assumpsit by the Testator lies against his Executor in Case the Debt riseth upon a Loan and Promise of the Testator to pay and the Promise be for the payment of a meer debt and not to do any collateral Act and where the Testator himself by reason of such Promise could not have waged his Law in such Case his Executor is chargeable but upon a meer collateral Promise of the Testator an Assumpsit lies not against his Executor Such was the Opinion in Q. Eliz. time but now in Reg. Jac. the Opinion of both Courts was and resolved That the Action against the Executor lies as well in the one Case as in the other Scire Facias Sued by H. against W. Executor to his Father for Execution of a Judgment obtained against the Testator The Defendant pleaded Plenè Administravit at the time of bringing the Action and thereupon they were at Issue and the Jury found That the Testator conveyed a Lease in trust to one Fisher against whom the Executor had recovered One Thousand pound in Chancery which was come to the Executors hands Et si super tota materia c. Two Points in this Case were argued at the Bar and Bench 1. Whether the Plea of Plenè Administravit at the time of bringing the Writ were good in that Judgement was given against the Testator in his life-time and it was Ruled that it was not good but that in such Case the Executor should have pleaded There was nothing in his hands at the time of the Testators death because the Judgement bound him to satisfie that debt before others but by the joyning of Issue the advantage of that exception to the Plea was waved 2. Whether the Summ Decreed in Equity in the Chancery shall be Assets and they all agreed it should be Assets because the Jury found that by vertue of the Executorship it was come to the Executors hands 9 Eliz. Dyer 264. And money arising of the sale of Lands by Executors shall be accounted Assets Chapman and Daltons Case Plowd Also Dammages recovered by Executors pro bonis asportatis in vita Testatoris shall be Assets Vid. Pasch 39 Ed. 3. and C. B. Ordinary and Godfreys Case W. And others brought D. against the Defendant as Executor he pleaded Plenè Administravit And it was found by Verdict That the Defendants Wife was made Executrix who to defraud the Creditors had made a Deed of Gift of the Goods before her marriage with the Defendant and yet retain'd them in her possession and took the Defendant to Husband and died and the Defendant had now as much goods in his hands as would suffice to pay the Creditors their debts And the Court adjudged for the Plaintiff for that the Defendant confess'd himself Executor by pleading Fully Administred and therefore is chargeable because the property of the Goods passed not out of the Wife by that Grant being fraudulently made as aforesaid by the Stat. 13 Regin One sued an Executor in the Ecclesiastical Court for a Legacy who pleaded Recovery in debt against him at Common Law and beyond that he had not Assets wherewith to satisfie To which the Plaintiff in the Ecclesiastical Court Replyed That the Recovery was by Covin and that the Plaintiff in the Recovery offered to discharge the Judgement and the Defendant would not And hereupon the Question was whether a Prohibition should be awarded or not And it was Resolved That it should not be awarded for that the Covin or Fraud is properly examinable in the Ecclesiastical Court because the Legatee cannot sue for his Legacy at the Common Law Action upon the Case of Trover of Goods The Case was this a Recovery in the Exchequer was had against the Executor of P. of Debt and Dammages and Fieri Facias issued de bonis Testatoris si c. And if none then Damna de propriis the Executor dies the Sheriff levies Execution of the Testators Goods before the Return of the Writ and adjudged good notwithstanding his death after the Test of the Writ B. brings Debt against H. on a Demise for years to one unto whom H. was Administrator And the Writ was in the Debet and Detinet Whereupon in Arrest of Judgement it was shew'd in B. R. That it ought to have been in the Detinet only because against an Administrator But it was adjudged That it was good in the Debet and Detinet because the Rent due incurr'd in the Administrators time and the Land is not Assets but only so much of the Profits as the Land is worth above the Rents and the Administrator shall not answer for more than the Land is worth deducting the Rent But in all Cases where an Executor or Administrator brings an Action for a Duty Testamentary there it ought to be in the Detinet only because the Duty being demanded ought to be Assets An Executor is not chargeable for a Debt due by the Testator upon a simple Contract Regularly an Executor shall not be charged without Specialty in any Action wherein the Testator might wage his Law for that an Executor cannot wage his Law of other mens Contracts 46 Ed. 3. 10. b. 11 H. 6. b. Information in the Exchequer in nature of an Account was brought against D. Executor of W. M. supposing that W. M. had received money of the Queens amounting to One
to be paid 9. Touching Debts due for Rent upon Leases what the Law in that Case is 10. Debts for Servants wages payable before Legacies 11. Covin in an Executors payments shall not prejudice a Creditor 12. Mortuary what it is when where how much and in what Cases payable 13. Law-Cases relating to this Subject 1. ALl the Debts must be paid before any Legacies be paid or delivered and if there be not enough over and above the Legacies to pay all the debts then and in that Case any thing given by way of Legacy may be sold for payment of the Debts and in such Case the Legataries must be content to lose their Legacies 2. In the first place the Executor or the Administrator if he be a Creditor to the deceased shall be preferred before others so that he may deduct to satisfie himself first although other Creditors lose their whole debt thereby specially if his debt be in equal degree with the other debts so that an Executor may allow his own debt in prejudice of other like Creditors if he hath made an Inventory and in case he be not Executor of his own wrong Understand this especially when the debts are of equal degree for if the Testator be indebted to other men by Statute Judgement or Recognizance and to the Executor only by Bond or Specialty then may he not first pay himself unless there be Goods sufficient to pay both him and them But by the Civil and Ecclesiastical Laws the Executor is in the same case with other like Creditors 3. If there be any debt due to the Crown and the King Commence his Sute for it before any other man can get a Judgement for his debt he shall be satisfied before any others neither is it in the Election of the Executor to prefer any other debt due to any Subject So that if the Executor be Sued by any Subject for any such debt he may plead in Bar of the Sute That his Testator died thus much in debt to the King shewing how c. and that he hath not Goods surmounting the value of that debt And if the Sute be not so by way of Action as that the Executor hath a day in Court to plead but be by way of suing Execution as upon Stat. Merchant or Staple then is the Executor put to his Audita Querela wherein he must set forth this matter But this priority of payment of the Kings debt before any other is to be understood of such of the Kings debts only as are of Record and not of summs of money due to the King upon Wood-sales or Sales of his Minerals for which no Specialty is given or of Amercements in his Courts Baron or Courts of his Honours which be not Courts of Record or of Fines for Copy-hold Estates there or of mony upon the Sale of Strayes within the Kings Manors or Liberties or of forfeitures to the Crown of debts by Contract due to any Subject by Out-lawry or Attainder until Office thereupon found But of Fines and Amercements in the Kings Courts of Record there is no question but they are debts of Record 4. When the King is satisfied then must the debts of the Subject be paid if there be Goods of the deceased sufficient remaining and that in this order or method First before other personal debts whether they be due by Obligation Bill or otherwise Judgements and Condemnations are to be discharged that is the debts due by Record by any Judgement had against the deceased in any Judicial proceeding in any Court of Record Nor is it any Plea for a Creditor by Statute to say that his Statute was acknowledged before the Judgement and so is more ancient for a Judgement though latter yet being more puisne is to be preferred before a Statute in time precedent But if this Judgement be satisfied and is only kept on foot to wrong other Creditors or if there be any Defeazance of the Judgement yet in force then the Judgement will not avail to keep off other Creditors from their debts And here Note that between one Judgement and another had against the Testator precedency or priority of time is not material but he that first sueth Execution shall be preferred and before any Execution sued it is at the Election of the Executor to satisfie which Judgement he will first And here observe farther that this is to be understood of Judgements only against the Testator and not of any against the Executor himself also that what is said of a Testator in Case of an Executor immediate is to be understood likewise of the Testators Testator in Case of the Executor of an Executor Again the foresaid respect to debt by Judgement is not to be restrained or limited only to the Four Courts at Westminster but extends it self to Judgement in all other Courts of Record as in Cities and Towns Corporate having Power by Charter or Prescription to hold Plea of Debt above Forty shillings for though Execution cannot be there had of any other Goods than such as are within the Jurisdiction of that Court yet if the Record be removed into Chancery by a Certiorari and thence by Mittimus into one of the Benches then Execution may be had upon any Goods in any County of England Again Debts upon Specialties must be paid before debts upon Contract and debts upon Record must be paid before debts upon Specialties also a Judgement in a Court of Record shall be paid before Statutes which are but private Records as also before Recognizances acknowledged by Assent of the parties Likewise a debt upon or after a Recovery though it be a latter debt shall be paid before a precedent debt due by Recognizance or Statute because although they are both Records yet the Judgement in the Kings Court upon Judicial proceeding is the most notorious and more eminent in degree than a Statute or Recognizance taken in private by consent of the parties and therefore shall be preferred before it 5. In the next place Debts due by Statutes or Recognizances entered into by the deceased are to be satisfied for the debt due upon Statute Merchant and Recognizance is to be discharged if there be Assets before any Personal Debt For that by vertue of the Recognizance not only the person of the Debtor is obliged but also after the expiration of the day of payment the moveable Goods of the Debtor may be apprehended and sold for satisfaction of the debt Here Note that a Statute and Recognizance standing in equal degree it is at the Executors Election to give precedency to which he will neither is it material which of them was first or last nor between one Statute and another doth the time or antiquity give any advantage as touching the Goods though touching the Lands of the Conusor it doth but as for his Goods in the hands of the Executor who first seizeth them by
otherwise 10. If the Creditor hath no Specialty or Writing the Executor is not bound precisely to pay the pretended debt saving for the Servants wages for wherever the Testator might wage his Law no Action lyeth against his Executor But debts due for Servants wages and Workmen also must be paid For Assumptions or Promises made by the Testator upon good consideration will oblige his Executors to a performance or recompence in case of non-performance but these are post-posited and give place to all the former and an Action of the Case may be brought against the Executor upon the Promise or Assumption made by the Testator in his life-time by word only without writing if there be Assets And these Debts by Contract or Assumption express are to be satisfied before Legacies and also before the Reasonable Part to the Wife and Children to which by custome in some Counties they are intitled 11. If there be Two Creditors in equal degree and both sue if the Executor doth by Covin or agreement help that Creditor that began his Sute last to his Judgement or Execution first and there be not Assets then left to pay the other Creditor he must be satisfied out of the Executors own Estate if this Covin be proved against him for an Executor ought not to help one Creditor to a Judgement sooner than the other Covenously But the confession of an Action so done on purpose by an Executor is no Covin in the Law for Covin is where the Action is untrue and not where the Executors bear a lawful favour But where there is really Covin in an Executor there it shall be no prejudice to a Creditor and for this reason it is also that an Acquittance given to an Executor for more than he paid shall not prejudice a Creditor for more than the Executor did really pay 12. A Mortuary or Corse-present is a Gift left by a man at his death to his Parish Church for the recompence of his personal Tithes and Offerings not duly paid in his life-time and this by the Executor was used to be paid next to the Heriot and before the Debts And if a man be sued in the Spiritual Court for a Mortuary a Prohibition will lye Though it appeareth by the Stat. of 13 Ed. 1. commonly called Circumspecte agatis That Mortuaries are sueable in the Court Christian and in the Stat. of 21 H. 8. cap. 6. an Order and Rate in money is prescribed for Mortuaries And in Ancient Times if a man died possessed of Three or more Cattel of any kind the best being kept for the Lord of the Fee as a Heriot the second was wont to be given to the Parson in right of the Church But more particularly touching Mortuaries these Five things are more especially observable from the said Statute 1. That no Mortuary shall be taken or demanded of any for any person dying within this Realm whose moveable Goods at the time of his death extend not to the value of Ten Marks 2. That no Mortuary shall be given or demanded but only in such places where by Custome they have been used to be paid 3. That no person shall pay Mortuaries in more places than one viz. in the place of his most usual Dwelling or Habitation and there but one only Mortuary 4. That for a person deceased having at the time of his death in moveable Goods to the value of Ten Marks or more clearly above his debts paid and under the value of Thirty pounds there shall not be taken above Three shillings and four pence for a Mortuary and under the value of Forty pounds not above Six shillings and eight pence for a Mortuary and of the value of Forty pounds or upward to any summ whatever clearly above his debts paid not above Ten shillings for a Mortuary 5. That for a Woman under Covert Baron or Child or any person deceased that at the time of his death was not a House-keeper nothing at all shall be paid by way of Mortuary And here Note That Mortuaries ought to be satisfied out of the deads part only that is after and not before the Goods be divided among the Wife and Children where by the custome of the Countrey she can challenge her Widows part and they their filial portions yet they are to be paid before any Legacies whatever for that a Mortuary is of the nature of a Legacy yea it is in the Law termed the Principal Legacy Concerning other persons exempted from Mortuaries and of the extensions and limitations and other interpretations thereof see the said Statute of 21 H. 8. at large 13. If an Administrator compound for Forty pound with one who hath a Judgement of One hundred pound this under-hand composition shall not prejudice any other Creditor who is a stranger to it For every Administrator ought to execute his Office lawfully in paying Debts Duties and Legacies in such precedency as the Law requires and an agreement made between them and others shall not be to the prejudice of a third person In Action of Debt brought against an Administrator it was the Opinion of the Court That he might retain monies in his own hands of the Intestates to satisfie a debt due to himself But an Executor of his own wrong should not retain to satisfie his own debt An Administratrix durante minori aetate of an Executrix made divers Obligations unto the Creditors of the Testator and afterwards took Husband The Opinion of the Court in this Case was That so much of the Goods of the Testators as amounted unto the value of the debts paid and undertaken for the. Husband might retain as his own Debt against an Executor by an Original who pleaded a Recovery against him in the Court of Ipswich and that he had not any more Goods than what would satisfie the said Recovery and the Recovery was after the Test of the Original Writ but he averr'd That before the Recovery he had not any notice of the Sute by the Original and the Plaintiff demurr'd and it was adjudged for the Defendant be it whether he had any notice or not for if one sue him and give notice yet he may confess the Action of another who commenced his sute after the former and therein may pleasure his Friend so as it be without fraud But if he be sued by one upon an Obligation and will pay another debt by Obligation without sute there and in that case if he hath notice of the sute it is a Devastavit otherwise if he hath no notice thereof and so in such case the notice is material CHAP. XXIX Of Executors Accounts 1. Executors obliged to Account The Ordinaries power therein 2. Within what time an Executor ought to Account 3. An Account judicially made shall not prejudice absent Creditors or Legataries not duly summoned 1. TO render an Account is not the least part of an Executors or Administrators duty thereto obliged
as well by his own Oath as by the Law insomuch that should the Testator himself discharge his Executor from making an Account yet may the Ordinary at his discretion in case of Fraud exact an Account from him Therefore the Ordinary may if he please call him to Account either Generally or Particularly as the Case shall require and that either at or without the motion or instance of the Creditors or Legataries within a year or what time he please at which Account he may call all the Creditors and Legataries and therein he must set forth what he hath received what expended and Prove it too if need so require And upon a just Account so made the Ordinary may acquit him whereby he is discharged of all Sutes in the Spiritual Court But as to that the stile of each Court is to be observed And in the Proof of such Accounts the lesser summs as under Forty shillings may be Proved by the Executors own Oath the greater must be by due proofs 2. The Executor ought to have a competent time for the performance of the Will before he be called to an Account which time ought to be a Twelvemoneth Yet he may sooner be called to it by the Ordinary in case of Male-Administration or if the Ordinary see cause for it at least to a particular Account but herein also the several stiles of several Courts are to be observed And in this Account the Funerals Debts Legacies and moderate Expences ought to be allowed to the Executor so far as he hath really paid or is obliged to And the Executor having made a full and just Account ought to be acquitted and discharged of all further sute if it be such an Account of his whole Office neither is he to be called by the Ordinary to any further Account 3. No Executor is obliged to make any Account to the Creditors or Legataries extrajudicially but at their instance to the Ordinary he is compellable to it judicially and at the making of such Account they and all others having or pretending to have interest are to be summoned Legally to be present Otherwise the Account made in their absence and they not summoned will not prejudice them And yet extrajudicially an Executor may exact an Account of his Co-Executor but not in Judgement or judicially but the Ordinary as aforesaid may call them both or either of them to a Judicial Account CHAP. XXX Of Administrators in a notion distinct from Executors 1. Administrator what he is in the Law 2. The Origination of an Administrator by and to whom Letters of Administration are to be granted 3. What provision of Law in Case of an Administrator after an Executors death 4. What the Law is in case a Stranger doth Administer or the Ordinary grant his Letters ad Colligendum 5. In what manner Administration is to be granted 6. Of Administration durante minoritate 7. In what Cases Letters of Administration may be granted 8. Law-Cases touching this Subject 1. AN Administrator is in the Law called Executor Dativus because as such he is constituted or appointed by the Ordinary As by the Statutes so by the Common Law of this Realm an Administrator is properly taken for him that Legally hath or in his own wrong illegally the Goods and Chattels of a person dying Intestate or hath Administred to the same but more properly that hath them committed to his trust and charge by the Ordinary and is accountable for the same whensoever it shall please the Ordinary to call him thereunto and this is done for default of an Executor 2. By the Constitution of Leo the Emperour it was Enacted That if a man dying bequeath any thing for the Redemption of Captives c. and appoint one to execute the Will in that point the party so appointed should see it performed but if he appointed none to do it then was the Bishop of the City Authorized to demand the Legacy and therewith to perform the Will of the deceased without delay From whence it is probably conjectured that the Administration of the Goods of persons dying intestate by Bishops and others of Ecclesiastical Authority and Jurisdiction under them was Originally derived For it was Anciently Ordained That the Goods of those dying Intestate should be committed to the disposition of the Ordinary who should be obliged to answer the deceaseds debts so far forth as his Goods would extend unto even as Executors themselves in the like case And after this by another Statute power was given to the Ordinary to appoint Administrators and to Authorize them as fully as Executors to gather up and dispose the Goods of the Intestate Alway provided that they should be accountable for the same as Executors by which Statute it is ordained That the Ordinaries shall depute the next and most lawful Friends of the Intestate to be his Administrators who then in Law have nigh in all things equivalent power with Executors Insomuch that whatever hath been or may be spoken of the one may nigh in all points be properly applyed and aptly accommodated to the other And lastly in confirmation of the Premises it is enacted by a latter Statute That in case any person die Intestate or having made a Will the Executor therein named refuse to Prove the same the Ordinary or others Authorized for the Probate of Testaments may grant Administration to the deceaseds Widow or to the next of his Kin or to both at the Ordinaries discretion taking Surety for them for the due Administration And by the same Statute it is further Enacted That if divers persons claim the Administration as next of Kin which be in equal degree of kindred to the deceased and where any one person only desireth the Administration as next of Kin where indeed divers persons be in equality of kindred then in every such case the Ordinary is at his Election and Liberty to accept any one or more making request where divers do require the Administration 3. An Executor after Probate made dying Intestate the Administration of the first Testators Goods not Administred may be granted to whom the Ordinary shall see cause in Law and he may grant the Administration of the Goods both of the first and second deceased de bonis non Administratis to one and the same person in which case the Administrator ought to see that his Administration have special words for granting the Administration of the first Testators Goods not Administred For though some are of Opinion that by the general Administration the Administrator shall have not only the Executors but the Testators Goods also yet this is otherwise held for Law at this day And an Action shall lie for or against such an Administrator as for or against an Executor and he shall be charged to the value of the Goods of the deceased and no further if it happen not otherwise by his
be in the Debet and Detinet because he is bound by special words in the Obligation and here the debt which in the time of the Administratrix occurr'd is her debt and in Dyer 6 Ed. 6. 81. the Action is brought in the Debet and Detinet for Rent Arrear in the time of the Executor and admitted to be good Popham accord For the being charged with the Rent in her time it accrews by reason of the Profits of the Land which she her self received and therefore she is charged having quid pro quo For if an Executor hath a Lease for years of Land of the value of Twenty pound per Ann. rendring Ten pound per Ann. Rent it is Assets in his hands only for Ten pound over and above the Rent Fenner agreed to this Opinion and to that purpose cited 10 H. 6. 11. That the Husband shall be charged after the death of the Feme for Rent Arrear in his own time because he received the Profits of the Land So as the Rent grew due in respect of the occupation and taking of the Profits And therefore she is chargeable and not meerly as Executrix Clinch agreed with them wherefore it was then adjudged for the Plaintiff Note That afterwards this Judgement was reversed in the Exchequer Chamber for the point in Law For all the Judges of the Common Bench and Barons of the Exchequer held That she ought to be charged in the Detinet because she is charged only by the Contract of the Intestate 5 Co. 31. The Case was One died Intestate in the County of York and a Stranger prayed Letters of Administration to be granted to him which was Repealed by the Delegates at York there was an Appeal to the Court of Delegates in the Chancery who did Repeal the former Sentence at York and adjudged that the Party made no Will and granted Letters of Administration to him who Appealed to them The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury granted Administration to a second person and the Arch-Bishop of York to a Third person who made a Release unto the Debtor of the Intestate upon which Release debt was brought by the first Administrator against the Defendant who pleaded the Release made to him And whether this grant of Letters of Administration by the Judges Delegates were good or not was the Question But the better Opinion of the Court was That the Letters of Administration which were granted by the Judges Delegates was not good but there being Bona Notabilia the Administration was to be granted by the Arch-Bishop And it was said That if the Party who died Intestate had Goods in several Provinces both the Arch-Bishops there having a Peculiar might grant Letters of Administration and although the King be Supream Ordinary and by Delegates may do many Acts yet the Court of Delegates cannot do this nor have they power to Prove any Wills for the power of the Judges Delegates is Potestas Delegata corrigere non exequi And the Court said That it was adjudged in one Brakenburies Case That the Judges Delegates had not power to grant any Letters of Administration An Exception was taken to a Declaration because the Plaintiff conveyed his Interest to an Administrator to whom the Arch-Bishop of Canterbury did grant the Administration of all the Goods of the Lessee and did not shew how the Arch-Bishop granted it either as Ordinary or by his Prerogative And this was held by all the Court a material Exception But it was afterwards alledged That all the Presidents in this Court viz. B. R. and in C. B. were so in general without special shewing how and for that they would not change the Presidents they disallowed the Exception And in this Case it was held That if an Administrator doth grant Omnia bona catalla sua a Term which he hath as Administrator doth not pass for it is not suum but he hath it in right of the Intestate But if one hath a Lease as Executor or Administrator of the Mannor of D. and he granteth all his right and interest in the Mannor the Term which he hath as Executor c. doth pass for he had no other Right in it and his intent is to pass it but by general words it shall not pass Debt against the Defendant as Administratrix she pleaded Plenè Administravit the Jury found That the Intestate was indebted to divers by Obligations and that after his death the Defendant had taken in the Obligations and had obliged her self to pay the greater part of the summs contained in the Obligations at certain dayes to come and for the residue had promised to the parties That in consideration of delivery in of the said Obligations that she would pay c. And by the Opinion of Anderson Windham and Periam it was held clearly a good Administration so that the property of the Goods of the Intestate to that value were altered and changed in the Defendant Action Sur Trover And Declares as Administrator of J. S. and that Administration was committed to him by A. B. Official to the Bishop of Peterborrough and sheweth not that he was Ordinary of the Place or that the granting of Administration did belong to him and this matter after Verdict was alledged in Arrest of Judgement but because divers Presidents had been so and that such Declarations had been allowed the Court did give Judgement for the Plaintiff Debt as Administrator to one Philips and Declares That Administration of the Goods of Philips was committed to him per Adrian Vane Sacrae Theologiae Doctorem such a day apud Monmouth and the Plaintiff recovered in the Common Bench by default and Writ of Errour was thereon brought and the Errour Assign'd because it is not shewn that Vane was Ordinary of Monmouth nor that the committing of Administration appertained to him and in regard it was in a Declaration which ought to be certain and he is not a Bishop nor any person who may be intended to be the Ordinary the Judgement was therefore reversed It was moved by Coke the Queens Atturney That the committing of Administration being by the Arch-Bishop although he had not Goods in divers Diocesses because it is in his Province wherein he hath Jurisdiction it is not void but only voidable by Sentence and it is not like to an Administration committed by another Bishop of the Goods of a man who died in another Diocess or who had Goods in divers Diocesses and this difference hath been taken and agreed in the Queens Bench c. But the Justices said it was all one and the Administration is void in both cases and not voidable only Debt upon an Obligation of One hundred pound one of the Defendants was Out-lawed the other pleaded that he who was Out-lawed was made Executor and solely Proved the Will and Administred and that the Defendant as Servant unto him took divers of the Testators Goods by his Delivery and by his appointment had sold them
was the Opinion of the Justices That by his own Act he cannot purge himself of the first wrong and therefore this Action by the name of Executor good Note it was resolved per Curiam That Debt upon a Contract of the Intestate doth not lye against an Administrator Debt by an Administrator After Verdict it was moved in Arrest of Judgement That the Declaration was not good because he Counts that Administration was committed to him by the Bishop of St. Davids and he saith not Loci illius ordinarius nor cui Administratio pertinuit sed non allocatur For it is intended that he is the Ordinary and so is the common course of Declarations unless the Administration is alledged to be committed by one who hath a peculiar Jurisdiction The Commissary of the Bishop of London committed the Administration of Goods by word and gave an Oath to the Administrator which was Entered in the Acts of the Commissary but there were no Letters of Administration either in the name of the Commissary or Ordinary and whether this was a good Administration granted by word was the Question It was not resolved but the better Opinion seemed to be that it was not It cannot be without deed If divers persons be made Executors and some of them refuse at one time and some of them at another before the Ordinary they may afterwards Administer the Goods of the Testator but if they all refuse before the Ordinary and the Ordinary commits the Administration of the Goods to another Afterwards they cannot Prove the Will A Merchant of Ireland by an Obligation made in Ireland became bound to A. B. of London which Bond was in London and there remained A. B. died Intestate in Com. B. in England The Bishop of Ireland committed Administration to the Son of A. B. who released the debt The Arch-Bishop of Canterbury committed the Administration to the Wife of A. B. and she brought an Action of Debt against the Obligor and adjudged the Action was maintainable for that the Administration shall be committed by the Ordinary of the place where the Obligation is and not where the Debt first did arise because it is not Local CHAP. XXXI Of Administrations fraudulent and revocable 1. The Statute of 34 Eliz. cap. 8. Touching fraudulent Administrations 2. In what Case an Executor ought to Prove the Will notwithstanding Letters of Administration granted to another 3. Letters of Administration once granted are not revocable at the Ordinaries meer will and pleasure 4. In what Case Acts done by a former Administrator are good in Law notwithstanding second Letters of Administration afterwards granted 5. Cases in Law touching this Subject 1. FOrasmuch as it is often put in ure to the defrauding of Creditors that such persons as are to have the Administration of the Goods of others dying Intestate committed to them if they require it will not accept the same but suffer or procure the Administration to be granted to some Stranger of mean Estate and not of Kin to the Intestate from whom themselves or others by their means do take Deeds of Gifts and Authorities by Letters of Atturney whereby they obtain the Estate of the Intestate into their hands and yet stand not subject to pay the Debts owing by the said Intestate and so the Creditors for lack of knowledge of the place of habitation of the Administrator cannot Arrest him or Sue him And if they fortune to find him out yet for lack of ability in him to satisfie of his own Goods the value of that he hath conveyed away of the Intestates Goods or released of his Debts by way of Wasting the Creditors cannot have or recover their just and due debts Be it Enacted That every person and persons that shall hereafter obtain receive and have any Goods or Debts of any person Intestate or a Release or other discharge of any Debt or Duty that belonged to the Intestate upon any fraud as aforesaid or without such valuable consideration as shall amount to the value of the same Goods or Debts or near thereabouts except it be in or towards satisfaction of some just and principal Debt of the value of the same Goods or Debts to him owing by the Intestate at the time of his decease shall be charged and chargeable as Executor of his own wrong and so far only as all such Goods and Debts coming to his hands or whereof he is released or discharged by such Administrator will satisfie deducting nevertheless to and for himself allowance of all just due and principal Debts upon good consideration without fraud owing to him by the Intestate at the time of his decease and all other payments made by him which Lawful Executors or Administrators may and ought to have and pay by the Laws and Statutes of this Realm 2. Although upon an Executors refusal to Prove the Will and take on him the Office of Executorship and thereupon Administration be committed the Executor cannot as some hold sed Quaere go back again to Prove the Will and assume the Executorship yet if only upon the Executors making default to come in upon Process to Prove the Will the Administration be committed in that Case the Executor may yet at any time after Appear and Prove the Will and so cause the Administration to be revoked Also if after an Executors refusal it shall appear to the Ordinary that he had Administred before such his refusal then may the Ordinary revoke such Administration granted to another upon such refusal and compel the refusing Executor to Prove the Will for that by so Administring precedent to his refusal he hath accepted and determined his Election and therefore cannot be admitted to accept and refuse also so that in this Case also the Administration may be revoked 3. Some have been of Opinion That the Ordinary after he hath granted Letters of Administration may yet afterwards even without cause shewed and at his meer pleasure revoke the same and grant it to another yea that if the Ordinary grant Letters of Administration to one and then again afterwards grant Administration of the same Goods to another that hereby the first Letters of Administration be vacated and revoked albeit there be no express words of revocation contained in the latter But indeed the Law seems far otherwise and that the Ordinary after he hath granted according to the Statutes in that behalf provided the said Administration cannot afterwards at his pleasure revoke it and grant the same to another without cause that is unless the first Administration were illegally granted or where the first Administrator either cannot or will not Administer or the like 4. Where there is a former Administration regularly granted all Acts Lawfully Executed by the first Administrator as Administrator are good in Law and shall bind the next and succeeding Administrators For this reason it is that if Administration be granted to a Stranger and the next of Kin
he should have all the Goods and the Kindred be defrauded which is not reasonable and therefore such Administration shall be void CHAP. XXXV Of Succession in the Right Line Ascendent 1. Whether Parents specially the Mother be next of Kin to her Child 2. The method of Succession by the Civil Law in the Right Line Ascendent 3. How the Succession goes by the Civil Law when some of the Collaterals concurr with those of the Ascendent Line 4. Whether by the same Law the deceaseds Brothers and Brothers Children may concurr with their Parents to the Succession 1. NOtwithstanding that Maxime at the Common Law That Inheritance cannot Lineally Ascend yet is the Parent more nigh of blood to the Child even by that Law than is the Uncle And by the Civil Law as the Son and Daughter be in the first degree of Kindred in the Line Descendent So the Father and Mother are in the first degree of Kindred in the Line Ascendent To constitute a Kindred it is sufficient that the Relations do centre and agree in aliquo Tertio or flow from one common Head or Fountain or spring from the same Stock or Root Thus the Father and the Daughter the Mother and the Son the Mother and the Daughter the Father and the Son they flow from one and the same Fountain they spring from the same Root viz. the Grand-Father and therefore are of Kin each to other And by the Laws of this Realm Parents are reputed to be of Kin to their Children and the Mother to be of Kin to her Child and therefore by the Statute Law if a man seized of Lands in Socage his Heir being within the Age of Fourteen years In this case the Mother shall have the Wardship of her Son as being next of Kin to whom the Lands cannot descend Indeed by the Law of the twelfth Table the Mother could not Succeed to her Children nor they to her But this is now altered the Law now being otherwise It cannot be denyed but that this Question viz. Whether the Mother be of Kin to her Child hath been much controverted amongst the ablest Lawyers and in the close of all after much dispute it hath been adjudged in the Negative viz. That the Mother is not of Kin to her Child As in that remarkable of the D. of Suffolk in Ed. the sixth's time wherein an Administration was granted away from the Mother to a Sister of the half blood According to which Judgement divers other Administrations for several years after were granted away from the Mothers to the Brethren and Sisters as next of Kin. Notwithstanding all which the Law indeed being all that while quite otherwise than was practised at last the Truth prevailed and the practice now frequent and Judgement every where given for the Mother that she is of Kin to her Child who dying Issueless and Intestate the Administration of his Goods may be committed to her as next of Kin according to the Statute Or if he be Issueless but not Intestate and maketh his Kin his Executor or bequeath the residue of his Goods to his Kin the Mother in this case is Admissable to the Executrixship as next of Kin to her Child or on the same account to enjoy the Legacy during her life and after her death then the other next of Kin. 2. If the deceased leave no Children they in the Right Line Ascendent do by the Civil Law succeed him but in this Order First the Father and Mother succeed equally and exclusively to all others that are of a more remote degree or the Mother only if the Father be not alive or the Father only if the Mother be dead And if there be several Parents of a distinct Line who are equal in degree but unequal in number they succeed according to their Stock or Root not according to their number thus the Grand-Father by the Fathers side shall have as much as both Grand-Father and Grand-Mother by the Mothers side But if the Parents be in an unequal or different degree then the right of Representation doth cease and the nigher shall ever exclude the more remote Thus the Father excludes both the Grand-Fathers by the Fathers and Mothers side and the Mother both the Grand-Mothers 3. There are also some of the Collateral Line who by the Civil Law do concur with those of the Ascendent Line for the Brothers and Sisters of the deceased do succeed him together with the Father and Mother And the Succession when the Brothers concur is proportioned according to their number But if there be divers Kindred of the same degree to the Intestate whose Father is dead whereof some are by the Fathers side others by the Mothers side as if the deceased leave a Grand-Father by his Fathers side and a Grand-Father and Grand-Mother by the Mothers In this Case the Succession is not proportioned according to their number but it is to be divided into two equal parts and the Grand-Father by the Fathers side draws the one Moity the Rest the other Moity And if it happens that together with those of the Line Ascendent and with Brothers of the whole blood to the deceased there be the Sons of other Brothers of the whole blood deceased In this Case the Sons of such Brothers deceased shall Succeed together with the others but not according to their Number but according to their Stock or Root that is those Sons of such deceased Brothers shall among them all have only that proportion which would have come to their Fathers if they had been alive Here Note that this is meant only of the Children of such Brothers deceased therefore the Grand-children and others more remote are not admitted together with the Parents and Brothers and Sisters of the deceased 4. Brothers and Sisters only of the half blood to the deceased do not concur with the Parents in the Succession Thus the Grand-Father in Succession to his Grand-child doth exclude the Brothers of half blood to such Grand-child unless the Brothers be of the same blood and of the same side with such Grand-Father And if a man dye Intestate leaving a Mother and the Children of his Brothers deceased behind him the Mother alone shall Succeed to the Intestate unless there be other Brothers of the deceased then living for then the said Children of the said Brothers deceased shall concur with the Mother Thus Brothers and Brothers Children may concur with their Parents to the Succession of the deceased but all other Collaterals are excluded by the Parents insomuch that the Uncles both by the Fathers and the Mothers side are excluded by the Grand-Father and Grand-Mother of the deceased CHAP. XXXVI Of Succession in the Line Transversal or Collateral 1. The Line Collateral is Two-fold In which Line the Jus Repraesentationis holds only in Brothers Children not in their Grand-Children 2. Regularly the whole
Son to his Mother 10. A man bequeaths the House wherein he lives to A. B. his Wife quamdiu she shall continue a Widdow and dyes A. B. doth not Re-marry but lives and dyes a Widdow In this case the said House by the Civil Law comes to A. B. and his Heirs for ever Note that what in the premises hath been said touching the invallidity of Conditions against Marriage annexed to Legacies in relation to Females holds the same in Law touching the like illegal Conditions in reference to Males or Masculines 11. A man Devised to his Daughter 500 l. towards her Marriage In this Case it was the Opinion of the Court That if she die before Marriage her Executors shall have it But if the words were To be paid at the day of her Marriage or at the age of 21 years and she dyeth before both it is otherwise The latter part of which Judgment seems not to agree with the Civil Law in that point which sayes the time of the age of a Legatary may be joyned either to the substance of the Legacy or to the execution and performance of the same if the time of the age of the Legatary be joyned to the substance of the Legacy as when the Testator doth give thee 100 l. when thou shalt be of the age of 21 years In this case if thou dyest before that time thy Executors cannot recover the 100 l. But if the time of the age of the Legatary be joyned only to the execution or performance of the Legacy as when the Testator doth give thee 100 l. which he willeth shall be paid when thou accomplish the age of 21 years In this case although thou dye before thou accomplish the age of 21 years yet thy Executors or Administrators shall recover the same when the time is accomplished wherein thy self if thou hadst been then living mightst have recovered the same 12. Consonant whereunto is that which we find Reported viz. That it was agreed by the Court That if a man Deviseth to his Daughter 100 l. when she shall be Married or to his Son when he shall be of full age and they dye before the time appointed and make Executors their Executors shall not have it But it is otherwise if the Devise were to them to be paid at their full ages and they dye before that time and make Executors there the Executors shall have it Which difference was since likewise so Agreed and Adjudged 13. A Feme Sole Deviseth Lands to A. B. in Fee to whom afterwards she was Married and during the Coverture Countermands her Will saying her Husband should not have the Land nor any other benefit by her Will and dyes In this case the Husband shall not have the Land not only because of her Countermand but because of the disability of a Feme Covert to make a Will which takes no effect till the parties death And therefore if a Feme sole Deviseth Lands to a man and then takes him to Husband and dyes This Inter-marriage is a reversion of the Devise and the Heir of the Woman shall have the Lands and not the Husband because after Marriage the Will of the Wife in Judgment of Law is subject to the Will of her Husband and a Feme Covert hath not any Will for the making of the Will is but the Inception thereof and takes no effect till the death of the Devisor 14. If a man Deviseth Lands generally to his Wife for the Term of her life It cannot be averred to be for the Joynture of the Wife and in satisfaction of her Dower But if a man Deviseth Lands to his Wife for life or in tail for her Joynture and in satisfaction of her Dower the same is a good Joynture within the Stat. of 27 H. 8. 15. A man Devised the Moiety of his Goods to his Wife and dyed It was the opinion of the Court That she should have the Moiety of them as they were at the time of his death if his Executors had Assets sufficient to pay his Debts If a Legacy be given to a Woman Covert and her Husband give a Release and afterwards he and his Wife sue in the Ecclesiastical Court for the Legacy the party sued shall not have a Prohibition upon the Husbands Release because the Temporal Judges cannot meddle with a Legacy nor consequently determine whether the Release will extinguish the same As the Case 29 Eliz. Adjudged The Husband may Devise to his Wife although they are but one person in Law for it takes no effect till after his Death CHAP. XVIII Of Legacies and Devices to a Child in the Womb. 1. A Devise to an Infant in the Womb is good 2. It may be good though the Infant be rip'd alive out of the Womb. 3. It is good though it be a Devise in Remainder or in Tail 4. How the Divident of a Devise shall be in case of Twins unexpected or an Hermophrodite 5. How the Legacy shall be apportioned when bequeathed to any Child in the Womb and more then One or Two happen to be Born 6. Where a Devise void or voidable in his Inception may become good by matter ex post facto 1. THat a Child in the Womb to whom a Legacy is bequeathed or Lands Divised is after his or her Birth though subsequent to the Testators death capable of taking by such Devise is a Truth now not to be controverted though it hath been Contradicted and otherwise Resolved for we find it Reported in a Case thus stated viz. A Man had Issue Five Sons his Wife being with Child with the Sixth at the time of his death and by his last Will declared That the Third Part of his Land should descend and come to his Son and Heir the other Two Parts he bequeathed to his Four Younger Sons by Name and to the Heirs Males of their Bodies and if the Infant in the Mothers Womb be a Son then he to have a Fifth Part as Co-heir with his Four Elder Brothers The Sixth Son was Born after the death of his Father in this Case it was Resolved That the Son Born after the death of the Father should not have any thing because he was uncapable as a Purchasor when the Devise was first to take effect because he was not then in esse or rerum natura Notwithstanding which it was not long after in another Case otherwise understood in which Case it was Admitted That a Devise to an Infant in his Mothers Belly was good It is presumed the intendment is of such an Infant as was born after the Testators death In other Cases also it hath been held That Devise to an Infant in his Mothers Belly is good 2. A Man Deviseth his Land to his Wife being with Child the Remainder to the Issue en ventre safeme his Wife in Travail dyeth and the Son is rip'd from his Mother alive he shall have the said Remainder
after recede from it to the prejudice of the Legatary Likewise if the Testator saith I give 10 l. to A. B. when my Executor will or when my Executor please In this case as in the former the Legacy is not due till the Executor thinks fit but must wait his pleasure and be in a dilatory Expectancy as long as he lives or so long as he doth not say he will pay it But if once he declare that he will pay it and after dyes before he doth pay it his Executor is obliged to make it good Contrariwise if the Legatary dye before the Testators Executor declares his consent to the payment thereof for then it doth not accrue to the Legataries Executor because it is Conditional till the Executor declares his consent to pay it and such a Condition to be performed at the pleasure of another as that the Legacy cannot come to the Legataries Executor before the Accomplishment thereof 3. If the Testator saith I give A. B. 10 l. if my Executor will In that case the Legacy is void because there the Testator subordinates his Will to the Executors makes his Executors Will Absolute and his own Insignificant But in case he saith after this manner viz. If my Executor think fit I give A. B. 10 l. Or if my Executor conceive it expedient let A. B. have 10 l. In these cases the Legacy is good because here the Testator seems not to leave it wholly to the meer will and pleasure of his Executor but as it were to the judgment of any honest or indifferent person or as the Law phrases it arbitrio boni viri The Law is the same in case the Testator saith if my Executor see cause for it or it seem reasonable to him Let A. B. have 10 l. or I would have A. B. to be 10 l. the better for me For although a Legacy cannot be left to the meer will and pleasure of the Executor yet to his just and reasonable will it may for so it is left more to Reason than to his Will 4. But what if the Testator saith I give 10 l. to A. B. if he shall deserve it of my Executor In that case the Legacy is due in case the Legatary shall carry it no otherwise towards the Executor than as any honest man would or might do in the like case or no otherwise than as any honest and indifferent person might or would be well satisfied therewith Likewise if the Testator saith I give A. B. 10 l. if he hath not offended my Executor the Legacy is due if it appears that A. B. hath behaved himself towards the Executor no otherwise than what would satisfie any reasonable and impartial man In a word when it is left wholly to the meer free and arbitrary will and pleasure of the Executor the Legacy is void but when it is left to his will only as it shall seem meet just and equal to him it is good for if in it self it be just and equal the Executor may not interpret it otherwise 5. If a man Devise all his La 〈…〉 to A. B. and his Heirs excepting Twenty pounds for Ten years which he willeth shall be employ'd for his Children This is a good Devise of the Sum of Twenty pounds a year for Ten years Or if one bequeath 20 l. to the Children of A. B. who then hath three Children more or less at the time of making such Bequest and after but before the Testators death he happen to have other Children In this case those other Children he hath afterwards shall have no part of the said Legacy but the Children born at the time of making the Testament shall have it all The Reason is because in this case it is presumed the Testators intention did not extend to any not in rerum natura when there were Children indeed and at the same time in being 6. The Testator saith I give 100 l. to my four Neighbours A. B. C. and D. Provided they bestow 10 l. in a Tombstone to be set on my Grave Although B. should refuse to joyn with the rest therein yet A. C. and D. shall have not only the●r respective proportion of the 100 l. but also that part that should have come to B. in case he had performed the Condition Or if he say I give 100 l. to A. and such of my Three Children as shall come to my Funeral and dyes neither of his Children are at his Funeral In this Case A. shall have the whole 100 l. because the Legacy is in the Conjunctive were it in the Disjunctive he could have but 50 l. 7. Suppose the Testator saith I give 50 l. to A. B. And more than that 100 l. to C. D. In this case C. D. shall have an entire 100 l. but no more Possibly the transposition of the words may alter the Case and make the Legacy worth 150 l. to C. D. As if he should say I give to A. B. 50 l. and 100 l. more than that to C. D. But suppose he should say I give 100 l. to C. D. more than I have given to A. B. when indeed he had given nothing at all to A. B. In that case the Legacy of 100 l. is good to C. D. notwithstanding that false Implication to A. B. 8. A. B. makes C. D. his Executor gives in his Will 1000 l. to J. G. and therein sayes I desire that J. G. will pay the said 1000 l. to the Colledge of W. and dyes After the said Colledge is dissolved and before J. G. had received the said 1000 l. from the Executor of A. B. the Question is whether J. G. shall now recover the 1000 l. from the said Executor the Colledge to whom he was to pay it being now dissolved or whether it shall remain in the Executor It is resolved that in case there was no fault in J. G. why the 1000 l. was not paid to the Colledge before its dissolution and the payment prevented for no other Reason but because of the said Dissolution J. G. shall in such case recover the 1000 l. from the said Executor 9. If a Testator bequeath 1 〈…〉 l. to A. B. and C. D. And after one of them appears incapable of taking by the Legacy the other shall have only 50 l. and not the whole 100 l. Yet there are and they of the most Learned who hold That if one of the Legataries be incapable his proportion of the Legacy shall accrue to his Collegatary as is evident by the former Case of the Tomb-stone and never fails where the Legacy is in the Conjunctive by the Law of Accression or jure Aderescendi 10. A. B. pawned a Jewel with C. D. for 100 l. then in his Will makes his Son his Executor and orders that C. D. should sell the Jewel and out of the Proceed thereof pay himself the 100 l. and restore the overplus of the value to his
do therewith what the Testator required The refusal of payment by the Executor is good thou shalt not have the 100 l. till thou give good security to do therewith as by the Testator is enjoyn'd 30. Suppose a Testator gives 500 l. to one 400 l. to another and 300 l. to a third And after saith in his Will That A. B. shall have as much as one of the Legataries The Question is what A. B. shall have Some have supposed that he ought to have 500 l. because in the greater the less is included but the Law which prevails in such case is otherwise he shall have only 300 l. and no more because the Executor being burdened with such Legacies ought to have it in his power to give which proportion he thinks fit And because it is a Rule in Law That in all doubtful cases relating to the quantity of a Legacy the least is to be understood 31. A. B. makes his last Will and Testament wherein he disinherits his Son and makes a Stranger his sole Executor gives divers Legacies and after in his Will sayes That in case his Will should hereafter happen by any means to be so invalidated as to be pronounced Judicially null and void that thereby he should happen to dye Intestate That then however his full purpose mind and resolution is That from such Administrator ab Intestato whoever it should happen to be shall be given 100 l. to C. and 200 l. to D. and dyes After his said Son doth commence his Action and gets Judgment against the Will which is Judicially pronounced null and void the Son obtains Letters of Administration of his Fathers Estate ab Intestato The Question is whether the Son be obliged to pay the Legacies left by his now Intestate Father It is Resolved in the Negative for that not any thing now is vallid in such case which related to his Fathers mind or meaning in the said pretended Will as aforesaid 32. To conclude A Testator writ his Testament with his own hand and therein said That in regard he had found A. B. a very faithful Servant to him and that he had done him many eminent Services he desired to leave him not by way of a Legacy but by way of Gratuity 100 l. which he would have his Executor to pay him as a reward of his good Services and dyed Now in truth A. B. was such a person as by Law was incapable of taking by a Devise The Question is whether A. B. may demand the 100 l. not as a Legacy but as a reward for his Services aforesaid It is held in the Negative because it will be presumed it was left him in that manner in fraudem legis on purpose to defraud the Law which rendered him by reason of some legal Impediments incapable of taking by a Testament And for that a Testators Testimentary Confession of his being obliged or in debt to a person in himself incapable hath no operation in the Law other than to raise the Presumption so much the stronger that it was made only in fraudem legis specially when such Confession is voluntarily made in favour of a person incapable CHAP. XXIII Of Legacies Relating to Debts with certain Cases in the Law touching the same 1. THings in Action as Debts are Deviseable by Will therefore if the Testator bequeath any Debt due to him on an Obligation or a Contract or the like the Bequest is good for Obligations as also Counterpanes of Leases and the like may be Devised only the Legatary cannot sue upon the Obligation in his own Name nor enter for the Condition broken upon the Lease if there be cause but he may cancel give sell or deliver up the Obligation to the Obligor or surrender the Counterpane to the Lessee And it is an infallible Rule That whatsoever may come to the Executor after the Testators death in respect of his Executorship may be Devised by the last Will and Testament of the Testator Therefore a Testator may bequeath a Debt due to him and if he doth not make the Legatary his Executor as to that Debt and he who is his Executor shall refuse to sue the Debtor that so the Legatary may receive it in this case the Legatary may compel the Executor either to recover it himself and so to pay it to the Legatary or to give him power to sue for and recover it himself in the Executor's Name And this the Legatary may compel the Executor unto by conventing him before the Ordinary and on pain of Ecclesiastical censures to make him a Letter of Atturney for recovery of the Debt to him bequeathed in the Executor's Name in case the Executor himself doth not sue for it for the Legataries use who cannot otherwise sue the Debtor because he doth not represent the Testators person But if it be such a Case of Action as is altogether uncertain as where a man hath an Action against another for taking away his Goods or for some Trespass done the Testator in his life time or to compel another to make an Accompt or the like such Cases of Action are not Deviseable 2. Now the Law takes notice but of four wayes within the Circumference whereof all Legacies relating to Debts do fall As 1 when the Creditor bequeaths to one what his Debtor owes him Or 2 when he bequeaths it to the Debtor himself Or 3 when the Debtor bequeaths to the Creditor Or 4 when a third person bequeaths to a Creditor what his Debtor owes Suppose therefore that a Creditor should bequeath to one what A. B. owes him without expressing either the thing or the quantity in this case he seems to bequeath his right of Action nothing else So that the Testators Executor is no way obliged to such Legatary further than to deliver him the Obligation or Bond and yield his Name if need be to the Action Yea though the quantity were expressed by the Testator yet the Executor is not bound to pay it to the Legatary if the Testator joyn'd the very person of the Debtor himself with the execution or payment of the Legacy as if he should say I would have A. B. receive the 10 l. of C. D. which he owes me yet even in that case if the 100 l. cannot be recovered without Law it shall be at the Executors not the Legataries cost and at the Legataries not the Executors peril 3. Every Bond or Obligation is both Active and Passive but in divers respects Active in respect of the Creditor Passive in respect of the Debtor Active when the Creditor bequeaths to a third person what his Debtor doth owe him Passive when the Debtor bequeaths to his Creditor what himself owes to the other Between which two the difference is great for when the Creditor bequeaths he bequeaths either to the Debtor himself or to some other person In both which cases a Right is bequeathed but with this difference in the former
Condition of Superstitious Vses vests the Land in the Crown Ibid § 11. What Provision of Law in Case the Legatary die before Condition broken or the time for performance be come p. 281 § 11. Conditions Testamentary in reference to Marriage p 27 c. Conditions directly against Marriage are unlawfull with the Limitations thereof p. 342 343 § 25. Condition of Marriage is annexable to a Legacy or Devise but an unlawfull Condition thereof is void p 279 § 1. Condition of Marriage with the consent of another doth oblige the Legatary to Marry but not to have such consent Ibid § 2. Condition of Marriage with the Advice of another obligeth the Legatary to Ask it but not to follow it Ibid § 3. What in case the Legatary were Married before Ibid. § 4. p 316 § 18. Though a Condition against Marrige be void yet the Legacy is not p 280 § 5. The Canon Laws Distinction in case of Conditions directly contrary to Marriage p 280 § 9. Conditions of Non-alienation are intended only of voluntary Alienations p 438 § 17. Conditions necessary are as no Conditions Ibid § 18. Conditions implyed by Relative Pronouns Ibid § 19. Positions in Law touching Conditions p 438 § 16 to 26. Conditional Testaments how and when such p 22 23. The several kinds thereof p 23 to 27. Confidence in a Feme Covert is not transferrable to the Husband upon her death p 236. infin Consent or Delivery by an Executor requisite to a Legacy or Divise p 440 § 39 c. Corne standing is Devisable where the Land it self may not be p 225 § 2. p 304 § 13. Corporations or any Member thereof may not Devise the Land they have in right of their Corporations p 225 § 3. Costs not payable by an Executor Non-suited on Judgment against him p 104 § ult p 110 § ult p 117 § ult Given in Chancery against a Testator doth not charge his Executor p 108 § 6. Coverture nulls a Devise it may revive by a new Publication after the Husbands death p 289 § 9. Courtelage passeth by the Devise of a House p 237 in pr. Creditors made Executors p 74 to 77 They may pay themselves first the Limitations of that Rule p 75 76 § 3. Custome of London in reference to Executors or Administrators touching Debts by simple Contract p 116 117 § ult D. Deaf and Dumb naturally not Intestable absolutely p 19. Whether they may make a Devise of Lands p 226 § 3. Death of the Legatary before the existence of a possible Condition annexed to his Legacy insignificates the same p 325 § 13. Debet Detinet in what Cases And in what Cases in the Detinet only p 113 § 7 p 157 § ult Debts Bequeathed p 321 322 c. p 440 § 36 40 41. p 446 § 95. What Debts not Devisable p 440 § 38. Debts and Things in Action are Devisable by Will some only excepted p 321 § 1. Debts Bequeathed how extinguished or not p 324 § 11. Debt Bequeathed twice is due but once p 325 § 12. Debt Bequeathed to Joint-Debtors Ibid Debt Bequeathed the Executor is discharged by Assigning the Bond to the Legatary p 326. § 17. Debt is where the Bond is but upon a Contract it follows the Person p 157 § ult Where Debt upon a simple Contract may by the Custom be paid by an Administrator as soon as a Debt upon a Bond. p 116 117. § ult Debt is Assets though the Debtor be Administrator p 76 § 4. That can be no Debt in the Executor which was none in the Testator p. 107 § 6. Debt lieth not against an Executor upon a simple Contract of the Testator but an Action of the Case only p. 107 108 § 6 p 109 115 § ult It lyeth against them for Rent of Land Leased to their Testator p 115 § ult Debts by Bonds and Specialties are not Comprized in a general Legacy p 327 § 19. Whether Debts Bonds and Specialties are Comprized under the Notion of Moveables or Immoveables p 310 § 10. The Executors Method in paying of Debts p 142 c. Debts upon Record to be first satisfied p 108 § 7. In what case a Statute may be paid before a Judgment p. 137 138 § ult Debts to be paid before Legacies p 142 § 1. The Reason thereof in Law p. 440 § 45. What Debts to the Crown have Priority to the Subjects Debts p 143 § 3. Executors may satisfie their own Debts before any other of equal quality and degree p 142 § 2. What the Law is in Case of Debts for Rent upon Leases p 146 147 § 9. Declaration precedent Derogatory to the subsequent doth prevail against it p 302 § 4. An Exception to that Rule Ibid. Deed of Purchase Devised what it signifies p 448 § 103. Delegates or Judges Delegate whether they may grant Letters of Administration p 158 § ult Demonstrations false destroy not Legacies p 210 § 3 p 441 § 48. Vnderstand it of False Necessary not False Superfluous Demonstrations p 213 § 1. The difference between that and a False Cause p 214 § 2. Designation how a Legacy shall be paid makes it not Conditional nor Questionable whether it shall be paid p 315 § 14. Detinue in what Cases it lies or not p 102 § 7 § ult p 107 § 5. How it lies for an Infant-Executor against an Administrator Durante Minoritate p 162 § ult Devastavit What and in how many ways it may be in what Cases it lies the Method of proceeding therein and Execution thereupon p 134 c. Devise what p 200 § 1. Its Requisites p 202 § 2. In what Court properly recoverable p 204 § 4. Refused to be Delivered by Executors what remedy Ibid. What words or expressions sufficient for a Devise p 209 c. Wherein a Devise of Lands differs from a Bequest of Goods p. 4 § 2. Devise of a thing not in rerum Natura at the Testators death void p 292 § 20. It is as inferrable from the Testators Intention as intelligible by his expression p 295 § 36. An Omission of what the Testator said he would make a description of doth not null a Devise p. 296 § 37. The same thing twice Conditionally Devised by two Testators to several persons how or in what Case good to either or not p 297 § 41. Devisable what p. 221 c. p 311. § 15. Whether a Testator may Bequeath what is not his own p 221. § 2. What things in particular may be Devised Ibid. § 1. How the Testator may Bequeath what is his Executors p. 222 223. § 3. A Bequest to one of what was his own before Ibid. § 4. The difference between the Common and Civil Law in this point of Devising what is another mans Ibid. § 5. Goods in Joint-Tenancy are not Devisable p. 223. § 6. Devisee or Devisor who may be such p. 205 c. Deuisee must be capable of