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A34797 The interpreter, or, Book containing the signification of words wherein is set forth the true meaning of all ... words and terms as are mentioned in the law-writers or statutes ... requiring any exposition or interpretation : a work not only profitable but necessary for such as desire thoroughly to be instructed in the knowledge of our laws, statutes, or other antiquities / collected by John Cowell ... Cowell, John, 1554-1611. 1658 (1658) Wing C6644; ESTC R31653 487,806 288

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they be pursued within the time by them prescribed namely the Statute anno 1 Ed. 6. cap. 1. giveth action for three years after the offences therein shall be committed and no longer and the Statute anno 7 H. 8. cap. 3. doth the like for four years and that anno 31 Eliz. cap. 5. for one year and no more But as by the Civil Law no actions were at the last so perpetual but that by time they might be prescribed against as actiones in rem decem aut viginti terminantur annis personales veró triginta sect 1. de perpet temp actioin Institutio l. 3. Co. de praescript 30. annorum so in our Common law though actions may be called perpetual in comparison of those that be expresly limited by Statute yet is there a means to prescribe against real actions within five years by a fine levied or a recovery acknowledged as you may see farther in the word Fine and Recovery And for this also look Limitation of Assise Action is farther divided in actionem bonae fidei stricti juris Which division hath good use in our common Law likewise though the terms I find not in any of their Writers But of this and such like divisions because they have as yet no apparent acceptance amongst our Lawyers but only a hidden use I refer the Reader to the Civilians and namely to Wesenb in his Paratitles ● Deobligatio actio AD Addition additio is both the English and French word made of the Latine and signifieth in our common Law a title given to a man over and above his Christian and Surname shewing his Estate Degree Occupation Trade Age Place of Dwelling c. For the use whereof in original writs of Actions personal appeals and indictments It is provided by Statute an 1 H. 5. cap. 5. upon the penalty therein expressed Terms of the Law Brook farther addeth that it is likewise requisite in Towns and Gates of the Towns Parishes in great Towns and Cities where there may be any doubt by reason of more Towns Gates or Parishes of the same name titulo Addition See also M. Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 95 96. Adeling was a word of Honor among the Angles properly appertaining to the Kings Children whereupon King Edward being himself without issue and intending to make Eadgare to whom he was great Uncle by the Mothers side his Heir to this Kingdom called him Adeling Roger Hoveden parte poster suorum Annal. fol. 347. a. Adjournment adjournamentum is almost all one with the French adjouarement i. denunciatio vel diei dictio and signifieth in our Common-law an assignment of a day or a putting off untill another day Adjournment in eyre anno 25 Ed. 3. Statute of Pourveyers cap. 18. is an appointment of a day when the Justices in eyre mean to sit again Adjourn anno 2 Edw. 3. cap. 11. hath the like signification And this whole Title in Brook his Abridgement proveth the same The bastard Latine word adjournamentum is used also among the Burgundians as M. Skene noteth in his Book De verbo signi verbo Ad urnatus out of Cassaneus de consuet Burg. Ad inquirendum is a Writ judicial commanding inquiry to be made of any thing touching a Cause depending in the Kings Court for the better execution of Justice as of Bastardy of Bond-men and such like whereof see great diversity in the Table of the Register judicial verbo ad inquirendum Admeasurement admensuratio is a Writ which lyeth for the bringing of those to a mediocrity that usurp more than their part And it lyeth in two cases one is termed Admeasurement of Dower admensuratio dotis where the widow of the deceased holdeth from the Heir or his Guardian more in the name of her Dower than of right belonging unto her Register orig fol. 171. a. Fitzh nat br fol. 148. The other is Admeasurement of Pasture admensuratio pasturae which lyeth between those that have common of Pasture appendant to their free-hold or common by vicenage in case any one of them or more do surcharge the Common with more Cattel than they ought Register orig fol. 156. b. Fitzh nat br fol. 125. Administer administrator in our Common-law is properly taken for him that hath the Goods of a Man dying intestate committed to his charge by the Ordinary and is accountable for the same whensoever it shall please the Ordinary to call him thereunto I find not this word so used in all the Civil or Canon-law but more generally for those that have the Government of any thing as the Degrees Can. 23. quaest 5. cap. 26. Administratores plane saecularium dignitatum c. and extrava com ca. 11. Grangias autem alia loca Cisterciensium ordinis aliorum Regalium in quibus Gubernatores seu custodes vel administratores ponuntur c. Howsoever the signification of this word grew to be restrained amongst us it greatly booteth not But there was a Statute made anno 31 Ed. 3. cap. 11. whereby Power was given to the Ordinary to appoint these Administrators and to authorize them as fully as Executors to gather up and to dispose the Goods of the deceased alway provided that they should be accountable for the same as Executors And before that viz. Westm 2. anno 13 Ed. 1. cap. 19. it was ordained that the Goods of those that died intestate should be committed to the Ordinary his disposition and that the Ordinary should be bound to answer his debts so far forth as the Goods would extend as Executors And I perswade my self that the committing of this burden unto Bishops and those that derive Ecclesiastical Authority from them grew first from the constitution of Leo the Emperor Co. de Episco et cleri l. nulli li licere 28. Where it is said that if a man dying bequeath any thing to the redeeming of Captives c. and appoint one to execute his Will in that point the Party so appointed shall see it performed and if he appoint none to do it then the Bishop of the City shall have power to demand the legacie and without all delay perform the Will of the deceased Admirall Admiralius commeth of the French amerel and signifieth both in France and with us an high Officer or Magistrate that hath the Government of the Kings Navy and the hearing determining of all Causes as well Civil as Criminal belonging to the Sea Cromptons divers jurisd fo 88. and the Statutes anno 13 R. 2. ca. 5. anno 15. ejusdem ca. 3. anno 2 H. 4. ca. 11. anno 2 H. 4. ca. 6. anno 28. H. 8. ca. 15. with such like This Officer is in all Kingdoms of Europe that border upon the Sea and this Authority in the Kingdom of Naples is called magna Curia Admiratiae quae habet jurisdictionem in eos qui vivunt ex arte maris Vincent de Franch deseis 142. nu 1. This Magistrate among the Romans was called praefectus
called bannimertum which was aunelently tearmed depertatlo if it were perpetual or religatio in insulam if for a time Vincentius de Franchis Petrus de Bellug a in suo speculo fol. 125. num 4. Barbaries Oxycantha is a thornie shrub known to most men to bear a berry or fr●●t of a sharp taste These berries as also the leaves of the said tree be medicinable as Goard in his Herbal sheweth lib. 3. cap. 21. You find them mentioned among Drugges to be garbled Anno 1 Jacob. cap. 9. Bargain and sale as it seemeth by Westpart 1. symb lib. 2. sect 436 is properly acontract made of mannors lands renements hereditaments other things transferring the property thereof from the bargainer to the bargainee But the Author of the new terms of Law addeth that it ought to be for money saying farther that this is a good contract for Land c. and that Fee-simple passeth thereby though it be not said in the deed To have and to hold the land to him and to his heire and though there be no liverie and selfin made by the seller so it be by deed intended sealed and enrolled either in the County where the land lyeth or within one of the Kings Courts of Records at Westminster within six moneths after the date of the Deed intended an 27 H. 8. cap. 16. Barkarie Barkaria is a heath house New book of Entries titulo Assise corp poli● 2. Some call it a Tan-house Baron Barao is a French word and hath divers fignifications here in England First it is taken for a degree of Nobility next unto a Vicount Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. num 4. where he saith they be called Barones quasi robur belli And in this fignification it is borrowed from other Nations with whom Baroniae be as much as Provinciae Petrus Belluga in speculo princip fol. 119. So Barones be such as have the government of Provinces as their Fee holden of the King fome having greater some lesser authority within their territories as appeareth by Vincentius de Franobis in divers of his disceisions and others Yet it may probably be thought that of old times here in England all they were called Barons that had such Seigniories as we now call Court-barons as they be at this day called Seigneurs in France that have any such Mannor or Lordship Yea I have heard by men very learned in our Antiquities that neer after the Conquest all such came to the Parliament and sate as Nobles in the upper-house But when by experience it appeared that the Parliament was too much pestered with such multitudes it grew to a custome that none should come but such as the King for their extraordinary wisedome or quality thought good to call by Writ which Writ ran hac vice tantùm After that again men feeing this estate of Nobility to be but casual and to depend meerely upon the Prine●s pleasure they sought a more certain hold and obtained of the King letters patents of this dignity to them and their heires male And these were called Barons by letters patents or by creation whose postority be now by inhefitance and true delcent of Nobility those Barons that be called Lords of the Barliament of which kind the King may create more at his pleasure It is thought neverthelesse that there are yet Barons by writ as well as Barons by letters patents and that they may be discerned by their titles because the Barons by writare those that to the title of Lord have their own surnames annexed as Crompton North Norice c. whereas the Barons by letters patents are named by their Barronies These Barons which were first by writ may now justly also be called Barons by prescription for that they have continued Barons in themselves and their auncestors came beyond the memory of man The original of Barons by writ Master Camden in his Britaunia Pag. 109. in meo referreth to Henry the third Barons by letters patents or creation as I have heard among our Antiquaries were first created about the days of Henry the sixth the manner of whose creation read in Master Stows Annals pag. 1121. Of all these you may also read Mast Ferns glory of Generofity pa. 125. 126. And see M. Skene de ver signif verb. Baro. with Sir Thomas Smith lib. 1. d●●●pub Anglor cap. 17. who saith that none in England is created Baron except he can dispend a thousand pound by year or a thousand markes at the least To these former Master Seager by office Norrey lib. 4. cap. 13. of Honour civill and militariy addeth a ●ird kind of baron calling them Barons by conure and those be the Bishops of the land all which by vertue of Baronies annexed to their Bishopricks have alwaies had place in the upper house of Parliament and are termed by the name of Lords Spiritual Baron in the next signification is an Officer as Barons of the Exchequer be to the King of which the principal is called Lord chief Baron capitalis Baro and the three other for so many there be are his Assistants in causes of Justice between the King and his subjects touching causes appertaining to the Exchequer The Lord chief Baron at this day is the chief Judge of the Court and in matter of Law Information and Plea answereth the Barr and giveth order for judgement thereupon He alone in the Term time doth sit upon Nist prius that come out of the Kings Remembrancers office or out of the office of the Clerk of the Pleas which cannot be dispatched in the mornings for want of time He taketh recognisancea for the Kings debts for appearances and observing of orders He taketh the presentation of all the officers in Court under himself and of the Maior of London and seeth the Kings Remembrancer to give them their oaths He taketh the declaration of certain receivers accounts of the lands of the late augmentation made before him by the Anditors of the Shires He giveth the two parcel makers places by vertue of his office The second Baron in the absence of the Lord chief Baron answereth the Barr in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances for the Kings debts apparences and observing of orders He giveth yearly the oath to the late Maior and Escheatour of London for the true account of the profits of his office He taketh a declaration of certain receivers accounts He also examineth the letters and sums of such Sheriffs forrain accounts as also the accounts of Escheatours and Collectours of subsidies and Fifteens as are brought unto him by the Auditors of the Court. The third Baron in the absence of the other two answereth the barr in matters aforesaid he also taketh recognisances as aforesaid He giveth yearly the oath of the late Major and Gawger of London for his true accounting He also taketh a declaration of certain receivers accounts and examineth the letters and sums of such of the former accountants as are brought unto him The fourth Baron is alwayes a
men upon any cause anno 25 Ed. 3. stat 4. cap. 2. Cathedrall See Church Casu matrimonii praelocuti is a Writ which lyeth in case where a woman giveth lands to a man in fee simple to the intent he shall marry her and refusesh so to do in reasonable time being required thereunto by the woman The form and farther use thereof learn in the Register orig fol. 233. and in Fitzh nat br fol. 205. Causam nobis significes is a Writ which lyeth to a Maior of a Town or City c. that formerly by the Kings writ being commanded to give seisin unto the Kings grantee lof any land or tenements doth delay so to do willing him to shew cause why he so delayeth the performance of his charge Coke l. 4. casu communalty des Sadlers fol. 55. b. Cautione admittenda is a Writ that lyeth against the Bishops holding an excommunicate person in prison for his contempt notwithstanding that he offereth sufficient caution or assurance to obey the commandments and orders of holy Church from thenceforth The form and farther effect whereof take out of the Regist orig pag. 66. and Fitzh nat br fol. 63. CE Century centuria See Hundred Cepicorpus is a return made by the Sheriff that upon an exigend he hath taken the body of the party Fitzh nat br Fol. 26. Certiorari is Writ issuing out of the Chancery to an inferior Court to call up the records of a cause therein depending that conscionable Justice therein may be ministred upon complaint made by bill that the party which seeketh the said Writ hath received hard dealing in the said Court. Terms of the Law See the divers forms and uses of this in Fitzh nat br fol. 242. as also the Register both original and judicial in the tables verbo Certiorari Crompton in his Justice of peace f. 117. saith that this Writ is either returnable in the Kings Bench and then hath these words nobis mittatis or in the Chauncerie and then hath in caucellaria nostra or in the Common Bench and then hath Justiciariis nostris de banco The word Certiorare is used divers times in the digest of the Civil Law but our later Criticks think it so barbarous that they suspect it rather to be foisted in by Tribonian than to be originally used by those men of whose works the said digest is compiled Prataeus in suo lexico Certificat certificatorium is used for a writing made in any Court to give notice to another Court of any thing done therein As for example a certificat of the cause of attaint is a transcript made briefly and in few words by the Clerk of the Crown Clerk of the Peace or Clerk of Assise to the Court of the Kings Bench containing the tenure and effect of every endictment outlawrie or convictior and Clerk attainted made or pronounced in any other Court anno 34 H. 8. cap. 14. Of this see more in Certificat d'evesque Broke fol. 119. Certification of assise of novel disseisin c. Certificatio assisae novae disseisinae c. is a Writ grant ed for the reexamining or review of a matter passed by assise before any Justices and is called certificatione novae dissessinae Old nat br fol. 181. Of this see also the Register original fol. 200. and the new book of entries verb. Certificat of assise This word hath use where a man appearing by his Bailiff to an assise brought by another hath lost the day and having something more to plead for himself as a deed of release c. which the Bailiff did not or might not plead for him desireth a farther examination of the cause either before the same Justices or others obtaineth Letters patents unto them to that effect The form of these Letters Patents you may see in Fitzh nat br fol. 181. and that done bringeth a Writ to the Sheriff to call both the party for whom the assise passed and the Jurie that was empaneled upon the same before the said Justices at a certain day and place And it is called a certificate because in it there is mention made to the Sheriff that upon the parties complaint of the defective examination or doubts yet remaining upon the assise passed the King hath directed his Letters patents to the Justices for the better certifying of themselves whether all points of the said assise were duly examined yea or not See farther Old nat br and Fitzh ubi supra Of this also you may read Bracto● lib. 4. cap. 19. num 4. in fine 5 6. where he discusseth the reason of this point very learnedly and lastly Horn in his Mirrour of Justices lib. 3. cap. finali § en eyde des memoyees c. Certificando ' de recognitione Stapulae it is a Writ directed to the Major of the Staple c. commanding him to certifie the Chauncellor of a statute of the staple taken before him between such and such in case where the party himself detaineth it and refuseth to bring it in Regist orig fol. 152. b. In like manner may be said of certificando de statuto mercatorio eodem fol. 148. and de certificando in cancellarium de inquisitione de idemptitate nominis fol. 195. and certificando quando recognitio c. and certificando quid actum est de brevi super statutum mercatorium fol. 151. and certificando si loquela Warantiae fol. 13. Cessor is he that ceaseth or neglecteth so long to perform a duty be longing unto him as that by his cesse or cessing he incurreth the danger of Law and hath or may have the Writ cessavit brought against him Old nat br fol. 136. And note that where it is said in divers places the Tenent cesseth without any more words such phrase is so to be understood as if it were said the Tenent cesseth to do that which he ought or is bound to do by his Land or Tenement Cessavit is a Writ ●hat lyeth in divers cases as appeareth by Fitzh nat br fol. 280. upon this general ground that he against whom it is brought hath for two years foreslown to perform such service or to pay such rent as he is ●ed unto by his Tenure and hath not upon his Land or his Tenement sufficient goods or cattels to be distreined Consult more at large with Fitz. upon this ubi supra with Fleta lib. 5. cap. 34. § visa sunt and with the Terms of law See Cessavit de cantaria Register orig fol. 238. Cessavit de feod firma eodem fol. 237. Cessavit per biennium eodem folio etiam eodem See the new book of Entries verbo Cessavit Cestui qui vie is in true French Cestui a vie de qui. i. he for whose life any Land or Tenement is graunted Perkins graunts 97. Cestus qui use ille cujus usui vel ad cujus usum is broken French and thus may be bettered Cestui all use de qui. It is an ordinary speech among our Common
belonging unto the same Fleta lib. 2. cap. 6. 7. Chamberlain of any of the Kings courts anno 7 Edw. 6. cap. 1. Chamberlain of the Exchequer anno 51 H. 3. stat 5. anno 10 Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 14 ejusdem cap. 14. anno 26 H. 8. cap. 3. Chamberlain of North Wales Stow pag. 641. Chamberlain of Chester Cromptons jurisd fol. 7. This Officer is commonly the receiver of all rents and revenues belonging to that person or City whereunto he is Chamberlain Vide Fletam lib. 2. cap. 70. § Si autem The Latine word seemeth to expresse the function of this officer For camerarius dicitur à camer a i. testitudine sive fornice ●quia custodit pecun●as quae in cameris praecipuè reservantur Onyphrius de interpret vocum ecclesiasticarum It seemeth to be borowed from the Feudists who define the word camera thus Camera est locus in quem the saurus recolligitur vel conclave in quo pecunia reservatur Zasius de feudis part 4. num 7. and Peregrinus de jure fisci lib. 6. tit 3. saith that camerarius vel camberlingus quem quaestorem antiqui appellarunt in rebus fisci primum locum tenet quia thesaurarius custos est publicae pecuniae Sane officium hoc primipilatus fuisse nonnulli senserunt There be two officers of this name in the Kings Exch●quer who were wont to keep a controlement of the pells of receipt and exitus and kept certain keyes of the treasure cofers which is not now in use They keep the keyes of the Treasurie where the leagues of the Kings predecessors and divers ancient books do remain There is mention of this officer in the Statute an 34. 35 H. 8. cap. 16. There be also Under-chamberlains of the Exchequer which see in Under-chamberlain Champartie cambipartita aliâs champertie seemeth to come from the French champert i. vectigal and signifieth in our Common law a maintenance of any man in his sute depending upon condition to have part of the thing be it lands or goods when it is recovered Fitz. nat br fol. 171. and champertours be they that move plees or sutes or cause to be moved either by their own procurement or by other and pursue at their proper costs for to have part of the land in variance or part of the gains anno 33 Ed. 1. stat 2. in fine Whereunto adde the third statute made the same year This seemeth to have been an ancient fault in our Realm For notwithstanding these former statutes and a form of writ framed unto them yet anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 11. it was again enacted that whereas the former statute provided redresse for this in the Kings Bench onely which in those dayes followed the Court from thenceforth it should be lawful for Justices of the Common plees likewise and Justices of Assises in their circuits to inquire hear and determine this and such like cases as well at the sute of the King as of the Party How farre this Writ extendeth and the divers forms thereof applyed to several cases See Fitz. nat br fol. 171. and the Register orig fol. 183. and the new book of Enteries verbo Champertie Every Champertie imployeth maintenance Cromptons jurisd fol. 39. See also his Justice of Peace fol. 155. b. c. These with the Romans were called redemptores litium qui sc quotidian as lites mercantur aut qui partem litis paciscuntur l. si remuner andi § Maurus π. Mandati l. si contra l. per diversas Co. eodem 13. C●anpion campio is thus defined by Hottoman in verbis feudalibus Campio est certator pro alio datus in duello à campo dictus qui circus erat decertantibus definitus In our Common law it is taken no les●e for him that trieth the combat in his own case than for him that fighteth in the place or quarrel of another Bracton lib. 3 tract 2. cap. 21. num 24. who also seemeth to use this word for such as hold by Seargante or some service of another as campiones faciunt homagium domino suo lib. 2. cap. 35. Of this read more in Battel and Combat 30. Chanceler cancellarius cometh of the French chancelier Vicentius Lupanus de magistratibus Francorum saith that cancellarius is no Latine word howbeit he citeth divers Latine Writers that do use it With him agreeth that excellent man Petrus Pithaeus libro 2. adversariorum cap. 12. and whereas Lupanus would derive it from the verb cancello Pithaeus confe●eth he hath good colour for his opinion though he think it not sound and therefore rather deduceth it à cancellis Cancellare is liter as vel scriptum linea per medium duct a damnare and seemeth of it self like wise to be derived à cancellis which signifie all one with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Greek which we in our tongue call a Le●is that is a thing made of wood or iron barres laid crosse-waies one over another so that a man may see through them in and out And is to be thought that Judgement seats in old time were compassed in with those barres being found most necessary to defend Judges and other Officers from the presse of the multitude and yet never the more to hinder any mans view that had a desire or cause to observe what was done Cancellarius at the first by the opinion of Lupanus signified the registers or actuaries in Court grapharios sc qui conscribendis excipiendis judicum act is dant operam Pithaeus saith they were such as we now call Secretarios But this name in our daies is greatly advanced and not only in other Kingdomes but in ours also is given to him that is the chief man for matter of Justice in private causes especially next unto the Prince For whereas all other Justices in our Common-wealth are tied to the Law and may not swerve from it in judgement the Chancelor hath in this the Kings absolute power to moderate and temper the written Law and subjecteth himself onely to the Law of nature and conscience ordering all things juxta aequum bonum And therefore Stanford in his Prerogative cap. 20. fol. 65. saith that the Chancelor hath two powers one absolute the other ordinarie meaning that though by his ordinary power in some cases he must observe the form of proceeding as other ordinary Judges yet that in his absolute power he is not limited by the written law but by conscience and equity according to the circumstances of the matter in question But how long he hath had this power some would doubt For Polidorus Virgilius lib. 9. historiae Anglica hath these words of William the Conquerour Instituit item Scribarum Colleginm qui diplomata scriberent ejns Collegii magistrum vocabat Cancellarium qui paulatim supremus factus est Magistratus qualis hodie habeiur And see Flet. lib. 2. cap. 13. This high Officer seemeh to be derived from France unto us as many other
is an officer in Court so called because he hath the check and controllement of the yeomen of the Gard and all other ordinary yeomen or huissiers belonging either to his Majesty the Queen or Prince either giving leave or allowing their absences or defects in attendance or diminishing their wages for the same He also nightly by himself or Deputy taketh the view of those that are to watch in the Court and hath the setting of the watch This officer is mentioned anno 33 Henric. 8. cap. 12. Clerk Marshal of the Kings house seemeth to be an Officer that attendeth the Marshall in his Court and recordeth all his proceedings anno 33 Henr. 8. cap. 12. Clothe of Raye an 27 E. 3 stat 1. cap. 4. Closhe is an unlawful game forbidden by the the statute anno 17 E. 4. cap. 3. which is casting of a bowl at nine pinnes of wood or nine shank bones of an ox or horse Clove is the 32 part of a weigh of cheese i. eight pound anno 9 H. 6. cap. 8. Cloves caryophilli are a spice known by sight to every man They are flowers of a tree called caryophillus gathered and hardned by the Sun Of their nature you may read in Gerards Herbal lib. 3. cap. 144. This is comprised among such spices as be to be garbled an 1 Jacob. c. 19. CO Cocket cockettum is a seal appertaining to the Kings Custome-house Regist orig fol. 192 a. and also a scrow of parchment sealed and delivered by the officers of the Custome-house to Merchants as a warrant that their merchandise be customed anno 11 H. 6. cap. 16. which parchment is otherwise called literae de coketto or literae testimoniales de coketto Regist. ubi supr fol. 179 a. So is the word used anno 5 6 Edw. 6. cap. 14. an 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. c. 21. This word is also used for a distinction of bread in the statutes of bread and ale made anno 51 H. 3. where you have mention of bread coket wastelbread bread of trete and bread of Common wheat Coferer of the Kings houshold is a principal officer of his Majesties Court next under the controller that in the Counting-house and elsewhere at other times hath a special charge and oversight of other officers of the houshold for their good demeanour and carriage in their offices to all which one and other being either Sergeants Yeomen Grooms Pages or children of the kitchin or any other in any room of his Majesties servants of houshold and payeth their wages This officer is mentioned an 39 Eliz. cap. 7. Cogs anno 23 H. 8. cap. 18. Conisor of a fine is he that passeth or acknowledgeth a fine in Lands or Tenements to another Cognisee is he to whom the fine is acknowledged West parte 2. symbol tit Fines sect 2. Cognizance cometh from the French cognisance id est intelligentia intellectus notio cognitio with us it is used diversly sometime signifying a badge of a serving-mans sleeve whereby he is discerned to belong to this or that Noble or Gentleman sometime an acknowledgement of a fine or confession of a thing done as cognoscens latro Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 3.20 32. cognoscere se ad villanum Idem lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 16. As also to make cognisance of taking a distresse sometime as an audience or hearing of a matter judicially as to take cognisance sometime a power or jurisdiction as cognisance of plee is an ability to call a cause or plee out of another Court which no man can do but the King except he can shew Charters for it Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws pag. 68. See the new Termes of the Law and the new book of Entries verbo Conusance Cognatione see Cosenage Cognisour see Conisour Cognitionibus mittendis is a Writ to a Justice or other that hath power to take a Fine who having taken acknowledgement of a Fine deferreth to certifie it into the Court of Common plees commanding him to certifie it Reg. orig 68. b. Coin cuneus vel cuna seemeth to come from the French coin id est Angulus which probably verifieth the opinion of such as do hold the ancientest sort of Coyn to be cornered and not round Of this Lawyers substantive cuna commeth the Lawyers verb cunare i. to coyn Cromtons Justice of peace fol. 220. Coliander seed or rather coriander seed Semen coriandri is the seed of an hearb so called medicinable and wholesome for divers goo● purposes which see in Gerards Herbal l. 2. cap. 379. It is numbered among the drugges that be to be garbled an 1 Jacob. cap. 19. Collaterall collateralis commeth of the Latine Laterale id est that which hangeth by the side Lateralia viatoria π. de lega fidelium tertio l. 102. seem to signifie a budget or cap-case to hang by a saddel pomel Collaterall is used in the Common law for that which commeth in or is adhering of the side as collaterall assurance is that which is made over and beside the deed it self For example if a man covenant with another and enter bond for the performance of his covenant the bond is termed collaterall assurance because it is externall and without the nature and essence of the covenant And Crompt Jurisd fol. 185. sayeth that to be subject to the fee ding of the Kings Deer is collaterall to the spoyl within the Forest in the like manner may we say That the liberty to pitch booths or standings for a Fair in another mans ground is collaterall to the ground The private woods of a Common person within a Forest may not bee cut without the Kings licence For it is a prerogative collaterall to to the soil Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws p. 66. Collaterall warranty see Warranty Collation of benefice collatio beneficii signifieth properly the bestowing of a Benefice by the Bishop that hath it in his own gift or patronage and differeth from Institution in this for that institution into a benefice is performed by the Bishop at the motion or presentation of another who is patron of the same or hath the Patrons right for the time Extra de institutionibus De concessione praebendarum c. And yet is collation used for presentation anno 25 Edw. 3. stat 6. Collatione fact a uni post mortem alterius c. is a writ directed to the Justices of the Common Plees commanding them to direct their writ to a Bishop for the admitting of a Clerk in the place of another presented by the King that during the sute between the King and the Bishops Clerk is departed For judgment once passed for the Kings Clerk and he dying before he be admitted the king may bestow his presentation upon another Regist orig fol. 31. b. Collatione heremitagii is a writ whereby the king conferreth the keeping of an Ermitage upon a Clerk Register orig fol. 303 308. Colour color signifieth in the Common law a probable plee but in truth
places they there have this commissary is but superfluous and most commonly doth rather vex and disturb the Country for his lucre than of conscience seek to redresse the lives of offenders And therefore the Bishop taking prestation money of his Archdeacons yearely pro exteriori jurisdictione as it is ordinarily called doth by super-onerating their circuit with a commissary not only wrong Archdeacons but the poorer sort of subjects much more as common practice daily teacheth to their great woe Commission commissio is for the most part in the understanding of the Common law as much as delegatio with the Civilians See Brook titulo Commission and is taken for the warrant or Letters Patents that all men exercising jurisdiction either ordinary or extraordinary have for their power to hear or determine any cause or action Of these see divers in the table of the Register original verbo Commissio Yet this word sometime is extended further than to matters of judgement as the Commission of Purveyers or takers anno 11 H. 4. cap. 28. But with this epitheton High it is most notoriously used for the honourable Commission Court instituted and founded upon the Statute 1 Eliz. cap. 1. for the ordering and reformation of all offences in any thing appertaining to the jurisdiction ecclesiastical but especially such as are of higher nature or at the least require greater punishment than ordinary jurisdiction can afford For the world being grown to that loosenesse as not to esteem the censure of excommunication necessity calleth for those censures of fines to the Prince and imprisonment which doe affect men more neerly Commission of rebellion commissio rebellionis is otherwise called a writ of Rebellion Breve Rebellionis and it hath use when a man after proclamation made by the Sheriff upon an order of the Chauncery or court of Statrechamber under penalty of his allegeance to present himself to the Court by a certain day appeareth not And this commission is directed by way of command to certain persons to this end that they or three two or one of them doe apprehend or cause to be apprehended the party as a rebell and contemner of the Kings lawes wheresoever they find him within the Kingdom and bring him or cause him to be brought to the court upon a day therein assigned The true copie of this commission or Writ you have in Cromptons divers jurisdictions Court de Starre-Chamber as also in West tractat touching proceedings in chancery Sectio 24. Commissioner commissionarius is he that hath commission as Letters Patents or other lawful warrant to execute any publike office as Commissioners of the office of Fines and Licenses West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines sect 106. Commissioners in Eyr anno 3 Ed. 1. cap. 26. with infinite such like Committee is he to whom the consideration or ordering of any matter is referred either by some Court or consent of parties to whom it belongeth As in Parliament a Bill being read is either consented unto and passed or denied or neither of both but referred to the consideration of some certain men appointed by the house farther to examine it who thereupon are called Committees Committee of the King West part 2. symbol titulo Chancerie sect 144. This word seemeth to be something strangely used in Kitchin fol. 160. where the widow of the Kings Tenent being dead is called the Committee of the King that is one committed by the ancient law of the land to the Kings care and protection Common bench bancus communis is used some time for the Court of Common plees anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 11. So called as M. Cambden saith in his Britannia pag. 113. quia communia placita inter subditos ex jure nostro quod commune vocant in hoc disceptantur that is the Plees or Controversies tryed between Common persons Common fine finis communis of this Fleta hath these words Quibus expeditis speaking of the businesse finished by Justices in Eyr consueverunt Justiciarii imponere villatis juratoribus hundredis toti comitatui concelamentum omnes separatim amerciare quod videtur voluntarium cùm de per jurio concelau●ento non fuerint convicti sed potius dispensandum esset cum eis quod anim as in statera posuerint pro pacis conservatione lib. 1. cap. 48. § Quibus And a little following § Et provisum he hath these words Et provisum ests quòd communes misericordiae vel fines comitatuum amerciatorum in finibus ininerum Justiciariorum ante recessum ipsorum Justiciariorum per sacramenta militum aliorum proborum hominum de comitatu eodem affidentur super eos qui contribuere debent unde particulae Justiciariis liberentur ut cum aliis extractis suis ad Scaccarium liberare valeant These last words of his have relation to the statute Westminst pr. cap. 18. which read See Fine Common Plees communia placita is the Kings Court now held in Westminster Hall but in antient time moveable as appeareth by the Statute called Magna charta cap. 11. as also anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 11. and Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. But M. Gwin in the Preface to his Readings saith that until the time that Henry the third granted the great Charter there were but two Courts in all called the Kings Courts whereof one was the Exchequer the other the Kings Bench which was then called Curia Domini regis and Aula regia because it followed the Court or King and that upon the grant of that Charter the Court of Common plees was erected and setled in one place certain viz. at Westminster And because this Court was setled at Westminster wheresoever the King lay thereupon M. Gwin ubi supra saith that after that all the Writs ran Quòd sit coram Justiciariis meis apud Westmonasterium whereas before the party was commanded by them to appear coram me vel Justiciariis meis simply without addition of place as he well observeth out of Glanvile and Bracton the one writing in Henry the seconds time before this Court was erected the other in the latter end of Henry the thirds time who erected this Court. All civil causes both real and personal are or were in former times tryed in this Court according to the strict law of the Realm and by Fortescue cap. 50. it seemeth to have been the onely Court for real causes The chief Judge thereof is called the Lord chief Justice of the Common Plees accompanied with 3 a 4 Assistants or Associates which are created by Letters Patents from the King and as it were enstalled or placed upon the Bench by the Lord Chancelor and Lord chief Justice of the Court as appeareth by Fortescue cap. 51. who expresseth all the circumstances of this admission The rest of the Officers belonging to this Court are these The Custos brevium three Protonotaries otherwise called Prenotaries Chirographer Filazers 14. Exigenters 4. Clerk of the Warrants Clerk of the Juries or Jurata
anno 35. H. 8. cap. 26. and the County of Litchfield Cromptons Justice of peace fo 59. a. County is in another signification used for the Countie court which the Sheriff keepeth every month within his charge either by himself or his Deputy anno 2. Ed. 6. ca. 25. Crompt Juris f. 221. Bract. li. 3. c. 7. l. 3. tract 2. cap. 12. Of these Counties or Shires one with another there are reckoned in England 37. beside twelve in Wales The word comitatus is also used for a jurisdiction or territory among the Feudists County court curia comitatus by M. Lamberd is otherwise called conventus in his explication of Saxon words divided into two sorts one retaining the geneeal name as the County-court held every moneth by the Shiereve or his Deputy the under Sheriff wherof you may read in Crompt jurisd f. 231. the other called the Turn held twice every year which see more at large in his place and Cromptons Jurisd fol. 231. This County court had in antient times the cognition of these and other great matters as may appear by Glanvile lib. 1. cap. 2.3.4 by Bracton and Britton in divers places and by Pleta lib 2. cap. 62. But was abridged by the Statute of Magna charta cap. 17. and much more by 1 Ed. 4. cap. unico It had also and hath the determination of certain trespasses and debts under forty shillings Britton cap. 27 28. what manner of proceeding was of old used in this Court see Fleta ubi supra Coursitour See Cursetour Court curia cometh of the French court which signifieth the Kings Palace or Mansion as curtis doth among the Lombards All these spring of the Latine curia which signifieth one of thirty parts into which Romulus divided the whole number of the Romans sometime also the Senat-house as appeareth by Tully in his Offices nihil est quod dignum nobis aut in foro aut in curta agere possumus which in his oration pro Milone he calleth Templum sanctitatis amplitudinis mentis consilii publici caput urbis c. Court with us signifieth diversly as the House where presently the King remaineth with his ordinary retinue and also the place where Justice is judicially ministred of which you find 32 several s●rts in M. Cromptons book of Jurisdictions well described And of them most be courts of record some be not and therefore are accounted base Courts in comparison of the rest Beside these also there are Courts Christian Smith de Repnb Anglor lib. 3. cap. 6. which are so called because they handle matters especially appertaining to Christianity and such as without good knowledg in Divinity cannot be well judged of being held heretofore by Archbishops and Bishops as from the Pope of Rome because he chalenged the superiority in all causes spiritual but sithence his ejection they hold them by the Kings authority virtute magistratus sui as the Admiral of England doth his Court Whereupon it proceedeth that they send out their precepts in their own names and not in the Kings as the Justices of the Kings Courts do And therefore as the appeal from these Courts did lye to Rome now by the statute anno 25 H. 8. cap. 19. it lieth to the King in his Chancerie Court baron curia baronis is a Court that every Lord of a manor which in ancient times were called Barons hath within his own precincts Barons in other Nations have great Territories and jurisdiction from their Soveraignes as may be proved out of Cassanaeus de gloria mundi part 5. consideratio 56. by Vincentius de Franchis descis 211. and many others Bu here in England what they be and have been heretofore see in Baron Of this Court Baron you may read your fill in Kitchin that writeth a large Book of it and of a Court Leet Sir Edward Coke in his fourth Book of Reports amongst his Copy-hold cases fol. 26. b. saith that this Court is two after a sort and therefore if a man having a mannor in a Town and do graunt the inheritance of the Copy-holders thereunto belonging unto another this grantee may keep a Court for the customarie Tenants and accept surrenders to the use of others and make both admittances and graunts the other Court is of Free-holders which is properly called the Court Baron wherein the suters that is the Free-holders be Judges whereas of the other the Lord or his Steward is Judge Court of Pypowders See Pie-powders Court of Requests curia requestarum is a Court of equity of the same nature with the Chancerie principally instituted for the help of such petitioners as in conscionable cases deal by supplication with his Majestie This Court as M. Gwin saith in the Preface to his Readings had beginning from Commission first granted by Henry the eighth to the Masters of Requests whereas before that time by his opinion they had no warrant of ordinary jurisdiction but travelled between the King and the Petitioner by direction from the Kings mouth But Sir Julius Caesar in a Tractate of his painfully and very judiciously gathered from the Records of the same Court plainly sheweth that this Court was 9 Henrici septimi though then following the King and not setled in any certain place neither swayed particularly by the Masters of Requests as now it is but more at large by others of the Kings most Honourable Councel whom he pleased to employ in this service For page 148. of the said Tractate you have the form of the oath then ministred to those that were Judges in this Court and à pag. pri usque ad pag. 46. causes of divers natures which in the said Kings dayes were there handled and adjudged This Court as that right honourable and Learned Knight in a Brief of his upon the same Court plainly proveth was and is parcel of the Kings most honoutable Councel and so alwayes called and esteemed The Judges thereof were alwayes of the Kings most Honourable Councel appointed by the King to keep his Councel board The keeping of this Court was never tyed to any place certain but onely where the Counsel sate the suters were to attend But now of late for the ease of suters it hath been kept in the White-Hall at Westminster and onely in Term time It is a Court of Record wherein Recognizances are also taken by the Kings Councel The form of proceeding in this Court was altogether according to the processe of summarie causes in the Civil Law The persons Plaintiffs and Defendants were alwayes either privileged as officers of the Court or their servants or as the Kings servants or as necessary Attendants of them or else where the Plaintiffs poverty or mean estate was not matchable with the wealth or greatnesse of the Defendant or where the cause meerly contained matter of Equity and had no proper remedie at the Common law or where it was specially recommended from the King to the Examination of his Councel or concerned Universities Colleges Hospitals
Gustwit seemeth to be compounded of Gult i. noxa and wit which is sayd by some skilful men to be an ancient termination of the words in the Saxon tongue fignifying nothing in it self but as dom or hood and such like be in these English words Christendom and Manhood or such others Others say and it is true that wit signifieth blame or reprehension Gultwit as Saxon in his Description of England cap. 11. doth interpretet it is an amends for trespasse Gust Hospes is used by Bracton for a stranger or guest that lodgeth with us the second night lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 10. In the laws of Saint Edward set forth by Master Lambert num 27. it is written Gest Of this see more in Uncothe Gumme gummi is a certain clammy or tough liquor that in manner of a sweaty excrement issueth out of trees and is hardned by the Sun Of these there be divers sorts brought over Seas that be drugs to be garbled as appeareth by the statute Anno 1 Jacob. cap. 19. Gutter-tile aliâs Corner-tyle is a tyle made three-corner-wise especially to be layd in Gutters or at the corners of the tyled houses which you shall often see upon Dove-houses at the four corners of their roofs anno 17 Ed. 4. cap. 4. HA HAbeas corpus is a Writ the which a man indited of some trespasse before Justices of peace or in a Court of any franchise and upon his apprehension being layd in prison for the same may have out of the Kings bench thereby to remove himself thither at his own costs and to answer the cause there c. Fitzh nat br fol. 250. h. And the order is in this case first to procure a Certiorari out of the Chancery directed to the said Justices for the removing of the Inditement into the Kings Bench and upon that to procure this Writ to the Sheriff for the causing of his body to be brought at a day Reg. jud fol. 81. where you shall find divers cases wherein this Writ is used Habeas corpora is a Writ that lieth for the bringing in of a Jurie or so many of them as refuse to come upon the venire facias for the trial of a cause brought to issue Old nat br fol. 157. See great diversity of this Writ in the table of the Register Judicial verbo habeas corpora and the new book of Entries verbo codem Habendum is a word of form in a deed of conveyance to the true understanding whereof you must know that in every deed of conveyance there be two principal parts the Premises and the Habendum The office of the Premisses is to expresse the name of the Grantor the Grantee and the thing granted or to be granted The office of the habendum is to limit the estate so that the general implication of the estate which by construction of law passeth in the Premisses is by the habendum controlled and qualified As in a Lease to two persons the habendum to one for life the remainder to the other for life altereth the general implication of the joynt tenancie in the Free-hold which should passe by the Premisses if the habendum were not Coke vol. 2. Bucklers case fo 55. See Use Habere facias seisinam is a Writ Judicial which lieth where a man hath recovered lands in the Kings Court directed to the Sheriff and commanding him to give him seisin of the land recovered Old nat br fol. 154. Terms of the Law wherof see great diversity also in the table of the Register Judicial verbo Habere facias seisinam This Writ is issuing sometime out of the Records of a fine executory directed to the Sheriff of the County where the land lieth and commanding him to give to the Cognizee or his heirs seisin of the land whereof the Fine is levied which Writ lyeth within the year after the Fine or Judgement upon a Scire facias and may be made in divers forms West parte 2. symb titulo Fines Sect. 136. There is also a Writ called Habere facias seisinam ubi Rex habuit annum diem vastum which is for the delivery of lands to the Lord of the Fee after the King hath taken his due of his lands that was convicted of Felony Register origin fol. 165. Habere facias visum is a Writ that lieth in divers cases where view is to be taken of the lands or tenements in question See Fitzh nat br in Indice verbo View See Bracton lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 8. lib. 5. parte 2. cap. 11. See view See the Register Judicial fol. 1 26 28 45 49 52. Haber●ects Hauberiteus pannus magn chart cap. 25. Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. Hables is the plural of the French hable signifying as much as a Porte or Haven of the Sea whence Ships do set forth into other Countries and whither they do arrive when they return from their voyage This word is used anno 27 Hen. 6. cap. 3. Haerede deliberando alii qui habet custodiam terrae is a Writ directed to the Sheriff willing him to command one having the body of him that is ward to another to deliver him to him whose ward he is by reason of his land Regist. orig fol. 161. b. Haerede abducto is a Writ that lyeth for the Lord who having the wardship of his tenent under age by right cannot come by his body for that he is conveyed away by another Old nat br fol. 93. See Ravishment de Gard and Haerede rapto in Regist orig fol. 163. Haeretico comburendo is a Writ that lyeth against him that is an heretick viz. that having been once convinced of heresie by his Bishop and having abjured it afterward falleth into it again or into some other and is thereupon committed to the secular power Fitz. nat br fol. 269. Haga is used as a kind of Latine word for a house I find in an ancient book sometime belonging to the Abbey of Saint Augustines in Canterbury that King Stephen sent his Writ to the Sheriff and Justices of Kent in this manner Stephanus Rex Anglorum Vicecomiti et Iusticiariis de Kentsalutem Praecipio quòd faciatis habere Ecclesiae sancti Augustini monachis hagam suam quam Gosceoldus eis dedit ita bene in pace justae quietè liberè sicut eam eis dedit in morte sua coram legalibus testibus c. Hagbut See Haque and Haquebut Haye boote seemeth to be compounded of Haye i. Sepes and Bote i. compensatio The former is French and the second is Saxon. And although it do fall out sometime that our words be so compounded yet it is rare Wherefore it may be thought peradventure to come as well from Hag and Boote which be both Saxon words It is used in our Common law for a permission to take thorns and freeth to make or repair hedges Half haque See Haeque Half merk dimidia merka seemeth to signifie a noble Fitzh nat br fol.
words Billa vera or disallow by writing Ignoramus such as they doe approve if they touch Life and Death are farther referred to another Jury to be considered of because the case is of such importance but others of lighter moment are upon their allowance without more work fined by the Bench except the party travers the Inditement or challenge it for insufficiency or remove the cause to a higher Court by Certiorari in which two former cases it is referred to another Jury and in the latter transmitted to the higher Lamb. Eir. li. 4. ca. 7. and presently upon the allowance of this Bill by the Grand Enquest a man is said to be indited Such as they disallow are delivered to the Bench by whom they are forthwith cancelled or torn The Petit Iury consisteth of twelve men at the least and are empaneled as well upon criminal as upon civil causes those that passe upon offences of Life and Death doe bring in their verdict either guiltie or not guilty wherupon the Prisoner if he be found guilty is said to be convicted and so afterward receiveth his judgement and condemnation or otherwise is acquitted and set Free Of this read Fortes cap. 27. Those that passe upon civil causes real are all or so many as can conveniently be had of the same Hundred where the land or tenement in question doth lie and four at the least And they upon due examination bring in their verdict either for the Demandant or Tenent Of this see Fortescue cap. 25 26. According unto which judgement passeth afterward in the Court where the cause first began and the reason hereof is because these Justices of Assise are in this case for the ease of the Country only to take the verdict of the Jury by the vertue of the writ called Nisi prius and so return it to the Court where the cause is depending See Nisi prius Joyn with this the chapter formerly cited out of the Custumary of Normandie and that of King Etheldreds laws mentioned by Master Lamberd verbo Centuria in his explication of Saxon words And by these two words you shall perceive that as well among these Normans as the Saxous the men of this Jury were Associates and Assistants to the Judges of the Court in a kind of equalitie whereas now adayes they attend them in great humility and are as it were at their command for the service of the Court the words set down by M. Lamberd are these In singulis centuriis comitia sunto atque liberae conditionis viri duodeni aetate superiores un à cum praeposito sacra tenentes juranto se aedeo virum aliquem innocentem hand condemnaturos sontemve absoluturos to this joyn also the 69. chapter of the said Custumary See Enquest See 12. Men. See Lamberds Eirenarch lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. Juris utrùm is a writ that lieth for the incumbent whose predecessour hath alienated his lands or tenements the divers uses of which writ see in Fitzh nat br fol. 48. Jurisdictiou Jurisdictio is a dignity which a man hath by a power to doe Iustice in causes of Complaint made before him And there be two kinds of Jurisdictions the one that a man hath by reason of his fee and by vertue thereof doth right in all plaints concerning his fee The other is a Iurisdiction given by the Prince to a Bayliff this division I have in the Custumary of Normandie cap. 2. which is not unapt for the practice of our Commonwealth for by him whom they call a Bayliff wee may understand all that have commission from the Prince to give judgement in any cause The Civilians divide jurisdictionem generally in imperium jurisdictionem and imperium in merum et mixtum Of which you may read many especiall tractats written of them as a matter of great difficulty and importance Justes cometh of the French Joustes i. decursus and signifieth with us contentions between Martial men by speares on horsback anno 24 H. 8. cap. 13. Justice Justiciarius is a Freneh word and signifieth him that is deputed by the King to doe right by way of judgement the reason why he is called Justice and not Judex is because in ancient time the latine word for him was Justitia and not Justiciarius as appeareth by Glanv lib. 2. cap. 6. Roger Hoveden part poster suorum annalium fo l 413. a. and divers other places which appellation we have from the Normans as appeareth by the Grand Custumary cap. 3. And I doe the rather note it because men of this function should hereby consider that they are or ought to be not Justi in their judgements but in abstract ipsa justitia howbeit I hold it well if they perform their office in concreto Another reason why they are called Justiciari● with us and not Judices is because they have their authority by deputation as Delegates to the King and not jure magistratus and therefore cannot depute others in their stead the Justice of the Forest only excepted who hath that liberty especially given him by the Statute anno 32 H. 8. cap. 35. for the Chancellor Marshal Admiral and such like are not called Justiciarii but Judices of these Justices you have divers sorts in England as you may perceive here following The manner of creating these Justices with other appurtenances read in Fortescue cap. 51. Justice of the Kings bench Justiciarius de Banco Regis is a Lord by his office and the chief of the rest wherefore he is also called Capitalis Justiciarius Angliae his office especially is to hear and determine all plees of the Crown that is such as concern offences committed against the crown dignity and peace of the King as treasons felonies mayhems and such like which you may see in Bracton lib. 3. tractat 2. per totum and in Stawnf treatise intituled The plees of the Crown from the first chapter to the fifty one of the first Book But either it was from the beginning or by time is come to passe that he with his Assistants heareth all personal actions and real also if they be incident to any personal action depending before them See Cromptons jurisd fol. 67. c. Of this Court Bracton lib. 3. ca. 7. nu 2. saith thus Placita vero civilia in rem personam in Curia domini Regis terminanda coram diversis Justiciariis terminantur Habet enim plures curias in quibus diversae actiones terminantur illarum curiarum habet unam propriam sicut aulam regiam justiciariios capitales qui proprias causos Regis terminant aliorum omnium par querelam vel per privilegium sive libertatem ut si sit aliquis qui implacitari non debeat nisi coram domino Rege This Justice as it seemeth hath no patent under the broad Seal For so Cromp. saith ubi supra He is made only by Writ which is a short one to this effect Regina Johanni Popham militi salutem Sciatis
hurried to the Kings Bench if the cause were too high for the County Court They differed from the Justices of Oyer and Terminer because they as is above-said were sent upon some one or few especial cases and to one place whereas the Justices in Eyre were sent through the Provinces and Counties of the land with more indefinite and general Commission as appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. cap. 11 12 13 and Britton cap. 2. And again they seem to differ in this because the Justices of Oyer and Terminer as it is before said were sent uncertainly upon any uproar or other occasion in the countrey but these in Eyre as M. Gwin setteth down in the Preface to his Reading were sent but every seven year once with whom Horn in his mirrour of Justices seemeth to agree lib. 2. cap. queux point estre actourrs c. and lib. 2. cap. des peches criminels c. al suyte de Roy c. and li. 3. ca. de Justices in Eyre where he also declar●th what belonged to their office These were instituted by Henry the 2. as M. Camden in his Britannia witnesseth pag. 104. And Roger Hoveden parte posteri annalium fol. 313. b. hath of them these words Justiciarii itinerantes constituti per Henricum secundum i. qui divisit regnum suum in sex partes per quarum singulas tres Justiciarios itinerantes constituit quorum nomina haec sunt c. Justices of Gaol delivery Justiciarii ad Gaolas deliberandas are such as are sent with Commission to hear and determine all causes appertaining to such as for any offence are cast into the Gaol part of whose authority is to punish such as let to Mainprise those prisoners that by law be not baileable by the Statute de finibus cap. 3. Fitz. nat br fol. 151. I. These by likelihood in antient time were sent to Countries upon this several occasion But afterward Justices of Assise were likewise authorised to this anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. Their oath is all one with other of the Kings Justices of either Bench Old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Justiciariorum See Oath Justices of labourers were Justices appointed in those times to redresse the frowardnesse of labouring men that would either be idle or have unreasonable wages See anno 21 Edvardi 3. cap. primo anno 25 ejusd cap. 8. an 31 ejusd cap. 6. Justices of Nisi prius are all one now adayes with Justices of Assises for it is a common Adjournment of a cause in the Gommon Plees to put it off to such a day Nisi prius Justiciarit venerint ad eas parte ad capiendas Assisas and upon this clause of Adjournment they are called Justices of Nisi Prius as well as Justices of Assises by reason of the writ or action that they have to deal in their Commission you may see in Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 204. yet M. Crompton maketh this difference between them because Justices of Assise have power to give judgement in a cause but Justices of Nisi prius only to take the verdict But in the nature of both their functions this seemeth to be the greatest difference because Justices of Nisi prius have to deal in causes personal as well as real whereas Justices of Assise in strict acception deal only with the possessory writs called Assises Justices of trial baston aliàs of trayl baston were a kind of Justices appointed by King Edward the first upon occasion of great disorder grown in the Realm during his absence in the Scotish and French warres they are called in the Old nat brev fol. 52. Justices of trial Baston but by Holynshed and Stow Ed. pri of Trail baston or trailing or drawing the staff as Holynshed saith Their office was to make inquisition through the Realm by the verdict of substantial Juries upon all officers as Maiors Sheriffs Bayliffs Escheators and others touching extortion briberies and other such grievances as intrusions into other mens lands and Barratours that used to take money for beating of men and also of them whom they did beat by means of which inqusitions many were punished by death many by ransome and so the rest flying the Realm the land was quieted and the King gained great riches toward the supporting of his wars Inquire farther of the name Baston is thought by some to be the beam of a pair of Scoales or Weights And this is in this place metaphorically applied to the just peising of recompence for offences committed My poor opinion is that the etymologie of this title or addition groweth from the French Treilles i. cancelli bars or lettises of what thing soever a grate with crosse bars or of the singular Treille i. pargula an house arbour a rail or form such as vines run upon and Baston a staff or pole noting thereby that the Justices imployed in this Commission had authority to proceed without any solemn Judgement Seat in any place either compassed in with railes or made Booth or Tent-wise set up with staves or poets without more work wheresoever they could apprehend the malefactors they sought for See libro Assisarum folio 57.141 Justices of Peace Justiciarii ad pacem are they that are aprointed by the kings Commission with others to attend the peace of the Countie where they dwell of whom some upon special respect are made of the Quorum because some businesse of importance may not be dealt in without the presence or assent of them or one of them Of these it is but folly to write more because they have so many things appertaining to their Office as cannot in few words be comprehended And again Justice Fitzherbert sometime sithence as also Master Lamberd and Master Crompton of late have written Bookes of it to their great commendation and fruitfull benefit of the whole Realm See also Sir Thomas Smith de repub Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 19. They were called Gardians of the Peace until the 36. year of king Edward the third cap. 12. where they be called Justices Lam. Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 19. pag. 578. Their oath see also in Lamberd lib. 1. cap. 10. Justices of Peace c. within Liberties Justiciarii ad pacem infra libertates be such in Cities and other Corporate Towns as those others be of any County and their authoritie or power is all one within their several precincts Anno 27 H. 8. cap. 25. Justicies is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the dispatch of Justice in some especiall cause wherewith of his own authoritie he cannot deal in his County Court lib. 12. cap. 18. whereupon the Writ de Excommunicato deliberando is called a Justicies in the Old nat brev fol. 35. Also the Writ de homine replegiando eodem fol. 41. Thirdly the Writ de secunda superoneratione pasturae eodem fol. 73. Kitchin fol. 74. saith that by this writ called Justicies the Sheriff may hold plee of a great summe whereas of his ordinary authoritie he cannot hold plees but
be impeached or excepted against either in this or any other thing The next chapter viz. the 103. sheweth how many persons suffice to make a Record in the Exchequer The next how many in an assise c. I find not that we in our Courts especially the Kings Courts stand much upon the numbers of Recorders or witnesses for the strength of the testimony which the Record worketh but that we take it sufficient which is registred in each Court Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37. num 4. Bretton in the Proeme of his book saith that the Iustices of the Kings Bench have a Record the Coroner Vicounr Iustices of the Exchequer Iustices of the Gaol delivery the Steward of England Iustices of Ireland Iustices of Chester Iustices assigned by the Kings letters patents in those causes they have Commission to take knowledge of All which as I take it must be understood with that caveat of Brook titulo Record num 20. 22. that an act committed to writing in any of the Kings Courts during the term wherein it is written is alterable and no record but that term once ended and the said act duly enrolled it is a record and of that credit that admitteth no alteration or proof to the contrary Yet see Sir Edward Cooks Reports lib. 4. Rawlius case fol. 52. b. anno 12 Ed. 2. cap. 4. It is said that two Iustices of either Bench have power to record Non-sutes and defaults in the Country It appeareth by Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. cap. 1. et 11. that quatuor milites habent recordum being sent to view a party essoined de malo lecti and lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 4. nu 2. that Serviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And in the Statute of Carleil made anno 15 Ed 2. it is said that one Iustice of either Bench with an Abbot or Prior or a Knight or a man of good fame or credence hath a record in the view of one that is said by reason of sickness to be unable to appear personally for the passing of a fine And anno 13 H. 4. cap. 7. et anno 2 H. 5. cap. 3. that two Iustices of peace with the● Shyreeve or Under-shyreeve have power to record what they find done by any in a ryot or rout c. That which is before mentioned out of Briton touching the Shyreeve seemeth to be limited by Fitzh nat br fol. 81. D. Who alloweth him a record in such matters only as he is commanded to execute by the Kings Writ in respect of his office And thence it commeth that Kitchin fol. 177. saith that the Escheator and Shyreeve be not Iustices of record but officers of record In which words he signifieth that their testimony is authentical only in some certain things that are expresly injoyned them by vertue of their Commission as Ministers to the King in his higher Courts whereas Iustices of record have in generality a record for all things within their cognisance done before them as Iudges though not expresly or particularly commanded Fitzh in his Nat. br fol. 82. in principio something explaineth this point writing to this effect Every act that the shyreeve doth by vertue of his commission ought to be taken as matter of Record no lesse than the Justices of peace His reasons be two the former because his patent is of record the other because he is a conservatour of the peace And then he addeth that the plees held before him in his County be not of record Yet is the County called a Court of record Westm 2. cao 3. anno 13 Ed 1. But it seemeth by Briton cap. 27. that it is only in these causes whereof the shyreeve holdeth plee by especial writ and not those that he holdeth of course or custome And in that case also it may be gathered out of the same Author that he hath a record but with the testimony of those annexed that be suters to the Court. Which seemeth to agree with Bractons words above specified Scrviens Hundredi habet recordum in testimonio proborum hominum And to this purpose read Glanvile l. 8. c. 8 9 et 10. One Iustice upon view of forcible detinue of land may record the same by statute anno 15 R. 2. cap. 2. the Maior and Constables of the staple have power to record recognisances of debt taken before them anno 10 H. ● ca. 1. Brook titulo Record seemeth to say that no Court ecclesiastical is of record how truly it is to be inquired For Bishops certifying bastardy bigamy excommunication the vacancy or plenarty of a Church a mariage a divorse a spiritual intrusion or whether a man be professed in any religion with other such like are credited without farther enquiry or controlment See Brook titulo Bastardy See Fleta lib 6. cap. 39 40 41 42. Lamb. Eirenarcha lib. pri cap. 13. Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 14 et 15. the Register original fol. 5. b. Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. cap. 20. nu 5. Briton cap. 92 94 106 107 109. Doct. and Stud. lib. 2. cap. 5 but especially Cosius apology parte pri cap. 2. And a testament shewed under the seal of the Ordinary is not traversable 36 H. 6.31 Perkins Testament 491. Fulb. paral fol. 61. b. But it may be that this opinion groweth from a difference between that law whereby the court Christian is most ordered and the Common law of this Land For by the Civil or Canon law no instrument or record is held so firm but that it may be checked by witnesses able to depose it to be untrue Co. plus valere quod agitur quàm quod simulate concipitur ca. cum Johannes 10. extra de fide instrumentorum Whereas in our Common law against a record of the Kings court after the term wherein it is made no witnesse can prevail Briton cap. 109. Coke lib. 4. Hinds case fol. 71. lib. assisarum fol 227. nota 21. This reconciliation may be justified by Brook himself titulo Testaments num 4.8 14. and by Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. The King may make a Court of record by his grant Glanvile lib. 8. cap. 8. Briton cap. 121. as for example Queen Elizabeth of worthy memory by her Charter dated 26 Aprilis anno 3. regni sui made the Consistoty court of the University of Cambridge a court of record There are reckoned among our common Lawyers three sorts of Records viz. A record judicial as attainder c. A record ministerial upon oath as an office found A record made by conveyance by consent as a fine deed inrolled or such like Coke lib. 4. Andrew Ognels case fol. 54. b. Recordare facias or recordari facias is a writ directed to the Shyreeve to remove a cause depending in an inferiour court to the Kings bench or common plees as out of a court of antient Demeasn Hundred or County Fitz. nat br fol. 71. B. out of the county court idem fol.
46. B. or other courts of record idem fol. 71. C. 119. K. Howbeit if you will learn more exactly where and in what cases this writ lyeth read Brook in his Abridgement titulo Recordare et pone It seemeth to be called a recordare because the form is such that it commandeth the Shyreeve to whom it is directed to make a record of the proceedings by himself and others and then to send up the cause See the Register verbo Recordare in the table of the original Writs See Certiorari See Accedas ad Curiam Recorder recordator commeth of the French recordeur i. talis persona quae in Ducis curia à judicio faciendo non debet amoveri Grand Custumary of Norm cap. 107. 121. Whereby it appeareth that those which were necessary ludges to the Duke of Normandies courts were called Recorders and who they were is shewed in the ninth chapter of the said book And that they or the greater part of them had power to make a record it is evident in the chapter 107. Here in England a Recorder is he whom the Maior or other Magistrate of any City or Town corporate having jurisdiction or a Court of record within their precincts by the Kings grant doth associate unto him for his better direction in matters of Iustice and proceedings according unto law And he is for the most part a man well seen in the common law Recordo et processu mittendis is a writ to call a Record to gether with the whole proceeding in the cause out of one court into the Kings court Which see in the Table of the Register original how diversly it is used Recorde Utlagariae mittendo is a writ Iudicial which see in the Register judicial fol. 32. Recovery Recuperatio comes of the French Reconvrer i. Recuperare It signifieth in our common law an obtaining of any thing by Iudgement or tryal of Law as evictio doth among the Civilians But you must understand that there is a true recovery and a figned A true recovery is an actual or real recovery of any thing or the value thereof by Iudgement as if a man sued for any land or other thing moveable or immoveable and have a verdict and Iudgement for him A feigned recovery is as the Civilians call it quaedam fictio juris a certain form or course set down by Law to be observed for the better assuring of Lands or tenements unto us And for the better understanding of this read West parte 2. symbol titulo Recoveries sect pri who saith that the end and effect of a recovery is to discontinue and destroy Estates tayls Remainders and Reversions and to bar the former owners thereof And in this formality there be required three parties viz. the Demandant the Tenent and the Vouchee The Demandant is he that bringeth the Writ of Entry and may be termed the Recoverer The Tenent is he against whom the writ is brought and may be termed the Recoveree The Vouchee is he whom the Tenent voucheth or calleth to warranty for the Land in demand West ubi supra In whom you may read more touching this matter But for example to explain this point a man that is desirous to cut off an Estate tayl in lands or tenements to the end to sell give or bequeath it as himself seeth good useth his friend to bring a writ upon him for this Land He appearing to the writ saith for himself that the Land in question came to him or his ancestors from such a man or his ancestor who in the conveyance thereof bound himself and his heirs to make good the title unto him or them to whom it was conveyed And so hers allowed by the court to call in this third man to say what he can for the justifying of his right to this land before he so conveyed it The third man commeth not whereupon the land is recovered by him that brought the writ and the Tenent of the land is left for his remedy to the third man that was called and came not in to defend the Tenent And by this means the entayl which was made by the Tenent or his Ancestor is cut off by judgement hereupon given for that he is pretended to have no power to entayl that land whereunto be had no just title as now it appeared because it is evicted or recovered from him This kind of recovery is by good opinion but a snare to deceive the people Doctor and Stud. cap. 32. diai pri fol. 56. a. This feigned recovery is also called a common recovery And the reason of that Epitheton is because it is a beaten and common path to that end for which it is ordained viz. to cut off the estates above specified See the new book of Entries verbo Recovery I said before that a true recovery is as well of the value as of the thing for the better understanding whereof know that in value signifies as much as Illud quod interest with the Civilians For example if a man buy land of another with warranty which land a third person afterward by sute of Law recovereth against me I have my remedy against him that sold it me to recover in value that is to recover so much in mony as the land is worth or so much other land by way of exchange Fitzh nat brev fol. 134. K. To recover a warranty Old nat brev fol. 146. is to prove by judgement that a man was his warrant against all men for such a thing Recto is a writ called in English a writ of right which is a writ of so high a nature that whereas other writs in real actions be only to recover the possession of the land or tenements in question which have been lost by our ancestor or our selves this aimeth to recover both the seisin which some of our Ancestors or we had and also the property of the thing whereof our Ancestor died not seised as of fee and whereby are pleaded and tryed both their rights together viz. as well of possession as property In so much as if a man once lose his cause upon this writ either by judgement by assise or battell be is without all remedy and shall be excluded per exceptionem Rei judicatae Bracton lib. 5. tract 1. cap. 1. et seq where you may read your fill of this writ It is divided into two species Rectum patens a writ of right patent and Rectum clausum a writ of right close This the Civilians call Judicium petitorum The writ of right patent is so called because it is sent open and is in nature the highest writ of all other lying alwaies for him that hath fee simple in the lands or tenements sued for and not for any other And when it lyeth for him that challengeth fee simple or in what cases See Fitzh nat br fol. pri C. whom see also fol. 6. of a special writ of right in London otherwis● called a writ of right according to
que lieu is interponere judicium suum Of this Verb commeth the Participle assis as estre assis i. sedere And this Participle in the grand Customary of Normandy c. 68. is used as we would say appointed limited or determined viz. au jour qui est assis àfaire la battaille se doibuent les champions offrir à la justice That is At the day which is appointed for the combat the Champions ought to offer themselves to the Iustice So that by all these places compared together it is evident whence the original of this word assise floweth How diversly it is used in our Common law it followeth that we declare First Littleton in the Chapter Rents saith that it is aequivocum where he setteth down three several significations of it one as it is taken for a Writ another as it is used for a Iury the third as for an Ordinance And him he that listeth may read more at large My Collections have served me thus first assise is taken for a Writ directed to a Sheriff for the recovery of possession of things immoveable where of your self or your Ancestors have been disseised And this is as well of things corporal as incorporeal rights being of four sorts as here they follow in their order Assise of novel disseisin assisanovae disseisinae lyeth where a Tenent in fee-simple fee-tail or for term of life is lately disseised of his Lands or Tenements or else of a Rent-service Rent-seck or Rent-charge of common of Pasture of an office of toll tronage passage pownage or for a Nusance levied and divers other such like For confirmation whereof you may read Glanvile li. 10. c. 2. Bracton li. 4. tract 1. per totum Britton c. 70. seq Reg orig fol. 197. Fitz. Nat. br fo 177 178 179. New book of Entries fo 74. col 3. West 2. c 25. anno 13 Ed. 1. And to this may aptly be added the Bill of fresh force friscae fortiae which is directed to the Officers or Magistrates of Cities or Towns corporate being a kind of Assise for recovery of possession in such places within forty daies after the force as the ordinary Assise is in the County Fitzh Nat. br fol. 7. c. This the Civilians call Judicium possessorium recuperandi Assise of mort d'auncester assisa mortis antecessoris lyeth where my Father Mother Brother Sister Uncle Aunt c. died seised of Lands Tenements Rents c. that he had in Fee-simple and after his death a Stranger abateth and it is good as well against the Abatour as any other in possession How likewise this is extended see Bracton lib. 4. trast 3. per totum Britton ca. 70. cum multis sequent Fitzh Nat. br fo 114. Regist. orig fo 223. This the Civilians call Judicium possessorium adipiscend● Assise of darrein presentment assisa ultimae praesentationis lyeth where I or mine Ancestor have presented a Clark to a Church and after the Church being void by the death of the said Clark or otherwise a Stranger presenteth his Clark to the same Church in disturbance of me And how otherwise this Writ is used see Bracton l. 4. tract 2. Reg. orig fo 30. Fitzh Nat. br fo 195. Assise de utrum assisa utrum lyeth for a Parson against a Lay-man or a Lay-man against a Parson for Land or Tenement doubtfull whether it be lay-fee or free-alms And of this see Bracton li. 4. sract 5. ca. 1. seq Britton ca. 95. The reason why these Writs be called assises may be divers First because they settle the possession and so an outward right in him that obtaineth by them Secondly they were originally sped and executed at a certain time and place formerly appointed For by the Norman law the time and place must be known forty days before the Iustices sate of them and by our Law there must be likewise fifteen daies of preparation except they be tryed in those standing Courts of the King in Westminster as appeareth by F. N. B. fo 177. d e. Lastly they may be called Assises because they are tryed most commonly by especial Courts set and appointed for the purpose as may be well proved not only out of the Customary of Normandy but our books also which shew that in antient times Iustices were appointed by special Commission to dispatch controversies of possession one or more in this or that only County as occasion fell out or disseisins were offered and that as well in Term time as out of Term whereas of later daies we see that all these Commissions of Assises of Eyr of Oyer and Terminer of Gaol-delivery and of Nisi prius are dispatched all at one time by two several Circuits in the year out of term and by such as have the greatest sway of Iustice being all of them either the Kings ordinary Iustices of his Benches Sergeants at the Law or such like Assise in the second signification according to Littleton is used for a Jury For to use his own example it is set down in the beginning of the Record of an Assise of novel disseisin assisa venit recognatura which is as much as to say as Juratores ven●unt recognituri The reason why the Iury is called an Assise he giveth to be this because by writ of Assise the Sheriff is commanded quod faciat duodecim liberos legales homines de viceneto c. Videre Tenementum illud nomina corum imbreviari quòd summoneat eos per bonas summonitiones quòd sint coram Justiciariis c. parati inde facere recognitionem c. This is as if he should have spoken shorter Metonymia effecti For they are called the Assises because they are summoned by vertue of the Writ so termed And yet the Iury summoned upon a Writ of right is likewise called the Assise as himself there confesseth Which writ of right is not an Assise but this may be said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or abusively so termed Assise in this signication is divided in magnam parvam Glanvile li. 2. c. 6 7 c. and Britton c. 12. where it appeareth wherein the great Assise differeth from the petit Assise whom I wish to be read by those who would be further instructed in this point For this place thus much in short The former four kinds of Assises used in actions only possessory be called petit assises in respect of the grand Assise For the Law of fees is grounded upon two rights one of possession the other of property and as the grand Assise serveth for the right of property so the petit assise serveth for the right of possession Horns mirror of Justices l. 2. c. de novel disseisin Assise in the third signification according to Littleton is an Ordinance or Statute as the Statute of bread and ale made anno 51 H. 3. is termed the assise of bread and ale assisa panis cervisiae Register orig fol. 279. b. The Assise of Clarendon
assisa de Clarendon whereby those that be accused of any hainous crime and not able to purge themselves by fire and water but must abjure the Realm had liberry of fourty daies to stay and try what succour they could get of their Friends towards their sustenance in exile Stawnf pl. cor fo 118. out of Bracton li. 3. tract 2. cap. 16. num 2. Of this also Roger Hoveden maketh mention and more particularly than any I have heard parte poster suorum annalium fo 313. b. in Henrico secundo Assise of the Forest assisa de Foresta which is a statute or condition touching orders to be observed in the Kings Forest Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws p. 35. Crompton in the Court of Justices of the Forest per totum fo 146. seq And the assise of the King anno 18. Edw. 1. Stat. 1. called the Statute for view of Frank-pledge And these be called assises because they set down and appoint a certain measure tate or order in the things which they concern Of Assise in this singnification doth Glanvile also speak lib. 9. c. 10. in fine Geraliter verum est quod de quolibet placito quod in comitatu deducitur terminatur misericordia quae inde provenit vicecomiti aebetur quae quanta sit per nullam assisam generalem determinadum est And thus much touching Littletons division But if we mark well the Writers of the Law we shall find this word assise more diversly used than this Author hath noted For it is sometime used for the measure or quantity it self and that per Metonymiam effecti because it is the very scantline described or commanded by the Ordinance as for example we say when Wheat c. is of this price then the bread c. shall be of this assise This word is further taken for the whole process in court upon the Writ of assise or for some part thereof as the issue or verdict of the Jury For example assises of new disseisin c. shall not be taken but in their shires and after this manner c. Mag. Char. c. 12. And so it seemeth to signifie Westm 2. cap. 25. an 13 Ed. 1. in these words let the Disseisour allege no false exceptions whereby the taking of the Assises may be deferred c. And anno 34 Ed. 1. Stat. 2. if it be found by assise the assise is arrained to aver by the assise the assise by their default shall pass against them and also anno 1 H. 6. c. 2. assises awarded by default of the Tenents c. Lastly by Merton cap. 4. an 20 Henry 3. certified by the assise quit by the assise c. And in this signification Glanvile calleth it magnam assisam domins regis quae ex duodecim ad minus legalium hominum sacramentis consistit li. 2. c. 7. Bracton useth it in like sort as assisa cadit in transgressionem lib. 4. c. 30. assisa cadit in perambnlationem eodem c. 31. num 2. Fleta defineth an assise in this signification thus Assisa in jure possessorio est quaedam recognitio duodecim hominum juratorum per quam Justicjarii certiorantur de articulis in brevi contentis And assise also thus signifying is said sometime to pass per modum assisae and sometime in modum juratae in manner of an assise when only the Dissesin in question is put to the tryal of the Twelve in manner of a Iury when as any exception is objected to disable the interest of the Disseisee and is put to be tryed by the Twelve before the assise can pass as for example Quaestio status causa successionis causa donationis pactum sive conditio vel conventio voluntas disimulatio transactio vel quistaclamatio vel remissio confirmatio sive consensus propria usurpatio rei propriae difficultas Judicii justum judicium finis chirographum intrusio in rem alienam vel disseisina si incontinenti rejiciatur negligentia quae per transitum temporis excludit actionem Fleta lib. 4. c. 10. § 1. whom read also to this point c. 11. § Si autem à domino and at large c. 16. ejusdem libri l. b. 5. c. 6. § Item vertitur assisa seq And note that assise in this signification is taken four waies Old nat br fol. 105. The first is assise at large which is taken as well upon other points as upon the disseisin For example where an Infant bringeth an assise and the deed of his Ancestor is pleaded whereby he claimeth his right or foundeth his title then the assise shall be taken at large that is the Jury shall enquire not only whether the Plaintiff were disseised or not by the Tenent but also of these two points viz. whether his ancestor were of full age of good memory and out of Prison when he made the Deed pleaded Another example out of Kitchin fol. 66. The Tenent pleadeth a forein release in bar to an assise whereupon the cause was adjourned At the day the Tenent maketh default Therefore the assise was taken at large that is not only whether the Plaintiff were disseised but also whether there be any forein release A third example you may read in Littleton c. Estates upon Condition The second manner of assise in point of assise assisa in modum assisae which is when the Tenent as it were setting foot to foot with the Demandant without farther circumstance pleadeth directly contrary to the Writ no wrong no disseisin The third manner is assise out of the point of assise assisa extra assisam velin modum jurata viz. when the Tenent allegeth some by exception that must be tryed by a Jury before the principal cause can proceed as if he plead a forein release or forein matter tryable in another County For in this case the Justices refer the Record to the Court of Common pleas for the Tryal of the Forein pleas before the disseisin can come to be decussed Of this sort read divers others examples in Bracton l. 4. parte 1. c. 34. For there be of them as he saith and Britten also c. 52. both dilatory and peremptory The fourth and last manner is Assise of right of dammages and that is when the Tenent confessing a putting out and referring it to a demurrer in Law whether it were rightly done or not is adjudged to have done wrong For then shall the Demandant have a Writ to recover dammages which is called assise to recover dammages as also the whole processe Assise is further taken for the Court place or time when and where the Writs and processes of the assise be handled or taken And in this signification assise is general as when the Justices pass their several Circuits every couple with their Commission to take all assises twice in the year For he that speaketh of any thing done at that time and in that place will commonly say that it was done at the general assise It may likewise
be speciall in this signification as if an especial Commission should be granted to certain as in antient times they often were Bracton lib. 3. c. 11. in fine for the taking of an assise upon one disseisin or two any thing done in the Court before them a man would say it was done at such an especial assise And in this very signification doth Glanvile use it lib. 9. c. 12. in these words Sicontra dominum suum non infra assisam tunc distringitur ●se occupator c. and lib. 13. cap. 32. in these words cùm quis itaque infra assisam domini regis i. infra tempus à domino rege de consilio procerum ad hoc constitutum quandoque majus quandoqne minus censetur alium injuste sine judicio disseisiverit c. Of this word Assise you may read in M● Skene de verbo signif de verbo Assise and by him understand that in Scotland also it is diversly used viz. in five several significations And touching the fifth signification he hath these words An Assise is called a certain number of men lawfully summoned received sworn and admitted to judge and discern in sundry civil causes like as Perambulations Cognitions Molestations pourpestrure division of Lands serving of Briefs and in all and sundry Criminal causes decided and tryed by an assise whereof there are two kinds one ordinarily in use which may be called a little assise of the number of 13 or 15 persons the other called a Great assise which consisteth of 25. Persons c. The rest is very worth the reading Assisa continuanda is a Writ directed to the Justices assigned to take an assise for the continuance of the cause in case where certain Records alleged cannot in time be procured by the party that would use it Reg. orig f. 217. Assisa praeroganda it is a Writ directed to the Justices of Assise for the stay of proceeding by reason of the Kings business wherein the party is imployed Register orig fo 208 and 221. Association associatio is a patent sent by the King either of his own motion or at the sure of the Plaintiff to Justices appointed to take assises of novel disseisin or of Oyer and Terminer c. to take others unto them as fellows collegues in that business The derivation is plain the examples and sundry uses hereof you may find in Fitzh nat br fol. 185. E. fo 111. B. but more particularly in the Reg. orig fol. 201 202 205 206 207 223 224. Assoile absolvere commeth of the French absouldre and signifieth to deliver or set free from an excommunication Stawnf pl. cor fol. 72. in words to this effect otherwise the Defendant should remain in Prison untill the Plaintiff were assoiled that is delivered from his excommunication Assumpsit is a voluntary promise made by word whereby a man assumeth or taketh upon him to perform or pay any thing unto another This word containeth any verbal promise made upon consideration which the Civilians express by divers words according to the nature of the promise calling it sometime pactum sometime sponsionem sometime promissionem pollicitationem or constitutum the word seemeth to be drawn from the Latine assumptio quae significat professionem l. π. ad municipalem AT Attache attachiare commeth of the French attacher i. figere nectere illigare defigere alligare In our Common law it signifieth to take or apprehend by Commandement or Writ And M. Lambert in his Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 16. maketh this difference between an Arrest and an Attachment that an arrest proceedeth out of lower Courts by Precept and an attachment out of higher Courts by Precept or Writ and that a Precept to arrest hath these formal words ducifacias c. and a Writ of attachment these words praecipimus tibi quòd attachies talem habeas cum coram nobis c. whereby it appeareth that he which arresteth carrieth the party arrested to another higher Person to be disposed of forthwith he that attacheth keepeth the Party attached and presenteth him in Court at the day assigned in attachment Yet I observe out of Master Kitchin that an attachment issueth out of a Court Baron which is a low Court cap. Attachment in Court Baron fol. 79. Another difference there is that an arrest lyeth only upon the body of a man and an attachment sometime upon his goods as shall be shewed in the sequel It may be likewise asked how an attachment and a capias do differ and how an attachment and a cape and an attachment and a Distress First that an attachment differeth from a capias it appeareth by Kitchin in these words fol. 79. Note that in a Court Baron a man shall be attached by his goods and a capias shall not go out thence whereby I gather that an attachment is more general taking hold of a mans goods and a capias of his body only Then an attachment differeth from a cape in this because a cape be it cape magnum or cape parvum taketh hold of immoveables as Lands or Tenements and are properly belonging to action real as you may gather out of their forms in Fitzh nat br whereas attachment hath rather place in Actions personal as Bracton plainly setteth down lib. 4. tract 4. cap. 5. num 3. Where nevertheless it appeareth that a cape may be likewise used in an Action personal An attachment as is formerly said taketh hold of moveable goods or the body For it appeareth by Kitchin fol. 263. that a man may be attached by an hundred Sheep Read Skene de verbo signif verbo Attachiamentum Now it followeth to shew how Attachment differeth from a Distress For so it doth as may be shewed out of Kitchin fol. 78. where he saith that Process in Court Baron is Summons Attachment and Distress our of the Old nat br fol. 27. where it is said that a Process in a quare impedit is Summons Attachment and one Distress and again fol. 28. where speaking of the Writ Ne admittas he saith thus And the Process is one prohibition and upon the prohibition an Attatchment or Distress and fol. 32. in a Writ of Indicavit you have these words And after the attachment returned the Distress shall go out of the Roles of the Justices Bracton on the other side l. 5. tract 3. c. 4. num 2. sheweth that both attachiamentum magnum cape districtiones sunt Of which opinion Fleta also is li. 5. ca. 24. § si autem aed. But there also he saith that attachiamentum est districtio personalis cape magnum districtio realis So that by his opinion districtio is genus to Attachment Britton in his 26 Chapter hath words to this effect But in Attachment of Felony there commeth no Distress otherwise than by the body And if the Sheriff return in the cases aforesaid that the Trespassours have nothing in his Bayliwick by the which they may be distreined it must be awarded that he
same to the best of his cunning wit and power and with allspeed and diligence from time to time at the calling of the Master to endeavor himself for the hearing determination indifferently of such matters and causes as depend before the Master not to take any gift or reward in any matter or cause depending in the Court or elsewhere wherein the King shall be party whereby the King shall be hurt hindred or dis-inherited to do to his power twit and cunning all and every thing that appertaineth to his office Atturney of the Court of the Dutchie of Lancaster Atturnatus curiae Ducatus Lancastriae is the second Officer in that Court and seemeth for his skill in law to be there placed as assessor to the Chancellor of that Court being for the most part some honorable man and chosen rather for some especial Trust reposed in him to deal between the King and his Tenents than for any great learning as was usual with the Emperors of Rome in the choice of their Magistrates Attournment attornamentum commeth of the French tourner i. vertere and in our Common law is an yielding of the Tenent to a new Lord or acknowledgement of him to be his Lord. For otherwise he that buyeth or obteineth any Lands or Tenements of another which are in the occupation of a third cannot get possession yet see the Statute anno 27 H. 8. cap. 16. The words used in Atturnment are set down in Littleton I agree me to the Grant made to you c. But more common Atturnment is to say Sir I atturn to you by force of the same Grant or I become your Tenent c. or else deliver unto the Grantee a pennie halfpenny or farthing by way of Attournment Littleton lib. 3. cap. Attournment 10. whom you may read more at large and find that this Definition proceedeth from more Law than Logick because he setteth down divers other Cases in the same Chapter whereto Attournment apperraineth as properlie as unto this But you may perceive there that Atttournment is the transposing of those Duties that the Tenent ought to his former Lord unto another as to his Lord and also that Attournment is either by word or by act c. Also attournment is voluntarie or else compulsorie by the Writ termed Per quae servitia Old nat br fol. 155. or sometime by Distresse Fitzh nat br fol. 147. Lastly Attournment may be made to the Lord himself or to his Steward in Court Kitchin fo 70. And there is attournment in deed and attournment in Law Coke vol. 6. fo 113. a. Attournment in Law is an Act which though it be no express Attournment yet in intendment of Law is all one Atturnato faciendo vel recipiendo is a Writ which a man owing sute to a County Hundred Wapen-take or other Court and desiring to make an Attourney to appear for him at the same Court whom he doubteth whether the Shetiff or Bailiff will admit or not for his Attourney there purchaseth to command him to receive such a man for his Attourney and admit his appearance by him The form and other circumstances whereof see in Fitzh nat br fo 156. AU Audiendo terminando is a Writ but more properlie termed a Commission directed to tertain persons when as any greater Assembly Insurrection or heinous Demeanour or Trespass is committed in any place for the appeasing and punishment thereof which you may read at large in Fitzh nat br fol. 110. See also Oyer Terminer Audience Court Curia audientiae Cantuariensis is a Court belonging to the Archbishop of Canterbury of equall authority with the Arches Court though inferiour both in dignitie and antiquity The original of this Court was because the Arch-bishop of Canterbury heard many Causes extrajudicially at home in his own Palace in which before he would finally determine any thing he did usually commit them to be discussed by certain learned men in the Civil and Canon laws whom thereupon be termed his Auditors And so in time it grew to one especial man who at this day is called Causarum negotiorumque audientiae Cantuariensis anditoriseu officialis And with this Office hath heretosore commonly been joined the Chancerie of the Arch-Bishop who medleth not in any point of contentious Jurisdiction that is deciding of Causes between party and party except such as are ventilated pro forma only as the confirmation of Bishops Elections or such like but only of Office and especially such as are voluntariae jurisdictionis as the granting of the custodie of the Spiritualities during the vacation of Bishopricks Institutions to Benefices dispencing with Banes of Matrimonie and such like But this is now distinguished in Person from the Audience Of this Audience Court you may read more in the Book intituled De antiquitate Ecclesiae Britannicae historia Audita querela is a Writ that lyeth against him who having taken the Bond called Statute-Merchant of another and craving or having obtained execution of the same at the Maior and Bailiffs hands before whom it was entered at the complaint of the party who entered the same upon suggestion of some just cause why execution should not begranted as a Release or other exception This Writ is granted by the Chaunceler of England upon view of the exception suggested to the Justices of the Common bank or of the Kings Bench willing them to grant Summons to the Sheriff of the Countie where the Creditour is for his appearance at a certain day before them See more in Old nat br fo 66. and Fitzh nat br fo 102. Auditour auditor commeth of the French auditeur and in our Law signifieth an Officer of the King or some other great Personage which yearlie by examining the Accounts of all under Officers accountable maketh up a general Book that sheweth the difference between their receipts or burthen and their allowarces commonly called allocations as namely the Auditours of the Exchequer take the accounts of those Receivors which receive the revenues of the Augmentation as also of the Sheriffs Escheatours Collectours and Customers and set them down and perfect them Him that will read more of this I referre to the Statute anno 33. H. 8. ca. 33. Auditors of the Prests are also officers in the Exchequer that do take and make up the great accounts of Ireland Barwick the Mint and of any money imprested to any man Auditour of the Receits is an officer of the Exchequer that fileth the Tellers bils and maketh an entry of them and giveth to the Lord Treasurer a certificate of the money received the week before He maketh also Debentures to every Teller before they pay any money and taketh their accounts He kepeth the Black book of the Receipts and the Treasurers key of the Treasury and seeth every Tellers monies locked up in the new Treasury Aventure is a mischance causing the death of a man without Felonie as when he is suddenly drowned or burnt by any sudden disease falling into the water
himself never quiet but at brawl with one or other To this effect you may read M. Lamb. Eirenarcha pa. 342. who saith likewise that barettor for so he writeth it may seem to come from the Latine baratro or balatro that is a vile knave or unthrift and by a metaphor a spot in a Common wealth See the statute of Champerty anno 33 Ed. 1. stat 2. cap. unico and West 1. ca. 32. an 3 Ed. 1. M. Skene de verè signif verbo barracrie saith that Barrators be Symonists called of the Italian word barrataria signifying corruption or bribery in a Judge giving a false sentence for money whom you may read more at large as also Hortensius Cavalcanus in his tractat de brachio rigio parte 5. nu 66. whose words are Barataria verò dicitur quando Judex aliquid petit indebitum ut justituam faciat Who also nu 195. part 5. saith thus barraterii appellantur qui praetorium nimis frequentant And in another place of the same work Barratria dicitur quia fit quoddam barratrum i. commutatio pecuniae cum justitia c. See also Aegidius Bossius in practica criminali titulo de officialibus corrupt c. nu 2. 6. Baratariam committunt Judices qui justitiam auro vendunt Paris Pateola de syndicatu verbo Barataria pa. 217. Barre fee is a fee of twenty pence that every prisoner acquitted of felony paieth to the Gaoler Crompt Justece of peace fo 158. b. Barrel is a measure of wine oyl c. containing the eighth part of a tunne the fourth of a Pipe and the second of a hogshead that is 31. gallons and a half anno 1 R. 3. cap. 13. But this vessel seemeth not to contain any certain quantity but differeth according to the liquor for a barrel of beer containeth 36. gallons the Kilderkin 18. and the Firkin 9. a barrel of ale 32. gallons the Kilderkin 16. and the firkin 8. gallons an 23 H. 8. c. 4. Barriers commeth of the French barres and signifieth with us that which the Frenchmen call jeu de barres i. palaestra●● a martial sport or exercise of men armed and fighting together with short swords within certain limits or lists whereby they are severed from the beholders Barter may seem to come of the French barater i. circumvenire It signifieth in our Statutes exchange of wares with wares anno 1 R. 3. ca. 9. and so bartry the substantive anno 13 Eliz. cap. 7. The reason may be because they that chop and change in this manner doe what they can for the most part one to over-reach the other See barratour Base estate is in true French bas estat It signifieth in our Common law that estate which base Tenents have in their lands Base Tenents be they as M. Lamberd saith in his explica of Saxon words verb. Paganus which do to their Lords villanous service The Author of the Terms of law in his Tractat of old Terms saith that to hold in fee base is to hold at the will of the Lord. Kitchin fol. 41. seemeth to make base tenure and franck to be contraries where it appeareth that he putteth Copy-holders in the number of base Tenents And out of these I think that it may be probably conjectured that every base Tenent holdeth at the wil of the Lord but yet that ther is a difference between a base estate and villenage which Fitzh in his nat br f. 12. B. C. seemeth co confound For the above-named Author of the Terms of law saith in the place before ciced that to hold in pure villenage is to doe all that the Lord will command him So that if a Copy-holder have but base estate he not holding by the performance of every commandement of his Lord cannot be said to hold in villenage Whether it may be said that Copy-holders be by custome and continuance of time grown out of that extreme servitude wherein they were first created I leave to others of better judgement but Fitz. loco citato saith tenure by Copie is a Term but lately invented Base Court is any Court that is not of record as the Court Baron Of this read Kitchin f. 95 96 c. Base fee See Base estate Baselard baslardus in the Statute an 12 R. 2. ca. 6. signifieth a weapon which M. Speight in his exposition upon Chawcer calleth pugionem vel sicam Bastard bastardus See Bastardy And See Skene de verbo signif verbo Bastardus Bastardy bastardia commech of the French bastard i. nothus Cassanaeus de consuetu Burg. pag. 1116 saith bastard and filius naturalis be all one Bastardy in our Common law signifieth a defect of birth objected to one begotout of wedlock Bract. l. 5. cap. 19 per totum How bastardy is to be proved or to be inquired into if it be pleaded see Rastals book of Entries tit Bastardy 104. f. Kitchin f. 64 maketh mention of Bastardy special and Barstardy general The difference of which is that Bastardy general is a Certificate from the Bishop of the Diocess to the Kings Justices after just inquity made that the party inquired of is a Bastard or not a Bastard upon some question of inheritance Bastatdy special is a sute commenced in the Kings Court against him that calleth another Bastard so termed as it seemeth because Bastardy is the principall and especiall case in trial and no inheritance contended for And by this it appeareth that in both these fignifications Bastardy is rather taken for an examination or triall whether a mans birth be defective or illegitimate than for Bastardy it self See Broke titulo Bastardy n. 29. and Doctor Ridlies book pa. 203 204. Baston is in French a staff club or coulstaff It signifieth in the Statutes of our Realm one of the Warden of the Fleet his servants or officers that attendeth the Kings Court with a red staff for the taking of such to ward as be committed by the Court. So it is used anno 1 R. 2. cap. 12. anno 5 Eliz. cap. 23. Batable ground seemeth to be the ground in question heretofore whether it belonged to England or Scotland lying between both the Kingdomes anno 23 H. 8. cap. 16. as if we should say debatable ground For by that name M. Skene de verbo sign verbo Plegius calleth ground that is in controversie between two Battel duellum commeth of the French battaile i. bellum praelium and signifieth in our Common law a tryal by combat The manner whereof because it is long and full of ceremonies I do for the better and more full understanding of it referre you to Glanvile lib. 2. cap. 3 4 5. to Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 21. fol. 140. to Britton cap. 22. and to S. Thomas Smith de repub Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 7. lib. 3. cap. 3. See Combat Battery commeth of the French batre i. verberare cudere percutere and signifieth in our Common law a violent striking of any man which the Civilians call injuriam
lawyers signifying him to whose use any other man is infeoffed in any Lands or Tenements See the new book of entries verbo uses and in Replevin fol. 508. colum 3. verbo Trespas fol. 606. fol. 123. a. b. colum 3. num 7. CH Chafe wax is an Officer in Chauncery that fitteth the wax for the sealing of the Writs such other instruments as are there made to be sent out This Officer is borrowed from the French For there calefactores cerae sunt qui regiis literis in Cancellaria ceram imprimunt Corasius Chase chacea commeth of the French chasser i. sectari belluas apros cervos It signifieth two things in the Common Law First as much as actus in the Civil law that is a driving of cattel to or from any place as to chase a distress to a fortlet Old nat br fol. 45. Secondly it is used for a receit for Deer and wild beasts of a middle nature between a Forest and a Park being commonly lesse than a Forest and not endued with so many liberties as the Courts of attachment Swain mote and Justice seat and yet of a larger compas and stored with greater diversity both of keepers and wild beasts or game than a park And Crompton in his book of Jurisdictions fol. 148. saith that a Forest cannot be in the hands of a subject but it forth with loseth the name and becommeth a chase and yet fol. 197. he saith that a subject may be lord and owner of a Forest which though it seem a contrariety yet be both his sayings in some sort true For the King may give or alienate a Forest to a subject yet so as when it is once in the subject it leeseth the true property of a Forest because that the Courts called the Justice seat the Swain more and Attachment forthwith do vanish none being able to make a Lord chief Justice in Eyr of the Forest but the King as M. Manwood well sheweth parte 2. of his Forest Lawes cap. 3. 4. And yet it may be granted in so large a manner that there may be Attachment and Swainmote and a Court equivalent to a Justice seat as appeareth by him in the same chapter num 3. So that a Chase differeth from a Forest in this because it may be in the hands of a subject which a Forest in his proper true nature cannot and from a Park in that that it is not inclosed hath not onely a larger compasse and more store of game but of Keepers also and Overseers See Forest Chale●ge calumnia cometh of the French chalenger i. sib● asserere is used in the Common law for an exception taken either against persons or things persons as in assise to the Jurors or any one or more of them or in a case of felony by the prisoner at the barre Smith de re● Angl. lib. 2. cap. 12. Briton cap. 52. Bracton lib. 2. tract 2. cap. 22. Against things as a declaration Old nat br fol. 76. Chalenge made to the Jurors is either made to the array or to the polles Chalenge to the array is when the whole number is excepted against as partially empaneled chalenge to or by the polle when some one or more are excepted against as not different Terms of the Law Chalenge to the Jurours is also divided into Chalenge principal and Chalenge per cause i. upon cause or reason Challenge principal otherwise by Stawnf pl. cor fol. 157. 158. called peremptorie is that which the Law alloweth without cause alleged or farther examination Lamberd Eirena lib. 4. cap. 14. as a prisoner at the barr arraigned upon felonie may peremptorily chalenge to the number of 20. one after another of the Jurie empaneled upon him alleging no cause but his own dislike and they shall be still put off and new taken in their places But in case of high treason no challenge peremptorie is allowed anno 33 H. 8. cap. 23. Fortescue saith that a prisoner in this case may challenge 35 men c. 27. but that law was abridged by anno 25 H. 8. cap. 3. I cannot here omit to note some difference that in mine opinion I observe between Chalenge principal and Chalenge peremptorie finding peremptorie to be used only in matters criminal and barely without cause alledged more than the prisoners own phantasie Stawnf pl. cor fol. 124. but principal in civil actions for the most part and with naming of some such cause of exception as being found true the law alloweth without farther scanning For example if either party say that one of the Jurors is the son brother cousin or tenent to the other or espoused his daughter this is exception good and strong enough if it be true without farther examination of the parties credit And how far this Chalenge upon children reacheth you have a notable example in Plowden casu Vernon against Manners fol. 425. Also in the plee of the death of a man and in every action real as also every action personal where the debt or dammages amount to 40 marks it is a good Chalenge to any man that he cannot dispend 40 shillings by the year of Free-hold anno 11 H. 7. cap. 21. and Terms of the Law verbo Chalenge The ground of this Chalenge you may see farther in Fleta lib. 4. cap. 8. Chalenge upon reason or cause is when the party doth allege some such exception against one or more of the Jurors as is not forthwith sufficient upon acknowledgement of the truth thereof but rather arbitrable and considerable by the rest of the Jurors as for example if the son of the Juror have married or espoused the daughter of the adverse party Terms of the Law ubi supra This Chalenge per cause seemed to be tearmed by Kitchin chalenge for favour fol. ●2 or rather Chalenge for favour is said there to be one species of Chalenge per cause where you may read what chalenges be commonly accounted principal and what not See the new book of Enteries verbo Chalenge and the Old nat br fol. 158. 159. That this word Chalenge is long sithence latined by the word calumnia appeareth by Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 18. lib. 4. tract 3. cap. 6. lib. 5. cap. 6. But I doubt Priscian will never forgive him that first strook this blow at him Of Chalenge you may farther read Fleta lib. 1. cap. 32. § Ad quem diem seq Chamberdekins are Irish beggers an 1 H. 5. c. 8. Chamberer is used for a Chamber-maid an 33 H. 8. cap. 21. Chamberlain camerarius vel camberlingus cometh of the French chambellan i. cubicularius vel praefectus cubiculi It is diversly used in our Cbronicles Laws and Statutes as Lord great Chamberlain of England Lord Chamberlain of the Kings house the Kings Chamberlain anno 13 Ed. 1. cap. 41. anno 17 R. 2. cap. 6. to whose office it especially appertaineth to look to the Kings chambers and wardrope and to govern the under ministers
to discontinew from their benefices for their particular service Chapiters capitula cometh of the French chapitre i. caput libri It signifieth in our Common law a summary or con ent of such matters as are to be inquired of or presented before Justices in Eyr Justices of Assise or of Peace in their sessions So it is used anno 3 Ed. 1. cap. 27. in these words and that no Clerk of any Justice Escheatour or Commissioner in Eyr shall take any thing for delivering chapiters but onely Clerks of Justices in their circuits and again anno 13 ejusdem cap. 10. in these words and when the time cometh the Sheriff shall certifie the Chapiters before the Justices in Eyr how many Writs he hath and what c. Britton likewise useth the same word in this signification cap. 3. Chapiters or capitula be now called articles most ordinarily and are delivered as well by the mouth of the Justice in his charge as by the Clerks in writing to the Enquest whereas in auncient times as appeareth by Bracton and Britton they were after an exhortation given by the Justices for the good observation of the laws and kings peace first read distinctly and openly in the whole Court and then delivered in writing to the grand Enquest And the same order doth M. Lamberd wish to be kept in these dayes also Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 4. pag. 393. Horn in his mirrour of Justices calieth them articles and expresseth what they were wont to contain lib. 3. cap. des articles in Eyr An example of these chapters or articles you have in the book of assises fol. 138. num 44. as also in Roger Hoveaen parte poster suorum annal i● Richardo primo fol. 423. Chapter capitulum signifieth in our Common law as in the Canon Law whence it is borrowed congregationem clericorum in ecclesia cathedrali conventuali regulari vel collegiata and in another signification locum in quo fiunt communes tractatus collegiatorum It hath other significations though not greatly worth the repeating in this place which you may read in Linwoods provincials glos in ca quia incontinentiae de constitutionibas verb. Capitulis Why this collegiat company should be called capitulum of the Canonists a man may make a question and for answer it may be said that it is metaphorically so termed the word originally signifying a little head For this company or corporation is a kind of head not onely to rule and govern the Diocesse in the vacation of the Bishoprick but also in many things to advise the Bishop when the See is full See Panormitan in ca. capitulum extrade rescriptis Charta perdonationis se defendendo is the form of a pardon for slaying another in a mans own defence Register original fol. 287. Charta perdonationis Utlagariae is the form of a pardon for a man that is out-lawed Regi orig fol. 288.388 Charter chartea cometh of the French chartres i. instrumenta It is taken in our law for written evidence of things done between man and man whereof Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 1. saith thus Fiunt aliquando donationes in scriptis sicut in chartis ad perpetuam rei memoriam propter brevē hominū vitā c. and a little after num 12. Et sciendum quòd chartarumalia regia alia privatorum regiarum alia privata alia cōmunis aliauniver salis Itemprivatorum alia de puro feoffamēto simplici alia de feoffamento conditionali sive conventionali secundùm omnia genera feoffamextorum fieri potest Item privatorum alia de recognitione pura vel conditionali Item aliam de qutete-clamantia Item alia de confirmatione c. and so through the chapter Briton likewise in his 39. chapter divideth Charters into the Charters of the King and Charters of private persons Charters of the King are those whereby the King passeth any grant to any person or more or to any body politick as a Charter of exemption that a man shall not be empaneled upon any Jury Kitchin fol. 114. fol. 177. Charter of pardon whereby a man is forgiven a felony or other offence committed against the Kings Crown and dignitie Broke tit Charter of pardon Charter of the Forest wherein the lawes of the forest are comprised anno 9 H. 3. Cromptons jurisd fol. 147. Pupilla oculi parte 5. cap. 22. Manwood parte 1. of his Forest laws fol. 1. where he setteth down the Charters of Canutus and fol. 17. where he hath set down that which was made anno 9 H. 3. with the Charter of the Forest which we use M. Skene saith that the laws of the Forest in Scotland do agree De verbo signif verbo Venison Charter of land Broke eodem titulo That which we call a Charter the Lombards in libris feudalibus call praeceptum praeceptionem Hotama verbo praeceptum in verbis feudalibus Of these Charters you have also along discourse in Fleta lib. 3. cap. 14. who expoundeth every substantial part of a deed of gift particularly in order Charter land terra per chartam is such as a man holdeth by Charter that is by evidence in writing otherwise called-Free hold anno 19 H. 7. cap. 13. and Kitchin fol. 86. and these in the Saxons time were wont to be called Bockland Idem fol. 89. and Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Terra ox Scripto which was held as he there saith with more commodious and easier conditions than Folkland was that is land held without writing And the season he giveth because that was haereditaria libera atque immunis whereas fundus sine scripto censum pensitab at annuum a que officiorum quadam servitute est obligatus Priorem viri plerumque nobiles atque ingenui posteriorem rustici ferè pagani possidebant Illam nos vulgò free-hold per chartam hanc ad voluntatem domini appellamus Thus farre M. Lamberd Charta partie charta partita is nothing but that which we call a pair of indentures containing the covenants and agreements made between Merchants or Sea-faring men touching their maritine affairs anno 32 H. 8. cap. 14. Chartis redd ndis is a Writ which lyeth against him that hath Charters of Feofment delivered him to be kept and refuseth to deliver them Old nat br fol. 66. Register orig fol. 159. Chase See Chace Chatel See Catel Chaunce medley Infortunium cometh of the French words chance i. lapsus and mester i. miscere It signifieth in our Common law the casual slaughter of a man not altogether without the fault of the slayer Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 8. calleth it homicide by misadventure West calleth it Homicide mixt part 2. symbol titulo Indictments sect 50. and there defineth it thus Homicide mixt is when the killers ignorance or negligence is joyned with the chance as if a man lop trees by an high way side by which many usually travel and cast down a bow not giving warning to take
that attend in their course and have their dyet at the Secretaries table More largely you may read of their office in the statute made anno 27 H. 8. cap. 11. Clerk of the privy seal clericus privati sigilli is an officer whereof there be four of number that attendeth the Lord Keeper of the privy Seal or if there be none such upon the principal Secretary writing and making out all things that be sent by warrant from the Signer to the privy Seal and are to be passed to the great Seal as also to make out as they are tearmed privy Seals upon any special occasion of his Majesties affairs as for loan of money and such like Of this officer and his function you may read the statute an 27 H. 8. cap. 11. He that is in these dayes called the Lord Keeper of the privy Seal seemeth in antient time to have been called Clerk of the privy Seal and to have been reckoned in the number of the great officers of the realm Read the statute anno 12 R. 2. cap. 11. Clerk of the Juries or Jurata writs clericus Juratorum is an Officer belonging to the Court of the Common plees which maketh out the Writs called Habeas corpora and Distringas for appearance of the Jury either in Court or at the Assises after that the Jury or Panel is returned upon the Venire facias He entreth also into the Rolles the awarding of these Writs and maketh all the continuance from the going out of the Habeas corpora until the verdict be given Clerck of the Pipe clericus Pipae is an Officer in the Kings Exchequer who having all accounts and debts due to the King delivered and drawn out of the Remembrancers offices chargeth them down into the great Roll who also writeth summons to the Sheriff to levy the said debts upon the goods and cattels of the Debtours and if they have no goods then doth he draw them down to the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer to write extreats against their Lands The antient renew of the Crown remaineth in charge before him and he seeth the same answered by the Fermers and Sheriffs to the King He maketh a charge to all Sheriffs of their summons of the Pipe and Green wax and seeth it answered upon their accounts He hath the drawing and ingrossing of all leases of the Kings land Clerk of the Hamper or Hanaper clericus Hanaperii is an Officer in Chauncery anno 2 Edw. 4. cap. 1. otherwise called Warden of the Hamper in the same statute whose function is to receive all the money due to the Kings Majesty for the seals of Charters Patents Commissions and Writs as also fees due to the Officers for enrolling and examining the same with such like He is tied to attendance on the Lord Chauncellour or Lord Keeper daily in the Term time and at all times of sealing having with him leather bagges wherein are put all Charters c. after they be sealed by the Lord Chancellour and those bagges being sealed up with the Lord Chauncellours private Seal are to be delivered to the Controller of the Hamper who upon receipt of them doth as you shal read in his office This Hanaper representeth a shadow of that which the Romans tearmed Fiscum that contained the Emperors treasure Clerk of the Plees clericus placitorum is an Officer in the Exchequer in whose office all the Officers of the Court upon especial privilege belonging unto them ought to sue or to be sued upon any action Clerk of the Treasury clericus the saurariae is an Officer belonging to the Common plees who hath the charge of keeping the records of the Court and maketh out all the records of Nisi prius hath the fees due for all searches and hath the certifying of all records into the Kings Bench when a Writ of Error is brought and maketh out all Writs of Supersedeas de non molestando which are granted for the Defendants while the Writ of Error hangeth Also he maketh all Exemplifications of Records being in the Treasurie He is taken to be the servant of the chief Justice and removeable at his pleasure whereas all other Officers are for tearm of life There is also a Secundary or Under-Clerk of the Treasurie for assistance which hath some allowances There is likewise an Underkeeper who alway keepeth one key of the Treasury door and the chief Clerk of the Secundary an other so the one cannot come in without the other Clerk of Essoines clericus essoniorum is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees who onely keepeth the Essoins rolle and hath for entring every essoin six pence and for every exception to barr the essoin in case where the party hath omitted his time six pence He hath also the providing of parchment and cutting it out into rolls and marking the numbers upon them and the delivery out of all the rolles to every Officer and the receiving of them again when they be written and the binding and making up of the whole bundles of every term and this he doth as servant to the chief Justice For the chief Justice is at charge for all the parchment of all the rolles Clerk of the outlawries clericus utlagariarum is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees being onely the servant or Deputy to the Kings Atturny general for making out the writs of capias utlaga●um after outlawry And the Kings Atturnies name is to every one of those writs And whereas seven pence is payd for the Seal of every other writ betwixt party and party there is but a penny payd for the Seal of this writ because it goeth out at the Kings sute Clerk of the sewers clericus suerarum is an officer appertaining to the Commissioners of sewers writing all things that they do by vertue of their commission for the which see Sewers and see the statute of anno 13 Elizab. cap. 9. Clerk controller of the Kings house whereof there be two is an officer in Court that hath place and seat in the Counting-house and authority to allow or disallow the charges and demands of persuivants or messengers of the Green cloath purveyours or other like He hath also the oversight and controlling of al defaults defects and miscarriages of any the inferiour officers and to sit in the Counting-house with the superior officers viz. the Lord Steward Treasurer Controller and Cofferer either for correcting or bettering things out of order and also for bringing in Countrey provision requisite for the Kings houshold and the censure for failing of carriages and carts warned and charged for that purpose This Officer you have mentioned an 33 H. 8. cap. 12. Clerk of the Nihils clericus Nihilorum is an officer in the Exchequer that maketh a roll of all such summes as are nihiled by the Sheriffs upon their estreats of green wax and delivereth the same into the lord Treasurers Remembrancer his office to have execution done upon it for the King Clerk of the check
of Court-roll This is the land that in the Saxons time was called Folk-land Lamberd explicat of Saxon words verbo Terra ex scripto West part prim symb l. 2. Sect. 646. defineth a Copy-holder thus Tenent by copie of Court-roll is he which is admitted Tenent of any lands or tenements within a Manor that time out of memory of man by use and custome of the said Manor have been demisable and demised to such as will take the same in Fee in Fee-tail for life years or at will according to the custome of the said Manor by copy of Court-roll of the same Manor where you may read more of these things Coraage coraagium is a kind of imposition extraordinary and growing upon some unusual occasion and it seemeth to be of certain measures of corn For corus tritici is a certain measure of corn Bracton libro 2. cap. 116. nu 6. who in the same Chapter num 8. hath of this matter these words Sunt etiam quaedam communes praestationes quae servitia non dicuntur nec de consuetisdine veniunt nisi cum necessitas intervenerit vel cùm rex venerit sicut sunt hidagia coraagia carvagia alia plura de necessitate ex consensu communi totius regni introducta quae ad dominum feudi non pertinent de quibus nullus tenetur tenentem suum acquietare nisi se ad hoc specialiter obligaverit in charta sua c. Cordiner cometh of the French Cordovannier i. sutor calcearius a Shoo-maker and is so used in divers Statutes as anno 3 H. 8. cap. 10. anno 5 ejusdem cap. 7. and others Cornage cornagium cometh of the French cor i. cornu and in our Common law signifieth a kind of grand seargancy the service of which tenure is to blow a horn when any invasion of the Northern enemy is perceived And by this many men hold their land Northward about the wall commonly called the Picts-wall Cambden Britan. pag. 609. hence cometh the word cornuare to blow a horn pupil oculi parte 5. cap. 22. in charta de Foresta This service seemeth to have proceeded from the Romans For I find cornicularios mentioned in the Civil law viz. lib. 1. Cod. de officio diverso Jud. 48. lege 3. lib. 12. tit de apparitoribus praefectorum praetorio 53. lege 1. 3. where Lucas de Penna defineth them eos qui cornu faciunt excubias militares And Brissonius lib. 3. de verbo significat faith thus of them hi militum quoddam genus fuere quicorniculo merebant unde nomen habent Where it appeareth by him out of Suetonius Plinie and Livie that the horn was an honour and reward given for service in war Corner-tile See Gutter-tile Corody corodium cometh of the Latine verb corrodo and signifieth in our Common Law a summe of money or allowance of meat and drink due to the King from an Abbey or other house of Religion whereof he is the founder toward the reasonable sustenance of such a one of his servants being put to his pensior as he thinketh good to bestow it on And the difference between a corrodie and a pension seemeth to be that a Corrody is allowed toward the main enauce of any the Kings servants that liveth in the Abbey a pension is given to one of the Kings Chaplains for his better maintenance in the Kings service until he may be provided of a benefice Of both these read Fitzh nat br fol. 230 231 233. who there setteth down all the Corrodies and pensions certain that any Abbey when they stood was bound to perform unto the King There is mention also of a Corrody in Stawn praerogative 44. And this seemeth to be an ancient law For in Westm 2. cap. 25. it is ordained that an Assise shall lie for a Corrody It is also apparent by the Statute anno 34. 35 H. 8. c. 16. that Corrodies belonged some time to Bishops from Monasteries and by the new Terms of law that a Corrody may be due to a common person by graunt from one to another or of common right to him that is founder of a Religious house not holden in frank almoyn For that Tenure was a discharge of all Corrodies in it self By which book it appeareth also that a Corrody is either certain or uncertain and that it may be for life years in Tail or in Fee Corodio habendo it is a Writ whereby to exact a Corrody of any Abbey or Religious house See Corodie see the Regist. orig fol. 264. Coronatore eligendo is a Writ which after the death or discharge of any Coroner is directed to the Shyreeve out of the Chancery to call together the Free-holders of the County for the choice of a new Coroner to certifie into the Chancerie both the election and the name of the party elected and to give him his oath See Westm 1. cap. 10. and Fitzh nat br fol. 163. and the Register orig fol. 177. Coroner coronator is an ancient Officer of this land so called because he dealeth wholly for the King and Crown There be four of them commonly in every County and they are chosen by the Free-holders of the same upon Writ and not made by Letters Patents Crompt Jurisd fol. 126. This Officer though now he be some inferiour Gentleman that hath some smattering in the Law yet if we look to the statute of Westm 1. cap. 10. we shall finde that he was wont and ought to be a sufficient man that is the most wise and discreet Knight that best will and may attend upon such an office Yea there is a Writ in the Register Nisi sit miles fol. 177. b. whereby it appeareth that it was sufficient cause to remove a Coroner chosen if he were not a Knight and had not a hundred shillings rent of Free-hold And the Lord Chief Justice of the Kings Bench is the Soveraign Coroner of the whole Realm in person i. wheresoever he remaineth libro assissarum fol. 49.5 coron Coke lib. 4. casu de Wardens c. of the Sadlers fol. 57. b. His office especially concerneth the Plees of the Crown But if you will read at large what anciently belonged unto him read Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 5. de officio coronatorum circa homicidium and cap. 6. de of sicio coronatoris in thesauris inventis and cap. 6. de officio coronatorum in raptu virginum and cap. 8. de officio coronatorum de pace plagis And Britton in his first Chapter where he handleth it at large Fleta also in his first book cap. 18. and A●drew Horns mirrour of Justices lib. 1. cap. del office del coroners But more aptly for the present times Stawnf pl. cor lib. 1. cap. 51. Note there be certain Coroners special within divers liberties as well as these ordinary officers in every Countie as the Coroner of the Verge which is a certain compasse about the Kings Court whom Crompton in his Jurisd
from the verb couvar i. tegere It is particularly applyed in our Common law to the estate and condition of a married woman who by the lawes of our Realm is in potestute viri and therefore disabled to contract with any to the prejudice of her self of her husband without his consent and privity or at the least without his allowance and confirmation Broke hoc tit per totum And Bracton saith that omnia quae sure uxorit sunt ipsius viri nec habet uxer potestatem sui sed vir L● 2. cap. 15. and that vir est caput mutieris li. 4. cap. 24. and again that in any law-matter sine viro respondere non potest li. 5. tract 2. cap. 3. and tract 5. cap. 23. ejusdem libri hee hath words to this effect Vir uxor sum quasi unica persona quia caro una sanguis unus Res licet sit propria uxoris vir tamen ejus custos cùm sit caput mulieris and lib. 1. cap. 10. nu 2. Uxores sunt sub virg a viri And if the husband alienate the wifes land during the mariage she cannot gainesay it during his life See Cui ante divortium and Cui in vita Covine covina is a deceitfull assent or agreement between two or more to the prejudice or hurt of another New terms of Law It commeth from the French verb convenancer i. depascisci or rather convenir i. convenire Coucher signifieth a Factour that continueth in some place or Countrey for trasique anno 37. Ed. 3. cap. 16. It is used also for the generall book into which any Corporation entreth their particular acts for a perpetuall remembrance of them Counte commeth of the French coumpte i. subductus computatio ratio or of emote i. warratio It signifieth as much as the original de claration in a process though more used in reall actions than personall as declaration is rather applyed to personall than reall Fitz. nat br fol. 16. A. 60. D. Pl. 71. A. 191. E. 217. A. Libellus with the Civilians comprehendeth both And yet count and declaration be confounded sometimes as Count in debt Kitchin fol. 281. count or declaration in appeal pl. cor fol. 78. Count in trespasse Britton ca. 26. Count in an action of Trespasse upon the case for a slander Kuchin fol. 252. This word seemeth to come from France and Normandy For in the grand Custumary ca. 64. I find Contours to be those which a man set teth to speak for him in court as advocates and cap. 63. Pledurs to be another sort of spokes-men in the nature of Atturneys for one that is himself present but suffereth another to tell his tale Where also in the 65. chapter Atturney is said to be he that dealeth for him that is absent See this text and glosse upon those 3. chapters Camntours by Horn in his Mirror of Justices li. 2. ca. Des loyers are Sergeants skilfull in the law of the Realm which serve the common people to pronounce and defend their actions in judgement for their fee when occasion requireth whose duty if it be as it is there described and were observed men might have much more comfort of the Law than they have Countenance seemeth to be used for credit or estimation Old nat br fo 111. in these words Also the attaint shall be granted to poor men that will swear that they have nothing whereof they may make Fine saving their countenance or to other by a reasonable Fine So is it used anno 1. Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 4. in these words Sheriffs shall charge the Kings debtors with as much as they may levie with their oaths without abating the Debtors countenance Counter computatorium seemeth to come of the Latine computare or the French counter For we use it for the name of a prison whereinto he that once slippeth is like to acconut ere he get out Counter-plee is compounded of two French words contre i. contra adversus and pleder i. causam agere it signifieth properly in our Common law a replication to ayde prier For when the Tenent by cour esie or in dower prayeth in ayde of the King or him in the teversion for his better defence or else if a stranger to the action begun desire to be received to say what he can for the safegard of his estate that which the demandant allegeth against this request why it should not be admitted is called a counter-plee See Broke tit And in this signification it is used anno 25. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 7. See also the new Termes of Law and the Statute anno 3. Ed. 1. cap. 39. County comitatus signifieth as much as Shire the one descending from the French the other from the Saxons both containing a circuit or portion of the Realm into the which the whole land is divided for the better government thereof and the more easie administration of justice So that there is no part of the Kingdome that lieth not within some County and every County is governed by a yearly officer whom we call a Sheriff which among other duties belonging to his office putteth in execution all the Commandements and Judgements of the Kings courts that are to be executed within that compasse Fortescue cap. 24. Of these Counties there be four of especiall mark which therefore are termed Counties Palatines as the Countie Palatine of Laucaster of Chester of Durham of Ely an 5. Eliz. 1. ca. 23. I read also of the Countie Palatine of Hexam an 33. H. 8. ca. 10. Unde quaere And this County Palatine is a Jurisdiction of so high a nature that whereas all Plees touching the life or mayhem of man called Plees of the Crown be ordinarily held and sped in the Kings name and cannot passe in the name of any other the chief governours of these by especial charter from the King did heretofore send out all writs in their own name and did all things touching Justice as absolutely as the Prince himself in other Counties only acknowledging him their Superiour and Soveraign But by the Statute anno 27. H. 8. ca. 25. this power is much abridged unto the which I refer the reader as also to Crom. Juris fol. 137. for the whole course of this court Besides these Counties of both sorts there be likewise Counties Corporate as appeareth by the Statute anno 3. Ed. 4 5. And these be certain Cities or antient Boroughs of the land upon which the Princes of our Nation have thought good to bestow such extraordinary liberties Of these the famous Citie of London is one and the principall York another an 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the City of Chester a third an 42. Eliz. cap. 15. Canterbury a fourth Lamb. Eire lib. 1. cap. 9. And to these may be added many more but I have only observed out of the statutes other writers the County of the Town of Kingston upon Hull anno 32. H. 8. cap. 13. the County of the Town of Haverford West
2. 14. Forein answer that is such an answer as is not triable in the County where it is made an 15. Han. 6. ca. 5. Forein service forinsecum servitium that is such service whereby a mean Lord holdeth over of another without the compasie of his own fee. Broke●titulo Tenur●● fo 251. num 12. et 28. et Kitchin fol. 209. or else that which a Tenent performeth either to his own Lord or to the Lord paramount one of the fee. For of these services Bracton speaketh thus lib. 2. cap. 16. n● 7. Item su●t quedam forvitia quae dicuntur forinsoca 〈◊〉 sunt in charta de feoff mento expressa et nominata et quae ideo dici possut forinfeca quia perti nent ad Dominum R●gem et non ad Dominum capitalem nisi cum in propria persona profectus fuerit in servi●i● volnisi cum pro servitio suo satisfecerit domina Regi quocu● que modo et fiunt 〈◊〉 certis temporibus cum casus et necessitas evene●it et varia habent nomina et divorsa Quando● enim vominantur fori●s●●a Largè sumpto vocabitlo quo ad sorvitium Domint Regis quandoque scutaginm quandoque servitium Domini Regis et ideo forinsecum dici potest quia st at capitur foris sive extra servitium quod fit Domino capitali v. Brooke Tavuras 28.95 Fore in service seemeth to be Knights service or Es●uage uncertain P●rkins Reservation 650. Forein attachment Attachiamentum forinsoeum is an attachment of foreiners goods found within a Liberty or City for the satisfaction of some Citised to whom the said foreiner oweth money Forein apposer forinsecarum oppositor is an officer in the Exchequer to whom all Sheriffs and Bayliffs doe repair by him to be opposed of their green waxe and from thence draweth down a charge upon the Sheriff and Bayliff to the Clerk or the pipe Forest foresta is a French word signifying a great or vast wood Lieu forestier et sauvage locus-sylvestris et saltuosus The writers upon the Common law define it thus Foresta est locus ubi ferae inhabitant vel includuntur Gloss in ca. cum dilecti extra de donatio et Felinus in cap. Rodulphus versu quid antem foresta extra de rescriptis speaketh to the same effect Some other writers doe say it is called foresta quasi ferarum statio vel tuta mansio ferarum But as it is taken with us M. Manwood in his second part of Forest Lawes ca. 1. nu 1. thus defineth it A forest is a certain territory of woody grounds and fruitfull pastures privileged for wilde beasts and fouls of forest chase and warren to rest and abide in in the safe protection of the King for his princely delight and pleasure which territory of ground so privlieged is meered and bounded with unremoveable markes meers and boundaries either known by matter of record or else prescription and also replenished with wild beasts of Venery or chase and with great coverts of vert for the succour of the said wilde beasts to have their aboad in for the preservation and continuance of which said place together with the vert and venison there are certain particular laws privileges and officers belonging to the same meet for that purpose that are only proper unto a Forest and not to any other place The same definition he hath parte 1. pa. 139. which though it have many superfluities yet it well expresseth the nature of the thing especially the explication adjoyned which there is set down by the said Author in both places in his first part pag. 16. where he fetcheth a forest from such overgrown antiquitie alleging for it the 2 book of Kin. ca. 2. ver 24. ca. 19. ver 23. and the 104 Psalm vers 20. the 131. vers 6. hee taketh license to sport himself for though our English translation have the word Forest to expresse the vastnesse of the desart yet if we look to the original idiome wee shall find no more reason to call those places forests than either chases or parks The manner of making forests as the same Author well setteth down parte 1. pag. 142. is this The King sendeth out his Commission under the broad Seal of England directed to certain discreet persons for the view perambulation meering and bounding of the place that he mindeth to afforest Which returned into the Chancery proclamation is made throughout all the shire where the ground lieth that none shall hunt or chase any manner of wild beasts within that precinct without the Kings speciall license after which he appointeth ordinances lawes officers fit for the preservation of the vert venison so becometh this a forest by matter of record The properties of a forest are these in speciall first a forest as it is truly strictly taken cannot be in the hands of any but the King the reason is given by M. Manwood because none hath power to grant commission to be a justice in Eire for the forest but the King par 1. pag. 87. The second property be the Courts as the Justice sent every three years the Swainmoot thrice every year Idem eod pag. 90. et parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. et 5. and the attachment once every forty dayes Idem eod pag. 92. The third property may be the officers belonging unto it for the preservation of the vert and venison as first the Justices of the forest the Warden or Keeper the Verders the Foresters Agistours Regarders Bayliffs Bedels and such like which you may see in their places See Manwood parte 2. ca. 1. nu 4. 5. But the chief property of a Forest both by Master Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. and Master Crompton pa. 146. is the Swainemore which as they both agree is no lesse incident unto it than the court of Pye owders to a Fair. Other Courts and Offices are not so requisite in those forests that are in the hands of subjects because they be not truly forests But if this fail then is there nothing of a forest remaining but it is turned into the nature of a Chace See Chace I read of thus many forests in England The forest of Windsor in Berkshire Cambd. B●it pag. 213. of Pickering Crompt 190. of Shirwood idem fol. 202. of Englewood in Cumberland an 4. Hen. 7. ca. 6. and Crompton fol. 42. of Lancaster idem fol. 196. of Wolmore Stowes Annals pa. 462. of Gillingham idem pa. 113. Knaresborow an 21. H. 8. c. 17. of waltham Cambd. pa. 328. of Breden idem pag. 176. of Whitehart idem p. 150. of Wiersdale idem pa. 589. Lownesall ibidem of Deane idem pa. 266 an 8. H. 6. c. 27. an 19. Hen. 7. ca. 8. of Saint Leonards in Southsex Manwood parte 1. pa. 144. of Waybridge and Sapler Idem codem pa. 63. of Whitvey pa. 81. Of Fekenham Camden pa. 441. of Rockingham idem pag. 396. Forest de la mer idem pag. 467. of
him to raise Hue and Crie or to make pursute after the offendour describing the party and shewing as neer as he can which way he is gone the Constable ought forthwith to call upon the Parish for ayde in seeking the felon and if he be not found there then to give the next Constable warning and he the next until the offendour be apprehended or at the least until he be thus pursued to the Sea side Of this read Bract. lib. 3. tract 2. ca. 5. Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. 2. cap. 20. and the statute anno 13 Ed. 1. statute of Winchest cap. 3. a. 28 Ed. 3. cap. 11. anno 27 Eliz. cap. 13. The Normans had such a pursute with a Crie after offenders as this is which they called Haro whereof you may read the Grand Customarie cap. 54. Some call it Harol the reason whereof they give to be this that there was a Duke of Normandy called Rol a man of great justice and severity against grievous offenders and that thereupon when they follow any in this pursute they cry Ha-Rol as if they should say Ah Rol where art thou that wert wont to redresse this or what wouldst thou do against these wretches if thou wert now living But in truth I think it cometh from Harier i. flagitare inquietare urgere Hue is used alone anno 4 Ed. pri stat 2. This the Scots call Huesium and M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Huesium saith that it cometh of the French Oyes i. Audite making one etymologie of this and the crie used before a Prolamation The maner of their Hue and crie she there describeth it is that if a robbery be done a horn is blown and an out-crie made after which if the party flie away and not yeeld himself to the Kings Bailiff he may be lawfully slain and hanged up upon the next gallows Of this Hue and Crie see Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 160. b. Huissers See Usher Hundred Hundredum is a part of a Shire so called originally because it contained ten tithings called in Latine Decennas These were first ordained by King Alfred the 29. King of the West Saxons Stows annal pag. 105. of these thus speaketh M. Lamb. in his Explic. of Saxon words verbo Centuria Aluredus rex ubi cum Guthruno Daco foedus inierat prudentissimum illud olim à Jethrone Moysi datum secutus consililium Angliam primus in satrapias Centurias Decurias partitus est Satrapiam Shire à shyran quod partiri significat nomin● vit Centuriam Hundred Decuriam Toothing sive Tienmantale i. Decemvirale collegium appellavit atque iisdem nominibus vel hodie vocantur c. And again afterward Decrevit tum porro Aluredus liberae ut conditionis quisque in Centuriam ascriberetur aliquam atque in Decemvirale aliquod conjiceretur collegium De minoribus negotiis Decuriones ut judicarent ac si quae esset res difficilior ad Centuriam deferrent difficilimas denique maximi momenti lites Senator et praepositus in frequenti illo ex omni satrapia cenvontu componerent Modus autem judicandi quis fuerit Ethelredus Rex legem quas frequenti apud Vanatingum senatu sancivit capite 4. hiis fere verbis exponit In singulis Centurits com●tia sunto atque liberae conditionis viri duodeni aetate superiores unà cum praeposito sacra tenentes juranto se adeo virum aliquem innocentem haud damnaturos sontemve absoluturos This form of dividing Counties into Hundreds for better Government howsoever it is attributed to king Alfred here with us yet he had it from Germany whence hee and his came hither For there Genta or Centena is a jurisdiction over a hundred towns and containeth the punishment of Capital crimes Andraeus Kitchin in his tractat de sublimi regio territorii jure cap. 4 pag. 123. where he also sheweth out of Tacitus de situ et moribus Germa that this division was usuall amongst the Germans before his dayes By this you understand the original and old use of Hundreds which hold still in name and remain in some sort of combination for their severall services in divers respects but their jurisdiction is abolished and grown to the County Court some few excepted which have been by privilege annexed to the Crown or granted unto some great subject and so remain still in the nature of a Franchise And this hath been ever sithence the Statute anno 14 Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 9. whereby these Hundred Courts formerly fermed out by the Sheriff to other men were reduced all or the most part to the County Court and so have and doe remain at this present So that where you read now of any Hundred Courts you must know that they be severall franchises wherein the Sheriff hath not to deal by his ordinary authority except they of the Hundred refuse to doe their office See West parte 1. symbol lib. 2. Sect. 288. See Turn The new expounder of Law terms saith that the Latine Hundredum is sometime used for an immunitie or privilege whereby a man is quit of money or customes due to the Governour or hundreders Hundreders Hundredarii be men impaneled or fit to be empaneled of a Jurie upon any Controversie dwelling within the Hundred wher the land lieth which is in question Cromptons Jurisd fol. 217. anno 35 Henrici 8. ca. 6. It signifieth also him that hath the jurisdiction of a Hundred and holdeth the Hundred Court anno 13 Ed. pri cap. 38. an 9 Ed. 2. stat 2. an 2. Ed. 3. cap. 4. and sometime is used for the Bailiff of an Hundred Horn in his mirrour of Justices lib. 1. ca. del office del coroner Hundred laghe signifieth the Hundred Court from the which all the officers of the Kings Forest were freed by the Charter of Canurus ca. 9. Mannwood parte 1. pag. 2. Huers See Conders Huseans commeth of the French houseaux i. ocrea a boot it is used in the Statute an 4. Ed. 4. cap. 7. Hustings Hustingum may seem to come from the French Haulser i. tollere attollere suberigere for it signifieth the principall and highest Court in London anno 11 H. 7. cap. 21. et Fitz. nat br fol. 23. See anno 9 Ed. pri cap. unico Other Cities and Towns also have had a Court of the same name as Winchester Lincolne York and Sheppey and others where the Barons or Citizens have a Record of such things as are determinable before them Fleta libro 2. cap. 55. Husfastne is he that houldeth house and land Bract. lib. 3. tra 2. ca. 10. His words be these Et in franco plegio esse debet omnis qui terram tenet et domum qui dicuntur Hustfastene et etiam alii qui illis deserviunt qui dicuntur Folgheres c. IA IArrock an 1. R. 3. ca. 8. is a kind of cork so called ID Identitate nominis is a writ that lyeth for him who is upon a Capias
joyntly to the Husband and the Wife and after to the Heirs of their bodies whereby the Husband and Wife be made joynt tenants during the coverture Coke lib. 3. Butler and Bakers case f. 27. b. See Frank mariage Joynture is also used as the abstract of Joynt tenants Coke lib. 3. the Marquess of Winchesters Case fol. 3. a. b. Junctura is also by Bracton and Fleta used for joyning of one bargain to another Fleta lib. 2. cap. 60. touching the self-same thing and therefore joynture in the first signification may be so called in respect that it is a bargain of livelihood for the wife adjoyned to the contract of mariage Journ Choppers anno 8 Hen. 6. cap. 5. be regraters of yarn Whether that we now call yarn were in those daies called journ I cannot say but Choppers in these dayes are well known to be changers as choppers of Churches c. Journeyman commeth of the French Journee that is a day or dayes work which argueth that they were called Journeymen that wrought with others by the day though now by Statute it be extended to those likewise that covenant to work in their occupation with another by the year anno quinto Elizabeth cap. quarto IS Issue Exitus commeth of the French Issir i. emanare or the Substantive Issue i. exitus eventus It hath divers applications in the common Law sometime being used for the children begotten between a man and his wife sometime for profits growing from an amercement or fine or expences of sute sometime for profits of lands or tenements West 2. anno 13. Edw. prim cap. 39. sometime for that point of matter depending in sute whereupon the parties joyn and put their cause to the trial of the Jury and in all these it hath but one signification which is an effect of a cause proceeding as the children be the effect of the mariage between the Parents the profits growing to the King or Lord from the punishment of any mans offence is the effect of his transgression the point referred to the trial of twelve men is the effect of pleading or processe Issue in this last signification is either general or special General issue seemeth to be that whereby it is referred to the Jury to bring in their verdict whether the Defendant have done any such thing as the Plaintiff layeth to his charge For example if it be an offence against any Statute and the Defendant plead not culpable this being put to the Jury is called the General issue and if a man complain of a private wrong which the Defendant denieth and pleads no wrong nor disseisin and this be referred to the 12. it is likewise the General issue Kitchin fol. 225. See the Doctor and Student fol. 158. b. The Special issue then must be that where special matter being alleged by the Defendant for his defence both the parties joyn thereupon and so grow rather to a Demurrer if it be quaestio Juris or to tryal by the Jury if it be quaestio facti See the new Book of Entries verbo Issue JU Juncture See Joynture Jure patronatus See the new Book of Entries verbo Jure patronatus in quare impedit fol. 465. col 3. Jurie Jurata commeth of the French Jurer i. jurare it signifieth in our Common law a company of men as 24. or 12. sworn to deliver a truth upon such evidence as shall be delivered them touching the matter in question Of which trial who may and who may not be empanelled see Fitzh nat brev fol. 165. D. And for better understanding of this point it is to be known that there be three manner of trials in England one by Parliament another by Battel and the third by Assize or Jury Smith de Repub. Anglorum lib. 2. cap. 5 6 7. touching the two former read him and see Battel and Combat and Parliament the trial by Assise be the action civil or criminal publike or private personal or real is referred for the fact to a Jury and as they find it so passeth the Judgement and the great favour that by this the King sheweth to his Subjects more than the Princes of other Nations you may read in Glanvil lib. 2. cap. 7. where he called it Regale beneficium clement is principis de consilio procerum populis indultum quo vitae hominum Status integritats tam salubriter consulitur ut in jure quod quis in libero soli tenemento possidet retinendo duelli casum declinare possint homines ambiguum c. see the rest This Iury is not used only in Circuits of Justices Errant but also in other Courts and matters of Office as if the Escheatour make inquisition in any thing touching his Office he doth it by Jury or Inquest if the Coroner inquire how a subject found dead came to his end he useth an Inquest the Justices of Peace in their Quarter Sessions the Sheriff in his County and Turn the Bayliff of a Hundred the Steward of a Court Leet or Court Baron if they inquire of any offence or decide any cause between party and party they doe it by the same manner So that where it is said that all things be triable by Parliament Battel or Assise Assise in this place is taken for a Jury or Enquest empanelled upon any cause in a Court where this kind of trial is used and though it be commonly deemed that this custom of ending and deciding causes proceed from the Saxons and Britons and was of favour permitted unto us by the Conquerour yet I find by the grand Customarie of Normandy cap. 24. that this course was used likewise in that Country For Assise is in that Chapter defined to be an assembly of wise men with the Bayliff in a place certain at a time assigned forty dayes before whereby Justice may be done in causes heard in the Court. Of this custom also and those Knights of Normandie Johannes Faber maketh mention in the Rubrique of the Title de militari testamento in Institut this Jury though it appertain to most Courts of the Common law yet is it most notorious in the half-year Courts of the Justices errants commonly called the great Assises and in the quarter Sessions and in them it is most ordinarily called a Jury And that in civil causes whereas in other Courts it is oftener termed an Enquest and in the Court Baron the Homage In the general Assise there are usually many Juries because there be store of causes both civil and criminal comonly to be tried whereof one is called the Grand Jury and the rest Petit Juries whereof it seemeth there should be one for every Hundred Lamb. Eirenar lib. 4. cap. 3. pag. 384. The Grand Jury consisteth ordinarily of 24. grave and substantial Gentlemen or some of them Yeomen chosen indifferently out of the whole Shire by the Sheriff to consider of all Bils of Inditement preferred to the Court which they doe either approve by writing upon them these
quod constituimus vos Justiciarium nostrum capitalem ad placita coram nobis terminandum durante bene-placito nostro Teste c. And Bracton in the place now recited speaking of the Common Plees saith that Sine Warranto jurisdictionem non habet which I think is to be understood of a Commission under the great Seal This Court was first called the Kings Bench because the King sat as Judge in it in his proper Person and it was moveable with the Court. See anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. More of the jurisdiction of this Court see in Crompton ubi supra See Kings Bench. The oath of the Justices see in the Statute anno 18 Edw. 3. stat 4. See Oatb Justice of common plees Justiciarius communium placitorum is also a Lord by his Office and is called Dominus Justiciarius communium placitorum and he with his assistants originally did hear and determine all causes at the Common law that is all civil causes between common persons as well personal as real for which cause it was called the Court of Common Plees in opposition to the Plees of the Crown or the Kings Plees which are special and appertaining to him only Of this and the Jurisdiction hereof see Cromptons jurisdiction fol. 91. This Court was alwayes setled in a place as appeareth by the Statute anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. The oath of this Justice and his Associates see anno 18 Edw. 3. Stat. 4. See Oath Justice of the Forest Justiciarius Forestae is also a Lord by his Office and hath the hearing and determining of all offences within the Kings Forest committed against Venison or Vert of these there be two whereof the one hath jurisdiction over all the Forests on this side Trent the other of all beyond The chiefest point of their Jurisdiction consisteth upon the articles of the Kings Charter called Charta de Foresta made anno 9 H. 3. which was by the Barons hardly drawn from him to the mitigation of over cruel ordinances made by his predecessors Read M. Camdens Brit. pag. 214. See Protoforestarius The Court where this Justice sitteth and determineth is called the Justice seat of the Forest held every three years once whereof you may read your fill in M. Manwoods first part of Forest lawes pag. 121. 154. pag. 76. He is sometimes called Justice in Eyre of the Forest See the reason in Justice in Eyre This is the only Justice that may appoint a Deputy per statutum anno 32 H. 8. cap. 35. Justices of Assise Justiciarii ad capiendas Assisas are such as were wont by special Commission to be sent as occasion was offered into this or that County to take Assises the ground of which polity was the ease of the Subjects For whereas these actions passe alway by Jury so many men might not without great hinderance be brought to London and therefore Justices for this purpose were by Commission particularly authorised and sent down to them And it may seem that the Justices of the Common Plees had no power to deal in this kind of businesse until the statute made anno 8 Richard 2. cap. 2. for by that they are enabled to take Assises and to deliver Gaols And the Justices of the kings Bench have by that Statute such power affirmed unto them as they had one hundred years before that Time hath taught by experience that the better sort of Lawyers being fittest both to judge and to plead may hardly be spared in term time to ride into the Countrey about such businesse and therefore of later years it is come to passe that these commissions ad capiendas Assisas are driven to these two times in the year out of term when the Justices and other may be at leasure for these Controversies also wherupon it is also fallen out that the matters wont to be heard by more general Commission of Justices in Eyr are heard all at one time with these Assises which was not so of old as appeareth by Bracton l. 3. c. 7. 2. nu Habet etiam Justiciarios itinerantes de Comitatu in Comitatum quandoque adomnia placita quandoque ad quaedam specialia sicut Assisas c. et ad Gaolas deliberandas quandoque ad unicam vel duas non plures And by this means the Justices of both Benches being justly to be accounted the fittest of all others others their Assistants as also the Sergeant at law may be imployed in these affaires who as gravest in years so are they ripest in judgement and therefore likest to be void of partiality for being called to this dignity they give over practice anno 8 R. 2. cap. 3. but this alway to be remembred that neither Justice of either Bench nor any other may be Justice of Assise in his own Countrey anno 8 R. 2. cap. 2. anno 33 H. 8. cap. 24. Lastly note that in these dayes though the self same men disparch businesse of so divers natures and all at one time which were wont to be performed by divers and at severall times yet they doe it by several commissions Cromptons jurisdictions fol. 210. For those who be in one word called Justices of Circuit and twice every year passe by two and two through all England have one Commission to take Assises another to deliver Gaols another of Oyer and Terminer That Justices of Assise and Justices in Eyre did antiently differ it appeareth anno 27 Ed. 3. cap. 5. and that Justices of Assise and Justices of Gaol delivery were divers it is evident by anno 4 Ed. 3. cap. 3. The oath taken by Justices of Assise is all one with the oath taken by the Justices of the Kings Bench. Old abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacramentum Justiciariorum See Oath Justices of Oyer and Terminer Justiciarii ad audi●ndum Terminandum were Justices deputed upon some especial or extraordinary occasion to hear and deter mine some or more causes Fitzherbert in his natura brevium saith that the Commission a'Oyer and Terminer is directed to certain persons upon any great assembly insurrections hainous demeanure or trespasse committed And because the occasion of granting this commission should be maturely weighed is provided by the Statute anno 2 Ed. 3. cap. 2. that no such commission ought to be granted but that they shall be dispatched before the Justices of the one Bench or other or Justices errants except for horrible trespasses and that by the special favour of the King The form of this commission see in Fitzh natur brev fol. 110. Justices in Eyre Justiciarii itinerantes are so termed of the French Erre i. iter which is an old word as a grand erre i. magnis itineribus proverbially spoken the use of these in antient time was to send them with Commission into divers Counties to hear such causes especially as were termed the Plees of the Crown and therefore I must imagine they were so sent abroad for the ease of the Subjects who must else have been
of summs under forty shillings Crompton fol. 231. agreeth with him It is called a Justicies because it is a commission to the Sheriff ad Justiciandam aliquem to doe a man right and requireth no return of any certificate of what he hath done Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 13. num 2. maketh mention of a Justicies to the Sheriff of London in a case of Dower See the new book of Entries Justicies Justification Justificatio is an upholding or shewing a good reason in Court why he did such a thing as he is called to answer as to Justifie in a cause of Replevin Broke titulo Replevin KE KEeper of the great Seal Custos Magni Sigilli is a Lord by his Office and called Lord-Keeper of the great Seal of England c. and is of the Kings privy Councel under whose hands pass all Charters Commissions and Grants of the King strengthened by the great or broad Seal Without the which Seal all such Instruments by Law are of no force for the King is in interpretation and intendment of Law a Corporation and therefore passeth nothing firmly but under the said Seal This Lord Keeper by the Statute anno 5 Eliz. cap. 18. hath the same and the like place authority preheminence Jurisdiction execution of Laws and all other Customes Commodities and advantages as hath the Lord Chancellor of England for the time being Keeper of the privy Seal Custos privati Sigilli is a Lord by his Office under whose hands pass all Charters signed by the Prince before they come to the broad or great Seal of England He is also of the Kings privy Councell He seemeth to be called Clerk of the privy Seal anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 11. But of late daies I have known none to bear this Office by reason the Prince thinketh good rather to keep his Seal in his own hands and by private trust to commit it to his principal Secretary or some such one of his Councel as he thinketh fit for that function Keeper of the Touch anno 2 H. 6. cap. 14. seemeth to be that Officer in the Kings Mint which at this day is termed the Master of the Assay See Mint Keeper of the Forest Custos Forestae is also called Chief Warden of the Forest Manwood parte prim of his Forest laws pag. 156. c. and hath the principal government of all things belonging thereunto as also the check of all Officers belonging to the Forest And the Lord Chief Justice in Eyr of the Forest when it pleaseth him to keep his Justice Seat doth forty daies before send out his general Summons to him for the warning of all under Officers to appear before him at a day assigned in the Summons This see in Manwood ubi supra KI King Rex is thought by M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 105. to be contracted of the Saxon word Cyninge signifying him that hath the highest power and absolute rule over our whole Land and thereupon the King is in intendment of Law cleared of those defects that Common persons be subject unto For he is alwaies supposed to be of full age though he be in years never so young Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 134. Kitchin fol. 1. He is taken as not subject unto death but is a Corporation in himself that liveth ever Crompton ibidem Thirdly he is above the Law by his absolute power Bracton lib. 1. cap. 8. Kitchin fol. 1. And though for the better and equal course in making Laws he do admit the three Estates that is Lords Spiritual Lords Temporal and the Commons unto Counsel yet this in divers learned mens opinions is not of constraint but of his own benignity or by reason of his promise made upon oath at the time of his Coronation For otherwise were he a Subject after a sort and subordinate which may not be thought without breach of duty and loyalty For then must we deny him to be above the Law and to have no power of dispersing with any positive law or of granting especial Privileges and Charters unto any which is his only and clear right as Sir Thomas Smith well expresseth lib. 1. cap. 3. de Repub. Anglica and Bracton lib. 2. cap. 16. num 3. and Britton ca. 39. For he pardoneth life and limme to Offendors against his Crown and Dignity except such as he bindeth himself by Oath not to forgive Stawnf pl. Cor. l. 2. ca. 35. And Habet omnia jura in manu sua Bracton l. 2. c. 24. nu 1. And though at his Coronation he take an Oath not to alter the laws of the Land yet this Oath notwithstanding he may alter or suspend any particular Law that seemeth hurtfull to the publique Estate Blackwood in Apologia Regum cap. 11. See Oath of the King Thus much in short because I have heard some to be of opinion That the Laws be above the King But the Kings Oath of old you may see in Bracton lib. 3. cap. 9. nu 2. for the which look in Oath of the King The Kings Oath in English you may see in the old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Sacram. Regis Fourthly the Kings only Testimony of any thing done in his presence is of as high nature and credit as any Record Whence it commeth that in all Writs or Precepts sent out for the dispatch of Justice he useth none other Witness but himself alwaies using these words under it Teste me ipso Lastly he hath in the right of his Crown many Prerogatives above any common person be he never so potent or honorable whereof you may read you fill in Stawnfords Tractate upon the Statute thereof made anno 17 Ed. 2. though that contain not all by a great number What the Kings power is read in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 24. nu pri 2. King of Heralds Rex Haraldorum is an Officer at Armes that hath the preeminence of this Society See Herald This officer of the Romans was called Pater Patratus Kings Bench Bancus Regius is the Court or Judgement Seat where the King of England was wont to sit in his own person and therefore was it moveable with the Court or Kings houshold And called Curia Domini Regis or Aula R●gia as Master Gwin reporteth in the Preface to his Readings and that in that and the Exchequer which were the only Courts of the King untill Henry the Thirds dayes were handled all matters of Justice as well Civil as Criminal whereas the Court of Common Plees might not be so by the Statute anno 9 H. 3. cap. 11. or rather by Master Gwins opinion was presently upon the grant of the great Charter severally erected This Court of the Kings bench was wont in ancient times to be especially exercised in all Criminal matters and Plees of the Crown leaving the handling of private contracts to the County Court Glanvil lib. 1. cap. 2 3 4 lib. 10. cap. 18. Smith de Repub. Anglicana lib. 2. cap. 11. and hath President of it the Lord
Chief Justice of England with three or four Justices assistants four or five as Fortescue saith cap. 51. and Officers thereunto belonging the Clerk of the crown a Praenatory or Protonotary and other six inferior Ministers or Atturneys Camb. Britan. pag. 112. See Latitat How long this Court was moveable I find not in any Writer But in Brittons time who wrot in K. Ed. the 1. his dayes it appeareth it followed the Court as M. Gwin in his said preface well observeth out of him See Justice of the Kings Bench. Kings silver is properly that money which is due to the King in the court of Common Plees in respect of a licence there granted to any man for passing a fine Coke vol. 6. fol. 39. a. 43. b. Kintall of woad iron c. is a certain waight of Merchandize to the value of an hundred or somthing under or over acording to the divers uses of sundry nations This word is mentioned by Plowden in the case of Reniger Fogassa KN Knave is used for a man-servant anno 14 Edward 3. stat 1. ca. 3. and by M. Verstigans judgement in his restitution of decayed intelligence ca. 10. is borrowed of the Dutch enapa cnave or knave which signifie all one thing And that is some kind of officer or servant as scild-knapa was he that bore the weaon or shield of his superiour whom the Latins call Armigerum and the Frenchmen Escuyer Knight miles is almost one with the Saxon Cnight i. administer and by M. Camdens judgement pag. 110. derived from the same With us it signifieth a Gentleman or one that beareth arms that for his vertue and especially martiall prowesse is by the King or one having the Kings authority singled as it were from the ordinary sort of Gentlemen and raised to a higher account or step of dignity This among all other Nations hath his name from the horse because they were wont in antient time to serve in warres on horseback The Romans called them Equites The Italians at these dayes term them Cavallieri The Frenchmen Chevalliers The German Reiters The Spaniard Gavellaros or Varones à Cavallo It appeareth by the Statute anno 1 Ed. 2. cap. 1. that in antient times Gentlemen having a full Knights fee and holding their land by Knights service of the King or other great person might be urged by distress to procure himself to be made knight when he came to mans estate for the answerable service of his Lord in the kings wars To which point you may also read M. Camden in his Britann pag. 111. But these customs be not now much urged this dignity in these dayes being rather of favour bestowed by the Prince upon the worthier sort of Gentlemen than urged by constraint The manner of making knights for the dignitie is not hereditarie M. Camden in his Britan. pag. 111. shortly expresseth in these words Nostris verò temporibus qui Equestrem dignitatem suscipit flexis genibus educto g'adio leviter in humero percutitur Princeps his verbis Gallicè affatur Sus vel sois Chevalier au nom de Dieu id est Surge aut Sis eques in nomine Dei The Solemnity of making knights among the Saxons M. Stow mentioneth in his Annals pag. 159. See the privileges belonging to a Rnight in Ferns Glorie of Generosity pag. 116. Of these Knights there be two sorts one Spiritual another Temporal Cassanaus in gloria mundi parte 9. Considerat 2. of both these sorts and of many subdivisions read him in that whole part The Temporal or second sort of Knights M. Fern in his Glory of generosity pag. 103. maketh threefold here with us Knights of the Sword Knights of the Bath and Knights of the Soverain Order that is of the Garter of all which you may read what he saith I must remember that mine intent is but to explain the terms especially of our common Law Wherefore such as I find mentioned in Statutes I will define as I can M. Skene de verbor significat verbo Milites saith that in the antient Laws of Scotland Freeholders were called Milities which may seem to have been a custom with us also by divers places in Bracton who saith that Knights must be in Juries which turn Freeholders do serve Knights of the Garter Equites Garterii are an Order of Knights created by Edward the third after hee had obtained many notable victories King John of France and King James of Scotland being both his prisoners together and Henry of Castile the Bastard expulsed out of his Realm and Don pedro being restored unto it by the Prince of Wales and Duke of Aquitane called the Black Prince who for furnishing of this Honourable Order made a choice out of his own Realm and all Christendome of the best and most excellent renowned Knights in Vertues and Honour bestowing this dignity upon them and giving them a Blew Garter decked with Gold Pearl and precious Stones and a Buckle of Gold to wear daily on the left legge only a Kirtle Crown Cloak Chaperon a Coller and other stately and magnifical apparel both of stuff and fashion exquisite and heroical to wear at high Feasts as to so high and Princely an Order was meer Of which order he and his successours Kings of England were ordained to be the Soveraigns and the rest fellows and brethren to the number of twentie six Smith de Repub. Anglo lib. prim cap. 20. I have seen an antient monument whereby I am taught that this Honorable Company is a College or a Corporation having a Common Seal belonging unto it and consisting of a Soveraign Gardian which is the King of England that alwayes governs this order by himself or his Deputy of twenty five Companions called Knights of the Garter of fourteen secular Chanons that be Priests or must be within one year after their admission 13. Vicars also Priests and 26. poor Knights that have no other sustenance or means of living but the allowance of this house which is given them in respect of their daily Prayer to the Honour of God and according to the course of those times of Saint George There be also certain officers belonging to this order as namely the Prelate of the Garter which office is inherent to the Bishop of Winchester for the time being the Chancellor of the Garter the Register who is alwaies Dean of Windsor The principal King at Armes called Garter whose chief function is to mannage and marshal their Solemnities at their yearly Feasts and installations Lastly the Usher of the Garter which as I have heard belongeth to an Usher of the Princes Chamber called Blacke rod. There are also certain ordinances or Constitutions belonging unto this Society with certain forfeitures and sometime penances for the breakers of them which constitutions concern either the Solemnities of making these Knights or their duties after their creation or the Privileges belonging to so high an order but are too large for the nature of this poor Vocabularie
portionis is a Writ that lyeth for a joint renent or renent in Common that is distreyned for more rent than the proportion of the Land commeth unto Reg. orig fol. 182. b. OP Open Law Lex manifesta Lex apparens is making of Law which by Magna Charta cap. 28. Bayliffs may not put men unto upon their own bare assertions except they have Witnesses to prove their imputation OR Orchel anno 1 R. 3. cap. 8. Orchall anno 24 H. 8. cap. 2. anno 3 4 Ed. 6. cap. 2. seemetst to be all one with Cork Ordinance of the Forest Ordinatio Forestae is a Statute made touching Forest causes in the 34 year of Edward 1. See Assise Ordinary Ordinarius though in the Civil law whence the word is taken it doth signifie any Judge that hath authority to take knowledge of Causes in his own right as he is a Magistrate and not by deputation yet in our Common law it is most commonly and for ought I remember alway taken for him that hath ordinary jurisdiction in causes Ecclesiastical See Brook hoc titulo Linwood in cap. exterior titulo de Constitutionibus verbo Ordinarii saith quòd Ordinarius habet locum principaliter in Episcopo et aliis superioribus qui soli sunt universales in suis ju isdictionibus sed sunt sub eo ali●ordinarii hii viz. quibus competit jurisdictio ordinaria de jure privilegio vgl consuetudine c. v. c. Ordinatione contra servientes is a Writ that lyeth against a Servant for leaving his Master against the Statute Register original fol. 189. Ordel Ordalium is a Saxon word signifying as much as Judgement in some mens opinions compounded of two Saxon words or a privative as a in Greek and dael 1. pars It signifieth as much as expers but it is artificially used for a kind of purgation practised in antient times whereby the party purged was judged expers criminis called in the Canon law purgatio vulgaris and utterly condemned There were of this two sorts one by fire another by water Of these see M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Ordalium where he expresseth it at large with such superstitions as were used in it Of this you may like wise read Holinshed in his description of Britain fol. 98. and also M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 15. But of all the rest Hotoman especially disput de feud p. 41. where of five kind of proofs which he calleth feudales probationes he maketh this the fourth calling it explorationem et hujus furiosae probationis 6. genera fuisse animadvertit per flammam per aquam perferrum candens per aquam vel gelidam vel ferventem per sortes et per corpus Domini of all which he allegeth several exemples out of History very worthy the reading See M. Skene also de verbor significatione verbo Machamium This seemeth to have been in use here with us in Henry the seconds dayes as appeareth by Glanvile lib. 14. c. 1 2. Read also of this in M. Verstegans Restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 3. pag. 63. seq Orfgild aliis Cheapegeld is a restitution made by the Hundred or County of any wrong done by one that was in plegio Lamberd Archaion page 125. 126. Org is anno 31. Ed. 3. stat 3. cap. 2. is the greatest sort of North sea-fish now a daies called Organ ling. Oredelf is a liberty whereby a man claimeth the Ore found in his soyl New exposition of Termes Ortelli is a word used in the book termed pupilla oculi in the chapter containing the Charter of the Forest parte 5. cap. 22. and signifyeth the clawes of a dogs foot being taken from the French orteils des pieds i. digiti pedum the Toes OS Osmonds anno 32. Henr. 8. cap. 14. OT Oth of the King Juramentum Regis is that which the King taketh at his Coronation which in Bract. is set down in these words Debet Rex in coronatione sua in nomine Jesu Christi praestito sacramento haec tria promittere populo sibi subdito Inprimis se esse praecepturum pro viribus opem impensurum ut ecclesiae dei et omni populo Christiano vera pax omnisuo tempore observetur Secundò ut rapacitates et omnes inquietates omnibus gradibus interdicat Tertiò ut in omnibus judciis aequitatem praecipat misericordiam ut indulgeat ei suam misericordiam clemens misericors Dens ut per justitiam suam firma gaudeant pace universi And in the old abridgment of Statutes set out in King Henry the eighths dayes I find it thus described This is the oath that the King shall swear at his Coronation That he shall keep and maintain the right and the liberties of the Holy Church of old time granted by the righteous Christian Kings of England and that hee shall keep all the Lands Honours and Dignities righteous and free of the Crown of England in all manner whole without any manner of minishment and the rights of Crown hurt decayed or lost to his power shall call again into the ancient estate and that he shall keep the peace of the Holy Church and of the Clergy and of the people with good accord and that he shall doe in all his judgements equity and right justice with discretion and mercy and that he shall grant to hold the Lawes and customes of the Realm and to his power keep them and affiem them which the folke and people have made and chosen and the evill Lawes and customes wholey to put out and stedfast and stable peace to the people of this Realm keep and cause to be kept to his power and that hee shall grant no Charter but where he may doe it by his oath All this I find in the foresaid Book titulo Sacramentum Regit and Charter of Pardon quinto Oth of the Kings Justices is That they well and truly shall serve the King and that they shall not assent to things that may turn to his dammage or disinheritance Nor that they shall take no fee nor livery of none but the King Nor that they shall take gift or reward of none that hath adoe before them except it be meat and drink of small value as long as the plce is hanging before them nor after for the cause Nor that they shall give counsell to none in matter that may touch the King upon pain to be at the Kings will body and goods And that they shall doe right to every person notwithstanding the Kings Letters c. Anno 18. Ed. 3. statut 4. which the old abridgement maketh to be anno 20. ejusdem statu●o perse Otho was a Deacon Cardinal of S. Nichens in carcere Tulliani and Legate for the Pope here in England anno 22 H. 3. whose constitutions we have at this day Stows An. p. 303. and see the first constitution of the said Legat Othobonus was a Deacon Cardinal
and the Statute 31 Elizabeth cap. 5. saith by way of correcting the two former Statutes that all actions c. brought upon any Statute the penalty whereof belongeth to the King shall be brought within two years after the offence committed or else be void And the statute anno 39 Eliz. cap. prim secund saith that actions brought after two years by any common person or after three years by the King alone for decay of husbandry or tillage shall be of no force Whosoever offendeth against any such statute and doth escape uncalled for two years or three years in one case of the two later of these three statutes may justly be said to have prescribed an immunity against that action The like may be said of the statute made anno 23 Elizabeth cap. primo which saith that all offences comprised in that statute made in the 13 year of Elizab. cap. 2. are inquirable before both Justices of peace and of Assise within one year and a day after the offence committed Also the title that a man obtaineth by the passing of five years after a fine acknowledged of any land or tenements may justly be said to be obtained by prescription And whereas the Statute anno 8 R. 2. ca. 4. saith that a Iudge or Clerk convicted for false entring of plees c. may be fined within two years the two years being ended he prescribeth against the punishment of the said Statute and whereas the Statute anno 11 H. 7. saith that he which will complain of maintenance or embracery whereby perjury is committed by a lury must do it within six daies those six daies ended the parties prescribe and whereas the Statute anno 5 Ed. 6. saith that a man being not indicted within 3 months of any offences there mentioned touching Service and Sacraments he shall be clear from thence forward the three months being ended he prescribeth and the same may be said of the Statute anno 5 Ed. 6. cap. 5. which saith that a man shall not be indited of any offence there mentioned touching the decay of tillage after three years And whereas it is ordained by the statute anno 8 H. 6. cap. 9. that those which keep possession of lands by force after 3 years possession held by themselves and their ancestors shall not be subject to the arbitrament of Disseisours there set down I hold this a prescription likewise against those censures v. anno 23 H. 6. cap. 15. Lastly a servant prescribeth liberty after a year Bracton li. 1. ca. 10. nu 3. and the right that is gotten in any Stray to a Lord of a manor no man claiming it within the year and day after proclamation made is an usucapion or prescription See Action perpetual and temporal And see Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 173. b. ubi habebis festum But see one rule for all in Lam. Eirenarch lib. 4. cap. 5. pag. 469. Of this prescription and the learning touching the same you may read a solemn report in S. Edwards Cooks Luttrels case vol. 4. f. 84. b. seq Presentation Praesentatio is used properly for the act of a patron offering his Clerk to the Bishop to be instituted in a benefice of his gift the form whereof see in the Register original fol. 322. a. Presentment is a meer denunciation of the Iurors themselves or some other Officer as Iustice Constable Searcher Surveyours c. without any information of an offence inquirable in the Court whereunto it is presented See Lamberd Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 5. pag. 467. President praeses is used in the Common law for the Kings Lieutenant in any Province or Function as President of Wales of York Barwick Presient of the Kings Councel Anno 22 Hen. 8. cap. 8. anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 3 14. Preignotary Protonotarius is a word that seemeth to be made either of two French words prime or prim●er i. primus and Notaire i. Notarius tabellio Or of two Latine words prae notarius quasi primus aut principalis notarius The office is likewise borrowed from the later Romans who made his name of half Greek and half Latine viz. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. primus principalis and Notarius It is used in our Common law for the chief Clerks of the Kings Courts whereof three be of the Common plees and one of the Kings Bench. For the Pregnotary of the Common plees anno 5 H. 4. cap. 14. is tearmed the chief Clerk of that Court He of the Kings Bench recordeth all actions civil sued in that Court as the Clerk of the Crown-office doth all criminal causes Those of the Common plees do enter and inroll all manner of Declarations pleadings assises and judgements and all actions the same term that the apparence is made Also they make out all judicial writs as the Venire facias after issues joyned and Habeas corpus for the bringing in of the Jury after it is returned upon the Venire facias They also make forth writs of executions and of seisin writs of Supersedeas for appearance to Exigents as well as the Exigents and writs of privileges for removing of causes from other inferiour Courts of Record in case where the party hath cause of privilege Also writs of Procedendo of Scire facias in all cases and writs to enquire of dammages and all process upon prohibitions and upon writs of Audita quaerela and false judgement Finally they inroll all Recognisances acknowledged in that Court and all common Recoveries and may make exemplifications of any record the same term before the roles be delivered from them Prender commeth of the French trendere i. accipere acceptare capere prehendere It signifieth in our Common law sometime a power or right to take a thing before it be offered as such things as lye in Prender or such as lye in render West parte 2. titule Fines Sect. 126. where you have these words If the Lord grant the services of his Tenent by fine or otherwise the Lord before atturnment shall have such things as lye in Prender as the ward of the body of the heir and of the Land escheats c. but not such things as lye in render as rents and reliefs heriots and other services For he cannot avow for them before the attournment Prender de Baron signifieth literally in barbarous French to take a Husband But it is used in our Common law as an exception to disable a woman from pursuing an Appeal of murder against the Killer of her former Husband Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 59. The reason whereof whether it be because by her second mariage she may justly be thought to have given up the interest she had in her former husband or for that she is now covert again or for both I leave to consideration Prender del profits signifieth verbatim to take the profits It signifieth substantively the taking of the profits See Cromptons jurisdict folio 185. See Pernour of profits Prest is used for some
used in our vulgar talk for the petit Sessions which are yearly kept for the disposing of Servants in service by the Statute anno 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. See Recognisance Statute sessions otherwise called Petit Sessions are a meeting in every Hundred of all the Shires in England where of custome they have been used unto the which the Constables do repair and others both Housholders and servants for the debating of differences between Masters and their Servants the rating of Servants wages and the bestowing of such people in Service as being fit to serve either refuse to seek or cannot get Masters anno 1 Eliz. cap. 4. Statu'o stapulae is a writ that lyeth to take his body to Prison and to seise upon his Lands and goods that hath forfeited a bond called Statute staple Regist orig fol. 151. a. Statutam de laborariis is a writ Iudicial for the apprehending of such labourers as refuse to work according to the Statute Reg. judi fol. 27. b. Statuto Mercatorio is a writ for the imprisoning of him that hath forfeited a bond called the Statute Merchant untill the debt be satisfied Regist origin fol. 146. b. and of these there is one against Lay persons ubi supra and another against Ecclesiastical 148. Stavisaker staphis agria vel herba pedicularis is a medicinable herb the kind and vertues thereof you have set forth in Gerards Herbal lib. 1. cap. 130. The seed of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled anno 1 Jacob. ca. 19. Stenrerie is used for the same that Stannaries be in the statute anno 4 H. 8. cap. 8 See Stannaries Sterling Sterlingum is a proper epitheton for mony currant within the Realm The name groweth from this that there was a certain pure Coyn stamped first of all by the Easterlings here in England Stows Annals pag. 112. The which I rather believe because in certain old Monuments of our English and broken French I find it written Esterling so Roger Hoveden writeth it parte poster annalium fol. 377. b. M. Skene de verborum sipnific verbo Sterlingus saith thus Sterling is a kind of weight containing 32 corns or grains of wheat And in the Canon law mention is made of five shilling sterling and of a merk sterling ap 3. de arbitriss c. constituit 12. de procurator And the sterling peny is so called because it weighs so many grains as I have sundry times proved by experience and by the law of England the peny which is called the sterling round and without clipping weigheth 32 grains of wheat without tails whereof twenty make an ounce and 12 ounces a pound and eight pound make a gallon of wine and eight gallons maketh a bushell of London which is the eighth part of a quarter Hitherto M. Skene Buchanan lib. 6. saith that the common People think it so termed of Sterling a Town in Scotland Our Lyndwood saith that it is called sterling of the bird which we call a sterling which as he noteth was ingraven in one quarter of the coin so termed cap. Item quia de testamentis vaerb Cent. solides in Glos Stews are those places which were permitted in England to women of prosessed incontinency for the proffer of their bodies to all commers it is derived from the French Estuves i. thermae vaporarium Balneum because wantons are wont to prepare themselves to these venerous acts by bathing themselves And that this is not new Homer sheweth in the 8 book of his Odiss where he reckneth hot bathes among the effeminate sort of pleasures Of these stewes see the statute anno 11 Hen 6. ca. pri Steward See Seneschall and Stuward Steward of the Kings house an 25 Ed. 3. statute 5. cap. 21. Stily ard Guilda Theutonicorum anno 22 H. 8. ca. 8. et anno 32 ejusdem ca. 14. is a place in London where the fraternity of the Easterling Merchants otherwise the Merchants of Hawnse and Almain an pri Ed. 6. cap. 13. are wont have their abode See Geld. It is so called of a broad place or Court wherein Steel was much sold upon the which that house is now founded Nathan C●itraeus See Hawnse Stone of wool Petra lanae see Weights See Sarpler It ought to weigh 14 pounds yet in some places by custome it is more See Cromptons Justice of peace f. 83. b. Straife aliâs Stray See Estry Straits anno 18 H. 6. ca. 16. Streme works is a kind of work in the Stanaries for saith M. Camden titulo Cornwall pa. 119. Horum Stanario●um five metallicorum operum duo sunt genera Alterum Lode-works alterum streme works vo cant Hoc in lecis inferioribus est cum Fossis agendis stanni venas sectantur et fluvierum alveos subinde defl ctunt illud in locis aeditiorsbus cum in montibus puteor quod Shafts vcc in t in magnam attitudinem defodiunt et cuniculos agunt These you may read mentioned an 27 H. 8. cap. 23. Stirks Strip See Estreapement SU Suard aliâs steward senescallus seemeth to be compounded of Steed and ward and is a word of many applications yet alway signifieth an officer of chief account within the place of his sway The greatest of these is the Lord high Steward of England whose power if those Antiquities be true which I have read is next to the Kings and of that height that it might in some sort match the Ephori amongst the Lacedemonians The custom of our Common-wealth hath upon great consideration and policie brought it to passe that this high Officer is not appointed for any long time but only for the dispatch of some especiall businesse at the arraignment of some Nobleman in the case of treason or such like which once ended his Commission expireth Of the high Steward of Englands Court you may read Cromptons Jurisd f. 28. I have read in an antient Manuscript of what credit I know not that this Officer was of so great power in antient times that if any one had sought justice in the Kings Court and not found it he might upon complaint therof made unto him take those Petitions and reserving them to the next Parliament cause them there to be propounded and not only so but also in the presence of the King openly to rebuke the Chancellor or any other Judge or officer whom he found defective in yeilding Justice And if in case the judge or Officer so reprehended did allege that his defect grew from the difficultie of the case insomuch as he durst not adventure upon it then the case being shewed and so ●ound the Lord Steward together wich the Constable of England there in the presence of the King and Parliament might elect five and twenty persons or more or fewer according to their discretion and the case or cases in question some Earls some Barons some Knights some Citizens and Burgesses which upon deliberation should set down what they thought just and equal and their decree being read and allowed by Parliament did
72. the office is as Crompton saith loco allegato properly to look to the vert and to see that it be well maintained Also when any forfeiture is taken in the Forest before the Foresters or other Ministers the price thereof shall be delivered to the Verdour who is to answer for it before the Iustices in Eyr And if he die his heir is chargeable therewith Crompton ibidem The form of his oath at his admittance you may see in Manwoods first part of his Forest laws pag. 51. who there calleth him verderour aliàs verdictor You shall truly serve our Soveraign Lord the King in the office of a verderor of the Forest W. you shall to the uttermost of your power and knowledge do for the profit of the King so far as it doth appertain unto you to do You shall preserve and maintain the antient rights and franchises of his Crown you shall not conceal from his Majesty any rights or privileges nor any offence either in vert or venison or any other thing You shall not withdraw nor abridge any defaults but shall indeavour your self to manifest and redresse the same and if you cannot do that of your self you shall give knowledge thereof unto the King or unto his Iustice of the Forest You shall deal indifferently with all the Kings liege people you shall execute the laws of the Forest and do equal right and justice as well unto the poor as unto the rich in that appertaineth unto your office you shall not oppress any person by colour thereof for any reward favour or malice All these things you shall to the uttermost of your power observe and keep Their Office is farther expressed eodem pag. 93. which is to sit in the Court of Attachment to see the Attachments of the Forest to receive the same of the Foresters and Woodwards that do present them and then to enter these attachments into their Roles Verdict veredictum is the answer of a Jury or Enquest made upon any cause civil or criminal committed by the Court to their consideration or tryal And this verdict is two-fold either general or especial Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 9. A general verdict is that which is given or brought into the Court in like general terms to the general issue as in an action of disseisin the Defendant pleadeth No wrong no disseisin Then the issue is this in general whether the fact in question be a wrong or not And this committed to the Iury they upon consideration of their evidence come in and say either for the Plaintiff that it is wrong and disseisin or for the Defendant that it is no wrong no disseisin And again the prisoner at the bar pleading Not guilty the Enquest in like general terms bring in their verdict either for the King Guilty or for the prisoner Not guilty A special verdict is that whereby they say at large that such a thing and such they find to be done by the Defendant or Tenent so declaring the course of the fact as in their opinion it is proved and for the quality of the fact they pray the discretion of the Court. And this special verdict if it contain any ample declaration of the cause from the beginning to the end is also called a verdict at large Whereof read divers examples in Stawnf pl. cor lib. 3. cap. 9. and one or two in Littleton fol. 78. 79. See the new book of Entries verb. Verdict Verge virgata may seem to come from the French verger i. viridarium hortus It is used here in England for the compass about the Kings Court that boundeth the jurisdiction of the Lord Steward of the Kings houshold and of the Coroner of the Kings house and that seemeth to have been twelve miles compass anno 13 Richard 2. Stat. prim cap. 3. Fitzh nat br fol. 24. B. and Briton fol. 68. b. 69. a. and Fletae lib. 2. cap. 2. and Sir Edward Cooks Reports lib. 4. fol. 47. a. For this see the Statute anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. toward the end But Fleta saith that this compass about the Court is called virgatä à virga quam Marishalus portat ut signism suae potestatis lib. 2. cap. 4. sect prim Verge hath also another signification and is used for a stick or rod whereby one is admitted Tenent and holding it in his hand sweareth fealty unto the Lord of a manor who for that cause is called Tenent by the Verge Old nat br fol. 17. Vergers virgatores be such as cary white wands before the Iustices of either bank c. Fleta lib. 2. cap. 38. otherwise called Porters of the Verge Very Lord and very Tenent verus Dominus et verus Tenens are they that be immediate Lord and Tenent one to the other Brook titulo Hariot fol. 23. In the Old nat br and in the writ Replegiari de averiis fol. 42. I find these words And know ye that in taking of Leases six things are necessary that is to say very Lord and very Tenent Service behind the day of the taking seisin of the services and within his Fee And know yee that a man is not very tenent untill he have atturned to the Lord by some services So that by Brook the very Lord and the very Tenent must be immediate and by this Book there must be an acknowledgement See anno 19 Hen. 7. cap. 15. See Tenent Vert viride is made of the French verd i. viridis and significth with us in the laws of the Forest every thing that doth grow and bear green leaf within the Forest that may cover and hide a D●er Manwood in the second part of his Forest laws fol. 6. a. and fol. 33. b. with whom also Crompton agreeth fol. 170. of his Iurisd And vert as the same Author saith eodem fol. 34. is divided into Over vert and Neather vert Over vert is that which our Lawyers call Hault bois and Neather vert is that which they call South boil And of this you may read him in his second part of Forest laws cap. 6. per totum Where you shall find that he divideth vert into general and special General is as it is above defined Vert special is every tree and bush within the Forest to feed the Deer withall as Pear trees Crab-trees Hauthorns Blackbush and such like And the reason of this name is because the offence of destroying of such vert is more highly punished than of any other according to the quantity thereof codem cap. 6. num 2. fol. 35. a. Vervise otherwise called Plonkets anno 1. R. 3. cap. 8. a kind of cloath Vesses anno 1 R. 3. cap. 8. anno 14 15 H. 8. cap. 11. otherwise called Set cloaths Vesture Vestura is a French word signifying a garment but in the use of our Common law turned metaphorically to betoken a possession or an admittance to a possession So it is taken Westm. 2. cap. 25. anno 13 Ed. prim And
which doctrine Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium fol. 112. E. extendeth thus far that if any of the goods be cast upon the dry Land by any in the ship it is no wreck subject to the Prerogative for by this some of the Ship are presumed to come to land and still to have a custody of the goods Cook ubi supra This in the Grand Customary of Normanny cap. 17. is called varech and latined veriscum where it appeareth that the like law to ours was in Normandy almost in all points But some sorts of their precious Merchandise do by their law appertain to the Duke by his Prerogative though a just challenge of the goods be made within the year and day The Emperors of Rome made no advantage of this pitifull event as appeareth titulo De Naufragiis 11. Cod. And it appeareth that Richard the first had some remorse of poor sea-mens miseries in this case For he quietum clam evit wreck suis subditis Rog. Hoveden parte poster suerum ann●l fol. 386. Of this M. Skene de verb. siguif speaketh to this effect wreck signifieth a power liberty and prerogative appertaining to the King or to any person to whom the same is granted by him by feoffment or any other disposition to take up and gain such goods as are ship-broken or fall to him by escheat of the sea Writ breve is that with our Common Lawyers in Sir Thomas Smiths judgement lib. 2. de Repub. Anglorum ca. 9. which the Civilians call Actionem sive formulam But I am rather of his judgement that hath added the marginal note unto him saying that Actio is the parties whole sute and that Breve is the Kings precept whereby any thing is commanded to be done touching the sute or action as the Defendant or Tenent to be summoned a distresse to be taken a disseisin to be redressed c. And these writs are diversly divided in divers respects Some in respect of their order or manner of granting are termed original and some judicial Original writs be those that are sent out for the summoning of the Defendant in a personal or Tenent in a real action or other like purpose before the sute beginneth or to begin the sute thereby Those be judicial that be sent out by order of the Court where the cause dependeth upon occasion growing after sute begun Old nat brev fol. 51. And Iudicial is thus by one sign known from the Original because the Teste beareth the name of the Chief Iustice of that Court whence it commeth where the Original beareth in the Teste the name of the Prince Then according to the nature of the action they be personal or real and real be either touching the possession called writs of Entry or the property called writs of right Fitz. nat br sparsim per totum Some writs be at the sute of a party some of office Old nat br fol. 147. Some ordinary some of privilege A writ of privilege is that which a privileged person bringeth to the Court for his exemption by reason of some privilege See Procedendo See the new book of Entries verbo Privilegt See Brief Writ of Rebellton See Commission of Rebellion Writer of the Tallies Scriptor talliarum is an Officer in the Exchequer being Clerk to the Auditor of the Receipt who writeth upon the Tallies the whole letfers of the Tellers bills Y. YA YArd lands Virgata terrae is a quantity of land called by this name of the Saxon Gyrdlander but not so certain a quantity as that it is all one in all places For in some Countries it containeth 20 acres in some 24. in some 30. as M. Lamberd saith in his explication of Saxon words verbo virgata terrae This Yard land Bracton calleth virgatam terrae lib. 2. cap. 10. et 37. but he expresseth no certainty what it containeth YE Year and day annus et dies is a time thought in construction of our Common law fit in many cases to determine a right in one and to work an usucapion or prescrition in another As in a case of an estray if the owner Proclamations being made chalenge it not within that time it is forfeit So is the year and day given in case of appeal in case of descent after entry or claim of no claim upon a fine or writ of right at the Common law so of a villein remaining in antient demean of the death of a man sore bruised or wounded of Protections Essoins in respect of the Kings service of a wreck and divers other cases Coke vol. 6. fol. 107. b. And that touching the death of a man seemeth an imitation of the Civil Law Nam si mortiferè fuerit vulneratus et posteà post longum intervallum mortuus fit inde annum numerabimus secundum Iulianum l. ait lex n. ad legem Aqui● Year day and wasto annus dies et vastum is a part of the Kings Prerogative whereby he challengeth the profits of their lands and tenements for a year and a day that are attainted of petit treason or felony whosoever be Lord of the Manor whereunto the lands or tenements do belong and not only so but in the end wasteth the tenement destroyeth the houses rooteth up the woods gardens pasture and ploweth up meadows except the Lord of the fee agree with him for the redemption of such waste afterward restoring it to the Lord of the fee wherof you may read at large Siawnf prarog cap. 16. fol. 44. et seq YO Yoman seemeth to be one word made by contraction of two Danish words young men which I gather out of Canutus Charter of the Forest set out out by M. Manwood parte prim fol. prim num 2. in these words Sunt sub quolibet horum quatuor ex mediocribus hominibus quos Angli Legespend ●uncupant Dani vero yong men vecaut locati qui curam et onus tum vi●id●s tum veneris suscipiant These M. Cambden in his Britan. pag. 105. placeth next in order to Gentlemen calling them Iugenuos whose opinion the Statute affirmeth anno 6 R. 2. cap. 4 Whereunto adde the Statute anno 20. ejusdem Regis cap. 2. Sir Thomas Smith in his Repub. Anglor lib. prim cap. 23. calleth him a Yoman whom our Laws call legalem hominem which as he saith is in English a ●ee man born that may dispend of his own free land in yearly revenue to the sum of 40 shillings sterling Of these he writeth a good large discourse touching their estate and use in this Common wealth The former etymologie of the name he liketh not making question whether it come of the Dutch Yonger yea or not which in the Low-countries signifieth a mean Gentleman or a gay fellow but he that hath added the marginal notes to that book seemeth to draw it from the Saxons Geman which signifieth a maried man M. Verstegan in his restitution of decayed intelligence cap. 10. writeth that Gemen among the antient Teutonicks and Germein among the modern signifieth as much as common and that the first Letter G. is in this word as in many others turned into Y. and so writeth Yemen and that therefore Yemen or Yeomen signifieth so much as Commoner Yoman signifieth an Officer in the Kings house which is in the middle place between the Sergeant and the Groom as Yoman of the Chaundry and Yoman of the Scullery an 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. Yoman of the Crown anno 3 Ed. 4. cap. 5. anno 22 ejusdem cap. 1. anno 4 H. 7. cap. 7. This word Yongmen is used for Yomen in the Statute anno 33 H. 8. cap. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 FINIS
may without absurdity be said to proceed from the French bouter i. ponere apponere impellere propellere It signifieth in our common Law as much as to encourage or set on The substantive abetment abettum is used for an incouraging or setting on Stawnf pl. cor fol. 105. And also abettour for him that encourageth or setteth on Old nat br fol. 21. But both verb and noun is alwaies used in the evill part Abishersing according to Rastall in his Abridgement titulo Exposition of law words is to be quit of amerciaments before whomsoever of transgression The Author of the new tearms calleth it otherwise Mishersing and saith it is to be quit of amerciaments before whomsoever of transgression prooved I am of opinion that the word original signifieth a forfeiture or an amerciament and that it is much transformed in the writing by misprision and ignorance of Clarks thinking it very probable that it proceedeth from the German verb Beschetzen which is as much as fisco addicere vel confiscere It seemeth by the former Authors to be tearmed a freedome or liberty because he that hath his word in any Charter or Grant hath not only the forfeitures and amerciaments of all others within his fee or transgressions but also is himself free from all such controll of any within that compass Abjuration abjuratio signifieth in our common law a sworn banishment or an oath taken to forsake the Realm for ever For as Stawnf pl. Cor. lib. 2. ca. 40. saith out of Polydore Virgils 11 book of Chronicles the devotion toward the Church first in Saint Edward a Saxon King and so consequently in all the rest untill anno 22 Hen. 8. was so earnest that if a man having committed felony could recover a Church or Church-yard before he were apprehended he might not be thence drawn to the usual tryal of Law but confessing his fault to the Justices at their comming or to their Coroner before them or him give his oath finally to forsake the Realm Of this you may read a touch an 7 Hen. 7. cap. 7. But the form and effect of this you may have in the old Abridgement of Statutes titulo Abjuration nu 3. taken out of the antient Tractate intituled De officiis Coronatorum as also in Cromptons Tractate of the Office of the Coroner fo 260. b. and in the new Book of Entries verbo Abjuration and in Andrew Horus Mirrour of Justices lib. 1. cap. del Office del Coroner This part of our Law was in some sort practised by the Saxons as appeareth by the Laws of King Edward set out by Master Lambert num 10. but more directlie by the Normans as is evident by the grand Custumary ca. 24. where you have these words in effect He that flieth to a Church or holy place may stay there for eight daies and at the ninth day he must be demanded whether he will yeeld himself to secular justice or hold him to the Church for if he will he may yeeld himself to the lay Court If he cleave to the Church he shall foreswear the Countrie before the Knights and other people of credit which may witness the act if need require The form of the Oath is likewise there set down with the rest of the proceeding in this matter very agreeable with ours This mercy as well of the Saxons as Normans derived unto us something resembleth that of the Roman Emperors towards such as fled to the Church lib. 1. Co. titulo 12. or to the images of themselves eodem titulo 25. And also that of Moses touching the Cities of refuge Exod. cap. 21. vers 13. Num. ca. 15. vers 6 11 12. Deut. 19. vers 2. Josh 20. vers 2. But as it was in our Ancestors daies larger by great oddes in this Realm so had it less reason as may appear to all that will compare them Of all circumstances belonging to this abjuration you may futher read the new Tearms of law Stawnford ubi supra and such others But this grew at the last upon good reason to be but a perpetual confining of the offender to some Sanctuary wherein upon abjurarion of his liberty and free habitations he would choose to spend his life as appeareth an 22 Hen. 8. cap. 14. And this benefit also by other Statutes is at the last wholly taken away So that abjurati on at this day hath place but in few places And if it be inflicted upon any it is not a confining to a Sanctuary for there be no Sanctuaries remaining amongst us but a sworn banishment of the Kings Dominions This the Civilians call exilium or deportatinem li. 28. Digest tit 22. de interdictis relegatis deportatis Abridge abbreviare commeth of the French abreger and in one generall language signifieth as much as to make shorter in words holding still the whole substance But in the Common law it seemeth at the least for the most part to be more particularly used for making a declaration or count shorter by subtracting or severing some of the substance therein comprised As for example a man is said to abridge his plaint in an Assise or a woman her demaund in an action of Dower that hath put into the plee or demand any land not in the tenure of the tenant or defendant and finding that by his answer raseth those parcels out of the plee praying answer to the rest So that here Abridger is not contrahere but rather subtrahere Tearms of the Law Brook titulo Abridgement and an 21 Hen. 8. ca. 3. Of this the Civilians have no use by reason of certain cautelous clauses they ordinarily have at the end of every position or article of their libel or declaration to this effect ponit conjunctim divisim et de quolibet et de tali et tanta quantitate vel summa qualis quanta per confessionem partis adversae vel per probationes legitimas in fine litis apparebit And again in the conclusion of all Non astringens se ad singula probanda sed petens ut quatenus probaverit in praemissis aut eorum aliquo eatenus obtineat by vertue of which clauses the Plaintiff faileth not in the end by any over or under demand neither is driven to begin his Action again but obtaineth for so much as he proveth to be due though not to the height of his demand Abridgement abbreviamentum see Abridge AC ACcedas ad curiam is a Writ that lyeth for him who hath received false judgement in a Court Baron being directed to the Sheriff as appeareth by Dyer f. 169. nu 20. Like as the writ De falso judicio lyeth for him that hath received false judgement in the County Court the form whereof you may see in Fitz. nat br fol. 18. d. in the Register fol. 9. b. where it is said that this writ lyeth for Justice delayed as well as falsly given It is a species of the writ called Recordare Register original fol. 5. b. and Fitz.
classis as appeareth by Tully in Verrem 7. but his Authority was not continual as the Admirals in these day but only in time of War Neither do I find any such Officer belonging to the Emperors in our Code And M. Gwin in the Preface to his reading is of opinion that this Office in England was not created untill the daies of Edward the third His reason is probable Britton that wrote in Edw. the firsts time and in the beginning of his Book taking upon him to name all the Courts of Justice maketh no mention of this Court or Magistrate And again Richard the second finding the Admiral to extend his Jurisdictions over far ordained by Statute made the 10 year of his Reign that the limits of the Admirals jurisdiction should be restrained to the power he had in his Grandfather Edward the thirds daies whereby the said Master Gwin conjectureth that he did nought else but reduce him to his original But contrarily to this it appeareth by antient Records the Copies wherof I have seen that not only in the daies of Edward the first but also of King John all causes of Merchants and Mariners and things happening within the Flood-mark were ever tryed before the Lord Admiral Ad jura Regis is a Writ for the Kings Clark against him that seeketh to eject him to the prejudice of the Kings Title in the right of his Crown Of this you may see divers forms upon divers Cases Register orig fo 61. a. Admittendo clerico is a Writ granted to him that hath recovered his right of presentation against the Bishop in the Common-bank the form whereof read in Fitzh nat br fol. 38. and the Register orig fol. 33. a. Admittendo in socium is a Writ for the association of certain Persons to Justices of Assises formerly appointed Register orig fol 206. a. Ad quod damnum is a Writ that lyeth to the Escheater to inquire what hurt it will be to the King or other Person to grant a Fair or Market or a Mortmain for any Lands intended to be given in Fee-simple to any House of Religion or other body politick For in that Case the Land so given is said to fall into a dead hand that is Such an estate and condition that the chief Lords do leese all hope of Heriots service of Court and escheats upon any traiterous or felonious Offence committed by the Tenant For a body politick dieth not neither can perform personal service or commit Treason or Felony as a single Person may And therefore it is reasonable that before any such Grant be made it should be known what prejudice it is like to work to the Granter Of this read more in Fitzh nat brev folio 221. and look Mortmain Ad terminum qui praeteriit is a Writ of Entry that lyeth in case where a man having leased Lands or Tenements for term of life or years and after the term expired is held from them by the Tenent or other Stranger that occupieth the same and deforceth the Leasour Which Writ belongeth to the Leasour and his Heir also Fitzh nat br fol. 201. Advent adventus is a certain space of time comprising a Month or thereabouts next before the Feast of Christs Nativity Wherein it seemeth that our Ancestors reposed a kind of Reverence for the neerness of that solemn Feast so that all contentions in Law were then remitted for a season Whereupon there was a Statute ordained Westm 1. cap. 48. anno 3. Ed. 1. that notwithstanding the said usual solemnity and time of rest it might be lawfull in respect Justice and Charity which ought at all times to be regarded to take Assises of novel disseisin mort d'auncester and darrein presentment in the time of Advent Septuagesima and Lent This is also one of the times from the beginning whereof unto the end of the Octaves of the Epiphany the solemnizing of Mariages were forbidden by reason of a certain spiritual joy that the Church and so consequently every Member thereof for that time doth or ought to conceive in the remembrance of her Spouse Christ Jesus and so abandon all affections of the flesh See Rogation week and Septuagesima Advocatione decimarum is a Writ that lyeth for the claim of the fourth part or upward of the Tithes that belong to any Church Register orig fol. 29. b. Advow aliâs avowe advocare commeth of the French advoüer aliâs avoüer and signifieth as much as to justifie or maintain an Act formerly done For example one taketh a distress for rent or other thing and he that is distreined sueth a Replevin Now he that took the Distress or to whose use the Distress was taken by another justifying or maintaining the Act is said to avow Terms of the Law Hereof commeth advowant Old nat br fol. 43. and advowrie eodem folio Bracton useth the Latine word in the same signification as advocatio disseifinae li. 4. cap. 26. And I find in Cassanaeus de consuet Burg. pag. 1210. advohare in the same signification and pag. 1213. the Substantive desavohamentum for a disavowing or refusal to avow Advowzen advocatio signifieth in our Common-law a right to present a benefice as much as jus patronatus in the Canon-law The reason why it is so termed proceedeth from this Because they that originally obtained the right of presenting to any Church were Maintainers and Upholders or great Benefactors to that Church either by building or increasing it and are thereupon termed sometime Patroni sometime Advocati cap. 4. cap. 23. de jure Patronatus in Decretal And advowzen being a bastardly French word is used for the right of presenting as appeareth by the Statute of Westm the second anno 13 Edw. 1. ca. 5. Advowzen is of twosorts advowzen in grosse that is sole or principal not adhering or belonging to any Manor as parcel of the right thereof advowzen dependant which dependeth upon a Manor as appertinent unto it termed of Kitchin an incident that may be separated from the Subject Of this M. John Skene de verbo sig hath these words dicitur advocatio Ecclesiae vel quia Patronus alicujus Ecclesiae ratione sui juris advocat se ad eandem Ecclesiam asserit se in eadem habere jus Patronatus eamque esse sui quasi clientis loco vel potiùs cùm aliquis nempe patronus advocat alium jure suo ad Ecclesiam vacantem cumque loco alterius veluti defuncti praesentat quasi exhibet See Advowè next following Advowè alias avowè advocatus is used for him that hath right to present to a benefice Anno 25 Ed. 3. stat 5. ca. unico There have you also Advowe paramount which is as much as the highest Patron and is spoken of the King Advocatus est ad quem pertinet jus advocationis alicujus Ecclesiae ut ad Ecclesiam nomine proprio non alieno possit praesentare Fleta l. 5. ca. 14. § 1. Fitzh in his nat br fol. 39. useth it in
agreeth the Statute anno 34 35 H. ● cap. 14. in ipso principio and anno 1 Ed. 6. cap. 12. in these words that then every such Offender being duly thereof convicted or attainted by the Laws of this Realm c. And again in these words every Woman that is or shall fortune to be Wife of the person so attainted convicted or out-lawed c. To this you may likewise adde the Statute an 2 3 Ed. 6. c. 33. And Ifind by Stawnf pl. cor f. 66. that a Man by our antient Laws was said to be convicted presently upon the verdict guilty but not to be attainted until it appeared he was no clerk or being a Clerk demanded of his Ordinary could not purge himself So that a man was not attainted upon Conviction except he were no Clerk and in one word it appeareth that Attainder is larger than Conviction Conviction being only by the Jury And attainder is not before Judgement Perkins Graunts num 27 29. Yet it appeareth by Stawnf fo 9. that Conviction is called attainder sometime For there he saith that the verdict of the Jury doth either acquit or attaint a man and so it is Westm pr. cap. 14. anno 3 Edw. 1. This antient Law touching the Conviction and Purgation of Clerks is altered by an 23 Eliz. cap. 2. as you may further read in Clergie Attainder Attinctus though it be most used in matters of Felony or Treason yet it is likewise applied to inferiour transgressions as to Disseisin Westm 1. cap. 36. an 3 Ed. 1. and Britton cap. 26. See Attaint and Attainted Attendant attendens commeth of the French attendere i. demorari operiri expectare praestolari it signifieth in our Common law one that oweth a Dutie or Service to another or after a sort dependeth of another For example there is a Lord Mesn and Tenent the Tenent holdeth of the Mesn by a pennie the Mesn holdeth over by two pence The mean releaseth to the Tenent all the right he hath in the Land and the Tenent di●●h His wife shall be endowed of the Land and she shall be attendent to the Heir of the third part of the peny and not of the 3d. part of the two pence For she shall be endowed of the best possession of her husband Another hath Kithin f. 209. in these word where the wife is endowed by the gardian she shall be attendant to the gardian and to the heir at his full age with whom agreeth Perkins also in Dower 424. Atturney atturnatus cometh of the french tourner i. vertere as tourner son esprit a faire quelque chose i. animum adrem aliquam inclinare Thence cometh the participle tourne i. versus conversus and the Substantive tour i. vices vicissitudo as chacun a sontour i. quilibet sua vice It signifieth in our Common law one appointed by another man to do any thing in his stead as much as procurator or syndicus in the Civil law West parte 1. Symbolaogr lib. 2. sect 559. defineth it thus Atturneys be such persons as by the consent commandment or request to take heed see to and take upon them the charge of other mens businesse in their absence by whom they are commanded or requested And where it seemeth that in ancient time those of authority in Courts had it in their arbitrement whether they would suffer men to appear or sue by any other than themselves as is evident by Fitzh nat br fol. 25. in the writ Dedimus potestatem de atturnato faciendo where it is shewed that men were driven to procure the Kings writs or letters patents to appoint Atturneys for them it is sithence provided by Statutes that it should be lawfull so to do without any such circuit as by the Statute anno 20. H. 3. cap. 10. anno 6 Edw. 1. c. 8. anno 27 ejusdem stat 2. anno 12 Edw. 2.1 anno 15 ejusdem cap. unico anno 7 Ric. 2. cap. 14. anno 7 H. 4. cap. 13. anno 3 H. 5. cap. 2. anno 15 Hen. 6. cap. 7. anno 17 H. 7. cap. 2. is to be proved And you may set great diversity of writs in the table of the Regi origen wherein the King by his writ commandeth the Judges to admit of Atturneys Whereby there grew at the last so many unskilfnl Atturneys and so many mischiefes by them that provision for restraining them was requisite Wherefore anno 4 H. cap. 18. it was ordained that the Justrces should examine them and displace the unskilful And again anno 33 H. 6. cap. 7. that there should be but acertain number of them in Norfolk and Suffolk In what cases a man at this day may have an Atturney and in what not see Fitzh ubi supra Atturney is either general or special Atturney general is he that by generall authority is appointed to all our affaires or sutes as the Atturney general of the King pl. cor fol. 152. which is as much as Procurator Caesaris was in the Romane Empire Atturney general of the Duke Cromptons jurisd fol. 105. Atturney special or particular is he that is employed in one or more causes particularly specified Atturneys-general be made after two sorts either by the Kings letters patents before him or the Lord Chancellour or by our appointment before Justices in Eyr in open court Glanvile l. 11. c. pri Britton c. 126. whom of this thing you may read more at large There be also in respect of the divers Courts Atturneys at large and Atturnies special longing to this or that Court only The name is borrowed of the Norman as appeareth by the Custumary c. 65. And I find the word Attornaty or as some read Turnati in the same signification in the title de statu regularium ca. unico Sect. Porro in sexto where the glosse saith that Atturnati dicuntur Procuratores apud acta eonstituti Our old Latine word for this seems to be responsalis Bract. lib. 4. cap. 31. lib. 5. parte 2. cap. 8. and so it is in Scotland at this day but especially for the Atturney of the Defendant as prolocutor is for the Perssewer M. Skene de verb. significatione Responsalis as Sigonius witnesseth in his first book De regno It aliae was in an ancient time the title of the Popes Ambassador Page 11. Atturney of the Court of Wards and Liveries Atturnatus regis in curia Wardorum Liberatur arum is the third office in that Court who must be a person learned in the lawes of the Land being named and assigned by the King At his admission into the office he taketh an oath before the Master of the said Court well and truly to serve the King as his Attorney in all Courts for and concerning any matter or cause that toucheth the possessions and hereditaments limited to the Survey and government of this Court and to procure the Kings profit thereof truly to counsel the King and the Master of the Court in all things concerning the
Prison at that time or otherwise at their will So that he which is so bayled shall not be said by the Law to be at large or at his own liberty see Lamberts Eirenal l. 3. cap. 2. pag. 330. Bayl is also a certain limit within the Forest accordingly as the forest is divided into the charges of several foresters Crompton in the Oath of the Bow-bearer fol. 201. See Maynprise Bayliff ballivus commeth of the French bailif i. diacetes nomarcha praefectus provinciae and as the name so the office it self in antient time was very answerable to that of France and Normandy for as in France there be sixteen Parliaments Lupanus de magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Parlamentum which be high Courts whence lieth no appeal and within the precincts of those several parts of that kingdom that belong to each Parlament there be severall provinces unto which within themselves Justice is ministred by certain officers called Bayliffs So in England we see many severall Counties or Shires within the which Justice hath been ministred to the inhabitants of each Countie by the officer whom we now call Sheriff or Vicount one name descending from the Saxons the other from the Normans And though I cannot expressely prove that this Sheriff was ever called a Bayliff yet it is probable that that was one of his names likewise because the County is called many times Balliva that is a Bavliwick as namely in the return of a writ with Non est inventus he writeth thus A. S. infra scriptus non est inventus in Balliva mea post receptionem hujus brevis Kitchin returna brevium fo 285. And again in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 33. num 3. And anno 5 Eliz. cap. 23. and anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. cap 6. And I think the word Bayliff used ca. 28 of Magna charta compriseth as well Sheriffs as Bayliffs of Hundreds as also anno 14 Edw. 3. stat 1. ca. 9. But as the Realm is divided into Counties so every County is again divided into hundreds within the which it is manifest that in antient time the Kings subjects had justice ministred unto them by the severall Officers of every Hundred which were called Bayliffs as those officets were and are in France and Normandie being chief officers of justice within every Province Lupanus de Magistratibus Francorum lib. 2. cap. Baltvi and the Grand Custumary of Normandie cap. 1. And that this is true among many others I bring Bracton for my witness lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 34. un 5. where it appeareth that Bayliffs of Hundreds might hold plee of Appeal and Approvers But sithence that time these Hundred Courts certain Franchises excepted are by the Statute anno 14 Ed. 3. stat 1. cap. 9. swallowed into the County Courts as you may read in County and Hundred And the Bayliffs name and Office is grown into such contempt at the least these Bailiffs of Hundreds that they are now but bare Messengers and Mandataries within their liberties to serve Writs and such base offices their office consisting in three points only which see in Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 49. a. Yet is the name still in good esteem some other way For the chief Magistrates in divers Towns Corporate be called Bailiffs as in Ipswich Yarmouth Colchester and such like And again there be certain to whom the Kings Castles be Cōmitted which called are Bailiffs as the Bailiff of Dover Castle These ordinary Bailiffs are of two sorts Bailiffs Errant Bailiffs of Franchises Bailiffs Errant Ballivi itinerantes be those which the Sheriff maketh and appointeth to go hither thither in the County to serve writs to summon the County Sessions Assises such like Bailiffs of Franchises Ballivi Franchesiarū aut libertatū be those that are appointed by every Lord within his liberty to do such offices within his Precincts as the Bailiff Errant doth at large in the County Of these read S. Thomas Smith de re Anglo lib. 2. c. 16. There be also Bailiffs of the Forest Manwood par 1. pa. 113. There be likewise Bayliffs of Husbandry belonging to private men of great Substance who seem to be so called because they dispose of the under Servants every man to his labour and task check them for misdoing their businesse gather the profits to their Lord and Master and deliver an account for the same at the years end or otherwise as it shall bee called for The word Bayliff or Ballivus is by Rebuffus derived from Baal i. dominus quia Ballivi dominantur suis subditis quasi eorum magistri domini Rebuf in constit regias de senten excutionis art 7. glos 1. The office or duty of a Bailiff of a mannor or Houshold which in antient time seemeth to have been all one Fleta well describeth li. 2. ca. 72. 73. This word is also used in the Canon Law ca. dilecto de sentent excom in sexto c. 1. de paenis in Clement where the Glossographer saith it is a French word signifying as much as praepositus and Balia or Bativatus is used among our later interpreters of the Civil and Canon law for Provincia as Balliva here in England is used for a County or Shire Balkers See Conders Ballivo amovendo is a writ to remove a Bailiff out of his office for want of sufficient living within his Bayliwick Reg. or fo 78. Bane seemeth to signifie the destruction or overthrow of any thing Bract. l. 2. tract 8. ca. 1. nu 1. as he which is the cause of another mans drowning is said there to be Labane i. Malefactor In that Bracton in the place aforesaid prefixeth a French article to this word it should seem by his opinion that the word is French but I find it not in any French writer that ever I read Baneret banerettus in M. Skenes opinion seemeth to be compounded of baner and rent whom read more at large of this verbo Baneret de verbo sign But our M. Camden rather draweth the word from the German Bannerheires Britan. pag. 109. in meo libro S. Thomas Smith de republ Angl. li. c. 18. saith That Baneret is a Knight made in the field with the ceremony of cutting off the point of his Standard and making it as it were a Banner and they being being Ba chelors are now of greater degree allowed to display their armes in a banner in the Kings army as Barons doe M. Camden ubi supra hath these words of this matter Baneretti cum vasullorum nomen jam desierat à baronibus secundi erant quibus inditum nomen à vexillo Concessum illis erat miliaris virtutis ergo quadrato vexillo perinde ac barones uti unde equites vexillarii à nonulllis vocantur c. Of creating a Knight baneret you may read farther in M. Segar Norrey his book lib. 2. c. 10. That they be next to Barons in dignity it appeareth by the Statute anno 14 R.
mans dwelling-house wherein some person is or into a Church in the night time to the end to commit some felonie therein as to kill some man or to steal somewhat thence or to do some other felonious act there albeit he execute not the same If the intent or fact of this offendour be to steal this is like robberie if to murther it differeth not much from murther and so of other felonies West parte 2. symbol titulo Indictments Sect. 56. Burglarie in the natural signification of the word is nothing but the robbing of a house but as it is vox artis our Common Lawyers restrain it to robbing a house by night or breaking in with an intent to rob or to do some other felonie The like offence committed by day they call house-robbing by a peculiar name How many wayes burglarie may be committed see Cromptons Justice of Peace fol. 28. b. and fol. 29 30. Butlerage of wines signifieth that imposition of sale wine brought into the land which the Kings Butler by vertue of his office may take of every ship anno 1 H. 8. cap. 5. For the which see more in Botyler C. CA CAblish cablicia among the Writers of the Forest laws signifieth brush wood Manwood parte pag. 84. Cromptons Jurisd fol. 165. Calamus is a cane reed or quill the divers kinds whereof you have set down in Gerards Herbal lib. 1. cap. 24. This is comprized among merchandize and drugs to be garbled in the statute anno 1 Jacobi cap. 19. Calendrin of Worsseds anno 5 H. 8. cap. 4. an 35 ejusdem cap. 5. Cantred is as much in Wales as an Hundred in England For Cantre in the Brittish tongue signifieth centum This word is used anno 28 H. 8. cap. 3. Cape is a writ judicial touching plee of land or tenements so termed as most writs be of that word in it self which carrieth the especiallest intention or end thereof And this writ is divided in Cape magnum cape parvum both which as is before said in Attachment take hold of things immoveable and seem to differ between themselves in these points First because cape magnum or the grand Cape lyeth before appearance and Cape parvum afterward Secondly the Cape magnum summoneth the Tenent to answer to the default and over to the demandant Cape parvum summoneth the Tenent to answer to the default onely and therefore is called Cape parvum or in French English petit Cape Old nat br fol. 161 162. Yet Ingham saith that it is called petit Cape not because it is of smal force but that it consisteth of few words Cape magnum in the old nat br is thus defined This writ is a judicial and lyeth where a man hath brought a Principe quod reddat of a thing that toucheth plee of land and the Tenant make default at the day to him given in the Writ original then this writ shall go for the King to take the land in o the Kings hands and if he come not at the day given him by the grand Cape he hath lost his land c. A President and form of this writ you may see in the Register judicial fol. 1. b. It seemeth after a sort to contain in it the effect missionis in possessionem ex primo secundo decreto among the Civilians For as the first decree seiseth the thing and the second giveth it from him that the second time defaulteth in his appearance so this Cape both seiseth the land and also assigneth to the party a farther day of appearance at which if he come not in the land is forfeited Yet is there difference between these two courses of the Civil and Common law first for that missio in possessionem toucheth both mooveable and immooveable goods whereas the Cape is extended onely to immoveable secondly that the party being satisfied of his demand the remanet is restored to him that defaulted but by the Cape all is seised without restitution thirdly missio in possess is to the use of the party agent the Cape is to the use of the King Of this writ and the explication of the true force and effect thereof read Bracton lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 1. num 4 5 6. See Cape ad valentiam Cape parvum in the Old nat br fol. 162. is thus defined This writ lyeth in case where the Tenant is summoned in plee of land and cometh at the summons and his appearance is of record and after he maketh default at the day that is given to him then shall go this writ for the king c. Of this likewise you have the form in the Register judicial fol. 2. a. Why it is called Cape parvum see in Cape magnum Of both these writs read Fleta lib. 6. cap. 44. § Magnum seq Cape ad valentiam is a species of Cape magnum so called of the end whereunto it tendeth In the Old nat br fol. 161 162. it is thus defined or described This writ lyeth where any impleaded of certain lands and I vouch to warrant another against whom the summons ad warantizandum hath been awarded and the Shyreeve cometh not at the day given then if the Demandant recover against me I shall have this Writ against the vouchee and shal recover so much in value of the land of the vouchee if he have so much and if he have not so much then I shal have executiō of such lands tenements as descend unto him in fee-simple or if he purchase afterward I shal have against him a resummons if he can nothing say I shall recover the value And note ye that this writ lyeth before apparence Thus farre goeth the book Of these and the divers uses of them see the Table of the Register judiciall verbo Cape Capias is a writ of two sorts one before judgment called capias ad respondendum in an action personal if the Shyreeve upon the first writ of distresse return nihil habet in baliva nostra and the other is a writ of execution after judgment being also of divers kinds viz. Capias ad satisfaciendum Capias pro fine Capias utlagatum Capias utlagatum inquiras de lönis catallis Capias ad satisfacieudum is a writ of execution after judgment lying where a man recovereth in an action personal as debt or dammages or detinue in the Kings Court and he against whom the debt is recovered and hath no lands nor tenements nor sufficient goods whereof the debt may be levied For in this case he that recovereth shall have this writ to the Sheriff commanding him that he take the body of him against whom the debt is recovered and he shall be put in prison until satisfaction be made unto him that recovered Capias pro fine is where one being by judgement fined unto the King upon some offence committed against a statute doth not discharge it according to the judgement For by this is his body taken and committed to prison
corporate as hath a Bishop and a Cathedrall Church For Lucas de Penna lege unica tituli De Metropol Bcryto tit 21. lib. 10. Cod. hath these words Idem locus urbs civitas opidum appellatur Pro quo est etiam infra De spectaculis l. Nemo Civitas enim dicitur quatenus cum justitia magistr atuum ordine gubernatur opidum quatenus est ●bi copia incolarum urbs quatenus muris debito more cingitur Propriè autem dicitur civitas quae habet Episcopum Supra de Episcop Cleri l. Nulli Aliâs dicitur gener aliter omnis habitatio plurimorum quae muro cingitur π. de verbo signif lib. 2. de penu lega l. Nam quod § Si ita Sed strictè loquendo si Episcopo caret dicitur nrbs π. de verb. signif l. Pupillus § Oppidum c. Yet M. Crompton in his Jurisdictions where he reckoneth up the Cities leaveth out Ely though it have a Bishop and a Cathedrall Church and putteth in Westminster though now it have no Bishop And anno 35 Eliz. cap. 6. Westminster is called a City anno 27 ejusd cap. 5. Of the Statutes not printed it is alternatively termed a City or Borow It appeareth by the Statute 35 H. 8. cap. 10. that then there was a Bishop of Westusmjter Civitas according to Aristotle li. politicorum ca. pri is defined to be a certain or uniform government of the Inhabitants Caesar civitatem vocat populum eodem jure utentem Camd. Britan. pa. 310. But this is the generall definition of a Common-wealth and not of a City at the least as we now a dayes particularly take it For over and beside that which is above said Cassanaeus in consuetudi Burg. pag. 15. saith that France hath within the territories of it one hundred and four Cities and giveth reason of this his saying because there be there so many seates of Archbishops and Bishops CL Clack as to clack force and bard aliàs beard good wools anno 8 H. 6. ca. 22. whereof the first viz. to clack wool is to cut off the sheeps mark which maketh it to weigh lesse and so yeeld the lesse custome to the King to force wool is to clip off the upper and more hairy part of it to bard or beard it is to cut the head and neck from the rest of the sleece Clamea admittenda in i●inere per Atturnatum is a writ whereby the King commandeth the Justices in Eyre to admit of ones clai●n by Atturney that is employed in the Kings service and cannot come in his own person Register orig fol. 19. b. Clayme clameum is a challenge of Interest in any thing that is in the possession of another or at the least out of his own as claim by Charter claim by Descen Old nat br fol. 11. Si dominus infra annum clamcum qualitercunque apposuerit Bracton lib. 1. cap. 10. See the definition and divers sorts of claim in Plowden Casu Stowel fol. 359. a. Clarentius See Herald Clergie clerus clericatus is diversly taken sometime for the whole number of those that are de clero Domini of the Lords lot or share as the tribe of Levi was in Judaea sometime for a plee to an Indictment or an appeal and is by Stawnf pl. cor l. 2. cap. 41 thus defined Clergy is an antient liberty of the Church which hath been confitmed by divers Parliaments and is when a Priest or one within Orders is arraigned of felony before a secular Judge he may pray his Clergy which is as much as if he prayed to be delivered to his Ordinary to purge himself of the offence objected And this might be done in case of murther Cook lib. 4. fol. 46 a. This libertie is mentioned in articulis cleri ann 9 Ed. 2. cap. 16. and what persons might have their Clergy and what not see Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 42 43. Howbeit there be many statutes made since he writ that book whereby the benefit of Clergy is abridged As anno S. El. cap. 4. an 14. ejusdem cap. 5. anno 18 ejusdem cap. 4 6 7. anno 23 ejusdem cap. 2 a. 29 ejusdem cap. 2. an 31 ejusdem cap. 12. a. 39 ejusdem cap. 9. cap. 15. Of this see Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 102 103 104 105. And Lamberts Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 14. pag. 543. And note by the way that the antient course of the Law in this point of Clergy is much altered for by the statute Anno 18 Eliz. cap. 7. Clerks be no more delivered to their Ordinaries to be purged but now every man though not within orders is put to read at the barre being found guilty and convicted of such felony as this benefit is granted for and so burnt in the hand and set free for the first time if the Ordinaries Commissioner or Deputy standing by do say legit ut Clericus or otherwise suffereth death for his transgression Clerico admittendo is a Writ directed to the Bishop for the admitting of a Clerk to a Benefice upon a Ne admittas tried and found for the party that procureth the Writ Reg. orig fol. 31 6. Clerico capto per statutum mercatorum c. is a Writ for the delivery of a Clerk out of prison that is imprisoned upon the breach of a statute metchant Rtg. orig fol. 147. Clerico convicto commisso gaolae in defectu ordinarii deliberando c. is a Writ for the delivery of a Clerk to his Ordinary that formerly was convicted of felony by reason his Ordinary did not challenge him according to the privile●ges of Clerks Regist origin fol. 69. a. Clerico infra sacros ordines constituto non eligendo in officium is a Writ directed to the Bailiffs c. that have thrust a Bayliwick or bedleship upon one in holy Orders charging them to release him again Register orig fol. 143. a. Clerk clericus hath two significations one as it is the title of him that belongeth to the holy ministery of the Church that is in these dayes either Minister or Deacon or what other degree or dignity soever though according to former times not onely Sacerdotes Diaconi but also subdiaconi cantores acolyti exo●cistae ostiarii were within this account as they be at this day where the Canon Law hath full power And in this signification a Clerk is either religious otherwise called regular or secular anno 4 Hen. 4. cap. 12. The other signification of this word noteth those that by their function or course of life practise their pen in any Court or otherwise as namely the Clerk of the Rolles of Parliament Clerks of the Chancery and such like whose peculiar offices I purpose to set down in order according to that knowledge that I could procure of them Clerk of the Parliament Rolls Clericus Rotulorum Parliamenti is he that recordeth all things done in the high Court of Parliament and engrosseth them fairely into
parchment rolles for their better keeping to all posterity Of these there be two one of the higher another of the lower or Common house Cromptons Jurisd fol. 4 8. Smith de republ Anglorum pag. 38. See also Vowels book touching the order of the Parliament Clerk of the Crown in the Chancery clericus coronae in Cancellaria is an Officer there that by himself or his Deputy is continually to attend the Lord Chancellor or Lord Keeper for special matters of estate by commission or the like either immediately from his Majesty or by order of his councel as well ordinary as extraordinary viz. commissions of Lieutenancies of Justices errant and of Assises of Oyer and Terminer of Gaol-delivery of the peace and such like with their writs of Association and Dedimus potestatem for taking of oaths Also all general pardons upon grants of them at the Kings coronation or at a Parliament where he sitteth in the higher-house at the Parliament time he writs of Parliament with the names of Knights and Burgesses which be to be returned into his office He hath also the making of all special pardons and writs of execution upon bonds of statute of the Staple forfeited which was anne●ed to his office in the reign of Queen Mary in consideration of his continual and chargeable attendance both these before being common for every Cursitour and Clerk of Court to make Clerk of the Crown clericus coronae is a Clerk or officer in the Kings Bench whose function is to frame read and record all indictments against Traitors Felons and other offendors there arraigned upon any publike crime He is otherwise tearmed Clerk of the Crown-office And anno 2 H. 4. cap. 10. he is called Clerk of the Crown of the Kings Bench. Clerk of the Extreats clericus Extractorum is a Clerk belonging to the Exchequer who termely receiveth the Extreats out of the Lord Treasurers Remembrancer his office and writeth them out to be levied for the King He also maketh schedules of such summes extreated as as are to be discharged Clerk of assise clericus assisae is he that writeth all things judicially done by the Justices of assise in their circuits Cromptons Jurisdict fol. 227. Clerk of the Pell clericus Pellis is a Clerk belonging to the Exchequer whose office is to enter every Tellers bill into a parchement rolle called Pellis receptorum and also to make another rolle of payments which is called Pellis exitum wherein he setteth down by what warrant the money was payd Clerk of the Warrants clericus Warrantorum is an officer belonging to the Court of Common Plees which entreth all warrants of Atturney for Plaintiff and Defendant and intolleth all Deeds of Indentures of bargain and sale which are acknowledged in the Court or before any Judges out of the Court. And he doth extreat into the Exchequer all issues fines and amerciaments which grow due to the King any way in that Court and hath a standing fee of ten pounds of the King for making the same ex treats See Fitzh nat br fol. 76. in prin Clerk of the pety Bag clericus parvae bagiae is an Officer of the Chauncerie of which sort there be three and the Master of the Rolles their chief Their office is to record the return of all inquisitions out of ●every Shire all Liveries granted in the Court of Wards all ouster le maines to make all patents of Customers Gaugers Controllers and Aulnegers All conge de eslires for Bishops All liberateis upon extents of statute staples the recovery of Recognisances forfeited and all Elegits upon them the summons of the Nobility Clergy and Burgesses to the Parliament Commissions directed to Knights and other of every Shire for seising of the Subsidies Writs for the nominations of Collectours for the fifteenths and all traverses upon any office bill or otherwise and to receive the mony due to the King for the same This Officer is mentioned anno 33 H. 8. cap. 22. Clerk of the Kings great Wardrobe clericus magnae garderobae regis is an Officer of the Kings house that keepeth an account or Inventary in writing of all things belonging to the Kings wardrobe This Officer is mentioned an 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. Clerk of the Market clericus merketi is an Officer of the Kings house anno 1 Ed. 4. cap. 1. anno 13 R. 2. cap. 4. whose duty is to take charge of the Kings measures and to keep the standards of them that is the examples of all the measures that ought to be through the Land as of Elns Yards Lagens as Quarts Pottles Gallons c. of Weights Bushels and such like and to see that all measures in every place be answerable unto the said Standard Fleta lib. 2. cap. 8.9.10.11.12 of which office as also of our diversity of weights and measures you may there find a Treatise worth the reading Britton also in his 30 chapter saith in the Kings person to this effect We wil that none have Measures in the Realm but we our selves but that every man take his Measures and Weights from our Standards and so goeth on with a Tractat of this matter that well sheweth the ancient law and practice in this point Touching this Officers duty you have also a good statute anno 13 R. 2. c. 4. Clerk of the Kings silver clericus argenti Regis is an Officer belonging to the Court of Common plees unto whom every fine is brought after it hath been with the custos Brevium and by whom the effect of the Writ of Covenant is entred into a Paper-book and according to that note all the fines of that term are also recorded in the Rolles of the Court. And his entrie is in this form He putteth the Shire over the Margin and then saith A.B. dat domino Regi dimidium merkam or more according to the value pro licentia concordandi C. cum C.D. pro talibus terris in tali villa habet chirographum per pacem admissum c. Clerk of the Peace clericus pacis is an Officer belonging to the Sessions of the peace His duty is in the Sessions to read the Endictments to enrol the Acts and draw the Processe to record the Proclamations of rates for servants Wages to enrol the discharge of Apprentices to keep the Counterpain of the Indenture of Armour to keep the Register book of Licenses given to Badgers and laders of corn and of those that are licensed to shoot in gunnes and to certifie into the Kings Bench transcripts of Indictments Outlawries Attainders and Convictions had before the Justices of the peace within the time limited by statute Lamberts Eirenarcha lib. 4. cap. 3. fol. 379. Clerk of the Signet clericus signeti is an Officer attendant continually on his Majesties principal secretary who alwayes hath the custody of the privy Signet as well for sealing his Majesties privat Letters as also such grants as passe his Majesties hand by bill assigned Of these there be four
the Heir of him that holdeth Land of the Crown either by Knights service or in soccage and dyeth be he under or at full age directed to the Escheatour of the County for inquiry to be made by him of what estate the deceased party was seised who is next heir unto him and of what value the Land is The form thereof and other circumstances you may learn in Fitz. nat br fol. 251. Dyer was a learned Lawyer and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Plees in the dayes of Queen Elizabeth who writ a Book of great account called his Commentaries or Reports Dies datus is a respight given to the Tenant or Defendant before the Court Brook tisulo Continuance Dicker of Leather is a quantity consisting of ten hides The name may seem to come from the Greek Decas which is also a Latine word signifying ten in number Diguity Ecclesiastical dignitas Ecclesia●tica is mentioned in the statute anno 26 H. 8. cap. 3. and is by the Canonists defined to be administratio cum jurisdictione potestate te aliquae conjuncta Glos in cap. 1. de consuct in sexte whereof you may read divers examples in Duarynus de sacris Eccles minist benefic lib. 2. cap. 6. Dioces diocesis is a Greek word compounded of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifieth with us the circuit of every Bishops Jurisdiction For this Realm hath two sorts of divisions one into Shires or Counties in respect of temporal policy another into Diocesses in respect of Jurisdiction Ecclesiasticall Diet a rationabilis is in Bracton used for a reasonable dayes journey lib. 3. parte 2. cap. 16. It hath in the Civil Law divers other significations not needful here to be set down v. vocab utriusque juris Dimibaque See Haque Disalt signifieth as much as to disable Litleton in his Chapter of Discontinuance Disceite See Deceit and deceptione See the new book Entrie verbo Disceit Discent Discensus in the French Descents signifieth in the Common law an order or means whereby Lands or Tenements are derived unto any man from his Ancestors as to makehis discent from his Ancestors Old nat br f. 101. is to shew how and by what degrees the Land in question came to him from his Ancestors as first from his great Grandfather to his Grandfather from his Grandfather to his Father and so to him Or in such other like sort This discent is either lineal or collateral Lineal Discent is conveyed downward in a right line from the Grandfather to the Father and from the Father to the Son and from the Son to the Nephew c. Collateral discent is springing out of the side of the whole blood as Grandfathers brother Fathers brother c. See the new Tearms of Law Disclamer Disclamium is a Plee containing an expresse denial or refusal as if the Tenant sue a Replevin upon a Distresse taken by the Lord and the Lord avow the taking of the distresse saying that he holdeth of him as of his Lord and that he distremed for rent not payd or service not performed then the Tenant denying himself to hold of such Lord is said to Disclaim and the Lord proving the Tenant to hold of him the Tenant leeleth his Land Terms of Law Of this see Skene de verb. fignif verbo Disclamation Also if a man denie himself to be of the blood or kindred of another in his Plee he is said to disclaim his blood Fitzh nat br fol. 197. G. See Brook titulo Diselamer If a man arraigned of Felony do disclaim goods being cleered he leeseth them Stawnf pl. cor fol. 186. See the new book of Entries verbo Disclamer Discontinuance Discontinuatio cometh of the French Discontinuer i. cessare intermittere and signifieth in the Common law nothing else but an interruption of breaking off as discontinuance of possession or discontinuance of proces And the large discourse that Litleton hath about this Discontinuance is rather to shew cases wherein it is or wherein it is not than to define the thing The effect of Discontinuance of possession is this that a man may not enter upon his own Land or Tenement alienated whatsoever his right be unto it of his own self or by his own authority but must bring his Writ and seek to recover possession by Law Examples you may have store in his Tearms of Law verbo Discontinuance And in Litleton codem capite with whom agreeth another in these words But Discontinuance of Possession is indeed an impediment to a man for entring into his own Land or Tenements caused by the fact of one that alienated them contrary to right and gave Livery and Seisin of them whereby the true owner is left only to his action See the new Tearms of Law and the Institutes of the Common law cap. 43. and see S. Ed. Cokes Reports lib. 3. the Case of Fines fol. 85. b. The effect of Discontinuance of Plee is that the instance is fallen and may not be taken up again but by a new Writ to begin the Sute a fresh For to be discontinued to be put without day is all one and nothing else but finally to be dismissed the Court of that instance West parte 2. Symbol tit Fines sect 115. So Crompton in his divers Jurisdictions fol. 131. useth it in these words If a Justice seat be discontinued by the not coming of the Justices the King may renew the same by his Writ c. In this signification Fitzherb in his nat br useth the word divers times as discontinuance of Corody fol. 193. A. To discontinue the right of his wise fol. 191. L. 193. L. Discontinuance of an assise fol. 182. D. 187. B. Disgrading Degradatis is the punishment of a Clerk that being delivered to his Ordinaty cannot purge himself of the offence whereof he was convicted by the Jury● and is nothing but the privation of him from those orders of Clerkship that he had as Priesthood Deaconship c. Sl●●f 〈…〉 138. There is likewise ●isgrading of a Knight Stowes Annals pag. 855. And it is not to be omitted that by the Canon Law there be two forte of disgrading one summary by word onely and another solemn by devesting the party degraded of those Ornaments and Rites which be the ensighes of his Order or Degree Dismes Decimes is made of the French Decimes and signifieth Tithe or the tenth part of all the fruits either of the earth or beasts or our labour due unto God and so consequently to him that is of the Lords lot and had his share viz. our Pastour It signifieth also the Tenths also of all spititual livings yearly given to the Prince called a perpetuar Dismo anno 2. 3. Edwar. 6. cap. 35. which in ancient times were paid to the Pope until Pope Urbane gave them to Richard the second to aid him against Charles the French King and those other that upheld Clement the seventh against him Polidor V●igil Angl. hist
restraint For the Law holdeth this not good but rather supposeth it to be constrained Broke in his Abridgement joyneth Dures and Manasse together i. duritiam minas hardness and threatning See the new Book of Entries verbo Dures And the New Terms of Law EA EAldermans Aldermannus among the Saxons was as much as Earl among the Danes Cambden Britan. pag. 107. If ye go to the true etymologie of the word me thinkoth it should sound more generally so much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the Graecians or Senator with the Romans who were rather Counsellors at large than bestowed upon any particular office as Comites were See Coun. ie And that signification we retain at this day almost in all our Cities and Boroughs calling those Aldermen that are Associates to the Chief Officer in the common Councel of the Town anno 24 H. 8. cap. 13. or sometime the chief Officer himself as in Stawnford Earl Comes in M. Cambdens opinion pag. 107. is a word made by the Danes of Ealderman a word of the Saxons M. Lamberd seemeth notwithstanding to acknowledge that Earl is originally a Saxon word Explica of Saxon words verbo Paganus and interpreteth it Satrapam which word the Romans borrowing of the Persians applyed to those that were praefecti provinciarum M. Verstegan in his restitution of decayed Intelligence deriveth it from two Netherland words ear i. honor and ethel i. nobilis wherein I leave the Reader to his own iudgement This title in ancient time was given to those that were Associates to the King in his Counsels and Marshal actions as Comes was to those that followed the Magistrates in Rome and executed their offices for them as their Deputies and died alwayes with the man Zasius hath of this word thus much Comitum originem in Doctoribus non invenimus sed noveris eam dignitatem vetustissimam esse Nam Cor. Tacitus in libello de Germania scribit apud priscos usu fuisse receptum ut cuilibet Principi seu Duci exercitus duodecim comites assignarentur ideo dictos quia comitarentur eos à Ducum latere non decederent Comitatum it aque originem Germanis moribus or tum esse dictus receptissimus autor testis est Quapropter quod in duodecimo libro codicis aliqui tituli de Comitibus largitionum c. inscribuntur usurpationem Imperatoris ex Germanorum ritibus sumptum credo But the Conqueror as M. Cambden saith gave this dignity in Fee to his Nobles annexing it to this or that County or Province and allotted them for their maintenance a certain proportion of money rising from the Princes profits for the pleadings and forfeitures of the Province For example he bringeth an ancient Record in these words Henricus 2. Rex Angliae his verbis Comitem creavit Sciatis nos fecisse Hugonet Bigot Comitem de Nortfolk sc de tertio denario de Norwic. Nortfolk sicut aliquis Comes Angliae libertus com●tatum suum tenet Which words saith the same Author an old book of Battel Abbey thus expoundeth Consuetudinaliter per totam Angliam mos antiquitùs inoleverat Comites provinciarum tertium denarium sibi obtinere inde Comites dicti And another book without name more fully Comitatus à Comite dicitu● aut vice versa Comes autem est quia tertiam portionem corum quae de placitis proveniunt in quolib●t Comitatu percipit● Sed non omnes Comites ista percipiunt sed bit quibus Rex baereditariò aut personaliter concessit You may read M. Fern in Lacy's nobility something to his effect pag. 12. But he saith that one Duke or Earl had divers Shires under his government as a Viceroy and had Lieurenants under him in every particular Shire called a Sheriff That one Earl was dignified by the appellation of more than one Sheriff it appeareth by divers of our ancient Statutes as namely by the sentence of Excommunication pronounced by the Bishops against the infringers of the great Charter and Charter of the Forest anno 38 H. 3. Roger Bigot is named Earl both of Northfolk and Southfolk and anno 1 Ed. 3. Thomas Earl of Lancaster and Leycester Humfrey Bohun Earl of Hereford and Essex Dyer fol. 285. num 39. At these dayes as long since the Kings of England make Eearls by their Charters of this or that County giving them no authority over the County nor any part of the profit rising of it but onely some annual stipend out of the Exchequer rather for honours sake than any great commodity And these be in other Nations accounted Earles improperly Quià illi dicuntur verè Comites quibus datur Comitatus in feudum illi Comites abusivè qui non habent administrationem Vincentius de Franchis descis 115. num 7. The manner of creating Earles is by girding them with a Sword Camden pag. 107. but see the solemnity thereof described more at large in Stowes annals pag. 1121. The occasion why these Earles in latter times have had no sway over the County wherof they bear their name is not obscurely signified in Sir Tho. Smith l. 2. cap. 14. where he saith that the Sheriff is called Vicecomes as Vicarius Comi●is following all matters of Justice as the Earl should do and that because the Earl is most continually attendant upon the King in his wars or otherwise So that it seemeth that Earls by reason of their high employments being not able to follow also the businesse of the County were delivered of all that burthen and onely enjoyed the honour as now they do And the Sheriff though he be still called Vice-comes yet all he doth is immediatly under the King and not under the Earl See Countie and see Hotoman de verb. feudal verb. Comes and Cassan de consuetud Burg. pag. 12. Easement esamentum is a service that one Neighbour hath of another by Charter or prescription without profit as a way through his ground a sink or such like Kitchin fol. 105. which in the Civil law is called Servitus praedii EE Eele fares alias Eele Vare anno 25 H. 8. be the frie or brood of Eeles EG Egyptians Aegyptiani are in our Statutes and Laws of England a conterfeit kind of Rogues that being English or Welsh people accompany themselves together disguising themselves instrange robes blacking their faces and bodies and framing to themselves an unknown Language wander up and down and under pretence of telling of Fortunes curing diseases and such like abuse the ignorant common people by stealing all that is not too hot or too heavie for their carriage anno 1. 2 Philip. Mar. cap. 4. anno 5 Eli. cap. 20. These are very like to those whom the Italians call Cingari of whom Franciscus Leo in suo thesauro fori Ecclesiastici parte prim cap. 13. thus writeth Cingari qui corrupto vocabulo quandoque etiam Saraceni nominantur permissione principum ac aliorum dominorum per Italium vagantur nec unquam
each journey Escuage certain is that which yearly payeth a certain rent in lieu of all services being no further bound than to pay his rent called a Knights-fee or the fourth part of a Knights-fee according to his land and this leeseth the nature of Knights service though it hold the name of Escuage being in effect Soccage Fitzh na br fol. 84. C. Esnecy Aesnecia is a prerogative given to the eldest Comparcener to chuse first after the inheritance is divided Fleta lib. 5. cap. 10. § in divisionem Esples Expletia seem to be the full profits that the ground or land yeeldeth as the Hay of the Meadowes the Feed of the Pasture the corn of the Earable the Rents Services and and such like issues Ingham It seemeth to proceed from the Latine Expleo The profits comprised under this word the Romans call properly accessiones Nam accessionem nomine intelliguntur ea gener aliter omnia quae ex re de qua agitur orta sunt veluti fructus partus omnis causa rei quaecunque ex re procedunt lib. 2. π. De in diem adjectio lib. 50. π. Ad Trebel lib. 61. § hiis etiam π. de furt See the new Terms of Law Esquier Armiger is in letters little altered from the French Esouier i. scutiger It signifieth with us a Gentleman or one that beareth arms as a testimony of his nobility and gentry S. Thomas Smith is of opinion that at the first these were Bearers of arms to Lords and Knights and by that had their name and dignity Indeed the French word is sometime translated Agaso that is a Boy to attend or keep a Horse and in old English Writers it is used for a Lackey or one that carrieth the Shield or Spear of a Knight Mast Cambden in his Britannia pag. 111. hath these words of them having spoken of Knights Hiis proximi fuere Armigeri qui scutiferi hominesque ad arma dicti qui vel à clypeis gentilitiis quae in nobilitatis insignia gestant vel quia principibus ma oribus illis nobilibus ab armis erant nomen traxerunt Olim enim ex hiis duo unicuique militi serviebant galeam clypeumque gestabant c. Hotoman in the sixth Chapter of his Disputations upon the Feodssaith that these which the French men cal Escuiers were 1 Military kind of vassal having jus scuti which is as much to say he there interpreteth himself as that they bare a Shield and in it the ensignes of their family in token of their Gentility or dignity Essendt quietum de telonio is a Writ that lyeth for Citizens and Burgesses of any City or Town that have a Charter or prescription to exempt them from tolle through the whole Realm if it chance they be any where exacted ●he same Fitz. nat br fol. 226. Reg. fol. 258. Essoin essonium cometh of the French essomè or exonniè i. causarius miles he that hath his presence forborn or excused upon any just cause as sicknesse or other incumbrance It signifieth in our Common Law and allegement of an excuse for him that is summoned or sought for to appear and answer to an Action real or to perform sute to a Court Baron upon just cause of absence It is as much as excusatio with the Civilians The causes that serve to essoin any man summoned be divers and infinite yet drawn to five heads whereof the first is ulira mare the second de terra sancta the third de malo veniendi which is also called the common Essoin the fourth is de malo lecti the fifth de servitio Regis For further knowledge of these I refer you to Glanvile in his whole first book and Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. per totum and Britton c. 122 123 124 125. and to Horns Mirrour of Justices lib. 1. cap. des Essoins who maketh mention of some more essoins touching the service of the King celestial then the rest do and of some other points not unworthy to be known Of these Essoins you may read further in Flet. l. 6. c. 8. seq and that these came to us from the Normans is well shewed by the Grand Custumary where you may find in a manner all said that our Lawyers have of this matter cap. 39 40 41 42 43 44 45. Essoins and profers anno 32 H. 8 cap. 21. See Profer Essonio de malo lecti is a Writ directed to the Sheriff for the sending of four lawful Knights to view one that hath essoined himself de malo lecti Regist. orig fol. 8. b. Establishment of dower seemeth to be the assurance of dower made to the Wife by the Husband or his friends before or at marriage And assignement is the setting it out by the Heir afterward according to the Establishment Britton cap. 102. 103. Estandard or Standard cometh of the French estandart or estandart i. signum vexillum It signifieth an Ensigne in war as well with us as with them But it is also used for the principal or standing measure of the King to the scantling whereof all the measures thorowout the Land are or ought to be framed by the Clerk of the Market Anlneger or orher Officer according to their functions For it was established by the Statute of Magna Charta an 6 H. 3. cap. 9. That there should be but one scantling of Weights and Measures through the whole Realm which is sithence confirmed by A●co 14 Ed. 3. cap. 12. and many other Statutes as also that all should be fitted to the Standard sealed with the Kings Seal It is not called a Standard without great reason because it standeth constant and immoveable and hath all other Measures coming toward it for their conformity even as Souldiers in field have their Standard or Colours for their direction in their march or skirmish Of these Standards and Measures read Britton cap. 30. Estate cometh of the French estat i. conditio and signifieth especially in our Common law that Title or Interest which a man hath in Lands or Tenements as estate simple otherwise called Fee-simple and estate conditional or upon condition which is as Litleson saith libro 3. caput 5. either upon condition in Deed or upon condion in Law Estate upon condition in Deed is where a man by Deed indented infeoffeth another in Fee referving to him and to his Heirs yeerly a certain Rent payable at one Feast or at divers upon condition that if the Rent be behind c. that it shall be lawful to the Feoffor and to his Heires to enter in the Lands or Tenements c. Estate upon condition in Law is such as hath a consideration in the Law annexed to it though it be not specified in writing For example if a man grant to another by his Deed the Office of a Parkership for Term of his life this estate is upon condition in the Law or imployed by Law viz. if the Parker so long shall well and
sub lege signifieth him that is in some franck pledge of whom take Bractons words li. 3. tract 2. ca. H. nu 5. Minor vero qui infra aetatem duodecim annorum fuerit utlagari non potest nec extra legem pont quiae ante talem aetatem non est sub lege aliqua nec in decenna non magis quam foemina quae utlagari non potest quiae ipsa non est sub lege i. Inlowghe anglice sc in franco plegio sive decenna sicut masculus duodecim annorum ulterius c. Inlaughe significat hominem subjectum lege Fleta lib. 1. cap. 47. Inlagary Inlagatio is a restitution of one outlawed to the Kings protection and to the benefit or estate of a subject Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 14. nu 6 7 8. Britton cap. 13. Inmates are those that be admitted to dwell for their money jointly with an other man though in several rooms of his Mansion house passing in and out by one door and not being able to maintain themselves which are inquiral in a Leet Kitchin fol. 45. where you may read him at large who be properly Inmates in intendment of law and who not Imprison anno 18. Ed. 3. statu 4. cap. unico seemeth to signifie so much as an attempt comming of the French Empris which is all one with Enterpris an enterprite Inquirendo is an authority given to a person or persons to inquire into something for the Kings advantage which in what cases it lyeth see the Register original fol. 72.85.124.265.266.179.267 Inquisition Inquisitio is a maner of proceeding in matters criminal by the office of the Judge which Hostiensis defineth thus Inquisitio nihil aliud est quam alicujus criminis manifesti ex bono aequo Judicis competentis canonice facta investigatio ca. qualiter de accusatio in the Decretales this course we take here in England by the great inquest before Iustices in Eyre See Eyre and the places in Bracton and Britton there noted Inquisition is also with us used for the King in temporal causes and profits in which kind it is confounded with Office Stawnford praerogativ fol. 51. See office Inrolement Irrotulatio is the Registring recording or entring of any lawful act in the Rolles of the Chancerie as recognisance acknowledged or a Statute or a Fine levied See West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines Sect. 133. Insimul tenuit is one species of the writ called a Formdon See Formdon Intakers be a kind of Thieves in Ridesdall anno 9. H. 5. ca. 8. so called as it seemeth because they dwelling within that liberty did receive in such booties of cattel or other things as the out parters brought in unto them See Out parters Interdiction Interdictio is used in the Common law in the same signification that it hath in the Canon law where it is thus defined Interdictio est censura ecclesiastica prohibens administrationem divinorum c. quod in te de poenitent remiss in the Decretals and thus is it used an 24. H. 8. ca. 12. Interpleder See Enterpleder Intrusion intrusio by Bracton lib. 4. cap. 2. is thus defined Intrusio est ubi quis cui nullum jus competit in re nec scintilla Iuris possessionem vacuam ingreditur quae nec corpore nec animo possidetur sicut haereditatem jacentem antequam adita fuerit ab haerede vel saltem à domino capitali ratione custodiae vel ratione eschaetae si forte haeredes non existant vel si post mortem alicujus per finem factum ●●l per modum donationis ubi successio sibi locum vendicare nonpossit vel si post mortem alicujus qui tenuit ad vitam debeat tenemen um reverti ad proprietarium ponat quis se in seisinam antequam tenementum illud veniat ab illis ad quem pertinere deberet ex praedictis causis with whom agreeth Fleta lib. 4. cap. 30. sect 1. 2. See Britton cap. 65. to the same effect See the new book of Entries verb. Entrusion See Entrusion See Disseisin the Author of new Terms of law would have intrusion especially after the tenant for life is deceased Verbo Abatement and abatement in all other cases But I find not any Latine word for Abatement but intrusio so that 1 rather think these two English words to be Synonyma and Fleta cap. supra citato seemeth direct against this his opinion Intrusione is a Writ that lyeth against the Intruder Regist fol. 233. Inventarie inventarium is a description or repertory orderly made of all dead mens goods and Cattels prized by four credible men or more which every Executor or Administrator ought to exhibite to the Ordinary at such times as he shall appoint the same West parte prim Symb. lib. 2. sect 696. where likewise you may see the form This Inventary proceedeth from the Civil Law for whereas by the antient Law of the Romans the Heir was tyed to answer all the Testators debts by which means heritages were prejudicial to many men and not profitable Justinian to encourage men the better to take upon them this charitable office ordained that if the Heir would first make and exhibite a true Inventary of all the Testators substance comming to his hand he should be no further charged than to the value of the Inventary l. ult Cod. de Jure deliberando Invest investire commeth of the French word Invester and signifieth to give possession Hear Hotoman de verbis feudalibus verbo Investitura Investitura barbarum nomen barbaricam quoque rationem habet Nam ut ait Feudista lib. 2. tit 2. Investitura propriè dicitur quando hasta vel aliquod corporeum traditur à domino with us we use likewise to admit the Tenant by delivering them a verge or rodd into their hands and ministring them an oath which is called Investing Others define it thus Investitura est alicujus in suum jus introductio Inure signifieth to take effect as the pardon inureth Stawnf praerog fol. 40. See Enure JO Joynder is the coupling of two in a sute or action against another Fitzh nat br fol. 118. H. 201. H. 221. H. in many other places as appeareth in the Index verbo Joynder Joynt tenants fimul tenentes liber intrationum titulo Formdon in vieu 3. be those that come to and hold Lands or Tenements by one title pro indiviso or without partition Littleton lib. 3. cap. 3. and Terms of Law See Tenants in common Joyning of issue Junctio exitus See Issue Joynture Junctura is a covenant whereby the husband or some other friend in his behalf assure●h unto his wife in respect of mariage lands or tenements for term of her life or otherwise See West part 2. Symbol lib. 2. titulo Covenants sect 128. and the new exposition of the law Terms It seemeth to be caled a Joynture either because it is granted ratione juncturae in matrimonio or because the land in Frank mariage is given
Goods of that people of whom they have received wrong and cannot get ordinary Justice when they can catch them within their own territories or precincts Law Merchant is a Privilege or special law differing from the Common law of England and proper to Merchants and summary in proceeding anno 27 Edw. 3. stat 8 9 19 et 20. anno 13 Edward 1. stat tertio Lawing of dogs expeditatio canum See Expeditate Mastifs must be lawed every three year Crompton jurisdict fol. 163. LE Leasi lessa commeth of the French laysser i. linquere relinquere smittere permittere It signifieth in our Common law a demise or letting of lands or tenements or right of Common or of a Rent or any hereditament unto another for term of years or of life for a rent reserved And a lease is either written called a lease by Indenture or made by word of mouth called a lease paroll See the new terms of the law The party that letteth this lease is called the Leassour and the party to whom it is let the Lessee And a lease hath in it six ponts viz. words importing a demise a leassee named a commencement from a day certain a term of years a determination a reservation of a rent Cook vol. 6. Knights Case fol. 55. a. Leet leta is otherwise called a law day Smith de Repub. Anglor lib. 2. cap. 18. the word seemeth to have grown from the Saxon Lethe which as appeareth by the laws of King Edward set out by M Lambard num 34. was a Court of Jurisdiction above the Wapentake or Hundred comprehending three or four of them otherwise called Thryhing and contained the third part of a Province or Shire These Jurisdictions one and other be now abolished and swallowed up in the County Court except they be held by prescription Kitchin fol. 6. or Charter in the nature of a Franchise as I have said in Hundred The liberty of Hundreds is rare but many Lords together with their Courts Baron have likewise Leets adjoined and thereby doe enquire of such transgressions as are subject to the enquiry and correction of this Court whereof you may read your fill in Kitchin from the beginning of this book to the fift Chapter B●itton cap. 28. But this Court in whose Manor soever it be kept is accounted the kings Court because the authority thereof is originally belonging to the Crown and thence derived to inferiour persons Kitchin fol. 6. Justice Dyer saith that this Leete was first-derived from the Sheriffs Turn fol. 64. And it enquireth of all offences under high treason committed against the Crown and Dignity of the king though it cannot punish many but must certifie them to the Justices of Assise per Statut. anno 1. Ed 3. cap. ult Kitchin fol. 8. but what things be onely inquirable and what punishable see Kitchin in the charge of a Court Leet fol. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20. See also the Statute anno 8. Ed. 2. The Jurisdiction of Bayliffs in the Dutchy of Normandie within the compasse of their Provinces seemeth to be the same or very near the same with the power of our Leet cap. 4. of the grand Custumary Legacie legatum is a particular thing given by last will and testament For if a man dispose or transferre his whole right or estate upon another that is called Haereditas by the Civilians and he to whom it is so transferred is termed haeres Howbeit our common Lawyers call him Heir to whom all a mans lands and hereditaments doe descend by right of bloud See Heir See Hereditaments Leproso amovendo is a writ that lyeth for a Parish to remove a Leper or Lazar that thrusteth himself into the companie of his neighbours either in Church or other publike meeting and commeth with them to their annoyance or disturbance Regist orig fol. 267. Fitz nat Brev. fo 234. Lestage aliâs lastage lastagium proceedeth from the Saxon word last i. onus and is a Custom challenged in Fairs and Markets for carrying of things Rastals Exposition of words or a Custom challenged in cheapings or Fairs Saxon in the description of England cap. 11. Lastage anno 21. R. 2. cap. 18. seemeth to be the ballance of a ship Fleta termeth it Lesting saying quòd significat acquietantiam Le stagii lib. 1. cap. 47. § Lesting Letters of Exchange literae Cambitoriae vel literae Cambii Regist orig fol. 194. a. Letters patents literae patentes bee Writings sealed with the broad Seal of England whereby a man is authorized to doe or enjoy any thing that otherwise of himself he could not anno 19. H. 7. cap. 7. And they be so termed of their form because they be open with the Seal hanging ready to be shewed for the confirmation of the authority given by them If any will say that Letters patents may be granted by Common persons I will not greatly contend For I find that to be true in Fitz. nat br fol. 35. E. Howbeit they bee called rather patents in our Common speech then Letters patents Letters patents to make Denizens anno 32. Hen. 6. cap. 16. yet for difference sake the kings letters patents be called letters patents royal Anno 2 Hen. 6. cap. 10. There is likewise a writ patent Fitzh nat br fol. 1. seqq Levari facias is a writ directed to the Sheriff for the levying of a Sum of money upon lands and tenements of him that hath forfeited a Recognizance c. Regist origin fol. 298. b. 300. b. Levari facias damna de disseisitoribus is a writ directed to the Sheriff for the levying of damages wherein the disseisour hath formerly been condemned to the disseisee Regist fol. 214. b. Levari facias residuum debiti is a writ directed to the Sheriff for the levying of a Remanant of a debt upon lands and tenements or chattels of the debtor that hath in part sasatisfied before Regist. orig fol. 299. Levari facias quando vicecomes returnavir quòd non habuit emptores is a writ commanding the Sheriff to sell the goods of the debtor which he hath already taken and returned that he could not sell them and as much more of the debtors goods as will satisfie the whole debt Register orig fol. 300. a. Letter of Atturney litera Atturnatus is a writing authorizing an Atturney that is a man appointed to doe a lawfull act in our steeds West part prim symbol lib. 2. sect 559. It is called in the civil law mandatum or procuratorum There seemeth to be some difference between a letter of Atturney and a warrant of Atturney For whereas a letter of Atturney is sufficient if it be sealed and delivebefore sufficient witnesse a warrant of Atturney must bee acknowledged and certified before such persons as fines be acknowledged in the Countrey or at the least before some Justice or Sergeant West parte 2. symbol tit Recoveries sect 1. F. See the Statute anno 7 R. 2. cap. 13. Letters of
Marque See Marque and law of Marque See Reprisals See an 14. Hen. 6. cap. 7. Letters patents of summons for debt anno 9. H. 3. cap. 18. Levy Levare cometh of the French Lever i. allevare attollere It is used in our Common law for to set up any thing as to levie a mill Kitchin fol. 180. or to cast up as to levie a ditch Old nat br fol. 110. or to gather and exact as to levie money See Levarifacias LI Libell Libellus literally signifieth a litle book but by use it is the originall declaration of any action in the civill law an 2 H. 5. cap. 3. anno 2 Ed. 6. ca. 13. It signifieth also a criminous report of any man cast abroad or otherwise unlawfully published in writing but then for difference sake it is called an infamous libel famosus libellus Libello habendo See Copia libelli deliberanda Libera Chasea habenda is a writ Judicial granted to a man for a free chace belonging to his Manor after he hath by a Jury proved it to belong unto him Register Judicial fol. 36. 37. Liberate is a warrant issuing out of the Chancery to the Treasurer Chamberlanes and Barons of the Exchequer or Clerk of the Hamper c. for the payments of any annuall pension or other sums granted under the broad Seal v. Brooke titulo Taile d'Exchequer nu 4. Reg. orig fol. 193. a. b. or somtime to the Sheriff c. nat br fol. 132. for the delivery of any lands or goods taken upon forfeits of Recognisance Fitz. nat br fol. 131 132 v. Coke lib. 4. Fulwoods case fo 64 66. 67. It is also to a Jayler from the Justices for the delivery of a Prisoner that hath put in bail for his appearance Lamb. Eiren. lib. 3. ca. 2. Libertate probanda is a writ that lieth for such as be challenged for Slaves and offer to prove themselves free to the Sheriff that he take security of them for the proving of their freedome before the Justices of Assise and provide that in the mean time they be quiet from their vexations that challenge them for Slaves Fitzh nat brev fol. 77. See Nativo habendo Libertatibus allocandis is a writ that lieth for a Citizen or Burgesse of any City that contrarily to the liberties of the Citie or Town whereof he is is impleaded before the Kings Justices or Justices errants or Justice of the Forest c. that refuseth or deferreth to allow his privilege Origi Regist fol. 262. Fitz. nat br fol. 229. Libertatibus exigendis in itinerè is a writ whereby the King willeth the Justices in Eyre to admit of an Atturney for the defence of another mans liberty c. before them Regist orig fol. 19. b. Libertas lbertas is a privilege held by grant or prescription whereby men enjoy some benefit or favor beyond the ordinarie subject Liberties royal what they be see in Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. Broke hoc titulo See Franchise Librata terrae containeth four Oxegans and every Oxegange 13. A●●s Skene de verb. signif verbo Bovata terra See Farding deal of land Licence to goe to election Licentia eligendi Regist fol. 294. See Conge d'eslire Licence to arise licentia surgendi is a liberty given by the Court to a tenent that is essoined de malo lecti in a real action For the law is that in this case he may not arise out of his bed or at least go out of his chamber untill he have been viewed by Knights thereunto appointed and so upon view of his sicknesse have a day assigned him to appear or else lie until he be licensed by the Court to arise And the reason of this is as I take it because it may appear whether he caused himself to be essoined deceitfully yea or not and therefore if the Demandant can prove that he be seen out of his chamber walking up and down his grounds or else going abroad unto any other place before he be viewed or have license of the Court he shall be adjudged to be deceitfully essoined and to have made default Of this see Bracton lib. 5. tract 2. ca. 7 10 and 12. and Fleta li. 6. ca. 10. Horn in the second book of his Mirrour ca. des Essoynes saith that the adverse party may grant licentiam surgendi to his adversary thus essoyned And if he will not the king upon just cause may Licentia surgendi is the writ whereby the Tenent essoined de malo lecti obtaineth liberty to rise See License to arise See the Register fo ● Licentia transfretandi is a writ or warrant directed to the keepers of the port at Dover c. willing them to let some passe quietly over sea that hath formerly obtained the kings license thereunto Register original fol. 193. b. Lieutenent locum tenens is a French word signifying as much as Legatus It is compounded of lieu id est locus and tenir id est tenere It signifieth with us him that occupieth the Kings place or representeth his person as the Lieutenent of the kings of Ireland anno 4. H. 4. cap. 6. So it is used an 2 3 Edward 6. cap. 2. whence that officer seemeth to take his beginning But I read also in Master Man● woods first part of Forest laws pag. 113. that the Lord chief Justice in Eyre of the Forest and the chief warden also have their lieutenents in the forest So that though a Lieutenant be most ord●nary and most properly used for the deputy of a king yet is it somtime extended to their deputies that be but lieutenants to the King Lieutenent of the ordinance anno 39 Eliza. cap. 7. Liege ligius is a word borrowed from the Feudists and hath two several significations in our common Law sometime being used for Liege Lord an 34 35 H. 8. cap. 1. and an 25 ejusdem cap. 3. and somtime for Liege man an 10 R. 2. ca. 1. and an 11 ejusdem cap. 1. Liege-lord is he that acknowledgeth no superiour Duarenus in commentar de Consuctud n. Feudorum cap. 4. nu 3. Liegeman is he that oweth legeancie to his Liege lord Master Skene de verbo signif verbo Ligeantia saith that it is derived from the Italian word Liga i. a Band league or obligation In whom read more of this matter Ligeancie is such a duty or fealty as no man may owe or bear to more than one Lord. Jdem eodem num 4. I find also this definition of ligeancie in the graund Custumary of Normandie ca. 13. Ligeantia est ex qua domixo tenentur vasalli sui contra omnes homines qui mori possunt vivere proprii corporis praeberi consilsi auxilii juvamentum ci se in omnibus innocuos exhibere nec ei adversantinm partem in aliquo confovere Dominus etiam eosdem tenetur regere protegere defensare eosque secundum ura consuetudines leges patriae pertractare This is otherwise called legietas
Sacramentales à Sacramento id est juramento diceb antur ii qui quamvis rei de qua ambigebatur testes non fuissent tamen ex ejus cujus res agebatur animi sententia in eadem quae ille verba jurabant illius videlicet probitate innocentia confisi Nam tuum demum adhibebantur cum testes nulli extarent See the rest The formal words used by him that maketh his Law are commonly these Hear O ye Justices that I do not owe this sum of mony demanded neither all nor any part thereof in manner and form declared so help me God and the contents of this Book To make services or custom is nothing else but to perform them Old nat brev folio 14. To make Oath is to take Oath Maletent in the Statute called the confirmation of the liberties of c. anno 29 E. 1. cap. 7. is interpreted to be a toll of forty shillings for every sack of Wool Srow in his Annals calleth it a Maletot pag. 461. See also the Statute de Tallagio non concedendo an 35 ejusdem stat Malin see Marle Manbote signifieth a pecuniary compensation for killing of a man Lambert in his Exposition of Saxon words verbo Aestimatis Of which read Roger Hoveden also in parte poster suorum annal f. 344. a b. Mandamus is a writ that lyeth after the year and day whereas in the mean time the writ called Diem clausit extremum hath not been sent out to the Escheatour for the same purpose for the which it should formerly have been sent forth Fitzh nat brev fol. 253. B. See Diem clausit extremum Mandamus is also a charge to the Sheriff to take into the Kings hands all the lands and tenements of the Kings widow that against her oath formerly given marieth without the Kings consent Register fol. 295. b. See widow Mandatum is a commandment judicial of the King or his Justices to have any thing done for the dispatch of Justice where of you shall see diversity in the Table of the Register judicial verbo Mandatum Manor Manerium see meth to come of the French manoir i. domicilium habitatio M. Skene de verb. signif verb. Manerium saith it is called mane ium quasi manurium because it is laboured with handy work by the Lord himself It signifieth in our Common law a rule or government which a man hath over such as hold Land within his fee. Touching the original of these Manors it seemeth that in the beginning there was a certain compasse or circuit of ground granted by the King unto some man of worth as a Baron or such like for him and his Heirs to dwell upon and to exercise some Jurisdiction more or lesse within that compass as he thought good to grant Performing him such services and paying such yearly rent for the same as he by his grant required and that afterward this great man parcelled his Land to other meaner men injoining them again such services and rents as he thought good and by that means as he became Tenent to the King so the inferiours became Tenents unto him See Perkins Reservations 670. and Andrew Horns Book intituled the Mirrour of Justices l. 1. cap. du Roy Alfred See the definition of a Manor Fulb. fol. 18. And this course of benefiting or rewarding their Nobles for good service have our Kings borrowed from the Emperors of Rome or the Lombard Kings after they had setled themselves in Italy as may well appear by Antonius Contius in methodo feudorum c. 1. de origin libris Feudorum And I find that according to this our custom all lands holden in fee throughout France are divided into Fiefz and arrierifiefz where of the former are such as are imediatly granted by the K. the second such as the Kings feudataries do again grant to others Gregorti Syntagm lib. 6. ca. 5. nu 3. But the inconstancie of mans estate and the mutability of time hath brought to passe that those great men or their posterity have alienated these Mansions and lands so given them by their Prince and others that had none have by their wealth purchased many of them And again that many for capital offences have forfeited them to the King and that thereby they still remain in the Crown or are bestowed again upon others so that at these dayes many be in the hands of mean men such as by their skill in Law or Physick by Merchandize Grazing or such other good husbandry have gathered wealth and inabled themselves to purchase them of those that by descent received them from their ancestors in greater abundance than wit to keep them But whosoever possesseth these Maners the liberty belonging unto them is real and predial and therefore remaineth still though the owners be changed In these dayes a Maner rather signifieth the Jurisdiction and royaltie incorporeal than the land or site For a man may have a Maner in grosse as the law termeth it that is the right and interest of a Court Baron with the perquisites thereunto belonging and another or others have every foot of the land thereunto belonging Kitchin fol. 4. Broke hoc titulo per totum Bracton lib. 4. ca. 31. num 3. divideth manerium in capitale non capitale See Bracton lib. 5. tractat 5. ca. 28. nu pri See Fee The new ex● ositor of Law terms faith that Maner is a thing compounded of divers things as of a house land earable pasture meadow wood rent advonzen Court Baron and such like And this ought to be by long continuance of time to the contrary whereof mans memory cannot discern c. Mansio Mansio as Bracton defineth it lib. 5. cap. 28. nu pri is a dwelling consisting of one or more houses without any neighbour And yet he granteth forthwith that Mansio Mansioni pessit esse vicinata I find it most commonly used for the Lords chief dwelling house within his fee whether it have neighbours adjoyning or not otherwise called the capital mesuage Bracton lib. 2. ca. 26. or the chief Maner place Mansio amongst the antient Romans was a place appointed for the lodging of the Prince or Souldiers in their journey furnished with convenient entertainment by the neighbours adjoyning And in this sense we read primam mansionem for the first nights lodging and so in order It is probable that this word Mansion doth in some construction signifie so much land as Beda calleth Familiam in his Ecclesiastial History For Master Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verb. Hida terrae saith that that which he calleth familiam others ●ince call Manentem vel mansam Mansus and Mansum I read of in the Feudists which as Hotoman saith in verbis feudalibus est neque domus neque area neque hortus sed ager certi modi ac mensurae And again in Commentariis Feudorum lib. p. tit 4. vers de Manso Agri deserti et inculti certa mensura dabantur cultoribus quasi in
Kings house belongeth to the Earl of Norffolk in fee and that he may appoint with the Kings consent a Knight under him to execute the office which office he also describeth to be especially to execute the judgements and decrees of the Steward and to have the keeping of the prisoners lib. 2. cap. 4. and read further of his office in the fift chap. of the said Book which is to dispose of the Lodging in the Kings houshold under the Chamberlain and to clear the Verge of Strumpets c. anno 5 H. 3. statut 5. Then be there other inferiour Officers of this name as Marshal of the Justices in Eyr anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 19. Marshal of the Kings Bench anno 5 Ed. 3. ca. 8. and this is he which hath the Custody of the Prison called the Kings Bench in Southwark Fitzh nat brev fol. 251. I. And these inseriour Marshals be either ad placitum or in fee Kitchin fol. 143. I find also in Fleta lib. 2. ca. 15. mention of a Marshal of the Kings Hall whose office is when the Tables be prepared and Cloaths laid to call out both those of the Houshold and Strangers according to their worth and decently to place them to reject unworthy persons to know the number of the Hall and to testifie it at the next account to see Dogs kept out to save the Almes from filching to see silence kept and every man competently served with meat and drink and when the Court removeth to appoint every of the Houshold his lodging There is also a Marshal of the Eschequer anno 51 H. 3. stat 5. to whom the Court committeth the custody of the Kings Debtors during the Term-time to the end they may be farther imprisoned if they clear not their Debts He also assigneth Sheriffs Escheatours Customers and Collectors their Auditors before whom they shall account He hath all inquisitions taken before Escheators virtute officii delivered unto him to be delivered by him to the Treasurers Remembrancer Mareshalsee Marescaltia is the Court of the Marshal or word for word the seat of the Marshal whom see Cromptons jurisd fol. 102. It is also used for the Prison in Southwark the reason whereof may be because the Marshal of the Kings house was wont perhaps to sit there in judgement See the Statute anno 9 R. 2. ca. 5. anno 2 Henry 4. cap. 23. Martial law is the Law that dependeth upon the voice of the King or the Kings Lieutenant in wars For howbeit the King for the indifferent and equal temper of Laws to all his Subjects do not in time of Peace make any laws but by the consent of the three estates in Parliament yet in wars by reason of great dangers rising of small occasions he useth absolute power in so much as his word goeth for Law And this is called Martial law Smith de Repub. Angl. li. 2. cap. 3. See Law of Armes Mariage Maritagium signifieth not only the coupling together of a man and wife but also the interest of bestowing a ward or a widow in mariage Magna Charta cap. 6. anno 9 Hen. 3. and Bracton lib. 2. cap. 3. and also it signifieth land given in mariage Bracton lib. 2. cap. 34 39. And in this signification the same Author saith that Maritagium est aut liberum aut servitio obligatum li. 2. cap. 7. num 3 4. Liberum maritagium disitur ubi donator vult quod terra sic data quieta sit libera ab omni seculari servitio quod ad Dominum feudi possit pertinere its quòd ille cui sic data fuerit nullum omninò inde faciat servitium usque ad tertium haeredem usque ad quartum gradum ita quòd tertius haeres sic inclusivus See the rest See also Skene de verbo significat verbo Maritagium who is worth the reading Maritagio amisso per desaltam is a writ for the Tenent in Franck mariage to recover lands c. whereof he is deforced by another Reg. fol. 171. Maritagio forisfacto is a writ See For is factura Maritagii Marke merca commeth of the Saxon Mearc which signifieth a piece of money worth thirty silver pence Lamb. explication of Saxon words verbo Mancusa what it now signifieth in our coyn every man knoweth But in antient times I find a mark of gold which was the quantity of eight ounces Stowes Annals pag. 32. and again pag. 691. 12 marks of Gold Troy weight the which was 200 pounds of English money after which rate every mark valued 16 pounds 13 shillings four pence M. Skene de verbo signif verbo Merke saith that in tractatu de ponderibus mensuris a mark signifieth an ounce weight or half a pound whereof the Dram is the eight part like as the ounce is the eight part of a mark citing Cassanaeus de consuet Burgund Rub. prim § 7. verbo Solz Turnoys hiis verbis Solidus inquit in jure capitur pro auro quorum 72. faciunt libram auri duodecim unciae faciunt libram octo unciae mercam Market mercatus commeth of the French marche i. emporium forüm nundinarium it signifieth with us the same thing and also the liberty or privilege whereby a Town is inabled to keep a market Old nat brev fol. 149. So doth Bracton use it lib. 2. cap. 24. num 6. lib. 4. cap. 46. where he sheweth that one market ought to be distant from another Sex leucas dimidiam tertiam partem dimidiae The reason thereof both he and Fleta giveth in these words Quia omnes rationabiles dietae constant ex 20 milliaribus Dividatur ergo dieta in tres partes prima autem matutina detur euntibus versus mercatum secunda detur ad emendum vendendum quae quidem sufficere debet omnibus nisi sint forte mercatores statarii qui meroes deposuerint exposuerint suerint venales quibus necessaria erit prolexior mora in mercatu tertia pars relinquitur redeuntibus de mercatu ad propria Et quae quident omuia necessa erit facere de die non de nocte propter insidias incursum latronum ut omnia sint in tuto c. lib. 4. cap. 28. § Item refert Marle is a kind of stone or chalke which men in divers Countries of this Realm cast upon their Land to make it the more fertile It is some where called Malin anno 17 Edw. 4. cap. 4. Marque seemeth to be a French word signifying notam vel signum or else to come from the German march i. limes it signifieth in the ancient Statutes of our Land as much as reprisals as anno 4 H. 5. cap. 7. Marques and Reprisals are used as Synonyma And Letters of Marques are found in the same signification in the same Chapter The reason may be because the griefs whereupon these Letters are sought and granted are commonly given about the bounds and limits of every every Countrie or
at least the remedy for the same is likest there to be had by some sodain inrode and happing of such recompence of the injury received as may most conveniently be lighted upon See Reprisalls See Marches Marquis Marchio by the opinion of Hotom verbo Marchio in verbis feudalibus commeth of the German March i. limes signifying originally as much as Custos limitis or Comes praefectus limitis of these Zasius thus writeth de Marchione nihil compertum est nisi quod Gothicum vocabilum putamus And afterwards thus Hujusmodi Marchionum sive ut nos appellamus Margraphiorum origo in limitaneos praepositos sive duces referenda Margraphii dicti quòd limitibus quos vulgo marken appellamus graphii td est praepositi fuerunt c. For in those Territories that have naturally no bounds of great strength or defence there is need of wise and stout men toward their borders for the keeping out of Neighbour enemies But here in England though we have a L. Warden of the Marches northward and a Warden of the Cinque Ports toward the South-east and were wont to have Lord Marchers between us and Wales that served this turn yet those which we call Marquises are Lords of more dignity without any such charge and are in honor and account next unto Dukes At this day I know but one in England and that is the Marques of Winchester being of that noble family of the Powlets See Cassanaeus de consuetud Burg. pag. 15. Marrow was a Lawyer of great account that lived in Henry the seventh this daies whose learned Readings are extant but not in print Lambert Eirenarch lib. 1. cap. 1. Marterns see Furre Master of the Rolls Magistri rotulorum is an Assistant unto the Lord Chancellour of England in the High Court of Chancery and in absence heareth Causes there and giveth Orders Cromptons Jurisdiction fol. 41. His Title in his Patent as I have heard is Clericus parvae bagae Custos rotulorum domus conversorum This Domus conversorum is the place where the Rolls are kept so called because the Jews in ancient time as there were any of them brought to Christianity were bestowed in that House seperately from the rest of their Nation But his office seemeth originally to have sprung from the safe keeping of the Rolls or Records of Indictments passed in the Kings Courts and many other things He is called Clark of the Rolls anno 12 Rich. 2. cap. 2. and in Fortescue his Book cap. 24. and no where Master of the Rolls untill anno 11 H. 7. cap. 20. and yet an 11. ejusdem cap. 25. he is also called Clark In which respect Sir Thomas Smith l. 2. cap. 10. de Repub Angl. well saith That he might not unfitly be called Custos Archivorum He seemeth to have the bestowing of the offices of the six Clarks anno 14 15 Henry the eight cap. 1. Master of the Mint an 2 Hen. 6. cap. 14. he is now called the warden of the Mint whose office see in Mint Master of the Court of Wards and Liveries is the chief principal officer of the Court of Wards and Liveries named and assigned by the King to whose Custody the Seal of the Court is committed He at the entring upon his office taketh an oath before the Lord Chancellor of England well and truly to serve the King in his Office to minister equal Justice to rich and poor to the best of his cunning wit and power diligently to procure all things which may honestly and justly be to the Kings advantage and profit and to the augmentation of the rights and Prerogative of the Crown truly to use the Kings Seal appointed to his Office to endeavour to the uttermost of his power to see the King justly answered of all such profits rents revenues and issues as shall yearly rise grow or be due to the King in his Office from time to time to deliver with speed such as have to do before him not to take or receive of any person any gift or reward in any Case or matter depending before him or wherein the King shall be party wherby any prejudice losse hinderance or disherison shall be or grow to the King an 33 H. 8. cap. 33. Master of the Horse is he that hath the rule and charge of the Kings stable being an Office of high account and alwaies bestowed upon some Noblemen both valiant and wise This Officer under the Emperors of Rome was called Comes sacri stabuli The master of the Horse is mentioned anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. and an 1 Edw. 6. cap. 5. Master of the Posts is an Officer of the Kings Court that hath the appointing placing and displacing of all such through England as provide Post horse for the speedy passing of the K. messages other businesses in the thorow-fair towns where they dwel as also to see that they keep a certain number of convenient Horses of their own and when occasion is that they provide others therewith to furnish such as have warrant from him to take Post-horses either from or to the Seas or other borders or places within the Realm He likewise hath the care to pay them their wages and make their allowance accordingly as he shall think meet This Officer is mentioned an 2 E. 6. cap. 3. Master of the Armoury is he that hath the care and oversight of his Majesties Armour for his person or Horses or any other provision or store thereof in any standing Armouries with command and placing or displacing of all inferiour Officers thereunto appertaining Mention is made of him anno 39 Elizabeth cap. 7. Master of the Jewel-house is an Officer in the Kings houshold of great credit being allowed bouge of Court that is dyet for himself and the inferiour Officers viz. Clarks of the Jewel-house and a special lodging or Chamber in Court having charge of all plate of Gold of Silver double or parcel guilt used or occupied for the Kings or Queens board or to any Officer of account attendant in Court and of all Plate remaining in the Tower of London of Chains and loose Jewels not fixed to any garment Mention is made of this Officer an 39 Eliz. c. 7. Master of the Kings Houshold magister hospitii is in his just Title called Grant master of the Kings Houshold and beareth the same Office that he did that was wont to be called Lord Steward of the Kings most honourable Houshold anno 32 Henry 8. cap. 39. Whereby it appeareth that the name of this Officer was then changed and Charles Duke of Suffolk President of the Kings Councel then enjoying that office was so to be called ever after so long as he should possess that office Master of the Ordinance anno 39 Eliz. ca. 7. is a great officer to whose care all the Kings Ordinance and Artillery is committed being some great man of the Realm and expert in marshal affairs Master of the Chancery Magister Cancellariae is an assistant
one with Brittons misaventure Homicide by chance mixed he defineth sect 50. to be when the killers ignorance or negligence is joyned with the chance as if a man loppe Trees by a high way side by which many usually travel and cast down a bough not giving warning c. By which bough a man passing by is slain Miscontinuance Kitchin fol. 231. See Discontinuance Mise misa is a French word signifying as much as expensum in Latine and the Latine word Misa is so used in Kitchin fol. 144. and in West parte 2. symb titulo Proceedings in Chancery Sect. 21. F. It is used anno 2. 3. Edw. 6. ca. 36. for a summ of money paid by the Kings tenents in certain Counties in Wales according to their several customs In the Statute 33 H. 8. c. 13. it is used plurally for certain cunumary gratuities sent to the Lord Marchers of Wales by their Tenents at their first comming to their lands And an 4. et 5. Ph. Mar. cap. 11. Mise is used in an action of right or property for the point whereupon the parties proceed to trial either by Assise or batel as issue is in an action personal if the Mise be upon battel Litleton fo 102. and in the Old nat br fol. 2. you have these words Know yee that this writ hath but two Issues that is to say joyning the mise upon the meer and that is to put himself into the great Assise of our Soveraign Lord the King or to joyn battel See anno 37 Ed. 3. ca. 16. To joyn the mise upon the meer is as much to say as to joyn the mise upon the cleer right and that in more plain termes is nothing else but ●o joyn upon this point whether hath the ●ore right the Tenent or Demandant Litleton lib. 3. cap. 8. fol. 101. b. This word in ●ome other place is used for a Participle signi●ing as much as cast or put upon in English which appeareth by Sir Edw. Cokes report in Stafsins case vol. 6. fol. 124. a. Misericordia is used in the Common law for an arbitrary punishment Bracton li. 4. tractat 5. cap. 6. in these words Item siquis in misericordiam incider●t pro disseisina non remanebit misericordia exigenda si ille qui amiserit quaesiverit convictionem Kithin fol. 78. out of Glanvile saith thus Est autem misericordia quia quis per uramentum legalium hominum amerciatus est ne aliquid de suo honor abilicontenemento amittat Which saying you have in a maner word for word Glanv l. 9. ca. 11. Fitzh saith that it is called misericordia because ie ought to be very moderate and rather lesse than the offence according to the tenure of the great Charter cap. 14. This saith Fitzherbert in his nat brev in the writ de moderata misericordia fol. 75. A. I. Misericordia is to be quit of misericors that is discharged of all manner of amercements that may a man fall into within the Forest See M. Cromptons Jurisdictions fol. 196. See Amerciament See Mercie and Moderata misericordia Miskenning i. changing of speech in Court Saxon in the description of England ca. 11. Misnomer is compounded of the French mes which in composition alwaies signifieth as much as amisse and nomer i. nominare It signifieth in our Common law the using of one name for another or mis-terming ●ro●e titulo Misnomer Misprision misprisio commeth of the French Mespris i. fastidium contemptus It signifieth in our Common law neglect or negligence or over-sight As for example misprision of treason or of felony is a neglect or light account shewed of treason or felony committed by not revealing it when we know it to be committed Stawnf pl. cor l. 1. ca. 19. which read at large or by letting any person committed for treason or felonie or suspition of either to goe before he be indited Also Misprision of Clerks anno 8 H. 6. ca. 15. is a neglect of Clerks in writing or keeping Records Thirdly anno 14 Ed. 3. ca. 6. stat prim by misprision of Clerks no processe shall be admitted Misprision of treason is the concealment or not disclosing of known treason for the which the offendours are to suffer imprisonmen● during the Kings pleasure lose their goods and the profits of their lands during their lives Crompton in his Justice of Peace cap. Misprision of felony fol. 40. West parte 2. symb titulo Inditements Sect. 63. in fine Misprision of felonie seemeth only finable by the Justices before whom the party is attainted Cromptons Justice of Peace ubi supra The Justices of the Common place have power to assess fines and amerciaments upon persons offending for misprisions contempts or negligences for not doing or mis-doing any thing in or concerning fines West parte 2. symbol titulo Fines Sect. 133. Justices of Assise shall amend the defaults of Clerks misprising of a Syllable or Letter or writing Cromptons jurisdictions fol. 20● But it is to be noted that other faults may be accounted misprisions of Treason or Felony because certain latter Statutes do inflict that punishment upon them● h●t of old hath been inflicted upon misprisions wherof you have an example an 14 El. cap. 3. of such as coyn forein Coyns not current in this Realm and of their Procurers Aiders and Abetters And see the new exposition of Law-terms Misprision signifieth also a mistaking anno 14 Edw. 3. stat pri cap. 6. Misses See Mise Misuser is an abuse of liberty or benefit As he shall make fine for his misuser Old nat br fol. 149. Mystery mysterium commeth of the Latin mysterium or rather from the French mestier i. ars artificium an art or occupation Mittendo manuscriptum pedis finis is a writ Judicial directed to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of the Exchequer to search and transmit the foot of a Fine acknowledged before Justices in Eyr into the Common plees c. Reg. orig fol. 14. a b. Mittimus signifieth a Precept sent by the King out of his Bench to those that have the custody of fines levyed that they send them by a day assigned to his Bench West parte 2. symb titulo Fines Sect. 138. F. 154. B. and also to the Exchequer for certificate that Judgement is given for the livery of Lands to such or such a one out of the Kings hands whereupon he is dismissed also out of the Exchequer anno 5 R. 2. cap. 15. of divers other uses and applications of this Mittimus see the Register original in the Table of the Book MO Moderata misericordia is a Writ that lyeth for him that is amerced in Court Baron or other being not of Record for any transgression or offence beyond the quality of a fault It is directed to the Lord of the Court or his Bailiff commanding them to take a moderate amerciament of the party and is founded upon Magna Charta cap. 14. Quòd nullus liber homo amercietur nisi secundùm qualitatem delicti c.
do it And therefore whereas the Rhetoricians comprise all the substance of their discourses under three Questions An sit quid sit quale sit this Answer falleth under the first of the three all other Answers are under one of the other two And as this is the general Answer in an Action of Trespass that is an Action criminal civilly prosecuted so is it also in all Actions criminally followed either at the sute of the King or other wherein the Defendant denyeth the crime objected unto him See the New Book of Entries titulo Non culpabilis and Stawnf pl. cor lib. 2. cap. 62. Non est factum is an Answer to a Declaration wherby a man denyeth that to be his Deed whereupon he is impleaded Broke hoc titulo Non implacitando aliquem de libero tenemento sine brevi is a Writ to inhibit Bailiffs c. from distreining any man without the Kings Writ touching his Freehold Register fol. 171. b. Non intromittendo quando breve praecipe in capite subdolè impetratur is a Writ directed to Iustices of the Bench or in Eyr willing them not to give one hearing that hath under the colour of intitling the King to Land c. as holding of him in Capite deceitfully obtained the Writ called Praecipe in capite but to put him to this Writ of Right if he think good to use it Register original fol. 4. b. Non Mercandizando victualia in a Writ directed to the Justices of Assise commanding them to inquire whether the Officers of such a Town do sell Victuals in gross or by retayl during their Office contrary to the Statute and to punish them if they find it true Regist fol. 184. Non molestando is a Writ that lyeth for him which is molested contrary to the Kings Protection granted him Register fol. 24. Non omittas is a Writ lying where the Sheriff delivereth a former Writ to a Bayliff of a Franchise within the which the party on whom it is to be served dwelleth and the Bayliff neglecteth to serve it for in this Case the Sheriff returning that he delivered it to the Bayliff this shall be directed to the Sheriff charging him himself to execute the Kings commandement Old nat brev fol. 44. of this the Regist. orig hath three sorts fol. 82. b. 151. and the Register judic one folio 5 56. Non penendo in Assisis Juratis is a Writ founded upon the Stat. Westm 2. ca. 38. and the stat Articuli super Chartas cap. 9. which is granted upon divers causes to men for the freeing them from Assises and Juries See Fitz. nat brev fol. 165. See the Regist fol. 179 100 181 183. Non precedendo ad Assisam Rege inconsulto is a writ to stop the Tryal of a Cause appertaining unto one that is in the Kings service ● c. untill the Kings pleasure be farther known Register fol. 220. a. Non residentia pro clericis regis is a Writ directed to the Ordinary sharging him not to molest a Clerk imployed in the Kings service by reason of his non residence Regist orig folio 58. b. Non sute is a renunciation of the sute by the Plaintiff or demandant when the matter is so far proceeded in as the Jury is ready at the Bar to deliver their verdict anno 2 H. 4. cap. 7. See the New Book of Entries verbo Non-sute The Civilians term it Litis renunciationein Non solvendo pecuniam ad quam Clericus mu●ctatur pro non residentia is a Writ prohibiting an Ordinary to take a pecuniary mulct imposed upon a Clerk of the King for Non-residence Reg. orig fol. 59. Non-tenure is an exception to a count by saying that he holdeth not the Land specified in the count or at the least some part of it anno 25 Edw. 3. statut 4. cap. 16 West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Sect. 138. maketh mention of Non tenure general and Non tenure special See the New Book of Entries Verbo Non tenure where it is said that especial Non tenure is an exception alleging that he was not Tenent the day whereon the writ was purchased Non tenure general is then by Likelyhood where one denyeth himself ever to have been Tenent to the Land in question Non sum informatus See Informatus non sum Non sane memorie Non sanae memoriae is on exception taken to any Act declared by the Plaintiff or Demandant to be done by another whereupon he groundeth his Plaint or Demand And the Contents of this Exception be that the party that did that Act being himself or any other was not well in his wits or mad when he did it See the New Book of Entries titulo nonsane memorie and Dum non fuit compos mentis See also supra Non compos mentis Non term non terminus is the time of Vacation between Term and Term. It was wont to be called the times or days of the Kings peace Lamb. Archaiono fol. 126. and what these were in the time of King Edward the Confessour see there This time was called Justicium or Feriae among the Romans or dies nefasti Ferias appellari notum est tempus illud quod forensibus negotiis jure dicendo vacabat Earum autem aliae solennes erant alia repentinae Brisson de verb. signif lib. 6. vide Wesenbec paratit De Feriis num 6. Note of ● Fine nota finis is a brief of a fine made by the Chirographer before it be ingrossed The form whereof see in West parte 2. Symbol titulo Fines Section 117. Novel assignment nova assignatio is an assignment of time or place or such like otherwise than as it was before assigned In Brook you may find these words in effect titulo Deputy num 12. See novel assignment of Trespass in a new place after Bar pleaded Brock tit Trespass 122. and novel assignment in a Writ de ejectione custodiae titulo Ejectione custodiae num 7. See Assignment NU Nuae mater See Mater Nunne Nonna is the French word nonnain or nonne something altered which signifieth a holy or confecrated Virgin or a woman that hath by vow bound her self to a single and chaste life in some place and Company of other women seperated from the world and addicted to an especial service of God by Prayer Fasting and such like holy exercises If we would know whence this word came into France Saint Hierome maketh it an Aegyptian word as Hospinian recordeth of him in this Book De origine progressu monachatus fol. 2. Nuper obiit is a Writ that lyeth for a Co-heir being deforced by her Co-heir of Lands or Tenements whereof the Grandfather Father Uncle or Brother to them both or any other their Common Ancesters died seised of an Estate in Fee-simple See the form of the Writ Origin Regist fol. 226 c. Fitzh nat brev fol. 197. If the Ancestor died sessed in Fee tail then the Co-heir deforced shall have a Formedon Idem
de decimis cap. sancta verb. Pannagiis M. Skenede verborum signif calleth it pannagium and defineth it to be the duty given to the King for the pasturage of swine in the forest The french word for this same thing is panage or glandee i. glandatio vel glandium collectio et pastio suum ex glandibus And wee surely take it from the French whence they had it or what etoymolgie they make of it let themselves look PE Peace pax in the generall signification is opposite to war or strife But particularly it signifyeth with us a quiet and harmlesse cariage or behaviour toward the King and his People Lamberd eirenarcha li. 1. cap. 2. pa. 7. And this is one way provided for all men by oath as you may read in Franck pledge but more especially in case where one particular man or some few go in danger of harm from some other For upon his oath made thereof before a Justice of peace he must be secured by good bond See Lamb. eirenarcha lib. 2. ca. 2. pag. 77. See also Cromptons Justice of peace fol. 118. b. c. usque f. 129. This among the Civilians is called cautio de non offendendo Gail de pace publ lib. pri ca. 2. nu 1. Peace of God and the Church pax Dei ecclesiae is anciently used for that rest which the Kings subjects had from trouble and sute of law between the terms See Vacation Peace of the King anno 6. R. 2. stat pri ca. 13. is that peace and security both for life and goods which the King promiseth to all his Subjects or others taken to his protection See Sute of the Kings peace This point of policy seemeth to have been borrowed by us from the Feudists for in the second book of the seuds there is a chapter viz. 53. chapter intituled thus De pace tenenda inter subditos et juramento firmanda et vindicanda et de paena judictbus opposit a qui eum vindicare et justitiam facere neglexerint the contents of which chapter is a Constitution of Frederick the first as Hotoman there proveth expounding it very learnedly and like himself Of this Kings peace Roger Hoveden setteth down divers branches parte poster suorum annalium in H. 2. fol. 144. a. b. and fol. 430. b. he mentioneth a form of an oath which Hubert Archbishop of Canterbury and chief Iustice of England in R. the first his daies sent through the whole realm to be taken by the Kings subjects See Deciners See Surety of peace There is also the peace of the Church for which see Sanctuary And the peace of the Kings highway which is the immunity that the Kings highway hath from all annoyance or molestation See watlin street The peace of the plow whereby the plow and plow cattel are secured from distresses For which see Fitz. nat br fol. 90. A. B. So Fayres may be said to have their peace because no man may in them be troubled for any debt elsewhere contracted See Fayre Pedage pedaginm signifieth money given for the passing by foot or horse through any countrey Extra de Censibus ca. Innovamus I read not this word in any English writer but only the author of the book called pupilla occuli parte 9. ca. 7. A. D. I. I think we rather use passage for it Pedagia dicuntur quae dantur à transeuntibus in locum constitutum à principe Et capiens pedagium debet dare salvum conductum et territorium ejus tenere securum Baldus in usibus Feudorum de pa. jura fir sect Conventionales Cassan de consuetud Burg. pa. 118. hath these words Pedaginm à pede dictum est quòd à transeuntibus solvitur c. Peere pila seemeth properly to be a fortresse made against the force of the sea for the better security of ship that lye at harbour in any haven So is the peer of Dover described in M. Camd. Bris. pag. 259 in meo Peeres pares commeth of the French per i. par It signifieth in our common Law plurally those that are empaneled in an Enquest uppon any man for the convicting and clearing him of any offence for the which he his called in question And the reason thereof is because the course and custome of our nation is to trie every man in this case by his equals West pri cap. 6. anno 3. Edw. prim So Kitchin useth it fol. 78. in these words Mais fi le amerciament soit assirre per pares And this word in this signification is not in use with us only but with other nations also For pares sunt convasalli quorum sententi● vasallus propter felo-xiam est condemnatus Barklaius de Regno lib. 4. cap. 2. Fit pares sunt qui ab ecdem domino feudum tenent lib. prim Feudor cap. 26. But this word is most notoriously used for those that be of the Nobility of the Realm Lords of the Parliament and so it is used in Stawnf pl. of the Crown lib. 3. cap. Trial per les Peeres being the first The reason whereof is because though there be a distinction of degrees in our Nobility yet in all publike actions they are equal as in their voices in Parliament and in passing upon the triall of any Noble man c. This appellation seemeth to be borrowed from Fraunce and from those twelve Peeres that Charles the Great or Lewis the younger in some mens opinion instituted in that kingdome which be next unto the King and are of like dignity among themselves touching their power in publike affairs Or whom you may read Vincentius Lupanus de magist Francia lib. 1. cap. Pares Franciae So that wee though wee have borrowed the appellation and applyed it with some reason to all that are Lords of the Parlament yet we have no set number of them because the number of our Nobles may be more or lesse as it pleaseth the King Pelota is a word used in the book called pupilla oculi parte 5. ca. 22. signifying the ball of the foot of the French pelote i. pila Pein fort dure See Pain fort et dure Pelt wool is the woll pulled off the skinne or pelt of dead sheep anno 8 H. 6. cap 22. Penon anno 11 R. 2. cap. prim is a Standard Banner or Ensigne carried in warr It is borrowed from Fraunce for pennon in the French language signifyeth the same thing See Baronet yee read this word anno 11. R. ca. 1. Penue See Baye Peper Piper is a spice known in a manner to every child being the fruit of a plant that is between a tree and a herb of whose diversities and nature you may read Gerards herball lib. 3. cap. 146. This is set among merchandize that are to be garbled anno 1. Jacob. cap. 9. Peper lowse anno 32. H. 8. cap. 14. Per cui post See Entrie Perambulatione facienda is a writ that is sued out by two or more Lords of Maners
therefore to be noted that the Church of Rome under pretence of her supremacy and the dignity of Saint Peters chair grew to such an incroaching that there could not be a benefice were it Bishoprick Abbathy or other of any worth here in England the bestowing whereof could escape the Pope by one means or other In so much as for the most part he granted out Mandates of Ecclesiastical livings before they were void to certain persons by his Bulls prerending therein a great care to see the Church provided of a Successor before it needed Whence it grew that these kinds of Bulls were called Gratiae expectativae or Provisiones whereof you may read a learned discourse in Duarenus that worthy Civilian in his tractate De beneficiis lib. 3. ca. 1. and in his treatise De immunitate ecclesiae Gallicanae These provisions were so rife with us that at the last King Edw. the third that heroical Prince not disgesting so intollerable an oppression made a statute in the 25 year of his reign stat 5. cap. 22. and another stat 6. ejusdem anni cap. p●i and a third anno 27. against those that drew the Kings people out of the Realm to answer of things belonging to the Kings Court and another anno 28. statu 2. c. 1 2 3 4. to the like effect whereby he greatly restrained this liberty of the Pope Yet such was the wantonness that grew out of his power and the impatience of Princes in those daies that he still adventured the continuance of these provisions in so much as King Richard the second made likewise a statute against them in the Twelfth year of his reign ca. 15. and the 13 year stat 2. cap. 2. making mention of the said first Statute of Edward the third ratifying the same and appointing the punishment of those that offended against it to be perpetual banishment forfeiture of their lands tenements goods and chattels as by the same doth more at large appear And again in the 16 year of his reign cap. 5. to meet more sully with all the shifts invented to defraud these former Statutes he expresseth the offence more particularly and setteth the same punishment to it that he ordained in the last former Statute For there toward the end he hath these words if any purchase or pursiew or do to be purchased or siewed in the Coure of Rome or elsewhere any such translations processes and sentences of excommunication Bulls Instruments or any other things c. After him K. Henr. the fourth in like manner grieved at this importunie by other abuses not fully met with in the former Statutes in the second year of his reign cap. 3. and 4. addeth certain new cases and layeth upon the offendours in them the same censure whereunto for shortness sake I refer you admonishing likewise to adde the statute an 9 ejusdem cap. pri an 7. cap. 9. 8. anno 9 ejusdem cap. 8. anno 3 H. 5. cap. 4. Out of which statutes have our Professors of the Common law wrought many dangers to the Iurisdiction Ecclesiastital threatning the punishment contained in the statute anno 27 Edw. 3. 38 ejusdem almost to every thing that the court Christian dealeth in pretending all things dealt within those Courts to be the disherison of the Crown from the which and none other fountain all Ecclesiastical Iurisdiction is now derived whereas in truth Sir Tho. Smith saith very rightly and charitably that the uniting of the Supremacy Ecclesiastical and Temporal in the King utterly voideth the use of all those statutes Nam cessante ratione cessat lex And whatsoever is now wrought or threatned against the Iurisdiction Ecclesiastical by colour of the same is but in emulation of one Court to another and by consequent a derogation to that authorit from which all Iurisdiction is now derived and the maintenance whereof was by those Princes especially purposed But of this read Sir Thomas Smith lib. 3. de Rep. Ang. cap. 9. Some later statutes do cast this punishment upon other Offenders as namely the statute anno 1 Eliz. cap. prim upon him that denieth the Kings supremacy the second time c. and the statute anno 13 Eliz cap. 2. upon him that affirmeth the authority of the Pope or that refuseth to take the oath of Supremacy and the Statute an 13 Eliz. ca. 1. such as be seditious talkers of the inheritance of the Crown or affirm the Queen Majestie to be an heritique And the word is applyed most commonly to the punishment first ordained by the statutes before mentioned for such as transgressed them but in latter times imposed upon other offences For that where it is said that any man for an offence committed shall incurre a premunire it is meant that he shall incurre the same punishment which is inflicted against those that transgress the statute made an 16 R. 2. c. 5. which is commonly called the statute of premunire which kind of reference is not unusual in our statutes For example I shew only the statute anno 5 Elizabeth cap. 5. where it is enacted that if any man preach or teach by writing that the common counsell of the Realm do by that statute forbid flesh to be eaten as of necessity for the saving of mans soul that he shall for such preaching c. be punished as they be which be spreaders of false news having reference thereby to those statutes which contain the punishment of such offenders Now touching the Etymologie of this word Praemuuire some think it proceedeth from the strength given to the Crown by the former statutes against the usurpation of forain and unnateral power which opinion may receive some ground from the statute anno 25 Edward 3. stat 6. cap. pri But other think it to grow from the verb Praemonere being barbarously turned into praemunire which corruption is taken from the rude Interpreters of the Civil and Canon-laws who indeed do use the effect Praemunire many times for the efficient cause Praemonere according to the proverb He that is well warned is half armed And of this I gather reason from the form of the writ which is thus conceived in the Old nat br fol. 143. Praemunire facias praefatum praepositum I. R. precuratorem c. quod tunc sint coram nobis c. for these words can be referred to none but parties charged with the offence Praepositus ville is used sometime for the Constable of a town or petit Constable Crom. Iurisd fol. 205. howbeit the same author fol. 191. seemeth to apply it otherwise for there quatuor homines praepositi be those four men that for every town must appear before the Iustices of the Forest in their circuit It is used sometime for a Reeve See Reeve Praerogative of the King praerogativa regis is that especial power preeminence or privilege that the King hath in any kind over and above other persons and above the ordinary course of the Common law in
open concurse of Merchants and protest that I am deceived by him And thereupon if he hath any goods remaining in any mans hands within the Realm the Law of Merchants is that I be paid out of them Prouver Probator See Approuver anno 5 H. 4. cap. 2. See Approvours Province Provincia was used among the Romans for a Country without the compasse of Italy gained to their subjection by the sword whereupon the part of France next the Alpes was so called of them when it was in their dominion and of that carrieth the same name at this present But with us a Province is most usually taken for the circuit of an Archbishops Iurisdiction as the Province of Canterbury and the Province of York anno 32 H. 8. ca. 23. anno 33 ejusdem cap. 31. yet it is used divers times in our statutes for several parts of the Realm Provincial provincialis is a chief goververnor of an order of Friers anno quar Hen. quar cap. 17. Protoforesta●ius was he whom the antient Kings of this Realm made chief of Wind for Forest to hear all causes of death or mayhem or of slaughter or of the Kings Deer within the Forest Camden Brit. pag. 213. See Justice of the Forest Prove See Profe Provision proviso is used with us as it is used in the Canon law for the providing of a Bishop or any other person of an Ecclesiastical living by the Pope before the Incumbent be dead It is also called gratia expectativa or Mandatum de providendo The great abuse whereof in the Pope through all Christendome heretofore you may read not only in Duarenns de sacris ecclesiae ministeriis beneficiis l. 3. cap. 2. but also for England particularly in divers statutes of the Realm viz. anno 35 Ed. 3. cap. 22. stat 4. statu 5. commonly called the statute de provisionibus anno 27 ejusdem cap. 1. anno 38 ejusdem stat 2. cap. pri 2 3 4. anno 38 ejusdem anno 2 Rich. 2. cap. 7. anno 3 ejusdem cap. 3. anno 7 ejusdem cap. 12. anno 12 ejusdem cap 15. anno 13 ejusdem stat 2. cap. 2 3. anno 16 ejusdem cap. 5. anno 2 Henr. 4. cap. 3 et 4. et anno 5 ejusdem cap. prim et anno 7 ejusdem cap. 6 et 8. et anno 9 ejusdem cap. 8. anno 3 Henr. 5. cap. quar See Praemunire Provisour Provisor is he that sueth to the court of Rome for a provision Old nat br fol. 143. See Provision Proviso is a condition inserted into any deed upon the observance whereof the validity of the deed consisteth which form of condition seemeth to be borrowed from France for Pourvieu Gallicum semper conditionem inducit Tiraquel tome 3. pag. 316. Our common Lawyers say that it sometime signifieth but a covenant whereof you have a large dispute in the second Book of Sir Edward Cooks Reports in the Lord Cromwels case It hath also another signification in matters Iudicial as if the Plaintiff or demandant desist in prosecuting an action by bringing it to a tryal the defendant or tenent may take out the venire factas to the Shyreeve which hath in it these words Proviso quòd c. to this end that if the Plaintiff take out any writ to that purpose the Sheriff shall summon but one Iury upon them both See Old natura brev in the writ Nisi prius fo 159. PU Purchas See Pourchas Purfles of a womans gown anno 33 H. 8 cap. 5. Purgation purgatio is a clearing of a mans self from a crime whereof he is probably and publiquely suspected and thereof denounced to a Iudge Of this there was great use in England touching matter of Felony imputed to Clerks in former time as appeareth by Stawnf pl. cor li. 2. cap. 48. See Clergy It is still observed for matter pertaining to the Ecclesiastical court as suspicion or common fame of incontinency or such like Purgation is either Canonical canonica or vulgar vulgaris Canonical is that which as prescribed by the Canon law The form whereof is usually in the Spiritual court the man suspected taking his oath that he is clear of the fault objected and bringing so many of his honest Neighbours being not above twelve as the court shall assign him to swear upon their consciences and credulity that he sweareth truly or hath taken a true oath Vulgar purgation was by fire or water or by combat used by infidels and Christians also untill by the Canon law it was abolished tit 15. depurgatione Canon et vulga in Decretalibus Combat though it be lesse in use than it was yet it is and may be still practised by the Laws of the Realm in cases doubtfull if the defendant chu●e rather the combat than other tryal See Ordell See Combat Purlue is all that ground near any Forest which being made Forest by Henry the second Richard the first or King John were by perambulation granted by Henry the third severed again from the same Manwood parte 2. of his Forest laws cap. 20. And he calleth this ground either pouralce i. perambulationem or purliu purluy which he saith be but abusively taken for pourallee ubi supra num 3. But with the licence of that industrious and learned Gentleman I am bold to say that this word may be no less fitly made of two French words pur i. purus and lieu i. locus and my reason is because that such grounds as were by those Kings subjected to the Laws and Ordinances of the Forest are now cleared and freed from the same for as the Civilians call that purum locum qui sepulchrorum reli●ioni non est obstrictus sect 9. de reruus divisin institution so no doubt in imitation of that very point our auncestors called this purlieu i. purum locum because it was exempted from that servitude or thraldome that was formerly layd upon it So ager purus est qui neque sacer neque sanctus neque religiosus sed ab omnibus hujusmodi nominibus vacare videtur lib. 2. sect 4. π. de religio et sumptibus funerum And therefore Master Crompton Purraile is not much amisse fol 153. of his Iurisdict because we may also derive it from the French words pur and allee that is as much as to say as a clear or a free walk or passage And where it is sometime called Pouralee that may and doth come from pur and alee i. itio profectio ambulatio because he that walketh or courseth within that compasse is clear enough from the laws or penalties incurred by them which hunt within the precincts of the Forest See the statute anno 33 Edw. prim stat 5. Pourlie man is he that hath ground within the purlieu and being able to dispend forty shillings by the year of Freehhold is upon these two points licensed to hant in his own purlieu Manwoo● parte 1 of his Forest laws pag. 151 and 157.
the custome of London This writ also is called Breve magnum de Recto Register original fol. 9. A. B. and Fleta lib. 5. cap. 32. sect 1. A writ of right close is a writ directed to a Lord of antient Demesn and lyeth for those which hold their lands and tenements by charter in fee simple or in fee tayl or for term of life or in dower if they be ejected out of such lands c. or disseised In this case a man or his heir may sue out this writ of right close directed to the Lord of the antient Demesn commanding him to do him right c. in this Court This is also called a small writ of right Breve parvum Register original fol. 9. a. b. and Briton cap. 120. in fine Of this see Fitzh likewise at large nat br fol. 11. et seq Yet note that the writ of right patent seemeth farther to be extended in use than the original invention served for a writ of Right of Dower which lyeth for the tenent in Dower and only for term of life is patent as appeareth by Fitzh nat brev fol. 7. E. The like may be said of divers others that do hereafter follow Of these see also the Table of the Original Register verbo Recto This writ is properly tryed in the Lords Court between kinsmen that claim by one title from their Ancestor But how it may be thence removed and brought either to the County or to the Kings Court see Fleta lib. 6. cap. 3 4 et 5. Glanvile seemeth to make every writ whereby a man sueth for any thing due unto him a writ of right lib. 10. cap. 1. lib. 11. cap. 1. lib. 12. c. 1. Recto de dote is a writ of Right of Dower which lyeth for a woman that hath received part of her Dower and purposeth to demand the Remanent in the same Town against the heir or his Guardian if he be ward Of this see more in the Old nat br fo 5. and Fitzh fol. 7. E. and the Register original folio 3. and the new book of Entriet verbo Droyt Recto de dote unde nihil habet is a writ of right which lyeth in case where the husband having divers Lands or Tenements hath assured no dower to his wife and she thereby is driven to sue for her thirds against the heir or his Guardian Old nat br fol. 6. Regist origin fol. 170. Recto de rationabili parte is a writ that lyeth alway between privies of bloud as brothers in Gavel-kind or sisters or other Coparceners as Nephews or Neeces and for land in Fee simple For exampse if a man lease his Land for term of life and afterward dyeth leaving issue two Daughters and after that the tenent for term of life likewise dyeth the one sister entering upon all the land and so deforcing the other the sister so deforced shall have this writ to recover part Fitz. nat br fol. 9. Regist. orig fol. 3. Recto quando dominus remisit is a writ of right which lyeth in case where lands or tenements that be in the Seigneury of any Lord are in demand by a writ of right For if the Lord hold no Court or otherwise at the prayer of the Demandant or Tenent shall send to the Court of the King his writ to put the cause thither for that time saving to him another time the right of his Seigneury then this writ issueth out for the other party and hath his name from the words therein comprised being the true occasion thereof This writ is close and must be returned before the Iustices of the common Banck Old nat br fol. 16. Regist original fol. 4. Recto de Advocatia Ecclesiae is a writ of right lying where a man hath right of Advowsen and the Parson of the Church dying a stranger presenteth his Clerk to the Church and he not having moved his action of Quare impedit nor darrein presentment within six months but suffered the stranger to usurp upon him And this writ he only may have that claimeth the Advowsen to himself and to his heirs in Fee And as it lyeth for the whole advowsen so it lyeth also for the half the third the fourth part Old nat br fol. 24. Register original fol. 29. Recto de custodia terra et haredis is a writ that lyeth or him whose Tenent holding of him in Chivalry dyeth in his nonage against a stranger that entreth upon the land and taketh the body of the heir The form and farther use whereof see in Fitz. nat br fol. 139. and the Register original fol. 161. Recto sur disclaimer is a writ that lyeth where the Lord in the Kings Court sc in the common plees doth avow upon his Tenent and the Tenent disclaimeth to hold of him upon the disclaimes he shall have this writ and if the Lord aver and prove that the Land is holden of him he shall recover the land for ever Old nat br fol. 150. which is grounded upon the statute Westm 2. cap. 2. anno 13 Ed. pri which statute beginneth Quia domini feudorum c. Rector is both Latine and English signifying a Governour In the Common law rector ecclesiae parochialis is he that hath the charge or cure of a Parish church qui tantum jus in ecclesiae parochiali habet quantum praelatus in ecclesiae collegiat● cap. ult De Locat Conduct in glos verbo expelli potuissent In our common law I hear that it is lately over-ruled that rector ecclesiae parochialis is he that hath a personage where there is a vicaridge endowed and he that hath a personage without a vicaridge is called persona But this distinction seemeth to be new and subtile praeter rationem I am sure Bracton useth it otherwise lib. 4. tract 5. ca. pri in these words Et sciendum quod rectoribus ecclesiarum parochialium competit Assisa qui instituti sunt per Episcopos Ordinarios ut personae Where it is plain that rector and persona be confounded Mark also these words there following Item dici possunt rectores Canonici de ecclestis praebendatis Item dici possunt rectores vel quasi Abbates Prieres alii qui habent ecclesias ad proprios usus Rectus in curia is he that standeth at the bar and hath no man to object any offence against him Smith de repub Angl. li. 2. cap. 3. sec a. 6. R. 2. stat 1. cap 11. Reddendum is used many times substantively for the clause in a lease c. whereby the rent is reserved to the Leassour Coke lib. 2. Lord Cromwells case fol. 72. b. Redisseisin redisseisina is a disseisin made by him that once before was found and adjudged to have disseised the same man of his Lands or Tenements For the which there lyeth a special writ called a writ of redisseisin Old nat br fol. 106. Fitz. nat br fo 188. See the new book of Entries verb. Redisseisin Redisseisina is a writ lying for a redisseisin
Reg. orig f. 206 207. Reddioion is a judicial confession and acknowledgement that the land or thing in demand belongeth to the demandant or at the least not to himself a. 34 35 H. 8. ca. 24. Perkins Dower 379 380. Redubhours be those that buy cloath which they know to be stollen and turn it into some other form or fashion Briton cap. 29. Cromptons Viconat fol. 193. a Reentry commeth of the French rentrer i. rursus intrare and signifieth in our Common law the resuming or taking again of possession which we had earst foregone For example If I make a Lease of land or tenement I do thereby forego the possession and if I do condition with the Leassee that for non payment of the rent at the day it shall be lawfull for me to reenter this is as much as if I conditioned to take again the lands c. into mine own hands and to recover the possession by my own fact without the assistance of Iudge or proces Reere County See Rier County Reextent is a second extent made upon lands or tenements upon complaint made that the former extent was partially performed Brook titule Extents fol. 313. Regard regardum is borrowed of the French Regard or regardere i. aspectus conspectus respectus and though it have a general signification of any care or diligence yet it hath also a special acceptance and therein is used only in matters of the Forest and there two waies one for the office of the Regarder the other for the compasse of ground belonging to the regarders office or charge Cromptons jurisd fol. 175.199 Toaching the former thus saith M. Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 198. The Eire general Sessions of the Forest or Justices seat is to be holden and kept every third year and of necessity before that any such sessions or Iustices seat can be holden the Regarders of the Forest must make their Regard And this making of the regard must be done by the Kings writ And the regard is as he afterward there saith to go through the whole horest and every Bayliwick of the same to see and enquire of the trespasses of the Forest which he compriseth in these four viz. ad videndum ad inquirendum ad imbreviandum ad certificandum Of every of which branches you may read there his exposition Touching the second signification the compasse of the Regarders obarge is the whole Forest that is all that ground which is parcel of the Forest For there may be Woods within the limits of the Forest that be no parcel thereof and those be without the Regard as the same Author plainly declareth parte pri pag. 194. and again parte 2. cap. 7. nu 4. where he sheweth the difference between these words Infra regardum or Rewardum infra Forestam Regarder regardator commeth of the French Regardeur id est Spectator and signifieth an Officer of the Forest Cromptons jurisdict 153. where it is thus defined A Regarder is an Officer of the Forest appointed to surview all other officers He saith there also that this officer was ordained in the beginning of King Henry the seconds daies M. Manwood in his first part of Forest lawes pag 188. thus defineth him A Regarder is an Officer of the Kings forest that is sworn to make the regard of the Forest as the same hath been used to be made in antient time And also to view and enquire of all offences of the Forest as well of vert as of venison and of all concealments of any offences or defaults of the Foresters and of all other officers of the Kings forest concerning the execution of their offices He saith there also that a Regarder may be made either by the Kings letters patents or by any one of the Kings Iustices of the forest at his discretion in the general Eyr or at such time as the regard is to be made by vertue of the Kings writ directed to the Shyreeve of the County for that purpose The form of which writ he there setteth down After that pag. 192. he setteth down his Oath in these words You shall truly serve our Soveraign Lord the King in the office of a Regarder in the Forest of Waltham You shall make the Regard of the same in such manner as the same hath been accustomed to be made You shall raunge through the whole Forest and through every Bayliwick of the same as the Foresters there shall lead you to view the said Forest. And if the Foresters will not or do not know how to lead you to make the regard or raunge of the Forest that they will conceal from you any thing that is forfeited to the King you your selves shall not let for any thing but you shall see the same forfeiture and cause the same to be enrolled in your roll You shall enquire of all wastes pourprestures and Asserts of the Forest and also of concealments of any offence or trespasse in the Forest and all these things you shall to the uttermost of your power d● So help you GOD. Then you may read farther the particulars of his office eadem pag. 195. And pag. 207. he saith that their presentments must be upon their view and so recorded and that the Regarders of themselves have power to hear and determine the fine or amerciament for expeditating of dogs See Regard Regio assensis is a writ whereby the King giveth his Royal assent to the election of a Bishop or Abbot Register origin fol. 294. b. Registrie registrum commmeth of the French Registre i. liber librarium codex ratiocinarius ephemeris commentarius it signifieth with us the office or books or rolls wherein are recorded the proceedings of the Chancery or any Spiritual Court. The writer and the keeper whereof is called the Register in Latine Registrarins Register is also the name of a book wherein are expressed all the forms of writs used at the Common law called the Register of the Chancery Anno 13 Ed. pri cap. 24. Some say it is termed Registrum quasi regestum Prataeus Regrator regratator commeth of the French regratter i. desquamare Regratter quelque vielle robe la faire neufue is to scoure or furbish an old garment and to make it new again Also regratteur signifieth as much as Mango in Latine which kind of men sold children and to sell them the better mentiendi coloris artem optime callebant Martialis Plinius This word in our Common law did antiently signifie such as bought by the great and sold by the retayl Anno 27 Ed. 3. stat prim cap. 3. but now it signifieth him that buyeth and selleth any wares or victuals in the same market or fair or within five miles thereof Anno 5 Ed. 6. cap. 14. anno 5 Eliz. ab cap. 12. anno 13 Eliza. cap. 25. See Forestallers and Engrossers Rehabere facias seifinam quando Vicecomes liberavit seifinam de majore parte quam deberet is a writ judicial Register
signifieth in our Common law even the same as the repeal of a Statute Rastal titulo Repeal Brook useth Repellance in this signification titulo Rapellance Repleader Replacitare is to plead again that which was once pleaded before Rastal titulo Repleader See the new Book of Entries verbo Repleader Replegiare See Replevie See Second deliverance Replevie Plevina is the bringing of the writ called Replegiari facias by him that hath his Cattell or other Goods distreined by another for any cause and putting in surety to the Shyreeve that upon the delivery of the thing distreined he will persue the action against him that distreined Terms of Law See Replegiare It is used also for the bayling of a man pl. cor f. 72 73 74. West pri cap. 11. cap. 15. anno 3 Ed. 1. Replegiare de averiis is a writ brought by one whose Cattell be distreined or put in pound upon any cause by another upon surety given to the Shyreeve to persue the action in law anno 7 H. 8. cap. 4. Fitz. nat br fol. 68. See the Register original of divers sorts of this writ called Replegiare in the Table verbo codem See also the Register judicial fol. 58. 70. See also the new book of Entries verbo Replevin See Dyer fol. 173. un 14. Replevish replegiare is to let one to mainprise upon surety Anno 3 Edw. 1. cap. 11. Replication replicatio is an exception of the second degree made by the Plaintiff upon the first answer of the Defendant West parte 2. symbol titulo Chancery sect 55. West 2. anno 13 Ed. pri cap. 36. This is borrowed from the Civilians De replicationibus li. 4. Institutio titulo 14. Report reportus is in our Common law a relation or repetition of a Case debated or argued which is sometime made to the Court upon reference from the Court to the Reporter sometime to the world voluntarily as Ploydens reports and such like Reposition of the Forest was an act whereby certain Forest grounds being made purlieu upon view were by a second view laid to the Forest again Manwood parte pri pag. 178. Reprisells reprisalia are all one in the Common and Civil law Reprisalia est potestas pignorandi contra quemlibet de terra debitoris data creditori pro injuriis et damiis acceptis Vocabucarius utriusque juris This among the ancient Romanes was called Clarigatio of the verb Clarigo i. res clarè repeto It is called in the Statute anno 27 Ed. 3. stat 2. cap. 17. Law of Marque of the German word March i. terminus limes And the reason may be because one destitute of Justice in another territory redresseth himself by the goods belonging to men of that territorie taken within his own bounds Requests Supplicum libelli Curia Requistionum is a Court of the same nature with the Chauncery redressing by equity the wrongs that poor men do suffer at their hand whose might they are not able to withstand either in Law or otherwise It took beginning as some men think by commission from King Henry the 8. before which time the Masters of Requests had no warrant of ordinary Iurisdiction but travailed between the Prince and Petitioners by direction from the mouth of the King Guins Preface to his readings But see Court of Requests Resceyt Receptio seemeth to be an admission of a third person to plead his right in a cause for merly commenced between other two See the new book of Entries verbo Resceit V. Aide prier The Civilians call this admissionem tertii pro suo interesse Of this you have one example in the terms of Law viz. if Tenant for term of life or Tenant for term of years bring an action he in the reversion commeth in and prayeth to be received to defend the land and to plead with the Demandant Many more you may have in Brook titulo Resceit fol. 205. See Perkins Dower 448. Receit is also applyed to an admittance of plee though the controversie be between two only Brook estoppel in many places Resceyt of homage is a relative to doing homage for as the Tenant who oweth homage doth it at his admission to the land so the Lord receiveth it Kitchin fol. 148. See Homage Rescous Rescussus cometh of the French Rescourre se Rescourre du danger i. asserere se ab injuria It signifieth in our common Law a resistance against a lawful authority as for example if a Bayliff or other Officer upon a Writ do arrest a man and another upon a Writ do arrest a man and another one or more by violence do take him away or procure his escape this act is called a Rescus Cassanaeus in his book de consuctud Burg. hath the same word coupled with resistentia fol. 294. whereby it appeareth that other nations doe use this word in the same signification that we doe or the very like It is also used for a Writ which lyeth for this act called in our Lawyers Latine Breve de rescussu whereof you may see both the form and use in Fitz. nat bre fol. 101. and the Register original fol. 125. See the new book of Entries v●rbo rescous This rescous in some cases is treason and in some felony Crompton Justice fol. 54. b. Reseiser reseisire is a taking again of lands into the Kings hands whereof a general livery or ●●ster le main was formerly missused by any person or persons and not according to form and order of law Of this see Stawnf praeroga 26. where it is handled at large See resumption Resiance resiantia seemeth to come of the French rasseoir see Rasseoir is residere and signifieth a mans aboad or continuance in a place Old nat br fol. 85. whence also commeth the participle resiant that is continually dwelling or abiding in a place Kitchin fol. 33. It is all one in truth with Residence but that custom of speech tyeth that only to persons ecclesiastical Reservation signifieth that rent or service which the granter in any grant tyeth the grantee to perform unto him or them or the Lord Paramont Perkins reservations per cotum Residence residentia cometh of the Latin residere and is peculiarly used both in the Canon and common Law for the continuance or aboad of a Parson or Vicar upon his benefice The default whereof except the party be qualified and dispensed with is the losse of ten pounds for every month anno 28 Henr. 8. cap. 13. Resignation resignittiò is used particularly for the giving up of a Benefice into the hands of the Ordinary otherwise called of the Canonists renunciatio And though it signifie all one in nature with the word Surrender yet it is by use more restreined to the yeelding up of a spiritual living into the hands of the Ordinary and Surrender to the giving up of temporal Lands into the hands of the Lord. And a resignation may now be made into the hands of the King as well as of the Diocesan because he
otherwise called general Sessions an 5 Elizabeth cap. 4. or open Sessions ibidem Opposite whereunto are especial otherwise called privy Sessions which are procured upon some special occasion for the more speedy expedition of Iustice in some cause Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 110. what things be inquirable in general Sessions See Cromptons Iustice of peace fol. 109. Petit Sessions or Statute Sessions are kept by the high Constable of every Hundred for the placing of servants anno 5 Eliz. cap. 4. in fine Sessour an 25 Ed. 3. cap. 6. seemeth to signifie so much as assessing or rating of Wages at this day Set Cloathes anno 27 Hen. 8. cap. 13. Setwell Valeriana is a medicinal herb the nature and divers kinds whereof you have in Gerards herbal lib. 2. cap. 424. The root of this is mentioned among drugs to be garbled an 1 Iac. cap. 19. Severance is the singling of two or more that joyn in one Writ or are joyned in one Writ For example if two joyn in a VVrit de Libertate probanda and the one afterward be nonsute here severance is permitted so that notwithstanding the nonsute of the one the other may severally proceed Fitzherbert natura brevium fol. 78. l. K. Of this see Brook titulo Severance and Summons fol. 238. For it is harder to know in what cases severance is permitted than what it is There is also severance of the Tenents in an Assise when as one or two or more disseisours appeareth upon the VVrit and not the other New Book of Entries fol. 81. col 4. And severance in Attaints eod fo 95. col 2. And severance in Debt verbo debt fol. 220. col 1. see the said Book verbo Severance Seneral tayl tallium separatum is that whereby Land is given and entayled severally to two For example land is given to two men and their VVives and to the Heirs of their bodies begotten the Donees have joynt estate for their two lives and yet they have several Inheritance because the issue of the one shall have his moyetie and the issue of the other the other moyetie Kitchin ibid. Several tenancy tenura separalis is a Plee or exception taken to a writ that is laid against two as joynt which are several Brook titulo Severall tenancie fol. 273. Sevantly woven anno 35. Eliza. cap. 10. Sewer hath two significations with us one applyed to him that issueth or commeth in before the meat of the King or other great personage and placeth it upon the table the other to such passages or gutters as carry water into the sea or river in Lawyers Latine called Sewera an 6. H. 6. c. 5. which is also used in common speech for commissioners authorised under the broad seal to see drains and ditches well kept and maintained in the Marish and Fenne Countries for the better conveyance of the water into the Sea and the preserving of the grasse for seed of Cattel stat an 6. H. 6. cap. 5. It is probable to bring this word from the French issir or issue as if we should call them Issuers because they give issue or passage to the water c. And the Latine word suera some time used in these commissions for these drains is a competent reason of this conjecture See Fitz. nat brev in Oyer and Terminer Yet I find in an old French Book containing the Officers of the King of Englands Court as it was antiently governed that he whom in Court we now call Sewer was called Asseour which may seem to come from the French Asseour wherein his Office in setting down the meat upon the Table is well expressed And Sewer as it signifieth an Officer is by Fleta latined Assessor li. 2. c. 15. All which argueth that the descent of this word is from the French Asseoir as signifying a disposing or placing of any thing or as we say in English an assessing of any person toward the performance of a Duty Sexagesima See Septuagesima SH Shanck See Fur. Share See Flotzon Shewing is to be quit of Attachment in any Court and before whomsoever in plaints shewed and not avowed New exposition of law terms verbo Shewing See Scavage Shipper An. 1 Iac. ses 1. cap. 33. is is a Dutch word signifying the Master of the ship Shire Comitatus shyra is a Saxon word signifying Satrapian of the verb scyran 1. partiri Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo Centuaria The word is in use so rife that every Child understandeth it Who first thus divided this land into shires appeareth by M. Cambdens Britan. pag. 102. in these words Nec dum tamen florente Hepterchia Anglia it a in Comitatus divisa sic enim vulgò vocant sed pestea cum solus aluredus rerum potiretur Vt enim Germani majores nostri teste Tacito jura per pagos vicosque reddebant et centeni ex plebe comites adrem admistrandam adjungebantur sic ille ut ingulfi Croulandenfis verbis utar pr mus Angliam in Comitatus divisit qued indiginae rapinas committerent exemplo et colore Danorum Comitatus porro in Centurias i. Hundreds et Decimas i. Tythings distribui fecit praecipitque ut omnis indigena in aliqua esset Centuria Decima Praefectos etiam provinciarum qui antea Vicedomini vocabantur in duo officia divtsit viz. Iudices nunc Iusticiarios Vicecomites qui adhue idem nomen retinent See the rest Shereeve Vicecomes is compounded of these Saxon words Scyre i. satrapia and Reeve i. praefectus and accordingly he is the chief Officer under the King of his Shire or County See Ferme in Lacies Nobility pag. 12. M. Cambden pag. 104. Thus describeth his Office Singulis verò annis nobilis aliquis ex incolis praeficitur quem Vicecomitem quasi vicarium comitis nostrâ linguâ Shyref i. Comitatus praepositum vocamus qui etiam comitatus vel provinciae Quaestor rectè dici potest Ejus enim est Publicas pecunias provinciae suae conquirere mulctas irrogatas vel pignoribus ablat is eolligere aerario inferrae Iudicibus praesto adesse eorum mandata ex●qui duodecim viros cogere qui in causis de facto cognoscunt et ad Iudices referunt Iudices enim apud nos juris solum non facti sunt Iudices condemnatos ad supplicium ducere in minoribus litibus cognoscere in majoribus autcm jus dicunt justiciarii quos itinerantes ad Assisas vocant qui quotannis hos Comitatus bis adeunt ut de causis cognoscant et ad carceratis sententiam ferant Henricus secundus hos itinerantes instituit vel potius restituit Ille ut inquit Mathaeus Parisiensis consilio filii sui et Episcoporum constituit Iusticiarios per sex paertes regni in qualibet parts tres qui jurarent quod cuilibet jus suum conservarent illaesum Of the antiquity and authority of this Officer read Sir Edwards Cooks Reports lib. 4. Mittons Case The manner of appointing
stand as a Law for ever furthermore if the Chancellor or other Iudge or Officer could not well approve that the delay of Iustice complained of grew from just difficultie by reason that the case in question was formerly determined by Law or statute then might the Steward on the Kings behalf admonish him of his negligence and will him to be more carefull and studious Or if there appeared malice or corruption then the King and Parliament was wont to remove him and assign another of better hope to the place Lastly if the King had about him any such evill Councellor as advised him to this unjust or unanswerable to his Majesty as tending either to the disherison of the Crown publick hurt or destruction of the Subject The office of the Steward was taking to him the Constable and other great men with some of the Commons and giving notice to the King of their intention to send to that Counsellor and will him to desist from misleading the King yea if need so required to charge him to stay no longer about him but to depart from the Court which if hee neglected to perform then they might send to the King and with him to remove him and if the King refused then they might take him as a publick enemy to the King and Realm seise on his goods and possessions and commit his body to safe custody untill the next Parliament there to be judged by the whole Kingdome Examples are brought of Godwin Earl of Kent in the time of King Edward next before the Conquerour of Hubert Burgh Earl of the same County in the reign of Henry the third and of Peter Gaveston in Edward the seconds dayes But experience as I said hath found this Officer more dangerous then profitable and therefore hath time taught though not wholy to suppresse him yet to limit him to particular occasion and to restrain his power Then is there the Steward of the Kings most honourable houshold anno 24 Hen. 8. cap. 13. whose name is changed to the name of great Master anno 32. ejusdem cap. 39. But this statute was repealed by anno prim Mar. 2. Parlam cap. 4. and the office of the Lord Steward of the Kings houshold revived where you may at large read divers things touching his Office As also in Fitz. nat br f. 241. B. Of this Officers antient power read Fleta lib. 2. cap. 3. There is also a Steward of the Marshalsea pl. cor fol. 52. anno 33 Hen. 8. cap. 12. To be short this word is of so great diversity that there is not a Corporation of any accompt or house of any honour almost through the Realm but it hath an Officer toward it of this name A Steward of a manor or of a houshold what he is or ought to be Fleta fully describeth lib. 2. cap. 71. 72. Straunger commeth of the French estranger i. alienate It signifieth in our Language generally a man born out of the Land or unknown but in the Law it hath an especiall signification for him that is not privie or a party to an act as a Stanger to a judgement old nat brev fol. 128. is he to whom a ludgement doth not belong and in this signification it is directly contrary to partie or privie See Privie Submarshall submarescallus is an Officer in the Marshal-sea that is Deputy to the chief Marshall of the Kings house commonly called the Knight Marshal and hath the custody of the prisoners there Crompt Jurisd fol. 104. He is otherwise called Vnder-marshall Subpoena is a writ that lyeth to call a man into the Chancery upon such case only as the Common law faileth in and hath not provided for so as the partie who in equity hath wrong can have none ordinary remedy by the rules and course of the Common-law West part 2. symbol titulo Proceedings in Chancery Sect. 18. where you may read many examples of such cases as Sub poena lyeth in There is also a Sub poena ad testificandum which lyeth for the calling in of witnesses to testifie in a cause as well in Chancery as in other Courts And the name of both these proceed from words in the writ which charge the party called to appear at the day and place assigned Sub poena centum librarum c. I find mention of a common Sub poena in Cromptons Jurisd fol. 33. which signifieth nothing else but such a Sub poena as every common person is called by into the Chancery whereas any Lord of Parliament is called by the Lord Chancelors letters giving him notice of the sute intended against him and requiring him to appear Crompton cedem Subsidie Subsidium commeth of the French Subside signifying a tax or tribute assessed by Parlament and granted by the Commons to be levied of every subject according to the value of his Land or Goods after the rate of four Shillings in the pound for Land and two Shillings eight pence for Goods as it is most commonly used at this day Some hold opinion that this Subsidy is granted by the Subject to the Prince in recompence or consideration that whereas the Prince of his absolute power might make Laws of himself he doth of favour admit the consent of his Subjects therein that all thing in their own confession may be done with the greatest indifferency The manner of assessing every mans Lands or Goods is this First there issueth a Commission out of the Chancery to some man of honour or worship in every County by vertue thereof to call unto them the Head constables or Bailiff of every Hundred and by them the Constable and three or four of the substantiallest housholders in every Town within their Hundred at a day certain which men so called or so many of them as the commissioners think good to use do rate the Inhabitants of their own Town in such reasonable manner as they find meet yet by the discretion of the said Commissioners And then every man after his value set down must at his time pay to the Collector appointed after the rate aforesaid yet in antient time these subsidies seem to have been granted both for other causes as in respect of the Kings great travail and expences in wars or his great favours towards his subjects as also in other manner than now they be as every ninth Lambe every ninth Fleece and every ninth Sheaf anno 14 E. 3. stat pri cap. 20. And of these you may see great variety in Rastals Abridgement tit Taxes Tenths Fifteenths Subsidies c. whence you may gather that there is no certain rate but even as the two houses shall think good to conclude Subsidy is in the statute of the Land sometime confounded with custome anno 11 H. 4. cap. 7. See Benevolence Surety of peace securit as pacis is an acknowledging of a Bond to the Prince taken by a competent Iudge of Record for the keeping of the peace Lamberds Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 2. pag. 77. This
peace may a Iustice of peace command either as a Minister when he is willed so to do by a higher authority or as aludge when he doth it of this own power derived from his Commission Of both these see Lamberds Eirenarcha lib. 2. cap. 2. pa. 77. See Peace See Supplicavit Suffragan Suffraganeus is a titular Bishop ordained and assisted to aid the Bishop of the Diocesse in his spiritual function c. Suffraganeus Extra de electione For the Etymologie Suffraganei dicuntur quia eorum suffragiis causae Ecclesiasticae judicantur Joach Stephanus de jurisdict lib. 4. cap. 16. num 14. It was enacted anno 26 H. 8. cap. 14. that it should be lawfull to every Diocesan at his pleasure to elect two sufficient men within his Diocesse and to present them to the King that he might give the one of them such Title Stile Name and Dignity of sease in the said Statute specified as he should think convenient Suyte Secta commeth of the French Suite i. affectatio consecutio sequela comitatus It signifieth in our Common law a following of another but in divers senses the first is a sute in Law and is divided into sute real and personal Kitchin fol. 74. which is all one with action real and personal Then is there sute of Court or sute service that is an attendance which a Tenent oweth at the Court of his Lord. Fitz. nat brev in Indice verbo Suite suyte service and suyte real anno 7. H. 7. cap. 2. The new Expositour of Law terms maketh mention of four sorts of sutes in this signification Sute covenant sute custome sute real and sute service Sute covenant he defineth to be when your Ancestor hath covenant with mine Ancestor to sue to the Court of mine Ancestors Sute custome when I and my Ancestors have been seised of your own and your Ancestors sute time out of mind c. Sutereal when men come to the Sheriff Turn or Leet to which Court all men are compelled to come to know the Laws so that they may not be ignorant of things declared there how they ought to be governed And it is called real because of their allegiance And this appeareth by common experience when one is sworn his oath is that he shall be a loyal and faithfull man to the King And this sute is not for the Land that he holdeth within the County but by reason of his person and his abode there and ought to be done twice a year for default whereof he shall be amerced and not distrained I think this should be called ratherregal or royal because it is performed to the King for royal The French word in the usual pronuntiation commeth near to real the letter o being almost suppressed See Leet Suyte service is to sue to the Sheriff Turn or Leet or to the Lords Court from three weeks to three weeks by the whole year And for default thereof a man shall be distrained and not amerced And this sute service is by reason of the tenure of a mans Land Then doth sute signifie the following of one in chase as fresh sute West 1. cap. 46. a. 3 Edw. 1. Lastly it signifieth a Petition made to the Prince or great personage Suyte of the Kings peace secta pacis Regis anno 6 R. 2. stat 2. cap. pri anno 21 ejnsdem cap. 15. anno 5 Hen. 4. ca. 15. is the persuing of a man for breach of the Kings peace by treasons insurrections rebellions or trespasses Summoneas is a Writ Judicial of great diversity according to the divers cases wherein it is used which see in the Table of the Register Judicial Summoner summonitor signifieth one used to call or cite a man to any Court. These by the Common law ought to be boni that is by Fleta his Iudgement liberi homines ideo boni quia terras tenentes qued sint coram talibus Justiciarits ad certos diem ●locum secundum mandatum Justiciariorum Vicecomiti directum parati inde facere recognitionem lib. 4. cap. 5. § Et cum Summons summonitio see Summons Common Summons Marlb cap. 18. anno 52 Hen. 3. it l. Summons in terra petita Kitch fol. 286. is that Summons which is made upon the Land which the party at whose sute the summons is sent forth seeketh to have Summons ad warrantizandum Dyer fol. 69. nu 3● Sumage Sumagium seemeth to be toll for carriage on horse-back Crompton Jurisd fol. 191. For where the Charter of the Forest cap. 14. hath these words for a horse that beareth loads every half year a half penny the Book called Pupilla oculi useth these words pro uno equo portante summagium per dimidium annum obolum It is otherwise called a Seam And a Seam in the Western parts is a Horse-load Superoneratione pasturae is a writ Iudicial that lyeth against him who is impleaded in the County for the over-burthening of a Common with his cattell in case where he is formerly impleaded for it in the County and the cause is removed into the Kings Court at Westm Supersedeas is a writ which lyeth in divers and sundry cases as appeareth by the Table of the Register original and the Iudicial also and by Fitzh nat bre fol. 226. and many other places noted in the Index of his Book verbo Snpersedeas But it signifieth in them all a command or request to stay or forbear the doing of that which in apparence of Law were to be done were it not for the cause whereupon the Writ is granted For example a man regularly is to have surety of peace against him of whom he will sweat that he is asraid and the Iustice required hereunto cannot deny him Yet if the party be formerly bound to the peace either in Chancery or elsewhere this writ lyeth to stay the lustice from doing that which otherwise he might not deny Super statutum Edward 3. vers servants and labourers is a writ that lyeth against him who keepeth my servants departed out of my service against Law Fitz. nat fol. 167. Super statuto de York quo nul sera viteller c. is a writ lying against him that occupyeth vittelling either in grosse or by retail in a City or Borough Town during the time he is Major c. Fitz. nat brev fol. 172. Super statuto anno pri Ed. 3. cap. 12 13. is a writ that lyeth against the Kings Tenent holding in chief which alienateth the Kings Land without the Kings license Fitzh nat brev fol. 175. Super statuto facto pour Seneshall Marshall de Roy c. is a writ lying against the Steward or Marshall for holding plee in his Court of Freehold or for trespasse contracts not made within the Kings houshold Fitzherbert nat brev fol. 241. Super statuto de Articulis Cleri cap. 6. is a writ against the Sheriff or other Officer that distraineth in the Kings high-way or in the glebe Land antiently given to Rectories Fitz. nat brev
in every Tun anno 12 Edw. 4. ca. 3. anno 6 H. 8. ca. 14. anno pri Ed. 6. ca. 13. anno pri Jacobi ca. 33. I have heard it also called a duty due to the Mariners for unloading their Ship arrived in any Haven after the rate of every Tun. Torny See Turney Totted anno 42 Edw. 3. cap. 9. anno 1 Ed. 6. cap. 15. is a word used of a debt which the forein Apposer or other Officer in the Exchequer noteth for a good debt to the King by writing this word Tot unto it Tourn See Turn Tout tempa prist uncore est that is to say in English Alway ready and is at this present This is a kind of Plee in way of excuse or defence unto him that is sued for with-holding any debt or duty belonging to the Plaintiff See of this Broke his Abridgement fol. 258. TR Traile baston See Iustices of trial baston Traitor traditor proditor See Treason Transgressione is a writ called commonly a writ or action of Trespass Of this Fitzherbert in his Natura brevium hath two sorts one Vicountiel so called because it is directed to the Sheriff and is not returnable but to be determined in the County The form whereof differeth from the other because it hath not these words Quire vi armis c. and this see in Fitzherberts natura brev fol. 84 G. The other is termed a writ of trespasse upon the case which is to be sued in the Common bank or the Kings Bench in which are alwaies used these words vi et armis c. And of this you have Fitzh nat br f. 92. E. See Trespass See the divers use of this writ in the Register original in the Table Transcript anno 34 35 H. 8. cap. 14. is the copy of any original written again or exemplified Transcripto Recognitionis factae coram Justiciariis itinerantibus c. is a writ for the certifying of a Recognizance taken before Iustices in Eyre into the Chancery Regist orig fol. 152. b. Transcripto pedis finis levati mittendo in Cancellariam is a writ for the certifying of the foot of a fine levyed before Justices in Eyre c. into the Chancery eodem fol. 169. et Register judicial fol. 14. Travers commeth of the French Traverser i●transfigere It signifieth in our Common law sometime to deny sometime to overthrow or undo a thing done Touching the former signification take these words in Wests Symbol parte 2. titulo Chancery Sect. 54. An answer saith he speaking of an answer to a bill in Chancery is that which the Defendent pleadeth or saith in Bar to avoid the Plaintiffs bill or action either by confession and avoiding or by denying and traversing the material parts thereof And again Section 55. A replication is the Plaintiffs speech or answer to the Defendants answer which must affirm and pursue his bill and confess and avoid deny or traverse the Defendants answer And the formal words of this traverse are in Lawyers French sans ceo in Latine absque hoc in English without that See Kitchin fol. 227. titulo Affirmative et Negative In the second signification I find it in Stawnfords praerog cap. 20. through the whole Chapter speaking of traversing an Office which is nothing else but to prove that an Inquisition made of goods or lands by the Escheatour is defective and untruly made So traversing of an Inditement is to take issue upon the chief matter thereof which is none other to say than to make contradiction or to deny the point of the Inditement As in presentment against A. for a Highway over-flown with water for default of scowring a ditch which he and they whose estate he hath in certain land there have used to scowr and cleanse A. may traverse either the matter viz. that there is no Highway there or that the ditch is sufficiently scowred or otherwise he may traverse the cause viz. that he hath not the land c. or that he and they whose estate c. have not used to scowr the ditch Lamb. Earenarcha lib. 4. cap. 13. pag. 521 522. Of Traverse see a whole chapter in Kitchin fol. 240. See the new book of Entries verbo Traverse Treason traditio vel proditio commeth of the French trahison i. proditio and signifieth an offence committed against the the amplitude and Majesty of the Common wealth West parte secund symbol titulo Inditement sect 63. by whom it is there divided into High treason which other call altam proditionem and Petit treason High treason he defineth to be an offence done against the security of the Common wealth or of the Kings most excellent Majesty whether it be by imagination word or deed as to compass or imagine treason or the death of the Prince or the Queen his Wife or his Son and Heir apparent or to deflowre the Kings wife or his eldest Daughter unmarried or his eldest sons wife or levy war against the King in his Realm or to adhere to his enemies aiding them or to counterfeit the Kings great Seal privy Seal or mony or wittingly to bring false mony into this Realm counterfeited like unto the mony of England and utter the same or to kill the Kings Chancellor Treasurer Iustice of the one bench or of the other Iustices in Eyr Iustices of Assise Iustices of Oyer and Terminer being in his place and doing of his office anno 25 Ed. prim cap. 2. or forging of the Kings seal Manuel or privy signet privy seal or forein coyn current within the Realm anno 2 Mar. cap. 6. or diminishing or impairing of mony current anno 5 Eliz. cap. 11. et anno 14 El. ca. 3. et 18 Eliz. ca. pri and many other actions which you may read there and in other places particularly expressed And in case of this treason a man forfeiteth his lands and goods to the King only And it is also called treason Paramount anno 25 Ed. 3. ca. 2. The form of Iudgement given upon a man convicted of high treason is this The Kings Serjeant after the verdict delivered craveth Iudgement against the Prisoner in behalf of the King Then the Lord Steward if the traitor have been noble or other Iudge if he be under a Peer saith thus N. Earl of P. For so much as thou before this time hast been of these treasons indited and this day arraigned for the same and put thy self upon God and thy Peers and the Lords thy Peers have found thee guilty my Iudgement is that thou shalt be conveyed unto the Tower of London whence thou camest and from thence drawn through the midst of London to Tiburn and there hanged and living thou shalt be cut down thy bowels to be cut out and burnt before thy face thy head cut off and thy body to be divided into four quarters and disposed at the Kings Majesties pleasure and God have mercy upon thee Petit treason is rather described by examples than any where logically
any other thing and carrying it away out of the Jurisdiction where I dwell I take by order of him that hath Iurisdiction another of him again or of some other of that Jurisdiction and do bring it into the jurisdiction wherein I dwell that by equal wrong I may come to have equal right c. Namatio animalium in Scotland is used for the pounding of cattel Skene de verbor signif verbo Averis whom also read verbo Namar● Withernam in Bracton lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 37 and also in Westm 2. cap. 2. seemeth to signifie an unlawfull distress made by him that hath no right to distrein anno 13 Ed. prim cap. 2. See the new book of Entries Verbo Withernam WO Woad glastum is an herb brought from the parts of Tolouse in France and from Spain much used and very necessary in the dying of wollen cloath anno 7 H. 8. cap. 2. we call it woad of the Italian word guado or the German word weidt Woodgeld seemeth to be the gathering or cutting of wood within the Forest or mony payed for the same to the use of the Foresters And the immunity from this by the Kings grant is by Crompton called Woodgeld fol. 157. Woodmen seem to be those in the Forest that have their charge especially to look to the Kings woods Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 193. and Cromptons Jus risd fol. 146. Woodmote court is the Attachment of the Forest Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 95. See Attachment Woodward woodwardus is an officer of the Forest whose function you may partly gather by his oath set down in Cromptons jurisd fol. 201 which M. Manwood hath also in his first part of his Forest laws pag. 50. to the same effect but something more at large viz. You shall truly execute the office of a woodward of B. woods within the Forest of W. so long as you shall be woodward there you shall not conceal any offence either in Vert or in Venison that shall be committed or done within your charge but you shall truly present the same without any favour affection or reward And if you do see or know any Malefactors or do find any Deer killed or hurt you shall forthwith do the verderour understand thereof And you shall present the same at the next Court of the Forest be it Swainmote or Court of Attachments so help you God Woodwards may not walk with Bow and Shafts but with Forest bils Manwood parte pri of his Forest laws pag. 189. and more of him pag. 97. Woold●iver anno 2 et 3 Ph. et Ma. cap. 13. be those that buy VVool abroad in the Country of the Sheep masters and carry it by horse-back to the Clothiers or to Market towns to sell it again Woolferh fod Caput Lupinum is the condition of those which were outlawed in the Saxons time for not yeelding themselves to Iustice For if they could be taken alive they must have been brought to the King and if they in fear or apprehension did defend themselves they might be slain and their heads brought to the King For they carried a VVolves head that is to say their head was no more to be accounted of than a VVolves head being a beast so hurtfull unto man See the Laws of King Edward set out by M. Lamberd fol. 127. b. nu 7. The very like whereof Bract●n also saith lib. 3. tract 2. cap. 11. See Vtlary Roger Hoveden writeth it Wulvesheved parte poster suorum annalium fol. 343. b. whom read of this matter because you shall there see what it was in those daies to violate the peace of the Church Wool-staple anno 51 H. 3. stat 5. See Staple Wool winders be such as wind up every fleece of Wool that is to be packed and sold by weight into a kind of bundle after it is cleansed in such manner as it ought to be by statute And to avoid such deceit as the owners were wont to use by thrusting locks of refuse Wool and such other drosse to gain weight they are sworn to perform that office truly between the owner and the Merchant See the Statute anno 8 H. 6. cap. 22. et anno 23 H. 8. cap. 17. et an 18 Eliz. cap. 25. Would See Weald Wranglands seem to be mis-grown Trees that will never prove Timber Kitchin fol. 169. b. Wormseed Semen sanctonicum is a medicinal seed brought forth of that Plant which in Latine is called Sementina in English Holy worm wood whereof you may read in Gerards Herbal li. 2. cap. 435. This is a Drug to be garbled anno 1 Jac. cap. 19. WR Wreck wreecum vel wrectum maris is the losse of a ship and the goods therein contained by tempest or other mischance at the Sea The Civilians call it Naufragium This wreck being made the goods that were in the ship being brought to Land by the waves belong to the King by his Prerogative And thereupon in many books of our Common law the very goods so brought to land are called wreck And wreck is defined to be those goods which are so brought to Land Sir Edward Coke vol. 6. relatio fol. 106. a. and the Statute anno 17 Edward 2. cap. 11. in these words Item Rex habebit wreccum maris per tatum Regnum ballenas et sturgeones captas in mart vel alibi infra Regnum except is quibusdam locis privilegiatis per Regem Whereby it appeareth that the King hath them or such as have by Grant this liberty or Privilege of him And that this Statute doth but affirm the antient law of the Land it appeareth by Bracton lib. 2. cap. 5. num 7. hiis verbis Sunt etiam aliae res quae pertinent ad Coronam propter privilegium Regis et ita communem non recipiunt libertatem quin dari possint ad alium transferri Quia si transferantur translatio nussi erit damnosa nisi ipsi Regi sive Principi Et si hujusmodi res alicui concessae fuerint sicut wreccum maris c. The reason of this he toucheth shortly in his first book cap. 12. num 10. where he reckneth these goods jure naturali to be in bonis nullius quia non apparet Dominus eorum sed jure Gentium fieri principis And see him also lib. 2. cap. 24. nu m. 1 et 2. It is worth the asking to know what is a wreck and what not in this stricter signification And the Author of the terms of Law saith that if any person of the Ship come to land it is not a wreck or the wreck is not such that the King ought to have the goods with whom agreeth Sir Edward Coke vol. 6. fol. 107. a. No if either a Dog or Cat escape alive to the Land the goods are the Owners still so he come within a year and a day to claim them And for this the Statute is plain Westm prim cap. 4. anno 3 Edward prim
the Ordinarie or Institution by the Ordinarie or Induction by his commandement Fitzh nat br fol. 35. E. See the stature anno 8 R. 2. cap. 4. Of this Petr. Gregor de beneficits cap. 11. num 10. hath these words Sitamen Capellaniae fundat●e per Laicos non fuerint à Diocesano approbatae et ut loquuntur spiritualiz atae non censentur beneficia nec ab Episcopo conferri possunt sed sunt sub pia dispositione fundatoris Joh. Fab. ad § Nullius De rerum diuis Iden fundatores et baeredes corum possunt tales Capellanias donare sine Episcopo cui voluerint tanquam profana beneficin Guido Papaeus descis 187. See also Gregorius lib. 15. cap. 29. sui syntagmatis num 11. I sinde in the Preface of M. Gwins readings that as the King might of ancient times found a free Chapel and exempt it from the jurisdiction of the Diocesan so he might also by his Letters Patents license a common person to found such a Chapel and to ordain that it shall be Donative and not presentable and that the Chaplain shall be depriveable by the Founder and his Heirs and not by the Bishop And this is likest to be the original of these Donatives in England Fitzh saith that there be certain Chauntries which a man may give by his Letters Patents nat br fol. 33. C. See him also fol. 42. B. All Bishopricks were Donative by the King Coke lib. 3. fol. 75. b. Dooms day Rotulus Wintoniae domus D i Coke in praefatione ad librum saum is a Book that was made in King Ed. the Confe●ors dates as the Author of the Old nat br faith f. 15. containing in it not onely all the Lands through England but also all the names of those in whose hands they were at that time when the book was made M. Lamberd in his explication of Saxon words verbo jus Dacorum c. proveth out of Gervasius Tilburiensis that this Book was made in William the Conquerours time with whom agreeth M. Cambden in his Bretan pag. 94. pro●ing it out of Ingulphus that flourished the same time And for the better commendation of the Book it is not amiste to set down the words of Ingulphus touching the contents thereof Totam terram descripsit Nec er at hyda in tota Anglia quin valorem ejus possessorem scivit nec lacus nec locus aliquis q●sin in Regis rotulo extitit descriptus ac ejus reditus proventus ipsa possessio ejus possessor regiae rotitiae manifestatus juxta taxatorum fidem qui elect● de qualibet patria territorium oroprium deseribebant Ifte rotulus vocatns est Rotulus Wintoniae ab Anglis pro sua generalitate quòd omnia tenementa totius terrae continuit Domesday cognominatur So it is called in the statute anno pri Ric. 2. cap. 6. And in Ockhams lucubrations de fisci Regis ratione which seemeth to be taken out of the Book called Liber Rubeus in the Exchequer It is termed Liber Judicatorius and the reason why quia in co totius Regni descriptio diligens continetu● tam de tempore Regis Edwardi quàm de tempore Regis Willielmi sub quo factus est singulorum fundorum valentia expr mitur Dorture dormitorium anno 25 H. 8. cap. 11. is the common room place or chamber where all the Friers of one Covent slept and lay all night Dote assignanda is a Writ that lieth for a Widow where it is found by office that the Kings Tenent was feised of Tenements in Fee or Fee-tail at the day of his death c. and that he holdeth of the King in chief c. For in this case the Widow cometh into the Chancery and there maketh oath that she will not marry without the Kings leave anno 15 Ed. 3. cap. 4. and hereupon he shall have this Writ to the Escheatour for which see the Register Original fol. 297. and Fitzherb nat br fol. 263. And this sort of Widowes is called the Kings Widow See Widow Dote unde nihil habet is a Writ of Dower that lieth for the Widow against the Tenent which hath bought Land of her Husband in his life time whereof he was feised solely in Fee simple or Fee tail in such sort as the issne of them both might have inherited it Fitzh nat br fol. 147. Regist. fol. 170. Dotts admensuratione See Admensurement See the Reg. orig fol. 171. Dotkins a kind of Coin pl. cor fol. 37. I●seemeth to come of the Dutch word ' Duytkin that is the eighth part of a Stufer or French Shilling which in Latine is called Solidus Gallicus Doubles anno 14 H. 6. cap. 6. fignifie as much as Letters Patents being as it seemeth a French word made of the Latine diploma Double plee duplex placitum is that wherein the Defendant allegeth for himself two several matters in barre of the action where of either is sufficient to effect his desire in debarring the Plaintiff And this is nor to be admitted in the Common law wherefore it is well to be observed when a P●ee is double and when it is not For if a man allege several matters the one nothing depending of the other the Piea is accounted double If they be mutually depending one of the other then is it accounted but single Kitchin fol. 223. See Brook hoc titule But why this doublenesse for so Kitchin calleth it fol. 234. should be debarred I see no reason under correction all things being spoken For a man may have two good defences and happily in the issue he shall contrarily to his hope fail in proving the one and yet be able to carry the cause by the other And therefore not onely the Civilians but Bracton also saith Pluribus exceptionibus uti nemo prohibetur libr. 5 aract 5. cap. 5. num 4. whom also read libro 4. cap. 17. And Sir Thomas Smiths reason of this scantly satisfieth me alleging this to be the course of our proceeding because the trial is by twelve rude men whose heads are not to be troubled with over many things at once lib. 2. de Repub. Anglor cap. 13. Double quarrel duplex querela is a complaint made by any Clerk or other unto the Archbishop of the Province against an inferiour Ordinary for delaying of Justice in some cause Ecclesiastical as to give sentence or to Institute a Clerk presented or such like The effect whereof is that the said Arch-bishop taking knowledge of such delay directeth his Letters under his authentical Seal to all singular Clerks of his Province thereby commanding and authorizing them and every of them to admonish the said Ordinatie within a certain number of dayes namely 9 dayes to do the Justice required or otherwise to cite him to appear before him or his Official at a day in the said Letters prefixed and there to allege the cause of his delay And lastly to intimate to the said Ordinary that if he neither perform the
thing enjoyned nor appear at the day assigned he himself will without farther delay proceed to perform the Justice required And this seemeth to be tearmed a double quarrel because it is most commonly made against both the Judge and him at whose Petition Justice is delayed Dower dos cometh of the French dovaire and signifieth in our Common law two things first that which the VVife bringeth to her Husband in marriage otherwise called maritagium marriage good next and more commonly that which she hath of her Husband after the marriage determined if she out-live him Glanvile lib. 7. cap. 1. Bracton lib. 2. cap. 38. Britton cap. 101. in princ And in Scotland dos signifieth just as much Skene de verb. signif verbo Dos The former is in French called dot the other dovayre by them latined doarium I like wise once thought it not unreasonable to call the former a Dowrie and the other a Dower but I finde them confounded For example Smith de rep Anglo pa. 105. calleth the latter a dowry and dower is sometime used for the former as in Britton ubi supra Yet were it not inconvenient to distinguish them being so divers The Civilians cal the former dotem the latter donationem propter nuptias Of the former the Common law-books speak very little This onely is to be noted that whereas by the Civil Law instruments are made before marriage which contain the quantity of the wives dowrie or substance brought to her husband that he having the use of it during marriage may after certain deductions restore it again to his Wives Heirs or Friends after the marriage dissolved the Common law of England whatsoever chattels moveable or immoveable or ready money she bringeth doth make them forthwith her Husbands own to be disposed of as he will leaving her at his courtesie to bestow any thing or nothing of her at his death The reason whereof is said to be the holding of the Wife in obedience to her Husband Onely if she be an inheretrice her Husband holdeth the Land but during her life except he have issue by her but then he holdeth it by the courtesie of England during his own life See Courtesie And again if he have any Land in Fee whereof he was possessed during the marriage she is to have a third thereof during her life though she bring nothing to him except she do by fine release her right during the marriage So that here is no great matter to be spoken of but touching dower in the latter signification You must know therefore that upon speech of marriage between two the Parents of both sides are commonly more careful in providing each for his child than the parties themselves And that by their means there be divers bargains made sometime for the conveiance of Lands c. to them and their issue And this is said to be given in Frank mariage sometime to her during her life and that before or at the marriage If before marriage then it is called a Joynture For a Joynture is a Covenant whereby the Husband or some for him is tyed ratione juncturae in consideration of the marriage that the wife surviving him shall have during her life this or that Tenement or Lands or thus much Rent yeerly payable out of such Land c. with clause of distresse and this may be more or lesse as they do accord Britton cap. 110. whom read also cap. 102 103 104. for conventio vincit legem Bracton lib. 5. tractat 4. cap. 9. The diversity of these Joyntures you may see in West parte prima symbol l. 2. sect 128 129 130 131 132 133. But if none of these former bargains passe before marriage then must the Wife stick to her Dower and that is sometime given at the Church door or the Chapel door if the marriage be by License but not the Chamber door and may be what the Husband will so it exceed not a third part of this Lands Glanvile lib. 6. cap. pri Or the half as some say Fitz. nat br fol. 150. N.P. And this Dower is either certainly set down and named or not named but onely in generality as the law requireth if it be not named then it is by law the third part and called dos legitima Bracton lib. 4. tract 6. cap. 6. num 6. 10. Magna Charta c. 7. or the half by the custome of some Countries as in Gavelkind Fitzh nat br fol. 150. O. And though it be named it seemeth that it cannot be above half the lands of the Husband Fitzh nat br fol. 150. P. And the Woman that will challenge this Dower must make 3 things good viz. that she was married to her Husband that he was in his life time seised of the Land whereof she demandeth Dower and that he is dead Cokes reports lib. 2. Binghames case fol. 93. a. Of these things see Glanvile l. 6. c. 1 2 3. Bract. l. 2. c. 38 39 l. 4. tract 6. cap. 1. 6. and Britton cap. 101 102 103 104. and Fitzherb nat br fol. 147 148 149 150. And this custumary Dower seemeth to be observed in other nations as well as in ours Hotoman verbo Dotalitium in verbis feudal Cassan de consuetud Burg. pag. 580. 676. 677. de conventional pa. 720. And to these joyn the grand Custumarie of Normandy cap. 102. where you shall perceive that in a manner all our law in this point is taken from the Normans See Endowment Of Dower read Fleta likewise who writeth largely thereof and hath many things worth the learning lib. 5. cap. 23. seq Dozenno See Decennitr DR Drags anno 6 H. 6. cap. 5. seem to be wood or timber so joyned together as swimming or floting upon the water they may bear a burden or load of other wares down the River Draw latches anno 5 Edw. 3. cap. 14. anno 7. Rich. 2. cap. 5. Master Lamberd in his Eirenarch lib. 2. cap. 6. calleth them Miching thieves as Wasters and Roberdjemen mighty thieves saying that the words be grown out of use Dreit Dreit signifieth a double right that is jus possessionis jus Domini Bracton lib. 4. cap. 27. lib. 4. tract 4. cap. 4. lib. 5. tract 3. cap. 5. Dry exchange anno 3 H. 7. cap. 5. Cambium siccum seemeth to be a cleanly tearm invehred for the disguising of foul usury in the which something is pretended to passe of both sides wheras in truth nothing passeth but on the one fide in which respect it may well be called dry Of this Ludovicus Lopes tracbat de contract negotiatio lib. 2. cap. pri § Deinde postquam writeth thus Cambium est reale vel siccn̄ Cambium reale dicitur quod consistentiam veri Cambit realem habet et Cambium per or ans et Cambium minutum Cambium autem siccum est Cambium non habens existentiam Cambii sed apparentiam ad instar arboris exsiccatae quae humorae vitali jam