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A84200 The exact law--giver faithfully communicating to the skilfull the firm basis and axioms of their profession. To the ignorant their antient and undoubted birthrights and inheritances. Being as a light unto all the professors of the law, as well counsellors as atturneys, clerks, soliciters, scriveners, &c. Or a manu-ductio, or a leading, as it were, by the hand, all such, both of the gentry or laity (as desire to be instructed how to gain or preserve their estates from the hands of their cruell adversaries) to the perfect knowledg of the common and statute law of this nation. 1658 (1658) Wing E3652; Thomason E2128_1; ESTC R201913 81,570 230

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some such Tenants have an Inheritance according to the custome of that Mannor yet in very deed they are but Tenants at the will of the Lord for as some men think if the Lord will expell them and put them forth they have no remedy at all but to sue unto their Lord by way of Petition desiring him to be a good and gracious Lord unto them for if they might have any remedy by the Law then should they not be called say they Tenants at the will of the Lord after the custome of the Mannor but other men of no less Learning and prudence have been of contrary judgment as Lord Brian Chief Justice in the time of King Edward the fourth whose opinion was alwayes that if such a Tenant by the custome paying his Services be ejected and put forth by his Lord without cause reasonable Action of Trespass he may very well bring and maintain an Action of Trespass against his Lord at the Common Law as appeareth Termino Hillarij An. 21. E. 4. Also Lord Danby Chief Justice likewise was of the same judgment as appeareth Termino Mich. An. 7. E. 4. where he saith That the Tenant by the custome is as well Inheritable to have his Land after the custome as is he that hath a free-hold at the Common Law but the determination of this question I remit to my great Masters which can lose the knots and ambiguities of the Law forasmuch as yet still of this matter Causidici certant adhuc sub judice lis est Also ye shall understand that the usage of some Mannor is when the Tenant will surrender his Land to the use of another that he shall take a Wand or a Rod in his hand and deliver it to the Steward of the Court and the Steward shall deliver the same Wand in name of Seisin to him that shall take the Land and such a Tenant is called Tenant by the Verge Divers other customs there be of surrendring of Copyhold Lands which here for tediousness I will omit And forasmuch as Tenants by custome of the Mannor have by the course of the Common Law no free-hold therefore they be called Tenants of base Tenure Base Tenure Also if such a Tenant letteth to farme his Copyhold Land for longer time then a twelve moneth and a day without the Lords licence it is a forfeiture of his Land to his Lord. And know ye that if this Tenant fell any Timber that groweth upon the Land but only for the reparation of the same this is Wast and a forfeiture of his Copyhold Hitherto have I treated of the first member of our division that is to wit of Chattels for as I said all Leases for terme of years and at will be accounted in the Law but as Chattels and be comprised under that name save that these be called Chattels reals whereas Kine Oxen Chattell reall and personall Horses Money Plate Corn and such like be called Chattels personals Now we will proceed to the explanation of the second member that is to say of Freeholds CHAP. VIII Of Freeholds FReeholds or Frank-tenements a man may have in sundry wise for either he is seized for terme of his own life or for terme of another mans life if he be seized for terme of his own life either he hath gotten such estate by way of Purchase or else the Law hath intituled him thereunto I call it by purchase whether he cometh unto it by his own bargaining and procurement or by the gift of his friend and I call it by the operation of intituling of the Law when a man marrieth a woman that is an inheritrix and hath issue by her Tenure by the Courtesie and she dieth now shall he have the Lands during his life by course of the Law and shall be called Tenant by the courtesie of England Likewise if a man be seized in fee-simple or fee-taile of Lands and taketh a wife and he dieth the Law giveth unto the wise the third part of her husbands Lands for terme of life Tenant in Dower and she shall be called Tenant in Dower CHAP. IX Tenant for terme of Life TEnant for terme of Life is he that holdeth Lands or Tenements for terme of his own life or for terme of anothers life howbeit the most frequent and common manner of speaking is to call him that hath an estate for terme of his own life Tenant for life and him that hath an estate for terme of anothers life Tenant for terme dauter vie that is to say Tenant for terme of anothers life Ye shall note that like as he that maketh the Lease is called the Lessour and he to whom the Lease is made is called the Lessee so he that maketh the Feoffment is called the Feoffer and he to whom the Feoffment is made the Feoffee Also if the Tenant for terme of life or Tenant for terme of another mans life doe waste Waste the Lessour or he in the reversion shall maintain very well an Action of Waste against him and shall by the same recover trebble damages Finally Ye shall understand that by an Act of Parliament made in the 27. year of our Soveraign Lord King Henry the eight it is enacted That no Freehold nor estate of Inheritance shall pass nor take effect by reason of any bargain and sale except the same be made by writing indented sealed and enrolled in one of the Kings Majesties Courts at Westminster or else within the County where the Land doth lie before the Custos Rotulorum and two Justices of Peace and the Clerk of the Peace of the same County or two of them at least of which the said Clerk shall be one and that such enrolment be made within six moneths after the date of such writing and for the enrolment of every such writing where the Land comprised therein is not above the yearly value of Fourty shillings they shall take two shillings that is Twelve pence to the Justices and Twelve pence to the Clerk and if the Land be above the yearly value of Fourty shillings then they shall take Five shillings that is Two shillings and six pence to the Justices and Two shillings and six pence to the Clerk which shall enroll and ingross sufficiently in parchment such Deed and writing and at every years end he shall deliver the same to the Custos Rotulorum of the same County to remain in his custody among other Records of the same County so that the parties resorting thither may see them provided that this extend not to any Tenements or Hereditaments lying within any City or Town Corporate wherein the Majors Records or other Officers have authority or have lawfully used to enroll any Evidences or writings within their Precinct CHAP. X. Tenant by the Courtesie TEnant by the Courtesie of England is he that hath married a Wife inherited and hath had issue by her and she is dead in this case the Law of England permitteth and
whence it came Yet forasmuch as the Tenant after possibility of Issue had once an Inheritance in him he shall not be punished by an Action of Waste though he make never so much waste in the Lands and Tenements whereas yet in effect he is but a Tenant for terme of life But if this Tenant doth alien in fee such Lands he in the reversion may enter for the forfeiture And this for Estates at this present time shall suffice Forfeiture but to the intent that ye may the more easily comprehend all the members of the division of Possessions and Estates which men have in Lands Tenements and other Hereditaments it shall not be evill done to set forth as it were in a Table before your eyes the division thereof which is this A Figure of the Division of Possessions Possession de Frank-tenement Selon comonley Estate Dinheritance Fee simple Fee-tayl generall speciall Frank-tenement Apres possibilitie dissue extinct Curtesie Dangl ' Dower Terme de vie Terme daut vie Selon custome que poet este divide en mesme le maner come franktenement al common ley Chattell Reall Terme daus Gard de terre Tener a volunt Personal Biens moveables CHAP. XVI Of Parceners or other Coheirs HItherunto I have made a compendious and short declaration of Estates of all sorts but where I said that among Sisters there is no prerogative or preheminence concerning the inheriting of their Ancestors Lands but that they shall be all together inheritours and make as it were but one Heir it is expedient to make a further declaration and process in this behalf and to shew how and in what manner this partition shall be made But ye shall understand Division of Parceners at the Common Law and Parceners by Custome That there be besides Parceners at the Common Law which be only Sisters also Parceners by Custome which is amongst Brothers contrary to the course of the Common Law and this custome is in some places of Rent and in other places where Lands and Tenements be of the tenure of Gavelkind Ye shall therefore kow That when a man is seized of Land in fee-simple or fee tayle and hath no issue but Daughters and die and the Daughters do enter into the Lands thus descended unto them now they be called Parceners or Co-heirs Writ de partione facienda and by a Writ called de partitione facienda brought by one of them against the others they shall be constrained by the Law to suffer an equall partition to be made of the Lands between them Now partition may be made in sundry wayes one way is when they themselves do make partition between them of the whole heritage and do agree unto the same and do enter every one into her part so allotted unto her Another way is Partition in divers manners when by all their agreements and consent one common friend doth make the partition in which case the eldest Sister shall have the first election and after her the second Sister and so forth but if they agree that the eldest Sister shall make the partition and she maketh it then the eldest shall not choose first but shall suffer all her Sisters to choose before her as it is thought There is also another form of partition which is equally to divide the Lands into so many parts as there are Co-heirs or Parceners and to write every part so divided in a severall scroule of paper and so put the said scroules in a bonet or to inclose them severally in balls of wax and then the eldest Sister to choose which ball she will or to put her hand into the bonet and take a scroule and to hould her to her chance and allotment and so consequently every Sister after other And ye shall note Nota. That Partition by agreement may as well be made by nude and bare words without writing as by writing And if any of the Parceners will not suffer any partition to be made then may the other that would have partition A writ de partritone facienda purchase a Writ called De partitione facienda against them that refuse partition to compell the same to suffer partition to be made accordingly and then by the judgment of the Court the Sheriff by the serement and Oath of twelve men shall make partition between them and shall assign to each Sister her portion as he shall think good without giving any election of choice to the eldest And if two Mannors or Meases happen to descend to two Sisters and the Mannors be not of equall value then may she to whom the less Mannor or Mease is allotted have assigned unto her a Rent proportionably out of the other Mannor for the which Rent she and her Heirs may distrain of common right though they have no writing thereof Finally ye shall understand Distress of Common Right That if a man be seized of Lands in fee-simple and hath Issue two Daughters and giveth with one of his Daughters to another man that shall marry her the third or fourth part of his Land in frank-marriage and dieth if in this case the Daughter that is in this wise bestowed and advanced will have her portion of her fathers heritage she must put her Land given unto her in frank-marriage in hochpot new again Hochpot I mean she must be contented to suffer her said Lands to be commixed and mingled with the other Lands of which her Father died seized in fee-simple so that an equall division may be made of the whole or or else she shall have no part of those Lands of which her Father died seized but if her Father had made unto her a common gift in tayl or feofment in fee she should not need to put her Lands in hochpot but may very well keep and retain them still and also have as good part of the rest of the Lands of which her Father died seized as her other sister or Sisters have Frank-marriage for a gift in frank-marriage is accounted the most free and most liberall gift that can be and that gift which the Law judgeth to be only for the advancement and bestowing of the Daughter whereas feofments in fee-simple and also common gifts in tayle be accustomarily for other causes and for the advantage rather of the giver or feoffer then of the taker And if Parceners make partition of Lands being within age that partition is void And if Parceners in fee-simple make partition and the part of the one is better then the other being of full age of 21. years then the partition is good and cannot be defeated but if it be of Lands in fee-tayle the one part being better then the other that partition may be defeated by their Heirs CHAP. XVII Of Joyntenants HItherunto briefly have we spoken of Coheirs called Parceners of the the Common Law which as is heretofore declared do come to Lands and other hereditaments joyntly by the course operation and act of
as is hereafter declared in pain to forfeit so much as he takes or demands more and likewise 40s to the party grieved to be recovered by Action of Debt wherein no essence c. shall be allowed None shall take or demand for a Mortuary any thing at all where by the Custome they have not been usually paid nor upon the death of a Woman covert a Child a Person not keeping house a Wayfaring man one not residing in the place where he happens to dye nor where the goods of the dead Person Debts deducted amount not to the value of 10. Marks nor above the Summe of 3s 4d when they exceed not 30lb nor above 6s 8d when they exceed 30lb but not 40lb nor above 10s when they amount to 40lb or above And if the Person dye in a place where he or she dwelleth not their Mortuary shall be paid in the place where they had their most abode This Act shall not abridge Spirituall Persons to receive Legacies bequeathed to them or to the Kings Altar No Mortuaries shall be paid in Wales Callais or Barwick or in any of their Marches save only in Wales and the Marches thereof where they have been accustomed to be paid and such as are there paid shall be regulated according to the order prescribed by this Act. The B P of Bangor Landaff S. Davids and S. Assaph and the Arch Deacon of Chester shall take Mortuaries of the Priests within their Jurisdiction as hath been accustomed notwithstanding his Act. Lesse Mortuaris already setled by custome shall not be increased and there also persons exempted by this Act shall not hereafter be chargeable CHAP. XLV Of Discontinuance IT is called a Discontinuance by the Laws of England whereby he hath the possession of Lands or Tenements for the time present and yet not haveing the Fee-simple in himself nor in his own right only maketh an Alienation of the same to another by reason whereof he that should have them after him and which then hath right unto them cannot enter but is driven to his remedy by way of Action in such wise that the said Lands be not utterly shifted c. gone from such Person or Persons as have right unto them but be all only discontinued for a time till the Person which after the death of such discontinuer hath right unto them do continue and bring them home again not by entry but by suit and way of action As for example a Tenant in tayl of certain Lands doth Enfeoff another in the same in Fee-simple or Fee-tayle and hath Issue and dyeth his Issue cannot enter into the Lands though he hath Title and right unto them Formedon in the descender but is but to his Action which is called a Formedon in the descender And if such Tenant in tayle which maketh such a Feoffment hath no Issue at time of his death it is yet neverthelesse a discontinuance to him which is either in the reversion or in the remainder so that neither the one nor the other can enter Formedon in the reverter or remainder but be driven to their Action he in the reversion of his Formedon in the reverter and he in the remainder to his Formedon in the remainder In like manner if a Bishop doth alien Lands Entre sine assensue Capitali which be parcell of his Bishoprick and dyeth this is a discontinuance of his Successor Forasmuch as he cannot enter but is driven to his Writ of entre sine assensu Capitali Semblable if a Deane be sold seized of Lands in the right of his Deanry and maketh such an Alienation this is a discontinuance to his Successor Also the Master of an Hospitall alieneth any Lands of his Hospitall that is a discontinuance and his Successor cannot enter but is put to his Writ Igressu sine assensu confratrum sororum De ingressu sine ascensu confratrum sororum But if a Parson or a Vicar of a Church will alien any of his glebe-Lands to another in Fee-simple or Fee-tayl and dieth or resigneth his Benefice this is no discontinuance to his Successor but he may very well enter notwithstanding such Alienation made by his Predecessor And the highest Writ that a Parson can have if his Predecessor have aliened his Glebe-Land or lost it by default or Reddition is a Juris utrum Reddition that is voluntarily yielding And furthermore note That no Tenant of the Land can by his or their Act discontinue the right of him in the Reversion unless it be by Feoffment with Livery and Seisin or else by a Release with Warranty And note That such things as pass by way of Grant by Deed without Livery and Seisin cannnot be discontinued as an Advowson Common or a Villain in Gross Reversion Rent-charge Common for Beasts certain and such other like And ye shall understand That in 32 H. 8. it was enacted that no fine Feoffment or other Act to be made or suffered by the Husband only of any Lands or Tenements being the Inheritance or the Free-hold of his Wife during the Coverture between them should be any discontinuance thereof or be prejudiciall or hurtfull to the said Wife or to her Heirs or to such as should have right title or interest to the same by the death of such Wife but that the same Wife and her Heirs and such other to whom such right should appertain after her decease may then lawfully enter in all such Lands and Tenements according to their rights and titles therein CHAP. LXVI How Recoveries by Collusion against Tenants for term of life is no Discontinuance An. 32. H. 8. WHere divers Persons seized of Lands and Hereditaments as Tenants by the Courtesie of England or otherwise only for term of life or lives have heretofore suffered other persons by agreement or covine between them had to recover the same against them in the Kings Court by reason whereof they to whom the reversion or remainder thereof have belonged have after the deaths of such Tenants been driven to their Actions for the recontinuance and obtaining the said Lands and Tenements so recovered and sometimes have been clearly disherited of the same It is enacted that all such Recoveries hereafter to be had by agreement of the Party or by covine or against any such particular Tenant of Lands or Hereditaments whereof he is or hereafter shall be seized as Tenant by the Courtesie of England Tenant in tayl after possibility of issue extinct or otherwise for term of life shall from henceforth as against such persons to whom the reversion or remainder shall then appertain and against their Heirs and Successors be clearly void Provided that this Act extend not to any person that shall by good title recover any Hereditaments without fraud or covine against any such particular Tenant by reason of any former right or title nor to avoid any recovery to be had against any such particular Tenant by the assent and agreement of those in the