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A47714 Reports and cases of law, argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster, in the times of the late Queen Elizabeth, and King James in four parts / collected by ... William Leonard, Esq. ...; with alphabetical tables of the names of the cases, and of the matter contained in each part ; published by William Hughes ...; Reports and cases of law argued and adjudged in the courts at Westminster Part 1 Leonard, William.; Hughes, William, of Gray's Inn. 1687 (1687) Wing L1104; ESTC R19612 463,091 356

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out of the pardon shall be intended and construed the bare Act of Conversion but the whole offence i. the continuance and practise of it is understood As if by general pardon all intrusions are excepted now by that the instant Act of Intrusion i. the bare Entry is not only excepted but also the continuance of the Intrusion and the perception of the profits And note The words of the Statute are conversion permitted and Conversion continued is Conversion permitted And the said Statute doth not punish the Conversion but also the continuance of the Conversion for the penalty is appointed for each year in which the Conversion continues And Egerton Solicitor put this Case 11 H. 8. It was enacted by 3 H. 7. cap. 11. That upon Recovery in Debt if the Defendant in delay of Execution sues a Writ of Error and the Iudgment be affirmed he shall pay damages now the case was That one in Execution brought such a Writ of Error and the first Iudgment is affirmed he shall pay damages and yet here is not any delay of the Execution for the Defendant was in Execution before but here is an Interruption of the Execution and the Statute did intend the Execution it self i. the continuance in Execution ibidem moraturus quousque It was said on the other side That the conversion and continuance thereof are two several things each by it self and so the conversion only being excepted in the pardon the continuance thereof remains in the grace of the pardon And it appeareth by the Statute of 2 and 3. Ph. Ma. That conversion and continuance are not the same but alia atque diversa and distinct things in the consideration of the Law for there it is enacted That if any person shall have any Lands to be holden in Tillage according to the said Statute but converted to Pasture by any other person the Commissioners c. have authority by the said Statute to enjoyn such persons to convert such Lands to Tillage again c. And in all cases in the Law there is a great difference betwixt the beginning of a wrong and the continuance of it As if the Father levyeth a Nusance in his own Lands to the offence of another and dyeth an Assize of Nusance doth not lye against the Heir for the continuance of that wrong but a Quod permittat See F.N.B. 124. It was adjorned CCCLXX Powley and Siers Case Mich. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. POwley brought Debt against Sier Executor of the Will of A Debt The Defendant demanded Iudgment of the Writ for he said That one B. was Executor of the said A. and that the said B. did constitute the Defendant his Executor so the Writ ought to be brought against the Defendant as Executor of the Executor and not as immediate Executor to the said A. The Plaintiff by Reply said That the said B. before any probate of the Will or any Administration dyed and so maintained his Writ Wray Iustice was against the Writ for although here be not any probate of the Will of A. or any other Administration yet when B. made his Will and the Defendant his Executor the same is a good acceptance in Law of the Administration and Execution of the first Will for the Defendant might have an Action of Debt due to the first Testator Gawdy and Ayliff Iustices The Writ is good See Dyer 1 Cro. 211. 212. 23 Eliz. 372. against Wray CCCLXXI Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Case was A seised of certain Lands Bargain and sale of Trees bargained and sold by Indenture all the Trees there growing Habendum succidendum exportandum within twenty years after the date of the said Indenture the twenty years expire The Bargainee cuts down the Trees A. brought an Action of Trespass for cutting down the Trees And by Wray Iustice The meer property of the Trees vests in the Bargainee Post 288. and the Limitation of time which cometh after is not to any purpose but to hasten the cutting of the Trees within a certain time within which if the Vendee doth not cut them he should be punished as a Trespassor as to the Land but not as to the Trees Gawdy contrary And that upon this Contract a conditional property vests in the Vendee which ought to be pursued according to the direction of the condition and because the condition is broken the property of the Trees is vested in A. CCCLXXII Curriton and Gadbarys Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN in Action upon the Case the Plaintiff declared Leases That the Defendant in consideration that the Plaintiff should make a lease for life to the Defendant of certain Lands Habendum after the death of A. before the tenth of August next following promised to pay the Plaintiff ten pounds the first day of May next after the promise which was before the tenth of August And the truth was That the said ten pounds was not paid at the day ut supra nor the said Lease made And now both sides being in default the Plaintiff brought an Action It was said by Wray Iustice If the Plaintiff had made the Lease according to the consideration and in performance thereof the action would have lyen but now his own default had barred him of the Action But for another cause the Declaration was holden insufficient for here is not any Consideration for the promise is in consideration that the Plaintiff shall lease to the Defendant for life Habendum after the death of A. which cannot be good by way of lease but ought to enure by way of grant of the Reversion so as here is no lease therefore no consideration and notwithstanding that if a Lease be made for life Habendum after the death of A. the Habendum is void and the Lease shall be in possession according to the Premises yet the Law will not give such construction to the words of a Promise Contract or Assumpsit but all the words ought to be wholly respected according to the Letter so as because that no Lease can be made according to the words of the Consideration no supply thereof shall be by any favorable construction And so it was adjudged But before the same imperfection was espied Iudgment was entred and therefore the Court awarded that there should be a cesset executio entred upon the Roll for it is hard as it was said by Wray to drive the party to a Writ of Error in Parliament because Parliaments are not now so frequently holden as they have used to be holden and the Execution was staid accordingly CCCLXXIII Willis and Crosbys Case Pasch 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. Error IN a Writ of Error It was assigned for Error That whereas in the first Action the parties were at issue and upon the Venire facias one G●●gory Tompson was returned But upon the Habeas Corpora George T●●●●son was returned and the Iury was taken and found for the
afterwards that this murder is dispunishable notwithstanding the Statute of 2 Ed. 6. CCCLXIV The Queen and Braybrooks Case Pasch 25 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 3 Co. 1 2 c. THe Queen brought a Writ of Error against Braybrook The Case was this That King Ed. 4. was seised of the Manor of Marston and gave the same to Lionel Lord Norris and A.M. and the Heirs of the body of the Lord the Remainder to H. Norris in Tail L and A. entermarry L. suffered a common Recovery against himself only without naming the said A. Hen. Norris is attainted of high Treason by Act of Parliament and by the same Act all his Lands Tenements Hereditaments Rights Conditions c. the day of the Treason committed or ever after c. Hen. Norris is executed Lionel dieth without issue the Queen falsified the said Recovery for one moiety by Scire facias because Anne who was joint-tenant with Lionel was not named party to the said Recovery and afterwards the Queen granted to the Lord Norris Son of the said Hen. Norris Manerium suum de Merston omnia jura in eodem and now upon the said Recovery the Queen brought a Writ of Error and it was argued by Egerton the Queens Sollicitor that this right to a Writ of Error is such a right as is transferred to the Queen by the Act of Parliament for the words are omnia jura sua quaecunque and here is a right although not a present right yet a right although in futuro so it is a right of some quality as A. Tenant in Tail the Remainder in Tail to B.A. makes a Feoffment in Fee B. is attainted of high Treason and by such Act all his Lands c. given to the King. A. dieth without issue the Queen shall have a Formedon in the Remainder and although the Queen hath granted to the Lord Norris Manerium suum de Merston omnia jura in eodem yet by such general words a Writ of Error doth not pass which See 32 H. 8. Br. Patents 98. And also this Action rests in privity of record and cannot be displaced from thence but by Act of Parliament see Br. Chose in Action 14. 33 H. 8. for when the King will grant a thing in Action he ought in his Patent to recite all the circumstances of the matter as the Right and how it became a Right and because the Queen here doth not make mention of this Right as of the Entail the Recovery and the Attainder for that cause the Right doth not pass The Case betwixt Cromer and Cranmer 8 Eliz the Disseisee was attainted of Treason the Queen granted to the Heir of the Disseisee all the Right which came unto her by the Attainder of his Ancestor nothing passed Causa qua supra And always where the King grants any thing which he cannot grant but as King that such a grant without special words is to no purpose Coke contrary he agreed the Case put by Egerton for at the time of the Attainder B. had a Right of Remainder but in our Case Hen. Norris had not any Right but a possibility of a Right of Action i.e. a Writ of Error And he said that this Writ of Error is not forfeitable for it is an Action which rests in privity no more than a condition in gross as a Feoffment in Fee is made upon condition of the party of the Feoffor who is attainted ut supra This word Right in the Act of Attainder shall not transfer this Condition to the Queen and of the Act of Attainder to Hen. Norris it is to be conceived That the makers of the Act did not intend that by the word Right every right of any manner or quality whatsoever should pass to carry a Condition to the Queen and therefore we ought to conceive that the makers of the Act did not intend to touch Rights which rested in privity And as to the Grant of the Queen to the Lord Norris of the Mannor of Merston Et omnia jura sua in eodem he conceived that thereby the Right of the Writ of Error did pass for it is not like Cranmers Case but if in the said Case the Land it self had been set down in the Grant it had been good enough as that Cranmer being seised in Fee of the Manor of D. was there of disseised and so being disseised was attainted of high Treason now the Queen grants to his Heirs totum jus suum in his Manor of D c. and so in our Case the Queen hath granted to the Lord Norris Manerium suum de Merston omnia jura sua in eodem c. at another day it was moved by Plowden that this Right of Writ of Error was not transferred to the Queen by the Act but such Right might be saved to a stranger c. the words of the Act are omnia jura sua and this word sua is Pronomen possessionis by which it is to be conceived that no Right should pass but that which was a present Right as a Right in possession but this Right to a Writ of Error was not in Hen. Norris at the time of his Attainder but it was wholly in him against whom the erroneous Iudgment was had and therefore if in a Praecipe quod reddat the Tenant vouch and loseth and Iudgment is given and before Execution the Tenant is attainted by Act of Parliament by words ut supra and afterwards he is pardoned the Demandant sueth for Execution against the Tenant now notwithstanding this Attainder the Tenant may sue Execution against the Vouchee and afterwards Wray chief Iustice openly declared in Court the opinion of himself and all his companions Iustices and also of all the other Iustices to be That by this Act of Parliament by which all Lands Tenements Hereditaments and all Rights of any manner and quality whatsoever Henry Norris had the day of his Attainder or ever after Lionel then being alive and over-living the said Hen. Norris that this Writ of Error was not transferred to the Queen And that the said Act by the words aforesaid could not convey to the King this possibility of right for at the time of the Attainder the Right of the Writ of Error was in Lyonel and Hen. during the estate tail limited to Lyonell had not to do with the Land nor any matter concerning it And Iudgment was given accordingly And it was holden That he in the Reversion or Remainder upon an Estate tail might have a Writ of Error by the common Law upon a Recovery had against Tenant in tail in Reversion CCCLXV Mich. 25 26. Eliz. In the common Pleas. Copy-holder IN Trespass brought by a Copy-holder against the Lord for cutting down and carrying away his Trees c. It was found by special Verdict That the place where c. was Customary lands of the Plaintiffs holden of the Defendant and that the Trees whereof c. were Chery Trees de
Eliz. In the Common Pleas. Debt KYnter brought debt upon an Obligation the condition was that whereas the Plaintiff had bought of the Defendant a Ship if then the Defendant shall enjoy the said Ship with all the furniture belonging to the same without being disturbed for the said Ship or any furniture appertaining to it that then c. and the Case was that after the sale of the said Ship a stranger sued the Plaintiff for certain monies due for certain Ballast bought by the Defendant for the same Ship and put into the said Ship before the sale of it and in the said suit the Plaintiff obtained a Iudgment and Execution and thereupon the said Ship was seised and all the matter was if Ballast be furniture of a Ship or not And it was moved by Serjeant Gawdy that it was for Ballast is as necessary to a Ship as a Sail but the Court was against him for somtimes a Ship may sail without Ballast for it may be laden with such Merchandizes which are convenient Ballast in themselves as Coals Wheat c. Periam at the first doubted of it and by him if I be bound upon condition ut supra I am bound to deliver the Guns being in it at the time of the sale but yet he conceived that the Plaintiff should be barred because he had not specially shewed that at the time of the sale the Ballast was in the Ship. LX. Pendleton and Gunstons Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. PEndleton informed against Gunston upon the Statute of 13 Eliz. Cap. 5. for that where the said Pendleton had before brought a plaint of Debt against I.S. in the Guild-Hall of Norwich upon which issued out of the said Court an Attachment against the said I.S. by which the Sheriff of Norw being ready by virtue of the said process to attach the said I. S. by his goods there the now Defendant in disturbance of the said process and the execution of it did publish and shew to the Sheriff a conveyance by which he claimed the said goods as conveyed to him by the said I. S c. and averred the fraud c. and it was moved by Serjeant Snagg that the matter of which the Defendant is charged is not within the said Statute because the avowing of the said conveyance doth not go in delay of the execution for no Iudgment is given but only in delay of process but the Court was clear of opinion to the contrary and that by reason of the Statute and the words of it scil delay hinder or defraud Creditors of their just and lawful Actions sutes c. for here is a delay for want of serving the said Attachment the Appearance of I.S. to the sute of the Plaintiff is delayed which mischief is within the remedy of the said Statute And Periam and Rhodes Iustices conceived that such avowing of such conveyance where no sute is depending is within the said Statute which Anderson doubted See the pleading of this Case reported in the second Book of Entries 207 208. 30 Eliz. per quod secta impedita fult c. LXI Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. FEnner Serjeant moved this Case 4 Len. Alien Purchasor An Alien purchaseth Lands in Fee The Queen confirms it to the Alien Office is found if the confirmation shall bind the Queen and it seemed to some that it should for by the Lord Anderson Confirmation when an Alien is enfeoffed he receiveth by the Livery the Fee-simple of which he shall be seised until Office be found and a Praecipe quod reddat lyeth against him And by Fenner an Alien and Denizen Ioynt-tenants are disseised they both shall joyn in Assize vide 11 H. 4. 26. and by him the Kings Nief being an Inheritrix takes a Husband and hath issue Office is found the Husband shall be Tenant by the Curtesy which see 33 E. 3. Traverse 36. It was argued of the other side that the estate of the Alien is so feeble that a confirmation cannot enure upon it for an Alien cannot take but to the use of the King and cannot be enfeoffed to another use and if he be such use is void for there is not a sufficient seisin in the Alien to carry an use And it hath been adjudged in the Case of one Forcet that where an Alien and the said Forcet were Ioynt-purchasors and the Alien died Forcer had not the whole by the Survivor but that upon an Office found the Queen should have the moyety See Dyer 11 Eliz. 283. LXII Sir Roger Lewknor and Fords Case Mich. 28 29 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. 1 Cro. 17. Co. 5. Rep. 12. b. SIr Roger Lewknor seised of the Manor of Wallingford leased the same to A. for years and died after which it was Enacted by Parliament That the said Manor should from henceforth be deemed and reputed in the Heirs of the body of the said Sir Roger begotten upon Eliz. his Wife the said Sir Roger having three Daughters only without any other issue The Daughters married Husbands and had issue A. assigned his enterest in the said Manor to B. C. and D. and also to one Shelley B.C. and D. assigned their interest to one Sponer one of the Defendants and Shelly assigned his fourth part to Ford another of the Defendants excepting the Woods and Vnderwoods Wast is committed one of the Daughters having issue dieth living her Husband the two surviving Sisters and their Husbands the Term being expired brought a Writ of Wast leaving out the Husband of the third Sister who was Tenant by the Curtesy against Shelley and Sponer who Tenuerunt Shuttleworth Serjeant took Exception to the Writ scil praedictus Rogerus cujus haeredes ipsae funt which shall be intended Heirs general and by the Declaration it appeareth that the Daughters have to them by Act of Parliament an especial inheritance as Heirs in special tail and that by a special conveyance and therefore the Plaintiffs ought to have brought a special Writ according to their Case as where Cestuy que use maketh a lease for years by the Statute of 1 R. 3. and the Lessee committeth Wast now the Feoffees ought to have a special Writ of Wast according to their Case 26 H. 8. 6. but that exception was disallowed and the case cited out of 6 H. 8. is upon another reason for in such case the estate of the Lessee for years is created by the said Statute Another Exception was taken to the Writ for the Writ is tenuerunt which shall be intended prima facie conjunctim tenuerunt and in the Declaration it appeareth that one of the Defendants is assignee of three parts of the Lands demised and the other Defendant of the fourth part and so separatim tenuerunt but that Exception was also disallowed because originally it was one and intirely demised interest and estate and so it remaineth as to the Plaintiffs although it be devised by the Lessee himself
as a Will but as an Executory Devise Wray It is not a conditional Estate in Fee but an Estate tail Coke They who would prove the Custom to entail Copyhold Land within a Manor it is not sufficient to shew Copies of Grants to persons and the Heirs of their bodies Copyhold Estate but they ought to shew that surrenders made by such persons have been enjoyed by reason of such matter VVray That is not so for Customary Lands may be granted in tail and yet no surrenders have been made within time of memory CCXLV Matthew and Hassals Case Mich. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Ejectione firmae betwixt Matthew and Hassal the Plaintiff had Iudgment to recover and the Defendant brought a Writ of Error Error 1 Cro. 144. and assigned Error in this that the Iudgment was entred Quod querens recuperet possessionem c. where it should be Terminum vent in ten praedict See 9 Eliz. Dyer 258. Coke contrary That the Iudgment is good enough for the Writ of Execution upon it is Habere facias possessionem and in a real Action the Writ is Quod perens recuperet sesinam and not terram And afterwards Iudgment was affirmed CCXLVI Tempest and Mallets Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Trespass by Tempest against Mallet Iudgment was given and Eror brought and assigned for Error 1 Cro. 153 145. that whereas the Action was brought against four one of them died Mesne betwixt the Award of the Nisi prius and the Inquest taken And it was said on the part of the Defendant in the Writ of Error which was entred upon the Record that the Plaintiff shewed unto the Court the death of one of the Defendants and prayed Iudgment against the others See 4 H. 7. 2 Eliz. 175. And there is a difference where in an Action of Trespass there is but one Defendant and where many Another Error was assigned the Defendant Obtulit se per Higgins Attornat suum without shewing his Christian Name as John or VVilliam for Higgins only without the Christian Name is not any Name for it is but an addition to shew which John or VVilliam Coke The same is helped by the Statute of 32 H. 8. cap. 30. Where it is enacted that after Verdict Iudgment shall be given notwithstanding the lack of Warrant of Attorney of the party against whom the Issue shall be tried or any default or negligence of any the parties their Counsellors or Attorneys and of necessity this default here in the Christian Name ought to be the fault of one of them See also 18 Eliz. Cap. 14. for want of any Warrant of Attorney c. Glanvil The Statute provides for default of Warrant of Attorney c. Then Coke To what end was the Statute of 18 Eliz. made for the Statute of 32 H. 8. provides for defects of Warrants of Attorney Glanvil The first Statutes for Warrants of Attorneys of such persons against whom the Issue was tryed but the later Stat. is general Another Error was assigned Quod defendens Capiatur where the Offence so the Fine is pardoned by Parliament and therefore the entry of the Iudgment ought to be Et de fine nihil quia perdonatur Coke The Iudgment is well enough for in every general Pardon some persons are excepted it doth not appear if the Defendant here were one of them and then the Fine is not pardoned 1 Cro. 768. 778. 3 Cro. 22. for the Court cannot take notice of that as it was holden in Serjeant Harris Case but if the Defendant be charged with the Fine then he ought to plead the pardon and to shew that he was not any of the persons excepted And afterwards at another day the Defendant did alledge that there was a Warrant of Attorney in the Common Pleas. And also it appeareth upon Record that the Defendant did appear upon the Supersedeas by Attorney who had his full Name and therefore prayed a Certiorari de novo to certifie the same matter vide 9 E. 4. 32. VVray A Case here greatly debated betwixt the Lord Norris and Braybrook In nullo est erratum and upon Advice such a Writ of Certiorari was granted after the Plaintiff had pleaded In nullo est erratum for this Plea in nullo est erratum goes but to that which is contained within the body of the Record and not unto collateral matter scil Warrant of Attorneys And afterwards the Writ of Error was allowed and upon the day of return thereof it appeared upon the Record of Supersedeas that the Defendant did appear by such a one his Attorney But it was said by the Court that there ought to be two appearances the one upon the Supersedeas and the other when the Plaintiff declares See as to the name of the Attorney Tirrells Case 1 Mar. Dyer 93. CCXLVII. Palmer and Knowllis Case Hill. 31. Eliz. In the Kings Bench. 1 Cro. 160. PAlmer recovered Debt against Knowllis and sued Execution by Elegit upon which the Sheriff returned that he had made Execution of the lands of the Defendant by the Oath of twelve men but he could not deliver it to the party Execution for it is extended to another upon a Statute upon which the Plaintiff sued a Capias ad satisfaciendum And now came the Defendant by his Counsel and moved that after Elegit returned the Plaintiff could not resort to the Execution by Capias and therefore prayed a Supersedeas Caplas after Elegit because the Capias erronice emanavit But the whole Court was clear to the contrary for upon Nihil returned upon Elegit the Plaintiff shall have a Capias 17 E. 4. 5. See 21 H. 7. 19. A man shall have a Capias after a Fieri facias or Elegit 34 H. 6. 20. and here the special return doth amount to as much as if the Sheriff had returned Nihil Also the Statute of West 2. which giveth the Elegit is not in the Negative and therefore it shall not take away the Execution which was at the Common Law. And here is no Execution returned for after the former extent ended he ought to have a new Elegit which Wray granted And afterwards the said Knowllis was taken by force of the Capias ad satisfaciend and came into Court in the Custody of the Sheriff and the Case was opened and in the whole appeared to be worthy of favour but by the Law he could not be helped and although he instantly prayed a Supersedeas yet the same was denied unto him CCXLVIII The Church-wardens of Fetherstones Case Hill. 31 Eliz. In the Common Pleas. AN Action of Trespass was brought by the Church-wardens of Fetherstone in the County of Norfolk and declared Church-wardens 1 Cro. 145. 179. That the Defendant took out of the said Church a Bell and declared that the Trespass was done 20 Eliz. And it was found for the Plaintiffs And now it was moved by
upon the grant of the said Rent ought to attorn to the Grant for the Ter-tenant ought to attorn and one of them is not Ter-tenant And in case of a Rent-charge the Avowry is upon the Lands but Attornment differs from our case for Attornment is but a bare assent without any interest in him who attorns for an Abator may do it but here is matter of Interest and in Attornment Attornment for one acre is effectual for all 18 E. 3. Fitz. variance 63. but otherwise it is in case of Confirmation for one acre the same doth not extend to the rest for in such case an Interest passeth So here the one of them is not Patron therefore all of them ought to concur 31 E. 3. Grants 61. That such act of the Patron shall not bind but according to the Estate of the Patron which see Lit. 112. 528. as if Tenant in Tail confirm the same shall not bind the Presentee of the issue See Fitz. Grants 104 In R. 2. The case was that the Bishop of Covent and Lichfeild had two Chapters one of Coventry the other of Lichfeild and he made a conveyance but one Chapter only did confirm it the same doth not bind the Successor for both are but one Chapter in respect of the Bishop and see the case abridged by Statham Title Assize for if the Bishop is chosen by both Chapters there a confirmation must be of them both The case in Dyer 11 Eliz. 282. Thark Archbishop of Dublin hath two Deans and Chapters the one surrendreth without the assent of the Bishop and afterwards the other Dean and Chapter confirmeth a Lease made by the Bishop the same is good I confess that for the Surrender was by Act of Parliament and so one sole Chapter remained And in our case the Lease cannot be good in part and void for the residue for all are but one Patron as 22 H. 6. 47. Two Coparcenes are they make composition to present by Turns a Writ of Annuity is brought against the Incumbent he shall have aid of both And see the Case betwixt Gore and Dawbney in the Exchequer Chamber upon a Writ of Error where two are accountable an Account made by the one is not good for both the Accountants shall make but one account and therefore the Account of the one cannot be good And the Lord Anderson put this Case two Ioynt-tenants of a Manor the one of them doth grant a Copy the same is void for he is not Dominus pro tempore And see as to the assent of them all c. 3 Eliz. 190. Dyer But it hath been objected That now the Incumbent comes in by the Ordinary and not by the Presentment of the Patron and the Ordinary is bound by the confirmation of his Predecessor so that the collation of the Bishop by Lapse is in the right and sted of the Patron and as the Presentee of the Heir of the Patron shall avoid c. so also of the Ordinary and 20 E. 3. Br. Presentment 12. The Patron shall have a Writ of Darrein-presentment upon the present of the Bishop for Lapse and 22 H. 6. If a man can recover an Advowson and after the Bishop collate for Lapse the same is an Execution of the Iudgment and will make a possessio fratris as Moyle saith And in our case this confirmation is void in all because Non sunt concurrentes ii qui in hac parte concurrere debuerant And it is an entire Act and cannot be avoided in part and stand for the residue and the Presentee comes in in the right of the Heir for which he may avoid it c. Popham contrary it is to be here considered if the Ordinary hath Interest in the Church by this Lapse or only an authority for if he hath an Interest then it will follow that every one of his Successors shall be bound by his Confirmation and also their Presentees It hath been objected that there ought to be a full and entire Patron who makes such a Lease otherwise it is void But that is not so as if the Patron be Tenant for life his Lease or Confirmation shall not be void in all but shall be good during his life which see 31 E. 3. Grants 61. and 19 Eliz. 356. A Parson makes a Lease for forty years the Bishop being Patron and Ordinary confirms it the Patron dyeth the Bishop presents and afterwards is translated this Lease shall stand during the life of the Bishop and of the new Incumbent who found the Church charged and then such Lease may be good for part and void for part See for the same 2 E 3. 8. If the Advowson of a Church be appropriated unto a Prior and his Successors if afterwards the wife of the Grantor be endowed of it and present her Clerk the Church is become dis-appropriated during the life of the Wife but afterwards shall stand See the case cited to the contrary 29 Eliz. in the case of the Earl of Bedford 7 Co. 8. At the beginning the Patron was not restrained to any time to present his Clerk but the six months was appointed at the instance and suit of the Ordinaries by a Canon confirmed in the councel of Lateran before which time the Ordinaries had not any Lapses but after the said Canon they had an Interest in the Church and this appeareth in the Register And see F.N.B. 37. f. that after the Ordinary is entituled to Lapses The Plaintiff in a Quare Impedit cannot have a Ne admittas for now the Ordinary hath an Interest And if the Bishop hath Title to present by Lapse and before Presentment he dyeth so as his temporalties come to the King the King shall present which proves that it is an Interest and the Civilians call it Interesse caducum conditionale And in our case the confirmation of the Coparcener shall bind the other Coparceners in a Nativo habendo shall bind them all and the villain shall be free for ever And it was moved also if an usurper or the Clerk who is in by him shall avoid this clause and by the words of the Statute of West 2. Si tempus semestre transierit per impedimentum alicujus ita quod Episcopus Ecclesiam conferat verus Patronus ea vice praesentationem suam amittat adjudicentur damna ad valorem Ecclesiae pro duobus annis Wherefore what the Patron loseth the Ordinary hath the same therefore it is an Interest and in lieu of that loss the Statute gives damages to the Patron c. And the case was adjorned to be further argued at another day c. CCCXVIII Pet and Baldens Case Pasch 33. Eliz. Rot. 392. In the Kings Bench. IN a prohibition the Plaintiff declared Prohibition 1 Cro. 274. that whereas Michael Pett was seised of divers Lands and made his Will by which he made the Plaintiff his Son his Executor and thereby devised unto A. his Wife one hundred pounds in consideration and recompence
shewed our matter scil That we have Letters Patents of the Queen and that we were sworn in the said Office and so we are King of Heralds by matter of Record against which is pleaded only matter in defect of ceremony and circumstance which is not material An Earl is created with the ceremonies of putting a Sword broad-wise about his Body and a Cap with a Coronet upon his Head. Yet the King may create an Earl without such ceremonies And may also create an Earl by word if the same be after Recorded when a Knight is made Spurs ought to be put upon his Heels yet without such ceremony such degree may be conferred to and upon another for such ceremonies are or may be used or not used at the Kings pleasure Afterwards it was objected that the same is but a name of Office but not a name of Dignity To which it was answered that this word Coronamus always imports Dignity and this is a Dignity and Office as Earl Marquess c. Fenner Iustice The Patent is Nomen tibi imponimus and therefore Garter is parcel of his Name And therefore he ought to be Indicted by such Name And it should be hard to tye Estate and Degrees to ceremonies Gawdy was of opinion That this is but a name of Office and therefore the Indictment good as 1 Mar. Writ of Summons of Parliament issueth without these words Supream Head and the Writ was holden good for it is not parcel of the Name but addition only So here Fenner and Wray contrary for the words are Creamus Coronamus Nomen imponimus Ergo part of his Name which Clench also granted and afterwards Dethick was discharged CCCXXXVIII Strait and Braggs Case Pasch 32 Eliz. Rot. 318. In the Kings Bench. IN an Action of Trespass 2 Len. 1●9 for breaking his Close in H. the Defendant pleaded that long before the Trespass the Dean and Chapter of Pauls were seised of the Manor of C. in the said County of H. in Fee in the Right of their Church and so seised King Edward the Fourth by his Letters Patents Dat. An. 1. of his Reign granted to them all Fines pro licentia Concordandi of all their Homagers and Tenants Resiants and Non-resiants within their Fee and shewed that 29 Eliz. A Fine was levied in the Common Pleas betwixt the Plaintiff and one A. of eleven Acres of Lands whereof the place where is parcel and the Post-Fine was assessed to 15 s. and afterwards Scambler the Forain Opposer did allow to them the said 15 s. because the said Land was within their Fee And afterwards in behalf of the said Dean and Chapter he demanded of the Plaintiff the said fifteen shillings who refused to pay it wherefore he in the Right of the said Dean c. And by their commandment took the Distress as Baily c. for the said 15 s. and afterwards sold it upon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law. It was moved that it is not averred that the Land whereof the Fine was levied was within their Fee but they say that Scambler allowed it to be within their Fee and the same is not a sufficient Averment which the Court granted And it was the opinion of the Court that the Dean and Chapter cannot distrain for this matter but they ought to sue for it in the Exchequer as it appeareth 9 H. 6. 27. In the Dutchess of Somersets Case Gawdy This Grant doth not extend to the Post Fine for Fine pro licentia Concordandi is the Queens Silver and not the Post Fine Wray All shall pass by it for it is about one and the same matter and they were of opinion to give Iudgment for the Plaintiff CCCXXXIX Sherewood and Nonnes Case Trin. 32 Eliz. Rot. 451. In the Kings Bench. Covenant IN an Action of Covenant the Plaintiff declared that Charles Grice and Hester his Wife were seised of certain Tenements calle Withons with divers Lands to the same appertaining and of another parcel of Land called Dole containing eight Acres to them and the heirs of the body of the said Charks on the body of the said Hester his wife lawfully begotten and so seised 15 Eliz. leased the same to the Defendant by Indenture for years by which Indenture the Lessor covenanted that the Lessee should have sufficient House-boot Fencing-wood and Hoop-wood upon the Lands during the Term and that further the Lessee covenanted for him his Executors and Assigns with the Lessor c. That it should be lawful for them to enter upon the Lands during the said Term and to have egress and regress there and to cut down and dispose of all the Wood and Timber there growing leaving sufficient House-boot Fencing-wood and Hoop-wood to the Lessee upon the Lands called the Dole for his expences at Withons and further that he would not take any Wood or Timber upon the Premisses without the assent or assigment of the Lessor or his Assigns otherwise than according to the Indenture and true meaning thereof And further declared That the said Charles and his Wife so seised levied a Fine of part of the Land to R. S. and his heirs to whom the Defendant attorned and that the said R.S. afterwards devised the same to I. his Wife the now Plaintiff for years the Remainder over to another and died and that the Defendant had felled and carried out of the Lands called Withons twenty loads of Wood without the assent and assignment of the Lessor or his Assigns for which the Plaintiff as Assignee brought the Action The Defendant pleaded That after the Lease John Grice and others by assignment of Hester had cut down and carried away fifty loads of Wood in the said Lands called the Dole and so they had not left sufficient Woods for his expences at Withons according to the Indenture for which cause he took the said twenty loads of Wood upon Withons for his expences upon which the Plaintiff did demur in Law. Godfrey The Plea is not good This Plea is no more but that sufficient Wood was not left upon the Dole for his expences and although there be not yet the Defendant cannot cut Wood elsewhere for he hath restrained himself by the Covenant Also the Covenant of the Lessor is That the Lessee shall have sufficient Wood upon the Dole for his expences at Withons but in his satisfaction he doth not alledge that he had need of Wood for to spend at Withons nor doth aver that he hath spent it there for otherwise he hath not cause to take c. And the meaning was that the Lessee should have sufficient Wood when he had need of it Hobart for the Defendant He would not speak to the Plea in Bar but he conceived that the Declaration was not good for here no breach of Covenant is assigned for the Covenant is in the Disjunctive scil That the Defendant should not take Wood without the assent or assignment of the Lessor or his Assigns And the Plaintiff
Plaintiff● and Iudgment given accordingly Amercement It was argued on the part of the Plaintiff in the first Action that the same is a thing amendable As 9 E. 4. 14. A Iury was impannelled by the name of I.B. and in the Habeas Corpora he was named W.B. and by such name sworn c. And upon Examination of the Sheriff it was found that he was the same person who was impannelled and it was amended and made according to the Pannel But the opinion of the whole Court was That as this case is it was not amendable and it is not like the case of 9 E. 4. For there the Examination was before the Verdict when the Sheriff was in Court but here it is after Verdict and the Sheriff is out of Court and cannot be examined and for these causes the Iudgment was reversed CCCLXXIV Ognell and the Sheriffs of Londons Case Pasch 26. Eliz. In the Exchequer OGnell brought Debt upon an Escape by Bill in the Exchequer against the Sheriffs of London Escape 1 Cro. 164. the Case was That one Crofts was bound to the now Plaintiff in a Recognisance and afterwards committed for Felony to the Prison of Newgate of which he was attainted and remained in Prison in the custody of the Sheriffs Afterwards Ognell sued a Sc. fac upon the said Recognisance against Crofts the Sheriffs returned a Cepi and the especial matter aforesaid and after Iudgment given against Crofts for Ognell Crofts got his pardon and escaped It was argued That notwithstanding this Attainder Crofts is subject to the Execution obtained upon the Recognizance See the case of Escape betwixt Maunser and Annesley 16 Eliz. in Bendloes case 2 E. 4. 1. It is said by Watman That a man out-lawed for Felony shall answer but shall not be answered See 6 E. 4. 4. One condemned in Redisseisin was taken by a Capias pro fine and committed to Prison and afterwards out-lawed of Felony the King pardons the Felony yet he shall remain in Execution for the party if he will But if the party be once in Execution for the party and then out-lawed of Felony it seems by 6 E. 4. Fitz. Execution 13. that the Execution is gone And all the Barons were clear of opinion in the principal case for the Plaintiff And they also said That if one who hath a Protection from the King be taken in Execution and Escape the Gaoler shall answer for the Escape and that was one Hales Case And afterwards Iudgment was given for the Plaintiff Hales Case and one of the causes of the Iudgment was because that the Sheriffs had returned C●pi upon the Process CCCLXXV Bishop and Redmans Case Hill. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. BIshop a Doctor of the Civil Law brought an Action of Covenant against Redman Archdeacon of Canterbury and declared upon an Indenture by which the Defendant did constitute the Plaintiff Offici●●em suum of his Archdeaconcy for three years and gave to him by the said Indenture Authoritatem admittendi inducendi quoscunque Clericos ad quaecunque beneficia Ecclesiastica infra Archidiaconatum praedict ' and also Probate of Wills and further granted to him omnem omnim●dam Archidiaconatum Jurisdictionem suam praedict ' absque impetitione de●●egatione rest●ictione c. after which Doctor Young was created Bishop of Rochester which is in the Iurisdiction of the said Archdeaconry and the Defendant took upon him to enthronize the said Bishop in his said Church and took of him for his Fee twenty Nobles whereupon the Plaintiff brought this Action It was moved for the Defendant that upon the matter the Action doth lye for the Office of enthronizing or enstalling of a Bishop doth not pass by the said Indenture nor is there any word in the Indenture that doth extend unto it for the Bishop is not a Clark and the Plaintiff by the Indenture hath not to do but with Clarks not with Bishops and it appeareth by the Grant of Subsidies by the Clergy in Parliament that a Bishop and a Clark are distinct things See Instrumentum hereof Praelatus Clericus c. Also the Plaintiff hath not to do with a Bishoprick but with Benefices and a Bishoprick is not a Benefice but a higher thing And further the Plaintiff hath power to admit and induct which doth not extend to installing or inthronization for that belongs to a Bishop and the Court was clear of opinion That by this Grant there did not pass any power to instal or inthronize Bishops and the general words i.e. omnem omnimodam jurisdictionem Archidiaconatum praedictam Words which amount to Covenant did not mend the matter for the word Praedictam doth not restrain the words Omnem omnimodam c. but admitting that It was moved If upon this Indenture Covenant lieth for there is not any express Covenant yet the words absque impetitione denegatione restrictione do amount to so much to make the Defendant subject to his Action if the matter in it self would have served for him and so was the opinion of the Court. CCCLXXVI Lady Lodges Case Hill. 26 Eliz. In the Kings Bench. THe Lady Laxton of London by her Will bequeathed to Matthew Luddington and Andrew Luddington Prohibition Poph. 11. Dyer 59. several Legacies in monies to be paid to them respectively at their several ages c. and made the Lady Lodge her Daughter her Executrix and died Andrew died before his full age Matthew took Letters of Administration of the goods of Andrew and sued the Lady Lodge in the Spiritual Court for the Legacy bequeathed to Andrew before which Suit begins the Lady Lodge with Sir Thomas her Husband gave all the goods which she had as Executor of the said Lady Laxton to Sir William Cordel Master of the Rolls and to William Lodge Son of the said Sir Thomas and his Lady depending which Suit the Lady Lodge died after which sentence was given against her being dead and now a Citation was out of the Spiritual Court against William Lodge Executor of the said Lady Lodge to shew cause why the sentence given against the said Lady Lodge should not be put in Execution against him and sentence was given against the said William Lodge who appealed to the Delegates and there the sentence was affirmed And now came William Lodge into the Kings Bench and set forth the grant of the said Lady Lodge as aforesaid and that the same was not examinable in the Spiritual Court and thereupon prayed a Prohibition And Awbrey Doctor of the Civil Law came into Court to inform the Iustices what their Law was in certain points touching the Case in question and as to the sentence given against the Lady Lodge after her death he said That if the Defendant died before issue joyned which is called Litis contestationem the Suit shall cease but if he dieth after Litis contestationem it is otherwise for in such Case the Suit shall proceed for after