CHAPTER IV. COPYHOLDS. LIT. §§ 73, 74, 78. Tenant by copy of court roll is, as if a man be seised of a manor within which manor there is a custom, which hath been used time out of mind of man, that certain tenants within the same manor have used to have lands and tenements, to hold to them and their heirs in fee simple, or fee tail, or for term of life, &c. at the will of the lord according to the custom of the same manor. And such a tenant may not alien his land by deed, for then the lord may enter as into a thing forfeited unto him. But if he will alien his land to another, it behooveth him after the custom to surrender the tenements in court, &c. into the hands of the lord, to the use of him that shall have the estate, in this form, or to this effect. A. of B. cometh into this court, and surrendereth in the same court a mease, &c. into the hands of the lord (in manus domini), to the use of C. of D. and his heirs, or the heirs issuing of his body, or for term of life, &c. And upon that cometh the aforesaid C. of D. and taketh of the lord in the same court the aforesaid mease, &c. To have and to hold to him and to his heirs, or to him and to his heirs issuing of his body, or to him for term of life, at the lord's will, after the custom of the manor, to do and yield therefor the rents, services and customs thereof before due and accustomed, &c. and giveth the lord for a fine, &c. and maketh unto the lord his fealty, &c. Tenants by the verge are in the same nature as tenants by copy of court roll. But the reason why they be called tenants by the verge, is, for that when they will surrender their tenements into the hands of their lord to the use of another, they shall have a little rod (by the custom) in their hand, the which they shall deliver to the steward or to the bailiff according to the custom of the manor, and he which shall have the land shall take up the same land in court, and his taking shall be entered upon the roll, and the steward or bailiff according to the custom shall deliver to him that taketh the land the same rod, or another rod, in the name of seisin; and for this cause they are called tenants by the verge, but they have no other evidence but by copy of court roll. Read Digfur on Rear Croft CHAPTER V. USES AND TRUSTS.1 SECTION I. USES BEFORE ST. 27 HEN. VIII. C. 10.2 KEILW. 42, PL. 7 (1502). Vavasour, J., said that the subpœna commenced in the time of Edward III.; but this was always against the feoffee upon confidence himself, for against his heir the subpœna was never allowed until the time of Henry VI., and in this point the law was changed by Fortescue, C. J.3 un forffee ST. 1 RICH. III. (1483), c. 1. Forasmuch as by privy and unknown in dise lifeoffments, great unsurety, trouble, costs, and grievous vexations daily io sullille. grow among the King's subjects, insomuch that no man that buyeth any lands, tenements, rents, services, or other hereditaments, nor women that have jointures or dowers in any lands, tenements, or other hereditaments, nor men's last wills to be performed, nor leases for term of life, or of years, nor annuities granted to any person or persons for their services for term of their lives or otherwise be in perfect surety, nor without great trouble and doubt of the same, because of the said privy and unknown feoffments: (2) For remedy whereof, be it ordained, established, and enacted, by the advice of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and by the Commons in this present Parliament assembled, and by authority of the same, that every estate feoffment, gift, release, grant, leases and confirmations of lands, tenements, rents, services, or hereditaments, made or had, or hereafter to be made or had by any person 1 On Equity Jurisdiction in general, see Langdell, Eq. Pl. §§ 36-45; Digby, Real Prop. (1st ed.) 244-247; (2d ed.) 285-287; (3d ed.) 276-279; Haynes, Outlines of Eq. 6-20. 2 On Uses before the Statute, see also Digby, Real Prop. c. 6; Leake, Digest Land Law, 99-102. 3 "The experience and practice of uses were not ancient, and my reasons why I think so, are these four: First, I cannot find in any evidence before King R. II. his time, the clause ad opus et usum, and the very Latin of it savoureth of that time; for in ancient time, about Edw. I. and before, when lawyers were part civilians, the Latin phrase was much purer, as you may see partly by Bracton's writing, and by ancient patents and deeds, and chiefly by the register of writs, which is good Latin, whereas this phrase ad opus et usum, and the words ad opus, is a barbarous phrase, and like enough to be the penning of some chaplain that was not much past his grammar, where he had found opus and usus coupled together, and that they did govern an ablative case; as they do indeed since this Statute, for they take away the land and put them into a conveyance." Bacon, Uses, 22. J.Day. To are seisch in fee to the use of it. I. grantor thereof andgan ་ Defore it. Alice would have legal rt social she would get judament But after St. lease passed altite cestus to Italf fenny, and be Fricing int price it, Stalffiung Alice Anonymous a makes a also come in ahead Provision devisor. to it to his own use. а The it feoffees cestui (a) infe to the use of the Nove cambe scised to the use of another, exeift he who can execute an estate to the cestui which stall be perfect in law. This a ten. in blouse issue have frunte, Tenin tail : shall not be suised to his the fist use but to his tail cannot do bee own use. or persons being of full age, of whole mind, at large, and not in duress, No provision for devisor. X to J. Dr.J.B. in fee مد use z zv. n. V Rent goed ONE J. S. sued a replevin for his cattle tortiously taken. Rentnot The use is good. to the heir to Alice who The defendant avowed for that J. D. and J. B. were seised of a is made is Stalffenny To which the plaintiff said that J. D. and J. B. were seised to the & w. n.re. use of W. N. and being so seised granted the said rent to the said A. leases is him as alleged, she then having notice of the use, that the said J. D. and J. B. enfeoffed one Halpenny in fee whereby he was seised, and being 1 Only so much of the opinion of the court as relates to this point is given. The original bisheficiary. |