The Second Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England: Containing the Exposition of Many Ancient and Other Statutes, Volume 2

Capa
E. and R. Brooke, 1797 - 746 páginas

De dentro do livro

Outras edições - Ver todos

Termos e frases comuns

Passagens mais conhecidas

Página 502 - Forasmuch as Purchasers of Lands and Tenements of the Fees of great Men and other Lords, have many Times heretofore entered into their Fees, to the Prejudice of the Lords, to whom the Freeholders of such great Men...
Página 619 - Corporal. jl'JOREOVER, if any lay violent hands on a clerk, the amends for the peace broken shall be before the King, and for the excommunication before a prelate, that penance corporal may be enjoined ; which if the offender will redeem of his own good will, by giving money to the prelate, or to the party grieved, it shall be required before the prelate and the King's prohibition shall not lie.
Página 405 - By that statute it was provided that ' whensoever from henceforth it shall fortune in the Chancery that in one case a writ is found, and in like case falling under like law and requiring like remedy is found none, the clerks of the Chancery shall agree in making the writ, or the plaintiffs may adjourn it until the next Parliament, and let the cases, be written in which they cannot agree, and let them refer themselves until the next Parliament, [and] by consent of men learned in the law a writ shall...
Página 525 - And for so much as divers people of our realm are in fear that the aids and tasks which they have given to us beforetime towards our wars and other business, of their own grant and...
Página 529 - that no tallage or aid shall be taken or levied, by us or our heirs, in our realm, without the good will and assent of archbishops, bishops, earls, barons, knights, burgesses, and other freemen of the land.
Página 531 - Within this act are all new offices erected with new fees, or old offices with new fees ; for that is a tallage put upon the subject, which cannot be done without common assent by act of parliament.
Página 469 - ... matters inrolled or contained in the fine ought not to have execution. And if he do not come at the day, or peradventure do come, and can say nothing why execution ought not to be done, the sheriff shall be commanded to cause the thing inrolled or contained in the fine to be executed.
Página 522 - Church, and to the pro6t of our realm, have granted for us and our heirs, that the Charter of Liberties and the Charter of the Forest, which were made by common assent of all the realm, in the time of King Henry our father, shall be kept in every point without breach. And we will that the...
Página 707 - ... have not been employed according to the charitable intent of the givers and founders thereof, by reason of frauds, breaches of trust, and negligence in those that should pay, deliver and employ the same...
Página 433 - ... she shall lose her dower; for the cause of the bar of her dower is not the manner of the going away, but the remaining with the adulterer in avoutry without reconciliation, that is the bar of the dower.

Informações bibliográficas