Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ...

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Title
Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ...
Author
England and Wales. Court of King's Bench.
Publication
London :: Printed by F.L. for W. Lee, D. Pakeman, G. Bedel, and C. Adams,
1658.
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Subject terms
Law reports, digests, etc. -- England.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61918.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Narrationes modernæ, or, Modern reports begun in the now upper bench court at VVestminster in the beginning of Hillary term 21 Caroli, and continued to the end of Michaelmas term 1655 as well on the criminall, as on the pleas side : most of which time the late Lord Chief Justice Roll gave the rule there : with necessary tables for the ready finding out and making use of the matters contained in the whole book : and an addition of the number rolls to most of the remarkable cases / by William Style ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61918.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 10, 2024.

Pages

Trin. 23 Car. Banc. Reg.

VPon a verdict given in an ejectione firmae it was moved in Arrest of Iudgement,* 1.1 and the exception was, that the Plaintiff was ejected de uno Crofto, which was said to be of an uncertain signification; and because the Plaintiff conceived the Court doubted whether an ejectione firmae lay of a Croft, he durst not defend it, but moves for a special Iudgement for the rest of the land contained in the Declaration, and prayed that he might re∣lease the damages as to the Croft. Rolle Iustice doubted whether an e∣jectione firmae lyes de uno Crofto,* 1.2 and said that a Formedon lyes not of a Croft, but that an Assise doth, because it is put in view to the recognitors, but a Praecipe lyes not of it. The rule of Court was, that the Plaintiff should take a special Iudgement as he desired, and release the Croft, and the da∣mages to all, and that he should have his Costes.

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