| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench, John Prince Smith - Law - 1807 - 622 pages
...though lie who hat prima tonsura paid ell the tfiet, fur that mm merely ly kit negligence. i8W. 'T'HIS was an action of trespass for breaking and entering the plaintiff's close called Bird's Mead, ยป\ Langford, in the county of Essex, and there taking the soil and throwing it... | |
| Joseph Chitty - Fisheries - 1812 - 710 pages
...regulated by the same rules which measure the costs in other actions. In the case of Vivian v. Blake (e), which was an action of trespass for breaking and entering the plaintiff's free fishery in A., and also in B., and also in A. and B.; and the plea was not guilty; and secondly,... | |
| Great Britain. Court of King's Bench - Law reports, digests, etc - 1820 - 650 pages
...Tindal, for the plaintiff. Scarlett and Wailes for the defendant. 9 GARR and Another v. FLETCHER. r PHIS was an action of trespass, for breaking and entering the plaintiff's close, and pulling down a garden wall, &c. Plea the General Issue. One ground of defence was, that Mary Pickles... | |
| Richard Burn - Justices of the peace - 1820 - 880 pages
...the land of the wrong doer, as near to the bad way as he can. Taylor v. Whitehtad, Doug. 745. This was an action of trespass for breaking and entering the plaintiff's close. The defendant (inter alia) pleaded a right of way by prescription, through a laoe of the plaintiffs... | |
| John Scriven (serjeant at law.) - Copyhold - 1821 - 684 pages
...application succeeded upon another, and perfectly distinct, ground (49). Again in Boulcott v. Winmill(50) various instances were proved, from 1632, of grants by the lord of the manor of Westham, of parcels of the waste, some within and others without the ancient forest of Waltham, belonging... | |
| John Scriven (serjeant at law.) - Copyhold - 1823 - 698 pages
...application succeeded upon another, and perfectly distinct, ground (49). Again in Soulcott v. Winmill(50} various instances were proved, from 1632, of grants by the lord of the manor of Westham, of parcels of the waste, some within and others without the ancient forest of Waltham, belonging... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, John Bayly Moore - Law reports, digests, etc - 1824 - 630 pages
...to get rid of that plea, and prove some of the trespasses as laid.] In Thornton v. Williamson (a), which was an action of trespass for breaking and entering the plaintiff's messuage, and the defendant pleaded, first, not guilty as to the force and arms, &.c.; and secondly,... | |
| |