Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/336

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Cymro is no word ; nor a scholar of a school without consent of his master; nor a woman except as to that over which she has control. Such as these, their suretyship is no suretyship save with consent of their lords. [1]If a surety of a person dies, and there remains a son to him, the son is to stand in place of his father in his suretyship. [2]No one is to receive a debtor as surety, for they [i. e. debtor and surety] are two arddelws; and no one should other than choose his arddelw. If he chooses a debtor, there is no surety. If he chooses a surety, there is no debtor ; and therefore no one can stand as surety and as debtor. [3]A lord is to be surety for all chattels acknowledged to be without surety. [4]If the debtor permit the surety to give the worth of a pound in pledge for a penny, and before the time of the pledge, it [i.e. the pledge] be lost, the debtor is not to pay back save a halfpenny; for that is a third of a legal penny; and he himself debased the status of his pledge. [5]If a surety gives a large thing in pledge for a small thing, the plaintiff is to take it; and although it be lost before the time, the plaintiff is not to restore to the surety save a third. The surety however is to restore the whole to the debtor because he took it unlaw-

  1. V 36 b 8
  2. V 36 b 11
  3. V 36 b 16
  4. V 36 b 17
  5. V 36 b 23