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Having recited: firstly the 7 Mar 1805 assignment whereby (having rehearsed: first, the 28 Nov 1799 bargain and sale whereby (having narrated that Richard Austen (of Hitchin, Hertfordshire, gentleman) was entitled to the interest upon £600 in Bank of England stock held in the names of Samuel Wood (of George Yard, Lombard Street, London, woollen draper) and William Allen (of Plough Court, Lombard Street, druggist) as trustees for his life regarding dividends upon £60 in 5% Bank annuities also in their names) Richard Austen sold to Tristram Walker (in 1805 described as of Lothbury, London, gentleman) a £28 annuity in return for the £60 and £60 stocks, so as to pay the annuity; second, the 24 Dec 1799 assignment whereby (having narrated that the usufruct from the stock and annuities was £45 per annum, which left a £5 surplus payable to R. Austen after satisfying both the £28 annuity and £12 secured to Lewis Locard) Austen transferred to Tristram Walker the £5 with interest on that, and the stock and annuities, for the former's life; and third, that T. Walker thereafter assured Austen's life for £200 with the Pelican Assurance Office and had paid the premiums therefor to 29 Sep [1804], whilst the £28 and £5 annuities had been paid to Austen by the trustees) Walker consigned to Reverend Richard Vincent (described in 1807 as Reverend Richard Blackhall Vincent of Clifton, Bristol, Gloucestershire, clerk [in Holy Orders] and archdeacon of "Kilmardnaglin" [Kilmanaghan, Counties Offaly and Westmeath], Ireland) the £28 and £5 annuities, along with the stocks and life-assurance policy; secondly, that during Apr 1805 Edward Naish (of Margaret Street, Cavendish Square, Middlesex, esq.) was bound to Reverend Richard (Blackhall) Vincent in £440 to pay the latter £47/6/- per annum for life; thirdly, that during Hilary term, 46 George III Richard (Blackhall) Vincent recovered against Edward Naish £440 debt plus 80/- costs; fourthly that, in view of the aforesaid bond, on 6 Apr 1805 E. Naish transferred to Richard (B.) Vincent a £350 per annum pension which was owed to Naish by the Treasury, so as to discharge the £47/6/- annuity; fifthly, that on 9 Apr 1805 Reverend John Claus de Passon (of Hever, Kent, clerk [in Holy Orders]) bestowed upon R. (B.) Vincent a £180 annuity during the grantor's life from Hever rectory with glebe and tithes, and a proportion from the last quarter day before the former's death up to that event (Joseph Parker (of Homers Place, Lisson Green, Middlesex [no quality]) and Charles Harrison (of Craven Street, Strand, Middlesex, gentleman) also participating), hence he entered into a bond of the same date, but R. Vincent had entered into judgement against him (named as Richard Claus de Passon) during Hilary term, 46 George III for £2,500 plus 80/- costs, and the living is moreover under sequestration in order that that annuity might be realised; sixthly, that on 10 Apr 1805 Anne Egan (late of 4, James' Place, St. Pancras' parish, but then of Highgate, Middlesex; wife of Charles Francis Egan, originally Anne Boteler (spinster) but meanwhile Dame Anne Parker the wife of Sir Hyde Parker, baronet) granted to R. Vincent for her lifetime a £50 annuity and assigned one of £100 (which she had received under the will of John Palmer Boteler, esq.) and £7,005/5/3 in 5% Bank annuities of 1797 in the names of Sir Henry Parker and Thomas Barry, albeit by bond of even date Thomas Harvey (of John Street, Adelphi, Middlesex, gentleman) became bound to R. Vincent in £700 to honour the £50 annuity; seventhly, that on 18 Apr 1805 R. Vincent took out policy number 4163 with the Pelican Life Insurance [sic] Company upon Anne Egan's life for £305 at £11/5/9 annual premium; eighthly, that on 19 Apr 1805 Reverend George Rook (of Yardley Hastings, Northamptonshire, clerk [in Holy Orders]) granted to R. Vincent a £35 annuity chargeable during the grantor's life upon Yardley Hastings rectory, entering into a bond of the same date for £490 (Charles Harrison also participating), besides which the grantee recovered against Reverend George Rook judgement in the Court of King's Bench during Hilary term, 46 George III for £490 debt plus £80 [sic] costs; ninthly, that on 16 Apr 1805 R. Vincent took out Pelican Life Insurance Company policy number 4164 upon George Rook's life for seven years for £245 at payment to the company of £4/2/9 per annum; tenthly, that on 9 May 1805, for considerations paid by his wife Elizabeth and her daughter Anne Elizabeth Fortescue (in 1807 described as of Clifton, spinster) by her first husband the late Gerald Fortescue, esq., R. Vincent agreed that the annuities should be considered his wife's property and her daughter's, so that each of them would enjoy a moiety thereof during the wife's lifetime and the daughter all thereafter, but that no assignment has been made; eleventhly, that Anne Elizabeth Fortescue is entitled to £350 held in the name of William Payler (of Craven Street, Strand, St. Martin's-in-the-Fields parish, Middlesex, esq.); twelfthly, that William Northey Hopkins (esq., and captain in the 32nd. Regiment of Foot) is to marry Anne E. Fortescue; and thirteenthly, that this deed's covenants and PA194/12/8's can be borne out of the £350, besides any future assurance, and the residue become William Northey Hopkins' property, but that A.E. Fortescue's moiety and entirety should be settled for her own use: therefore (in consideration of 5/- paid by William Payler to A. Fortescue and both the Vincents) the Vincents and A. Fortescue (at William N. Hopkins' behest) transfer to W. Payler the aforesaid annuities of £28 and £5, the £600 stock, the £60 Bank annuities, the £200 life-assurance, the £47/6/- annuity, the £350 annual pension, the £220 life-assurance, the £180 annuity, the £50 annuity charged upon A. Fortescue's Bank annuities, her £350 life-assurance, the £35 annuity and £245 life-assurance; to be held by Payler, who will lay out any moneys received through maturation of the sums in purchase of other annuities, so that one moiety's clear profit be paid to Elizabeth Vincent or her appointee for life, the other during the mother's lifetime and the whole thereafter to A. Fortescue or her nominee, then to W.N. Hopkins if he survive her; R. Vincent covenants against encumbrance and for further assurance, as for the latter does W. Hopkins.
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