2a. The frequency of an act effects much. 4 Coke (Sir Edward Coke’s English King’s Bench Reports), 78; Wing. Max. 192 (Wingate’s Maxims of Law).2f. Things that are done simultaneously with an act are supposed to be inherent in it; to be a constituent part of it. Co. Litt. 236b (Coke on Littleton).2i. Where there is no act, there can be no force. 4 Coke, 43 (Sir Edward Coke’s English King’s Bench Reports)2s. To write is to act. 2 Rolle (Rolle’s English King’s Bench Reports), 89; 4 Bl. Comm. 80 (Sir William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Law); Broom, Max. 312, 967 (Broom’s Legal Maxims).2y. No one can do that indirectly which cannot be done directly. C.L.M. (Common Law Maxims)