Everything about Feu totally explained
Feu was previously the most common form of land
tenure in
Scotland, as
conveyancing in
Scots law was dominated by
feudalism until the
Scottish Parliament passed the
Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. The
word is the
Scots variant of
fee.
History
Prior to
1832 only the
vassals of the crown had votes in
parliamentary elections for the Scots
counties, and this made in favour of
subinfeudation as against sale outright. This was changed by the
Scottish Reform Act 1832 which increased the franchise in Scotland from 4,500 to 64,447
In
Orkney and
Shetland land is still largely possessed as
udal property, a holding derived or handed down from the time when these islands belonged to
Norway. Such lands could previously be converted into feus at the will of the
proprietor and held from the Crown or the
Marquess of Zetland.
At one time the system of conveyancing by which the transfer of feus was effected was curious and complicated, requiring the presence of parties on the land itself and the symbolical handing over of the property (for example, by throwing a shoe onto the dirt) together with the registration of various documents. However,
legislation since the middle of the
19th century has changed all that. The system of feuing in Scotland, as contrasted with that of long leaseholds in
England, tended to secure greater solidity and firmness in the average buildings of the northern country.
Various reforms were attempted before feu was eventually abolished by the
Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000.
In feu holding there's a substantial annual payment in money or in kind in return for the enjoyment of the land. The crown is the first overlord or superior, and land is held of it by crown vassals, but they in their turn may feu their land, as it's called, to others who become their vassals, whilst they themselves are mediate overlords or superiors; and this process of sub-infeudation may be repeated to an indefinite extent. The
Conveyancing (Scotland) Act 1874 rendered any clause in a disposition against
subinfeudation null and void.
Casualties, which are a feature of land held in feu, are certain payments made to the superior, contingent on the happening of certain events. The most important was the payment of an amount equal to one years feu-duty by a new holder, whether heir or purchaser of the feu. The Conveyancing Act of 1874 abolished casualties in all feus after that date, and power was given to redeem this burden on feus already existing. If the vassal doesn't pay the feu-duty for two years, the superior, among other remedies, may obtain by legal process a decree of irritancy, whereupon tinsel or
forfeiture of the feu follows.
Types of tenure
There have been other forms of
tenure:
- Booking is a conveyance peculiar to the burgh of Paisley but doesn't differ essentially from feu.
- Burgage is the system by which land is held in royal boroughs.
- Blench holding is by a nominal payment, as of a penny Scots, or a red rose, often only to be rendered upon demand.
- Ward, the original military holding, was abolished in 1747 (20 G. II. c. 20), as an effect of the rising of 1745.
Other jurisdictions
In England the
statute Quia Emptores, passed in
1290, made subinfeudation impossible, as the new holder simply effaces the
grantor, holding by the same title as the grantor himself.
Socage has long disappeared, as has
Mortification.Further Information
Get more info on 'Feu'.
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