Real Property Intro Tenure and Doctrine of Estates Unit # 7
Real Property Intro Tenure and Doctrine of Estates Unit # 7
• Doctrine of Estates
• Land tenure is the name given, particularly in
common law systems, to the legal regime in
which land is owned by an individual
• this doctrine answers the question, “On what
terms is the land held?”
Doctrine of Tenures
• William the Conqueror
• England, 1066
• Divide up England to satisfy his supporters
• Gave land to hold in return for services
• Their tenure (tenir – to hold) was labelled by
the type of service
• Called a feudal service
• Land tenure is the name given, particularly in
common law systems, to the legal regime in
which land is owned by an individual, who is
said to "hold" the land. The sovereign
monarch, known as The Crown, held land in
its own right. All private owners are either its
tenants or sub-tenants. The term "tenure" is
used to signify the relationship between
tenant and lord, not the relationship between
tenant and land.
• Historically in the system of feudalism, the
lords who received land directly from the
Crown were called tenants in chief. They doled
out portions of their land to lesser tenants in
exchange for services, who in turn divided it
among even lesser tenants. This process--that
of granting subordinate tenancies--is known
as subinfeudation. In this way, all individuals
except the monarch were said to hold the land
"of" someone else.
• Historically, it was usual for there to be
reciprocal duties between lord and tenant.
There were different kinds of tenure to fit
various kinds of duties that a tenant might
owe to a lord. For instance, a military tenure
might be by knight-service, requiring the
tenant to supply the lord with a number of
armed horsemen. The concept of tenure has
since evolved into other forms, such as leases
and estates.
The Feudal Pyramid
king
Serfs,
peasants
Tenure
• The dividing up covered all of England
• The tenure system = the feudal system
• 1290 Statute Quia Emptores passed
• STOPPED subinfeudation
• Landholders had to sell out their land, could
not just create a new subinfeudation
land ownership and tenure
king
Mesne
Sold to G Sold to Y Died without heirs
lords
Serfs,
peasants
End of Feudal System
• Escheat propter defectum sanguinis
king