Commentaries On the Laws of England volume 2

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Commentaries On the Laws of England volume 2
William Blackstone
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I Vern. 348.
Origin AiL 310 Thi Rights Book II.
Original conveyances are the following j i. Feoffment ; 2. -Gift ; 3. Grant; 4. Leafe j 5. Exchange; 6. Partition : derivative are, 7. Releafe; 8. Confirmation; 9. Surrender; 10. Affignment; 11. Defeazance.
I. A FEOFFMENT, feoffamentum, is a fubftantive derived from the verb, to enfeoff, feoffare or infevAare, to give one a feud ; and therefore feoffment is properly donatio feudi* . It is the mofl antient method of conveyance, the mofl folemn and
...public, and therefore the moft eafily remembered and proved. And it may properly be defined, the gift of any corporeal hereditament to another. He that fo gives, or enfeoffs, is called th^ feoffor ; and the perfon enfeoffed is denominated the feoffee.
This is plainly derived from, or is indeed itfelf the very mode of the antient feodal donation ; for though it may be per- formed by the word " enfeoff" or ** grant, " yet the aptefl word of feoffment is *' do or dedi^ . '" And it is flill directed and go- verned by the fame feodal rules ; infomuch that the principal rule relating to the extent and effedt of a feodal grant, " tenor eji *' qui legem dat feudo, " is in other words become the maxim of our law with relation to feoffments, " modus legem dat donatio7ii'.


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