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PRACTICE OF CONVEYANC

Forms of Assurances.

INTRODUCTION.

I. IN distributing the Forms of Assuranc tained in the following collection under the division of " Common Forms" and " Preceder topically arranged,- my object is to furnish th titioner, first, with the materials for drafting secondly, with various models of drafts, adap the usual exigencies of practice. There is no n indeed, in this classification, for it has ofte adopted by practitioners, and is said, though not quite correctly, to have been first introdu Mr. Preston: it possesses, however, many advantages over the usual plan of most print lections, which, as they contain only preced drafts used on former occasions, cannot more than the particular varieties incident t transaction. Such collections may very well s suggest the frame or form of instruments; draw from them exclusively-a practice mu ploded among well-educated draftsmen-is builder, instead of having his masonry ready a

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Sources for a history of Forms of Assurances.

sis.

Chartularium
Hemingi.

tatio Episto

laris.

should be obliged on all occasions to pull down some existing fabrics, and to construct a new one with the materials of the old.

II. It may be expected, perhaps, that some account should be premised of the history of Forms of Assurances, and of the principal writers who have contributed to the improvement of this branch of legal practice. Materials for such an essay, though by no means superfluously abundant, are not wanting. Textus Roffen The Textus Roffensis, or register of the church of Rochester, which we owe to the successive labours of Ernulphus, Sir Edward Dering, and Hearne; the Chartularium of Heming, containing some most valuable transcripts from the ancient register of WorHickes, Disser-cester; the Dissertatio Epistolaris of Dr. Hickes, addressed to Sir B. Shower, on the utility of ancient Madox, Formu- northern literature; and the Formulare Anglicanum of Madox, with other works which it would be tedious to enumerate, afford the most authentic materials for illustrating the history of Assurances from the earliest time down to the reign of Henry VIII. From that period- an epoch indeed in legal history, wherein we can detect the dawn of what may be termed the jus novum of Conveyancing. we possess various collections of Forms, published from time to time for the professional use of practitioners. This subject too engaged the particular attention of Sir Henry Spelman. In his posthumous works there is a treatise on ancient deeds and charters, unfinished it is true, but displaying the unequalled accuracy and erudition of that profound antiquary. Something

lare Anglica

num.

Spelman.

may

also be gleaned from the tracts of Selden, espe- Selden. cially his Janus Anglorum, which was rendered into English, with notes, by Dr. Adam Littleton, under the assumed name of Redman Westcot. Though one of Selden's earliest efforts, and much inferior to his subsequent productions, it yet exhibits traces of that accurate research and learning, which, in his riper manhood, rendered him one of the greatest ornaments of our constitutional literature (a). Madox, with Madox. that unaffected modesty and learned diligence which characterize his valuable writings, has given us the fruit of his researches on this subject in the able Dissertation prefixed to his Formulare. Most readers are acquainted with the popular but superficial work of Dalrymple on Feuds, wherein the author has Dalrymple. devoted a chapter exclusively to the history of Forms of Conveyance. Of the works of living writers it is unnecessary to speak: no one, however, can travel along "the ways of hoar antiquity" without being guided and informed by their learned labours. With Sketch of the history of Forms these and other sources of information, I shall en- of Assurances. deavour to lay before the reader a very brief historical account of Forms of Assurances.

III. The Anglo-Saxons, ignorant for the most part Anglo-Saxons. of the art of writing, conveyed their landed property from one to another in open folkmoot, by means of visible signs or symbols, which awakened attention, and engraved the transaction in the memory of the

(a) Selden forms one of the principal figures in that splendid gallery of portraits, with which

Clarendon introduces the account
of his own Life. i. 35. Oxford
edit. 1827.

veyance.

Witan, called together by the "Mot-bell" to record it (a). These symbols do not appear to have been reduced to any such artificial system as obtained in the old Roman (b), or even in the Scottish law (c); Symbols of con- but varied with the fancy of the donor. One delivered a turf, another a staff or spear, and a third an arrow (d). Ulfus, son of Toraldus, and a noble of Northumbria, having entered into the minster of York, filled his huge drinking-horn with wine, and there upon his bended knees gave away to God and to St. Peter all his lands and revenues; and quaffing the wine, placed his horn upon the altar in token of the gift (e). A curious instance of alienation by symbols is mentioned in the life of St. Birlanda (ƒ). The chaste daughter of Oidelardus, repulsing the unnatural addresses of her father, incurred his hatred, and was disinherited by the offended parent, who conveyed all his dominions to St. Gertrude by placing all the symbols of property upon her shrine—a turf, a twig, and a knife. Among the ancient Jews, as appears from the book of Ruth (g), when a purchase was effected, the party " plucked off his shoe, and

(a) Spelman's English Works, p. 233.

(b) Savigny, i. 2; Gibbon, v. 362, who pointedly remarks that the "jurisprudence of the first Romans exhibited the scenes of a pantomime."

(c) Palgrave's English Commonwealth, P. 2, 227.

(d) Reliq. Spelm. p. 8. Selden's Jan. Angl. p. 54. Madox, Form. Diss. p. 1.

of

(e) Selden's Jan. Angl. p. 54. The horn of Ulfus is still preserved in the minster, and part the "Terra Ulfi" is now in the possession of the chapter of the cathedral. Palgrave's Hist. of England, i. 151.

(f) Palgrave's English Commonwealth, P. 2, 227, citing Acta Sanctorum, i. 379.

(g) Chap. iv. ver. 7.

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