- Quia
Emptores is a
statute p****ed by the
Parliament of
England in 1290
during the
reign of
Edward I that
prevented tenants from
alienating their lands...
- enactments, in 1279 (Statutum de
Viris Religiosis, 7 Edw. 1) and 1290 (Quia
Emptores, 18 Edw. 1), p****ed in the
reign of
Edward I of England,
aimed at preserving...
-
increase of such subtenures. Accordingly, in 1290 a
statute was p****ed, Quia
Emptores,
which allowed the
tenant to
alienate whenever he pleased, but the person...
-
including serjeanty,
frankalmoin and knight-service. The
English statute Quia
Emptores of
Edward I (1290)
established that
socage tenure which p****ed from one...
- from him, but who was
himself the v****al of a
higher lord.
Owing to Quia
Emptores, the
concept of a
mesne lordship technically still exists today: the partitioning...
-
known as sub-enfeoffing or "subinfeudation". The 1290
Statute of Quia
Emptores abolished subinfeudation and
instead allowed the sale of fee
simple estates...
- subdivided. This has been
prohibited since 1290 by the
statute of Quia
Emptores that
prevents tenants from
alienating their lands to
others by subinfeudation...
-
Every seignory now
existing must have been
created before the
statute Quia
Emptores (1290),
which forbade the ****ure
creation of
estates in fee-simple by subinfeudation...
- IV in 1461, thus
merging the
title of Duke of York with the crown. Quia
Emptores Pretenders Alternative successions to the
English and
British Crown Weir...
- of
Westminster II,
contained the
clause De
donis conditionalibus Quia
Emptores of 1290,
often called the
Statute of
Westminster III,
prevented tenants...