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Escheat   Listen
noun
Escheat  n.  
1.
(Law)
(a)
(Feud. & Eng. Law) The falling back or reversion of lands, by some casualty or accident, to the lord of the fee, in consequence of the extinction of the blood of the tenant, which may happen by his dying without heirs, and formerly might happen by corruption of blood, that is, by reason of a felony or attainder.
(b)
(U. S. Law) The reverting of real property to the State, as original and ultimate proprietor, by reason of a failure of persons legally entitled to hold the same. Note: A distinction is carefully made, by English writers, between escheat to the lord of the fee and forfeiture to the crown. But in this country, where the State holds the place of chief lord of the fee, and is entitled to take alike escheat and by forfeiture, this distinction is not essential.
(c)
A writ, now abolished, to recover escheats from the person in possession.
2.
Lands which fall to the lord or the State by escheat.
3.
That which falls to one; a reversion or return "To make me great by others' loss is bad escheat."






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Escheat" Quotes from Famous Books



... and common soccage" with the holder a tenant of the King with obligations of fealty and of the payment of a quitrent. The fixed rent replaced the service, military or personal, required under feudal law; and the socage tenure in effect did not subject the land to the rules of escheat or return of the land to the King if inherited by minors or widows. For Englishmen in America, the "Instructions for the government of the colonies" in 1606 were explicit in showing that their legal and tenurial ...
— Mother Earth - Land Grants in Virginia 1607-1699 • W. Stitt Robinson, Jr.

... Emptores, 18 Edw. I., a tenant in fee simple might grant lands to be holden by the grantee and his heirs of the grantor and his heirs, subject to feudal services and to escheat; and by such subinfeudation ...
— Notes and Queries, Number 231, April 1, 1854 • Various



Words linked to "Escheat" :   reversion, jurisprudence, law, transferred possession, transferred property



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