1277/8 : William de la Plock' goes to Court to Recover his Land


Source:  47th Annual Report of the Deputy Keeper of the Public Records
Title:  Calendar of Patent Rolls; 6 Edward I, 1886, London, 323
Date:  1277-1278
Place:  Gloucester

20 November 1277 - 19 November 1278

m. 19d. (51). Purton (“Piryton”) (Glouc.); appointment of Solomon de Rochester and Master Thomas de Sodington to take the assise of novel disseisin arraigned by William de la Plock’ without Gloucester against Robert son of John de Piryton and others, touching a tenement in.

 

Novel Disseisin

In English law, the Assize of novel disseisin ("recent dispossession") was an action to recover lands of which the plaintiff had been disseised, or dispossessed. The action became extremely popular due to its expediency. Rather than dealing with the issue of lawful possession, it simply asked whether a dispossession had taken place, in which case the property was restored to the plaintiff, and the question of true ownership was dealt with later. It was one of the so-called "petty assizes" established by the Assize of Clarendon by Henry II in 1166. Like the other two assizes, it was abolished in 1833.[1]

Source: Wikipedia

 

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