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A DIGEST

OF

The Laws of England

RESPECTING

REAL PROPERTY.

TITLE XXI.

ADVOWSON.

CHAP. I.

Of the Origin and Nature of Advowsons.

CHAP. II.

Of Presentation, Institution, and Induction.

CHAP. I.

Of the Origin and Nature of Advowsons.

SECT. 1. Incorporeal Property. | SECT. 24. What Estates may be

2. Origin of Advowsons.

4. Description of.

6. Right of Nomination.
8. Advowsons appendant.
12. Advowsons in Gross.
19. Presentative,Collative,
and Donative.
23. How a Seisin is ac-
quired in.

HA

SECTION I.

had therein.

26. Subject to Curtesy.
29. And to Dower.
31. May be Alicned for

ever.

32. Or for the next Pre

sentation.

40. Is Assets for Payment
of Debts.

AVING treated in the preceding Titles of cor- Incorporeal poreal property, it will now be necessary to dis- property. cuss the nature of incorporeal hereditaments, and the

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2 Comm. 20.

1 Inst. 9 a.

Origin of ad

vowsons.

1 Inst. 17 b. 119 b.

Incumb. 64.

edit. 1725.

rules by which they are governed. Incorporeal hereditaments consist of rights and profits arising from, or annexed to lands; their essence being merely in idea and abstracted contemplation, though their effects and profits may frequently be objects of our bodily senses. Hæreditas, alia corporalis est, alia incorporalis; corporalis est quæ tangi potest et videri; incorporalis quæ tangi non potest, nec videri.

The principal kinds of incorporeal hereditaments are, advowsons, tithes, commons, ways, offices, dignities, franchises, and rents. To these Sir W. Blackstone had added two others, corrodies and annuities, which are here omitted.

2. In the early ages of Christianity the nomination of all ecclesiastical benefices belonged to the church. Watson's Com. When the piety of some lords induced them to build churches upon their own estates, and to endow them with glebe lands, or to appropriate the tithes of the neighbouring lands to their support, the bishops, from a desire of encouraging such pious undertakings, permitted those lords to appoint whatever clergyman they pleased to officiate in such churches, and receive the emoluments annexed to them; reserving, however, a power to themselves to judge of the qualification of those who were thus nominated.

Description of.

1 Inst. 17 b.

3. This practice, which was originally a mere indulgence, became in process of time a right; and all those who had either founded or endowed a church claimed and exercised the exclusive privilege of presenting a clerk to the bishop whenever the church 'became vacant.

4. An advowson (a) is, therefore, a right of presentation to a church or ecclesiastical benefice. The word is derived from advocatio, which signifies in clientelam recipere; for in former times the person to

(a) The law of advowsons is here only treated of as far as lay patrons are concerned,

whom this right belonged was called advocatus ecclesiæ, because he was bound to defend and protect, both the rights of the church, and the incumbent clerks, from oppression and violence. Hence the right of presentation acquired the name of advowson, and the person possessed of this right was called the patron of the church.

5. Lord Coke says, there may be several patrons, Idem. and two several incumbents, in one church; the one of the one moiety, and the other of the other moiety. And one part, as well of the church as of the town, allotted to the one, and the other part thereof to the other; which is called advocatio medietatis ecclesiæ.

6. The right of presentation, and that of nomination to a church, are sometimes confounded: but they are distinct things. Presentation is the offering a clerk to the bishop; nomination is the offering a clerk to the patron. These rights may exist in different persons at the same time. Thus a person seised of an advowson may grant to A. and his heirs, that whenever the church becomes vacant, he will present to the bishop such person as A. or his heirs shall nominate. This is a good grant, and the person to whom the right of nomination is thus granted is to most purposes considered as patron of the church.

Right of nomi

nation.

Plowd. 529.

Wats. 90.

Tit. 12.

7. Where the legal estate in an advowson is vested in trustees, they have the right of presentation in them: but the right of nomination is in the cestui que trust. Tit. 15. c. 2. So in the case of a mortgagee of an advowson, the mortgagee has the right of presentation, but the mortgagor has the right of nomination.

appendant.

8. The right of presentation, which was originally Advowsons allowed to the persons who built or endowed a church, became by degrees annexed to the manor in which it was erected; for the endowment was supposed to be parcel of the manor, and held of it; therefore it was natural that the right of presentation should pass with the manors, from whence the advowson was said to be appendant to the manor, being so closely annexed to

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