Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 January 2009
In February 1828 a Royal Commission was appointed to examine the law of Real Property of England and Wales. The Commission sat for four years and examined a vast amount of material, recommended certain changes in the law, and drafted several bills for consideration by parliament. Four massive reports were eventually presented to parliament in May 1829, June 1830, May 1832, and lastly in April 1833. As a result parliament enacted a limited number of piecemeal (although important) reforms, but did not attempt a major revision of the law.
I am grateful to William Twining and Stephen Conway for commenting on earlier drafts of this paper. My thanks are also to Mike Slade and the Law Department of the University of East London for support while this was being written.
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8 The Law of Property Act 1925 confirmed the Tenures Abolition Act of 1660 and abolished all feudal tenures save free and common socage. Section 1 of the Act allows only two estates to exist in law. These are the fee simple absolute in possession and the leasehold estate. Therefore all other estates, such as the life interest or the entailed estate, can only exist in equity. These measures did undoubtedly simplify land law, but at the same time the feudal doctrines of tenures and estates were preserved and continue to exist. Other reforming legislation introduced in 1925 included the Administration of Estates Act, the Settled Land Act, the Trustee Act, and of course the Land Registration Act.
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Do you think it advisable that persons beneficially entitled in fee to gavelkind lands should be enabled to disengavel them by declaration to that effect by deed? Have the goodness to state any objections to this measure that may occur to you.
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