The History of English Law before the Time of Edward I. Frederic William Maitland
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The four classes of tenants.These freeholders we may dismiss from our minds; they have and they require no peculiar remedies; indeed, the term “ancient demesne” having begun to imply peculiar remedies, we find it contrasted with “freehold,” and in a judgment of Edward I.’s reign we are told that the lord of the manor, be he the king or no, can change “ancient demesne” into “freehold” by enfeoffing a tenant;557 after such a feoffment the tenement is no longer ancient demesne, but “is at the common law.”558 The case also of the “conventioners” we may for a while postpone, for it is not very important, though it is very curious. There remain two classes of tenants: those who hold in absolute villeinage and those who in Bracton’s terms hold in privileged villeinage, or in villein socage, and who are villein sokemen and “ascript to [i.e. irremovable from] the soil.” It is the men of this last class who use the little writ of right.
The theory borne out by practice.Such is the legal doctrine, and at some points it corresponds well with what we can learn of actual arrangements. On an ordinary manor we rarely find more than two classes of tenants that can be called legal classes. We may find more than two economic classes:—in the common case there will be a class of virgaters, a class of half-virgaters, a class of crofters and cotters, and there may well be a class of tenants who pay rents and do but little labour, while other classes must do “week work”—we find censuarii as well as operarii. Also, as already said, we may find some tenants (but hardly classes of tenants) about whose tenure we may doubt whether it be freehold or no. Still in general there is a clear dichotomy; there are freeholders and then there is one other great [p.375] class. The latter may be called by different names according to the taste of the jurors; its members may be termed servi, nativi, bondi, villani, custumarii, consuetudinarii; but legally their tenure is always the same; they hold according to the custom of the manor but their tenure is unrecognized by the king’s courts. When, however, in turning over the Hundred Rolls we come upon a manor of the ancient demesne, we often see a more elaborate stratification, and in particular we read of sokemen; and conversely when we see this more elaborate stratification and discover sokemen, we can usually learn that we are on the ancient demesne. Thus at Soham in Cambridgeshire, besides ordinary freeholders, there are free sokemen, bond sokemen, and villani, and at Fordham there are ordinary freeholders, sokemen and villani.559 We hardly need the testimony of Domesday Book: Saham manerium Regis, Fordeham dominica villa Regis.560 In Huntingdonshire at Brampton there are freeholders, free sokemen, and bond sokemen, at Alconbury numerous sokemen;561 the natural inference may be verified in Domesday Book.562 No one could look through the Oxfordshire surveys without singling out the manor of Bensington563 with its many liberi sokemanni, who are kept apart from its libere tenentes, and inferring that it was a manor of no ordinary kind. It is so with the court rolls. To say nothing of the “little writs of right” which are stitched to their membranes, the rolls of a manor on the ancient demesne are distinguished by entries which show that land is freely bought and sold,564 and if in the Hundred Rolls we are told that the custumarii of Chesterton have sold their half-virgates, we hardly need look to see whether Chesterton be not dominica villa Regis.565
Difficulty of classifying the tenants.We have, however, no little difficulty in marking off Bracton’s “absolute villeinage” from his “privileged villeinage.” His test is the “certainty” or “uncertainty” of the services due from the tenant. But, as we have already seen, there lurks an ambiguity in these simple terms. If by saying that a tenant owes servitia certa et nominata, we mean that the terms of his tenure are defended by legal remedies, remedies the administration of which either belongs to, or is at least supervised by, the highest court in the land, then we are treading a vicious circle: the remedies are given because the [p.376] services are certain, the services are certain because the remedies are given. If, on the other hand, we look at the nature of the services, and say that they are certain if they can be defined without any reference to the lord’s will, then we exact too much from those who are to claim the law’s protection. The men of King’s Ripton in Huntingdonshire used the little writ of right, they used the Monstraverunt, they distrained their lord, the Abbot of Ramsey, to answer them in the manorial court; but, according to an “extent” made by their representatives, they were bound to work one day a week all the year round “at whatever work he commanded them” and three days a week during August and September. Of them it might well be said that when they went to bed on Sunday night they did not know what they would have to do on Monday. In short, here as when we were outside the ancient demesne we come upon a matter of degree. There is hardly a tenant of whom it can be said that no custom prevents him from having to do just whatever services the lord may command; on the other hand, there is hardly a tenant doing any substantial amount of agricultural labour, of whom it can be said that he has never to attend to the lord’s will; even the true freeholder must do his boon works in autumn, and the very essence of a boon work is that, within some spacious limit, described by such a word as “harvest-time,” it must be done when it is asked for. How low down in the social and economic scale the protection given by the little writ and the Monstraverunt would go is excellently shown by the case of Ripton Regis. When pressed in pleading, the tenants admitted that ever since Henry I.’s day they had been paying arbitrary reliefs, arbitrary tallages, arbitrary merchet; but still they used the little writ and the Monstraverunt, and, if the abbot sought to make them work two days a week instead of one, they had their remedy in the king’s court.566
Practical difficulties.This being so, the lawyers never seem able to obtain any firm hold for their theory. They can repeat that there are three classes of tenants, freemen, villeins and sokemen; but how to draw the line between mere villeinage and the socage tenure of ancient demesne is a difficult problem.567 It is not as though we had merely [p.377] to fix the distinction at some one point in a single scale of degrees; there are many scales as well as many degrees. Besides the scale of agricultural labour with its infinite particulars, there are the scales of tallage, of relief, of heriot, of merchet. Even if, following Bracton, we say that the sokeman should at least be personally free and free to quit his tenement, the men of King’s Ripton will appeal against our judgment, for at least they do all that freemen ought not to do according to legal theories. They pay arbitrary tallage, arbitrary merchet, they cannot have their sons ordained, they may not leave the manor without the lord’s licence; and yet, when all this has been proved against them, they go on using the little writ of right and distraining their lord.568 Our law never surmounted these difficulties until tenure in villeinage was protected by the king’s court under the name of copyhold tenure, and the line between common copyhold and the privileged villeinage of the ancient demesne had become of little significance. Even then many a curious, if unimportant, problem was left for lawyers to fight over.
Sokemanry and socage.On the other hand, to mark off the tenure of the sokeman, which is sometimes called “sokemanry,”569 from the freehold tenure known as free socage