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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: VIR-WAT |
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WASTE (O. Fr. wast, guast, gast, gaste; Lat. vastus, vast, desolate) , a term used in English law in several senses, of which four are the most important. (I) " Waste of a manor " is that part of a manor subject to rights of common, as distinguished from the lord's demesne (see COMMONS, MANOR). (2) " Year, day, and waste " was a part of the royal prerogative, acknowledged by a statute of Edward II.; De Fraerogativa Regis. The king had the profits of freehold lands of those attainted of felony and petit treason, and of fugitives for a year and a day with a right of committing waste in sense (3) thereon. After the expiration of a year and a day the lands returned to the lord of the fee. This species of waste was abolished by the Corruption of Blood Act 1814 (see FELONY, TREASON). (3) The most usual signification of the word is " any unauthorized act of a ten4__c, for a freehold estate not of inheritance, or for any lesser interest
Waste in sense (3) is either voluntary or permissive. Voluntary waste is by act of commission, as by pulling down a house
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the ancient form of " toasting," the term being applied later to the Christmas feasting and revelries and particularly to the bowl of spiced ale or wine which was a feature of the medieval Christmas. One of the earliest references to the wassail -bowl in English history is in the description of the reception of King Vortigern by Hengist, when Rowena " came into the king's presence, with a cup of gold filled with wine in her hand, and making a low reverence unto the king said, ` Waes hael hlaford Cyning,' which is ` Be of health, Lord King.' " In a collection of ordinances for the regulations of the royal household in Henry VII.'s reign, the steward on Twelfth Night was to cry " wassail " three times on entering with the bowl, the royal chaplain responding with a song. Wassailing was as much a custom in the monasteries as in laymen's houses, the bowl being known as poculum Caritatis. What was popularly known as wassailing was the custom of trimming with ribbons and sprigs of rosemary
mode of cropping on arable land, but if he exercises his statutory freedom of cropping in such a manner as to injure or deteriorate his holding, the landlord is entitled to recover damages for such injury, &c. (S. 3). Remedies for Waste.Various remedies for waste have been given to the reversioner at different periods in the history of English law. At common law only single damages seem to have been recoverable. This was altered by the legislature, and for some centuries waste was a criminal or quasi-criminal offence. Magna Carta enacted that a guardian committing waste of the lands in his custody should make amends and lose his office. The statute of Marlborough (1267) made a " fermor " (as above defined) committing waste liable to grievous amercement as well as to damages, and followed Magna Carta in forbidding waste by a guardian. The statute of Gloucester (1278) enacted that a writ of waste might be granted against a tenant
The law of waste as it affects ecclesiastical benefices will be found under DILAPIDATIONS. (4) " Waste of assets " or " devastavit " is a squandering and misapplication of the estate and effects of a deceased person by his executors or administrators, for which they are answerable out of their own pockets as far as they have or might have had assets of the deceased (see EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS). Executors and administrators may now be sued in the county court for waste of assets (County Courts Act 1888, s. 95). Scotland.In Scots law " waste " is not used as a technical term, but the respective rights of fiar and life-renter are much the same as in England. As a general rule, a life-renter has no right to cut timber, even though planted by himself. An exception is admitted in the case of coppice wood
Land Act 1882 a tenant for life may grant building, mining and other I allowed to grow again from the rocts. Grown timber is also available to the life-renter for the purpose of keeping up the estate or repairing buildings. Before making use of mature timber for estate purposes, the life-renter should give notice to the fiar. He is also entitled to the benefit of ordinary windfalls. Extraordinary windfalls are treated as grown timber. Life-renters by " constitution " (i.e. by grant from the proprietor) as opposed to life-renters by " reservation " (where the proprietor has reserved the life-rent to himself in conveying the fee to another) have, as a rule, no right to coals or minerals underground if they are not expressed in the grant or appear to have been intended by a testator to pass by his settlement, for they are partes soli. Where coals or minerals are expressed in, the grant, and also in cases of life-rent by " reservation," the life-renter may work any mine which had been opened before the be-ginning of his right, provided he does not employ a greater number of miners, or bring up a greater quantity cf minerals, than the unburdened proprietor did. All life-renters are entitled to such minerals as are required for domestic use and estate purposes.British Possessions.French law is in force in Mauritius, and has been followed in substance in the civil codes of Quebec (art. 455) and St Lucia (art. 406). In most of the other colonies the rules of English law are followed, and in many of them there has been legislation on the lines of the English Settled Land Acts. In India the law as to waste is included to some extent in the Transfer of Property Act (No. IV. of 1882) and its amendments. Section Io8 deals with the liabilities of lessees for waste, which may be varied by the terms of the lease or by local usage. The liabilities for waste of persons having under Hindu or Mahommedan law limited interests in reality depend in the main upon those laws and not on Indian statute law. United States." In the United States, especially in the Western states, many acts are held to be only in a natural and reasonable way of using and improving the landclearing wild woods, for examplewhich in England, or even in the Eastern states, would be manifest waste " (Pollock, Torts, 7th ed., 345). Thus Virginia, North Carolina, Vermont and Tennessee have deviated in favour of the tenant from English rules, while Massachusetts has adhered to them (Ruling Cases, tit. " Waste," xxv. 380, American notes). In certain states, e.g. Minnesota, Oregon and Washington (ibid., p. 381), the action of waste is regulated by statute. Europe.The French Civil Code provides (art. 591) that the usufructuary may cut timber in plantations that are laid out for cutting, and are cut at regular intervals, although he is bound to follow the example of former proprietors as to quantity and times. This provision is in force in Belgium (Civil Cede, art. 591). Analogous provisions are to be found in the civil codes of Holland (art. 814), Spain (art. 485), Italy (art. 486), and cf. the German Civil Code, art. Io36. AuTxoRITIEs.English law: Bewes, Law of Waste; Fawcett, Law of Landlord and Tenant; Foa, Law of Landlord and Tenant; Wood
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