What is a feu in scottish law?

The term feu is, I believe, peculiar to Scotland: it means a perpetual property granted by a feudal superior to a vassal, on his continuing to pay a certain stipulated sum annually, in name of feu duty.

What’s a feu?

FEU is an acronym for Forty Foot Equivalent Unit. Both are used to describe the size of a container. They’re also used as a measure to standardize the amount of volume being referenced.

What is a feu plan?

Traditionally, in Scotland, a feu charter was a document that would create a new feu – a feu being the most common form of land tenure in Scotland. It held that the tenure of land was held in perpetuity in return for a continuing annual fee (feu) paid to the landowner.

What is a feu superior?

The system of land tenure in Scotland is overwhelmingly feudal in nature. In theory, this means that the land is held under the Crown as ultimate feudal superior.

When was feu duty abolished in Scotland?

28 November 2004
The Act officially brought to an end annual feu duties, a vestige of feudal land tenure, on 28 November 2004 (that is, Martinmas, as the Act required the “appointed day” to be one of the Scottish term days).

What is Feuhold in Scotland?

In Scotland, we historically had our own form of property tenure called ‘feuhold’. This was previously the most common form of land tenure in Scotland, as conveyancing in Scots law was dominated by feudalism.

How big is a feu?

An FEU (forty-foot equivalent unit) is a measure of volume in units of 40-foot long containers. For example, “My company moves 500 FEU from Shanghai to Los Angeles every year.” One 40-foot container would equal an FEU, or two 20′ containers would equal an FEU.

What is a blench disposition?

Blench Disposition. A form of land transaction under the feudal system abolished by the Abolition of Feudal Tenure etc. (Scotland) Act 2000. A feudal holding where the reddendo (duty) was nominal (e.g. a penny if asked).

What does Feuhold mean in Scotland?

Does feu duty still exist in Scotland?

The Act officially brought to an end annual feu duties, a vestige of feudal land tenure, on 28 November 2004 (that is, Martinmas, as the Act required the “appointed day” to be one of the Scottish term days).

Is Scotland still feudal?

An end to feudalism In Scotland, whilst it was largely neutered by the ending of payments (known as feuduties) in 1974, it was only completely dismantled in 2004 by the Abolition of Feudal Tenure (Scotland) Act 2000.

What is Commonhold in Scotland?

Commonhold is a form of ownership (or tenure) for multi-occupancy developments. Each unit-holder owns the freehold of their home, and a commonhold or residents’ association owns and manages the common parts of the property. There are standardised rules for commonhold.