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PRESCRIPTION , in the broadest sense, the acquisition or extinction of rights by See also:lapse of See also:time. The See also:term is derived from the praescriptio of See also:Roman See also:law, originally a See also:matter of See also:procedure, a clause inserted before the See also:formula on behalf of either the See also:plaintiff or, in See also:early times, the See also:defendant, limiting the question at issue. It was so called from its preceding the formula.' One of the defendant's praescriptiones was longi temporis or longae possessionis praescriptio (afterwards superseded by the exceptio), limiting the question to the fact of See also:possession without interruption by the defendant for a certain time. It seems to have been introduced by the See also:praetor to meet cases affecting aliens or lands out of See also:Italy where the usucapio of the See also:civil law (the See also:original means of curing a defect of See also:title by lapse of time) could not apply. The time of acquisition by usucapio was fixed by the Twelve Tables at one See also:year for movables and two years for immovables. Praescriptio thus constituted a See also:kind of praetorian usucapio. In the time of Justinian usucapio and praescriptio (called also longi temporis possessio), as far as they affected the acquisition of ownership, differed only in name, usucapio being looked at from the point of view of See also:property, praescriptio from the point of view of See also:pleading. By the legislation of Justinian movables were acquired by three years' possession, immovables by ten years' possession where the parties had their See also:domicile in the same See also:province (inter praesentes), twenty years' possession where they were domiciled in different provinces (inter absentes). Servitudes could not be acquired by usucapio proper, but were said to be acquired by quasi usucapio, probably in the same time as sufficed to give a title to immovables. There was also a longissimi temporis possessio of See also:thirty years, applicable to both movables and immovables, and requiring nothing but See also:bona fides on the See also:part of the possessor. Where the right sought to be established was claimed against the See also: The prescription of Roman law (and of See also:modern systems based upon it) is thus both acquisitive and extinctive. It looks either t Praescriptiones autem appellatas esse ab eo quod ante formula praescribuntur " (See also:Gaius iv. § 132). 2 " Viae vicinales, quarum memoria non extat " (Dig. xliii. 7, 3). to the length of time during which the defendant has been in possession, or to the length of time during which the plaintiff has been out of possession. In English law the latter kind of prescription is called limitation. The tendency of law is to In English law prescription is used in a comparatively narrow sense. It is acquisitive only, and is very limited in its application. A title by prescription can be made only to incorporeal hereditaments —that is, in legal See also:language, hereditaments that are or have been appendant or appurtenant to corporeal hereditaments—and to certain exemptions and privileges.' The rights claimable by prescription for the most part consist of rights in alieno See also:solo. The most important are advowsons, See also:tithes, See also:commons, ways, watercourses, See also:lights, offices, dignities, franchises, See also:pensions, annuities and rents. See also:Land or movables cannot be claimed by prescription. The See also:foundation of prescription is the presumption of law that a See also:person found in undisturbed enjoyment of a right did not come into possession by an unlawful See also:act (see See also:Williams, Rights of See also:Common, 3). In the English courts this presumption was, perhaps still is, based upon the fiction of a lost See also: This is still the law with respect to claims not falling within the Prescription Act, mostly rights in See also:gross—that is, where there is no dominant or servient See also:tenement, e.g. a right to a See also:pew or to a several See also:fishery in gross. The twenty years' rule was of comparatively See also:late introduction; it does not seem to have been known in the time of See also: The Prescription Act is only supplemented to the common law, so that a claim may be based upon the act or, in the alternative, upon the common law. Nor does the act alter the conditions necessary at common law for a See also:good claim by prescription. The claim under the statute must be one which may be lawfully made at common law. The See also:principal rules upon the subject are these. (I) The title is founded upon actual usage. The amount of actual usage and the evidence necessary to prove it vary according to the kind of claim. (2) The enjoyment must (except in the See also:case of See also:light) be as of right—that is to say, See also:peace-able, openly used, and not by See also:licence. (3) The prescription must be certain and reasonable. Inhabitants cannot, however, claim by prescription, as they are an uncertain and fluctuating See also:body, unless under a grant from the See also:Crown, which constitutes them a See also:corporation for the purposes of the grant. (4) The prescription must be alleged in a que See also:estate or in a man and his ancestors. Prescription in a 3 Prescription seems at one time to have See also:borne a wider meaning. A claim by prescription to land is mentioned in 32 See also:Hen. VIII. c. 2. And it seems that tenants in common may still make title to land by prescription (See also:Littleton's Tenures, § 310). que estate lies at common law by See also:reason of continuous and immemorial enjoyment by the claimant, a person seised in fee, and all those whose estate he had (toux ceux que estate it ad). The Prescription Act fixes a definite period and does away with the See also:necessity which existed at common law of prescribing in the name of the person seised in fee. Prescription in a man and his ancestors is not of See also:ordinary occurrence in practice. Corporations, however, occasionally claim by a prescription analogous to this, viz. in the corporation and its predecessors. Such claims by either a person or a corporation are not within the Prescription Act, which applies only where there are dominant and servient tenements. By 32 Hen. VIII. c. 2 (1J40) no person can make any prescription by the seisin or possession of his ancestor unless such seisen or possession had been within threescore years next before such prescription made. (5) A prescription cannot See also:lie for a thing which cannot be granted, as it rests upon the presumption of a lost grant. Thus a See also:lord of a See also:manor cannot prescribe to raise a tax or See also:toll upon strangers, for such a claim could never have been good by any grant. Prescription and See also:Custom.—Prescription must be carefully distinguished from custom. Prescription, as has been said, is either in a que estate or in a man and his ancestors—that is to say, it is a See also:personal claim; custom is purely See also:local—that is to say, it is a usage obtaining the force of law within a particular See also:district. In the time of Littleton the difference between prescription and custom was not fully recognized (see Littleton's Tenures, § 170), but the law as it exists at See also:present had become established by the time of See also:Sir See also:Edward See also:Coke. A custom must be certain, reasonable and exercised as of right. Like prescription at common law, it must have existed from time immemorial. On this ground a custom to erect stalls at statute sessions for See also:hiring servants was held to be See also:bad, because such sessions were introduced by the Statute of Labourers, 23 Edw. III. st. 1 (See also:Simpson v. See also:Wells, L.R., 7 Q.B., 214). Some rights may be claimed by custom which cannot be claimed by prescription, e.g. a right of inhabitants to See also:dance on a See also:village See also:green, for such a right is not connected with the enjoyment of land. On the other See also:hand, profits a prendre can be claimed by prescription but not by custom, unless in two or three exceptional cases, such as rights of copy-holders to common in the lord's See also:demesne, or to dig See also:sand within their tenements, rights to See also:estovers in royal forests, and rights of See also:tin-bounders in See also:Cornwall. See also:United States.—The Law of the United States (except in See also:Louisiana) is based upon that of See also:England, but the period of enjoyment necessary to found a title by prescription varies in the different states. An See also:easement or profit d prendre is acquired by twenty years' enjoyment in most states, following the English common law rule. In Louisiana the period varies according to the subject from three to thirty years, and property other than incorporeal hereditaments may be claimed by prescription as in Roman law (see See also:Kent's See also:Comm. iii. 442). See also:International Law uses the term " prescription " in its wider or Roman sense. " The See also:general consent of mankind has established the principle that See also:long and uninterrupted possession by one nation excludes the claim of every other " (See also:Wheaton, Int. Law, § 165). Historic instances of rights which were at one time claimed and exercised by prescription as against other nations are the See also:sovereignty of See also:Venice over the Adriatic and of See also:Great See also:Britain over the Narrow Seas, and the right to the See also:Sound dues long exacted by See also:Denmark. But such claims were rejected by the highest authorities on inter-See also:national law (e.g. See also:Grotius), on the ground that they were defective both in justus titulus and in de facto possession. There is no See also:special period fixed, as in municipal law, for the acquirement of international rights by lapse of time. In private international law prescription is treated as part of the lex foci or law of procedure. (J. W.) Scotland.—In the law of Scotland " prescription " is a term of wider meaning than in England, being used as including both prescription and limitation of English law. In its most general sense it may be described as the effect which the law attaches to the lapse of time, and it involves the See also:idea of possession held by one person adverse to the rights of another. Though having its basis in the common law, its operation was early defined by statute, and it is now in all respects statutory. Prescription in Scots law may be regarded (t) as a mode of acquiring rights—the See also:positive prescription; (2) as a mode of extinguishing rights—the negative prescription ; (3) as a mode of limiting rights of action—the shorter prescriptions. It must, however, be observed with reference to this See also:division that the distinction between (1) and (2) is rather an accidental (due to a loose See also:interpretation of the language of the act of 1617, c. 12) than a logically accurate one. It is, moreover, strictly confined to heritable rights, having no application in the case of movable property. But, though the distinction has been complained of by the highest authority as tending to create embarrassment in the law (see See also:opinion of Lord See also:Chancellor St Leonards in Dougall v. See also:Dundee See also:Harbour Trustees, 1852, 24 Jurist, 385), it is now too well settled to be departed from. 1. Positive Prescription.—The positive prescription was introduced by the act of 1617, c. 12. After setting forth in the See also:preamble the inconvenience resulting from the loss of titles and the danger of See also:forgery after the means of improbation are lost by the lapse of time, it enacts that whatever heritages the lieges, their predecessors or authors have possessed by themselves or others in their names peaceably, in virtue of infeftments for the space of forty years,continually and together, from the date of their said infeftments, and without any lawful interruption during the said space, they shall not be disturbed therein, provided they produce a written title on which their possession has proceeded. Such written title must be either a See also:charter and sasine preceding the forty years, or, when no charter is extant, See also:instruments of sasine proceeding upon retours or precepts of See also:Clare constat. Though the statute in its literal construction only applied to such heritable subjects as had been conveyed by charter and sasine, it was at an early date interpreted so as to include other heritable rights, as servitudes, tacks, public rights of way, &c., where no charter could be supposed to exist. The act of 1617 was so well framed that it continued to regulate the prescription of land rights till 1874. By the See also:Conveyancing Act of that year (37 & 38 Viet. C. 94, § J4) the period of prescription was shortened from forty years to twenty. It was provided that possessions for twenty years upon " an ex facie valid irredeemable title recorded in the appropriate See also:register of sasines " should in future give the same right as forty years' possessions upon charter and sasine under the earlier law. The act of 1874 does not, however, apply to all the cases which See also:fell under the act of 1617. Thus it has been decided that twenty years' possession on a charter of See also:adjudication followed by sasine and a See also:declarator of expiry of the legal is insufficient to give an unchallengeable right, an adjudication not being an " ex facie irredeemable title " (See also:Hinton v. Connel's Trustees, 1883, to Rettie's Reports, p. r-11o). It is further specially provided by the act of 1874 that the twenty years' prescription is not to apply to servitudes, rights of way, and public rights generally. The following rules apply to the positive prescription. (a) The possession which is required for it must be peaceable, continuous (" continually and together," as the act of 1617 has it), and uninterrupted. (b) The prescription runs de momenta in momentum. (c) The person against whom the prescription runs must be See also:major and sui See also:juris—a rule which, as regards minority, was specially provided for by the act of 1617, and as regards other cases of incapacity by the application of the principles of the common law. Under the Conveyancing Act, however. it is provided that in all cases where the twenty years' prescription applies, the lapse of thirty years is to exclude any plea on the ground of minority or want of capacity. 2. Negative Prescription.—This prescription was introduced by the act of 1469, c. 28, and substantially re-enacted by the act of 1474, c. 55. At first restricted to personal claims of See also:debt, it was gradually extended in practice and ultimately made applicable to heritable bonds and other heritable rights by the above-mentioned act of 1617. By the act of 1469 it is declared that the person having See also:interest in an See also:obligation must follow the same within the space of forty years and take document thereupon, otherwise it shall be prescribed. The negative prescription accordingly extinguishes in toto the right to demand performance of an obligation after forty years, the years being reckoned from the See also:day on which fulfilment of the obligation can be first demanded. The lapse of this period of time creates a conclusive presumption—one incapable of being redargud—that the debt or obligation has been paid or fulfilled. But it must be kept in view that the negative prescription does not per se—without the operation of the positive—establish a right to heritable property (See also:Erskine, Inst. b. iii. tit. 7, § 8). As regards the character of the prescription, it is requisite, in the same way as in the case of the positive, that the years shall have run continuously and without interruption, i.e. without any act done on the part of the creditor which indicates his intention to keep alive the right. Such interruption may, for instance, take See also:place by the See also:payment of interest on the debt, or See also:citation of the debtor in an action for the debt, or by a claim being lodged in the debtor's See also:sequestration. In the same way as in the positive, the currency of the negative prescription is suspended by the debtor being See also:minor or non See also:valens agere. 3. Shorter Prescriptions.—There are certain See also:short prescriptions recognized by Scots law—corresponding to the limitations of English law—which operate not as extinguishing rights but as excluding the ordinary means of proving them. The following require to be noticed. (a) Vicennial prescription protecting a person who has been served as See also:heir for twenty years against action by any other person claiming to be heir. (b) Decennial prescription requiring all actions by minors against their tutors and curators, and See also:vice versa, to be prosecuted within ten years from the expiration of the guardianship. (c) Septennial prescription providing that no person bind himself, under certain exceptions, for and with another, conjunctly and severally, in any See also:bond or See also:contract for sums of See also:money shall be See also:bound for more than seven years after the date of the obligation. There are also other shorter prescriptions limiting rights of action in different matters as the sexennial, quinquennial and triennial. Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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