[301] D. B. i. 10 b: ‘et sunt quieti pro servitio maris ab omni consuetudine preter tribus, latrocinio, pace infracta, et forestel.’
[302] D. B. i. 61 b: ‘solutam ab omni consuetudine propter forestam custodiendam excepta forisfactura Regis, sicut est latrocinium, et homicidium, et heinfara, et fracta pax.’
[303] D. B. i. 52: ‘Hi infrascripti habent in Hantone consuetud[ines] domorum suarum.’ Ibid. 249: ‘Haec terra fuit consuetudinaria solummodo de theloneo Regis sed socam aliam habebat.’
[304] Hist. Eng. Law, i. 558. The terms here used were adopted when the Introduction to the Selden Society’s Select Pleas in Manorial Courts (1888) was being written. M. Esmein in his Cours d’histoire du droit français, ed. 2 (1895), p. 259, has insisted on the same distinction but has used other and perhaps apter terms. According to him ‘la justice rendue par les seigneurs’ (my seignorial justice) is either ‘la justice seigneuriale’ (my franchisal justice) or ‘la justice féodale’ (my feudal justice).
[305] See Liebermann, Leges Edwardi, p. 88.
[306] Leg. Hen. 9, § 9.
[307] Leg. Henr. 20 § 2.
[308] Leg. Henr. 27.
[309] Hist. Eng. Law, i. 532.
[310] Leg. Henr. 57 § 8. Cf. 59 § 19.