[521] D. B. i. 132 b: ‘Hoc manerium tenuit Heraldus Comes et iacuit et iacet in Hiz [Hitchin, Herts] sed wara hujus manerii iacuit in Bedefordscire T. R. E. in hundredo de Maneheue.’ D. B. i. 190, ‘Haec terra est bereuuicha in Neuport [Essex] set wara ejus iacet in Grantebrige.’ When in the survey of Oxfordshire, i. 160, it is said, ‘Ibi 1 hida de warland in dominio,’ the taxed land is contrasted with the inland, which in this county has gone untaxed.
[522] D. B. i. 28.
[523] See the cases of the monks of Bury and the canons of S. Petroc, above, [p. 55].
[524] D. B. i. 4 b: ‘De terra huius manerii ten[uit] unus homo archiepiscopi dimid. solin et cum his 6 solins geldabat T. R. E. quamvis non pertineret manerio nisi de scoto quia libera terra erat.’ The scotum in this context seems to be or to include the geld. Compare D. B. i. 61 b: ‘Haec terra iacet et appreciata est in Gratentun quod est in Oxenefordscire et tamen dat scotum in Berchescire.’ D. B. ii. 11: ‘In Colecestra habet episcopus 14 domos et 4 acras non reddentes consuetudinem praeter scotum nisi episcopo.’
[526] Hamilton, Inquisitio, 60.
[527] Above, p. 110.
[528] D. B. i. 35 b.
[529] Northumbrian Priests’ Law, 58, 59, (Schmid, p. 369.)
[530] An Act of 1869 (32–3 Vic. c. 41) allowed the owners of certain small houses to agree to pay the rates which under the ordinary law would become due from the occupiers, and authorized the vestries to allow such owners a commission of 25 per cent. See also the instructive recital in 59 Geo. III. c. 12, sec. 19:—The small occupiers are evading the poors’ rate, and the owners exact higher rents than they would otherwise get, on the ground that the occupiers can not be effectually assessed.