Canada And The States Recollections 1851 To 1886 By Sir E. W. Watkin

























































































































































 -  The mixture of custom evidently caused
embarrassment, and it was clear that no fixed decisions could regulate
disputes concerning property - Page 335
Canada And The States Recollections 1851 To 1886 By Sir E. W. Watkin - Page 335 of 492 - First - Home

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The Mixture Of Custom Evidently Caused Embarrassment, And It Was Clear That No Fixed Decisions Could Regulate Disputes Concerning Property, While The Precedents Relied Upon Were Based Upon The Differing Laws Of Two Separate Countries - Laws, Perhaps, Not Now Operating In Those Very Countries Themselves.

"The tenure of property in Lower Canada is still in part based upon the old French feudal system.

There are still 'seigneurs' who hold lands, and have 'censitaires' or tenants, paying fee-rent in produce, services, and money. It is true that a law has been passed enabling a fixed commutation, in money, of these seigneurial rights; but I am told that the parties adhere in most cases to the old usage, and despise innovation.

"A singular custom, too, prevails. Parents, when old and tired of labour, assign their property to their children, or to one of them, in consideration of a string of conditions for their own maintenance and comfort, each one of which is recited in the deed with minute exactness. They stipulate usually for a house, so much meat, bread, sugar, tea, &c.; a caleche and horse to take them to church on Sundays and holidays; so much tobacco or snuff; so many gowns and bonnets, or suits of clothes and hats; and so on. These gifts lead to frequent law- suits; and one can quite understand how, in a country with large tracts of its land held upon tenures of the most complex character, under a system which has passed away even in the country from whence it came, and where to this mass of difficulty is added the cause of dispute just alluded to, the legal profession should flourish, - which I understand it does.

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