The K-Zone: The titles game: can you buy nobility?
Let's suppose that Fred and Freda Bloggs have a
hankering to stop being plain old Mr and Mrs Bloggs, and to become
Lord and Lady Bloggs of Dogpatch instead. Or perhaps Fred fancies
a nice knighthood
-- Sir Frederick has a certain ring to it. So they have a nose around
the Internet, and come across a number of sites that appear to be
offering titles of nobility for sale. They learn, for example, that
for a measly hundred quid, they can become a lord and lady, or a
couple of Scottish lairds. For a bigger investment -- say a couple of
thousand -- they can buy a title that can be inherited by their
descendants, or even sold at a profit. Titles are even auctioned on
eBay. But how genuine are these offers? Can you really, legally buy
and sell titles? If not, what is it that you are getting from these
offers? This article seeks to answer these questions. But in order
to understand the answers, and indeed the questions, it's necessary
to know something about the English system of nobility and titles.
Basic principles of nobility, peerage, titles, and honours
In general, to be titled is to hold a title of honour
granted by the Crown. English common law recognizes two
broad classes of these titles of honour: titles associated with
the nobility, or peerage titles (they are the synonymous,
for our purposes), and titles of less than peerage rank.
We must also consider titles that are not titles of honour
(Doctor, Reverend, etc), honours that are not titles (OBE, etc),
and title-like forms of address whose exact status is disputed
(feudal titles, for example, of which much more later).
We must also say a few words about the legal issues associated
with the creation, grant, and recognition of titles and honours.
Peerage titles
Formerly, a peer -- a nobleman, in other words -- was
visibly distinguished from a titled person of lesser rank
by having the right to sit in the House of Lords. However,
since most peerages are hereditary, and the right of hereditary peers
to sit in the Lords has now been curtailed, hereditary peerage is now merely
a tradition with no particular common-law rights apart from the use of the
titles of the rank. There are five ranks of peerage, in descending order of
precedence:
- Duke/Duchess
- Marquess/Marchioness
- Earl/Countess
- Viscount/Viscountess
- Baron/Baroness
Typically a peerage would come with certain lands attached, but this
was not inevitable.
The way in which a peerage passes from generation to generation, if
it passes at all, depends on the way in which the peerage was granted.
In most cases, it passes to the direct male heir, although there are
still some titles extant that are capable of passing down the female
line. The rules are quite complicated, and not always consistent, but
for the purposes of this article there are a couple of basic
principles you should be aware of. First, the peerage does not
normally lie in the grant of the holder. That is, although the holder
can renounce a peerage (this might happen, for example, to allow
a peer to stand for election as an MP), he can't dispose of it any
any other way apart from as set out in the original grant. Second,
life peerages are not inheritable at all. Nearly all modern peerages
are life peerages, including all political appointments, and the law lords.
These people technically rank as barons or baronesses. Third,
Some of a peer's household may conventionally have courtesy
titles. For example, the eldest male heir of an earl might conventionally
be addressed as if he held one of the earl's lesser titles (a viscountcy,
perhaps).
Holders of courtesy titles are not do not necessarily hold noble rank (although they might expect to do so in due course). The important point for our
purposes is that a courtesy title is not something that can be passed
by inheritance, or indeed in any other way, since it has no substantive
existence.
Female heirs also sometimes
take courtesy forms of address, but technically not courtesy titles.
Of course,
women can hold peerages in their own right, and take the full
titles of their husbands on marriage -- not courtesy titles.
Titles of honour of less than peerage rank
Title-holders of less than peerage rank include knights
-- of which there are
various orders -- and baronets. A baronet outranks a knight in the
orders of nobility, and the rank is inheritable. Again, the rules
about inheritance are complicated, and depend on the original grant.
For some time it was thought that male heirs of baronets had an
automatic right to a knighthood. Most likely this right has lapsed
but, whether it has or not, the acquisition is not automatic -- the
heir must still petition the Crown.
Titles which are not honours
Both peerage titles, and titles of less than peerage rank, are titles
of honour. There are other titles, of course, with legal recognition,
that are not titles of honour.
For
example, `Doctor' (as in `Dr. Bloggs') is a title, but not a title of
honour, much less a mark
of nobility. The title of Doctor is not awarded by the Crown, but
by academic organisations with a charter to award such titles.
Honours which are not, strictly speaking, titles
There are numerous other honours that the monarch can bestow,
independently or on ministerial advice, but
on the whole they do not amount to a recognition of titled status.
For example, the Order of the British Empire (OBE) is an honour,
but not a title.
Disputed titles
The last class of titles we must consider is that small class whose
status is not entirely certain, particularly `feudal' titles.
Of particular interest to title merchants are
the titles of `Lord of the Manor' -- which is generally believed not
to amount to a title of honour, much less a peerage title --
and the Scottish feudal Barony,
which is generally believed to be a true noble title (at least for
now). There is a great deal more to say about these particular titles,
as we shall see.
The legal basis of titles and honours
In the UK, titles and honours are not merely matters of social convention.
There is, for example, a defined procedure for determining whether somebody
is a baronet, and a correct answer
to whether a member of one Order of Chivalry takes social precedence over
a member of another. These issues are determined by what is known as
nobiliary law. Questions of nobiliary law may be difficult
to answer, particularly because some rulings are of great antiquity and
not easy to follow.
However, they are, for the most part, questions which do have definite
answers which can be researched, rather than matters of social preference.
On the whole, nobiliary law is not to be found in statute.
Although there is a small body of statute law which
applies to titles and honours, the creation,
recognition, and grant of titles of honour is technically one
of the prerogative powers of the Crown. Prerogative powers are
the vestiges of the archaic powers of the monarch to rule by proclamation,
rather by the procedures of Parliament.
In practice, the exercise of prerogative powers is now by
`the Crown', which is that
uniquely English constitutional phenomenon in which the monarch acts
on the `advice' (`instructions' might be a better word) of the
Government of the day. So, in practice, new titles are conferred by
the Queen or by the Prime Minister of the day. In theory, it lies in
the power of the Crown to create not just new title-holders, but whole new
titles. This has happened in the past, of course -- in the
immediate post-Conquest era there was only the rank of baron; all the
other classes of peerage are more recent creations.
Regulations governing
titles and honours are usually formally insituted by letters patent or
royal warrant, signed by the monarch, and in many cases countersigned
by a minister to indicate that ministerial advice has been given.
One statute that is important for our present purposes is the
Honours (Prevention of Abuse) Act (1925). This Act makes it a criminal
offence to offer, or to accept, money or other reward to
obtain the grant of a dignity or title of honour. In the medieval
past, however, there is no doubt that noble status was attendant
on wealth, particularly in the form of land. A person who had acquired
a sufficiently large estate could petition the monarch for a peerage.
In practice,
Prime Ministers do reward their long-term supporters with
honours and peerages, and this support may take the form of money.
Although peerages cannot be bought or sold in the UK, titles of
nobility may have been saleable in other jurisdictions. You may
sometimes come across people offering to sell French and German
titles. Apart from pointing out that these titles would confer no
particular status in English law, I can't really comment further as I
don't know anything about the nobiliary law of these countries.
Of course, since the reform of the House of Lords a hereditary English
peerage probably carries no more extensive legal rights
in the UK than does a
hereditary French one.
Legitimate uses of titled forms of address and honorifics
The following is a brief description of the more important
titled forms of address and
honorifics that are recognised in English common law.
Most titles are accompanied by honorifics, but there is a technical
distinction between the two. An honorific qualifies a full name -- it
cannot be part of a name. For example, `Reverend' is an honorific, not
a title. You could be, for example, `The Reverend Mr Bloggs', or
`The Reverend Fred Bloggs', but you can't, strictly speaking, be `The
Reverend Bloggs'. However, `baron' is a title. You can be `Baron
Bloggs', but not `Baron Mr Bloggs'. Many people get this distinction
wrong and, to be honest, it isn't hugely important for our present
purposes.
Please bear in mind that I am a law graduate with a particular interest
in the historical aspects of English law; correct modes of address,
courtesy titles, etc,
are -- for the most part -- not legal issues at all, but matters of social
convention, and not really within my area of expertise.
His Grace, Her Grace
This honorific is legitimately used only by dukes and duchesses, and
certain bishops.
Lord and Lady
In English common law, only peers are entitled to be addressed as
`Lord Bloggs'. Male heirs of dukes and marquesses
are by convention addressed as `Lord Fred Bloggs', that is,
including the first name. In fact Fred Bloggs, if he is a senior
peer, may in fact be, say, Earl Dogpatch. That is, the peerage
has a title of its own, distinct from the surname of the holder.
The only women entitled to call themselves `Lady Somebody' are
peeresses in their own right, the wives of peers, knights, and
baronets. Female heirs of dukes, marquesses and earls are by convention
addressed as Lady Freda Bloggs, with the first name, like male
heirs of dukes and marquesses. Strangely, this courtesy extends
to female heirs of earls, but not to male heirs.
Of course, a peer could also use his rank as a title, e.g.,
Baron Bloggs, or Fred, Earl of Dogpatch. However, this form
of title is rarely used in speech, except for dukes. Normally
peers would be introduced as `Lord Bloggs' or `Lord Dogpatch'.
The Honourable, most honourable, and right honourable
To be The Most Honourable Fred or Freda Bloggs,
you must be a Marquess or a Marchioness.
To be The Right Honourable Fred or Freda Bloggs you must be an Earl
or a Countess, or a Privy Councillor.
To be The Honourable Fred Bloggs, or the The Honourable Freda Bloggs,
you must be a viscount or a baron or their female equivalent.
These honorifics are also by convention granted to people who hold
courtesy titles
of the equivalent rank. For example, the eldest son of the Duke of
Dogpatch might
have the courtesy title of a marquess, and be the Most Hon. Fred Bloggs
as well. The son of a baron is also allowed to be an Hon. Somebody.
Despite the complex rules surrounding these honorifics, and
their apparent grandness, they are only
ever used impersonally, that is, in describing someone or addressing
an envelope. They are never used as a form of address or introduction.
As far as obtaining a title is concerned, the only legitimate way to
acquire the honorifics of `The Hon.', etc., is to be a peer of the
realm, or a member of the immediate family of a peer of the realm, or
a Privy Councillor. In short, it is no easier to obtain the legitimate
use of these honorifics than it is a peerage itself.
Sir
The honorific prefix `Sir' is used for knights and baronets. If
knighted, Fred Bloggs will be Sir Fred Bloggs or, in speech, Sir Fred.
His Excellency
This honorific is used by ambassadors appointed by the Crown. Like
the Honorific `The Honourable...' it is only used impersonally,
never as a form of address or introduction.
Esquire
The title of esquire was widely abused even by the 16th century.
Technically an
esquire is a person of higher social rank than a gentleman, and less than
a knight. In writing, a gentleman would be `Mr Bloggs', and an
esquire `Fred Bloggs, Esq.' (not `Mr Fred Bloggs, Esq.').
Over the years the rank varied in seniority,
so in the 14th
century it meant approximately the same as a knighthood, while in the
19th century it meant little more than gentleman. Debrett's gives
a (long) list of those who might be entitled to be addressed as
esquire. This list includes, for example, male heirs of peers and
knights, sheriffs and Justices of the Peace, officers of the royal
household, QCs and senior judges, senior military officers, and
holders of postgraduate degrees. Despite widely
held belief, the title of esquire does not merely signify a gentleman
or a landowner, although it has often been thus misapplied.
In practice, as their is no formal legal ruling on the use of Esquire,
it has become rather haphazard. In practice, it is difficult to object
to the use of the title by anybody -- even the College of Arms routinely
uses it in correspondence with people who have no grander title.
Acquiring a title
So, let's suppose you want to acquire a noble title, or an honour,
or to use an
honorific that goes with one. How can you do this? This section
describes various services that are offered by the title merchants,
in ascending order of value.
Outright hoaxes and scams
In the UK there is very little to prevent a person going by whatever
name he or she likes. If you want to present yourself as Lord Bloggs of
Dogpatch then there really isn't much the law can do to stop you.
Currently there are a
number of rather pernicious scams that capitalise on this fact. These work
because if a person believes that he is Lord Foobar, in practice
no-one is going to question the validity of the title. There are,
for example, people who claim to be fons honorem, that is,
entitled to bestow honours. They might claim that this right derives,
for example, from some honour bestowed on their crusader forebears.
Alternatively, the right might have been granted by some European
monarch at some point in the past (maybe, but who's going to know?)
The reality is that English common law only recognizes one fons honorem
-- the Crown. Any document that purports to create a right to bestow
honours must carry the autograph of a legitimate monarch of England.
If you sign up for one of these scams, you can
expect to receive an impressive-looking document evidencing the grant
of the honour. If you believe it to be effective, then up to a point
it will be. However, these documents are no more valuable than
anything that you could print yourself. If you have some parchment and
a printer you can do at least as good a job, at a fraction of
the price.
A common trick with title scams is to have the signature of the
grantor validated by a person of impeccable credentials. In general,
where English law requires a signature to be witnessed, this means
exactly what it says: the witness must watch the document being
signed. The witness does not need to know, or care, what the document
itself concerns. If done carefully, it can be made to look as though
the witness is attesting to validity of the document itself.
It's important to bear in mind that
many unscrupulous title merchants confuse purchasers by offering a
mixture of valid and bogus services. For example, anyone can break up
his or her land and sell it in chunks. A title merchant might tell
you (wrongly) that a noble title goes with
that land, and can be
passed to purchasers of the chunks of land. The land certificate you get
from the Land Registry if you buy such a chunk of land is a valid, British
legal document. You have entered into a perfectly genuine land
transaction, and have the certificate to prove it. If you believe
that the title is passed with the land, then you have a certificate
that attests to your new status. Of course, you don't: noble titles
don't pass with dispositions of land in England, but the land
certificate gives a certain specious authenticity to the transaction.
A relatively recent development in the world of bogus baronies is the
sale of baronial appointments. While barons could, and did, appoint
people to offices such as `baron marshall', these were merely offices, not
titles. They were almost certainly not hereditary. Nevertheless, there are
scammers suggesting that purchasers of their bogus baronies will be able to
offset some of their costs -- or even make a profit -- by selling the
appointments to baronial offices. Such a scheme might well amount to
pyramid selling, and therefore be unlawful in the UK.
These scams are particular contemptible because they
offer absolutely nothing of value. Some of the other schemes do trade
in assets that are of some value, even if they don't offer what they
purport to offer.
Becoming a `Lord' by deed poll
So, we have established that you can legally go by whatever name you
like. Fred Bloggs can legally refer to himself as Lord Bloggs.
However, if you want to change your
name as it appears on, for example, your driving licence or passport,
then you will need to produce documentary evidence of the sincerity of
your intention to change your name. In the UK, this evidence usually
takes the form of a deed of change of name, informally known
as a `deed poll'. There is nothing magical about a deed poll: it is
simply a document signed by you and witnessed, which sets out your
determination to go by a new name and renounce your old one. In
general you can send the signed and witnessed deed to any official
agency and request that your records be changed. This request will
normally be honoured, however mad your new name. It does not appear
to be unlawful to change your name from Fred Bloggs to Lord Bloggs,
although any change of name would be illegal if used to effect a
fraud. You can ask a solicitor to prepare a deed poll for you, or go
to one of the many agencies that provide this service. However, you
can save money and time simply by printing, completing, and signing the
deed below in the presence of a witness. You can then start
sending it to the appropriate agencies.
``By this deed I, the undersigned, of _________________, having been
born at _________________ on ____________________, do hereby
absolutely renounce and abandon the use of my former name
_________________, and in lieu thereof assume and adopt the name of
_________________. I hereby declare that at all times hereafter in
all business, actions, proceedings, records, deeds, instruments in
writing, and upon all occasions whatsoever, the use of this name as my
full name and family name. I hereby request and authorise all persons
to designate and address me by such name.''
Signed on the _ of ____, 20__,
_______________
Witnessed by ______________
of _______________,
of the occupation of _________________.
So, for example, for Fred Bloggs to legally and legitimately become
Lord Bloggs:
``By this deed I, the undersigned, of 21 Acacia Avenue, East
Dogpatch, Wessex, having been born at 13, Scumbag Alley, Mousehole,
Wessex, on the twenty-third of June nineteen hundred and sixty, do
hereby absolutely renounce and abandon the use of my former name Fred
Bloggs, and in lieu thereof assume and adopt the name of Lord Bloggs.
I hereby declare that at all times hereafter in all business, actions,
proceedings, records, deeds, instruments in writing, and upon all
occasions whatsoever, the use of this name as my full name and family
name. I hereby request and authorise all persons to designate and
address me by such name.''
Signed on the 20th of August, 2003
F Bloggs
Witnessed by Mr Bill Scoggins of 23 Acacia Avenue, East Dogpatch,
Wessex,
of the occupation of town rat catcher
B Scoggins
There are many other perfectly valid formulations of a deed poll,
of course; but you can have this one with my compliments.
It appears to be entirely possible to use this technique to get a
passport issued in the name of Lord Bloggs, or Viscount Scoggins, or
whatever you like. Of course, you haven't acquired anything of value.
Deed polls can be formally registered by enrolment at the
Supreme Court, but there is no legal obligation to do so, and most
people don't bother.
A number of organisations `sell' titles by helping you to change your
name by deed poll. They charge about £200 for this service. It's worth
bearing in mind that you can do this yourself, for free, at any time,
simply by editing and signing the sample deed above. An agent might
carry out the additional step of checking whether there really is a
Lord Bloggs, as your use of his title might cause an upset. You can
check this yourself if your local library keeps a copy of Burke's,
for example.
Buying a Lairdship
In principle, in Scottish law a person can use the designation `Laird
of Someplace' merely by owning some land in that place. So all Mr
Bloggs needs to do to become Laird Bloggs is to buy a piece of land in
Scotland. Traditionally the title `Laird' was reserved to major
landowners and public dignitaries, rather like the English `Squire',
but in theory any landowner can use it. Of course, this makes all
Scottish landowners notional lairds, although there are, of course,
proper, traditional Lairdships in Scotland, recognized by the Lord Lyon.
A number of companies are selling
off tiny pieces of land (`souvenir plots') in the highlands to allow
people to become lairds, to the [i]chagrin[/i] of the
`real' lairds. The more reputable vendors are quite
tongue-in-cheek about the whole business, and charge what appears to
be a reasonable sum, given that a certain amount of administration is
involved. The going rate is 50-100. For the money you do get a real
piece of land (albeit tiny) which you can go and visit if you want to
feel connected to the soil. It is real property and the title of
Laird, such as it is, can be inherited, or sold at a profit if you're
lucky. Be aware that there are a number of companies who are charging
extortionate sums for this service; I have seen fees of more than £500.
Such companies often exaggerate the value of what they are sell. For
example, it isn't unusual to read that the Scottish word `laird' is
simply an Scottish equivalent of the English word `lord' (which might
be true, in the linguistic sense), so Laird Bloggs could legitimately call himself Lord
Bloggs (which isn't). Morevoer, there are some vendors that claim that
the souvenir parcel of land they sell has some special, lordly status
because it comes from the estate of the Lord High Foobar. This
is baloney. Even in Scottland, where there may be such a concept
as a barony by tenure (see below), you'd still have to buy
the caput of the barony to qualify (big bucks).
On the
whole, this method of acquiring a `title' is usually harmless and
unobjectionable, although slightly tacky -- like having personalised
number plates on your car -- and most people who buy `lairdships'
appear to do so as gifts. Iwantoneofthose.com sells lairdships
for 29.99, and describes them as ``delighfully silly'', which seems
about right.
Lordships of the manor, and (non-existent) English feudal baronies
In feudal times, the monarch owned all the land in the country (this
is technically still the case today, although a formality). He divided
up the country between his `tenants in chief', who would have been the
nobility of the day. The tenants in chief further divided the land
into sub-tenancies for the lesser nobility, each with its own feudal
obligations. At the bottom of this pyramid of land ownership was the
manor, managed by a lord of the manor. Typically a manor would consist
of a manor house and some parkland, surrounded by some acres of
>demesne. The demesne land was for the personal use of the
lord of the manor. Surrounding the demesne land was land worked by
villeins - bonded labourers - who held their land by copyhold tenure.
The term `copyhold' denotes that the villeins' rights were proved by a
copy of the records of the manorial court.
For the purposes of our present discussion, it is important to
understand that the lords of the manor, although important personages
in their own communities, were not necessarily nobility. Of course
some lordships of the manor were held by noblemen, even by royalty
(even kings have to live somewhere, after all). Lordship of the manor was, and
is, a form of property ownership, and the word `lord' in the title
has the same sense that it does in the word `landlord'.
Now, over the years the traditional
feudal manors got broken up and sold off. What happened to the
lordships of the manor when there was no manor? Well, technically
a lordship is an IncorporealHeriditament, an intangible right over
land that persists even when the land changes ownership.
For example, if your house is completely
surrounded by other peoples' land, and you have to pass over that
land to get to it, then you probably have an incorporeal heriditament
in the form of an `easement of access' (you'd better hope so, anyway,
unless you have a helipad on the roof).
This right belongs to you, but concerns somebody else's land.
If the land over which your right exists is sold, then your right is
enforceable against the new owner (this is a bit of a simplification,
but the details aren't important here).
A lordship of the manor is a right of this sort. It is attached to
land, but not necessarily owned by the owner of the land itself. Even
selling the manor house itself does not necessarily result in a sale
of the lordship of the manor. Like other property rights, a lordship
of the manor can be bought and sold. It is part of the estate of its
owner, and passes to his successors when he dies. This probably sounds
very grand, but the rights attached to a lordship of the manor are,
for the most part, nugatory. You may find yourself the owner of a few
hundred yards of grass verges, for example. By buying a lordship you
are probably entitled to style yourself ``Fred Bloggs, Lord of the
Manor of Dogpatch'' or (pushing your luck a little) ``Fred Bloggs,
Lord of Dogpatch''. Although people who sell titles will tell you that
the designation `Lord of Dogpatch' is a customary contraction of the
full title `Lord of the Manor of Dogpatch', I believe that this
`custom' is less than a decade old. Even the full title Lord of the
Manor of Dogpatch is of questionable validity.
The College of Arms suggests that the usage of the full title is
probably acceptable, but will not say for certain.
Some lordships
still have some land attached, often the manor house itself. Some have
other rights, sometimes quite peculiar, such as the right to hold the
hand of the Queen on certain state occasions. More commonly,
lords of the manor are able
to collect (notional) tithes from utility companies for the use of
grass verges in the manorial district.
A lordship of the manor is a genuine property right, recognised by
legislation. It does not, however, accord the lord any particular
status. It must be stressed that a lordship of the manor is probably
not a title of honour, and is certainly not a peerage. It does not give Fred
Bloggs, Lord of the Manor of Dogpatch, the right to call himself `Lord
Bloggs' or `Lord Dogpatch'.
Similar to a manor is a `feudal barony'. Like a manor, a barony comprised
land ownership and administrative obligations. Although feudal baronies
probably do still exist in Scotland and Ireland, the balance of authority
is that there are no English feudal baronies. Any that were still
extant by the 17th century were absorbed into the peerage, and feudal tenure
was abolished by an Act of Parliament in 1660. There have been a number of
attempts to revive English feudal baronial titles in the courts, most
recently in the late 19th century. None has been successful. Consequently,
anybody claiming to be selling an English feudal barony needs to be treated
with caution.
Lordships of the manor are usually sold by auction. Bidding starts from
about £1000.
The most prestigious, and therefore expensive, lordships are those that
have been associated with royalty in the past. For these you can
expect to pay perhaps £20,000 or more. The problem with buying a
lordship is ensuring that it is genuine. Before the system of
compulsory land registration, it could often be difficult to determine
whether a person had genuine title to a plot of land or a house.
Imagine how much difficult it is, therefore, to ensure the validity of
an intangible property right. We will return to this subject later,
in the discussion of bogus lordships.
It is difficult to know what to make of lordships of the manor.
On the one hand, a lordship is not a peerage, despite the similarity
of the titles. It is almost certainly not even a title of
less than peerage rank, because lordships were not created by
the same mechanisms used to create nobility. However, since the reform
of the House of Lords, interest in lordships has increased enormously.
The reason might be that now real, genuine hereditary peerages carry no real
rights (they have all been taken away), so lordships and peerages are
increasingly difficult for the non-expert to distinguish. Indeed,
a lordship of the manor may actually have land attached, while some
peerages do not. In the 1980s, Lord Denning, Master of the Rolls,
commented in one of the few reported court cases that concerned
lordships of the manor, that a lordship without any land could be
bought for £200-£300. These days, many change hands for tens of
thousands. Agencies that specialise in the sale of lordships claim
that they are an investment, and if you buy at the right time this
could be true. You may also be lucky, as one purchaser recently was,
to find that the manorial wasteland that you have rights over
is not limited to grass verges, but includes 200 acres of prime
development land. On the other hand, you may find that you have
bought the right to maintain the church roof in perpetuity.
Lordships of the manor by trademark
While a genuine lordship of the manor is a thing of some value,
albeit limited, and probably does confer on the owner the right to a
dignified form of address, it is difficult to know what to make of
this new scheme, of registering lordships as trademarks. If it does
work -- which is doubtful -- it is much cheaper than buying a real
manor.
The way the system
appears to work is as follows. The title agent tracks down a manor
that appears to be defunct, that is, its rights are currently not
claimed by anyone. He then registers the description of the manor
as a trademark on behalf of the purchaser. The owner of the trademark
then asserts himself as being in adverse possession of the `land'
of the lordship of the manor. After a period of time defined by
the Limitation Act (currently 12 years), it becomes impossible for
a person with a prior claim on the lordship of the manor, if there
is anyone with such a claim, to take legal action to recover
possession from the trademark owner.
In reality, the agents will have checked that there is no-one around
to make such a claim. The owner of the trademark can apply to have
his possessory title to the lordship registered at the Land Registry,
and after 12 years can apply to have the possessory title uprated
to absolute title.
Schemes like this are widely advertised, but I would suggest that
there are a few problems which a potential buyer should bear
in mind. First, it is not obvious whether a defunct lordship of the
manor can be revived, or whether it simply vanishes. To be sure,
it isn't clear
that it can't be revived, but it would be a gamble to
rely on this. Secondly,
while it is clear that one can obtain real, tangible land and property
by adverse possession, it isn't clear that one can establish an
incorporeal heriditament by adverse possession. It is possible to
establish an easement (e.g., a right of access) by long usage, but
this does not amount to adverse possession. Thirdly, while it is
true that a lordship of the manor can be registered (at least at the
moment -- see below), to register it requires an accurate plan of
the demesnes land of the manor, and this will almost always be
hard to come by these days. Fourthly, when the Land Registration Act
(2002) comes fully into force, it will no longer be possible to
register lordships of the manor with the Land Registry.
The administration costs for setting up a `lordship' by trademark
are quite high, and you may find that you end up paying as much as
you would if you had bought the genuine article. Given the uncertain
legal status, prospective purchasers should think quite hard about
whether it's worth the risk.
Bogus lordships of the manor
Consider the following problem. You would like to buy a house, some
three hundred years old, which is currently unoccupied. You find out
from the estate agent handling the sale that the present owner is a
certain Mr Swindler, who lives abroad. How can you be sure that
Mr Swindler really does own the house, and can legally sell it? If
you are lucky, the house will be registered as an estate with the Land
Registry. If the house is old, and has not changed ownership recently,
you will probably not be so lucky. The process of establishing
ownership of unregistered land interests is for the vendor to show an
unbroken chain of title, from a good root of title to the
present day. A good root of title is a document that establishes
ownership -- a deed of conveyance, or a will, for example -- that
dates back a certain length of time (currently 15 years; since the
Limitation Act prevents legal actions to recover land after 12 years,
a 15-year proof of title is usually sufficient). Of course, if the
good root of title is 200 years old, that's OK, so long as the chain
of title is unbroken to the present day. So, there should be documents
establishing all changes of ownership from the good root of title to
the present vendor. If you are a solicitor acting for a house
purchaser, and the vendor cannot provide this proof of ownership, then
you would probably advise your client to buy elsewhere.
What relevance does this have to lordships of the manor? Well, the
overwhelming majority of lordships are not registered, and the process
of proof of ownership will be much the same as it is for tangible
unregistered land. However, because a lordship is intangible, it is
much easier for an unscrupulous person to fake evidence of ownership.
It's hard to do this with a house or a
farm -- if I try to sell my neighbour's house the buyer will find out
soon enough that I'm not the real owner, because someone else lives in
it. Moreover, the owner of a lordship of the manor may not even have
documentary evidence of his rights; ownership may have passed down the
family for generations without any formal description. What
documentary evidence there is may be obtainable from the Public
Records Office, or inferred from the old manorial court records, if
they can be found.
In the last couple of years, there have been numerous reports of
fraudulent manor sales. In some cases deeds of conveyance are simply faked up
from scratch. In others, the `vendor' provides genuine documentary
evidence of the ownership of the manor for the period 1400-1900, then
claims that the manor has been in the same family for the last hundred
years, and that it is this family that is selling the manor.
In the most egregious cases, people have bought manors that don't even
exist, or that actually belong to someone else. Unless you are
experienced in conveyancing unregistered land, you should seek
expert legal advice before parting with any money.
Scottish and Irish feudal baronies
Unlike English feudal lordships of the manor, Scottish `baronies by tenure'
are probably genuine
titles of honour. If they are, then they are the only real UK titles
of nobility that are capable of being bought and sold. Unlike English
noble titles, Scottish baronies by tenure can (or, at least until
recently, could) pass with the land to which they
are attached, rather than by personal descent. The barony is not a
full peerage, and the equivalent Scottish term for an English baronial
peerage is `Lord of Parliament'. In short, an English barony
is a peerage, a Scottish barony is not, but might be a
noble title in its own right. I will return later to why
there are so many maybies and probablies in this discussion.
If Mr Bloggs can obtain a genuine Scottish barony, then
he probably gets the right to call himself `Fred Bloggs, Baron of Someplace'.
This
right, if it exists at all, is inheritable along with the Caput, or property, of
the barony. Baronies are invariably associated with land, usually
a few acres accompanied by a crumbling castle. Because Scottish
baronies might be genuine titles of honour, they are highly sought after
and not easy to obtain.
Typically about a dozen baronies change hands every year. The sales
are not well publicised, and large sums of money are involved. You can
expect to pay a minimum of 40,000, although I understand that one sale
has recently been agreed at 1M. Even if you can raise the cash, the
transfer of the title has to be agreed by the Lord Lyon -- the officer
of the Crown responsible for Scottish title and heraldry disputes --
which is by no means a foregone conclusion. You must be armigerous,
that is, entitled to arms, or be prepared to petition the Lord Lyon
for a grant of arms. It's worth pointing out that the Lord Lyon's
office keeps very careful track of baronies and arms in Scotland, and
it should be relatively easy to check the validity of a purported
barony.
In 2004, when the Abolition of Feudal Tenure (Scotland) Act (2000) came
fully into force, Scottish baronies by tenure ceased to exist as substantive
rights over land. However, the 2000 Act specifically preserves the right
to treat feudal dignities as incorporeal heriditaments -- rather like
English manorial rights.
Given the huge sums of money involved, the prospective purchaser of
a Scottish barony should seek specialist legal advice, particularly now
that the 2000 Act is in force, and in light of the Lord Lyon's
announcement (see below). Validating the
authenticity of a barony has all the same problems as validating a
lordship of the manor, with the additional hazard that you'll lose a
great deal of money if you get it wrong.
The situation is more complicated in Ireland, because the term
`barony' is used both in an administrative sense -- like an
English
lordship of the manor -- and in the Scottish sense of a
barony by tenure. Baronies by tenure were almost certainly abolished
in Ireland by Act of Parliament in 1662, soon after England and Wales abolished
the vestiges of feudalism. The 1662 Act might have abolished Baronies
in the sense of lordships of the manor too, but this is less certain.
The balance of authority at present seems to be that there are no
valid Irish feudal titles still extant, but few experts seem prepared
to assert with full conviction that this is the case. This lack of complete
certainty has provided an opening for sellers of bogus baronies, because
it is extremely difficult to discredit their offerings without extensive,
costly research.
In addition, there is no Irish equivalent of
the Scottish Lord Lyon to keep an eye on the use of baronial arms.
As a result, buying an Irish barony is particularly risky.
As to the title `baron' itself, there are a number of uncertainties
concerning its legitimate use.
First, it is uncertain whether the title `Baron of Someplace', or
`Baron Somebody', is recognised outside of Scotland (or Ireland, as
the case may be). Consider the following extract from the transcript
of the case of Harvey-Bussell v Sun Alliance Group (I have
X'ed out the names to reduce the likelihood of causing embarrassment):
``In evidence, the Applicant told us that her husband had, during
1995, acquired the title Baron X of Moycarne. It was put
to her in cross-examination, and she did not deny, that he had
acquired the title by purchase, and that it was the equivalent, in
Ireland, of an English Lordship of the Manor rather than a
peerage... With absolutely no disrespect to the Applicant, it does
not appear self-evident to us, that in England, she is entitled to
describe herself as "Baroness" which, since the passing of the Life
Peerages Act, has come to imply that the holder of the title is a Life
Peeress by creation... So in this decision we shall refer to the
Applicant... as Mrs X.''
Arguably the judges in this case (which was before the Employment
Appeal Tribunal) were not experts in nobiliary law, and in any event
the case did not turn on whether the Applicant was entitled
to be known as `Baroness' or not, so the matter did not receive all
that much attention. However, it does demonstrate the general
belief that the titles `Baron' and `Baroness' should be reserved to
the baronial peers.
Second, whether or not the title `Baron' is acceptable, it remains
unclear whether the title confers noble status or not. Certainly
a former Lord Lyon, Sir Thomas Innes, asserted strongly that
any grant of Scottish arms was a recognition of noble status in
Scotland. So if
the baron was granted arms as a result of purchasing the barony, then
this could be taken to indicate that the barony did indeed confer nobility.
However, although the matter has never been directly at issue in a court case
(as far as I am aware), there have been numerous judicial mutterings
that a grant of arms is not evidence of nobility, even in Scotland.
In addition, recently academic writings have started to question
whether the view expressed by Innes has any historical basis, or just
reflected his own (albeit very influential) take on the matter.
The current Lord Lyon recently announced that,
as a consequence of the 2000 Act, he would no longer recongize feudal
titles so far as the grant of arms is concerned.
The role of HM Land Registry in all this
The Land Registry is the department of the British Civil Service charged with
maintaining the register of what property rights are owned by whom. Since 1989,
all transfers of freehold land (and certain leases) have been required to be
registered, and the Registry is not empowered to refuse registration on the basis
that the transfer is for suspicious purposes. Similarly, it does not lie within
the registry's duties or powers to inquire into the bona fides of the person
making a disposition of land, provided that the appropriate legal formalities
are complied with. Why is this such a big deal? Well, suppose I own a few acres
of desolate scrubland somewhere. I can sell a foot-square piece of it, and on the
Registry paperwork I can state that the land is called `East Dogpatch', and that
I sold it to `Lord Bloggs of Dogpatch'. The registry will not check whether there really
is a `Lord Bloggs', nor whether the person buying the land really lives on it.
After all, businesses buy and sell land with which they have no personal connection all
the time. `Lord' Bloggs will, in the normal course of
events, receive a land certificate from the Registry, recording that Lord Bloggs of
Dogpatch is the registered owner of the freehold land of East Dogpatch. In a nice
frame such a certificate will look very impressive, no doubt.
A number of title vendors have capitalized on the Land Registry's
inability to inquire into the validity of the details of the transferee of a piece
of land. One company, Elite Titles, has the following on its web site, underneath a
heading ``Is it legal?''
``Please remember, we deal with an official Government agency in these matters and clearly,
they (HM Land Registry) would not be party to anything illegal''
This is perfectly true, but unless one is well informed about how land registration
works, apt to mislead. All the land certificate really certifies is that the registrar
made an entry on the register for a particular piece of land in a particular name. It
says nothing about the rights of the registered person to use that name, or whether
the name of the land is of any historical significance. These matters are simply outside
the remit of the Registry. In March 2004 the Registry issued a press release distancing
itself from the purported legitimation of titles. The press release pointed out that
it is not the job of the registrar to inquire into the particulars of the land or its
new owner, beyond what is required to satisfy its statutory duty.
Conclusion
If Mr Bloggs wants to be known as Lord Bloggs, then there are a number
of ways he can legally go about it. He could simply change his name
from `Fred' to `Lord'. This appears to be legal; after all, as far as
I know, no-one ever complained about Duke Ellington not being a real
duke. Alternatively, he could purchase something that gives him the
right to use a dignified form of address. It appears that a valid
lordship of the manor does this. If he has sufficient
money, he could try to purchase a Scottish barony by tenure, which
appears on balance -- with a grant of arms -- to confer noble
status, at least in Scotland (but the balance of authority seems recently
to be swinging the other way on this point).
However, he will have to be very careful to avoid the scams that are
going on. Many title merchants are simply fraudsters, and are selling
things that either don't exist, or that really belong to somebody else.
Of those that are not actually criminals, many vendors inflate their
offerings by using complicated and bogus language, or making grandiose
claims that don't bear close inspection.
And finally, a challenge. If anyone out there has a genuine way to
sell a title of nobility, that would be recognised by English courts
in England, and can explain the legal basis in clear language: tell
me, and I'll include details here. I'm not expecting many takers.
[Update 07/2006 -- five years on, and still no takers.]
©1994-2006 Kevin Boone, all rights reserved