Time immemorial

Time immemorial (French: temps immémorial) is a phrase meaning time extending beyond the reach of memory, record, or tradition, indefinitely ancient, "ancient beyond memory or record".[1][n 1]

In law, it means that a property or benefit has been enjoyed for so long that its owner does not have to prove how they came to own it. In English law and its derivatives, time immemorial means the same as time out of mind,[2] "a time before legal history and beyond legal memory".[3] In 1275, by the first Statute of Westminster, the time of memory was limited to the reign of King Richard I, beginning 6 July 1189, the date of the king's accession.[4] Since that date, proof of unbroken possession or use of any right made it unnecessary to establish the original grant under certain circumstances.

The Prescription Act 1832, which noted that the full expression was time immemorial, or time whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary,[5] replaced the common law burden of proving time immemorial for the enjoyment of particular land rights with statutory fixed time periods of up to 60 years.

See also

Notes

  1. The phrase is one of few in the English language other than place names in Britain where the pure adjective is after the noun, i.e. a postpositive adjective other than the grammatical constructions with indefinite pronouns and enough. Other examples: legal offices of notary public, solicitor general, attorney general and a court/process, the court-martial. Almost all flow from Norman French forebears.

References

  1. Oxford English Dictionary (1971 ed.), Vol. I, p. 63c
  2. Blackstone (1765) Commentary I viii 281
  3. The public domain Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
  4. Statute of Westminster, The First (3 Edw. I cap. 5)
  5. http://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukpga/Will4/2-3/71
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