The act officially brought to an end annual
feu duties, a vestige of
feudal land tenure, on 28 November 2004 (that is,
Martinmas, as the act required the "appointed day" to be one of the
Scottish term days).
Tommy Sheridan was one of a number of MSPs who drove this change through the Scottish Parliament. After that date, the former
vassal of an estate was the sole owner of the land, and the former
superior's rights were extinguished. For a further two years, the superior had the option of claiming compensation; this was fixed at a single payment of a size that, when invested at an annual rate of 2.5%, would yield interest equal to the former
feu duty. Because
inflation had eroded the value of duties, which had been fixed many years before, this payment was in most cases extremely small compared with the current value of the land. In consequence of this change in the legal basis of land-holding, the act also reformulated the legal basis on which conditions on the use of land can be specified in the title to ownership of that land. Such title conditions (known variously as real burdens and real conditions in the prior law) were combined into "real burdens". Prior to the act, a superior could choose to enforce title conditions, or grant a consent or waiver (usually for payment) allowing the land owner to disregard the condition even if otherwise neighbouring property owners might wish to enforce the condition. Existing conditions which were enforceable only by the superior were abolished, and only conditions enforceable by the owners of neighbouring property or by certain legal bodies on public policy grounds were retained. Transitional arrangements allowed superiors who were also neighbouring property owners to convert the old title conditions to benefit their land and hence themselves as owners of that land rather than themselves as feudal superior. Following this change in the legal basis for title conditions, the
Title Conditions (Scotland) Act 2003 was passed, reconstituting the mechanics of how new real burdens and servitudes could be created. These two acts, together with a third act (the
Tenements (Scotland) Act 2004), commenced on 28 November 2004. ==See also==