In his
Commentaries,
Blackstone noted that this common law writ would lie originally to prevent waste that took place between judgment in a real action and delivery of possession by the sheriff. Following the
Statute of Gloucester, a writ of estrepement
pendente placito would lie to prevent estrepement pending the outcome of a case. Either writ empowered the sheriff to prevent such waste, allowing him to imprison the waster, and even to raise a
posse comitatus to assist him. According to
Finlason, the basic writ of estrepement was an original writ that had to be sued out of
chancery, whereas the writ
pendente placito was a writ issued from the bench. Where the tenant is alleged to have disobeyed the writ, a
venire facias would issue and the tenant would be
attached. The standard pleading in response was to deny any waste contrary to the writ, and the issue would be tried by a jury, with the outcome resulting in a conviction for
contempt of court. When
John Puckering was
Lord Keeper, one of his actions was to restrict the issuance of writs of estrepement, as well as other writs such as
audita querela, unless he allowed it.
Holdsworth suggests this might have been part of an effort to keep the courts of common law from entering into matters of equity. While analogous to the
injunction in
equity, one major difference is that the grounds for the issuance of the writ was not the inequitable conduct of the defendant, but that the use of the land in the manner prohibited would work to commit a wrong. Also, unlike injunctions and the
writ of prohibition, the writ of estrepement merely stopped further damage, and could not command the repair or replacement of property already damaged. Two important similarities are that both are
in personam orders, and that disobedience may result in imprisonment. The injunction ultimately supplanted the writ, and the writ was ultimately abolished in England by the
Real Property Limitation Act 1833. == United States ==