The practice of
enfeoffing feoffees with fees, that is to say of granting legal
seizin in one's land-holdings ("holdings" as only the king himself "owned" land by his
allodial title) to a group of trusted friends or relatives or other allies whilst retaining use of the lands, began to be widespread by about 1375. The purpose of such an action was two-fold: • Akin to modern
tax avoidance, it was a legal loop-hole to avoid the suffering of the customary
feudal incidents, namely the payment of
feudal relief on an inheritance, the temporary loss of control of a
fiefdom through
wardship where the landholder was under the age of
majority of 21, and the forcible marriage of a young heiress. Nor could the land-holding
escheat, that is to say revert permanently to the overlord, as was customary where the land-holder died without a legal heir. When the fiefdom was held by a group of feoffees, the death of the beneficial holder was legally irrelevant to its continued holding by them. They simply allow the lands to continue to be used by the deceased's heir. The feoffees are "an undying corporation which never suffered a minority and could not be given in marriage" (McFarlane, p. 146). The feudal overlord, the king himself if the land was held
in-chief, was not entitled to exact feudal relief from the new beneficiary nor was he entitled to seize control of the lands and their revenues until such heir was of full-age, nor was he entitled to sell the heiress in marriage or to marry her to one of his own sons. This had a considerably deleterious effect on the royal finances, which state of affairs was rectified by the aggressive and imaginative new fiscal measures taken by
King Henry VII after his accession in 1485. • The land-holder was able effectively to bequeath his land to whomsoever he wished, and was no longer bound by the custom of
primogeniture where the eldest son alone had the right, on payment of the appropriate
feudal relief, to inherit, that is to demand to be re-enfeoffed with his father's land-holdings by his father's overlord. The effect was that on a man's death he appeared to hold little or no land, whilst in reality he had full use of it and of the revenues derived from it. If he was thought by the county
escheator to have been a
tenant-in-chief, a jury for an
Inquisition post mortem would be convened to enquire into what manors he held from the king and who was his legal heir. Frequently the verdict of such inquisitions even in the case of the decease of the most influential men of the county, was "he holds no lands of the king in this county". Such reports can be a major source of confusion to the modern historian or biographer who is unaware of the operation of feoffees to uses. As McFarlane summarised "it can make a great landowner (sic) appear to die a landless man". ==Procedure for creation==