A Brief Guide to Modern Manorial Law by Paul Stafford of Ten Old Square is now due for publication later in the spring.

The book draws on the author’s experience over nearly twenty years of advisory work and litigation in the field of modern manorial law and reflects the issues which most frequently arise. It examines key concepts surrounding manorial land, rights and title, together with registration issues, wastes and commons. There is extensive coverage of private and public Inclosure Acts, copyhold enfranchisement, manorial minerals, and the often-confusing treatment of manorial mineral reservations in the courts. There is a chapter on evidence which addresses the nature of available documentation and where to find it, and a concluding chapter on legislation brings together and provides commentary on key statutory provisions, in force or repealed, including those which may now be difficult to identify or obtain. There is a focus wherever possible on case law analysis.

Manorial law issues today can arise unexpectedly in high-value commercial contexts, including not just those relating to property but to minerals and renewable energy development. Intended primarily for busy practitioners yet of interest also to historical researchers and the general reader, A Brief Guide to Modern Manorial Law offers an introduction to a subject that once stood close to the centre of English property law and remains important but is now little known and often misunderstood.