outfangthief
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From out- + fang + thief, formed—probably in Middle English [Term?]—after the model of infangthief, with the only Old English [Term?] attestation a spurious charter forged in the 1st half of the 12th century.[1]
Pronunciation
[edit]Noun
[edit]outfangthief
- (historical, law, properly, rare) A privilege of some feudal lords permitting them to execute summary judgment upon thieves (particularly their own tenants) captured outside their estates and to keep any chattels forfeited upon conviction.
- 1822, John Comyns, Anthony Hammond, A Digest of the Laws of England, Butterworth & Son, page 328:
- A grant of outfangthief imports the trial of those of his fee taken for felony in another precinct.
- 1990, David Maxwell Walker, A Legal History of Scotland, volume II, page 640:
- The addition of outfangandthef is much less usual [than infangthief]; it seems to have meant the right to try a man of the barony taken stealing outside the barony, if necessary repledging him to the barony court.
- (historical, law, generally, rare) A privilege of some feudal lords permitting them to execute summary judgment upon all thieves captured within their estates, regardless of their origin.
- 1845, John Henry Newman, Lives of the English Saints, ST Freemantle, p. 19:
- But feudalism also contained another principle, and that was, that within his own territory each lord was absolute; his suzerain could not interfere with his jurisdiction; infangthief and outfangthief implied a very perfect and intelligible power of hanging and imprisoning as he pleased.
- 1845, John Henry Newman, Lives of the English Saints, ST Freemantle, p. 19:
- (historical, law, rare, countable) A thief so captured and tried.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Oxford English Dictionary, 3rd ed. "outfangthief, n." Oxford University Press (Oxford), 2004.
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