GLEANINGS FROM THE ASSIZE ROLLS FOR DEK15YSHIRE. 95 

 ( ?) 



The Prior of Repton charged Richard le Curzon with 

 depriving him of fifteen acres of after-math, to which he 

 was entitled for all his sheep for the whole season. 



Richard said that the prior had no right at all to the 

 pasturage, for he and his ancestors had lield the meadow 

 to their own use time out of mind. The prior had put his 

 oxen therein, and Richard had ejected them. The prior 

 was fined two shillings, but was afterwards pardoned by 

 the justices. 



COLD EATON. 



Henry de Appleton on his death-bed, yielding to the 

 influence of his daughter Emma, enfeoffed her with a 

 messuage and four parts of a bovate of land in Cold Eaton, 

 thus depriving Roger, his son and heir, of his lawful heritage. 

 Verdict given against the said Emma, and Roger restored 

 to his right, because his father died possessed of the same 

 after the term contained in the brief. 



IBOL 



John de Ibol was charged with unlawfully diverting a 

 certain watercourse " in Ivelbrok " to the injury of the free 

 tenants of the Abbot of Buildwas in that place. The plaintiff 

 said that the water supplied his fishpond in Ivelbrook, but 

 since the diversion the pond was laid dry. 



John said that the place where the diversion was made 

 was not in the vill of Ivelbrook, but in Ibol,'' and that if 

 any diversion of the stream had been made in Ibol, it was 

 done by the abbot himself or his servants, and not by him. 

 The case fell through, and so the abbot made himself liable 

 for false clamour. 



(ETWALL ?) 



Hugh de Oakerthorpe and Alice, his wife, on the plea 

 of securing the dowry of the said Alice, appear to have 

 entered upon a bovate of land the property of Henry, 



Ibk, in Wirksworth. 



