Droit (
French for
right), a legal title, claim or due; a term used in
English law in the phrase "
droits of admiralty", certain customary rights or perquisites formerly belonging to the
Lord High Admiral, but now to the crown, for public purposes and paid into the
Exchequer. These
droits (see also
wreck) consisted of
flotsam,
jetsam,
ligan,
treasure,
deodand,
derelict, within the admiral's jurisdiction; all fines, forfeitures, ransoms, recognizanees and pecuniary punishments; all sturgeons, whales, porpoises, dolphins, grampuses and such large fishes; all ships and goods of the enemy coming into any creek, road or port, by durance or mistake; all ships seized at sea, salvage, etc., with the share of prizes such shares being afterwards called "tenths", in imitation of the French, who gave their admiral a
droit de dixieme. The droits of admiralty were definitely surrendered for the benefit of the public by Prince
George of Denmark, when Lord High Admiral of England in 1702.
American law does not recognize any such droits, and the disposition of captured property is regulated by various acts of
Congress.
The term droit is also used in various legal connexions (i.e., French law), such as the droit of angary, the droit d'achat (right of pre-emption) in the case of contraband, the feudal droit de bris (see wreck), the droit de regale or ancient royal privilege of claiming the revenues and patronage of a vacant bishopric, and the feudal droites of seignory generally. Droit d'auteur is a term for French copyright law.
In French,
droit can mean
law. It also means the direction right (as opposed to left) and rights, as in "My God and my rights", "Mon Dieu et mon droit".
See also
References