Page:Welsh Medieval Law.djvu/323

 kill a steer, and it be not known which of them killed it, [A chasm in V supplied from W] let the owner of the steer come into the trev, having a relic with him, and let them make an oath of ignorance, and then let them pay by a cess on each steer (y rif eidon), and if there be a polled steer, the share of two steers is to be paid for it ; and that law is called full payment after full swearing. If it be acknowledged that a particular steer killed the other, let the owner pay. Four legal pence is the worth of the tooth of a steer or the tooth of a working horse.

lamb, while it shall be sucking, is a legal penny in value. When it shall be weaned, it is two legal pence in value until August. From August onwards, it is four legal pence in value. A sheep's teat is two legal pence in value. The teithi of a sheep are of the same amount as its worth. A sheep's tooth and its eye are each of them a legal penny in value. Whoever shall sell sheep, let him be answerable for three diseases, scab and rot and red water ; until they receive their fill three times of the new grass in spring, if after the calends of winter he sells them.