Deodand. A personal chattel which was the immediate and accidental occasion of the death of a reasonable creature, was, by the law of England, forfeited to the crown, in order that it might be applied to pious uses, or given to God (Deo dandum), as the term implies. The law of deodand was abolished by statute in 1846.
Deodand
Chambers's Encyclopaedia, Volume 3: Catarrh to Dion, p. 765
Source scan(s): p. 0778