summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/old/ijust10.txt
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THE INSTITUTES OF JUSTINIAN

Translated into English by J. B. Moyle, D.C.L.
of Lincoln's Inn, Barrister-at-Law,
Fellow and Late Tutor of New College, Oxford

Fifth Edition (1913)



* PROOEMIVM *

In the name of Our Lord, Jesus Christ.

The Emperor Caesar Flavius Justinian, conqueror of the
Alamanni, the Goths, the Franks, the Germans, the Antes,
the Alani, the Vandals, the Africans, pious, prosperous,
renowned, victorious, and triumphant, ever august,

To the youth desirous of studying the law:

The imperial majesty should be armed with laws as well as
glorified with arms, that there may be good government in times
both of war and of peace, and the ruler of Rome may not only be
victorious over his enemies, but may show himself as scrupulously
regardful of justice as triumphant over his conquered foes.

With deepest application and forethought, and by the blessing
of God, we have attained both of these objects.  The barbarian
nations which we have subjugated know our valour, Africa and
other provinces without number being once more, after so long an
interval, reduced beneath the sway of Rome by victories granted
by Heaven, and themselves bearing witness to our dominion.  All
peoples too are ruled by laws which we have either enacted or
arranged.  Having removed every inconsistency from the sacred
constitutions, hitherto inharmonious and confused, we extended
our care to the immense volumes of the older jurisprudence; and,
like sailors crossing the mid-ocean, by the favour of Heaven have
now completed a work of which we once despaired.  When this,
with God's blessing, had been done, we called together that dis-
tinguished man Tribonian, master and ex-quaestor of our sacred
palace, and the illustrious Theophilus and Dorotheus, professors
of law, of whose ability, legal knowledge, and trusty observance
of our orders we have received many and genuine proofs, and
especially commissioned them to compose by our authority and
advice a book of Institutes, whereby you may be enabled to
learn your first lessons in law no longer from ancient fables, but
to grasp them by the brilliant light of imperial learning, and that
your ears and minds may receive nothing useless or incorrect,
but only what holds good in actual fact.  And thus whereas in
past time even the foremost of you were unable to read the
imperial constitutions until after four years, you, who have been
so honoured and fortunate as to receive both the beginning and
the end of your legal teaching from the mouth of the Emperor,
can now enter on the study of them without delay.  After the
completion therefore of the fifty books of the Digest or Pandects,
in which all the earlier law has been collected by the aid of the
said distinguished Tribonian and other illustrious and most able
men, we directed the division of these same Institutes into four
books, comprising the first elements of the whole science of law.
In these the law previously obtaining has been briefly stated, as
well as that which after becoming disused has been again brought
to light by our imperial aid.  Compiled from all the Institutes of
our ancient jurists, and in particular from the commentaries of our
Gaius on both the Institutes and the common cases, and from
many other legal works, these Institutes were submitted to us by
the three learned men aforesaid, and after reading and examining
them we have given them the fullest force of our constitutions.

Receive then these laws with your best powers and with the
eagerness of study, and show yourselves so learned as to be
encouraged to hope that when you have compassed the whole
field of law you may have ability to govern such portion of the
state as may be entrusted to you.

Given at Constantinople the 21st day of November,
in the third consulate of the Emperor Justinian,
Father of his Country,
ever august.


* BOOK I *

TITLES
I. Of Justice and Law
II. Of the law of nature, the law of nations,
and the civil law
III. Of the law of persons
IV. Of men free born
V. Of freedmen
VI. Of persons unable to manumit, and the
causes of their incapacity
VII. Of the repeal of the lex Fufia Caninia
VIII. Of persons independent or dependent
IX. Of paternal power
X. Of marriage
XI. Of adoptions
XII. Of the modes in which paternal power
is extinguished
XIII. Of guardianships
XIV. Who can be appointed guardians by will
XV. Of the statutory guardianship of agnates
XVI. Of loss of status
XVII. Of the statutory guardianship of patrons
XVIII. Of the statutory guardianship of parents
XIX. Of fiduciary guardianship
XX. Of Atilian guardians, and those appointed
under the lex Iulia et Titia
XXI. Of the authority of guardians
XXII. Of the modes in which guardianship
is terminated
XXIII. Of curators
XXIV. Of the security to be given by guardians
and curators
XXV. Of guardians' and curators' grounds
of exemption
XXVI. Of guardians or curators who are
suspected

TITLE I
OF JUSTICE AND LAW

Justice is the set and constant purpose which gives to every
man his due. 1 Jurisprudence is the knowledge of things divine
and human, the science of the just and the unjust.

2 Having laid down these general definitions, and our object
being the exposition of the law of the Roman people, we think
that the most advantageous plan will be to commence with an
easy and simple path, and then to proceed to details with a most
careful and scrupulous exactness of interpretation.  Otherwise, if
we begin by burdening the student's memory, as yet weak and
untrained, with a multitude and variety of matters, one of two
things will happen:  either we shall cause him wholly to desert the
study of law, or else we shall bring him at last, after great labour,
and often, too, distrustful of his own powers (the commonest
cause, among the young, of ill-success), to a point which he
might have reached earlier, without such labour and confident
in himself, had he been led along a smoother path.

3 The precepts of the law are these:  to live honestly, to injure
no one, and to give every man his due.  4 The study of law
consists of two branches, law public, and law private.  The
former relates to the welfare of the Roman State; the latter to
the advantage of the individual citizen. Of private law then we
may say that it is of threefold origin, being collected from the
precepts of nature, from those of the law of nations, or from
those of the civil law of Rome.

TITLE II
OF THE LAW OF NATURE, THE LAW OF NATIONS,
AND THE CIVIL LAW

1 The law of nature is that which she has taught all animals; a
law not peculiar to the human race, but shared by all living
creatures, whether denizens of the air, the dry land, or the sea.
Hence comes the union of male and female, which we call
marriage; hence the procreation and rearing of children, for
this is a law by the knowledge of which we see even the lower
animals are distinguished.  The civil law of Rome, and the law
of all nations, differ from each other thus.  The laws of every
people governed by statutes and customs are partly peculiar
to itself, partly common to all mankind.  Those rules which a
state enacts for its own members are peculiar to itself, and
are called civil law:  those rules prescribed by natural reason
for all men are observed by all peoples alike, and are called
the law of nations. Thus the laws of the Roman people are
partly peculiar to itself, partly common to all nations; a dis-
tinction of which we shall take notice as occasion offers.
2 Civil law takes its name from the state wherein it binds; for
instance, the civil law of Athens, it being quite correct to speak
thus of the enactments of Solon or Draco.  So too we call the
law of the Roman people the civil law of the Romans, or the
law of the Quirites; the law, that is to say, which they observe,
the Romans being called Quirites after Quirinus.  Whenever
we speak, however, of civil law, without any qualification, we
mean our own; exactly as, when `the poet' is spoken of, without
addition or qualification, the Greeks understand the great Homer,
and we understand Vergil.  But the law of nations is common
to the whole human race; for nations have settled certain things
for themselves as occasion and the necessities of human life re-
quired.  For instance, wars arose, and then followed captivity
and slavery, which are contrary to the law of nature; for by the
law of nature all men from the beginning were born free.  The
law of nations again is the source of almost all contracts; for
instance, sale, hire, partnership, deposit, loan for consumption,
and very many others.

3 Our law is partly written, partly unwritten, as among the
Greeks.  The written law consists of statutes, plebiscites,
senatusconsults, enactments of the Emperors, edicts of the
magistrates, and answers of those learned in the law.  4 A
statute is an enactment of the Roman people, which it used to
make on the motion of a senatorial magistrate, as for instance
a consul.  A plebiscite is an enactment of the commonalty,
such as was made on the motion of one of their own magistrates,
as a tribune.  The commonalty differs from the people as a
species from its genus; for `the people' includes the whole
aggregate of citizens, among them patricians and senators,
while the term `commonalty' embraces only such citizens as
are not patricians or senators.  After the passing, however,
of the statute called the lex Hortensia, plebiscites acquired
for the first time the force of statutes.  5 A senatusconsult
is a command and ordinance of the senate, for when the
Roman people had been so increased that it was difficult to
assemble it together for the purpose of enacting statutes, it
seemed right that the senate should be consulted instead of
the people.  6 Again, what the Emperor determines has the
force of a statute, the people having conferred on him all their
authority and power by the ‘lex regia,’ which was passed
concerning his office and authority.  Consequently, whatever
the Emperor settles by rescript, or decides in his judicial
capacity, or ordains by edicts, is clearly a statute:  and these
are what are called constitutions.  Some of these of course
are personal, and not to be followed as precedents, since this
is not the Emperor's will; for a favour bestowed on individual
merit, or a penalty inflicted for individual wrongdoing, or relief
given without a precedent, do not go beyond the particular
person:  though others are general, and bind all beyond a doubt.
7 The edicts of the praetors too have no small legal authority,
and these we are used to call the ‘ius honorarium,’ because
those who occupy posts of honour in the state, in other words
the magistrates, have given authority to this branch of law.  The
curule aediles also used to issue an edict relating to certain
matters, which forms part of the ius honorarium.  8 The
answers of those learned in the law are the opinions and views
of persons authorized to determine and expound the law; for it
was of old provided that certain persons should publicly inter-
pret the laws, who were called jurisconsults, and whom the
Emperor privileged to give formal answers.  If they were
unanimous the judge was forbidden by imperial constitution to
depart from their opinion, so great was its authority.  9 The
unwritten law is that which usage has approved:  for ancient
customs, when approved by consent of those who follow them,
are like statute.  10 And this division of the civil law into two
kinds seems not inappropriate, for it appears to have origin-
ated in the institutions of two states, namely Athens and
Lacedaemon; it having been usual in the latter to commit
to memory what was observed as law, while the Athenians
observed only what they had made permanent in written
statutes.

11 But the laws of nature, which are observed by all nations
alike, are established, as it were, by divine providence, and
remain ever fixed and immutable:  but the municipal laws of
each individual state are subject to frequent change, either by
the tacit consent of the people, or by the subsequent enactment
of another statute.

12 The whole of the law which we observe relates either to
persons, or to things, or to actions.  And first let us speak of
persons: for it is useless to know the law without knowing the
 persons for whose sake it was established.

TITLE III
OF THE LAW OF PERSONS

In the law of persons, then, the first division is into free men and
slaves. 1 Freedom, from which men are called free, is a man's
natural power of doing what he pleases, so far as he is not
prevented by force or law:  2 slavery is an institution of the law
of nations, against nature subjecting one man to the dominion
of another.  3 The name `slave' is derived from the practice of
generals to order the preservation and sale of captives, instead
of killing them; hence they are also called mancipia, because
they are taken from the enemy by the strong hand. 4 Slaves are
either born so, their mothers being slaves themselves; or they
become so, and this either by the law of nations, that is to say
by capture in war, or by the civil law, as when a free man, over
twenty years of age, collusively allows himself to be sold in order
that he may share the purchase money.  5 The condition of all
slaves is one and the same:  in the conditions of free men there
are many distinctions; to begin with, they are either free born,
or made free.

TITLE IV
OF MEN FREE BORN

A freeborn man is one free from his birth, being the offspring
of parents united in wedlock, whether both be free born or
both made free, or one made free and the other free born.  He
is also free born if his mother be free even though his father be
a slave, and so also is he whose paternity is uncertain, being
the offspring of promiscuous intercourse, but whose mother is
free.  It is enough if the mother be free at the moment of birth,
though a slave at that of conception:  and conversely if she be
free at the time of conception, and then becomes a slave before
the birth of the child, the latter is held to be free born, on the
ground that an unborn child ought not to be prejudiced by the
mother's misfortune.  Hence arose the question of whether the
child of a woman is born free, or a slave, who, while pregnant,
is manumitted, and then becomes a slave again before delivery.
Marcellus thinks he is born free, for it is enough if the mother of
an unborn infant is free at any moment between conception and
delivery:  and this view is right. 1 The status of a man born free
is not prejudiced by his being placed in the position of a slave
and then being manumitted:  for it has been decided that manu-
mission cannot stand in the way of rights acquired by birth.

TITLE V
OF FREEDMEN

Those are freedmen, or made free, who have been manumit-
ted from legal slavery.  Manumission is the giving of freedom;
for while a man is in slavery he is subject to the power once
known as ‘manus’; and from that power he is set free by manu-
mission.  All this originated in the law of nations; for by natural
law all men were born free -- slavery, and by consequence
 manumission, being unknown.  But afterwards slavery came
in by the law of nations; and was followed by the boon of
manumission; so that though we are all known by the common
name of `man,' three classes of men came into existence with
the law of nations, namely men free born, slaves, and thirdly
freedmen who had ceased to be slaves.  1 Manumission may
take place in various ways; either in the holy church, according
to the sacred constitutions, or by default in a fictitious vindica-
tion, or before friends, or by letter, or by testament or any
other expression of a man's last will:  and indeed there are many
other modes in which freedom may be acquired, introduced
by the constitutions of earlier emperors as well as by our own.
2 It is usual for slaves to be manumitted by their masters at any
time, even when the magistrate is merely passing by, as for
instance while the praetor or proconsul or governor of a
province is going to the baths or the theatre.

3 Of freedmen there were formerly three grades; for those
who were manumitted sometimes obtained a higher freedom
fully recognised by the laws, and became Roman citizens;
sometimes a lower form, becoming by the lex Iunia Norbana
Latins; and sometimes finally a liberty still more circumscribed,
being placed by the lex Aelia Sentia on the footing of enemies
surrendered at discretion.  This last and lowest class, however,
has long ceased to exist, and the title of Latin also had become
rare:  and so in our goodness, which desires to raise and im-
prove in every matter, we have amended this in two consti-
tutions, and reintroduced the earlier usage; for in the earliest
infancy of Rome there was but one simple type of liberty,
namely that possessed by the manumitter, the only distinction
possible being that the latter was free born, while the manu-
mitted slave became a freedman.  We have abolished the class
of ‘dediticii,’ or enemies surrendered at discretion, by our
constitution, published among those our decisions, by which,
at the suggestion of the eminent Tribonian, our quaestor, we
have set at rest the disputes of the older law.  By another con-
stitution, which shines brightly among the imperial enactments,
and suggested by the same quaestor, we have altered the
position of the ‘Latini Iuniani,’ and dispensed with all the rules
relating to their condition; and have endowed with the citizen-
ship of Rome all freedmen alike, without regard to the age of
the person manuumitted, and nature of the master's ownership,
or the mode of manumission, in accordance with the earlier
usage; with the addition of many new modes in which freedom
coupled with the Roman citizenship, the only kind of freedom
now known may be bestowed on slaves.

TITLE VI
OF PERSONS UNABLE TO MANUMIT, AND THE
CAUSES OF THEIR INCAPACITY

In some cases, however, manumission is not permitted; for an
owner who would defraud his creditors by an intended manu-
mission attempts in vain to manumit, the act being made of no
effect by the lex Aelia Sentia.  1 A master, however, who is
insolvent may institute one of his slaves heir in his will, confer-
ring freedom on him at the same time, so that he may become
free and his sole and necessary heir, provided no one else takes
as heir under the will, either because no one else was instituted
at all, or because the person instituted for some reason or other
does not take the inheritance.  And this was a judicious provision
of the lex Aelia Sentia, for it was most desirable that persons
in embarrassed circumstances, who could get no other heir,
should have a slave as necessary heir to satisfy their creditors'
claims, or that at least (if he did not do this) the creditors might
sell the estate in the slave's name, so as to save the memory of
the deceased from disrepute.  2 The law is the same if a slave
be instituted heir without liberty being expressly given him, this
being enacted by our constitution in all cases, and not merely
where the master is insolvent; so that in accordance with the
modern spirit of humanity, institution will be equivalent to a gift
of liberty; for it is unlikely, in spite of the omission of the grant
of freedom, that one should have wished the person whom one
has chosen as one's heir to remain a slave, so that one should
have no heir at all.  3 If a person is insolvent at the time of a
manumission, or becomes so by the manumission itself, this is
manumission in fraud of creditors.  It is, however, now settled
law, that the gift of liberty is not avoided unless the intention of
the manumitter was fraudulent, even though his property is in
fact insufficient to meet his creditors' claims; for men often hope
and believe that they are better off than they really are.  Con-
sequently, we understand a gift of liberty to be avoided only
when the creditors are defrauded both by the intention of the
manumitter, and in fact:  that is to say, by his property being
insufficient to meet their claims.

4 The same lex Aelia Sentia makes it unlawful for a master
under twenty years of age to manumit, except in the mode of
fictitious vindication, preceded by proof of some legitimate
motive before the council.  5 It is a legitimate motive of manu-
mission if the slave to be manumitted be, for instance, the
father or mother of the manumitter, or his son or daughter, or
his natural brother or sister, or governor or nurse or teacher,
or foster-son or foster-daughter or foster-brother, or a slave
whom he wishes to make his agent, or a female slave whom
he intends to marry; provided he marry her within six months,
and provided that the slave intended as an agent is not less
than seventeen years of age at the time of manumission.  6
When a motive for manumission, whether true or false, has
once been proved, the council cannot withdraw its sanction.

7 Thus the lex Aelia Sentia having prescribed a certain mode
of manumission for owners under twenty, it followed that
though a person fourteen years of age could make a will, and
therein institute an heir and leave legacies, yet he could not con-
fer liberty on a slave until he had completed his twentieth year.
But it seemed an intolerable hardship that a man who had the
power of disposing freely of all his property by will should not
be allowed to give his freedom to a single slave:  wherefore we
allow him to deal in his last will as he pleases with his slaves as
with the rest of his property, and even to give them their liberty
if he will.  But liberty being a boon beyond price, for which
very reason the power of manumission was denied by the older
law to owners under twenty years of age, we have as it were
selected a middle course, and permitted persons under twenty
years of age to manumit their slaves by will, but not until they
have completed their seventeenth and entered on their eighteenth
year.  For when ancient custom allowed persons of this age to
plead on behalf of others, why should not their judgement be
deemed sound enough to enable them to use discretion in giving
freedom to their own slaves?

TITLE VII
OF THE REPEAL OF THE LEX FUFIA CANINIA

Moreover, by the lex Fufia Caninia a limit was placed on the
number of slaves who could be manumitted by their master's
testament:  but this law we have thought fit to repeal, as an
obstacle to freedom and to some extent invidious, for it was
certainly inhuman to take away from a man on his deathbed the
right of liberating the whole of his slaves, which he could have
exercised at any moment during his lifetime, unless there were
some other obstacle to the act of manumission.

TITLE VIII
OF PERSONS INDEPENDENT OR DEPENDENT

Another division of the law relating to persons classifies them as
either independent or dependent.  Those again who are depend-
ent are in the power either of parents or of masters.  Let us first
then consider those who are dependent, for by learning who
these are we shall at the same time learn who are independent.
And first let us look at those who are in the power of masters.

1 Now slaves are in the power of masters, a power recognised
by the law of all nations, for all nations present the spectacle of
masters invested with power of life and death over slaves; and
to whatever is acquired through a slave his owner is entitled.
2 But in the present day no one under our sway is permitted to
indulge in excessive harshness towards his slaves, without some
reason recognised by law; for, by a constitution of the Emperor
Antoninus Pius, a man is made as liable to punishment for killing
his own slave as for killing the slave of another person; and
extreme severity on the part of masters is checked by another
constitution whereby the same Emperor, in answer to inquiries
from presidents of provinces concerning slaves who take refuge
at churches or statues of the Emperor, commanded that on
proof of intolerable cruelty a master should be compelled to
sell his slaves on fair terms, so as to receive their value.  And
both of these are reasonable enactments, for the public interest
requires that no one should make an evil use of his own property.
The terms of the rescript of Antoninus to Aelius Marcianus are
as follow: -- `The powers of masters over their slaves ought to
continue undiminished, nor ought any man to be deprived of
his lawful rights; but it is the master's own interest that relief
justly sought against cruelty, insufficient sustenance, or intoler-
able wrong, should not be denied.  I enjoin you then to look
into the complaints of the slaves of Iulius Sabinus, who have
fled for protection to the statue of the Emperor, and if you find
them treated with undue harshness or other ignominious wrong,
order them to be sold, so that they may not again fall under the
power of their master; and the latter will find that if he attempts
to evade this my enactment, I shall visit his offence with severe
punishment.'

TITLE IX
OF PATERNAL POWER

Our children whom we have begotten in lawful wedlock are in
our power.  1 Wedlock or matrimony is the union of male and
female, involving the habitual intercourse of daily life.  2 The
power which we have over our children is peculiar to Roman
citizens, and is found in no other nation.  3 The offspring then
of you and your wife is in your power, and so too is that of
your son and his wife, that is to say, your grandson and grand-
daughter, and so on.  But the offspring of your daughter is not
in your power, but in that of its own father.

TITLE X
OF MARRIAGE

Roman citizens are joined together in lawful wedlock when they
are united according to law, the man having reached years of
puberty, and the woman being of a marriageable age, whether
they be independent or dependent:  provided that, in the latter
case, they must have the consent of the parents in whose power
they respectively are, the necessity of which, and even of its
being given before the marriage takes place, is recognised no
less by natural reason than by law.  Hence the question has arisen,
can the daughter or son of a lunatic lawfully contract marriage?
and as the doubt still remained with regard to the son, we
decided that, like the daughter, the son of a lunatic might marry
even without the intervention of his father, according to the mode
prescribed by our constitution.

1 It is not every woman that can be taken to wife:  for mar-
riage with certain classes of persons is forbidden.  Thus, persons
related as ascendant and descendant are incapable of lawfully
intermarrying; for instance, father and daughter, grandfather
and granddaughter, mother and son, grandmother and grand-
son, and so on ad infinitum; and the union of such persons is
called criminal and incestuous.  And so absolute is the rule, that
persons related as ascendant and descendant merely by adoption
are so utterly prohibited from intermarriage that dissolution of
the adoption does not dissolve the prohibition:  so that an
adoptive daughter or granddaughter cannot be taken to wife
even after emancipation.

2 Collateral relations also are subject to similar prohibitions, but
not so stringent.  Brother and sister indeed are prohibited from
intermarriage, whether they are both of the same father and
mother, or have only one parent in common:  but though an
adoptive sister cannot, during the subsistence of the adoption,
become a man's wife, yet if the adoption is dissolved by her
emancipation, or if the man is emancipated, there is no imped-
iment to their intermarriage.  Consequently, if a man wished to
adopt his son-in-law, he ought first to emancipate his daughter:
and if he wished to adopt his daughter-in-law, he ought first
to emancipate his son.  3 A man may not marry his brother's
or his sister's daughter, or even his or her granddaughter,
though she is in the fourth degree; for when we may not marry
a person's daughter, we may not marry the granddaughter either.
But there seems to be no obstacle to a man's marrying the
daughter of a woman whom his father has adopted, for she is
no relation of his by either natural or civil law.  4 The children
of two brothers or sisters, or of a brother and sister, may lawfully
intermarry.  5 Again, a man may not marry his father's sister,
even though the tie be merely adoptive, or his mother's sister:
for they are considered to stand in the relation of ascendants.
For the same reason too a man may not marry his great-aunt
either paternal or maternal.  6 Certain marriages again are pro-
hibited on the ground of affinity, or the tie between a man or his
wife and the kin of the other respectively.  For instance, a man
may not marry his wife's daughter or his son's wife, for both are
to him in the position of daughters.  By wife's daughter or son's
wife we must be understood to mean persons who have been
thus related to us; for if a woman is still your daughter-in-law,
that is, still married to your son, you cannot marry her for
another reason, namely, because she cannot be the wife of two
persons at once.  So too if a woman is still your stepdaughter,
that is, if her mother is still married to you, you cannot marry her
for the same reason, namely, because a man cannot have two
wives at the same time.  7 Again, it is forbidden for a man to
marry his wife's mother or his father's wife, because to him
they are in the position of a mother, though in this case too our
statement applies only after the relationship has finally terminated;
otherwise, if a woman is still your stepmother, that is, is married
to your father, the common rule of law prevents her from
marrying you, because a woman cannot have two husbands at
the same time:  and if she is still your wife's mother, that is, if her
daughter is still married to you, you cannot marry her because
you cannot have two wives at the same time.  8 But a son of the
husband by another wife, and a daughter of the wife by another
husband, and vice versa, can lawfully intermarry, even though
they have a brother or sister born of the second marriage.  9 If
a woman who has been divorced from you has a daughter by
a second husband, she is not your stepdaughter, but Iulian is of
opinion that you ought not to marry her, on the ground that
though your son's betrothed is not your daughter-in-law, nor
your father's betrothed you stepmother, yet it is more decent
and more in accordance with what is right to abstain from
intermarrying with them.  10 It is certain that the rules relating to
the prohibited degrees of marriage apply to slaves:  supposing,
for instance, that a father and daughter, or a brother and sister,
acquired freedom by manumission.  11 There are also other
persons who for various reasons are forbidden to intermarry,
a list of whom we have permitted to be inserted in the books
of the Digest or Pandects collected from the older law.

12 Alliances which infringe the rules here stated do not confer
the status of husband and wife, nor is there in such case either
wedlock or marriage or dowry.  Consequently children born of
such a connexion are not in their father's power, but as regards
the latter are in the position of children born of promiscuous
intercourse, who, their paternity being uncertain, are deemed to
have no father at all, and who are called bastards, either from
the Greek word denoting illicit intercourse, or because they are
fatherless.  Consequently, on the dissolution of such a connex-
ion there can be no claim for return of dowry.  Persons who
contract prohibited marriages are subjected to penalties set
forth in our sacred constitutions.

13 Sometimes it happens that children who are not born in their
father's power are subsequently brought under it.  Such for
instance is the case of a natural son made subject to his father's
power by being inscribed a member of the curia; and so too is
that of a child of a free woman with whom his father cohabited,
though he could have lawfully married her, who is subjected to
the power of his father by the subsequent execution of a dowry
deed according to the terms of our constitution:  and the same
boon is in effect bestowed by that enactment on children sub-
sequently born of the same marriage.

TITLE XI
OF ADOPTIONS

Not only natural children are subject, as we said, to paternal
power, but also adoptive children. 1 Adoption is of two forms,
being effected either by rescript of the Emperor, or by the
judicial authority of a magistrate.  The first is the mode in which
we adopt independent persons, and this form of adoption is
called adrogation:  the second is the mode in which we adopt a
person subject to the power of an ascendant, whether a
descendant in the first degree, as a son or daughter, or in a
remoter degree, as a grandson, granddaughter, great-grandson,
or great-grand-daughter.  2 But by the law, as now settled by
our constitution, when a child in power is given in adoption
to a stranger by his natural father, the power of the latter is not
extinguished; no right passes to the adoptive father, nor is the
person adopted in his power, though we have given a right of
succession in case of the adoptive father dying intestate.  But
if the person to whom the child is given in adoption by its
natural father is not a stranger, but the child's own maternal
grandfather, or, supposing the father to have been emancipated,
its paternal grandfather, or its great-grandfather paternal or
maternal, in this case, because the rights given by nature and
those given by adoption are vested in one and the same
person, the old power of the adoptive father is left unimpaired,
the strength of the natural bond of blood being augmented by
the civil one of adoption, so that the child is in the family and
power of an adoptive father, between whom and himself there
existed antecedently the relationship described.  3 When a child
under the age of puberty is adopted by rescript of the Emperor,
the adrogation is only permitted after cause shown, the goodness
of the motive and the expediency of the step for the pupil being
inquired into.  The adrogation is also made under certain con-
ditions; that is to say, the adrogator has to give security to a
public agent or attorney of the people, that if the pupil should
die within the age of puberty, he will return his property to
the persons who would have succeeded him had no adoption
taken place.  The adoptive father again may not emancipate
them unless upon inquiry they are found deserving of emanci-
pation, or without restoring them their property.  Finally, if he
disinherits him at death, or emancipates him in his lifetime
without just cause, he is obliged to leave him a fourth of his own
property, besides that which he brought him when adopted, or
by subsequent acquisition.  4 It is settled that a man cannot
adopt another person older than himself, for adoption imitates
nature, and it would be unnatural for a son to be older than his
father.  Consequently a man who desires either to adopt or to
adrogate a son ought to be older than the latter by the full term
of puberty, or eighteen years.  5 A man may adopt a person
as grandson or granddaughter, or as great-grandson or great-
granddaughter, and so on, without having a son at all himself;
6 and similarly he may adopt another man's son as grandson,
or another man's grandson as son.  7 If he wishes to adopt
some one as grandson, whether as the son of an adoptive son
of his own, or of a natural son who is in his power, the consent
of this son ought to be obtained, lest a family heir be thrust
upon him against his will:  but on the other hand, if a grandfather
wishes to give a grandson by a son in adoption to some one else,
the son's consent is not requisite. 8 An adoptive child is in most
respects in the same position, as regards the father, as a natural
child born in lawful wedlock.  Consequently a man can give in
adoption to another a person whom he has adopted by imperial
rescript, or before the praetor or governor of a province, pro-
vided that in this latter case he was not a stranger (i.e. was a
natural descendant) before he adopted him himself.  9 Both
forms of adoption agree in this point, that persons incapable of
procreation by natural impotence are permitted to adopt, where-
as castrated persons are not allowed to do so.  10 Again,
women cannot adopt, for even their natural children are not
subject to their power; but by the imperial clemency they are
enabled to adopt, to comfort them for the loss of children who
have been taken from them.  11 It is peculiar to adoption by
imperial rescript, that children in the power of the person
adrogated, as well as their father, fall under the power of the
adrogator, assuming the position of grandchildren.  Thus
Augustus did not adopt Tiberius until Tiberius had adopted
Germanicus, in order that the latter might become his own
grandson directly the second adoption was made.  12 The
old writers record a judicious opinion contained in the writings
of Cato, that the adoption of a slave by his master is equiva-
lent to manumission.  In accordance with this we have in our
wisdom ruled by a constitution that a slave to whom his master
gives the title of son by the solemn form of a record is thereby
made free, although this is not sufficient to confer on him the
rights of a son.

TITLE XII
OF THE MODES IN WHICH PATERNAL POWER
IS EXTINGUISHED

Let us now examine the modes in which persons dependent
on a superior become independent.  How slaves are freed
from the power of their masters can be gathered from what
has already been said respecting their manumission.  Children
under paternal power become independent at the parent's death,
subject, however, to the following distinction.  The death of a
father always releases his sons and daughters from dependence;
the death of a grandfather releases his grandchildren from
dependence only provided that it does not subject them to
the power of their father.  Thus, if at the death of the grand-
father the father is alive and in his power, the grandchildren,
after the grandfather's death, are in the power of the father;
but if at the time of the grandfather's death the father is dead,
or not subject to the grandfather, the grandchildren will not
fall under his power, but become independent.  1 As
deportation to an island for some penal offence entails loss of
citizenship, such removal of a man from the list of Roman
citizens has, like his death, the effect of liberating his children
from his power; and conversely, the deportation of a person
subject to paternal power terminates the power of the parent.
In either case, however, if the condemned person is pardoned
by the grace of the Emperor, he recovers all his former rights.
2 Relegation to an island does not extinguish paternal power,
whether it is the parent or the child who is relegated.  3 Again,
a father's power is extinguished by his becoming a `slave of
punishment,' for instance, by being condemned to the mines or
exposed to wild beasts.  4 A person in paternal power does
not become independent by entering the army or becoming a
senator, for military service or consular dignity does not set a
son free from the power of his father.  But by our constitution
the supreme dignity of the patriciate frees a son from power
immediately on the receipt of the imperial patent; for who would
allow anything so unreasonable as that, while a father is able by
emancipation to release his son from the tie of his power, the
imperial majesty should be unable to release from dependence
on another the man whom it has selected as a father of the State?
5 Again, capture of the father by the enemy makes him a slave
of the latter; but the status of his children is suspended by his
right of subsequent restoration by postliminium; for on escape
from captivity a man recovers all his former rights, and among
them the right of paternal power over his children, the law of
postliminium resting on a fiction that the captive has never
been absent from the state.  But if he dies in captivity the son is
reckoned to have been independent from the moment of his
father's capture.  So too, if a son or a grandson is captured by
the enemy, the power of his ascendant is provisionally suspended,
though he may again be subjected to it by postliminium.  This
term is derived from ‘limen’ and ‘post,’ which explains why we
say that the person who has been captured by the enemy and
has come back into our territories has returned by postliminium:
for just as the threshold forms the boundary of a house, so the
ancients represented the boundaries of the empire as a threshold;
and this is also the origin of the term ‘limes, signifying a kind of
end and limit.  Thus postliminium means that the captive returns
by the same threshold at which he was lost. A captive who is
recovered after a victory over the enemy is deemed to have
returned by postliminium.  6 Emancipation also liberates children
from the power of the parent.  Formerly it was effected either
by the observance of an old form prescribed by statute by
which the son was fictitiously sold and then manumitted, or
by imperial rescript.  Our forethought, however, has amended
this by a constitution, which has abolished the old fictitious
form, and enabled parents to go directly to a competent judge
or magistrate, and in his presence release their sons or daughters,
grandsons or granddaughters, and so on, from their power.
After this, the father has by the praetor's edict the same rights
over the property of the emancipated child as a patron has
over the property of his freedman:  and if at the time of emanci-
pation the child, whether son or daughter, or in some remoter
degree of relationship, is beneath the age of puberty, the father
becomes by the emancipation his or her guardian.  7 It is to be
noted, however, that a grandfather who has both a son, and by
that son a grandson or granddaughter, in his power, may either
release the son from his power and retain the grandson or grand-
daughter, or emancipate both together; and a great-grandfather
has the same latitude of choice.  8 Again, if a father gives a son
whom he has in his power in adoption to the son's natural
grandfather or great-grandfather, in accordance with our con-
stitution on this subject, that is to say, by declaring his intention,
before a judge with jurisdiction in the matter, in the official
records, and in the presence and with the consent of the person
adopted, the natural father's power is thereby extinguished, and
passes to the adoptive father, adoption by whom under these
circumstances retains, as we said, all its old legal consequences.
9 It is to be noted, that if your daughter-in-law conceives by
your son, and you emancipate or give the latter in adoption
during her pregnancy, the child when born will be in your power;
but if the child is conceived after its father's emancipation or
adoption, it is in the power of its natural father or its adoptive
grandfather, as the case may be.  10 Children, whether natural
or adoptive, are only very rarely able to compel their parent to
release them from his power.

TITLE XIII
OF GUARDIANSHIPS

Let us now pass on to another classification of persons.  Persons
not subject to power may still be subject either to guardians or
to curators, or may be exempt from both forms of control.  We
will first examine what persons are subject to guardians and
curators, and thus we shall know who are exempt from both
kinds of control.  And first of persons subject to guardianship or
tutelage.  1 Guardianship, as defined by Servius, is authority
and control over a free person, given and allowed by the civil
law, in order to protect one too young to defend himself:  2 and
guardians are those persons who possess this authority and
control, their name being derived from their very functions; for
they are called guardians as being protectors and defenders,
just as those entrusted with the care of sacred buildings are
called ‘aeditui.’  3 The law allows a parent to appoint guardians
in his will for those children in his power who have not attained
the age of puberty, without distinction between sons and
daughters; but a grandson or granddaughter can receive a tes-
tamentary guardian only provided that the death of the testator
does not bring them under the power of their own father.
Thus, if your son is in your power at the time of your death,
your grandchildren by him cannot have a guardian given them
by your will, although they are in your power, because your
death leaves them in the power of their father.  4 And as in
many other matters afterborn children are treated on the
footing of children born before the execution of the will, so it
is ruled that afterborn children, as well as children born before
the will was made, may have guardians therein appointed to
them, provided that if born in the testator's lifetime they would
be family heirs and in his power.  5 If a testamentary guardian
be given by a father to his emancipated son, he must be ap-
proved by the governor in all cases, though inquiry into the
case is unnecessary.

TITLE XIV
WHO CAN BE APPOINTED GUARDIANS BY WILL

1 Persons who are in the power of others may be appointed
testamentary guardians no less than those who are independent;
and a man can also validly appoint one of his own slaves as
testamentary guardian, giving him at the same time his liberty;
and even in the absence of express manumission his freedom
is to be presumed to have been tacitly conferred on him, where-
by his appointment becomes a valid act, although of course it
is otherwise if the testator appointed him guardian in the er-
roneous belief that he was free.  The appointment of another
man's slave as guardian, without any addition or qualification,
is void, though valid if the words `when he shall be free' are
added:  but this latter form is ineffectual if the slave is the
testator's own, the appointment being void from the beginning.
2 If a lunatic or minor is appointed testamentary guardian, he
cannot act until, if a lunatic, he recovers his faculties, and, if a
minor, he attains the age of twenty-five years.

3 There is no doubt that a guardian may be appointed for and
from a certain time, or conditionally, or before the institution of
the heir.  4 A guardian cannot, however, be appointed for a
particular matter or business, because his duties relate to the
person, and not merely to a particular business or matter.

5 If a man appoints a guardian to his sons or daughters, he is
held to have intended them also for such as may be afterborn,
for the latter are included in the terms son and daughter.  In the
case of grandsons, a question may arise whether they are im-
plicitly included in an appointment of guardians to sons; to which
we reply, that they are included in an appointment of guardians
if the term used is `children,' but not if it is `sons':  for the words
son and grandson have quite different meanings.  Of course an
appointment to afterborn children includes all children, and not
sons only.

TITLE XV
OF THE STATUTORY GUARDIANSHIP OF AGNATES

In default of a testamentary guardian, the statute of the Twelve
Tables assigns the guardianship to the nearest agnates, who
are hence called statutory guardians.  1 Agnates are persons
related to one another by males, that is, through their male as-
cendants; for instance, a brother by the same father, a brother's
son, or such son's son, a father's brother, his son or son's son.
But persons related only by blood through females are not
agnates, but merely cognates.  Thus the son of your father's
sister is no agnate of yours, but merely your cognate, and
vice versa; for children are member's of their father's family,
and not of your mother's.  2 It was said that the statute confers
the guardianship, in case of intestacy, on the nearest agnates;
but by intestacy here must be understood not only complete
intestacy of a person having power to appoint a testamentary
guardian, but also the mere omission to make such appointment,
and also the case of a person appointed testamentary guardian
dying in the testator's lifetime.  3 Loss of status of any kind
ordinarily extinguishes rights by agnation, for agnation is a title
of civil law.  Not every kind of loss of status, however, affects
rights by cognation; because civil changes cannot affect rights
annexed to a natural title to the same extent that they can affect
those annexed to a civil one.

TITLE XVI
OF LOSS OF STATUS

Loss of status, or change in one's previous civil rights, is of
three orders, greatest, minor or intermediate, and least.  1 The
greatest loss of status is the simultaneous loss of citizenship
and freedom, exemplified in those persons who by a terrible
sentence are made `slaves of punishment,' in freedmen con-
demned for ingratitude to their patrons, and in those who allow
themselves to be sold in order to share the purchase money
when paid.  2 Minor or intermediate loss of status is loss of
citizenship unaccompanied by loss of liberty, and is incident to
interdiction of fire and water and to deportation to an island.
3 The least loss of status occurs when citizenship and freedom
are retained, but a man's domestic position is altered, and is
exemplified by adrogation and emancipation.  4 A slave does
not suffer loss of status by being manumitted, for while a slave
he had no civil rights:  5 and where the change is one of dignity,
rather than of civil rights, there is no loss of status; thus it is no
loss of status to be removed from the senate.

6 When it was said that rights by cognation are not affected
by loss of status, only the least loss of status was meant; by the
greatest loss of status they are destroyed -- for instance, by a
cognate's becoming a slave -- and are not recovered even by
subsequent manumission.  Again, deportation to an island,
which entails minor or intermediate loss of status, destroys
rights by cognation.  7 When agnates are entitled to be guard-
ians, it is not all who are so entitled, but only those of the
nearest degree, though if all are in the same degree, all are
entitled.

TITLE XVII
OF THE STATUTORY GUARDIANSHIP OF PATRONS

The same statute of the Twelve Tables assigns the guardianship
of freedmen and freedwomen to the patron and his children,
and this guardianship, like that of agnates, is called statutory
guardianship; not that it is anywhere expressly enacted in that
statute, but because its interpretation by the jurists has procured
for it as much reception as it could have obtained from express
enactment:  the fact that the inheritance of a freedman or
freedwoman, when they die intestate, was given by the statute
to the patron and his children, being deemed a proof that they
were intended to have the guardianship also, partly because in
dealing with agnates the statute coupled guardianship with
succession, and partly on the principle that where the advantage
of the succession is, there, as a rule, ought too to be the burden
of the guardianship.  We say `as a rule,' because if a slave
below the age of puberty is manumitted by a woman, though
she is entitled, as patroness, to the succession, another person
is guardian.

TITLE XVIII
OF THE STATUTORY GUARDIANSHIP OF PARENTS

The analogy of the patron guardian led to another kind of so-
called statutory guardianship, namely that of a parent over a son
or daughter, or a grandson or granddaughter by a son, or any
other descendant through males, whom he emancipates below
the age of puberty:  in which case he will be statutory guardian.

TITLE XIX
OF FIDUCIARY GUARDIANSHIP

There is another kind of guardianship known as fiduciary
guardianship, which arises in the following manner.  If a parent
emancipates a son or daughter, a grandson or granddaughter, or
other descendant while under the age of puberty, he becomes
their statutory guardian:  but if at his death he leaves male
children, they become fiduciary guardians of their own sons, or
brothers and sisters, or other relatives who had been thus
emancipated.  But on the decease of a patron who is statutory
guardian his children become statutory guardians also; for a
son of a deceased person, supposing him not to have been
emancipated during his father's lifetime, becomes independent
at the latter's death, and does not fall under the power of his
brothers, nor, consequently, under their guardianship; whereas
a freedman, had he remained a slave, would at his master's
death have become the slave of the latter's children.  The
guardianship, however, is not cast on these persons unless
they are of full age, which indeed has been made a general
rule in guardianship and curatorship of every kind by our
constitution.

TITLE XX
OF ATILIAN GUARDIANS, AND THOSE APPOINTED
UNDER THE LEX IULIA ET TITIA

Failing every other kind of guardian, at Rome one used to
be appointed under the lex Atilia by the praetor of the city
and the majority of the tribunes of the people; in the provinces
one was appointed under the lex Iulia et Titia by the president
of the province. 1 Again, on the appointment of a testamentary
guardian subject to a condition, or on an appointment limited
to take effect after a certain time, a substitute could be ap-
pointed under these statutes during the pendency of the condition,
or until the expiration of the term:  and even if no condition
was attached to the appointment of a testamentary guardian,
a temporary guardian could be obtained under these statutes
until the succession had vested.  In all these cases the office
of the guardian so appointed determined as soon as the con-
dition was fulfilled, or the term expired, or the succession
vested in the heir.  2 On the capture of a guardian by the ene-
my, the same statutes regulated the appointment of a substitute,
who continued in office until the return of the captive; for if he
returned, he recovered the guardianship by the law of post-
liminium.  3 But guardians have now ceased to be appointed
under these statutes, the place of the magistrates directed by
them to appoint being taken, first, by the consuls, who began
to appoint guardians to pupils of either sex after inquiry into
the case, and then by the praetors, who were substituted for
the consuls by the imperial constitutions; for these statutes con-
tained no provisions as to security to be taken from guardians
for the safety of their pupils' property, or compelling them to
accept the office in case of disinclination.  4 Under the present
law, guardians are appointed at Rome by the prefect of the city,
and by the praetor when the case falls within his jurisdiction; in
the provinces they are appointed, after inquiry, by the governor,
or by inferior magistrates at the latter's behest if the pupil's
property is of no great value.  5 By our constitution, however,
we have done away with all difficulties of this kind relating to
the appointing person, and dispensed with the necessity of
waiting for an order from the governor, by enacting that if the
property of the pupil or adult does not exceed five hundred
solidi, guardians or curators shall be appointed by the officers
known as defenders of the city, along with the holy bishop of
the place, or in the presence of other public persons, or by the
magistrates, or by the judge of the city of Alexandria; security
being given in the amounts required by the constitution, and
those who take it being responsible if it be insufficient.

6 The wardship of children below the age of puberty is in ac-
cordance with the law of nature, which prescribes that persons
of immature years shall be under another's guidance and control.
7 As guardians have the management of their pupils' business,
they are liable to be sued on account of their administration as
soon as the pupil attains the age of puberty.

TITLE XXI
OF THE AUTHORITY OF GUARDIANS

In some cases a pupil cannot lawfully act without the authority
of his guardian, in others he can.  Such authority, for instance,
is not necessary when a pupil stipulates for the delivery of pro-
perty, though it is otherwise where he is the promisor; for it is
an established rule that the guardian's authority is not necessary
for any act by which the pupil simply improves his own position,
though it cannot be dispensed with where he proposes to make
it worse.  Consequently, unless the guardian authorizes all trans-
actions generating bilateral obligations, such as sale, hire, agency,
and deposit, the pupil is not bound, though he can compel the
other contracting party to discharge his own obligation.  1
Pupils, however, require their guardian's authority before they
can enter on an inheritance, demand the possession of goods,
or accept an inheritance by way of trust, even though such act
be advantageous to them, and involves no chance of loss.
2 If the guardian thinks the transaction will be beneficial to his
pupil, his authority should be given presently and on the spot.
Subsequent ratification, or authority given by letter, has no
effect.  3 In case of a suit between guardian and pupil, as the
former cannot lawfully authorize an act in which he is personally
concerned or interested, a curator is now appointed, in lieu of
the old praetorian guardian, with whose co-operation the suit is
carried on, his office determining as soon as it is decided.

TITLE XXII
OF THE MODES IN WHICH GUARDIANSHIP IS
TERMINATED

Pupils of either sex are freed from guardianship when they reach
the age of puberty, which the ancients were inclined to determine,
in the case of males, not only by age, but also by reference to
the physical development of individuals.  Our majesty, however,
has deemed it not unworthy of the purity of our times to apply
in the case of males also the moral considerations which, even
among the ancients, forbade in the case of females as indecent
the inspection of the person.  Consequently by the promulgation
of our sacred constitution we have enacted that puberty in males
shall be considered to commence immediately on the completion
of the fourteenth year, leaving unaltered the rule judiciously laid
down by the ancients as to females, according to which they are
held fit for marriage after completing their twelfth year.  1 Again,
tutelage is terminated by adrogation or deportation of the pupil
before he attains the age of puberty, or by his being reduced to
slavery or taken captive by the enemy.  2 So too if a testa-
mentary guardian be appointed to hold office until the occur-
rence of a condition, on this occurrence his office determines.
3 Similarly tutelage is terminated by the death either of pupil or
of guardian.  4 If a guardian suffers such a loss of status as
entails loss of either liberty or citizenship, his office thereby
completely determines.  It is, however, only the statutory kind
of guardianship which is destroyed by a guardian's undergoing
the least loss of status, for instance, by his giving himself in
adoption.  Tutelage is in every case put an end to by the pupil's
suffering loss of status, even of the lowest order.  5 Testa-
mentary guardians appointed to serve until a certain time lay
down their office when that time arrives.  6 Finally, persons
cease to be guardians who are removed from their office on
suspicion, or who are enabled to lay down the burden of the
tutelage by a reasonable ground of excuse, according to the
rules presently stated.

TITLE XXIII
OF CURATORS

Males, even after puberty, and females after reaching marriage-
able years, receive curators until completing their twenty-fifth
year, because, though past the age fixed by law as the time of
puberty, they are not yet old enough to administer their own
affairs.  1 Curators are appointed by the same magistrates who
appoint guardians.  They cannot legally be appointed by will,
though such appointment, if made, is usually confirmed by an
order of the praetor or governor of the province.  2 A person
who has reached the age of puberty cannot be compelled to
have a curator, except for the purpose of conducting a suit:
for curators, unlike guardians, can be appointed for a particular
matter.  3 Lunatics and prodigals, even though more than
twenty-five years of age, are by the statute of the Twelve
Tables placed under their agnates as curators; but now, as a
rule, curators are appointed for them at Rome by the prefect
of the city or praetor, and in the provinces by the governor,
after inquiry into the case.  4 Curators should also be given to
persons of weak mind, to the deaf, the dumb, and those suf-
fering from chronic disease, because they are not competent
to manage their own affairs.  5 Sometimes even pupils have
curators, as, for instance, when a statutory guardian is unfit
for his office:  for if a pupil already has one guardian, he can-
not have another given him.  Again, if a testamentary guardian,
or one appointed by the praetor or governor, is not a good
man of business, though perfectly honest in his management
of the pupil's affairs, it is usual for a curator to be appointed
to act with him.  Again, curators are usually appointed in the
room of guardians temporarily excused from the duties of their
office.

6 If a guardian is prevented from managing his pupil's affairs
by ill-health or other unavoidable cause, and the pupil is absent
or an infant, the praetor or governor of the province will, at the
guardian's risk, appoint by decree a person selected by the
latter to act as agent of the pupil.

TITLE XXIV
OF THE SECURITY TO BE GIVEN BY GUARDIANS
AND CURATORS

To prevent the property of pupils and of persons under curators
from being wasted or diminished by their curators or guardians
the praetor provides for security being given by the latter against
maladministration.  This rule, however, is not without exceptions,
for testamentary guardians are not obliged to give security, the
testator having had full opportunities of personally testing their
fidelity and carefulness, and guardians and curators appointed
upon inquiry are similarly exempted, because they have been
expressly chosen as the best men for the place.  1 If two or
more are appointed by testament, or by a magistrate upon in-
quiry, any one of them may offer security for indemnifying the
pupil or person to whom he is curator against loss, and be pre-
ferred to his colleague, in order that he may either obtain the
sole administration, or else induce his colleague to offer larger
security than himself, and so become sole administrator by
preference.  Thus he cannot directly call upon his colleague
to give security; he ought to offer it himself, and so give his
colleague the option of receiving security on the one hand, or
of giving it on the other.  If none of them offer security, and the
testator left directions as to which was to administer the pro-
perty, this person must undertake it:  in default of this, the
office is cast by the praetor's edict on the person whom the
majority of guardians or curators shall choose.  If they cannot
agree, the praetor must interpose.  The same rule, authorizing
a majority to elect one to administer the property, is to be
applied where several are appointed after inquiry by a magis-
trate.  2 It is to be noted that, besides the liability of guardians
and curators to their pupils, or the persons for whom they act,
for the management of their property, there is a subsidiary
action against the magistrate accepting the security, which may
be resorted to where all other remedies prove inadequate, and
which lies against those magistrates who have either altogether
omitted to take security from guardians or curators, or taken it
to an insufficient amount.  According to the doctrines stated by
the jurists, as well as by imperial constitutions, this action may
be brought against the magistrate's heirs as well as against him
personally; 3 and these same constitutions ordain that guardians
or curators who make default in giving security may be compel-
led to do so by legal distraint of their goods.  4 This action,
however, will not lie against the prefect of the city, the praetor,
or the governor of a province, or any other magistrate author-
ized to appoint guardians, but only against those to whose usual
duties the taking of security belongs.

TITLE XXV
OF GUARDIANS' AND CURATORS' GROUNDS OF
EXEMPTION

There are various grounds on which persons are exempted
from serving the office of guardian or curator, of which the
most common is their having a certain number of children,
whether in power or emancipated.  If, that is to say, a man
has, in Rome, three children living, in Italy four, or in the pro-
vinces five, he may claim exemption from these, as from other
public offices; for it is settled that the office of a guardian or
curator is a public one.  Adopted children cannot be reckoned
for this purpose, though natural children given in adoption to
others may:  similarly grandchildren by a son may be reckoned,
so as to represent their father, while those by a daughter may
not.  It is, however, only living children who avail to excuse
their fathers from serving as guardian or curator; such as have
died are of no account, though the question has arisen whether
this rule does not admit of an exception where they have died
in war; and it is agreed that this is so, but only where they
have fallen on the field of battle:  for these, because they have
died for their country, are deemed to live eternally in fame.
1 The Emperor Marcus, too, replied by rescript, as is recorded
in his Semestria, that employment in the service of the Treasury
is a valid excuse from serving as guardian or curator so long
as that employment lasts.  2 Again, those are excused from
these offices who are absent in the service of the state; and a
person already guardian or curator who has to absent himself
on public business is excused from acting in either of these
capacities during such absence, a curator being appointed to
act temporarily in his stead.  On his return, he has to resume
the burden of tutelage, without being entitled to claim a year's
exemption, as has been settled since the opinion of Papinian
was delivered in the fifth book of his replies; for the year's
exemption or vacation belongs only to such as are called to a
new tutelage.  3 By a rescript of the Emperor Marcus persons
holding any magistracy may plead this as a ground of exemption,
though it will not enable them to resign an office of this kind
already entered upon.  4 No guardian or curator can excuse
himself on the ground of an action pending between himself
and his ward, unless it relates to the latter's whole estate or
to an inheritance.  5 Again, a man who is already guardian
or curator to three persons without having sought after the
office is entitled to exemption from further burdens of the kind
so long as he is actually engaged with these, provided that the
joint guardianship of several pupils, or administration of an un-
divided estate, as where the wards are brothers, is reckoned
as one only.  6 If a man can prove that through poverty he is
unequal to the burden of the office, this, according to rescripts
of the imperial brothers and of the Emperor Marcus, is a valid
ground of excuse.  7 Ill-health again is a sufficient excuse if it
be such as to prevent a man from attending to even his own
affairs:  8 and the Emperor Pius decided by a rescript that
persons unable to read ought to be excused, though even
these are not incapable of transacting business.  9 A man too
is at once excused if he can show that a father has appointed
him testamentary guardian out of enmity, while conversely no
one can in any case claim exemption who promised the ward's
father that he would act as guardian to them:  10 and it was
settled by a rescript of M. Aurelius and L. Verus that the alleg-
ation that one was unacquainted with the pupil's father cannot
be admitted as a ground of excuse.  11 Enmity against the ward's
father, if extremely bitter, and if there was no reconciliation, is
usually accepted as a reason for exemption from the office of
guardian; 12 and similarly a person can claim to be excused
whose status or civil rights have been disputed by the father
of the ward in an action.  13 Again, a person over seventy
years of age can claim to be excused from acting as guardian
or curator, and by the older law persons less than twenty-five
were similarly exempted.  But our constitution, having for-
bidden the latter to aspire to these functions, has made excuses
unnecessary.  The effect of this enactment is that no pupil or
person under twenty-five years of age is to be called to a stat-
utory guardianship; for it was most incongruous to place persons
 under the guardianship or administration of those who are
known themselves to need assistance in the management of
their own affairs, and are themselves governed by others.
14 The same rule is to be observed with soldiers, who, even
though they desire it, may not be admitted to the office of
guardian:  15 and finally grammarians, rhetoricians, and
physicians at Rome, and those who follow these callings in
their own country and are within the number fixed by law, are
exempted from being guardians or curators.

16 If a person who has several grounds of excuse wishes to
obtain exemption, and some of them are not allowed, he is
not prohibited from alleging others, provided he does this
within the time prescribed.  Those desirous of excusing them-
selves do not appeal, but ought to allege their grounds of
excuse within fifty days next after they hear of their appoint-
ment, whatever the form of the latter, and whatever kind of
guardians they may be, if they are within a hundred miles
of the place where they were appointed:  if they live at a
distance of more than a hundred miles, they are allowed a day
for every twenty miles, and thirty days in addition, but this time,
as Scaevola has said, must never be so reckoned as to amount
to less than fifty days.  17 A person appointed guardian is
deemed to be appointed to the whole patrimony; 18 and after
he has once acted as guardian he cannot be compelled against
his will to become the same person's curator -- not even if the
father who appointed him testamentary guardian added in the
will that he made him curator, too, as soon as the ward reached
fourteen years of age -- this having been decided by a rescript
of the Emperors Severus and Antoninus.  19 Another rescript
of the same emperors settled that a man is entitled to be ex-
cused from becoming his own wife's curator, even after inter-
meddling with her affairs.  20 No man is discharged from the
burden of guardianship who has procured exemption by false
allegations.

TITLE XXVI
OF GUARDIANS OR CURATORS WHO ARE SUSPECTED

The accusation of guardians or curators on suspicion origin-
ated in the statute of the Twelve Tables; 1 the removal of those
who are accused on suspicion is part of the jurisdiction, at Rome,
of the praetor, and in the provinces of their governors and of
the proconsul's legate.  2 Having shown what magistrates can
take cognizance of this subject, let us see what persons are
liable to be accused on suspicion.  All guardians are liable,
whether appointed by testament or otherwise; consequently
even a statutory guardian may be made the object of such an
accusation.  But what is to be said of a patron guardian?  Even
here we must reply that he too is liable; though we must re-
member that his reputation must be spared in the event of his
removal on suspicion.  3 The next point is to see what persons
may bring this accusation; and it is to be observed that the
action partakes of a public character, that is to say, is open
to all.  Indeed, by a rescript of Severus and Antoninus even
women are made competent to bring it, but only those who
can allege a close tie of affection as their motive; for instance,
a mother, nurse, grandmother, or sister.  And the praetor
will allow any woman to prefer the accusation in whom he
finds an affection real enough to induce her to save a pupil
from suffering harm, without seeming to be more forward
than becomes her sex.  4 Persons below the age of puberty
cannot accuse their guardians on suspicion; but by a rescript
of Severus and Antoninus it has been permitted to those who
have reached that age to deal thus with their curators, after
taking the advice of their nearest relations.  5 A guardian is
‘suspected' who does not faithfully discharge his tutorial func-
tions, though he may be perfectly solvent, as was the opinion
also of Julian.  Indeed, Julian writes that a guardian may be
removed on suspicion before he commences his administration,
and a constitution has been issued in accordance with this view.
6 A person removed from office on suspicion incurs infamy
if his offence was fraud, but not if it was merely negligence.
7 As Papinian held, on a person being accused on suspicion
he is suspended from the administration until the action is
decided.  8 If a guardian or curator who is accused on sus-
picion dies after the commencement of the action, but before
it has been decided, the action is thereby extinguished; 9 and
if a guardian fails to appear to a summons of which the object
is to fix by judicial order a certain rate of maintenance for the
pupil, the rescript of the Emperors Severus and Antoninus
provides that the pupil may be put in possession of the guard-
ian's property, and orders the sale of the perishable portions
thereof after appointment of a curator.  Consequently, a guard-
ian may be removed as suspected who does not provide his
pupil with sufficient maintenance.  10 If, on the other hand,
the guardian appears, and alleges that the pupil's property
is too inconsiderable to admit of maintenance being decreed,
and it is shown that the allegation is false, the proper course
is for him to be sent for punishment to the prefect of the city,
like those who purchase a guardianship with bribery.  11 So
too a freedman, convicted of having acted fraudulently as
guardian of the sons or grandsons of his patron, should be
sent to the prefect of the city for punishment.  12 Finally, it
is to be noted, that guardians or curators who are guilty of
fraud in their administration must be removed from their office
even though they offer to give security, for giving security does
not change the evil intent of the guardian, but only gives him a
larger space of time wherein he may injure the pupil's property:
13 for a man's mere character or conduct may be such as to
justify one's deeming him `suspected.'  No guardian or curator,
however, may be removed on suspicion merely because he is
poor, provided he is also faithful and diligent.


* BOOK II *

TITLES
I. Of the different kinds of Things
II. Of incorporeal Things
III. Of servitudes
IV. Of usufruct
V. Of use and habitation
VI. Of usucapion and long possession
VII. Of gifts
VIII. Of persons who may, and who may
not alienate
IX. Of persons through whom we acquire
X. Of the execution of wills
XI. Of soldiers' wills
XII. Of persons incapable of making wills
XIII. Of the disinherison of children
XIV. Of the institution of the heir
XV. Of ordinary substitution
XVI. Of pupillary substitution
XVII. Of the modes in which wills become
void
XVIII.  Of an unduteous will
XIX. Of the kinds of and differences
between heirs
XX. Of legacies
XXI. Of the ademption and transference
of legacies
XXII. Of the lex Falcidia
XXIII. Of trust inheritances
XXIV. Of trust bequests of single things
XXV. Of codicils

TITLE I
OF THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF THINGS

In the preceding book we have expounded the law of Persons:
now let us proceed to the law of Things.  Of these, some admit
of private ownership, while others, it is held, cannot belong to
individuals:  for some things are by natural law common to all,
some are public, some belong to a society or corporation, and
some belong to no one.  But most things belong to individuals,
being acquired by various titles, as will appear from what
follows.

1 Thus, the following things are by natural law common to all --
the air, running water, the sea, and consequently the sea-shore.
No one therefore is forbidden access to the sea-shore, pro-
vided he abstains from injury to houses, monuments, and
buildings generally; for these are not, like the sea itself, subject
to the law of nations.  2 On the other hand, all rivers and
harbours are public, so that all persons have a right to fish
therein.  3 The sea-shore extends to the limit of the highest tide
in time of storm or winter.  4 Again, the public use of the banks
of a river, as of the river itself, is part of the law of nations;
consequently every one is entitled to bring his vessel to the
bank, and fasten cables to the trees growing there, and use it
as a resting-place for the cargo, as freely as he may navigate
the river itself.  But the ownership of the bank is in the owner
of the adjoining land, and consequently so too is the ownership
of the trees which grow upon it.  5 Again, the public use of
the sea-shore, as of the sea itself, is part of the law of nations;
consequently every one is free to build a cottage upon it for
purposes of retreat, as well as to dry his nets and haul them
up from the sea.  But they cannot be said to belong to any
one as private property, but rather are subject to the same
law as the sea itself, with the soil or sand which lies beneath it.
6 As examples of things belonging to a society or corporation,
and not to individuals, may be cited buildings in cities -- theatres,
racecourses, and such other similar things as belong to cities in
their corporate capacity.

7 Things which are sacred, devoted to superstitious uses, or
sanctioned, belong to no one, for what is subject to divine law
is no one's property.  8 Those things are sacred which have
been duly consecrated to God by His ministers, such as
churches and votive offerings which have been properly dedi-
cated to His service; and these we have by our constitution
forbidden to be alienated or pledged, except to redeem
captives from bondage.  If any one attempts to consecrate a
thing for himself and by his own authority, its character is un-
altered, and it does not become sacred.  The ground on which
a sacred building is erected remains sacred even after the
destruction of the building, as was declared also by Papinian.
9 Any one can devote a place to superstitious uses of his own
free will, that is to say, by burying a dead body in his own land.
It is not lawful, however, to bury in land which one owns jointly
with some one else, and which has not hitherto been used for
this purpose, without the other's consent, though one may
lawfully bury in a common sepulchre even without such con-
sent.  Again, the owner may not devote a place to superstitious
uses in which another has a usufruct, without the consent of the
latter.  It is lawful to bury in another man's ground, if he gives
permission, and the ground thereby becomes religious even
though he should not give his consent to the interment till after
it has taken place.  10 Sanctioned things, too, such as city walls
and gates, are, in a sense, subject to divine law, and therefore
are not owned by any individual.  Such walls are said to be
`sanctioned,' because any offence against them is visited with
capital punishment; for which reason those parts of the laws in
which we establish a penalty for their transgressors are called
sanctions.

11 Things become the private property of individuals in many
ways; for the titles by which we acquire ownership in them are
some of them titles of natural law, which, as we said, is called
the law of nations, while some of them are titles of civil law.  It
will thus be most convenient to take the older law first:  and
natural law is clearly the older, having been instituted by nature
at the first origin of mankind, whereas civil laws first came into
existence when states began to be founded, magistrates to be
created, and laws to be written.

12 Wild animals, birds, and fish, that is to say all the creatures
which the land, the sea, and the sky produce, as soon as they
are caught by any one become at once the property of their
captor by the law of nations; for natural reason admits the title
of the first occupant to that which previously had no owner.  So
far as the occupant's title is concerned, it is immaterial whether
it is on his own land or on that of another that he catches wild
animals or birds, though it is clear that if he goes on another
man's land for the sake of hunting or fowling, the latter may
forbid him entry if aware of his purpose.  An animal thus
caught by you is deemed your property so long as it is com-
pletely under your control; but so soon as it has escaped from
your control, and recovered its natural liberty, it ceases to be
yours, and belongs to the first person who subsequently catches
it.  It is deemed to have recovered its natural liberty when you
have lost sight of it, or when, though it is still in your sight, it
would be difficult to pursue it.  13 It has been doubted
whether a wild animal becomes your property immediately
you have wounded it so severely as to be able to catch it.
Some have thought that it becomes yours at once, and remains
so as long as you pursue it, though it ceases to be yours when
you cease the pursuit, and becomes again the property of any
one who catches it:  others have been of opinion that it does
not belong to you till you have actually caught it.  And we con-
firm this latter view, for it may happen in many ways that you
will not capture it.  14 Bees again are naturally wild; hence if
a swarm settles on your tree, it is no more considered yours,
until you have hived it, than the birds which build their nests
there, and consequently if it is hived by some one else, it be-
comes his property.  So too any one may take the honey-combs
which bees may chance to have made, though, of course, if you
see some one coming on your land for this purpose, you have
a right, to forbid him entry before that purpose is effected.  A
swarm which has flown from your hive is considered to remain
yours so long as it is in your sight and easy of pursuit:  other-
wise it belongs to the first person who catches it.  15 Peafowl
too and pigeons are naturally wild, and it is no valid objection
that they are used to return to the same spots from which they
fly away, for bees do this, and it is admitted that bees are wild
by nature; and some people have deer so tame that they will
go into the woods and yet habitually come back again, and still
no one denies that they are naturally wild.  With regard, how-
ever, to animals which have this habit of going away and
coming back again, the rule has been established that they are
deemed yours so long as they have the intent to return:  for if
they cease to have this intention they cease to be yours, and
belong to the first person who takes them; and when they lose
the habit they seem also to have lost the intention of returning.
16 Fowls and geese are not naturally wild, as is shown by the
fact that there are some kinds of fowls and geese which we
call wild kinds.  Hence if your geese or fowls are frightened
and fly away, they are considered to continue yours wherever
they may be, even though you have lost sight of them; and any
one who keeps them intending thereby to make a profit is held
guilty of theft.  17 Things again which we capture from the
enemy at once become ours by the law of nations, so that by
this rule even free men become our slaves, though, if they
escape from our power and return to their own people, they
recover their previous condition.  18 Precious stones too, and
gems, and all other things found on the sea-shore, become
immediately by natural law the property of the finder:  19 and
by the same law the young of animals of which you are the
owner become your property also.

20 Moreover, soil which a river has added to your land by
alluvion becomes yours by the law of nations.  Alluvion is an im-
perceptible addition; and that which is added so gradually that
you cannot perceive the exact increase from one moment of
time to another is added by alluvion.  21 If, however, the
violence of the stream sweeps away a parcel of your land and
carries it down to the land of your neighbour it clearly remains
yours; though of course if in the process of time it becomes
 firmly attached to your neighbour's land, they are deemed
from that time to have become part and parcel thereof.  22
When an island rises in the sea, though this rarely happens,
it belongs to the first occupant; for, until occupied, it is held
to belong to no one.  If, however (as often occurs), an island
rises in a river, and it lies in the middle of the stream, it belongs
in common to the landowners on either bank, in proportion
to the extent of their riparian interest; but if it lies nearer to
one bank than to the other, it belongs to the landowners on
that bank only.  If a river divides into two channels, and by
uniting again these channels transform a man's land into an
island, the ownership of that land is in no way altered:  23
but if a river entirely leaves its old channel, and begins to
run in a new one, the old channel belongs to the landowners
on either side of it in proportion to the extent of their riparian
interest, while the new one acquires the same legal character
as the river itself, and becomes public.  But if after a while
the river returns to its old channel, the new channel again
becomes the property of those who possess the land along
its banks.  24 It is otherwise if one's land is wholly flooded,
for a flood does not permanently alter the nature of the land,
and consequently if the water goes back the soil clearly be-
longs to its previous owner.

25 When a man makes a new object out of materials belong-
ing to another, the question usually arises, to which of them, by
natural reason, does this new object belong -- to the man who
made it, or to the owner of the materials?  For instance, one
man may make wine, or oil, or corn, out of another man's
grapes, olives, or sheaves; or a vessel out of his gold, silver,
or bronze; or mead of his wine and honey; or a plaster or
eyesalve out of his drugs; or cloth out of his wool; or a ship,
a chest, or a chair out of his timber.  After many controversies
between the Sabinians and Proculians, the law has now been
settled as follows, in accordance with the view of those who
followed a middle course between the opinions of the two
schools.  If the new object can be reduced to the materials
out of which it was made, it belongs to the owner of the
materials; if not, it belongs to the person who made it.  For
instance, a vessel can be melted down, and so reduced to
the rude material -- bronze, silver, or gold -- of which it is
made:  but it is impossible to reconvert wine into grapes, oil
into olives, or corn into sheaves, or even mead into the wine
and honey out of which it was compounded.  But if a man
makes a new object out of materials which belong partly to
him and partly to another -- for instance, mead of his own
wine and another's honey, or a plaster or eyesalve of drugs
which are not all his own, or cloth of wool which belongs
only in part to him -- in this case there can be no doubt that
the new object belongs to its creator, for he has contributed
not only part of the material, but the labour by which it was
made.  26 If, however, a man weaves into his own cloth
another man's purple, the latter, though the more valuable,
becomes part of the cloth by accession; but its former owner
can maintain an action of theft against the purloiner, and also
a condiction, or action for reparative damages, whether it
was he who made the cloth, or some one else; for although
the destruction of property is a bar to a real action for its
recovery, it is no bar to a condiction against the thief and
certain other possessors.  27 If materials belonging to two
persons are mixed by consent -- for instance, if they mix their
wines, or melt together their gold or their silver -- the result
of the mixture belongs to them in common.  And the law is
the same if the materials are of different kinds, and their mix-
ture consequently results in a new object, as where mead is
made by mixing wine and honey, or electrum by mixing gold
and silver; for even here it is not doubted that the new object
belongs in common to the owners of the materials.  And if it
is by accident, and not by the intention of the owners, that
materials have become mixed, the law is the same, whether
they were of the same or of different kinds.  28 But if the
corn of Titius has become mixed with yours, and this by
mutual consent, the whole will belong to you in common,
because the separate bodies or grains, which before
belonged to one or the other of you in severalty, have by
consent on both sides been made your joint property.  If,
however, the mixture was accidental, or if Titius mixed the
two parcels of corn without your consent, they do not belong
to you in common, because the separate grains remain distinct,
and their substance is unaltered; and in such cases the corn
no more becomes common property than does a flock formed
by the accidental mixture of Titius's sheep with yours.  But if
either of you keeps the whole of the mixed corn, the other
can bring a real action for the recovery of such part of it as
belongs to him, it being part of the province of the judge to
determine the quality of the wheat which belonged to each.
29 If a man builds upon his own ground with another's materials,
the building is deemed to be his property, for buildings become
a part of the ground on which they stand.  And yet he who
was owner of the materials does not cease to own them, but
he cannot bring a real action for their recovery, or sue for their
production, by reason of a clause in the Twelve Tables pro-
viding that no one shall be compelled to take out of his house
materials (tignum), even though they belong to another,
which have once been built into it, but that double their value
may be recovered by the action called ‘de tigno iniuncto.’  The
term tignum includes every kind of material employed in building,
and the object of this provision is to avoid the necessity of having
buildings pulled down; but if through some cause or other they
should be destroyed, the owner of the materials, unless he has
already sued for double value, may bring a real action for re-
covery, or a personal action for production.  30 On the other
hand, if one man builds a house on another's land with his own
materials, the house belongs to the owner of the land.  In this
case, however, the right of the previous owner in the materials
is extinguished, because he is deemed to have voluntarily parted
with them, though only, of course, if he was aware that the land
on which he was building belonged to another man.  Conse-
quently, though the house should be destroyed, he cannot claim
the materials by real action.  Of course, if the builder of the
house has possession of the land, and the owner of the latter
claims the house by real action, but refuses to pay for the
materials and the workmen's wages, he can be defeated by
the plea of fraud, provided the builder's possession is in good
faith:  for if he knew that the land belonged to some one else it
may be urged against him that he was to blame for rashly build-
ing on land owned to his knowledge by another man.  31 If
Titius plants another man's shrub in land belonging to himself,
the shrub will become his; and, conversely, if he plants his
own shrub in the land of Maevius, it will belong to Maevius.
In neither case, however, will the ownership be transferred until
the shrub has taken root:  for, until it has done this, it continues
to belong to the original owner.  So strict indeed is the rule that
the ownership of the shrub is transferred from the moment it has
taken root, that if a neighbour's tree grows so close to the land
of Titius that the soil of the latter presses round it, whereby it
drives its roots entirely into the same, we say the tree becomes
the property of Titius, on the ground that it would be unreason-
able to allow the owner of a tree to be a different person from
the owner of the land in which it is rooted.  Consequently, if a
tree which grows on the boundaries of two estates drives its
roots even partially into the neighbour's soil, it becomes the
common property of the two landowners.  32 On the same
principle corn is reckoned to become a part of the soil in which
it is sown.  But exactly as (according to what we said) a man
who builds on another's land can defend himself by the plea of
fraud when sued for the building by the owner of the land, so
here too one who has in good faith and at his own expense put
crops into another man's soil can shelter himself behind the
same plea, if refused compensation for labour and outlay.  33
Writing again, even though it be in letters of gold, becomes a
part of the paper or parchment, exactly as buildings and sown
crops become part of the soil, and consequently if Titius writes
a poem, or a history, or a speech on your paper and parch-
ment, the whole will be held to belong to you, and not to Titius.
But if you sue Titius to recover your books or parchments, and
refuse to pay the value of the writing, he will be able to defend
himself by the plea of fraud, provided that he obtained possession
of the paper or parchment in good faith.  34 Where, on the other
hand, one man paints a picture on another's board, some think
that the board belongs, by accession, to the painter, others, that
the painting, however great its excellence, becomes part of the
board.  The former appears to us the better opinion, for it is
absurd that a painting by Apelles or Parrhasius should be an
accessory of a board which, in itself, is thoroughly worthless.
Hence, if the owner of the board has possession of the picture,
and is sued for it by the painter, who nevertheless refuses to
pay the cost of the board, he will be able to repel him by the
plea of fraud.  If, on the other hand, the painter has possession,
it follows from what has been said that the former owner of the
board, [if he is to be able to sue at all], must claim it by a modi-
fied and not by a direct action; and in this case, if he refuses to
pay the cost of the picture, he can be repelled by the plea of
fraud, provided that the possession of the painter be in good
faith; for it is clear, that if the board was stolen by the painter,
or some one else, from its former owner, the latter can bring
the action of theft.

35 If a man in good faith buys land from another who is not its
owner, though he believed he was, or acquires it in good faith
by gift or some other lawful title, natural reason directs that the
fruits which he has gathered shall be his, in consideration of his
care and cultivation:  consequently if the owner subsequently
appears and claims the land by real action, he cannot sue for
fruits which the possessor has consumed.  This, however, is
not allowed to one who takes possession of land which to his
knowledge belongs to another person, and therefore he is
obliged not only to restore the land, but to make compensation
for fruits even though they have been consumed.  36 A person
who has a usufruct in land does not become owner of the fruits
which grow thereon until he has himself gathered them;
consequently fruits which, at the moment of his decease, though
ripe, are yet ungathered, do not belong to his heir, but to the
owner of the land.  What has been said applies also in the main
to the lessee of land.  37 The term `fruits,' when used of animals,
comprises their young, as well as milk, hair, and wool; thus
lambs, kids, calves, and foals, belong at once, by the natural law
of ownership, to the fructuary.  But the term does not include
the offspring of a female slave, which consequently belongs to
her master; for it seemed absurd to reckon human beings as
fruits, when it is for their sake that all other fruits have been pro-
vided by nature.  38 The usufructuary of a flock, as Julian held,
ought to replace any of the animals which die from the young
of the rest, and, if his usufruct be of land, to replace dead vines
or trees; for it is his duty to cultivate according to law and use
them like a careful head of a family.

39 If a man found treasure in his own land, the Emperor Hadrian,
following natural equity, adjudged to him the ownership of it, as
he also did to a man who found one by accident in soil which
was sacred or religious.  If he found it in another man's land by
accident, and without specially searching for it, he gave half to
the finder, half to the owner of the soil; and upon this principle,
if a treasure were found in land belonging to the Emperor, he
decided that half should belong to the latter, and half to the
finder; and consistently with this, if a man finds one in land which
belongs to the imperial treasury or the people, half belongs to
him, and half to the treasury or the State.

40 Delivery again is a mode in which we acquire things by
natural law; for it is most agreeable to natural equity that where
a man wishes to transfer his property to another person his wish
should be confirmed.  Consequently corporeal things, whatever
be their nature, admit of delivery, and delivery by their owner
makes them the property of the alienee; this, for instance, is the
mode of alienating stipendiary and tributary estates, that is to
say, estates lying in provincial soil; between which, however,
and estates in Italy there now exists, according to our consti-
tution, no difference.  41 And ownership is transferred whether
the motive of the delivery be the desire to make a gift, to confer
a dowry, or any other motive whatsoever.  When, however, a
thing is sold and delivered, it does not become the purchaser's
property until he has paid the price to the vendor, or satisfied
him in some other way, as by getting some one else to accept
liability for him, or by pledge.  And this rule, though laid down
also in the statute of the Twelve Tables, is rightly said to be a
dictate of the law of all nations, that is, of natural law.  But if
the vendor gives the purchaser credit, the goods sold belong
to the latter at once.  42 It is immaterial whether the person who
makes delivery is the owner himself, or some one else acting
with his consent.  43 Consequently, if any one is entrusted by
an owner with the management of his business at his own free
discretion, and in the execution of his commission sells and
delivers any article, he makes the receiver its owner.  44 In
some cases even the owner's bare will is sufficient, without
delivery, to transfer ownership.  For instance, if a man sells or
makes you a present of a thing which he has previously lent or
let to you or placed in your custody, though it was not from
that motive he originally delivered it to you, yet by the very
fact that he suffers it to be yours you at once become its owner
as fully as if it had been originally delivered for the purpose of
passing the property.  45 So too if a man sells goods lying in
a warehouse, he transfers the ownership of them to the pur-
chaser immediately he has delivered to the latter the keys of
the warehouse.  46 Nay, in some cases the will of the owner,
though directly only towards an uncertain person, transfers the
ownership of the thing, as for instance when praetors and
consuls throw money to a crowd:  here they know not which
specific coin each person will get, yet they make the unknown
recipient immediately owner, because it is their will that each
shall have what he gets.  47 Accordingly, it is true that if a
man takes possession of property abandoned by its previous
owner, he at once becomes its owner himself:  and a thing is
said to be abandoned which its owner throws away with the
deliberate intention that it shall no longer be part of his property,
and of which, consequently, he immediately ceases to be the
owner.  48 It is otherwise with things which are thrown over-
board during a storm, in order to lighten the ship; in the
ownership of these things there is no change, because the
reason for which they are thrown overboard is obviously not
that the owner does not care to own them any longer, but that
he and the ship besides may be more likely to escape the perils
of the sea.  Consequently any one who carries them off after
they are washed on shore, or who picks them up at sea and
keeps them, intending to make a profit thereby, commits a
theft; for such things seem to be in much the same position as
those which fall out of a carriage in motion unknown to their
owners.

TITLE II
OF INCORPOREAL THINGS

Some things again are corporeal, and others incorporeal.  1
Those are corporeal which in their own nature are tangible,
such as land, slaves, clothing, gold, silver, and others innum-
erable.  2 Things incorporeal are such as are intangible:  rights,
for instance, such as inheritance, usufruct, and obligations,
however acquired.  And it is no objection to this definition that
an inheritance comprises things which are corporeal; for the
fruits of land enjoyed by a usufructuary are corporeal too, and
obligations generally relate to the conveyance of something cor-
poreal, such as land, slaves, or money, and yet the right of
succession, the right of usufruct, and the right existing in every
obligation, are incorporeal.  3 So too the rights appurtenant to
land, whether in town or country, which are usually called
servitudes, are incorporeal things.

TITLE III
OF SERVITUDES

The following are rights appurtenant to country estates:  ‘iter,’
the right of passage at will for a man only, not of driving beast or
vehicles; ‘actus,’ the right of driving beasts or vehicles (of which
two the latter contains the former, though the former does not
contain the latter, so that a man who has iter has not necessarily
actus, while if he has actus he has also iter, and consequently
can pass himself even though unaccompanied by cattle); ‘via,’
which is the right of going, of driving any thing whatsoever, and
of walking, and which thus contains both iter and actus; and
fourthly, ‘aquaeductus,’ the right of conducting water over
another man's land.  1 Servitudes appurtenant to town estates
are rights which are attached to buildings; and they are said to
appertain to town estates because all buildings are called `town
estates,' even though they are actually in the country.  The
following are servitudes of this kind -- the obligation of a man
to support the weight of his neighbour's house, to allow a beam
to be let into his wall, or to receive the rain from his neighbour's
roof on to his own either in drops or from a shoot, or from a
gutter into his yard; the converse right of exemption from any
of these obligations; and the right of preventing a neighbour
from raising his buildings, lest thereby one's ancient lights be
obstructed.  2 Some think that among servitudes appurtenant
to country estates ought properly to be reckoned the rights of
drawing water, of watering cattle, of pasture, of burning lime,
and of digging sand.

3 These servitudes are called rights attached to estates, because
without estates they cannot come into existence; for no one
can acquire or own a servitude attached to a town or country
estate unless he has an estate for it to be attached to.  4 When
a landowner wishes to create any of these rights in favour of his
neighbour, the proper mode of creation is agreement followed
by stipulation.  By testament too one can impose on one's heir
an obligation not to raise the height of his house so as to ob-
struct his neighbour's ancient lights, or bind him to allow a
neighbour to let a beam into his wall, to receive the rain water
from a neighbour’s pipe, or allow a neighbour a right of way,
of driving cattle or vehicles over his land, or conducting water
over it.

TITLE IV
OF USUFRUCT

Usufruct is the right of using and taking the fruits of property
not one's own, without impairing the substance of that property;
for being a right over a corporeal thing, it is necessarily ex-
tinguished itself along with the extinction of the latter.  1 Usu-
fruct is thus a right detached from the aggregate of rights
involved in ownership, and this separation can be effected in
very many ways:  for instance, if one man gives another a
usufruct by legacy, the legatee has the usufruct, while the
heir has merely the bare ownership; and, conversely, if a man
gives a legacy of an estate, reserving the usufruct, the usufruct
belongs to the heir, while only the bare ownership is vested in
the legatee.  Similarly, he can give to one man a legacy of the
usufruct, to another one of the estate, subject to the other's
usufruct.  If it is wished to create a usufruct in favour of another
person otherwise than by testament, the proper mode is
agreement followed by stipulation. However, lest ownership
should be entirely valueless through the permanent separation
from it of the usufruct, certain modes have been approved in
which usufruct may be extinguished, and thereby revert to the
owner.  2 A usufruct may be created not only in land or build-
ings, but also in slaves, cattle, and other objects generally,
except such as are actually consumed by being used, of which
a genuine usufruct is impossible by both natural and civil law.
Among them are wine, oil, grain, clothing, and perhaps we may
also say coined money; for a sum of money is in a sense
extinguished by changing hands, as it constantly does in simply
being used.  For convenience sake, however, the senate en-
acted that a usufruct could be created in such things, provided
that due security be given to the heir.  Thus if a usufruct of
money be given by legacy, that money, on being delivered to
the legatee, becomes his property, though he has to give
security to the heir that he will repay an equivalent sum on his
dying or undergoing a loss of status.  And all things of this class,
when delivered to the legatee, become his property, though
they are first appraised, and the legatee then gives security that
if he dies or undergoes a loss of status he will ay the value
which was put upon them.  Thus in point of fact the senate did
not introduce a usufruct of such things, for that was beyond its
power, but established a right analogous to usufruct by requiring
security.  3 Usufruct determines by the death of the usufructuary,
by his undergoing either of the greater kinds of loss of status,
by its improper exercise, and by its non-exercise during the
time fixed by law; all of which points are settled by our consti-
tution.  It is also extinguished when surrendered to the owner
by the usufructuary (though transfer to a third person is in-
operative); and again, conversely, by the fructuary becoming
owner of the thing, this being called consolidation.  Obviously,
a usufruct of a house is extinguished by the house being burnt
down, or falling through an earthquake or faulty construction;
and in such case a usufruct of the site cannot be claimed.  4
When a usufruct determines, it reverts to and is reunited with
the ownership; and from that moment he who before was
but bare owner of the thing begins to have full power over it.

TITLE V
OF USE AND HABITATION

A bare use, or right of using a thing, is created in the same
mode as a usufruct, and the modes in which it may determine
are the same as those just described.  1 A use is a less right
than a usufruct; for if a man has a bare use of an estate, he is
deemed entitled to use the vegetables, fruit, flowers, hay, straw,
and wood upon it only so far as his daily needs require:  he
may remain on the land only so long as he does not incon-
venience its owner, or impede those who are engaged in its
cultivation; but he cannot let or sell or give away his right to a
third person, whereas a usufructuary may.  2 Again, a man
who has the use of a house is deemed entitled only to live in it
himself; he cannot transfer his right to a third person, and it
scarcely seems to be agreed that he may take in a guest; but
besides himself he may lodge there his wife, children, and
freedmen, and other free persons who form as regular a part
of his establishment as his slaves.  Similarly, if a woman has
the use of a house, her husband may dwell there with her.
3  When a man has the use of a slave, he has only the right
of personally using his labour and services; in no way is he
allowed to transfer his right to a third person, and the same
applies to the use of beasts of burden.  4 If a legacy be given
of the use of a herd or of a flock of sheep, the usuary may
not use the milk, lambs, or wool, for these are fruits; but of
course he may use the animals for the purpose of manuring
his land.

5 If a right of habitation be given to a man by legacy or in
some other mode, this seems to be neither a use nor a usufruct,
but a distinct and as it were independent right; and by a consti-
tution which we have published in accordance with the opinion
of Marcellus, and in the interests of utility, we have permitted
persons possessed of this right not only to live in the building
themselves, but also to let it out to others.

6 What we have here said concerning servitudes, and the
rights of usufruct, use, and habitation, will be sufficient; of inherit-
ance and obligations we will treat in their proper places respect-
ively.  And having now briefly expounded the modes in which we
acquire things by the law of nations, let us turn and see in what
modes they are acquired by statute or by civil law.

TITLE VI
OF USUCAPION AND LONG POSSESSION

It was a rule of the civil law that if a man in good faith bought
a thing, or received it by way of gift, or on any other lawful
ground, from a person who was not its owner, but whom he
believed to be such, he should acquire it by usucapion -- if a
movable, by one year's possession, and by two years' pos-
session if an immovable, though in this case only if it were in
Italian soil; -- the reason of the rule being the inexpediency of
allowing ownership to be long unascertained. The ancients
thus considered that the periods mentioned were sufficient to
enable owners to look after their property; but we have arrived
at a better opinion, in order to save people from being over-
quickly defrauded of their own, and to prevent the benefit of
this institution from being confined to only a certain part of the
empire.  We have consequently published a constitution on
the subject, enacting that the period of usucapion for movables
shall be three years, and that ownership of immovables shall
be acquired by long possession -- possession, that is to say,
for ten years, if both parties dwell in the same province, and
for twenty years if in different provinces; and things may in
these modes be acquired in full ownership, provided the pos-
session commences on a lawful ground, not only in Italy but in
every land subject to our sway.

1 Some things, however, not withstanding the good faith of
the possessor, and the duration of his possession, cannot be
acquired by usucapion; as is the case, for instance, if one pos-
sesses a free man, a thing sacred or religious, or a runaway
slave.  2 Things again of which the owner lost possession by
theft, or possession of which was gained by violence, cannot
be acquired by usucapion, even by a person who has pos-
sessed them in good faith for the specified period:  for stolen
things are declared incapable of usucapion by the statute of the
Twelve Tables and by the lex Atinia, and things taken with
violence by the lex Iulia et Plautia.  3 The statement that things
stolen or violently possessed cannot, by statute, be acquired
by usucapion, means, not that the thief or violent dispossessor
is incapable of usucapion -- for these are barred by another
reason, namely the fact that their possession is not in good faith;
but that even a person who has purchased the thing from them
in good faith, or received it on some other lawful ground, is
incapable of acquiring by usucapion.  Consequently, in things
movable even a person who possesses in good faith can seldom
acquire ownership by usucapion, for he who sells, or on some
other ground delivers possession of a thing belonging to another,
commits a theft.  4 However, this admits of exception; for if an
heir, who believes a thing lent or let to, or deposited with, the
person whom he succeeds, to be a portion of the inheritance,
sells or gives it by way of dowry to another who receives it in
good faith, there is no doubt that the latter can acquire the
ownership of it by usucapion; for the thing is here not tainted
with the flaw attaching to stolen property, because an heir does
not commit a theft who in good faith conveys a thing away
believing it to be his own.  5 Again, the usufructuary of a female
slave, who believes her offspring to be his property, and sells
or gives it away, does not commit a theft:  for theft implies
unlawful intention.  6 There are also other ways in which one
man can transfer to another property which is not his own,
without committing a theft, and thereby enable the receiver to
acquire by usucapion.  7 Usucapion of property classed among
things immovable is an easier matter; for it may easily happen
that a man may, without violence, obtain possession of land
which, owing to the absence or negligence of its owner, or to
his having died and left no successor, is presently possessed
by no one.  Now this man himself does not possess in good faith,
because he knows the land on which he has seized is not his own:
but if he delivers it to another who receives it in good faith, the
latter can acquire it by long possession, because it has neither
been stolen nor violently possessed; for the idea held by some
of the ancients, that a piece of land or a place can be stolen,
has now been exploded, and imperial constitutions have been
enacted in the interests of persons possessing immovables, to
the effect that no one ought to be deprived of a thing of which
he has had long and unquestioned possession.  8 Sometimes
indeed even things which have been stolen or violently possessed
can be acquired by usucapion, as for instance after they have
again come under the power of their real owner:  for by this they
are relieved from the taint which had attached to them, and so
become capable of usucapion. 9 Things belonging to our treasury
cannot be acquired by usucapion. But there is on record an
opinion of Papinian, supported by the rescripts of the Emperors
Pius, Severus, and Antoninus, that if, before the property of a
deceased person who has left no heir is reported to the excheq-
uer, some one has bought or received some part thereof, he can
acquire it by usucapion.  10 Finally, it is to be observed that things
are incapable of being acquired through usucapion by a purchaser
in good faith, or by one who possesses on some other lawful
ground, unless they are free from all flaws which vitiate the
usucapion.

11 If there be a mistake as to the ground on which possession
is acquired, and which it is wrongly supposed will support usu-
capion, usucapion cannot take place.  Thus a man's possession
may be founded on a supposed sale or gift, whereas in point of
fact there has been no sale or gift at all.

12 Long possession which has begun to run in favour of a
deceased person continues to run on in favour of his heir or
praetorian successor, even though he knows that the land
belongs to another person.  But if the deceased's possession
had not a lawful inception, it is not available to the heir or
praetorian successor, although ignorant of this.  Our consti-
tution has enacted that in usucapion too a similar rule shall be
observed, and that the benefit of the possession shall continue
in favour of the successor.  13 The Emperors Severus and
Antoninus have decided by a rescript that a purchaser too
may reckon as his own the time during which his vendor has
possessed the thing.

14 Finally, it is provided by an edict of the Emperor Marcus
that after an interval of five years a purchaser from the treasury
of property belonging to a third person may repel the owner,
if sued by him, by an exception.  But a constitution issued by
Zeno of sacred memory has protected persons who acquire
things from the treasury by purchase, gift, or other title, affording
them complete security from the moment of transfer, and guaran-
teeing their success in any action relating thereto, whether they
be plaintiffs or defendants; while it allows those who claim any
action in respect of such property as owners or pledges to sue
the imperial treasury at any time within four years from the
transaction.  A divine constitution which we ourselves have
lately issued has extended the operation of Zeno's enactment,
respecting conveyances by the treasury, to persons who have
acquired anything from our palace or that of the Empress.

TITLE VII
OF GIFTS

Another mode in which property is acquired is gift.  Gifts are
of two kinds; those made in contemplation of death, and those
not so made. 1 Gifts of the first kind are those made in view of
approaching death, the intention of the giver being that in the
event of his decease the thing given should belong to the donee,
but that if he should survive or should desire to revoke the gift,
or if the donee should die first, the thing should be restored to
him.  These gifts in contemplation of death now stand on ex-
actly the same footing as legacies; for as in some respects they
were more like ordinary gifts, in others more like legacies, the
jurists doubted under which of these two classes they should
be placed, some being for gift, others for legacy:  and conse-
quently we have enacted by constitution that in nearly every
respect they shall be treated like legacies, and shall be govern-
ed by the rules laid down respecting them in our constitution.
In a word, a gift in contemplation of death is where the donor
would rather have the thing himself than that the donee should
have it, and that the latter should rather have it than his own heir.
An illustration may be found in Homer, where Telemachus makes
a gift to Piraeus.

2 Gifts which are made without contemplation of death, which
we call gifts between the living, are of another kind, and have
nothing in common with legacies.  If the transaction be complete,
they cannot be revoked at pleasure; and it is complete when the
donor has manifested his intention, whether in writing or not.
Our constitution has settled that such a manifestation of inten-
tion binds the donor to deliver, exactly as in the case of sale; so
that even before delivery gifts are completely effectual, and the
donor is under a legal obligation to deliver the object.  Enact-
ments of earlier emperors required that such gifts, if in excess
of two hundred solidi, should be officially registered; but our
constitution has raised this maximum to five hundred solidi,
and dispensed with the necessity of registering gifts of this or
of a less amount; indeed it has even specified some gifts which
are completely valid, and require no registration, irrespective
of their amount.  We have devised many other regulations in
order to facilitate and secure gifts, all of which may be gathered
from the constitutions which we have issued on this topic.  It is
to be observed, however, that even where gifts have been
completely executed we have by our constitution under certain
circumstances enabled donors to revoke them, but only on
proof of ingratitude on the part of the recipient of the bounty;
the aim of this reservation being to protect persons, who
have given their property to others, from suffering at the hands
of the latter injury or loss in any of the modes detailed in our
constitution. 3 There is another specific kind of gift between the
living, with which the earlier jurists were quite unacquainted, and
which owed its later introduction to more recent emperors.  It
was called gift before marriage, and was subject to the implied
condition that it should not be binding until the marriage had
taken place; its name being due to the fact that it was always
made before the union of the parties, and could never take place
after the marriage had once been celebrated. The first change in
this matter was made by our imperial father Justin, who, as it
had been allowed to increase dowries even after marriage,
issued a constitution authorizing the increase of gifts before
marriage during the continuance of the marriage tie in cases
where an increase had been made to the dowry.  The name
`gift before marriage' was, however, still retained, though now
inappropriate, because the increase was made to it after the
marriage.  We, however, in our desire to perfect the law, and
to make names suit the things which they are used to denote,
have by a constitution permitted such gifts to be first made, and
not merely increased, after the celebration of the marriage, and
have directed that they shall be called gifts `on account of'
(and not `before') marriage, thereby assimilating them to dowries;
for as dowries are not only increased, but actually constituted,
during marriage, so now gifts on account of marriage may be
not only made before the union of the parties, but may be first
made as well as increased during the continuance of that union.

4 There was formerly too another civil mode of acquisition,
namely, by accrual, which operated in the following way:  if a
person who owned a slave jointly with Titius gave him his liberty
himself alone by vindication or by testament, his share in the
slave was lost, and went to the other joint owner by accrual.
But as this rule was very bad as a precedent -- for both the
slave was cheated of his liberty, and the kinder masters suffer-
ed all the loss while the harsher ones reaped all the gain -- we
have deemed it necessary to suppress a usage which seemed
so odious, and have by our constitution provided a merciful
remedy, by discovering a means by which the manumitter, the
other joint owner, and the liberated slave, may all alike be bene-
fited.  Freedom, in whose behalf even the ancient legislators
clearly established many rules at variance with the general
principles of law, will be actually acquired by the slave; the
manumitter will have the pleasure of seeing the benefit of his
kindness undisturbed; while the other joint owner, by receiving
a money equivalent proportionate to his interest, and on the
scale which we have fixed, will be indemnified against all loss.

TITLE VIII
OF PERSONS WHO MAY, AND WHO MAY NOT
ALIENATE

It sometimes happens that an owner cannot alienate, and that a
non-owner can.  Thus the alienation of dowry land by the hus-
band, without the consent of the wife, is prohibited by the lex
Iulia, although, since it has been given to him as dowry, he is its
owner. We, however, have amended the lex Iulia, and thus
introduced an improvement; for that statute applied only to land
in Italy, and though it prohibited a mortgage of the land even
with the wife's consent, it forbade it to be alienated only without
her concurrence. To correct these two defects we have forbidden
mortgages as well as alienations of dowry land even when it is
situated in the provinces, so that such land can now be dealt
with in neither of these ways, even if the wife concurs, lest the
weakness of the female sex should be used as a means to the
wasting of their property.  1 Conversely, a pledgee, in pursu-
ance of his agreement, may alienate the pledge, though not its
owner; this, however, may seem to rest on the assent of the
pledgor given at the inception of the contract, in which it was
agreed that the pledgee should have a power of sale in default
of repayment.  But in order that creditors may not be hindered
from pursuing their lawful rights, or debtors be deemed to be
overlightly deprived of their property, provisions have been
inserted in our constitution and a definite procedure established
for the sale of pledges, by which the interests of both creditors
and debtors have been abundantly guarded.  2 We must next
observe that no pupil of either sex can alienate anything without
his or her guardian's authority.  Consequently, if a pupil attempts
to lend money without such authority, no property passes, and
he does not impose a contractual obligation; hence the money,
if it exists, can be recovered by real action.  If the money which
he attempted to lend has been spent in good faith by the
would-be borrower, it can be sued for by the personal action
called condiction; if it has been fraudulently spent, the pupil can
sue by personal action for its production.  On the other hand,
things can be validly conveyed to pupils of either sex without
the guardian's authority; accordingly, if a debtor wishes to pay
a pupil, he must obtain the sanction of the guardian to the trans-
action, else he will not be released.  In a constitution which we
issued to the advocates of Caesarea at the instance of the
distinguished Tribonian, quaestor of our most sacred palace,
it has with the clearest reason been enacted, that the debtor
of a pupil may safely pay a guardian or curator by having first
obtained permission by the order of a judge, for which no fee
is to be payable:  and if the judge makes the order, and the
debtor in pursuance thereof makes payment, he is completely
protected by this form of discharge.  Supposing, however, that
the form of payment be other than that which we have fixed,
and that the pupil, though he still has the money in his pos-
session, or has been otherwise enriched by it, attempts to
recover the debt by action, he can be repelled by the plea of
fraud.  If on the other hand he has squandered the money or
had it stolen from him, the plea of fraud will not avail the debtor,
who will be condemned to pay again, as a penalty for having
carelessly paid without the guardian's authority, and not in
accordance with our regulation.  Pupils of either sex cannot
validly satisfy a debt without their guardian's authority, because
the money paid does not become the creditor's property; the
principle being that no pupil is capable of alienation without his
guardian's sanction.

TITLE IX
OF PERSONS THROUGH WHOM WE ACQUIRE

We acquire property not only by our own acts, but also by
the acts of persons in our power, of slaves in whom we have
a usufruct, and of freemen and slaves belonging to another but
whom we possess in good faith.  Let us now examine these cases
in detail.  1 Formerly, whatever was received by a child in power
of either sex, with the exception of military peculium, was acquired
for the parent without any distinction; and the parent was entitled
to give away or sell to one child, or to a stranger, what had been
acquired through another, or dispose of it in any other way that
he pleased.  This, however, seemed to us to be a cruel rule, and
consequently by a general constitution which we have issued we
have improved the children's position, and yet reserved to parents
all that was their due.  This enacts that whatever a child gains by
and through property, of which his father allows him the control,
is acquired, according to the old practice, for the father alone;
for what unfairness is there in property derived from the father
returning to him?  But of anything which the child derives from
any source other than his father, though his father will have a
usufruct therein, the ownership is to belong to the child, that he
may not have the mortification of seeing the gains which he has
made by his own toil or good fortune transferred to another.
2 We have also made a new rule relating to the right which a
father had under earlier constitutions, when he emancipated a
child, of retaining absolutely, if he pleased, a third part of such
property of the child as he himself had no ownership in, as a
kind of consideration for emancipating him.  The harsh result
of this was that a son was by emancipation deprived of the
ownership of a third of his property; and thus the honour which
he got by being emancipated and made independent was
balanced by the diminution of his fortune.  We have therefore
enacted that the parent, in such a case, shall no longer retain the
ownership of a third of the child's property, but, in lieu thereof,
the usufruct of one half; and thus the son will remain absolute
owner of the whole of his fortune, while the father will reap a
greater benefit than before, by being entitled to the enjoyment
of a half instead of a third.  3 Again, all rights which your slaves
acquire by tradition, stipulation, or any other title, are acquired
for you, even though the acquisition be without your knowledge,
or even against your will; for a slave, who is in the power of
another person, can have nothing of his own.  Consequently, if
he is instituted heir, he must, in order to be able to accept the
inheritance, have the command of his master; and if he has that
command, and accepts the inheritance, it is acquired for his
master exactly as if the latter had himself been instituted heir;
and it is precisely the same with a legacy.  And not only is
ownership acquired for you by those in your power, but also
possession; for you are deemed to possess everything of which
they have obtained detention, and thus they are to you instruments
through whom ownership may be acquired by usucapion or long
possession.  4 Respecting slaves in whom a person has only a
usufruct, the rule is, that what they acquire by means of the
property of the usufructuary, or by their own work, is acquired
for him; but what they acquire by any other means belongs to
their owner, to whom they belong themselves.  Accordingly, if
such a slave is instituted heir, or made legatee or donee, the
succession, legacy, or gift is acquired, not for the usufructuary,
but for the owner.  And a man who in good faith possesses a
free man or a slave belonging to another person has the same
rights as a usufructuary; what they acquire by any other mode
than the two we have mentioned belongs in the one case to the
free man, in the other to the slave's real master.  After a possessor
in good faith has acquired the ownership of a slave by usucapion,
everything which the slave acquires belongs to him without
distinction; but a fructuary cannot acquire ownership of a slave in
this way, because in the first place he does not possess the slave
at all, but has merely a right of usufruct in him, and because in
the second place he is aware of the existence of another owner.
Moreover, you can acquire possession as well as ownership
through slaves in whom you have a usufruct or whom you
possess in good faith, and through free persons whom in good
faith you believe to be your slaves, though as regards all these
classes we must be understood to speak with strict reference
to the distinction drawn above, and to mean only detention
which they have obtained by means of your property or their
own work.  5 From this it appears that free men not subject to
your power, or whom you do not possess in good faith, and
other persons' slaves, of whom you are neither usufructuaries
nor just possessors, cannot under any circumstances acquire
for you; and this is the meaning of the maxim that a man cannot
be the means of acquiring anything for one who is a stranger in
relation to him.  To this maxim there is but one exception --
namely, that, as is ruled in a constitution of the Emperor Severus,
a free person, such as a general agent, can acquire possession
for you, and that not only when you know, but even when you
do not know of the fact of the acquisition:  and through this
possession ownership can be immediately acquired also, if it
was the owner who delivered the thing; and if it was not, it can
be acquired ultimately by usucapion or by the plea of long
possession.

6 So much at present concerning the modes of acquiring rights
over single things:  for direct and fiduciary bequests, which are
also among such modes, will find a more suitable place in a later
portion of our treatise.  We proceed therefore to the titles
whereby an aggregate of rights is acquired.  If you become the
successors, civil or praetorian, of a person deceased, or adopt
an independent person by adrogation, or become assignees
of a deceased's estate in order to secure their liberty to slaves
manumitted by his will, the whole estate of those persons is
transferred to you in an aggregate mass.  Let us begin with
inheritances, whose mode of devolution is twofold, according
as a person dies testate or intestate; and of these two modes
we will first treat of acquisition by will.  The first point which
here calls for exposition is the mode in which wills are made.

TITLE X
OF THE EXECUTION OF WILLS

The term testament is derived from two words which mean a
signifying of intention.

1 Lest the antiquities of this branch of law should be entirely
forgotten, it should be known that originally two kinds of
testaments were in use, one of which our ancestors employed
in times of peace and quiet, and which was called the will made
in the comitia calata, while the other was resorted to when
they were setting out to battle, and was called procinctum.
More recently a third kind was introduced, called the will by
bronze and balance, because it was made by mancipation,
which was a sort of fictitious sale, in the presence of five
witnesses and a balance holder, all Roman citizens above the
age of puberty, together with the person who was called the
purchaser of the family.  The two first-mentioned kinds of
testament, however, went out of use even in ancient times,
and even the third, or will by bronze and balance, though it
has remained in vogue longer than they, has become partly
disused.  2 All these three kinds of will which we have
mentioned belonged to the civil law, but later still a fourth form
was introduced by the praetor's edict; for the new law of the
praetor, or ius honorarium, dispensed with mancipation,
and rested content with the seals of seven witnesses, whereas
the seals of witnesses were not required by the civil law.
3 When, however, by a gradual process the civil and
praetorian laws, partly by usage, partly by definite changes
introduced by the constitution, came to be combined into a
harmonious whole, it was enacted that a will should be valid
which was wholly executed at one time and in the presence
of seven witnesses (these two points being required, in a way,
by the old civil law), to which the witnesses signed their names
-- a new formality imposed by imperial legislation -- and affixed
their seals, as had been required by the praetor's edict.  Thus
the present law of testament seems to be derived from three
distinct sources; the witnesses, and the necessity of their all
being present continuously through the execution of the will in
order that the execution may be valid, coming from the civil law:
the signing of the document by the testator and the witnesses
being due to imperial constitutions, and the exact number of
witnesses, and the sealing of the will by them, to the praetor's
edict.  4 An additional requirement imposed by our constitution,
in order to secure the genuineness of testaments and prevent
forgery, is that the name of the heir shall be written by either the
testator or the witnesses, and generally that everything shall be
done according to the tenor of that enactment.

5 The witnesses may all seal the testament with the same seal;
for, as Pomponius remarks, what if the device on all seven
seals were the same?  It is also lawful for a witness to use a
seal belonging to another person.  6 Those persons only can
be witnesses who are legally capable of witnessing a testament.
Women, persons below the age of puberty, slaves, lunatics,
persons dumb or deaf, and those who have been interdicted
from the management of their property, or whom the law
declares worthless and unfitted to perform this office, cannot
witness a will.  7 In cases where one of the witnesses to a will
was thought free at the time of its execution, but was afterwards
discovered to be a slave, the Emperor Hadrian, in his rescript
to Catonius Verus, and afterwards the Emperors Severus and
Antoninus declared that of their goodness they would uphold
such a will as validly made; for, at the time when it was sealed,
this witness was admitted by all to be free, and, as such, had
had his civil position called in question by no man.  8 A father
and a son in his power, or two brothers who are both in the
power of one father, can lawfully witness the same testament,
for there can be no harm in several persons of the same family
witnessing together the act of a man who is to them a stranger.
9 No one, however, ought to be among the witnesses who is
in the testator's power, and if a son in power makes a will of
military peculium after his discharge, neither his father nor any
one in his father's power is qualified to be a witness; for it is
not allowed to support a will by the evidence of persons in
the same family with the testator.  10 No will, again, can be
witnessed by the person instituted heir, or by any one in his
power, or by a father in whose power he is, or by a brother
under the power of the same father:  for the execution of a
will is considered at the present day to be purely and entirely
a transaction between the testator and the heir.  Through
mistaken ideas on this matter the whole law of testamentary
evidence fell into confusion:  for the ancients, though they
rejected the evidence of the purchaser of the family and of
persons connected with him by the tie of power, allowed a
will to be witnessed by the heir and persons similarly
connected with him, though it must be admitted that they
accompanied this privilege with urgent cautions against its
abuse.  We have, however, amended this rule, and enacted
in the form of law what the ancients expressed in the form
only of advice, by assimilating the heir to the old purchaser of
the family, and have rightly forbidden the heir, who now
represents that character, and all other persons connected with
him by the tie referred to, to bear witness in a matter in which,
in a sense, they would be witnesses in their own behalf.
Accordingly, we have not allowed earlier constitutions on this
subject to be inserted in our Code.  11 Legatees, and persons
who take a benefit under a will by way of trust, and those
connected with them, we have not forbidden to be witnesses,
because they are not universal successors of the deceased:
indeed, by one of our constitutions we have specially granted
this privilege to them, and, a fortiori, to persons in their power,
or in whose power they are.

12 It is immaterial whether the will be written on a tablet, paper,
parchment, or any other substance:  and a man may execute
any number of duplicates of his will, for this is sometimes
necessary, though in each of them the usual formalities must
be observed.  For instance, a person setting out upon a voyage
may wish to take a statement of his last wishes along with him,
and also to leave one at home; and numberless other circum-
stances which happen to a man, and over which he has no
control, will make this desirable.  14 So far of written wills.
When, however, one wishes to make a will binding by the civil
law, but not in writing, he may summon seven witnesses, and
in their presence orally declare his wishes; this, it should be
observed, being a form of will which has been declared by
constitutions to be perfectly valid by civil law.

TITLE XI
OF SOLDIERS' WILLS

Soldiers, in consideration of their extreme ignorance of law, have
been exempted by imperial constitutions from the strict rules for
the execution of a testament which have been described.  Neither
the legal number of witnesses, nor the observance of the other
rules which have been stated, is necessary to give force to their
wills, provided, that is to say, that they are made by them while
on actual service; this last qualification being a new though wise
one introduced by our constitution.  Thus, in whatever mode
a soldier's last wishes are declared, whether in writing or orally,
this is a binding will, by force of his mere intention.  At times,
however, when they are not employed on actual service, but
are living at home or elsewhere, they are not allowed to claim
this privilege:  they may make a will, even though they be sons
in power, in virtue of their service, but they must observe the
ordinary rules, and are bound by the forms which we described
above as requisite in the execution of wills of civilians.

1 Respecting the testaments of soldiers the Emperor Trajan
sent a rescript to Statilius Severus in the following terms:
`The privilege allowed to soldiers of having their wills upheld,
in whatever manner they are made, must be understood to be
limited by the necessity of first proving that a will has been made
at all; for a will can be made without writing even by civilians.
Accordingly, with reference to the inheritance which is the
subject of the action before you, if it can be shown that the
soldier who left it, did in the presence of witnesses, collected
expressly for this purpose, declare orally who he wished to be
his heir, and on what slaves he wished to confer liberty, it may
well be maintained that in this way he made an unwritten
testament, and his wishes therein declared ought to be carried
out.  But if, as is so common in ordinary conversation, he said
to some one, I make you my heir, or, I leave you all my
property, such expressions cannot be held to amount to a
testament, and the interest of the very soldiers, who are
privileged in the way described, is the principal ground for
rejecting such a precedent.  For if it were admitted, it would
be easy, after a soldier's death, to procure witnesses to affirm
that they had heard him say he left his property to any one they
pleased to name, and in this way it would be impossible to
discover the true intentions of the deceased.'  2 A soldier too
may make a will though dumb and deaf.  3 This privilege,
however, which we have said soldiers enjoy, is allowed them
by imperial constitutions only while they are engaged on actual
service, and in camp life.  Consequently, if veterans wish to
make a will after their discharge, or if soldiers actually serving
wish to do this away from camp, they must observe the forms
prescribed for all citizens by the general law; and a testament
executed in camp without formalities, that is to say, not
according to the form prescribed by law, will remain valid
only for one year after the testator's discharge.  Supposing
then that the testator died within a year, but that a condition,
subject to which the heir was instituted, was not fulfilled within
the year, would it be feigned that the testator was a soldier at
the date of his decease, and the testament consequently upheld?
and this question we answer in the affirmative.  4 If a man,
before going on actual service, makes an invalid will, and then
during a campaign opens it, and adds some new disposition,
or cancels one already made, or in some other way makes it
clear that he wishes it to be his testament, it must be pronounced
valid, as being, in fact, a new will made by the man as a soldier.
5 Finally, if a soldier is adrogated, or, being a son in power, is
emancipated, his previously executed will remains good by the
fiction of a new expression of his wishes as a soldier, and is not
deemed to be avoided by his loss of status.

6 It is, however, to be observed that earlier statutes and imperial
constitutions allowed to children in power in certain cases a
civil peculium after the analogy of the military peculium, which
for that reason was called quasi-military, and of which some of
them were permitted to dispose by will even while under power.
By an extension of this principle our constitution has allowed all
persons who have a peculium of this special kind to dispose of
it by will, though subject to the ordinary forms of law.  By a
perusal of this constitution the whole law relating to this privilege
may be ascertained.

TITLE XII
OF PERSONS INCAPABLE OF MAKING WILLS

Certain persons are incapable of making a lawful will.
For instance, those in the power of others are so absolutely
incapable that they cannot make a testament even with the
permission of their parents, with the exception of those whom
we have enumerated, and particularly of children in power
who are soldiers, and who are permitted by imperial constitution
to dispose by will of all they may acquire while on actual service.
This was allowed at first only to soldiers on active service, by
the authority of the Emperors Augustus and Nerva, and of the
illustrious Emperor Trajan; afterwards, it was extended by an
enactment of the Emperor Hadrian to veterans, that is, soldiers
who had received their discharge.  Accordingly, if a son in power
makes a will of his military peculium, it will belong to the person
whom he institutes as heir:  but if he dies intestate, leaving no
children or brothers surviving him, it will go to the parent in whose
power he is, according to the ordinary rule.  From this it can be
understood that a parent has no power to deprive a son in his
power of what he has acquired on service, nor can the parent's
creditors sell or otherwise touch it; and when the parent dies it
is not shared between the soldier's son and his brothers, but
belongs to him alone, although by the civil law the peculium of
a person in power is always reckoned as part of the property
of the parent, exactly as that of a slave is deemed part of the
property of his master, except of course such property of the
son as by imperial constitutions, and especially our own, the
parent is unable to acquire in absolute ownership.  Consequently,
if a son in power, not having a military or quasi-military peculium,
makes a will, it is invalid, even though he is released from power
before his decease.  1 Again, a person under the age of puberty
is incapable of making a will, because he has no judgement,
and so too is a lunatic, because he has lost his reason; and it is
immaterial that the one reaches the age of puberty, and the other
recovers his faculties, before his decease.  If, however, a lunatic
makes a will during a lucid interval, the will is deemed valid, and
one is certainly valid which he made before he lost his reason:
for subsequent insanity never avoids a duly executed testament
or any other disposition validly made.  2 So too a spendthrift,
who is interdicted from the management of his own affairs, is
incapable of making a valid will, though one made by him before
being so interdicted holds good.  3 The deaf, again, and the
dumb cannot always make a will, though here we are speaking
not of persons merely hard of hearing, but of total deafness,
and similarly by a dumb person is meant one totally dumb, and
not one who merely speaks with difficulty; for it often happens
that even men of culture and learning by some cause or other
lose the faculties of speech and hearing.  Hence relief has been
afforded them by our constitution, which enables them, in
certain cases and in certain modes therein specified, to make
a will and other lawful dispositions.  If a man, after making his
will, becomes deaf or dumb through ill health or any other
cause, it remains valid notwithstanding.  4 A blind man cannot
make a will, except by observing the forms introduced by a
law of our imperial father Justin.  5 A will made by a prisoner
while in captivity with the enemy is invalid, even though he
subsequently returns.  One made, however, while he was in
his own state is valid, if he returns, by the law of postliminium;
if he dies in captivity it is valid by the lex Cornelia.

TITLE XIII
OF THE DISINHERISON OF CHILDREN

The law, however, is not completely satisfied by the observance
of the rules hereinbefore explained.  A testator who has a son
in his power must take care either to institute him heir, or to
specially disinherit him, for passing him over in silence avoids
the will; and this rule is so strict, that even if the son die in the
lifetime of the father no heir can take under the will, because of
its original nullity.  As regards daughters and other descendants
of either sex by the male line, the ancients did not observe this
rule in all its strictness; for if these persons were neither instituted
nor disinherited, the will was not avoided, but they were entitled
to come in with the instituted heirs, and to take a certain portion
of the inheritance.  And these persons the ascendant was not
obliged to specially disinherit; he could disinherit them collectively
by a general clause.  1 Special disinherison may be expressed
in these terms -- `Be Titius my son disinherited,' or in these,
`Be my son disinherited,' without inserting the name, supposing
there is no other son.  Children born after the making of the
will must also be either instituted heirs or disinherited, and in
this respect are similarly privileged, that if a son or any other
family heir, male or female, born after the making of the will,
be passed over in silence, the will, though originally valid, is
invalidated by the subsequent birth of the child, and so becomes
completely void.  Consequently, if the woman from whom a
child was expected to have an abortive delivery, there is nothing
to prevent the instituted heirs from taking the inheritance.  It
was immaterial whether the female family heirs born after the
making of the will were disinherited specially or by a general
clause, but if the latter mode be adopted, some legacy must be
left them in order that they may not seem to have been passed
over merely through inadvertence:  but male family heirs born
after the making of the will, sons and other lineal descendants,
are held not to be properly disinherited unless they are dis-
inherited specially, thus:  `Be any son that shall be born to me
disinherited.'  2 With children born after the making of the will
are classed children who succeed to the place of a family heir,
and who thus, by an event analogous to subsequent birth,
become family heirs to an ancestor.  For instance, if a testator
have a son, and by him a grandson or granddaughter in his
power, the son alone, being nearer in degree, has the right of
a family heir, although the grandchildren are in the testator's
power equally with him.  But if the son die in the testator's
lifetime, or is in some other way released from his power, the
grandson and granddaughter succeed to his place, and thus,
by a kind of subsequent birth, acquire the rights of family heirs.
To prevent this subsequent avoidance of one's will, grand-
children by a son must be either instituted heirs or disinherited,
exactly as, to secure the original validity of a testament, a son
must be either instituted or specially disinherited; for if the son
die in the testator's lifetime, the grandson and granddaughter
take his place, and avoid the will just as if they were children
born after its execution.  And this disinherison was first allowed
by the lex Iunia Vallaea, which explains the form which is to be
used, and which resembles that employed in disinheriting family
heirs born after the making of a will.  3 It is not necessary, by
the civil law, to either institute or disinherit emancipated children,
because they are not family heirs.  But the praetor requires all,
females as well as males, unless instituted, to be disinherited,
males specially, females collectively; and if they are neither ap-
pointed heirs nor disinherited as described, the praetor promises
them possession of goods against the will.  4 Adopted children,
so long as they are in the power of their adoptive father, are in
precisely the same legal position as children born in lawful
wedlock; consequently they must be either instituted or dis-
inherited according to the rules stated for the disinherison of
natural children.  When, however, they have been emancipated
by their adoptive father, they are no longer regarded as his
children either by the civil law or by the praetor's edict.
Conversely, in relation to their natural father, so long as they
remain in the adoptive family they are strangers, so that he need
neither institute nor disinherit them:  but when emancipated by
their adoptive father, they have the same rights in the succession
to their natural father as they would have had if it had been he
by whom they were emancipated.  Such was the law introduced
by our predecessors.  5 Deeming, however, that between the
sexes, to each of which nature assigns an equal share in
perpetuating the race of man, there is in this matter no real
ground of distinction, and marking that, by the ancient statute
of the Twelve Tables, all were called equally to the succession
on the death of their ancestor intestate (which precedent the
praetors also seem to have subsequently followed), we have by
our constitution introduced a simple system of the same kind,
applying uniformly to sons, daughters, and other descendants
by the male line, whether born before or after the making of the
will.  This requires that all children, whether family heirs or
emancipated, shall be specially disinherited, and declares that
their pretermission shall have the effect of avoiding the will of
their parent, and depriving the instituted heirs of the inheritance,
no less than the pretermission of children who are family heirs
or who have been emancipated, whether already born, or born
after, though conceived before the making of the will.  In respect
of adoptive children we have introduced a distinction, which is
explained in our constitution on adoptions.  6 If a soldier engaged
on actual service makes a testament without specially disinheriting
his children, whether born before or after the making of the will,
but simply passing over them in silence, though he knows that
he has children, it is provided by imperial constitutions that his
silent pretermission of them shall be equivalent to special dis-
inherison.  7 A mother or maternal grandfather is not bound to
institute her or his children or grandchildren; they may simply
omit them, for silence on the part of a mother, or of a maternal
grandfather or other ascendant, has the same effect as actual
disinherison by a father.  For neither by the civil law, nor by
that part of the praetor's edict in which he promises children
who are passed over possession of goods against the will, is
a mother obliged to disinherit her son or daughter if she does
not institute them heirs, or a maternal grandfather to be equally
precise with reference to grandchildren by a daughter:  though
such children and grandchildren, if omitted, have another
remedy, which will shortly be explained.

TITLE XIV
OF THE INSTITUTION OF THE HEIR

A man may institute as his heirs either free men or slaves, and
either his own slaves or those of another man.  If he wished
to institute his own slave it was formerly necessary, according
to the more common opinion, that he should expressly give him
his liberty in the will:  but now it is lawful, by our constitution,
to institute one's own slave without this express manumission
-- a change not due to any spirit of innovation, but to a sense
of equity, and one whose principle was approved by Atilicinus,
as it is stated by Seius in his books on Masurius Sabinus and
on Plautius.  Among a testator's own slaves is to be reckoned
one of whom he is bare owner, the usufruct being vested in
some other person.  There is, however, one case in which the
institution of a slave by his mistress is void, even though freedom
be given him in the will, as is provided by a constitution of the
Emperors Severus and Antoninus in these terms:  `Reason
demands that no slave, accused of criminal intercourse with his
mistress, shall be capable of being manumitted, before his
sentence is pronounced, by the will of the woman who is ac-
cused of participating in his guilt:  accordingly if he be instituted
heir by that mistress, the institution is void.'  Among `other
persons' slaves' is reckoned one in whom the testator has a
usufruct.  1 If a slave is instituted heir by his own master, and
continues in that condition until his master's decease, he
becomes by the will both free, and necessary heir.  But if the
testator himself manumits him in his lifetime, he may use his
own discretion about acceptance; for he is not a necessary heir,
because, though he is named heir to the testament, it was not
by that testament that he became free.  If he has been alienated,
he must have the order of his new master to accept, and then his
master becomes heir through him, while he personally becomes
neither heir nor free, even though his freedom was expressly
given him in the testament, because by alienating him his former
master is presumed to have renounced the intention of en-
franchising him.  When another person's slave is instituted heir,
if he continues in the same condition he must have the order of
his master to accept; if alienated by him in the testator's lifetime,
or after the testator's death but before acceptance, he must have
the order of the alienee to accept; finally, if manumitted in the
testator's lifetime, or after the testator's death but before
acceptance, he may accept or not at his own discretion.  2 A
slave who does not belong to the testator may be instituted heir
even after his master's decease, because slaves who belong to
an inheritance are capable of being instituted or made legatees;
for an inheritance not yet accepted represents not the future
heir but the person deceased.  Similarly, the slave of a child
conceived but not yet born may be instituted heir.  3 If a slave
belonging to two or more joint owners, both or all of whom
are legally capable of being made heirs or legatees, is instituted
heir by a stranger, he acquires the inheritance for each and all
of the joint owners by whose orders he accepts it in proportion
to the respective shares in which they own him.

4 A testator may institute either a single heir, or as many as he
pleases.  5 An inheritance is usually divided into twelve ounces,
and is denoted in the aggregate by the term as, and each
fraction of this aggregate, ranging from the ounce up to the as
or pound, has its specific name, as follows:  sextans (1/6),
quadrans (1/4), triens (1/3), quincunx (5/12), semis (1/2),
septunx (7/12), bes (2/3), dodrans (3/4), dextans (5/6),
deunx (11/12), and as.  It is not necessary, however, that
there should always be twelve ounces, for for the purposes of
testamentary distribution an as may consist of as many ounces
as the testator pleases; for instance, if a testator institutes only
a single heir, but declares that he is to be heir ex semisse, or to
one half of the inheritance, this half will really be the whole, for
no one can die partly testate and partly intestate, except soldiers,
in the carrying out of whose wills the intention is the only thing
regarded.  Conversely, a testator may divide his inheritance into
as large a number of ounces as he pleases.  6 If more heirs than
one are instituted, it is unnecessary for the testator to assign a
specific share in the inheritance to each, unless he intends that
they shall not take in equal portions; for it is obvious that if no
shares are specified they divide the inheritance equally between
them.  Supposing, however, that specific shares are assigned to
all the instituted heirs except one, who is left without any express
share at all, this last heir will be entitled to any fraction of the as
which has not been disposed of; and if there are two or more
heirs to whom no specific shares have been assigned, they will
divide this unassigned fraction equally between them.  Finally, if
the whole as has been assigned in specific shares to some of
the heirs, the one or more who have no specific shares take half
of the inheritance, while the other half is divided among the rest
according to the shares assigned to them; and it is immaterial
whether the heir who has no specified share come first or last
in the institution, or occupies some intermediate place; for such
share is presumed to be given to him as is not in some other
way disposed of.  7 Let us now see how the law stands if some
part remains undisposed of, and yet each heir has his share
assigned to him -- if, for instance there are three heirs instituted,
and each is assigned a quarter of the inheritance.  It is evident
that in this case the part undisposed of will go to them in
proportion to the share each has assigned to him by the will,
and it will be exactly as if they had each been originally instituted
to a third.  Conversely, if each heir is given so large a fraction
that the as will be exceeded, each must suffer a proportionate
abatement; thus if four heirs are instituted, and to each is
assigned a third of the inheritance, it will be the same as if each
had been originally instituted to a quarter.  8 If more than twelve
ounces are distributed among some of the heirs only, one being
left without a specific share, he will have what is wanting to
complete the second as; and the same will be done if more
than twenty-four ounces are distributed, leaving him shareless;
but all these ideal sums are afterwards reduced to the single
as, whatever be the number of ounces they comprise.

9 The institution of the heir may be either absolute or conditional,
but no heir can be instituted from, or up to, some definite date,
as, for instance, in the following form -- `be so and so my heir
after five years from my decease,' or `after the calends of such
a month,' or `up to and until such calends'; for a time limitation
in a will is considered a superfluity, and an heir instituted subject
to such a time limitation is treated as heir absolutely.  10 If the
institution of an heir, a legacy, a fiduciary bequest, or a
testamentary manumission is made to depend on an impossible
condition, the condition is deemed unwritten, and the disposition
absolute.  11 If an institution is made to depend on two or more
conditions, conjunctively expressed, -- as, for instance, `if this
and that shall be done' -- all the conditions must be satisfied:  if
they are expressed in the alternative, or disjunctively -- as `if
this or that shall be done' -- it is enough if one of them alone is
satisfied.

12 A testator may institute as his heir a person whom he has
never seen, for instance, nephews who have been born abroad
and are unknown to him:  for want of this knowledge does not
invalidate the institution.

TITLE XV
OF ORDINARY SUBSTITUTION

A testator may institute his heirs, if he pleases, in two or more
degrees, as, for instance, in the following form:  `If A shall not
be my heir, then let B be my heir'; and in this way he can make
as many substitutions as he likes, naming in the last place one of
his own slaves as necessary heir, in default of all others taking.
1 Several may be substituted in place of one, or one in place of
several, or to each heir may be substituted a new and distinct
person, or, finally, the instituted heirs may be substituted
reciprocally in place of one another.  2 If heirs who are instituted
in equal shares are reciprocally substituted to one another, and
the shares which they are to have in the substitution are not
specified, it is presumed (as was settled by a rescript of the
Emperor Pius) that the testator intended them to take the same
shares in the substitution as they took directly under the will.
3 If a third person is substituted to one heir who himself is
substituted to his co-heir, the Emperors Severus and Antoninus
decided by rescript that this third person is entitled to the shares
of both without distinction.  4 If a testator institutes another
man's slave, supposing him to be an independent person, and
substitutes Maevius in his place to meet the case of his not
taking the inheritance, then, if the slave accepts by the order
of his master, Maevius is entitled to a half.  For, when applied
to a person whom the testator knows to be in the power of
another, the words `if he shall not be my heir' are taken to
mean `if he shall neither be heir himself nor cause another to
be heir'; but when applied to a person whom the testator
supposes to be independent, they mean `if he shall not acquire
the inheritance either for himself, or for that person to whose
power he shall subsequently become subject,' and this was
decided by Tiberius Caesar in the case of his slave Parthenius.

TITLE XVI
OF PUPILLARY SUBSTITUTION

To children below the age of puberty and in the power of the
testator, not only can such a substitute as we have described be
appointed, that is, one who shall take on their failing to inherit,
but also one who shall be their heir if, after inheriting, they die
within the age of puberty; and this may be done in the following
terms, `Be my son Titius my heir; and if he does not become my
heir, or, after becoming my heir, die before becoming his own
master (that is, before reaching puberty), then be Seius my heir.'
In which case, if the son fails to inherit, the substitute is the heir
of the testator; but if the son, after inheriting, dies within the age
of puberty, he is the heir of the son.  For it is a rule of customary
law, that when our children are too young to make wills for
themselves, their parents may make them for them.  1 The reason
of this rule has induced us to assert in our Code a constitution,
providing that if a testator has children, grandchildren, or
great-grandchildren who are lunatics or idiots, he may, after
the analogy of pupillary substitution, substitute certain definite
persons to them, whatever their sex or the nearness of their
relationship to him, and even though they have reached the
age of puberty; provided always that on their recovering their
faculties such substitution shall at once become void, exactly
as pupillary substitution proper ceases to have any operation
after the pupil has reached puberty.  2 Thus, in pupillary
substitution effected in the form described, there are, so to
speak, two wills, the father's and the son's, just as if the son
had personally instituted an heir to himself; or rather, there is
one will dealing with two distinct matters, that is, with two
distinct inheritances.  3 If a testator be apprehensive that, after
his own death, his son, while still a pupil, may be exposed to
the danger of foul play, because another person is openly
substituted to him, he ought to make the ordinary substitution
openly, and in the earlier part of the testament, and write the
other substitution, wherein a man is named heir on the succession
and death of the pupil, separately on the lower part of the will;
and this lower part he should tie with a separate cord and
fasten with a separate seal, and direct in the earlier part of the
will that it shall not be opened in the lifetime of the son before
he attains the age of puberty.  Of course a substitution to a
son under the age of puberty is none the less valid because it
is a integral part of the very will in which the testator has
instituted him his heir, though such an open substitution may
expose the pupil to the danger of foul play.  4 Not only when
we leave our inheritance to children under the age of puberty
can we make such a substitution, that if they accept the inheritance,
and then die under that age, the substitute is their heir, but we can
do it when we disinherit them, so that whatever the pupil acquires
by way of inheritance, legacy or gift from his relatives or friends,
will pass to the substitute.  What has been said of substitution
to children below the age of puberty, whether instituted or
disinherited, is true also of substitution to afterborn children.
5 In no case, however, may a man make a will for his children
unless he makes one also for himself; for the will of the pupil is but
a complementary part of the father's own testament; accordingly,
if the latter is void, the former will be void also.  6 Substitution
may be made either to each child separately, or only to such one
of them as shall last die under the age of puberty.  The first is the
proper plan, if the testator's intention is that none of them shall
die intestate:  the second, if he wishes that, as among them, the
order of succession prescribed by the Twelve Tables shall be
strictly preserved.  7 The person substituted in the place of a
child under the age of puberty may be either named individually
-- for instance, Titius -- or generally prescribed, as by the words
`whoever shall be my heir'; in which latter case, on the child
dying under the age of puberty, those are called to the inheritance
by the substitution who have been instituted heirs and have
accepted, their shares in the substitution being proportionate to
the shares in which they succeeded the father.  8 This kind of
substitution may be made to males up to the age of fourteen,
and to females up to that of twelve years; when this age is once
passed, the substitution becomes void.  9 To a stranger, or a
child above the age of puberty whom a man has instituted heir,
he cannot appoint a substitute to succeed him if he take and die
within a certain time:  he has only the power to bind him by a
trust to convey the inheritance to another either wholly or in part;
the law relating to which subject will be explained in its proper
place.

TITLE XVII
OF THE MODES IN WHICH WILLS BECOME
VOID

A duly executed testament remains valid until either revoked or
rescinded.  1 A will is revoked when, though the civil condition
of the testator remains unaltered, the legal force of the will itself
is destroyed, as happens when, after making his will, a man
adopts as his son either an independent person, in which case
the adoption is effected by imperial decree, or a person already
in power, when it is done through the agency of the praetor
according to our constitution.  In both these cases the will is
revoked, precisely as it would be by the subsequent birth of a
family heir.  2 Again, a subsequent will duly executed is a
revocation of a prior will, and it makes no difference whether
an heir ever actually takes under it or not; the only question is
whether one might conceivably have done so.  Accordingly,
whether the person instituted declines to be heir, or dies in the
lifetime of the testator, or after his death but before accepting
the inheritance, or is excluded by failure of the condition under
which he was instituted -- in all the cases the testator dies
intestate; for the earlier will is revoked by the later one, and
the later one is inoperative, as no heir takes under it.  3 If, after
duly making one will, a man executes a second one which is
equally valid, the Emperors Severus and Antoninus decided
by rescript that the first is revoked by the second, even though
the heir instituted in the second is instituted to certain things only.
The terms of this enactment we have ordered to be inserted here,
because it contains another provision.  `The Emperors Severus
and Antoninus to Cocceius Campanus. A second will, although
the heir named therein be instituted to certain things only, is just
as valid as if no mention of the things had been made:  but the
heir is bound to content himself with the things given him, or
with such further portion of the inheritance as will make up the
fourth part to which he is entitled under the lex Falcidia, and
(subject thereto) to transfer the inheritance to the persons
instituted in the earlier will:  for the words inserted in the later
will undoubtedly contain the expression of a wish that the
earlier one shall remain valid.'  This accordingly is a mode in
which a testament may be revoked.  4 There is another event
by which a will duly executed may be invalidated, namely, the
testator's undergoing a loss of status:  how this may happen was
explained in the preceding Book.  5 In this case the will may be
said to be rescinded, though both those that are revoked, and
those that are not duly executed, may be said to become or be
rescinded; and similarly too those which are duly executed but
subsequently rescinded by loss of status may be said to be
revoked.  However, as it is convenient that different grounds
of invalidity should have different names to distinguish them,
we say that some wills are unduly executed from the commence-
ment, while others which are duly executed are either revoked
or rescinded.  6 Wills, however, which, though duly executed,
are subsequently rescinded by the testator's undergoing loss
of status are not altogether inoperative:  for if the seals of seven
witnesses are attached, the instituted heir is entitled to demand
possession in accordance with the will, if only the testator were
a citizen of Rome and independent at the time of his decease; but
if the cause of the rescission was the testator's subsequent loss
of citizenship or of freedom, or his adoption, and he dies an alien,
or slave, or subject to his adoptive father's power, the instituted
heir is barred from demanding possession in accordance with the
will.  7 The mere desire of a testator that a will which he has
executed shall no longer have any validity is not, by itself, sufficient
to avoid it; so that, even if he begins to make a later will, which
he does not complete because he either dies first, or changes his
mind, the first will remains good; it being provided in an address
of the Emperor Pertinax to the Senate that one testament which
is duly executed is not revoked by a later one which is not duly
and completely executed; for an incomplete will is undoubtedly
null.  8 In the same address the Emperor declared that he would
accept no inheritance to which he was made heir on account of
a suit between the testator and some third person, nor would he
uphold a will in which he was instituted in order to screen some
legal defect in its execution, or accept an inheritance to which he
was instituted merely by word of mouth, or take any testamentary
benefit under a document defective in point of law.  And there
are numerous rescripts of the Emperors Severus and Antoninus
to the same purpose:  `for though,' they say, `the laws do not
bind us, yet we live in obedience to them.'

TITLE XVIII
OF AN UNDUTEOUS WILL

Inasmuch as the disinherison or omission by parents of their
children has generally no good reason, those children who
complain that they have been wrongfully disinherited or passed
over have been allowed to bring an action impeaching the will
as unduteous, under the pretext that the testator was of unsound
mind at the time of its execution.  This does not mean that he was
really insane, but that the will, though legally executed, bears no
mark of that affection to which a child is entitled from a parent:
for if a testator is really insane, his will is void.  1 Parents may
impeach the wills of their children as unduteous, as well as children
those of their parents.  Brothers and sisters of the testator are
by imperial constitutions preferred to infamous persons who are
instituted to their exclusion, so that it is in these cases only that
they can bring this action.  Persons related to the testator in a
further degree than as brothers or sisters can in no case bring
the action, or at any rate succeed in it when brought.  2 Children
fully adopted, in accordance with the distinction drawn in our
constitution, can bring this action as well as natural children,
but neither can do so unless there is no other mode in which
they can obtain the property of the deceased:  for those who
can obtain the inheritance wholly or in part by any other title are
barred from attacking a will as unduteous.  Afterborn children
too can employ this remedy, if they can by no other means
recover the inheritance.  3 That they may bring the action must
be understood to mean, that they may bring it only if absolutely
nothing has been left them by the testator in his will:  a restriction
introduced by our constitution out of respect for a father's natural
rights.  If, however, a part of the inheritance, however small, or
even a single thing is left them, the will cannot be impeached,
but the heir must, if necessary, make up what is given them to
a fourth of what they would have taken had the testator died
intestate, even though the will does not direct that this fourth
is to be made up by the assessment of an honest and reliable
man.  4 If a guardian accepts, under his own father's will, a
legacy on behalf of the pupil under his charge, the father having
left nothing to him personally, he is in no way debarred from
impeaching his father's will as unduteous on his own account.
5 On the other hand, if he impeaches the will of his pupil's
father on the pupil's behalf, because nothing has been left
to the latter, and is defeated in the action, he does not lose
a legacy given in the same will to himself personally.
6 Accordingly,  that a person may be barred from the action
impeaching the will, it is requisite that he should have a fourth
of what he would have taken on intestacy, either as heir, legatee
direct or fiduciary, donee in contemplation of death, by gift from
the testator in his lifetime (though gift of this latter kind bars the
action only if made under any of the circumstances mentioned
in our constitution) or in any of the other modes stated in the
imperial legislation.  7 In what we have said of the fourth we
must be understood to mean that whether there be one person
only, or more than one, who can impeach the will as unduteous,
one-fourth of the whole inheritance may be given them, to be
divided among them all proportionately, that is to say, to each
person a fourth of what he would have had if the testator had
died intestate.

TITLE XIX
OF THE KINDS AND DIFFERENCES
BETWEEN HEIRS

Heirs are of three kinds, that is to say, they are either necessary,
family heirs and necessary, or external.  1 A necessary heir is
a slave of the testator, whom he institutes as heir:  and he is so
named because, willing or unwilling, and without any alternative,
he becomes free and necessary heir immediately on the testator's
decease.  For when a man's affairs are embarrassed, it is
common for one of his slaves to be instituted in his will, either in
the first place, or as a substitute in the second or any later place,
so that, if the creditors are not paid in full, the heir may be
insolvent rather than the testator, and his property, rather than
the testator's, may be sold by the creditors and divided among
them.  To balance this disadvantage he has this advantage, that
his acquisitions after the testator's decease are for his own sole
benefit; and although the estate of the deceased is insufficient
to pay the creditors in full, the heir's subsequent acquisitions are
never on that account liable to a second sale.  2 Heirs who are
both family heirs and necessary are such as a son or a daughter,
a grandchild by a son, and further similar lineal descendants,
provided that they are in the ancestor's power at the time of his
decease.  To make a grandson or granddaughter a family heir it
is, however, not sufficient for them to be in the grandfather's
power at the moment of his decease:  it is further requisite that
their own father shall, in the lifetime of the grandfather, have
ceased to be the family heir himself, whether by death or by
any other mode of release from power:  for by this event the
grandson and granddaughter succeed to the place of their
father. They are called family heirs, because they are heirs of
the house, and even in the lifetime of the parent are to a certain
extent deemed owners of the inheritance:  wherefore in intestacy
the first right of succession belongs to the children.  They are
called necessary heirs because they have no alternative, but,
willing or unwilling, both where there is a will and where there
is not, they become heirs.  The praetor, however, permits them,
if they wish, to abstain from the inheritance, and leave the parent
to become insolvent rather than themselves.

3 Those who are not subject to the testator's power are called
external heirs.  Thus children of ours who are not in our power,
if instituted heirs by us, are deemed external heirs; and children
instituted by their mother belong to this class, because women
never have children in their power.  Slaves instituted heirs by
their masters, and manumitted subsequently to the execution of
the will, belong to the same class.  4 It is necessary that external
heirs should have testamentary capacity, whether it is an in-
dependent person, or some one in his power, who is instituted:
and this capacity is required at two times; at the same time of
the making of the will, when, without it, the institution would be
void; and at the same time of the testator's decease, when,
without it, the institution would have no effect.  Moreover, the
instituted heir ought to have this capacity also at the time when
he accepts the inheritance, whether he is instituted absolutely or
subject to a condition; and indeed it is especially at this time that
his capacity to take ought to be looked to.  If, however, the in-
stituted heir undergoes a loss of status in the interval between the
making of the will and the testator's decease, or the satisfaction
of the condition subject to which he was instituted, he is not
thereby prejudiced:  for, as we said, there are only three points
of time which have to be regarded.  Testamentary capacity thus
does not mean merely capacity to make a will; it also means
capacity to take for oneself, or for the father or master in whose
power one is, under the will of another person:  and this latter
kind of testamentary capacity is quite independent of the
capacity to make a will oneself.  Accordingly, even lunatics,
deaf persons, after-born children, infants, children in power,
and other persons' slaves are said to have testamentary capacity;
for though they cannot make a valid will, they can acquire for
themselves or for another under a will made by someone else.
5 External heirs have the privilege of deliberating whether they
will accept or disclaim an inheritance.  But if a person who is
entitled to disclaim interferes with the inheritance, or if one who
has the privilege of deliberation accepts it, he no longer has the
power of relinquishing it, unless he is a minor under the age
of twenty-five years, for minors obtain relief from the praetor
when they incautiously accept a disadvantageous inheritance,
as well as when they take any other injudicious step.  6 It is, how-
ever, to be observed that the Emperor Hadrian once relieved
even a person who had attained his majority, when, after his
accepting the inheritance, a great debt, unknown at the time of
acceptance, had come to light.  This was but the bestowal of an
especial favour on a single individual; the Emperor Gordian
subsequently extended the privilege, but only to soldiers, to whom
it was granted as a class.  We, however, in our benevolence
have placed this benefit within the reach of all our subjects, and
drafted a constitution as just as it is splendid, under which, if
heirs will but observe its terms, they can accept an inheritance
without being liable to creditors and legatees beyond the value
of the property.  Thus so far as their liability is concerned there
is no need for them to deliberate on acceptance, unless they fail
to observe the procedure of our constitution, and prefer
deliberation, by which they will remain liable to all the risks of
acceptance under the older law.  7 An external heir, whether his
right accrue to him under a will or under the civil law of intestate
succession, can take the inheritance either by acting as heir, or
by the mere intention to accept.  By acting as heir is mean, for
instance, using things belonging to the inheritance as one's own,
or selling them, or cultivating or giving leases of the deceased's
estates, provided only one expresses in any way whatsoever,
by deed or word, one's intention to accept the inheritance, so
long as one knows that the person with whose property one is
thus dealing has died testate or intestate, and that one is that
person's heir.  To act as heir, in fact, is to act as owner, and the
ancients often used the term `heir' as equivalent to the term
`owner.'  And just as the mere intention to accept makes an
external heir heir, so too the mere determination not to accept
bars him from the inheritance.  Nothing prevents a person who
is born deaf or dumb, or who becomes so after birth, from
acting as heir and thus acquiring the inheritance, provided only
he knows what he is doing.

TITLE XX
OF LEGACIES

Let us now examine legacies:  -- a kind of title which seems
foreign to the matter at hand, for we are expounding titles
whereby aggregates of rights are acquired; but as we have
treated in full of wills and heirs appointed by will, it was natural
in close connexion therewith to consider this mode of acquisition.

1 Now a legacy is a kind of gift left by a person deceased; 2 and
formerly they were of four kinds, namely, legacy by vindication,
by condemnation, by permission, and by preception, to each
of which a definite form of words was appropriated by which it
was known, and which served to distinguish it from legacies of
the other kinds.  Solemn forms of words of this sort, however,
have been altogether abolished by imperial constitutions; and we,
desiring to give greater effect to the wishes of deceased persons,
and to interpret their expressions with reference rather to those
wishes than to their strict literal meaning, have issued a constitution,
composed after great reflection, enacting that in future there shall
be but one kind of legacy, and that, whatever be the terms in
which the bequest is couched, the legatee may sue for it no less
by real or hypothecary than by personal action.  How carefully
and wisely this constitution is worded may be ascertained by a
perusal of its contents.  3 We have determined, however, to go
even beyond this enactment; for, observing that the ancients
subjected legacies to strict rules, while the rules which they
applied to fiduciary bequests, as springing more directly from
the deceased person's wishes, were more liberal, we have
deemed it necessary to assimilate the former completely to the
latter, so that any future features in which legacies are inferior to
fiduciary bequests may be supplied to them from the latter, and
the latter themselves may in future possess any superiority which
has hitherto been enjoyed by legacies only.  In order, however,
to avoid perplexing students in their first essays in the law by
discussing these two forms of bequests together, we have
thought it worth while to treat them separately, dealing first with
legacies, and then with fiduciary bequests, so that the reader,
having first learnt their respective natures in a separate treatment,
may, when his legal education is more advanced, be able easily
to comprehend their treatment in combination.

4 A legacy may be given not only of things belonging to the
testator or heir, but also of things belonging to a third person,
the heir being bound by the will to buy and deliver them to the
legatee, or to give him their value if the owner is unwilling to
sell them.  If the thing given be one of those of which private
ownership is impossible, such, for instance, as the Campus
Martius, a basilica, a church, or a thing devoted to public use,
not even its value can be claimed, for the legacy is void.  In
saying that a thing belonging to a third person may be given as
a legacy we must be understood to mean that this may be done
if the deceased knew that it belonged to a third person, and not
if he was ignorant of this:  for perhaps he would never have
given the legacy if he had known that the thing belonged neither
to him nor to the heir, and there is a rescript of the Emperor Pius
to this effect.  It is also the better opinion that the plaintiff, that
is the legatee, must prove that the deceased knew he was giving
as a legacy a thing which was not his own, rather than that the
heir must prove the contradictory:  for the general rule of law
is that the burden of proof lies on the plaintiff.  5 If the thing
which a testator bequests is in pledge to a creditor, the heir is
obliged to redeem it, subject to the same distinction as has
been drawn with reference to a legacy of a thing not belonging
to the testator; that is to say, the heir is bound to redeem only
if the deceased knew the thing to be in pledge:  and the
Emperors Severus and Antoninus have decided this by rescript.
If, however, the deceased expresses his intention that the
legatee should redeem the thing himself, the heir is under no
obligation to do it for him.  6 If a legacy is given of a thing
belonging to another person, and the legatee becomes its
owner during the testator's lifetime by purchase, he can obtain
its value from the heir by action on the will:  but if he gives no
consideration for it, that is to say, gets it by way of gift or by
some similar title, he cannot sue; for it is settled law that where
a man has already got a thing, giving no consideration in return,
he cannot get its value by a second title of the same kind.
Accordingly, if a man is entitled to claim a thing under each of
two distinct wills, it is material whether he gets the thing, or
merely its value, under the earlier one:  for if he gets the thing
itself, he cannot sue under the second will, because he already
has the thing without giving any consideration, whereas he has a
good right of action if he has merely got its value.  7 A thing
which does not yet exist, but will exist, may be validly bequeathed:
-- for instance, the produce of such and such land, or the child
of such and such female slave.  8 If the same thing is given as
a legacy to two persons, whether jointly or severally, and both
claim it, each is entitled to only a half; if one of them does not
claim it, because either he does not care for it, or has died in
the testator's lifetime, or for some other reason, the whole goes
to his co-legatee.  A joint legacy is given in such words as the
following:  `I give and bequeath my slave Stichus to Titius and
Seius':  a several legacy thus, `I give and bequeath my slave
Stichus to Titius:  I give and bequeath Stichus to Seius':  and
even if the testator says `the same slave Stichus' the legacy is
still a several one.  9 If land be bequeathed which belongs to
some one other than the testator, and the intended legatee, after
purchasing the bare ownership therein, obtains the usufruct
without consideration, and then sues under the will, Julian says
that this action for the land is well grounded, because in a real
action for land a usufruct is regarded merely as a servitude; but
it is part of the duty of the judge to deduct the value of the
usufruct from the sum which he directs to be paid as the value
of the land.  10 A legacy by which something already belonging
to the legatee is given him is void, for what is his own already
cannot become more his own than it is:  and even though he
alienates it before the testator's death, neither it nor its value
can be claimed.  11 If a testator bequeaths something belonging
to him, but which he thought belonged to another person, the
legacy is good, for its validity depends not on what he thought,
but on the real facts of the case:  and it is clearly good if he
thought it already belonged to the legatee, because his expressed
wish can thus be carried out.  12 If, after making his will, a
testator alienates property which he has therein given away as
a legacy, Celsus is of opinion that the legatee may still claim it
unless the testator's intention was thereby to revoke the bequest,
and there is a rescript of the Emperors Severus and Antoninus
to this effect, as well as another which decides that if, after
making his will, a testator pledges land which he had therein
given as a legacy, the part which has not been alienated can in
any case be claimed, and the alienated part as well if the alienator's
intention was not to revoke the legacy.  13 If a man bequeaths
to his debtor a discharge from his debt, the legacy is good, and
the testator's heir cannot sue either the debtor himself, or his
heir, or any one who occupies the position of heir to him, and the
debtor can even compel the testator's heir to formally release him.
Moreover, a testator can also forbid his heir to claim payment
of a debt before a certain time has elapsed.  14 Contrariwise,
if a debtor leaves his creditor a legacy of what he owes him, the
legacy is void, if it includes no more than the debt, for the creditor
is thus in no way benefited; but if the debtor unconditionally
bequeaths a sum of money which the creditor cannot claim until
a definite date has arrived or a condition has been satisfied, the
legacy is good, because it confers on the creditor a right to
earlier payment.  And, even if the day arrives, or the condition
is satisfied, during the testator's lifetime, Papinian decides, and
rightly, that the legacy is nevertheless a good one, because it was
good when first written; for the opinion that a legacy becomes
void, because something happens to deprive it of all material
effect, is now rejected.  15 If a man leaves his wife a legacy of
her dowry, the gift is good, because the legacy is worth more
than a mere right of action for the dowry.  If, however, he has
never received the dowry which he bequeaths, the Emperors
Severus and Antoninus have decided by rescript that the legacy
is void, provided the general term `dowry' is used, but good,
if in giving it to the wife a definite sum or thing is specified, or
described generally by reference to the dowry deed.  16 If a
thing bequeathed perishes through no act of the heir, the loss
falls on the legatee:  thus if a slave belonging to another person,
who is given in this way, is manumitted through no act of the
heir, the latter is not bound.  If, however, the slave belongs to
the heir, who manumits him, Julian says that he is bound, and it
is immaterial whether he knew or not that the slave had been
bequeathed away from him.  17 If a testator gives a legacy of
female slaves along with their offspring, the legatee can claim
the latter even if the mothers are dead, and so again if a legacy
is given of ordinary slaves along with their vicarii or sub-
ordinates, the latter can be claimed even if the former are dead.
But if the legacy be of a slave along with his peculium, and the
slave is dead, or has been manumitted or alienated, the legacy
of the peculium is extinguished; and similarly, if the legacy be
of land with everything upon it, or with all its instruments of
tillage, by the alienation of the land the legacy of the instruments
of tillage is extinguished.  18 If a flock be given as a legacy,
which is subsequently reduced to a single sheep, this single sur-
vivor can be claimed; and Julian says that in a legacy of a flock
are comprised sheep which are added to it after the making of
the will, a flock being but one aggregate composed of distinct
members, just as a house is but one aggregate composed of
distinct stones built together.  So if the legacy consists of a house,
we hold that pillars or marbles added to it after the making of
the will pass under the bequest.  20 If a slave's peculium be
given as a legacy, the legatee undoubtedly profits by what is
added to it, and is a loser by what is taken from it, during the
testator's lifetime.  Whatever the slave acquires in the interval
between the testator's death and the acceptance of the inherit-
ance belongs, according to Julian, to the legatee, if that legatee
be the slave himself who is manumitted by the will, because a
legacy of this kind vests from the acceptance of the inheritance:
but if the legatee be a stranger, he is not entitled to such
acquisitions, unless they are made by means of the peculium
itself.  A slave manumitted by a will is not entitled to his
peculium unless it is expressly bequeathed to him, though, if
the master manumits him in his lifetime, it is enough if it be not
expressly taken from him, and to this effect the Emperors
Severus and Antoninus have decided by rescript:  as also, that
a legacy of his peculium to a slave does not carry with it the
right to sue for money which he has expended on his master's
account, and that a legacy of a peculium may be inferred from
directions in a will that a slave is to be free so soon as he has
made a statement of his accounts and made up any balance,
which may be against him, from his peculium.  21 Incorporeal
as well as corporeal things can be bequeathed:  thus a man can
leave a legacy even of a debt which is owed to him, and the
heir can be compelled to transfer to the legatee his rights of
action, unless the testator has exacted payment in his lifetime,
in which case the legacy is extinguished.  Again, such a legacy
as the following is good:  `be my heir bound to repair so and
so's house, or to pay so and so's debts.'  22 If a legacy be a
general one, as of a slave or some other thing not specifically
determined, the legatee is entitled to choose what slave, or what
thing, he will have, unless the testator has expressed a contrary
intention.  23 A legacy of selection, that is, when a testator
directs the legatee to select one from among his slaves, or any
other class of things, was held to be given subject to an implied
condition that the legatee should make the choice in person;
so that if he died before doing so the legacy did not pass to his
heir.  By our constitution, however, we have made an improve-
ment in this matter, and allowed the legatee's heir to exercise
the right of selection, although the legatee has not done so
personally in his lifetime; which enactment, through our careful
attention to the subject, contains the further provision, that if
there are either several co-legatees to whom a right of selection
has been bequeathed, and who cannot agree in their choice,
or several co-heirs of a single legatee, who differ through some
wishing to choose this thing and others that, the question shall
be decided by fortune -- the legacy not being extinguished,
which many of the jurists in an ungenerous spirit wished to
make the rule --; that is to say, that lots shall be drawn, and
he on whom the lot falls shall have a priority of choice over
the rest.

24 Three persons only can be legatees who have testamentary
capacity, that is, who are legally capable of taking under a will.
25 Formerly it was not allowed to leave either legacies or fiduci-
ary bequests to uncertain persons, and even soldiers, as the
Emperor Hadrian decided by rescript, were unable to benefit
uncertain persons in this way.  An uncertain person was held to
be one of whom the testator had no certain conception, as the
legatee in the following form:  `Whoever bestows his daughter
in marriage on my son, do thou, my heir, give him such or such
land.'  So too a legacy left to the first consuls designate after the
writing of the will was held to be given to an uncertain person,
and many others that might be instanced:  and so it was held
that freedom could not be bequeathed to an uncertain person,
because it was settled that slaves ought to be enfranchised by
name, and an uncertain person could not be appointed guardian.
But a legacy given with a certain demonstration, that is, to an
uncertain member of a certain class, was valid, for instance, the
following:  `Whoever of all my kindred now alive shall first marry
my daughter, do thou, my heir, give him such and such thing.'
It was, however, provided by imperial constitutions that legacies
or fiduciary bequests left to uncertain persons and paid by mis-
take could not be recovered back.  26 An after-born stranger
again could not take a legacy; an after-born stranger being one
who on his birth will not be a family heir to the testator; thus a
grandson by an emancipated son was held to be an after-born
stranger to his grandfather.  27 These parts of the law, however,
have not been left without due alteration, a constitution having
been inserted in our Code by which we have in these respects
amended the rules relating to legacies and fiduciary bequests no
less than to inheritances, as will be made clear by a perusal of
the enactment, which, however, still maintains the old rule that
an uncertain person cannot be appointed guardian:  for when a
testator is appointing a guardian for his issue, he ought to be
quite clear as to the person and character of the party he selects.
28 An after-born stranger could and still can be instituted heir,
unless conceived of a woman who cannot by law be a man's
wife.  29 If a testator makes a mistake in any of the names of
the legatee, the legacy is nevertheless valid provided there is no
doubt as to the person he intended, and the same rule is very
properly observed as to heirs as well as legatees; for names are
used only to distinguish persons, and if the person can be as-
certained in other ways a mistake in the name is immaterial.
30 Closely akin to this rule is another, namely, that an erroneous
description of the thing bequeathed does not invalidate the
bequest; for instance, if a testator says, `I give and bequeath
Stichus my born slave,' the legacy is good, if it quite clear who
is meant by Stichus, even though it turn out that he was not born
the testator's slave, but was purchased by him.  Similarly, if he
describe Stichus as `the slave I bought from Seius,' whereas
in fact he bought him from some one else, the legacy is good,
if it is clear what slave he intended to give.  31 Still less is a
legacy invalidated from a wrong motive being assigned by the
testator for giving it:  if, for instance, he says, `I give and be-
queath Stichus to Titius, because he looked after my affairs
while I was away,' or `because I was acquitted on a capital
charge through his undertaking my defence,' the legacy is still
good, although in point of fact Titius never did look after the
testator's affairs, or never did, through his advocacy, procure
his acquittal.  But the law is different if the testator expresses
his motive in the guise of a condition, as:  `I give and bequeath
such and such land to Titius, if he has looked after my affairs.'
32 It is questioned whether a legacy to a slave of the heir is
valid.  It is clear that such a legacy is void if given uncondition-
ally, even though the slave ceases to belong to the heir during
the testator's lifetime:  for a legacy which would be void if the
testator died immediately after making his will ought not to
become valid by the simple fact of the testator's living longer.
Such a legacy, however, is good if given subject to a condition,
the question then being, whether at the vesting of the legacy the
slave has ceased to belong to the heir.  33 On the other hand,
there is no doubt that even an absolute legacy to the master
of a slave who is instituted heir is good:  for, even supposing
that the testator dies immediately after making the will, the
right to the legacy does not necessarily belong to the person
who is heir; for the inheritance and the legacy are separable,
and a different person from the legatee may become heir
through the slave; as happens if, before the slave accepts the
inheritance at his master's bidding, he is conveyed to another
person, or is manumitted and thus becomes heir himself; in
both of which cases the legacy is valid.  But if he remains in the
same condition, and accepts at his master's bidding, the legacy
is extinguished.  34 A legacy given before an heir was appointed
was formerly void, because a will derives its operation from
the appointment of an heir, and accordingly such appointment
is deemed the beginning and foundation of the whole testament,
and for the same reason a slave could not be enfranchised
before an heir was appointed.  Yet even the old lawyers them-
selves disapproved of sacrificing the real intentions of the
testator by too strictly following the order of the writing:  and
we accordingly have deemed these rules unreasonable, and
amended them by our constitution, which permits a legacy,
and much more freedom, which is always more favoured, to
be given before the appointment of an heir, or in the middle of
the appointments, if there are several.  35 Again, a legacy to
take effect after the death of the heir or legatee, as in the form:
`After my heir's death I give and bequeath,' was formerly
void, as also was one to take effect on the day preceding the
death of the heir or legatee.  This too, however, we have
corrected, by making such legacies as valid as they would be
were they fiduciary bequests, lest in this point the latter should
be found to have some superiority over the former.
36 Formerly too the gift, revocation, and transference of
legacies by way of penalty was void.  A penal legacy is one
given in order to coerce the heir into doing or not doing some-
thing; for instance, the following:  `If my heir gives his daughter
in marriage to Titius,' or, conversely, `if he does not give her
in marriage to Titius, let him pay ten aurei to Seius'; or again,
`if my heir parts with my slave Stichus,' or, conversely, `if he
does not part with him, let him pay ten aurei to Titius.'  And so
strictly was this rule observed, that it is declared in a large
number of imperial constitutions that even the Emperor will
accept no legacy by which a penalty is imposed on some other
person:  and such legacies were void even when given by a
soldier's will, in which as a rule so much trouble was taken
to carry out exactly the testator's wishes.  Moreover, Sabinus
was of opinion that a penal appointment of a co-heir was void,
as exemplified in the following:  `Be Titius my heir:  if Titius
gives his daughter in marriage to Seius, be Seius my heir also';
the ground of the invalidity being that it made no difference in
what way Titius was constrained, whether by a legacy being
left away from him, or by some one being appointed co-heir.
Of these refinements, however, we disapproved, and have
consequently enacted generally that bequests, even though given,
revoked, or transferred in order to penalize the heir, shall be
treated exactly like other legacies, except where the event on
which the penal legacy is contingent is either impossible, illegal,
or immoral:  for such testamentary dispositions as these the
opinion of my times will not permit.

TITLE XXI
OF THE ADEMPTION AND TRANSFERENCE
OF LEGACIES

Legacies may be revoked either in a later clause of the will or
by codicils, and the revocation may be made either in words
contrary to those of the gift, as the gift thus `I give and bequeath,'
the revocation thus `I do not give and bequeath,' or in words
not contrary, that is to say, in any words whatsoever.  1 A
legacy may also be transferred from one person to another, as
thus:  `I give and bequeath to Seius the slave Stichus whom I
bequeathed to Titius,' and this may be done either by a later
clause of the will or by codicils; the result being that the legacy
is taken away from Titius and simultaneously given to Seius.

TITLE XXII
OF THE LEX FALCIDIA

We have finally to consider the lex Falcidia, the most recent
enactment limiting the amount which can be given in legacies.
The statute of the Twelve Tables had conferred complete
liberty of bequest on testators, by which they were enabled to
give away their whole patrimony in legacies, that statute having
enacted:  `let a man's testamentary disposition of his property
be regarded as valid.'  This complete liberty of bequest, how-
ever, it was thought proper to limit in the interest of testators
themselves, for intestacy was becoming common through the
refusal of instituted heirs to accept inheritances from which
they received little or no advantage at all.  The lex Furia and
the lex Voconia were enactments designed to remedy the evil,
but as both were found inadequate to the purpose, the lex
Falcidia was finally passed, providing that no testator should
be allowed to dispose of more than three-quarters of his
property in legacies, or in other words, that whether there
was a single heir instituted, or two or more, he or they should
always be entitled to at least a quarter of the inheritance.

1 If two heirs, say Titius and Seius, are instituted, and Titius's
share of the inheritance is either wholly exhausted in legacies
specifically charged thereon, or burdened beyond the limit fixed
by the statute, while no legacies at all are charged on Seius, or
at any rate legacies which exhaust it only to the extent of one
half or less, the question arose whether, as Seius has at least a
quarter of the whole inheritance, Titius was or was not entitled
to retain anything out of the legacies which had been charged
upon him:  and it was settled that he could keep an entire fourth
of his share of the inheritance; for the calculation of the lex
Falcidia is to be applied separately to the share of each of
several heirs in the inheritance.  2 The amount of the property
upon which the calculation is brought to bear is its amount at
the moment of the testator's decease.  Thus, to illustrate by
an example, a testator who is worth a hundred aurei at his
decease gives the whole hundred away in legacies:  here, if
before the heir accepts, the inheritance is so much augmented
through slaves who belong to it, or by births of children from
such of them as are females, or by the young of cattle that,
even after paying away a hundred aurei in legacies, the heir
will still have a clear fourth of the inheritance, the legatee's
position is in no way improved, but a quarter of the sum given
in legacies may still be deducted for himself by the heir.  Con-
versely, if only seventy-five aurei are given in legacies, and
before acceptance the inheritance is so much diminished in
value, say by fire, shipwreck, or death of slaves, that no more
or even less than seventy-five aurei are left, the legatees can
claim payment of their legacies in full.  In this latter case,
however, the heir is not prejudiced, for he is quite free to
refused the inheritance:  consequently, the legatees must come
to terms with him, and content themselves with a portion of
their legacies, lest they lose all through no one's taking under
the will.  3 When the calculation of the lex Falcidia is made,
the testator's debts and funeral expenses are first deducted,
and the value of slaves whom he has manumitted in the will
or directed to be manumitted is not reckoned as part of the
inheritance; the residue is then divided so as to leave the
heirs a clear fourth, the other three quarters being distributed
among the legatees in proportion to the amount of the legacies
given them respectively in the will.  Thus, if we suppose four
hundred aurei to have been given in legacies, and the value
of the inheritance, out of which they are to be paid, to be
exactly that sum, each legatee must have his legacy abated
by one-fourth; if three hundred and fifty have been given
in legacies, each legacy will be diminished by one-eighth;
if five hundred, first a fifth, then a fourth, must be deducted:
for when the amount given in legacies actually exceeds the
sum of the inheritance, there must be struck off first the excess,
and then the share which the heir is entitled to retain.

TITLE XXIII
OF TRUST INHERITANCES

We now proceed to fiduciary bequests or trusts; and let us
begin with trust inheritances.

1 Legacies or inheritances given by trust had originally no
binding legal force, because no one could be compelled against
his will to do what he was merely asked to do.  As there were
certain classes of persons to whom testators were unable to
leave inheritances or legacies, when they wished to effect these
objects they used to trust to the good faith of some one who
had this kind of testamentary capacity, and whom they asked
to give the inheritance, or the legacy, to the intended beneficiary;
hence the name `trusts,' because they were not enforced by
 legal obligation, but only by the transferor's sense of honesty.
Subsequently the Emperor Augustus, either out of regard for
various favourites of his own, or because the request was said
to have been made in the name of the Emperor's safety, or
moved thereto by individual and glaring cases of perfidy,
commanded the consuls in certain cases to enforce the duty
by their authority.  And this being deemed equitable, and being
approved by the people, there was gradually developed a
new and permanent jurisdiction, and trusts became so popular
that soon a special praetor was appointed to hear suits
relating to them, who was called the trust praetor.

2 The first requisite is an heir directly instituted, in trust to
transfer the inheritance to another, for the will is void without
an instituted heir in the first instance.  Accordingly, when a
testator has written: `Lucius Titius, be thou my heir,' he may
add:  `I request you, Lucius Titius, as soon as you can accept
my inheritance, to convey and transfer it to Gaius Seius'; or he
can request him to transfer a part.  So a trust may be either
absolute or conditional, and to be performed either immediately
or on a specified future day.

3 After the transfer of the inheritance the transferor continues
heir, the transferee being sometimes regarded as quasi-heir,
sometimes as quasi-legatee.  4 But during the reign of Nero,
in the consulate of Trebellius Maximus and Annaeus Seneca,
a senatusconsult was passed providing that, when an inheritance
is transferred in pursuance of a trust, all the actions which the
civil law allows to be brought by or against the heir shall be
maintainable by and against the transferee:  and after this
enactment the praetor used to give indirect or fictitious actions
to and against the transferee as quasi-heir.  5 However, as the
instituted heirs, when (as so often was the  case) they were
requested to transfer the whole or nearly the whole of an
inheritance, declined to accept for what was no benefit, or at
most a very slight benefit, to themselves, and this caused a
failure of the trusts, afterwards, in the time of the Emperor
Vespasian, and during the consulate of Pegasus and Pusio,
the senate decreed that an heir who was requested to transfer
the inheritance should have the same right to retain a fourth
thereof as the lex Falcidia gives to an heir charged with the
payment of legacies, and gave a similar right of retaining the
fourth of any specific thing left in trust.  After the passing of
this senatusconsult the heir, wherever it came into operation,
was sole administrator, and the transferee of the residue was
in the position of a partiary legatee, that is, of a legatee of a
certain specified portion of the estate under the kind of
bequest called participation, so that the stipulations which
had been usual between an heir and a partiary legatee were
now entered into by the heir and transferee, in order to secure
a rateable division of the gains and losses arising out of the
inheritance.  6 Accordingly, after this, if no more than three-
fourths of the inheritance was in trust to be transferred, then the
SC. Trebellianum governed the transfer, and both were liable
to be sued for the debts of the inheritance in rateable portions,
the heir by civil law, the transferee, as quasi-heir, by that
enactment.  But if more than three-fourths, or even the whole
was left in trust to be transferred, the SC. Pegasianum came
into operation, and when once the heir had accepted, of
course voluntarily, he was the sole administrator whether he
retained one-fourth or declined to retain it:  but if he did, he
entered into stipulations with the transferee similar to those
usual between the heir and a partiary legatee, while if he did
not, but transferred the whole inheritance, he covenanted
with him as quasi-purchaser.  If an instituted heir refuse to
accept an inheritance from a suspicion that the liabilities ex-
ceed the assets, it is provided by the SC. Pegasianum that,
on the petition of the person to whom he is requested to
transfer, he shall be ordered by the praetor to accept and
transfer it, whereupon the transferee shall be as capable of
suing and being sued as the transferee under the SC.
Trebellianum.  In this case no stipulations are necessary,
because by a concurrent operation of the two senatusconsults
both the transferor is protected, and all actions relating to the
inheritance pass to and against the transferee.  7 As, however,
the covenants which had become necessary through the SC.
Pegasianum were disliked even by the older lawyers, and
are in certain cases considered injurious by the eminent jurist
Papinian, and it being our desire that our statute book should
be clear and simple rather than complicated, we have, after
placing these two senatusconsults side by side and examining
their points of resemblance and difference, resolved to repeal
the SC. Pegasianum, as the later enactment, and to give ex-
clusive authority to the SC. Trebellianum, under which in
future all trust inheritances are to be transferred, whether the
testator has freely given his heir a fourth of the property, or
more or less, or even nothing at all:  provided always, that
when the heir has either nothing or less than a fourth, it shall
be lawful for him, under our authority expressed in this statute,
to retain a fourth, or to recover it by action if he has already
paid it over, the heir and the transferee being capable both
of suing and being sued in proportion to their shares in the
inheritance, after the analogy of the SC. Trebellianum; and
provided also, that if the heir voluntarily transfers the whole
inheritance, the transferee shall be able to sue and be sued
on all actions relating to the inheritance whatsoever.  More-
over, we have transferred to the SC. Trebellianum the leading
provision of the SC. Pegasianum, whereby it was enacted
that when an instituted heir refused to accept an inheritance
offered to him, he could be compelled to accept and transfer
the whole inheritance if the intended transferee so desired,
and that all actions should pass to and against the latter:  so
that it is under the SC. Trebellianum alone that the heir, if
unwilling to accept, is now obliged to do so, if the intended
transferee desire the inheritance, though to him personally no
loss or profit can accrue under the transaction.  8 It makes no
difference whether it is a sole or part heir who is under a trust
to another, or whether what he is requested to transfer is the
whole or only a part of that to which he is heir; for we direct
that the same rules shall be applied in the case of a part being
transferred as we have said are observed in the transference
of a whole inheritance.  9 If the request addressed to the
heir is to transfer the inheritance after deducting or reserving
some specific thing which is equal in value to a fourth part
thereof, such as land or anything else, the conveyance will be
made under the SC. Trebellianum, exactly as if he had been
asked after retaining a fourth part of the inheritance to transfer
the residue.  There is, however, some difference between the two
cases; for in the first, where the inheritance is transferred after
deducting or reserving some specific thing, the senatusconsult
has the effect of  making the transferee the only person who
can sue or be sued in respect of the inheritance, and the part
retained by the heir is free from all encumbrances, exactly as
if he had received it under a legacy; whereas in the second,
where the heir, after retaining a fourth part of the inheritance,
transfers the rest as requested, the actions are divided, the
transferee being able to sue and be sued in respect of three-
fourths of the inheritance, and the heir in respect of the rest.
Moreover, if the heir is requested to transfer the inheritance
after deducting or reserving only a single specific thing, which,
however, in value is equivalent to the greater part of the inherit-
ance, the transferee is still the only person who can sue and
be sued, so that he ought well to weigh whether it is worth
his while to take it:  and the case is precisely the same,
whether what the heir is directed to deduct or reserve before
transferring is two or more specific things, or a definite sum
which in fact is equivalent to a fourth or even the greater part
of the inheritance.  What we have said of a sole heir is equally
true of one who is instituted only to a part.

10 Moreover, a man about to die intestate can charge the
person to whom he knows his property will go by either the
civil or praetorian law to transfer to some one else either his
whole inheritance, or a part of it, or some specific thing, such
as land, a slave, or money:  but legacies have no validity unless
given by will.  11 The transferee may himself be charged by
the deceased with a trust to transfer to some other person
either the whole or a part of what he receives, or even some-
thing different.  12 As has been already observed, trusts in
their origin depended solely on the good faith of the heir, from
which early history they derived both their name and their
character:  and it was for that reason that the Emperor
Augustus made them legally binding obligations.  And we, in
our desire to surpass that prince, have recently made a con-
stitution, suggested by a matter brought before us by the
eminent Tribonian, quaestor of our sacred palace, by which
it is enacted, that if a testator charges his heir with a trust to
transfer the whole inheritance or some specific thing, and
the trust cannot be proved by writing or by the evidence of
five witnesses -- five being, as is known, the number required
by law for the proof of oral trusts -- through there having
been fewer witnesses than five, or even none at all, and if the
heir, whether it be his own son or some one else whom the
testator has chosen to trust, and by whom he desired the
transfer to be made, perfidiously refuses to execute the trust,
and in fact denies that he was ever charged with it, the alleged
beneficiary, having previously sworn to his own good faith,
may put the heir upon his oath:  whereupon the heir may be
compelled to swear that no trust was ever charged upon him,
or, in default, to transfer the inheritance or the specific thing,
as the case may be, in order that the last wishes of the testator,
the fulfilment of which he has left to the honour of his heir, may
not be defeated.  We have also prescribed the same procedure
where the person charged with a trust is a legatee or already
himself a transferee under a prior trust.  Finally, if the person
charged admits the trust, but tries to shelter himself behind
legal technicalities, he may most certainly be compelled to
perform his obligation.

TITLE XXIV
OF TRUST BEQUESTS OF SINGLE THINGS

Single things can be left in trust as well as inheritances; land,
for instance, slaves, clothing, gold, silver, and coined money;
and the trust may be imposed either on an heir or on a legatee,
although a legatee cannot be charged with a legacy.

1 Not only the testator's property, but that of an heir, or
legatee, or person already benefited by a trust, or any one else
may be given by a trust.  Thus a legatee, or a person in whose
favour the testator has already created a trust, may be asked
to transfer either a thing left to him, or any other thing belonging
to himself or a stranger, provided always that he is not charged
with a trust to transfer more than he takes by the will, for in
respect of such excess the trust would be void.  When a
person is charged by a trust to transfer a thing belonging to
some one else, he must either purchase and deliver it, or pay
its value.  2 Liberty can be left to a slave by a trust charging
an heir, legatee, or other person already benefited by a trust
of the testator's, with his manumission, and it makes no differ-
ence whether the slave is the property of the testator, of the
heir, of the legatee or of a stranger:  for a stranger's slave must
be purchased and manumitted; and on his master's refusal to
sell (which refusal is allowable only if the master has taken
nothing under the will) the trust to enfranchise the slave is not
extinguished, as though its execution had become impossible,
but its execution is merely postponed; because it may become
possible to free him at some future time, whenever an oppor-
tunity of purchasing him presents itself.  A trust of manumission
makes the slave the freedman, not of the testator, though he
may have been his owner, but of the manumitter, whereas a
direct bequest of liberty makes a slave the freedman of the
testator, whence too he is called `orcinus.'  But a direct be-
quest of liberty can be made only to a slave who belongs to
the testator both at the time of making his will and at that of
his decease; and by a direct bequest of liberty is to be
understood the case where the testator desires him to be-
come free in virtue, as it were, of his own testament alone,
and so does not ask some one else to manumit him.  3 The
words most commonly used to create a trust are I beg, I
request, I wish, I commission, I trust to your good faith; and
they are just as binding when used separately as when united.

TITLE XXV
OF CODICILS

It is certain that codicils were not in use before the time of
Augustus, for Lucius Lentulus, who was also the originator
of trusts, was the first to introduce them, in the following
manner.  Being on the point of death in Africa, he executed
codicils, confirmed by his will, by which he begged Augustus
to do something for him as a trust; and on the Emperor's ful-
filling his wishes, other persons followed the precedent and
discharged trusts created in this manner, and the daughter of
Lentulus paid legacies which could not have been legally
claimed from her.  It is said that Augustus called a council
of certain jurists, among them Trebatius, who at that time
enjoyed the highest reputation, and asked them whether the
new usage could be sanctioned, or did not rather run counter
to the received principles of law, and that Trebatius recom-
mended their admission, remarking `how convenient and even
necessary the practice was to citizens,' owing to the length
of the journeys which were taken in those early days, and
upon which a man might often be able to make codicils when
he could not make a will.  And subsequently, after codicils
had been made by Labeo, nobody doubted their complete
validity.

1 Not only can codicils be made after a will, but a man dying
intestate can create trusts by codicils, though Papinian says
that codicils executed before a will are invalid unless confirmed
by a later express declaration that they shall be binding.  But a
rescript of the Emperors Severus and Antoninus decides that
the performance of a trust imposed by codicils written before
a will may in any case be demanded, if it appears that the
testator had not abandoned the intention expressed in them.
2 An inheritance can neither be given nor taken away by
codicils, nor, accordingly, can a child be disinherited in this
way:  for, if it were otherwise, the law of wills and of codicils
would be confounded.  By this it is meant that an inheritance
cannot directly be given or taken away by codicils; for in-
directly, by means of a trust, one can very well be given in
this manner.  Nor again can a condition be imposed on an
instituted heir, or a direct substitution be effected, by codicils.
3 A man can make any number of codicils, and no solemnities
are required for their execution.


* BOOK III *

TITLE I
OF THE DEVOLUTION OF INHERITANCES
ON INTESTACY

A man is said to die intestate who either has made no will
at all, or has made one which is invalid, or if one which has
been duly executed has been subsequently revoked, or
rescinded, or finally, if no one accepts as heir under the
testament.

1 The inheritances of intestate persons go first, by the statute
of the Twelve Tables, to family heirs; 2 and family heirs, as we
said above, are those who were in the power of the deceased
at the time of his death, such as a son or daughter, a grandchild
by a son, or a great-grandchild by such grandchild if a male,
and this whether the relationship be natural or adoptive.
Among them must also be reckoned children who, though not
born in lawful wedlock, have been inscribed members of the
curia according to the tenor of the imperial constitutions
relating to them, and thus acquire the rights of family heirs,
or who come within the terms of our constitutions by which
we have enacted that, if any one shall cohabit with a woman
whom he might have lawfully married, but for whom he did
not at first feel marital affection, and shall after begetting
children by her begin to feel such affection and formally marry
her, and then have by her sons or daughters, not only shall
those be lawful children and in their father's power who were
born after the settlement of the dowry, but also those born
before, to whom in reality the later born ones owed their
legitimacy; and we have provided that this rule shall hold even
though no children are born after the execution of the dowry
deed, or if, having been born, they are dead.  It is to be ob-
served, however, that a grandchild or great-grandchild is not
a family heir, unless the person in the preceding degree has
ceased to be in the power of the parent, either through having
died, or by some other means, such as emancipation; for if at
the time of a man's decease a son is in his power, a grandson
by that son cannot be a family heir, and the case is exactly the
same with more remote descendants.  Children too who are
born after the ancestor's death, and who would have been
in his power had they been born during his lifetime, are family
heirs.  3 Family heirs succeed even though ignorant of their
title, and they can take upon an intestacy even though insane,
because whenever the law vests property in a person, even
when he is ignorant of his title, it equally vests it in him if insane.
Thus, immediately on the parent's death, the ownership is as
it were continued without any break, so that pupils who are
family heirs do not require their guardian's sanction in order
to succeed, for inheritances go to such heirs even though
ignorant of their title; and similarly an insane family heir does
not require his curator's consent in order to succeed, but
takes by operation of law.  4 Sometimes, however, a family
heir succeeds in this way to his parent, even though not in the
latter's power at the time of his decease, as where a person
returns from captivity after his father's death, this being the
effect of the law of postliminium.  5 And sometimes con-
versely a man is not a family heir although in the power of the
deceased at the time of his death, as where the latter after his
death is adjudged to have been guilty of treason, and his
memory is thereby branded with infamy:  such a person is un-
able to have a family heir, for his property is confiscated to
the treasury, though one who would otherwise have succeeded
him may be said to have in law been a family heir, and ceased
to be such.  6 Where there is a son or daughter, and a grand-
child by another son, these are called together to the inheritance,
nor does the nearer in degree exclude the more remote, for it
seems just that grandchildren should represent their father and
take his place in the succession.  Similarly a grandchild by a son,
and a great-grandchild by a grandson are called to the inherit-
ance together.  And as it was thought just that grandchildren
and great-grandchildren should represent their father, it seemed
consistent that the inheritance should be divided by the number
of stems, and not by the number of individuals, so that a son
should take one-half, and grandchildren by another son the
other:  or, if two sons left children, that a single grandchild, or
two grandchildren by one son, should take one-half, and three
or four grandchildren by the other son the other.  7 In ascertain-
ing whether, in any particular case, so and so is a family heir,
one ought to regard only that moment of time at which it first
was certain that the deceased died intestate, including here-
under the case of no one's accepting under the will.  For
instance, if a son be disinherited and a stranger instituted heir,
and the son die after the decease of his father, but before it is
certain that the heir instituted in the will either will not or cannot
take the inheritance, a grandson will take as family heir to his
grandfather, because he is the only descendant in existence
when first it is certain that the ancestor died intestate; and of
this there can be no doubt.  8 A grandson born after, though
conceived before, his grandfather's death, whose father dies
in the interval between the grandfather's decease and desertion
of the latter's will through failure of the instituted heir to take,
is family heir to his grandfather; though it is obvious that if
(other circumstances remaining the same) he is conceived as
well as born after the grandfather's decease, he is no family
heir, because he was never connected with his grandfather by
any tie of relationship; exactly as a person adopted by an
emancipated son is not among the children of, and therefore
cannot be family heir to, the latter's father.  And such persons,
not being children in relation to the inheritance, cannot apply
either for possession of the goods of the deceased as next
of kin.  So much for family heirs.

9 As to emancipated children, they have, by the civil law, no
rights to succeed to an intestate; for having ceased to be in the
power of their parent, they are not family heirs, nor are they
called by any other title in the statute of the Twelve Tables.
The praetor, however, following natural equity, gives them
possession of the goods of the deceased merely as children,
exactly as if they had been in his power at the time of his
death, and this whether they stand alone or whether there are
family heirs as well.  Consequently, if a man die leaving two
children, one emancipated, and the other in his power at the
time of his decease, the latter is sole heir by the civil law, as
being the only family heir; but through the former's being ad-
mitted to part of the inheritance by the indulgence of the
praetor, the family heir becomes heir to part of the inheritance
only.  10 Emancipated children, however, who have given
themselves in adoption are not thus admitted, under the title of
children, to share the property of their natural father, if at the
time of his decease they are in their adoptive family; though it
is otherwise if they are emancipated during his lifetime by their
adoptive father, for then they are admitted as if they had been
emancipated by him and had never been in an adoptive family,
while, conversely, as regards their adoptive father, they are
henceforth regarded as strangers.  If, however, they are
emancipated by the adoptive after the death of the natural
father, as regards the former they are strangers all the same,
and yet do not acquire the rank of children as regards suc-
cession to the property of the latter; the reason of this rule
being the injustice of putting it within the power of an adoptive
father to determine to whom the property of the natural father
shall belong, whether to his children or to his agnates.
11 Adoptive are thus not so well off as natural children in
respect of rights of succession:  for by the indulgence of the
praetor the latter retain their rank as children even after
emancipation, although they lose it by the civil law; while the
former, if emancipated, are not assisted even by the praetor.
And there is nothing wrong in their being thus differently
treated, because civil changes can affect rights annexed to a
civil title, but not rights annexed to a natural title, and natural
descendants, though on emancipation they cease to be
family heirs, cannot cease to be children or grandchildren;
whereas on the other hand adoptive children are regarded as
strangers after emancipation, because they lose the title and
name of son or daughter, which they have acquired by a civil
change, namely adoption, by another civil change, namely
emancipation.  12 And the rule is the same in the possession
of goods against the will which the praetor promises to
children who are passed over in their parent's testament, that
is to say, are neither instituted nor duly disinherited; for the
praetor calls to this possession children who were in their
parent's power at the time of his decease, or emancipated,
but excludes those who at that time were in an adoptive
family:  still less does he here admit adoptive children eman-
cipated by their adoptive father, for by emancipation they
cease entirely to be children of his.  13 We should observe,
however, that though children who are in an adoptive family,
or who are emancipated by their adoptive after the decease
of their natural father, are not admitted on the death of the
latter intestate by that part of the edict by which children are
called to the possession of goods, they are called by another
part, namely that which admits the cognates of the deceased,
who, however, come in only if there are no family heirs,
emancipated children, or agnates to take before them:  for the
praetor prefers children, whether family heirs or emancipated,
to all other claimants, ranking in the second degree statutory
successors, and in the third cognates, or next of kin.  14 All
these rules, however, which to our predecessors were sufficient,
have received some emendation by the constitution which we
have enacted relative to persons who have been given in
adoption to others by their natural fathers; for we found cases
in which sons by entering an adoptive family forfeited their
right of succeeding their natural parents, and then, the tie of
adoption being easily broken by emancipation, lost all title to
succeed  their adoptive parents as well.  We have corrected
this, in our usual manner, by a constitution which enacts that,
when a natural father gives his son in adoption to another
person, the son's rights shall remain the same in every partic-
ular as if he had continued in the power of his natural father,
and the adoption had never taken place, except only that he
shall be able to succeed his adoptive father should he die
intestate.  If, however, the latter makes a will, the son cannot
obtain any part of the inheritance either by the civil or by the
praetorian law, that is to say, either by impeaching the will
as unduteous or by applying for possession against the will;
for, being related by no tie of blood, the adoptive father is
not bound either to institute him heir or to disinherit him,
even though he has been adopted, in accordance with the
SC. Afinianum, from among three brothers; for, even under
these circumstances, he is not entitled to a fourth of what
he might have taken on intestacy, nor has he any action for
its recovery.  We have, however, by our constitution ex-
cepted persons adopted by natural ascendants, for between
them and their adopters there is the natural tie of blood as
well as the civil tie of adoption, and therefore in this case we
have preserved the older law, as also in that of an independent
person giving himself in adrogation:  all of which enactment
can be gathered in its special details from the tenor of the
aforesaid constitution.

15 By the ancient law too, which favoured the descent
through males, those grandchildren only were called as family
heirs, and preferred to agnates, who were related to the grand-
father in this way:  grandchildren by daughters, and great-
grandchildren by granddaughters, whom it regarded only as
cognates, being called after the agnates in succession to their
maternal grandfather or great-grandfather, or their grand-
mother or great-grandmother, whether paternal or maternal.
But the Emperors would not allow so unnatural a wrong to
endure without sufficient correction, and accordingly, as people
are, and are called, grandchildren and great-grandchildren
of a person whether they trace their descent through males or
through females, they placed them altogether in the same rank
and order of succession.  In order, however, to bestow some
privilege on those who had in their favour the provisions of
the ancient law as well as natural right, they determined that
grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and others who traced
their descent through a female should have their portion of
the inheritance diminished by receiving less by one-third than
their mother or grandmother would have taken, or than their
father or grandfather, paternal or maternal, when the deceased,
whose inheritance was in question, was a woman; and they
excluded the agnates, if such descendants claimed the inherit-
ance, even though they stood alone.  Thus, exactly as the
statute of the Twelve Tables calls the grandchildren and
great-grandchildren to represent their deceased father in the
succession to their grandfather, so the imperial legislation
substitutes them for their deceased mother or grandmother,
subject to the aforesaid deduction of a third part of the
share which she personally would have taken.  16 As, how-
ever, there was still some question as to the relative rights of
such grandchildren and of the agnates, who on the authority
of a certain constitution claimed a fourth part of the de-
ceased's estate, we have repealed the said enactment, and not
permitted its insertion in our Code from that of Theodosius.
By the constitution which we have published, and by which
we have altogether deprived it of validity, we have provided
that in case of the survival of grandchildren by a daughter,
great-grandchildren by a granddaughter, or more remote
descendants related through a female, the agnates shall have
no claim to any part of the estate of the deceased, that
collaterals may no longer be preferred to lineal descendants;
which constitution we hereby re-enact with all its force from
the date originally determined: provided always, as we direct,
that the inheritance shall be divided between sons and grand-
children by a daughter, or between all the grandchildren,
and other more remote descendants, according to stocks,
and not by counting heads, on the principle observed by the
ancient law in dividing an inheritance between sons and
grandchildren by a son, the issue obtaining without any
diminution the portion which would have belonged to their
mother or father, grandmother or grandfather:  so that if, for
instance, there be one or two children by one stock, and three
or four by another, the one or two, and the three or four, shall
together take respectively one moiety of the inheritance.

TITLE II
OF THE STATUTORY SUCCESSION
OF AGNATES

If there is no family heir, nor any of those persons called to the
succession along with family heirs by the praetor or the imperial
legislation, to take the inheritance in any way, it devolves, by
the statute of the Twelve Tables, on the nearest agnate.

1 Agnates, as we have observed in the first book, are those
cognates who trace their relationship through males, or, in
other words, who are cognate through their respective fathers.
Thus, brothers by the same father are agnates, whether by the
same mother or not, and are called ‘consanguinei’; an uncle
is agnate to his brother's son, and vice versa; and the children
of brothers by the same father, who are called ‘consobrini,
are one another's agnates, so that it is easy to arrive at various
degrees of agnation.  Children who are born after their father's
decease acquire the rights of kinship exactly as if they had
been born before that event.  But the law does not give the
inheritance to all the agnates, but only to those who were
nearest in degree at the moment when it was first certain that
the deceased died intestate.  2 The relation of agnation can
also be established by adoption, for instance, between a man's
own sons and those whom he has adopted, all of whom are
properly called consanguinei in relation to one another.  So,
too, if your brother, or your paternal uncle, or even a more
remote agnate, adopts any one, that person undoubtedly
becomes one of your agnates.  3 Male agnates have reciprocal
rights of succession, however remote the degree of relationship:
but the rule as regards females, on the other hand, was that
they could not succeed as agnates to any one more remotely
related to them than a brother, while they themselves could
be succeeded by their male agnates, however distant the
connexion:  thus you, if a male, could take the inheritance of
a daughter either of your brother or of your paternal uncle,
or of your paternal aunt, but she could not take yours; the
reason of this distinction being the seeming expediency of
successions devolving as much as possible on males.  But as
it was most unjust that such females should be as completely
excluded as if they were strangers, the praetor admits them to
the possession of goods promised in that part of the edict in
which mere natural kinship is recognised as a title to success-
ion, under which they take provided there is no agnate, or
other cognate of a nearer degree of relationship.  Now these
distinctions were in no way due to the statute of the Twelve
Tables, which, with the simplicity proper to all legislation,
conferred reciprocal rights of succession on all agnates alike,
whether males or females, and excluded no degree by
reason merely of its remoteness, after the analogy of family
heirs; but it was introduced by the jurists who came between
the Twelve Tables and the imperial legislation, and who with
their legal subtleties and refinements excluded females other
than sisters altogether from agnatic succession.  And no
other scheme of succession was in those times heard of,
until the praetors, by gradually mitigating to the best of their
ability the harshness of the civil law, or by filling up voids in
the old system, provided through their edicts a new one.
Mere cognation was thus in its various degrees recognised
as a title to succession, and the praetors gave relief to such
females through the possession of goods, which they promised
to them in that part of the edict by which cognates are called
to the succession.  We, however, have followed the Twelve
Tables in this department of law, and adhered to their principles:
and, while we commend the praetors for their sense of equity,
we cannot hold that their remedy was adequate; for when the
degree of natural relationship was the same, and when the
civil title of agnation was conferred by the older law on males
and females alike, why should males be allowed to succeed
all their agnates, and women (except sisters) be debarred
from succeeding any?  Accordingly, we have restored the
old rules in their integrity, and made the law on this subject
an exact copy of the Twelve Tables, by enacting, in our con-
stitution, that all `statutory' successors, that is, persons tracing
their descent from the deceased through males, shall be called
alike to the succession as agnates on an intestacy, whether
they be males or females, according to their proximity of
degree; and that no females shall be excluded on the pretence
that none but sisters have the right of succeeding by the title
of kinship.  4  By an addition to the same enactment we
have deemed it right to transfer one, though only one, degree
of cognates into the ranks of those who succeed by a
statutory title, in order that not only the children of a brother
may be called, as we have just explained, to the succession
of their paternal uncle, but that the children of a sister too,
even though only of the half blood on either side (but not her
more remote descendants), may share with the former the
inheritance of their uncle; so that, on the decease of a man
who is paternal uncle to his brother's children, and maternal
uncle to those of his sister, the nephews and nieces on either
side will now succeed him alike, provided, of course, that
the brother and sister do not survive, exactly as if they all
traced their relationship through males, and thus all had a
statutory title.  But if the deceased leaves brothers and
sisters who accept the inheritance, the remoter degrees are
altogether excluded, the division in this case being made
individually, that is to say, by counting heads, not stocks.
5 If there are several degrees of agnates, the statute of the
Twelve Tables clearly calls only the nearest, so that if, for
instance, the deceased leaves a brother, and a nephew by
another brother deceased, or a paternal uncle, the brother
is preferred.  And although that statute, in speaking of the
nearest agnate, uses the singular number, there is no doubt
that if there are several of the same degree they are all
admitted:  for though properly one can speak of `the nearest
degree' only when there are several, yet it is certain that
even though all the agnates are in the same degree the
inheritance belongs to them.  6 If a man dies without having
made a will at all, the agnate who takes is the one who was
nearest at the time of the death of the deceased.  But when
a man dies, having made a will, the agnate who takes (if one
is to take at all) is the one who is nearest when first it
becomes certain that no one will accept the inheritance under
the testament; for until that moment the deceased cannot
properly be said to have died intestate at all, and this
period of uncertainty is sometimes a long one, so that it not
unfrequently happens that through the death, during it, of
a nearer agnate, another becomes nearest who was not
so at the death of the testator.  7 In agnatic succession the
established rule was that the right of accepting the inheritance
could not pass from a nearer to a more remote degree; in
other words, that if the nearest agnate, who, as we have
described, is called to the inheritance, either refuses it or
dies before acceptance, the agnates of the next grade have
no claim to admittance under the Twelve Tables.  This
hard rule again the praetors did not leave entirely without
correction, though their remedy, which consisted in the
admission of such persons, since they were excluded from
the rights of agnation, in the rank of cognates, was inadequate.
But we, in our desire to have the law as complete as possible,
have enacted in the constitution which in our clemency we
have issued respecting the rights of patrons, that in agnatic
succession the transference of the rights to accept from a
nearer to a remoter degree shall not be refused:  for it was
most absurd that agnates should be denied a privilege which
the praetor had conferred on cognates, especially as the
burden of guardianship fell on the second degree of agnates
if there was a failure of the first, the principle which we have
now sanctioned being admitted so far as it imposed burdens,
but rejected so far as it conferred a boon.

8 To statutory succession the ascendant too is none the less
called who emancipates a child, grandchild, or remoter
descendant under a fiduciary agreement, which by our
constitution is now implied in every emancipation.  Among
the ancients the rule was different, for the parent acquired
no rights of succession unless he had entered into a special
agreement of trust to that effect prior to the emancipation.

TITLE III
OF THE SENATUSCONSULTUM
TERTULLIANUM

So strict were the rules of the statute of the Twelve Tables
in preferring the issue of males, and excluding those who
traced their relationship through females, that they did not
confer reciprocal rights of inheritance even on a mother and
her children, though the praetors called them to succeed one
another as next of kin by promising them the possession of
goods in the class of cognates.

1 But this narrowness of the law was afterwards amended,
the Emperor Claudius being the first to confer on a mother,
as a consolation for the loss of her children, a statutory right
to their inheritance, 2 and afterwards, very full provisions
were made by the SC. Tertullianum, enacted in the time of
the Emperor Hadrian, and relating to the melancholy
succession of children by their mothers, though not by their
grandmothers, whereby it was provided that a freeborn
woman who had three or a freedwoman who had four
children should be entitled to succeed to the goods of her
children who died intestate, even though herself under
paternal power; though, in this latter case, she cannot accept
the inheritance except by the direction of the person in whose
power she is.  3 Children of the deceased who are or who
rank as family heirs, whether in the first or any other degree,
are preferred to the mother, and even where the deceased is
a woman her children by imperial constitutions have a prior
claim to the mother, that is, to their own grandmother.  Again,
the father of the deceased is preferred to the mother, but not
so the paternal grandfather or great-grandfather, at least
when it is between them only that the question arises who is
entitled.  A brother by the same father excluded the mother
from the succession to both sons and daughters, but a sister
by the same father came in equally with the mother; and
where there were both a brother and a sister by the same
father, as well as a mother who was entitled by number of
children, the brother excluded the mother, and divided the
inheritance in equal moieties with the sister.  4 By a consti-
tution, however, which we have placed in the Code made
illustrious by our name, we have deemed it right to afford
relief to the mother, in consideration of natural justice, of
the pains of childbirth, and of the danger and even death
which mothers often incur in this manner; for which reason
we have judged it a sin that they should be prejudiced by a
circumstance which is entirely fortuitous.  For if a freeborn
woman had not borne three, or a freedwoman four children,
she was undeservedly defrauded of the succession to her own
offspring; and yet what fault had she committed in bearing few
rather than many children?  Accordingly, we have conferred
on mothers a full statutory right of succession to their children,
and even if they have had no other child than the one in
question deceased.  5 The earlier constitutions, in their
review of statutory rights of succession, were in some points
favourable, in others unfavourable, to mothers; thus in some
cases they did not call them to the whole inheritance of their
children, but deducted a third in favour of certain other
persons with a statutory title, while in others they did exactly
the opposite.  We, however, have determined to follow a
straightforward and simple path, and, preferring the mother
to all other persons with a statutory title, to give her the
entire succession of her sons, without deduction in favour
of any other persons except a brother or sister, whether by
the same father as the deceased, or possessing rights of
cognation only; so that, as we have preferred the mother to
all with a statutory title, so we call to the inheritance, along
with her, all brothers and sisters of the deceased, whether
statutorily entitled or not:  provided that, if the only surviving
relatives of the deceased are sisters, agnatic or cognatic,
and a mother, the latter shall have one-half, and all the sisters
together the other half of the inheritance; if a mother and a
brother or brothers, with or without sisters agnatic or cognatic,
the inheritance shall be divided among mother, brothers, and
sisters in equal portions.  6 But, while we are legislating for
mothers, we ought also to bestow some thought on their off-
spring; and accordingly mothers should observe that if they
do not apply within a year for guardians for their children,
either originally or in lieu of those who have been removed
or excused, they will forfeit their title to succeed such
children if they die under the age of puberty.  7 A mother
can succeed her child under the SC. Tertullianum even
though the child be illegitimate.

TITLE IV
OF THE SENATUSCONSULTUM
ORFITIANUM

Conversely, children were admitted to succeed their mother
on her death intestate by the SC. Orfitianum, passed in the
time of the Emperor Marcus, when Orfitus and Rufus were
consuls:  by which a statutory right of succession was con-
ferred on both sons and daughters, even though in the
power of another, in preference to their deceased mother's
brothers and sisters and other agnates.

1 As, however, grandsons were not called by this senatus-
consult with a statutory title to the succession of their
grandmothers, 2 this was subsequently amended by imperial
constitutions, providing that grandchildren should be called
to inherit exactly like children.  It is to be observed that
rights of succession such as those conferred by the SC.
Tertullianum and Orfitianum are not extinguished by loss of
status, owing to the rule that rights of succession conferred
by later statutes are not destroyed in this way, but only such
as are conferred by the statute of the Twelve Tables; 3 and
finally that under the latter of these two enactments even
illegitimate children are admitted to their mother's inheritance.

4 If there are several heirs with a statutory title, some of
whom do not accept, or are prevented from doing so by
death or some other cause, their shares accrue in equal
proportions to those who do accept the inheritance, or to
their heirs, supposing they die before the failure of the others
to take.

TITLE V
OF THE SUCCESSION OF COGNATES

After family heirs, and persons who by the praetor and the
imperial legislation are ranked as such, and after persons
statutorily entitled, among whom are the agnates and those
whom the aforesaid senatusconsults and our constitution have
raised to the rank of agnates, the praetor calls the nearest
cognates.

1 In this class or order natural or blood relationship alone is
considered:  for agnates who have undergone loss of status
and their children, though not regarded as having a statutory
title under the statute of the Twelve Tables, are called by
the praetor in the third order of the succession.  The sole ex-
ceptions to this rule are emancipated brothers and sisters,
though not in equal shares with them, but with some de-
duction, the amount of which can easily be ascertained
from the terms of the constitution itself.  But to other agnates
of remoter degrees, even though they have not undergone
loss of status, and still more to cognates, they are preferred
by the aforesaid statute.  2 Again, collateral relations
connected with the deceased only by the female line are
called to the succession by the praetor in the third order
as cognates; 3 and children who are in an adoptive family
are admitted in this order to the inheritance of their natural
parent.  4 It is clear that illegitimate children can have no
agnates, for in law they have no father, and it is through the
father that agnatic relationship is traced, while cognatic
relationship is traced through the mother as well.  On the
same principle they cannot be held to be consanguinei
of one another, for consanguinei are in a way agnatically
related:  consequently, they are connected with one another
only as cognates, and in the same way too with the cognates
of their mother.  Accordingly, they can succeed to the
possession of goods under that part of the Edict in which
cognates are called by the title of mere kinship.  5 In this
place too we should observe that a person who claims as
an agnate can be admitted to the inheritance, even though
ten degrees removed from the deceased, both by the
statute of the Twelve Tables, and by the Edict in which
the praetor promises the possession of goods to heirs
statutorily entitled:  but on the ground of mere natural kin-
ship the praetor promises possession of goods to those
cognates only who are within the sixth degree; the only
persons in the seventh degree whom he admits as cognates
being the children of a second cousin of the deceased.

TITLE VI
OF THE DEGREES OF COGNATION

It is here necessary to explain the way in which the degrees
of natural relationship are reckoned.  In the first place it is to
be observed that they can be counted either upwards, or
downwards, or crosswise, that is to say, collaterally.  Re-
lations in the ascending line are parents, in the descending
line, children, and similarly uncles and aunts paternal and
maternal.  In the ascending and descending lines a man's
nearest cognate may be related to him in the first degree;
in the collateral line he cannot be nearer to him than the
second.

1 Relations in the first degree, reckoning upwards, are the
father and mother; reckoning downwards, the son and
daughter.  2 Those in the second degree, upwards, are
grandfather and grandmother; downwards, grandson and
granddaughter; 3 and in the collateral line brother and sister.
In the third degree, upwards, are the great-grandfather and
great-grandmother; downwards, the great-grandson and
great-granddaughter; in the collateral line, the sons and
daughters of a brother or sister, and also uncles and aunts
paternal and maternal.  The father's brother is called ‘patruus,’
in Greek ‘patros’, the mother's brother avunculus, in Greek
specifically ‘matros,’ though the term theios is used
indifferently to indicate either.  The father's sister is called
‘amita,’ the mother's ‘matertera’; both go in Greek by the
name ‘theia,’ or, with some, ‘tithis.’  4 In the fourth degree,
upwards, are the great-great-grandfather and the great-
great-grandmother; downwards, the great-great-grandson
and the great-great-granddaughter; in the collateral line,
the paternal great-uncle and great-aunt, that is to say, the
grandfather's brother and sister:  the same relations on the
grandmother's side, that is to say, her brother and sister:
and first cousins male and female, that is, children of brothers
and sisters in relation to one another.  The children of two
sisters, in relation to one another, are properly called
‘consobrini,’ a corruption of ‘consororini’; those of two
brothers, in relation to one another, ‘fratres patrueles,’ if
males, ‘sorores patrueles,’ if females; and those of a brother
and a sister, in relation to one another, ‘amitini’; thus the sons
of your father's sister call you ‘consobrinus,’ and you call
them ‘amitini.’  5 In the fifth degree, upwards, are the grand-
father's great-grandfather and great-grandmother, downwards,
the great-grandchildren of one's own grandchildren, and in the
collateral line the grandchildren of a brother or sister, a great-
grandfather's or great-grandmother's brother or sister, the
children of one's first cousins, that is, of a ‘frater-’ or ‘soror
patruelis,’ of a ‘consobrinus’ or ‘consobrina,’ of an ‘amitinus’
or ‘amitina,’ and first cousins once removed, that is to say,
the children of a great-uncle or great-aunt paternal or maternal.
6 In the sixth degree, upwards, are the great-grandfather's
great-grandfather and great-grandmother; downwards, the
great-grandchildren of a great-grandchild, and in the collateral
line the great-grandchildren of a brother or sister, as also the
brother and sister of a great-great-grandfather or great-great-
grandmother, and second cousins, that is to say, the children
of ‘fratres-’ or ‘sorores patrueles,’ of ‘consobrini,’ or of
‘amitini.’

7 This will be enough to show how the degrees of relation-
ship are reckoned; for from what has been said it is easy to
understand how we ought to calculate the remoter degrees
also, each generation always adding one degree:  so that it
is far easier to say in what degree any one is related to some
one else than to indicate his relationship by the proper specific
term.  8 The degrees of agnation are also reckoned in the same
manner; 9 but as truth is fixed in the mind of man much better
by the eye than by the ear, we have deemed it necessary,
after giving an account of the degree of relationship, to have
a table of them inserted in the present book, that so the youth
may be able by both ears and eyes to gain a most perfect
knowledge of them.  [Note: -- the pedagogical  table is omit-
ted in the present edition.]

10 It is certain that the part of the Edict in which the possession
of goods is promised to the next of kin has nothing to do with
the relationships of slaves with one another, nor is there any
old statute by which such relationships were recognised.
However, in the constitution which we have issued with
regard to the rights of patrons -- a subject which up to our
times had been most obscure, and full of difficulties and con-
fusion -- we have been prompted by humanity to grant that if
a slave shall beget children by either a free woman or another
slave, or conversely if a slave woman shall bear children of
either sex by either a freeman or a slave, and both the parents
and the children (if born of a slave woman) shall become free,
or if the mother being free, the father be a slave, and subse-
quently acquire his freedom, the children shall in all these
cases succeed their father and mother, and the patron's rights
lie dormant.  And such children we have called to the suc-
cession not only of their parents, but also of one another
reciprocally, by this enactment, whether those born in slavery
and subsequently manumitted are the only children, or whether
there be others conceived after their parents had obtained
their freedom, and whether they all have the same father and
mother, or the same father and different mothers, or vice
versa; the rules applying to children born in lawful wedlock
being applied here also.

11 To sum up all that we have said, it appears that persons
related in the same degree of cognation to the deceased are
not always called together, and that even a remoter is some-
times preferred to a nearer cognate.  For as family heirs and
those whom we have enumerated as equivalent to family
heirs have a priority over all other claimants, it is clear that
a great-grandson or great-great-grandson is preferred to a
brother, or the father or mother of the deceased; and yet the
father and mother, as we have remarked above, are in the
first degree of cognation, and the brother is in the second,
while the great-grandson and great-great-grandson are
only in the third and fourth respectively.  And it is immaterial
whether the descendant who ranks among family heirs was
in the power of the deceased at the time of his death, or
out of it through having been emancipated or through being
the child of an emancipated child or a child of the female sex.
12 When there are no family heirs, and none of those persons
who we have said rank as such, an agnate who has lost none
of his agnatic rights, even though very many degrees removed
from the deceased, is usually preferred to a nearer cognate;
for instance, the grandson or great-grandson of a paternal
uncle has a better title than a maternal uncle or aunt.  Ac-
cordingly, in saying that the nearest cognate is preferred
in the succession, or that, if there are several cognates in
the nearest degree, they are called equally, we mean that this
is the case if no one is entitled to priority, according to what
we have said, as either being or ranking as a family heir, or
as being an agnate; the only exceptions to this being emanci-
pated brothers and sisters of the deceased who are called to
succeed him, and ho, in spite of their loss of status, are pre-
ferred to other agnates in a remoter degree than themselves.
TITLE VII
OF THE SUCCESSION TO FREEDMEN

Let us now turn to the property of freedmen.  These were
originally allowed to pass over their patrons in their wills with
impunity:  for by the statute of the Twelve Tables the
inheritance of a freedman devolved on his patron only when
he died intestate without leaving a family heir.  If he died
intestate, but left a family heir, the patron was not entitled to
any portion of this property, and this, if the family heir was a
natural child, seemed to be no grievance; but if he was an
adoptive child, it was clearly unfair that the patron should be
debarred from all right to the succession.

1 Accordingly this injustice of the law was at a later period
corrected by the praetor's Edict, by which, if a freedman made
a will, he was commanded to leave his patron half his property;
and, if he left him nothing at all, or less than a half, possession
of such half was given to him against the testament.  If, on the
other hand, he died intestate, leaving as family heir an adoptive
son, the patron could obtain even against the latter possession
of the goods of the deceased to the extent of one-half.  But
the freedman was enabled to exclude the patron if he left
natural children, whether in his power at the time of his death,
or emancipated or given in adoption, provided that he made
a will in which he instituted them heirs to any part of the
succession, or that, being passed over, they demanded pos-
session against the will under the Edict:  2 if disinherited, they
did not avail to bar the patron.  At a still later period the lex
Papia Poppaea augmented the rights of patrons who had more
wealthy freedmen.  By this it was enacted that, whenever
a freedman left property amounting in value to a hundred
thousand sesterces and upwards, and not so many as three
children, the patron, whether he died testate or intestate,
should be entitled to a portion equal to that of a single child.
Accordingly, if the freedman left a single son or daughter as
heir, the patron could claim half the property, exactly as if
he had died without leaving any children:  if he left two
children as heirs, the patron could claim a third:  if he left three,
the patron was excluded altogether.  3 In our constitution,
however, which we have drawn up in a convenient form and
in the Greek language, so as to be known by all, we have
established the following rules for application to such cases.
If the freedman or freedwoman is less than a ‘centenarius’,
that is, has a fortune of less than a hundred aurei (which
we have reckoned as equivalent to the sum of a hundred
thousand sesterces fixed by the lex Papia), the patron shall
have no right to any share in the succession if they make a
will; while, if they die intestate without leaving any children,
we have retained unimpaired the rights conferred on the
patron by the Twelve Tables.  If they are possessed of more
than a hundred aurei, and leave a descendant or descend-
ants of either sex and any degree to take the inheritance civil
or praetorian, we have given to such child or children the
succession to their parents, to the exclusion of every patron
and his issue.  If, however, they leave no children, and die
intestate, we have called the patron or patroness to their
whole inheritance: while if they make a will, passing over
their patron or patroness, and leaving no children, or having
disinherited such as they have, or (supposing them to be
mothers or maternal grandfathers) having passed them over
without leaving them the right to impeach the testament as
unduteous, then, under our constitution, the patron shall
succeed, by possession against the will, not, as before, to
one-half of the freedman's estate, but to one-third, or, if the
freedman or freedwoman has left him less than this third in his
or her will, to so much as will make up the difference.  But
this third shall be free from all charges, even from legacies or
trust bequests in favour of the children of the freedman or
freedwoman, all of which are to fall on the patron's co-heirs.
In the same constitution we have gathered together the rules
applying to many other cases, which we deemed necessary
for the complete settlement of this branch of law:  for instance,
a title to the succession of freedmen is conferred not only on
patrons and patronesses, but on their children and collateral
relatives to the fifth degree:  all of which may be ascertained
by reference to the constitution itself.  If, however, there are
several descendants of a patron or patroness, or of two or
several, the nearest in degree is to take the succession of the
freedman or freedwoman, which is to be divided, not among
the stocks, but by counting the heads of those nearest in
degree. And the same rule is to be observed with collaterals:
for we have made the law of succession to freedmen almost
identical with that relating to freeborn persons.  4 All that has
been said relates nowadays to freedmen who are Roman
citizens, for dediticii and Latini Iuniani having been together
abolished there are now no others.  As to a statutory right of
succession to a Latin, there never was any such thing; for men
of this class, though during life they lived as free, yet as they
drew their last breath they lost their liberty along with their life,
and under the lex Iunia their manumitters kept their property,
like that of slaves, as a kind of peculium.  It was subsequently
provided by the SC. Largianum that the manumitter's children,
unless expressly disinherited, should be preferred to his ex-
ternal heirs in succession to the goods of a Latin; and this was
followed by the edict of the Emperor Trajan, providing that
a Latin who contrived, without the knowledge or consent
of his patron, to obtain by imperial favour a grant of citizen-
ship should live a citizen, but die a Latin.  Owing, however,
to the difficulties accompanying these changes of condition,
and others as well, we have determined by our constitution to
repeal for ever the lex Iunia, the SC. Largianum, and the edict
of Trajan, and to abolish them along with the Latins themselves,
so as to enable all freedmen to enjoy the citizenship of Rome:
and we have converted in a wonderful manner the modes in
which persons became Latins, with some additions, into
modes of attaining Roman citizenship.

TITLE VIII
OF THE ASSIGNMENT OF FREEDMEN

Before we leave the subject of succession to freedmen, we
should observe a resolution of the Senate, to the effect that,
though the property of freedmen belongs in equal portions
to all the patron's children who are in the same degree, it
shall yet be lawful for a parent to assign a freedman to one
of his children, so that after his own death the assignee shall
be considered his sole patron, and the other children who,
had it not been for such assignment, would be admitted
equally with him, shall have no claim to the succession what-
ever:  though they recover their original rights if the assignee
dies without issue.

1 It is lawful to assign freedwomen as well as freedmen, and
to daughters and granddaughters no less than to sons and
grandsons; 2 and the power of assignment is conferred on all
who have two or more children in their power, and enables
them to assign a freedman or freedwoman to such children
while so subject to them.  Accordingly the question arose,
whether the assignment becomes void, if the parent subse-
quently emancipates the assignee? and the affirmative opinion,
which was held by Julian and many others, has now become
settled law.  3 It is immaterial whether the assignment is made
in a testament or not, and indeed patrons are enabled to
exercise this power in any terms whatsoever, as is provided
by the senatusconsult passed in the time of Claudius, when
Suillus Rufus and Ostorius Scapula were consuls.

TITLE IX
OF POSSESSION OF GOODS

The law as to possession of goods was introduced by the
praetor by way of amending the older system, and this not
only in intestate succession, as has been described, but also
in cases where deceased persons have made a will.  For
instance, although the posthumous child of a stranger, if
instituted heir, could not by the civil law enter upon the in-
heritance, because his institution would be invalid, he could
with the assistance of the praetor be made possessor of the
goods by the praetorian law.  Such a one can now, however,
by our constitution be lawfully instituted, as being no longer
unrecognised by the civil law.

1 Sometimes, however, the praetor promises the possession
of goods rather in confirmation of the old law than for the
purpose of correcting or impugning it; as, for instance, when
he gives possession in accordance with a duly executed will
to those who have been instituted heirs therein.  Again, he
calls family heirs and agnates to the possession of goods on
an intestacy; and yet, even putting aside the possession of
goods, the inheritance belongs to them already by the civil
law.  2 Those whom the praetor calls to a succession do not
become heirs in the eye of the law, for the praetor cannot
make an heir, because persons become heirs by a statute
only, or some similar ordinance such as a senatusconsult or
an imperial constitution:  but as the praetor gives them the
possession of goods they become quasi-heirs, and are called
`possessors of goods.'  And several additional grades of
grantees of possession were recognised by the praetor in his
anxiety that no one might die without a successor; the right
of entering upon an inheritance, which had been confined by
the statute of the Twelve Tables within very narrow limits,
having been conferred more extensively by him in the spirit
of justice and equity. 3 The following are the kinds of testa-
mentary possession of goods.  First, the so-called
`contratabular' possession, given to children who are merely
passed over in the will.  Second, that which the praetor
promises to all duly instituted heirs, and which is for that
reason called secundum tabulas.  Then, having spoken of
wills, the praetor passes on to cases of intestacy, in which,
firstly, he gives the possession of goods which is called unde
liberi to family heirs and those who in his Edict are ranked as
such.  Failing these, he gives it, secondly, to successors having
a statutory title:  thirdly, to the ten persons whom he preferred
to the manumitter of a free person, if a stranger in relation to
the latter, namely the latter's father and mother, grandparents
paternal and maternal, children, grandchildren by daughters as
well as by sons, and brothers and sisters whether of the whole
or of the half blood only.  The fourth degree of possession is
that given to the nearest cognates:  the fifth is that called
tum quam ex familia:  the sixth, that given to the patron and
patroness, their children and parents:  the seventh, that given to
the husband or wife of the deceased:  the eighth, that given to
cognates of the manumitter.  4 Such was the system established
by the praetorian jurisdiction.  We, however, who have been
careful to pass over nothing, but correct all defects by our
constitutions, have retained, as necessary, the possession of
goods called contra tabulas and secundum tabulas, and
also the kinds of possession upon intestacy known as unde
liberis and unde legitimi.  5 The possession, however, which
in the praetor's Edict occupied the fifth place, and was called
unde decem personae, we have with benevolent intentions
and with a short treatment shown to be superfluous.  Its effect
was to prefer to the extraneous manumitter the ten persons
specified above; but our constitution, which we have made
concerning the emancipation of children, has in all cases made
the parent implicitly the manumitter, as previously under a
fiduciary contract, and has attached this privilege to every
such manumission, so as to render superfluous the aforesaid
kind of possession of goods.  We have therefore removed it,
and put in its place the possession which the praetor promises
to the nearest cognates, and which we have thus made the
fifth kind instead of the sixth.  6 The possession of goods
which formerly stood seventh in the list, which was called
tum quam ex familia, and that which stood eighth, namely,
the possession entitled unde liberi patroni patronaeque et
parentes eorum, we have altogether suppressed by our
constitution respecting the rights of patrons.  For, having
assimilated the succession to freedmen to the succession to
freeborn persons, with this sole exception -- in order to pre-
serve some difference between the two classes -- that no one
has any title to the former who is related more distantly than
the fifth degree, we have left them sufficient remedies in the
`contratabular' possession, and in those called unde legitimi
and unde cognati, wherewith to vindicate their rights, so
that thus all the subtleties and inextricable confusion of these
two kinds of possession of goods have been abolished.
7 We have preserved in full force another possession of goods,
which is called unde vir et uxor, and which occupied the ninth
place in the old classification, and have given it a higher place,
namely, the sixth.  The tenth kind, which was called unde
cognati manumissoris, we have very properly abolished for
reasons which have been already stated:  thus leaving in full
operation only six ordinary kinds of possession of goods.
8 The seventh, which follows them, was introduced with most
excellent reason by the praetors, whose Edict finally promised
the possession of goods to those persons expressly entitled
to it by any statute, senatusconsult, or imperial constitution;
but this was not permanently incorporated by the praetor with
either the intestate or the testamentary kinds of possession,
but was accorded by him, as circumstances demanded, as
an extreme and extraordinary remedy to those persons who
claim, either under a will or on an intestacy, under statutes,
senatusconsults, or the more recent legislation of the emperors.
9 The praetor, having thus introduced many kinds of suc-
cessions, and arranged them in a system, fixed a definite time
within which the possession of goods must be applied for,
as there are often several persons entitled in the same kind
of succession, though related in different degrees to the
deceased, in order to save the creditors of the estate from
delay in their suits, and to provide them with a proper defend-
ant to sue; and with the object also of making it less easy
for them to obtain possession of the property of the deceased,
as in bankruptcy, wherein they consulted their own advantage
only.  He allowed to children and parents, adoptive no less
than natural, an interval of a year, and to all other persons one
hundred days, within which to make the application.  10 If a
person entitled does not apply for the possession of goods
within the time specified, his portion goes by accrual to those
in the same degree or class with himself:  or, if there be none,
the praetor promises by his successory edict the possession
to those in the next degree, exactly as if the person in the
preceding one were non-existent.  If any one refuses the
possession of goods which he has the opportunity of accept-
ing, it is not unusual to wait until the aforesaid interval, within
which possession must be applied for, has elapsed, but the
next degree is admitted immediately under the same edict.
11 In reckoning the interval, only those days are considered
upon which the persons entitled could have made application.
12 Earlier emperors, however, have judiciously provided that
no one need trouble himself expressly to apply for the possess-
ion of goods, but that, if he shall within the prescribed time in
any manner have signified his intention to accept, he shall have
the full benefit of such tacit acceptance.

TITLE X
OF ACQUISITION BY ADROGATION

There is another kind of universal succession which owes its
introduction neither to the statute of the Twelve Tables nor
to the praetor’s Edict, but to the law which is based upon
custom and consent.

1 When an independent person gives himself in adrogation, all
his property, corporeal and incorporeal, and all debts due to
him formerly passed in full ownership to the adrogator, except
such rights as are extinguished by loss of status, for instance,
bounden services of freedmen and rights of agnation.  Use and
usufruct, though formerly enumerated among such rights, have
now been saved by our constitution from extinction by the least
loss of status.  2 But we have now confined acquisition by
adrogation within the same limits as acquisition through their
children by natural parents; that is to say, adoptive as well as
natural parents acquire no greater right in property which
comes to children in their power from any extraneous source
than a mere usufruct; the ownership is vested in the children
themselves.  But if a son who has been adrogated dies in his
adoptive family, the whole of his property vests in the adro-
gator, failing those persons who, under our constitution, are
preferred to the father in succession to property which is not
acquired immediately from him.  3 Conversely, the adrogator
is not, by strict law, suable for the debts of his adoptive son,
but an action may be brought against him as his represent-
ative; and if he declines to defend the latter, the creditors are
allowed, by an order of the magistrates having jurisdiction in
such cases, to take possession of the property of which the
usufruct as well as the ownership would have belonged to
the son, had he not subjected himself to the power of another,
and to dispose of it in the mode prescribed by law.

TITLE XI
OF THE ADJUDICATION OF A DECEASED
PERSON’S ESTATE TO PRESERVE THE GIFTS
OF LIBERTY

A new form of succession was added by a constitution of the
Emperor Marcus, which provided that if slaves, who have
received a bequest of liberty from their master in a will under
which no heir takes, wish to have his property adjudged to
them, their application shall be entertained.

1 Such is the substance of a rescript addressed by the Emperor
Marcus to Popilius Rufus, which runs as follows:  ‘If there is
no successor to take on the intestacy of Virginius Valens, who
by his will has conferred freedom on certain of his slaves, and
if, consequently, his property is in danger of being sold, the
magistrate who has cognizance of such matters shall on appli-
cation entertain your desire to have the property adjudged to
you, in order to give effect to the bequests of liberty, direct
and fiduciary, provided you give proper security to the credit-
ors for payment of their claims in full.  Slaves to whom liberty
has been directly bequeathed shall become free exactly as if
the inheritance had been actually accepted, and those whom
the heir was requested to manumit shall obtain their liberty
from you; provided that if you will have the property adjudg-
ed to you only upon the condition, that even the slaves who
have received a direct bequest of liberty shall become your
freedmen, and if they, whose status is now in question, agree
to this, we are ready to authorize compliance with your wishes.
And lest the benefit afforded by this our rescript be rendered
ineffectual in another way, by the Treasury laying claim to the
property, be it hereby known to those engaged in our service
that the cause of liberty is to be preferred to pecuniary
advantage, and that they must so effect such seizures as to
preserve the freedom of those who could have obtained it had
the inheritance been accepted under the will.’  2 This rescript
was a benefit not only to slaves thus liberated, but also to the
deceased testators themselves, by saving their property
from being seized and sold by their creditors; for it is certain
that such seizure and sale cannot take place if the property
has been adjudged on this account, because some one has
come forward to defend the deceased, and a satisfactory
defender too, who gives the creditors full security for payment.
3 Primarily, the rescript is applicable only where freedom is
conferred by a will.  How then will the case stand, if a man
who dies intestate makes gifts of freedom by codicils, and on
the intestacy no one accepts the inheritance?  We answer,
that the boon conferred by the constitution ought not here to
be refused.  No one can doubt that liberty given, in codicils,
by a man who dies having made a will, is effectual.  4 The
terms of the constitution show that it comes into application
when there is no successor on an intestacy; accordingly, it is
of no use so long as it is uncertain whether there will be one or
not; but, when this has been determined in the negative, it at
once becomes applicable.  5 Again, it may be asked whether,
if a person who abstains from accepting an inheritance can
claim a judicial restoration of rights, the constitution can still
be applied, and the goods adjudged under it?  And what, if
such person obtains a restoration after they have been actually
adjudged in order to give effect to the bequest of freedom?
We reply that gifts of liberty to which effect has once been
given cannot possibly be recalled.  6 The object with which
this constitution was enacted was to give effect to bequests
of liberty, and accordingly it is quite inapplicable where no
such bequests are made.  Supposing, however, that a man
manumits certain slaves in his lifetime, or in contemplation of
death, and in order to prevent any questions arising whether
the creditors have thereby been defrauded, the slaves are
desirous of having the property adjudged to them, should this
be permitted? and we are inclined to say that it should, though
the point is not covered by the terms of the constitution.
7 Perceiving, however, that the enactment was wanting in
many minute points of this kind, we have ourselves issued a
very full constitution, in which have been collected many
conceivable cases by which the law relating to this kind of
succession has been completed, and with which any one
can become acquainted by reading the constitution itself.

TITLE XII
OF UNIVERSAL SUCCESSIONS, NOW OBSOLETE,
IN SALE OF GOODS UPON BANKRUPTCY,
AND UNDER THE SC. CLAUDIANUM

There were other kinds of universal succession in existence
prior to that last before mentioned; for instance, the ‘purchase
of goods’ which was introduced with many prolixities of form
for the sale of insolvent debtors’ estates, and which remained
in use under the so-called ‘ordinary’ system of procedure.
Later generations adopted the ‘extraordinary’ procedure, and
accordingly sales of goods became obsolete along with the
ordinary procedure of which they were a part.  Creditors are
now allowed to take possession of their debtor’s property
only by the order of a judge, and to dispose of it as to them
seems most advantageous; all of which will appear more per-
fectly from the larger books of the Digest.

1 There was too a miserable form of universal acquisition under
the SC. Claudianum, when a free woman, through indulgence
of her passion for a slave, lost her freedom by the senatus-
consult, and with her freedom her property.  But this enactment
we deemed unworthy of our times, and have ordered its
abolition in our Empire, nor allowed it to be inserted in our
Digest.

TITLE XIII
OF OBLIGATIONS

Let us now pass on to obligations.  An obligation is a legal
bond, with which we are bound by a necessity of performing
some act according to the laws of our State.  1 The leading
division of obligations is into two kinds, civil and praetorian.
Those obligations are civil which are established by statute,
or at least are sanctioned by the civil law; those are praetorian
which the praetor has established by his own jurisdiction,
and which are also called honorary.  2 By another division
they are arranged in four classes, contractual, quasi-contractual,
delictal, and quasi-delictal.  And first, we must examine those
which are contractual, and which again fall into four species,
for contract is concluded either by delivery, by a form of
words, by writing, or by consent:  each of which we will
treat in detail.

TITLE XIV
OF REAL CONTRACTS, OR THE MODES IN WHICH
OBLIGATIONS ARE CONTRACTED BY DELIVERY

Real contracts, or contracts concluded by delivery, are ex-
emplified by loan for consumption, that is to say, loan of such
things as are estimated by weight, number, or measure, for
instance, wine, oil, corn, coined money, copper, silver, or
gold:  things in which we transfer our property on condition
that the receiver shall transfer to us, at a future time, not the
same things, but other things of the same kind and quality:
and this contract is called mutuum, because thereby meum
or mine becomes tuum or thine.  The action to which it
gives rise is called a condiction.  1 Again, a man is bound by
a real obligation if he takes what is not owed him from another
who pays him by mistake; and the latter can, as plaintiff, bring
a condiction against him for its recovery, after the analogy of
the action whose formula ran ‘if it be proved that he ought to
convey,’ exactly as if the defendant had received a loan from
him.  Consequently a pupil who, by mistake, is paid something
which is not really owed him without his guardian’s authority,
will no more be bound by a condiction for the recovery of
money not owed than by one for money received as a loan:
though this kind of liability does not seem to be founded on
contract; for a payment made in order to discharge a debt is
intended to extinguish, not to create, an obligation.  2 So too
a person to whom a thing is lent for use is laid under a real
obligation, and is liable to the action on a loan for use.  The
difference between this case and a loan for consumption is
considerable, for here the intention is not to make the object
lent the property of the borrower, who accordingly is bound
to restore the same identical thing.  Again, if the receiver of a
loan for consumption loses what he has received by some
accident, such as fire, the fall of a building, shipwreck, or the
attack of thieves or enemies, he still remains bound:  but the
borrower for use, though responsible for the greatest care in
keeping what is lent him -- and it is not enough that he has
shown as much care as he usually bestows on his own affairs,
if only some one else could have been more diligent in the
charge of it -- has not to answer for loss occasioned by fire or
accident beyond his control, provided it did not occur through
any fault of his own.  Otherwise, of course, it is different:  for
instance, if you choose to take with you on a journey a thing
which has been lent to you for use, and lose it by being at-
tacked by enemies or thieves, or by a shipwreck, it is beyond
question that you will be liable for its restoration.  A thing is not
properly said to be lent for use if any recompense is received
or agreed upon for the service; for where this is the case, the
use of the thing is held to be hired, and the contract is of a
different kind, for a loan for use ought always to be gratuitous.
3 Again, the obligation incurred by a person with whom a
thing is deposited for custody is real, and he can be sued by
the action of the deposit; he too being responsible for the re-
storation of the identical thing deposited, though only where
it is lost through some positive act of commission on his part:
for for carelessness, that is to say, inattention and negligence,
he is not liable.  Thus a person from whom a thing is stolen,
in the charge of which he has been most careless, cannot be
called to account, because, if a man entrusts property to the
custody of a careless friend, he has no one to blame but him-
self for his want of caution. 4 Finally, the creditor who takes
a thing in pledge is under a real obligation, and is bound to
restore the thing itself by the action of pledge.  A pledge,
however, is for the benefit of both parties; of the debtor, because
it enables him to borrow more easily, and of the creditor, because
he has the better security for repayment; and accordingly, it is a
settled rule that the pledgee cannot be held responsible for more
than the greatest care in the custody of the pledge; if he shows
this, and still loses it by some accident, he himself is freed from
all liability, without losing his right to sue for the debt.

TITLE XV
OF VERBAL OBLIGATION

An obligation is contracted by question and answer, that is to
say, by a form of words, when we stipulate that property shall
be conveyed to us, or some other act be performed in our
favour.  Such verbal contracts ground two different action,
namely condiction, when the stipulation is certain, and the
action on stipulation, when it is uncertain; and the name is
derived from stipulum, a word in use among the ancients
to mean ‘firm,’ coming possibly from stipes, the trunk of a
tree.

1 In this contract the following forms of words were formerly
sanctioned by usage: ‘Do you engage yourself to do so and
so?’  ‘I do engage myself.’  ‘Do you promise?’  ‘I do promise.’
 ‘Do you pledge your credit?’  ‘I pledge my credit.’  ‘Do you
guarantee?’  ‘I guarantee.’  ‘Will you convey?’  ‘I will convey.’
‘Will you do?’  ‘I will do.’  Whether the stipulation is in Latin,
or Greek, or any other language, is immaterial, provided the
two parties understand one another, so that it is not necessary
even that they should both speak in the same tongue, so long
as the answer corresponds to the question, and thus two
Greeks, for instance, may contract an obligation in Latin.  But
it was only in former times that the solemn forms referred to
were in use:  for subsequently, by the enactment of Leo’s
constitution, their employment was rendered unnecessary,
and nothing was afterwards required except that the parties
should understand each other, and agree to the same thing,
the words in which such agreement was expressed being
immaterial.

2 The terms of a stipulation may be absolute, or performance
may either be postponed to some future time, or be made
subject to a condition.  An absolute stipulation may be ex-
emplified by the following:  ‘Do you promise to give five aurei?’
and here (if the promise be made) that sum may be instantly
sued for.  As an instance of stipulation in diem, as it is called
where a future day is fixed for payment, we may take the
following:  ‘Do you promise to give ten aurei on the first of
March?’  In such a stipulation as this, an immediate debt is
created, but it cannot be sued upon until the arrival of the day
fixed for payment:  and even on that very day an action cannot
be brought, because the debtor ought to have the whole of it
allowed to him for payment; for otherwise, unless the whole
day on which payment was promised is past, it cannot be
certain that default has been made.  3 If the terms of your
stipulation run ‘Do you promise to pay me ten aurei a year
so long as I live?’ the obligation is deemed absolute, and
the liability perpetual, for a debt cannot be owed till a certain
time only; though if the promisee’s heir sues for payment, he
will be successfully met by the plea of contrary agreement.
4 A stipulation is conditional, when performance is made to
depend on some uncertain event in the future, so that it becomes
actionable only on something being done or omitted:  for
instance, ‘Do you promise to give five aurei if Titius is made
consul?’  If, however, a man stipulates in the form ‘Do you
promise to give so and so, if I do not go up to the Capitol?’
the effect is the same as if he had stipulated for payment to
himself at the time of his death.  The immediate effect of a con-
ditional stipulation is not a debt, but merely the expectation
that at some time there will be a debt:  and this expectation
devolves on the stipulator’s heir, supposing he dies himself
before fulfilment of the condition.  5 It is usual in stipulations
to name a place for payment; for instance, ‘Do you promise
to give at Carthage?’  Such a stipulation as this, though in its
terms absolute, implies a condition that enough time shall be
allowed to the promisor to enable him to pay the money at
Carthage.  Accordingly, if a man at Rome stipulates thus,
‘Do you promise to pay to-day at Carthage?’ the stipulation
is void, because the performance of the act to be promised
is a physical impossibility.  6 Conditions relating to past or
present time either make the obligation void at once, or have
no suspensive operation whatever.  Thus, in the stipulation
‘Do you promise to give so and so, if Titius has been consul,
or if Maevius is alive?’ the promise is void, if the condition
is not satisfied; while if it is, it is binding at once:  for events
which in themselves are certain do not suspend the binding
force of an obligation, however uncertain we ourselves may
be about them.

7 The performance or non-performance of an act may be the
object of a stipulation no less than the delivery of property,
though where this is the case, it will be best to connect the non-
performance of the act to be performed, or the performance
of the act to be omitted, with a pecuniary penalty to be paid
in default, lest there be doubt as to the value of the act or
omission, which will make it necessary for the plaintiff to prove
to what damages he is entitled.  Thus, if it be a performance
which is stipulated for, some such penalty should be added
as in the following:  ‘If so and so is not done, do you promise
to pay ten aurei as a penalty?’  And if the performance of
some acts, and the non-performance of others, are bargained
for in the same stipulation, a clause of the following kind
should be added, ‘If any default is made, either as contrary
to what is agreed upon, or by way of non-performance, do
you promise to pay a penalty of ten aurei?’

TITLE XVI
OF STIPULATIONS IN WHICH THERE ARE
TWO CREDITORS OR TWO DEBTORS

There may be two or more parties on either side in a stipulation,
that is to say, as promisors or promisees.  Joint promises are
so constituted by the promisor answering, ‘I promise,’ after
they have all first asked the question; for instance, if after two
promises have separately stipulated from him, he answers,
‘I promise to give so and so to each of you.’  But if he first
promises to Titius, and then, on another’s putting the question
to him, promises to him too, there will be two distinct obli-
gations, namely, one between him and each of the promisees,
and they are not considered joint promisees at all.  The usual
form to constitute two or more joint promisors is as follows,
-- ‘Maevius, do you promise to give five aurei?  Seius, do you
promise to give the same five aurei?’ and in answer they reply
separately, ‘I promise.’  1 In obligations of this kind each joint
promisee is owed the whole sum, and the whole sum can be
claimed from each joint promisor; and yet in both cases but
one payment is due, so that if one joint promisee receives the
debt, or one joint promisor pays it, the obligation is thereby
extinguished for all, and all are thereby released from it.
2 Of two joint promisors one may be bound absolutely, while
performance by the other is postponed to a future day, or
made to depend on a condition; but such postponement or
such condition in no way prevents the stipulator from at
once suing the one who was bound absolutely.

TITLE XVII
OF STIPULATIONS MADE BY SLAVES

>From his master’s legal capacity a slave derives ability to be
promisee in a stipulation.  Thus, as an inheritance in most
matters represents the legal ‘person’ of the deceased, what-
ever a slave belonging to it stipulates for, before the inheritance
is accepted, he acquires for the inheritance, and so for the
person who subsequently becomes heir.  1 All that a slave
acquires by a stipulation he acquires for his master only,
whether it was to that master, or himself, or his fellow slave,
or no one in particular that performance was to be made
under the contract; and the same principle applies to children
in power, so far as they now are instruments of acquisition
for their father.  2 When, however, what is stipulated for is
permission to do some specific act, that permission cannot
extend beyond the person of the promisee:  for instance,
if a slave stipulates for permission to cross the promisor’s
land, he cannot himself be denied passage, though his master
can.  3 A stipulation by a slave belonging to joint owners
enures to the benefit of all of them in proportion to the shares
in which they own him, unless he stipulated at the bidding,
or expressly in favour, of one of them only, in which case
that one alone is benefited.  Where a jointly owned slave
stipulates for the transfer of property which cannot be
acquired for one of his two masters, the contract enures to
the benefit of the other only:  for instance, where the stip-
ulation is for the transfer of a thing which already belongs
to one of them.

TITLE XVIII
OF THE DIFFERENT KINDS OF STIPULATIONS

Stipulations are either judicial, praetorian, conventional, or
common:  by the latter being meant those which are both
praetorian and judicial.  1 Judicial stipulations are those which
it is simply part of the judge’s duty to require; for instance,
security against fraud, or for the pursuit of a runaway slave,
or (in default) for payment of his value.  2 Those are praetor-
ian, which the praetor is bound to exact simply in virtue of
his magisterial functions; for instance, security against appre-
hended damage, or for payment of legacies by an heir.  Under
praetorian stipulations we must include also those directed
by the aedile, for these too are based upon jurisdiction.
3 Conventional stipulations are those which arise merely from
the agreement of the parties, apart from any direction of a
judge or of the praetor, and which one may almost say are of
as many different kinds as there are conceivable objects to a
contract.  4 Common stipulations may be exemplified by that
by which a guardian gives security that his ward’s property
will not be squandered or misappropriated, which he is some-
times required to enter into by the praetor, and sometimes
also by a judge when the matter cannot be managed in any
other way; or, again, we might take the stipulation by which
an agent promises that his acts shall be ratified by his principal.

TITLE XIX
OF INVALID STIPULATIONS

Anything, whether movable or immovable, which admits
of private ownership, may be made the object of a stipulation;
1 but if a man stipulates for the delivery of a thing which
either does not or cannot exist, such as Stichus, who is dead
but whom he though alive, or an impossible creature, like a
hippocentaur, the contract will be void.  2 Precisely the same
principles applies where a man stipulates for the delivery of
a thing which is sacred or religious, but which he thought was
a subject of human ownership, or of a thing which is public,
that is to say, devoted in perpetuity to the use and enjoyment
of the people at large, like a forum or theatre, or of a free
man whom he thought a slave, or of a thing which he is
incapable of owning, or which is his own already.  And the
fact that a thing which is public may become private property,
that a free man may become a slave, that the stipulator may
become capable of owning such and such a thing, or that
such and such a thing may cease to belong to him, will not
avail to merely suspend the force of the stipulation in these
cases, but it is void from the outset.  Conversely, a stipulation
which originally was perfectly good may be avoided by the
thing, which is its object, acquiring any of the characters just
specified through no fault of the promisor.  And a stipulation,
such as ‘do you promise to convey Lucius Titius when he
shall be a slave’ and others like it, are also void from the
beginning; for objects which by their very nature cannot be
owned by man cannot either in any way be made the object
of an obligation.  3 If one man promises that another shall
convey, or do so and so, as, for instance, that Titius shall
give five aurei, he will not be bound, though he will if he
promises to get Titius to give them.  4 If a man stipulates for
conveyance to, or performance in favour of, another person
who is not his paterfamilias, the contract is void; though of
course performance to a third person may be bargained for
(as in the stipulation ‘do you promise to give to me or to
Seius?’); where, though the obligation is created in favour of
the stipulator only, payment may still be lawfully made to
Seius, even against the stipulator’s will, the result of which,
if it is done, being that the promisor is entirely released from
his obligation, while the stipulator can sue Seius by the action
of agency.  If a man stipulates for payment of ten aurei to
himself and another who is not his paterfamilias, the contract
will be good, though there has been much doubt whether in
such a case the stipulator can sue for the whole sum agreed
upon, or only half; the law is now settled in favour of the
smaller sum.  If you stipulate for performance in favour of
one in your power, all benefit under the contract is taken by
yourself, for your words are as the words of your son, as
his words are as yours, in all cases in which he is merely an
instrument of acquisition for you.  5 Another circumstance
by which a stipulation may be avoided is want of corre-
spondence between question and answer, as where a man
stipulates from you for payment of ten aurei, and you promise
five, or vice versa; or where his question is unconditional,
your answer conditional, or vice versa, provided only that in
this latter case the difference is express and clear; that is to
say, if he stipulates for payment on fulfilment of a condition,
or on some determinate future day, and you answer:  ‘I
promise to pay to-day,’ the contract is void; but if you merely
answer:  ‘I promise,’ you are held by this laconic reply to
have undertaken payment on the day, or subject to the
condition specified; for it is not essential that every word
used by the stipulator should be repeated in the answer of
the promise.  6 Again, no valid stipulation can be made
between two persons of whom one is in the power of the
other.  A slave indeed cannot be under an obligation to
either his master or anybody else:  but children in power can
be bound in favour of any one except their own paterfamilias.
7 The dumb, of course, cannot either stipulate or promise,
nor can the deaf, for the promisee in stipulation must hear
the answer, and the promisor must hear the question; and
this makes it clear that we are speaking of persons only who
are stone deaf, not of those who (as it is said) are hard of
hearing.  8 A lunatic cannot enter into any contract at all,
because he does not understand what he is doing.  9 On
the other hand a pupil can enter into any contract, provided
that he has his guardian’s authority, when necessary, as it
is for incurring an obligation, though not for imposing an
obligation on another person.  10 This concession of legal
capacity of disposition is manifestly reasonable in respect of
children who have acquired to some understanding, for child-
ren below the age of seven years, or who have just passed
that age, resemble lunatics in want of intelligence.  Those,
however, who have just completed their seventh year are per-
mitted, by a beneficent interpretation of the law, in order to
promote their interests, to have the same capacity as those
approaching the age of puberty; but a child below the latter
age, who is in paternal power, cannot bind himself even with
his father’s sanction.  11 An impossible condition is one
which, according to the course of nature, cannot be fulfilled,
as, for instance, if one says:  ‘Do you promise to give if I
touch the sky with my finger?’  But if the stipulation runs:  ‘Do
you promise to give if I do not touch the sky with my finger?’
it is considered unconditional, and accordingly can be sued
upon at once.  12 Again, a verbal obligation made between
persons who are not present with one another is void.  This
rule, however, afforded contentious persons opportunities of
litigation, by alleging, after some interval, that they, or their
adversaries, had not been present on the occasion in question;
and we have therefore issued a constitution, addressed to the
advocates of Caesarea, in order with the more dispatch to
settle such disputes, whereby it is enacted that written docu-
ments in evidence of a contract which recite the presence
of the parties shall be taken to be indisputable proof of the
fact, unless the person, who resorts to allegations usually so
disgraceful, proves by the clearest evidence, either document-
ary or borne by credible witnesses, that he or his adversary
was elsewhere than alleged during the whole day on which the
document is stated to have been executed.  13 Formerly, a
man could not stipulate that a thing should be conveyed to
him after his own death, or after that of the promisor; nor
could one person who was in another’s power even stipulate
for conveyance after that person’s death, because he was
deemed to speak with the voice of his parent or master; and
stipulations for conveyance the day before the promisee’s
or promisor’s decease were also void.  Stipulation, however,
as has already been remarked, derive their validity from the
consent of the contracting parties, and we therefore introduced
a necessary emendation in respect also of this rule of law, by
providing that a stipulation shall be good which bargains for
performance either after the death, or the day before the death,
of either promisee or promisor.  14 Again, a stipulation in the
form:  ‘Do you promise to give to-day, if such or such a ship
arrives from Asia to-morrow?’ was formerly void, as being
preposterous in its expression, because what should come
last is put first.  Leo, however, of famous memory held that
a preposterous stipulation in the settlement of a dowry ought
not to be rejected as void, and we have determined to allow
it perfect validity in every case, and not merely in that in which
it was formerly sanctioned.  15 A stipulation, say by Titius, in
the form:  ‘Do you promise to give when I shall die’ or ‘when
you shall die’? is good now, as indeed it always was even
under the older law.  16 So too a stipulation for performance
after the death of a third person is good.  17 If a document in
evidence of a contract states that so and so promised, the
promise is deemed to have been given in answer to a pre-
ceding question.  18 When several acts of conveyance or
performance are comprised in a single stipulation, if the pro-
misor simply answers:  ‘I promise to convey,’ he becomes
liable on each and all of them, but if he answers that he will
convey only one or some of them, he incurs an obligation in
respect of those only which are comprised in his answer,
there being in reality several distinct stipulations of which only
one or some are considered to have acquired binding force:
for for each act of conveyance or performance there ought
to be a separate question and a separate answer.  19 As has
been already observed, no one can validly stipulate for per-
formance to a person other than himself, for the purpose of
this kind of obligation is to enable persons to acquire for
themselves that whereby they are profited, and a stipulator
is not profited if the conveyance is made to a third person.
Hence, if it be wished to make a stipulation in favour of any
such third person, a penalty should be stipulated for, to be
paid, in default of performance of that which is in reality the
object of the contract, to the party who otherwise would
have no interest in such performance; for when one stipulates
for a penalty, it is not his interest in what is the real contract
which is considered, but only the amount to be forfeited to
him upon non-fulfilment of the condition.  So that a stipulation
for conveyance to Titius, but made by some one else, is void:
but the addition of a penalty, in the form ‘If you do not
convey, do you promise to pay me so many aurei?’ makes
it good and actionable.  20 But where the promisor stipulates
in favour of a third person, having himself an interest in the
performance of the promise, the stipulation is good.  For
instance, if a guardian, after beginning to exercise his tutorial
functions, retires from their exercise in favour of his fellow
guardian, taking from him by stipulation security for the due
charge of the ward’s property, he has a sufficient interest in
the performance of this promise, because the ward could have
sued him in case of maladministration, and therefore the
obligation is binding.  So too a stipulation will be good by
which one bargains for delivery to one’s agent, or for pay-
ment to one’s creditor, for in the latter case one may be so
far interested in the payment that, if it not be made, one will
become liable to a penalty or to having a foreclosure of
estates which one has mortgaged.  21 Conversely, he who
promises that another shall do so and so is not bound unless
he promises a penalty in default; 22 and, again, a man cannot
validly stipulate that property which will hereafter be his shall
be conveyed to him as soon as it becomes his own.  23 If a
stipulator and the promisor mean different things, there is no
contractual obligation, but it is just as if no answer had been
made to the question; for instance, if one stipulates from you
for Stichus, and you think he means Pamphilus, whose name
you believed to be Stichus.  24 A promise made for an illegal
or immoral purpose, as, for instance, to commit a sacrilege
or homicide, is void.

25 If a man stipulates for performance on the fulfilment of a
condition, and dies before such fulfilment, his heir can sue on
the contract when it occurs:  and the heir of the promisor can
be sued under the same circumstances.  26 A stipulation for
a conveyance this year, or this month, cannot be sued upon
until the whole year, or the whole month, has elapsed:  27 and
similarly the promisee cannot sue immediately upon a stip-
ulation for the conveyance of an estate or a slave, but only
after allowing a sufficient interval for the conveyance to be
made.

TITLE XX
OF FIDEJUSSORS OR SURETIES

Very often other persons, called fidejussors or sureties, are
bound for the promisor, being taken by promises as additional
security.  1 Such sureties may accompany any obligation,
whether real, verbal, literal or consensual:  and it is immaterial
even whether the principal obligation be civil or natural, so
that a man may go surety for the obligation of a slave either
to a stranger or to his master.  2 A fidejussor is not only
bound himself, but his obligation devolves also on his heir’
3 and the contract of suretyship may be entered into before
no less than after the creation of the principal obligation.  4 If
there are several fidejussors to the same obligation, each of
them, however many they are, is liable for the whole amount,
and the creditor may sue whichever he chooses for the whole;
but by the letter of Hadrian he may be compelled to sue for
only an aliquot part, determined by the number of sureties
who are solvent at the commencement of the action:  so that
if one of them is insolvent at that time the liability of the rest
is proportionately increased.  Thus, if one fidejussor pay the
whole amount, he alone suffers by the insolvency of the
principal debtor; but this is his own fault, as he might have
availed himself of the letter of Hadrian, and required that
the claim should be reduced to his rateable portion.  5 Fide-
jussors cannot be bound for more than their principal, for
their obligation is but accessory to the latter’s, and the
accessory cannot contain more than the principal; but they
can be bound for less.  Thus, if the principal debtor promised
ten aurei, the fidejussor can well be bound for five, but not
vice versa; and if the principal’s promise is absolute, that of
the fidejussor may be conditional, though a conditional promise
cannot be absolutely guaranteed, for more and less is to be
understood of time as well as of quantity, immediate payment
being regarded as more, and future payment as less.  6 For
the recovery of anything paid by him for the principal the
fidejussor can sue the latter by the action on agency. 7 A
fidejussor may be taken in Greek, by using the expressions
‘tei emei pistei keleuo,’ ‘lego,’ ‘thelo,’ or ‘boulomai’; and
‘phemi’ will be taken as equivalent to ‘lego.’  8 It is to be
observed that in the stipulations of fidejussors the general rule
is that whatever is stated in writing to have been done is taken
to have really been done; and, accordingly, it is settled law
that if a man signs his name to a paper stating that he became
a fidejussor, all formalities are presumed to have been duly
observed.

TITLE XXI
OF LITERAL OBLIGATION

Formerly there was a kind of obligation made by writing,
and said to be contracted by the entry of a debt in a ledger;
but such entries have nowadays gone out of use.  Of course,
if a man states in writing that he owes money which has never
been paid over to him, he cannot be allowed, after a consider-
able interval, to defend himself by the plea that the money was
not, in fact, advanced; for this is a point which has frequently
been settled by imperial constitutions.  The consequence is,
that even at the present day a person who is estopped from
this plea is bound by his written signature, which (even of
course where there is no stipulation) is ground for a condic-
tion.  The length of time after which this defence could not
be pleaded was formerly fixed by imperial constitutions at
five years; but it has been reduced by our constitution, in
order to save creditors from a more extended risk of being
defrauded of their money, so that now it cannot be advanced
after the lapse of two years from the date of the alleged
payment.

TITLE XXII
OF OBLIGATION BY CONSENT

Obligations contracted by mere consent are exemplified by
sale, hire, partnership and agency, which are called consensual
contracts because no writing, nor the presence of the parties,
nor any delivery is required to make the obligation actionable,
but the consent of the parties is sufficient.  Parties who are
not present together, therefore, can form these contracts by
letter, for instance, or by messenger: and they are in their
nature bilateral, that is, both parties incur a reciprocal ob-
ligation to perform whatever is just and fair, whereas verbal
contracts are unilateral, one party being promisee, and the
other alone promisor.

TITLE XXIII
OF PURCHASE AND SALE

The contract of purchase and sale is complete immediately
the price is agreed upon, and even before the price or as
much as any earnest is paid:  for earnest is merely evidence
of the completion of the contract.  In respect of sales unat-
tested by any written evidence this is a reasonable rule, and
so far as they are concerned we have made no innovations.
By one of our constitutions, however, we have enacted, that
no sale effected by an agreement in writing shall be good or
binding, unless that agreement is written by the contracting
parties themselves, or, if written by some one else, is at least
signed by them, or finally, if written by a notary, is duly
drawn by him and executed by the parties.  So long as any
of these requirements is unsatisfied, there is room to retract,
and either purchaser or vendor may withdraw from the
agreement with impunity -- provided, that is to say, that no
earnest has been given.  Where earnest has been given, and
either party refuses to perform the contract, that party, whether
the agreement be in writing or not, if purchaser forfeits what
he has given, and if vendor is compelled to restore double of
what he has received, even though there has been no express
agreement in the matter of earnest.  1 It is necessary that the
price should be settled, for without a price there can be no
purchase and sale, and it ought to be a fixed and certain price.
For instance, where the parties agreed that the thing should be
sold at a price to be subsequently fixed by Titius, the older
jurists doubted much whether this was a valid contract of sale
or not.  The doubt has been settled in the following way by
our decision; if the third person named actually fixes the price,
it must certainly be paid, as settled by him, and the thing must
be delivered, in order to give effect to the sale; the purchaser
(if not fairly treated) suing by the action on purchase, and the
vendor by the action on sale.  But if the third person named
will not or cannot fix the price, the sale will be void, because
no price has been settled.  This rule, which we have adopted
with regard to sales, may reasonably be extended also to
contracts of hire.  2 The price, too, should be in money; for
it used to be much disputed whether anything else, such as a
slave, a piece of land, or a robe, could be treated as a price.
Sabinus and Cassius held the affirmative, explaining thus the
common theory that exchange is a species, and the oldest
species, of purchase and sale; and in their support they quoted
the lines of Homer, who says in a certain passage that the army
of the Greeks procured themselves wine by giving other things
 in exchange, the actual words being as follow:  ‘then the long-
haired Greeks bought themselves wine, some with bronze,
some with shining iron, some with hides, some with live oxen,
some with slaves.’  The other school maintained the negative,
and distinguished between exchange on the one hand, and
purchase and sale on the other:  for if an exchange were the
same thing as a sale, it would be impossible to determine
which is the thing sold, and which is the price, and both things
cannot be regarded in each of these characters.  The opinion,
however, of Proculus, who affirmed that exchange was a
species of contract apart by itself, and distinct from sale, has
deservedly prevailed, as it is confirmed by other lines from
Homer, and by still more cogent reasons, and this has been
admitted by preceding Emperors, and is fully stated in our
Digest.  3 As soon as the contract of sale is concluded --
that is, as we have said, as soon as the price is agreed upon,
if the contract is not in writing -- the thing sold is immediately
at the risk of the purchaser, even though it has not yet been
delivered to him.  Accordingly, if a slave dies, or is injured in
any part of his body, or if a house is either totally or partially
burnt down, or if a piece of land is wholly or partially swept
away by a river flood, or is reduced in acreage by an inund-
ation, or made of less value by a storm blowing down some
of its trees, the loss falls on the purchaser, who must pay the
price even though he has not got what he purchased.  The
vendor is not responsible and does not suffer for anything not
due to any design or fault of his own.  If, however, after the
purchase of a piece of land, it receives an increase by alluvion,
it is the purchaser who profits thereby:  for the profit ought to
belong to him who also bears the risk.  And if a slave who
has been sold runs away, or is stolen, without any design or
fault of the vendor, one should look to see whether the latter
expressly undertook to keep him safely until delivery was
made; for, if he did this, the loss falls upon him, though other-
wise he incurs no liability:  and this is a rule which applies to
all animals and other objects whatsoever.  The vendor, how-
ever, will be bound to transfer to the purchaser all his rights
of action for the recovery of the object or damages, for,
not having yet delivered it to the purchaser, he still remains
its owner, and the same holds good of the penal actions on
theft and on unlawful damage.  4 A sale may be made con-
ditionally as well as absolutely.  The following is an example
of a conditional sale:  ‘If Stichus meets with your approval
within a certain time, he shall be purchased by you for so
many aurei.’  5 If a man buys a piece of land which is sacred,
religious, or public, such as a forum or basilica, knowing it
to be such, the purchase is void.  But if the vendor has
fraudulently induced him to believe that what he was buying
was not sacred, or was private property, as he cannot
legally have what he contracted for, he can bring the action
on purchase to recover damages for what he has lost by the
fraud; and the same rule applies to the purchase of a free
man represented by the vendor to be a slave.

TITLE XXIV
OF LETTING AND HIRING

The contract of hire resembles very closely the contract of
sale, and the same rules of law apply to both.  Thus, as the
contract of sale is concluded as soon as the price is agreed
upon, so the contract of hire is held to be concluded as soon
as the sum to be paid for the hiring is settled, and from that
moment the letter has an action on the letting, and the hirer
on the hiring.  1 What we have said above as to a sale in
which the price is left to be fixed by a third person must be
understood to apply also to a contract of hire in which the
amount to be paid for hire is left to be fixed in the same way.
Consequently, if a man gives clothes to a fuller to clean or
finish, or to a tailor to mend, and the amount of hire is not
fixed at the time, but left to subsequent agreement between
the parties, a contract of hire cannot properly be said to
have been concluded, but an action is given on the circum-
stances, as amounting to an innominate contract.  2 Again,
a question often arose in connexion with the contract of
hire similar to that which was so common, namely, whether
an exchange was a sale.  For instance, what is the nature
of the transaction if a man gives you the use or enjoyment
of a thing, and receives in return the use or enjoyment of
another thing from you?  It is now settled that this is not a
contract of hire, but a kind of contract apart by itself.  Thus,
if a man had one ox, and his neighbour another, and they
agreed that each should in turn lend the other his ox for ten
days to make use of, and then one of the oxen died while
working for the man to whom it did not belong, an action
cannot be brought on hire, nor on a loan for use, for a
loan for use ought to be gratuitous:  but an action should be
brought as on an innominate contract.  3 So nearly akin,
indeed, is purchase and sale, to letting and hiring, that in
some cases it is a question to which class of the two a
contract belongs.  As an instance may be taken those lands
which are delivered over to be enjoyed for ever, upon the
terms, that is to say, that so long as the rent is paid to the
owner it shall not be lawful for the latter to take the lands
away from either the original hirer, or his heir, or any one
else to whom he or his heirs has conveyed them by sale,
gift, dowry, or in any other way whatsoever.  The question-
ings of the earlier lawyers, some of whom thought this kind
of contract a hiring, and others a sale, occasioned the
enactment of the statute of Zeno, which determined that
this contract of emphyteusis, as it is called, was of a
peculiar nature, and should not be included under either
hire or sale, but should rest on the terms of the agreement
in each particular case:  so that if anything were agreed
upon between the parties, this should bind them exactly as
if it were inherent in the very nature of the contract; while if
they did not agree expressly at whose risk the land should be,
it should be at that of the owner in case of total destruction,
and at that of the tenant, if the injury were merely partial.  And
these rules we have adopted in our legislation.  4 Again, if a
goldsmith agrees to make Titius rings of a certain weight and
pattern out of his own gold for, say, ten aurei, it is a question
whether the contract is purchase and sale or letting and hiring.
Cassius says the material is bought and sold, the labour let and
hired; but it is now settled that there is only a purchase and
sale.  But if Titius provided the gold, and agreed to pay him
for his work, the contract is clearly a letting and hiring.

5 The hirer ought to observe all the terms of the contract, and
in the absence of express agreement his obligations should be
ascertained by reference to what is fair and equitable.  Where
a man has either given or promised for hire for the use of clothes,
silver, or a beast of burden, he is required in his charge of it
to show as much care as the most diligent father of a family
shows in his own affairs; if he do this, and still accidentally lose
it, he will be under no obligation to restore either it or its value.
6 If the hirer dies before the time fixed for the termination of
the contract has elapsed, his heir succeeds to his rights and
obligations in respect thereof.

TITLE XXV
OF PARTNERSHIP

A partnership either extends to all the goods of the partners,
when the Greeks call it by the special name of ‘koinopraxia,’
or is confined to a single sort of business, such as the purchase
and sale of slaves, oil, wine, or grain.  1 If no express agree-
ment has been made as to the division of the profit and loss,
an equal division of both is understood to be intended, but
if it has, such agreement ought to be carried into effect; and
there has never been any doubt as to the validity of a contract
between two partners that one shall take two-thirds of the
profit and bear two-thirds of the loss, and that the remaining
third shall be taken and borne respectively by the other.
2 If Titius and Seius agreed that the former should take two-
thirds of the profits, and bear only one-third of the loss, and
that the latter should bear two-thirds of the loss, and take
only one-third of the profits, it has been made a question
whether such an agreement ought to be held valid.  Quintus
Mucius thought such an arrangement contrary to the very
nature of partnership, and therefore not to be supported:
but Servius Sulpicius, whose opinion has prevailed, was of
a different view, because the services of a particular partner
are often so valuable that it is only just to admit him to the
business on more favourable terms than the rest.  It is certain
that a partnership may be formed on the terms that one partner
shall contribute all the capital, and that the profits shall be
divided equally, for a man’s services are often equivalent to
capital.  Indeed, the opinion of Quintus Mucius is now so
generally rejected, that it is admitted to be a valid contract
that a partner shall take a share of the profits, and bear no
share in the loss, which indeed Servius, consistently with his
opinion, maintained himself.  This of course must be taken to
mean that if there is a profit on one transaction, and a loss on
another, a balance should be struck, and only the net profit
be considered as profits.  3 It is quite clear that if the shares
are expressed in one event only, as for instance in the event
of profit, but not in the event of loss, or vice versa, the same
proportions must be observed, in the event of which no
mention has been made, as in the other.  4 The continuance
of partnership depends on the continuing consent of the
members; it is dissolved by notice of withdrawal from any
one of them.  But of course if the object of a partner in with-
drawing from the partnership is to fraudulently keep for
himself some accruing gain -- for instance, if a partner in all
goods succeeds to an inheritance, and withdraws from the
partnership in order to have exclusive possession thereof --
he will be compelled to divide this gain with his partners;
but what he gains undesignedly after withdrawing he keeps
to himself, and his partner always has the exclusive benefit
of whatever accrues to him after such withdrawal.  5 Again,
a partnership is dissolved by the death of a partner, for
when a man enters into a contract of partnership, he selects
as his partner a definite person.  Accordingly, a partnership
based on the agreement of even several persons is dissolved
by the death of one of them, even though several others sur-
vive, unless when the contract was made it was otherwise
agreed.  6 So too a partnership formed for the attainment of
some particular object is terminated when that object is
attained.  7 It is clear too that a partnership is dissolved by
the forfeiture of the property of one of the partners, for such
an one, as he is replaced by a successor, is reckoned civilly
dead.  8 So again, if one of the partners is in such embarrassed
circumstances as to surrender all his property to his creditors,
and all that he possessed is sold to satisfy the public or private
claims upon him, the partnership is dissolved, though if the
members still agree to be partners, a new partnership would
seem to have begun.  9 It has been doubted whether one
partner is answerable to another on the action of partnership
for any wrong less than fraud, like the bailee in a deposit, or
whether he is not suable also for carelessness, that is to say,
for inattention and negligence; but the latter opinion has now
prevailed, with this limitation, that a partner cannot be required
to satisfy the highest standard of carefulness, provided that in
partnership business he shows as much diligence as he does
in his own private affairs:  the reason for this being that if a
man chooses as his partner a careless person, he has no one
to blame but himself.

TITLE XXVI
OF AGENCY

Of the contract of agency there are five modes.  A man gives
you a commission either for his own exclusive benefit, or for
his own and yours together, or for that of some third person,
or for his own and the third person’s, or for the third person’s
and yours.  A commission given simply for the sake of the
agent gives rise in reality to no relation of agency, and accord-
ingly no obligation comes into existence, and therefore no
action.  1 A commission is given solely for the benefit of the
principal when, for instance, the latter instructs you to manage
his business, to buy him a piece of land, or to enter into a
stipulation as surety for him.  2 It is given for your benefit
and for that of your principal together when he, for instance,
commissions you to lend money at interest to a person who
borrows it for your principal’s benefit; or where, on your
wishing to sue him as surety for some one else, he commis-
sions you to sue his principal, himself undertaking all risk:  or
where, at his risk, you stipulate for payment from a person
whom he substitutes for himself as your debtor.  3 It is given
for the benefit of a third person when, for instance, some one
commissions you to look after Titius’s affairs as general agent,
or to buy Titius a piece of land, or to go surety for him.  4 It
is for the benefit of the principal and a third person when, for
instance, some one instructs you to look after affairs common
to himself and Titius, or to buy an estate for himself and
Titius, or to go surety for them jointly.  5 It is for the benefit
of yourself and a third person when, for instance, some one
instructs you to lend money at interest to Titius; if it were to
lend money free of interest, it would be for the benefit of
the third person only.  6 It is for your benefit alone if, for
instance, some one commissions you to invest your money
in the purchase of land rather than to lend it at interest, or
vice versa.  But such a commission is not really so much a
commission in the eye of the law as a mere piece of advice,
and consequently will not give rise to an obligation, for the law
holds no one responsible as on agency for mere advice given,
even if it turns out ill for the person advised, for every one can
find out for himself whether what he is advised to do is likely
to turn out well or ill.  Consequently, if you have money lying
idle in your cash-box, and on so and so’s advice buy some-
thing with it, or put it out at interest, you cannot sue that person
by the action on agency although your purchase or loan turns
out a bad speculation; and it has even been questioned, on
this principle, whether a man is suable on agency who com-
missions you to lend money to Titius; but the prevalent opinion
is that of Sabinus, that so specific a recommendation is sufficient
to support an action, because (without it) you would never
have lent your money to Titius at all.  7 So too instructions to
commit an unlawful or immoral act do not create a legal
obligation -- as if Titius were to instigate you to steal, or to
do an injury to the property or person of some one else; and
even if you act on his instructions, and have to pay a penalty
in consequence, you cannot recover its amount from Titius.

8 An agent ought not to exceed the terms of his commission.
Thus, if some one commissions you to purchase an estate for
him, but not to exceed the price of a hundred aurei, or to go
surety for Titius up to that amount, you ought not in either
transaction to exceed the sum specified:  for otherwise you
will not be able to sue him on the agency.  Sabinus and Cassius
even thought that in such a case you could not  successfully
sue him even for a hundred aurei, though the leaders of the
opposite school differed from them, and the latter opinion is
undoubtedly less harsh.  If you buy the estate for less, you
will have a right of action against him, for a direction to buy
an estate for a hundred aurei is regarded as an implied direction
to buy, if possible, for a smaller sum.

9 The authority given to an agent duly constituted can be
annulled by revocation before he commences to act upon it.
10 Similarly, the death of either the principal or the agent
before the latter commences to act extinguishes the agent’s
authority; but equity has so far modified this rule that if, after
the death of a principal and without having notice of his
decease, an agent executes his commission, he can sue on
the agency:  for otherwise the law would be penalizing a
reasonable and unavoidable ignorance.  Similar to this is the
rule, that debtors who pay a manumitted steward, say, of
Titius, without notice of his manumission, are discharged
from liability, though by the strict letter of the law they are
not discharged, because they have not paid the person whom
they were bound to pay.  11 It is open to every one to decline
a commission of agency, but acceptance must be followed
by execution, or by a prompt resignation, in order to enable
the principal to carry out his purpose either personally or by
the appointment of another agent.  Unless the resignation is
made in such time that the principal can attain his object
without suffering any prejudice, an action will lie at his suit,
in default of proof by the agent that he could not resign
before, or that his resignation, though inconvenient, was
justifiable.

12 A commission of agency may be made to take effect
from a specified future day, or may be subject to a condition.
13 Finally, it should be observed that unless the agent’s
services are gratuitous, the relation between him and the
principal will not be agency proper, but some other kind of
contract; for if a remuneration is fixed, the contract is one
of hiring.  And generally we may say that in all cases where,
supposing a man’s services are gratuitous, there would be a
contract of agency or deposit, there is held to be a contract
of hiring if remuneration is agreed upon; consequently, if you
give clothes to a fuller to clean or to finish, or to a tailor to
mend, without agreeing upon or promising any remuneration,
you can be sued by the action on agency.

TITLE XXVII
OF QUASI-CONTRACTUAL OBLIGATION

Having enumerated the different kinds of contracts, let us
now examine those obligations also which do not originate,
properly speaking, in contract, but which, as they do not arise
from a delict, seem to be quasi-contractual.  1 Thus, if one
man has managed the business of another during the latter’s
absence, each can sue the other by the action on uncom-
missioned agency; the direct action being available to him
whose business was managed, the contrary action to him who
managed it.  It is clear that these actions cannot properly be
said to originate in a contract, for their peculiarity is that they
lie only where one man has come forward and managed the
business of another without having received any commission
so to do, and that other is thereby laid under a legal obliga-
tion even though he knows nothing of what has taken place.
The reason of this is the general convenience; otherwise people
might be summoned away by some sudden event of pressing
importance, and without commissioning any one to look after
and manage their affairs, the result of which would be that
during their absence those affairs would be entirely neglected:
and of course no one would be likely to attend to them if he
were to have no action for the recovery of any outlay he might
have incurred in so doing.  Conversely, as the uncommissioned
agent, if his management is good, lays his principal under a
legal obligation, so too he is himself answerable to the latter
for an account of his management; and herein he must show
that he has satisfied the highest standard of carefulness, for to
have displayed such carefulness as he is wont to exercise in
his own affairs is not enough, if only a more diligent person
could have managed the business better.  2 Guardians, again,
who can be sued by the action on guardianship, cannot pro-
perly be said to be bound by contract, for there is no contract
between guardian and ward:  but their obligation, as it cer-
tainly does not originate in delict, may be said to be quasi-
contractual.  In this case too each party has a remedy against
the other:  not only can the ward sue the guardian directly
on the guardianship, but the guardian can also sue the ward by
the contrary action of the same name, if he has either incurred
any outlay in managing the ward’s property, or bound him-
self on his behalf, or pledged his own property as security for
the ward’s creditors.  3 Again, where persons own property
jointly without being partners, by having, for instance, a joint
bequest or gift made to them, and one of them is liable to be
sued by the other in a partition suit because he alone has
taken its fruits, or because the plaintiff has laid out money
on it in necessary expenses:  here the defendant cannot pro-
perly be said to be bound by contract, for there has been no
contract made between the parties; but as his obligation is not
based on delict, it may be said to be quasi-contractual.  4 The
case is exactly the same between joint heirs, one of whom
is liable to be sued by the other on one of these grounds in an
action for partition of the inheritance.  5 So, too, the obliga-
tion of an heir to discharge legacies cannot properly be called
contractual, for it cannot be said that the legatee has con-
tracted at all with either the heir or the testator:  yet, as the
heir is not bound by a delict, his obligation would seem to
be quasi-contractual.  6 Again, a person to whom money not
owed is paid by mistake is thereby laid under a quasi-con-
tractual obligation; an obligation, indeed, which is so far
from being contractual, that, logically, it may be said to arise
from the extinction rather than from the formation of a con-
tract; for when a man pays over money, intending thereby to
discharge a debt, his purpose is clearly to loose a bond by
which he is already bound, not to bind himself by a fresh one.
Still, the person to whom money is thus paid is laid under an
obligation exactly as if he had taken a loan for consumption,
and therefore he is liable to a condiction.  7 Under certain
circumstances money which is not owed, and which is paid by
mistake, is not recoverable; the rule of the older lawyers on
this point being that wherever a defendant’s denial of his
obligation is punished by duplication of the damages to be
recovered -- as in actions under the lex Aquilia, and for the
recovery of a legacy -- he cannot get the money back on this
plea.  The older lawyers, however, applied this rule only to
such legacies of specific sums of money as were given by
condemnation; but by our constitution, by which we have
assimilated legacies and trust bequests, we have made this
duplication of damages on denial an incident of all actions for
their recovery, provided the legatee or beneficiary is a church,
or other holy place honoured for its devotion to religion and
piety.  Such legacies, although paid when not due, cannot be
reclaimed.

TITLE XXVIII
OF PERSONS THROUGH WHOM WE
CAN ACQUIRE OBLIGATIONS

Having thus gone through the classes of contractual and
quasi-contractual obligations, we must remark that rights can
be acquired by you not only on your own contracts, but also
on those of persons in your power -- that is to say, your slaves
and children.  What is acquired by the contracts of your
slaves becomes wholly yours; but the acquisitions of children
in your power by obligations must be divided on the principle
of ownership and usufruct laid down in our constitution:  that
is to say, of the material results of an action brought on an
obligation made in favour of a son the father shall have the
usufruct, though the ownership is reserved to the son himself:
provided, of course, that the action is brought by the father, in
accordance with the distinction drawn in our recent constitu-
tion.  1 Freemen also, and the slaves of another person, acquire
for you if you possess them in good faith, but only in two
cases, namely, when they acquire by their own labour, or in
dealing with your property.  2 A usufructuary or usuary slave
acquires under the same conditions for him who has the usu-
fruct or use.  3 It is settled law that a slave jointly owned
acquires for all his owners in the proportion of their property
in him, unless he names one exclusively in a stipulation, or in
the delivery of property to himself, in which case he acquires
for him alone; as in the stipulation ‘do you promise to convey
to Titius, my master?’  If it was by the direction of one of
his joint owners only that he entered into a stipulation, the
effect was formerly doubted; but now it has been settled by
our decision that (as is said above) under such circumstances
he acquires for him only who gave him the order.

TITLE XXIX
OF THE MODES IN WHICH OBLIGATIONS
ARE DISCHARGED

An obligation is always extinguished by performance of
what is owed, or by performance of something else with the
creditor’s assent.  It is immaterial from whom the perform-
ance proceeds -- be it the debtor himself, or some one else on
his behalf:  for on performance by a third person the debtor is
released, whether he knows of it or not, and even when it is
against his will.  Performance by the debtor releases, besides
himself, his sureties, and conversely performance by a surety
releases, besides himself, the principal debtor.  1 Acceptilation
is another mode of extinguishing an obligation, and is, in its
nature, an acknowledgement of a fictitious performance.  For
instance, if something is due to Titius under a verbal contract,
and he wishes to release it, it can be done by his allowing the
debtor to ask ‘that which I promised thee has thou received?’
and by his replying ‘I have received it.’  An acceptilation can
be made in Greek, provided the form corresponds to that of
the Latin words, as ‘exeis labon denaria tosa; exo labon.’  This
process, as we said, discharges only obligations which arise
from verbal contract, and no others, for it seemed only natural
that where words can bind words may also loose:  but a debt
due from any other cause may be transformed into a debt by
stipulation, and then released by an imaginary verbal payment
or acceptilation.  So, too, as a debt can be lawfully discharged
in part, so acceptilation may be made of part only.  2 A stipula-
tion has been invented, commonly called Aquilian, by which
an obligation of any kind whatsoever can be clothed in stipu-
lation form, and then extinguished by acceptilation; for by
this process any kind of obligation may be novated.  Its
terms, as settled by Gallus Aquilius, are as follow:  ‘Whatever,
and on whatsoever ground, you are or shall be compellable to
convey to or do for me, either now or on a future specified day,
and for whatsoever I have or shall have against you an action
personal or real, or any extraordinary remedy, and whatsoever
of mine you hold or possess naturally or civilly, or would
possess, or now fail to possess through some wilful fault of
your own -- as the value of each and all of these claims Aulua
Agerius stipulated for the payment of such and such a sum,
and payment was formally promised by Numerius Negidius.’
Then conversely, Numerius Negidius asked Aulus Agerius,
‘hast thou received the whole of what I have to-day engaged,
by the Aquilian stipulation, to pay thee?’ to which Aulus
Agerius replied ‘I have it, and account it received.’  3 Novation
is another mode of extinguishing an obligation, and takes
place when you owe Seius a sum, and he stipulates for pay-
ment thereof from Titius; for the intervention of a new person
gives birth to a new obligation, and the first obligation is
transformed into the second, and ceases to exist.  Sometimes
indeed the first stipulation is avoided by novation even though
the second is of no effect:  for instance, if you owe Titius a sum,
and he stipulates for payment thereof from a pupil without
his guardian’s authority, he loses his claim altogether, for you,
the original debtor, are discharged, and the second obligation
is unenforceable.  The same does not hold if one stipulate
from a slave; for then the former debtor continues bound as
fully as if one had stipulated from no one.  But when the
original debtor is the promisor, a second stipulation produces
a novation only if it contains something new -- if a condition,
for instance, or a term, or a surety be added, or taken away --
though, supposing the addition of a condition, we must be
understood to mean that a novation is produced only if the
condition is accomplished:  if it fails, the prior obligation con-
tinues in force.  Among the older lawyers it was an established
rule, that a novation was effected only when it was with that
intention that the parties entered into the second obligation;
but as this still left it doubtful when the intention was present
and when absent, various presumptions were established as
to the matter by different persons in different cases.  We
therefore issued our constitution, enacting most clearly that
no novation shall take place unless the contracting parties
expressly state their intention to be the extinction of the prior
obligation, and that in default of such statement, the first
obligation shall subsist, and have the second also added to it:
the result being two obligations resting each on its own inde-
pendent ground, as is prescribed by the constitution, and as
can be more fully ascertained by perusing the same.  4 More-
over, those obligations which are contracted by consent alone
are dissolved by a contrary agreement.  For instance, if Titius
and Seius agree that the latter shall buy an estate at Tusculum
for a hundred aurei, and then before execution on either side
by payment of the price or delivery of the estate they arrange
to abandon the sale, they are both released.  The case is the
same with hire and the other contracts which are formed by
consent alone.


* BOOK IV *

TITLE I
OF OBLIGATIONS ARISING FROM DELICT

Having treated in the preceding Book of contractual and
quasi-contractual obligations, it remains to inquire into obliga-
tions arising from delict.  The former, as we remarked in the
proper place, are divided into four kinds; but of these latter
there is but one kind, for, like obligations arising from real
contracts, they all originate in some act, that is to say, in the
delict itself, such as a theft, a robbery, wrongful damage, or
an injury.

1 Theft is a fraudulent dealing with property, either in itself,
or in its use, or in its possession:  an offence which is prohibited
by natural law.  2 The term furtum, or theft, is derived either
from furvum, meaning ‘black,’ because it is effected secretly
and under cover, and usually by night:  or from fraus, or from
ferre, meaning ‘carrying off’; or from the Greek word phor,
thief, which indeed is itself derived from pherein, to carry off.
3 There are two kinds of theft, theft detected in the commission,
and simple theft:  the possession of stolen goods discovered
upon search, and the introduction of stolen goods, are not (as
will appear below) so much specific kinds of theft as actionable
circumstances connected with theft.  A thief detected in the
commission is termed by the Greeks ep’autophoro; in this
kind is included not only he who is actually caught in the act of
theft, but also he who is detected in the place where the theft
is committed; for instance, one who steals from a house, and
is caught before he has got outside the door; or who steals
olives from an olive garden, or grapes from a vineyard, and is
caught while still in the olive garden or vineyard.  And the
definition of theft detected in the commission must be even
further extended, so as to include the thief who is caught or
even seen with the stolen goods still in his hands, whether the
place be public or private, and whether the person who sees
or catches him be the owner of the property, or some third
person, provided he has not yet escaped to the place where he
intended to take and deposit his booty:  for if he once escapes
there, it is not theft detected in the commission, even if he be
found with the stolen goods upon him.  What is simple theft
is clear from what has been said:  that is to say, it is all theft
which is not detected in the commission.  4 The offence of dis-
covery of stolen goods occurs when a person’s premises are
searched in the presence of witnesses, and the stolen property
is found thereon; this makes him liable, even though innocent
of theft, to a special action for receiving stolen goods.  To in-
troduce stolen goods is to pass them off to a man, on whose
premises they are discovered, provided this be done with the
intent that they shall be discovered on his premises rather than
on those of the introducer.  The man on whose premises they
are found may sue the latter, though innocent of theft, in an
action for the introduction of stolen goods.  There is also an
action for refusal of search, available against him who prevents
another who wishes to look in the presence of witnesses for
stolen property; and finally, by the action for non-production
of stolen goods, a penalty is imposed by the praetor’s edict
on him who has failed to produce stolen property which is
searched for and found on his premises.  But the last-named
actions, namely, those for receiving stolen goods, for intro-
ducing them, for refusal of search, and for non-production,
have now become obsolete:  for the search for such property
is no longer made in the old fashion, and accordingly these
actions went out of use also.  It is obvious, however, that
any one who knowingly receives and hides stolen property
may be sued by the action for simple theft.  5 The penalty for
theft detected in the commission is four times the value, and
for simple theft twice the value, of the property stolen,
whether the thief be a slave or a free person.

6 Theft is not confined to carrying away the property of
another with the intent of appropriation, but comprises also all
corporeal dealing with the property of another against the will
of the owner.  Thus, for a pawnee to use the thing which he
has in pawn, or to use a thing committed to one’s keeping as
a deposit, or to put a thing which is lent for use to a different
use than that for which it was lent, is theft; to borrow plate,
for instance, on the representation that the borrower is going
to entertain his friends, and then to carry it away into the
country:  or to borrow a horse for a drive, and then to take it
out of the neighbourhood, or like the man in the old story, to
take it into battle.  7 With regard, however, to those persons
who put a thing lent for use to a different purpose than the
lender contemplated, the rule is that they are guilty of theft
only if they know it to be contrary to the will of the owner,
and that if he had notice he would refuse permission; but if
they believe that he would give permission, it is not theft:
and the distinction is just, for there is no theft without un-
lawful intention.  8 It is also said not to be theft if a man turns
a thing lent for use to a use other than he believes its owner
would sanction, though in point of fact its owner is consenting.
Whence arose the following question:  if Antoninus solicits the
slave of Peri to steal property of the latter, and convey it to
him, and the slave informs Peri of it, who, wishing to detect
Antoninus in the very act, allows the slave to convey the prop-
erty to him; can an action of theft, or for corrupting the slave,
or neither, be maintained against Antoninus?  The case was
submitted to us, and we examined the conflicting opinions of
the earlier jurists on the matter:  some of whom thought that
neither action lay, and others, that Peri might sue on theft
only.  But we, in order to put an end to such quibbles, have
enacted by our decision that in such case both the action
on theft and that for corrupting a slave shall lie.  It is true
that the slave has not been corrupted by the advances made
to him, so that the case does not come within the rules which
introduced the action for such corruption:  yet the would-be
corrupter’s intention was to make him dishonest, so that he is
liable to a penal action, exactly as if the slave had actually
been corrupted, lest his immunity from punishment should
encourage others to perpetrate a similar wrong on a slave
less strong to resist temptation.  9 A free man too may be
the subject of a theft -- for instance, a child in my power, if
secretly removed from my control.  10 So too a man some-
times steals his own property -- for instance, a debtor who
purloins the goods which he has pledged to a creditor.

11 Theft may be chargeable on a person who is not the
perpetrator; on him, namely, by whose aid and abetment
a theft is committed.  Among such persons we may mention
the man who knocks money out of your hand for another to
pick up, or who stands in your way that another may snatch
something from you, or scatters your sheep or your oxen, that
another may steal them, like the man in the old books, who
waved a red cloth to frighten a herd.  If the same thing were
done as a frolic, without the intention of assisting a theft, the
proper action is not theft, but on the case.  Where, however,
Titius commits theft with the aid of Maevius, both are liable
to an action on theft.  A man, too, is held to have aided and
abetted a theft who places a ladder under a window, or breaks
open a window or a door, in order that another may steal,
or who lends tools for the breaking of them open, or a ladder
to place under a window, if he knows the object for which
they are borrowed.  It is clear that a man is not liable on
theft, who, though he advises and instigates an offence, does
not actually aid in its commission.  12 If a child in power, or
a slave, steal property of his father or master, it is theft, and
the property is deemed stolen, so that no one can acquire it
by usucapion until it has returned into the hands of the owner;
but no action will lie on the theft, because between a son in
power and his father, or between a slave and his master, no
action will lie on any ground whatsoever.  But if the offender
is aided and abetted by a third person, the latter is liable to
an action on theft, because a theft has in fact been committed,
and by his aid and abetment.

13 The action on theft will lie at the suit of any person
interested in the security of the property, even though he
be not its owner:  indeed, even the owner cannot maintain
the action unless he suffers damage from the loss.  14 Hence,
when a pawn is stolen the pawnee can sue, even though his
debtor be perfectly able to pay the debt; for it is more advan-
tageous to him to rely on the pledge, than to bring a personal
action:  and this rule is so unbending that even the pawnor
who steals a pawn is suable for theft by the pawnee.  15 So,
if clothes are delivered to be cleaned or finished or mended
for a certain remuneration, and then are stolen, it is the fuller
or tailor who can sue on the theft, and not the owner; for the
owner suffers nothing by the loss, having the action of letting
against the fuller or tailor for the recovery of his property.
Similarly a purchaser in good faith, even though a good title
as owner is not given to him, can bring the action of theft
if the property is stolen, exactly like the pawnee.  The action
is, however, not maintainable at the suit of a fuller or tailor,
unless he is solvent, that is to say, unless he is able to fully
indemnify the owner; if he is insolvent, the owner cannot
recover from him, and so can maintain an action against the
thief, being, on this hypothesis, interested in the recovery
of the property.  Where the fuller or tailor is only partly
instead of wholly solvent the rule is the same.  16 The older
lawyers held that what has been said of the fuller and tailor
applied also to the borrower for use, on the ground that as
the remuneration which the fuller receives makes him re-
sponsible for custody, so the advantages which the borrower
derives from the use requires him to keep it safely at his
peril.  Our wisdom, however, has amended the law in this
particular in our decisions, by allowing the owner the option
of suing either the borrower by action on the loan, or the
thief by action of theft; though when his choice has been
determined he cannot change his mind, and resort to the
other action.  If he prefers to sue the thief, the borrower is
absolutely released from liability; but if he proceeds against
the borrower, he cannot in any way himself sue the thief on
the stealing, though this may be done by the borrower, who
is defendant in the other action, provided that the owner
knew, at the time when he began his action against the
borrower, that the thing had been stolen.  If he is ignorant
of this, or even if he is merely doubtful whether the borrower
still has the property in his possession or not, and sues him
on the loan, he may, on subsequently learning the facts, and if
he wishes to drop the action which he has commenced, and
sue the thief instead, adopt this course, in which case no ob-
stacle is to be thrown in his way, because it was in ignorance
that he took action and sued the borrower on the loan.  If,
however, the owner has been indemnified by the borrower,
in no case can he bring the action of theft against the thief, as
his rights of action pass to the person who has compensated
him for the loss of his property.  Conversely it is clear, that
if, at the outset, the owner began an action on the loan against
the borrower, not knowing that the property had been stolen,
and subsequently, on learning this, proceeded against the thief
instead, the borrower is absolutely released from liability,
whatever may be the result of the owner’s action against the
thief; the rule being the same, whether the borrower be wholly
or only partially insolvent.  17 As a depositary is not answerable
for the safe keeping of the thing deposited, but only for fraud,
and, if it is stolen, is not compellable to make restitution by
action of deposit, he has no interest if it is lost, and therefore
the action of theft is maintainable only by the depositor.  18
Finally, it has been a question whether a child below the age of
puberty, who carries away the property of another, is guilty
of theft.  The answer is that, as theft depends on intention,
obligation by theft is not incurred unless the child is near
puberty, and so understands its delinquency.  19 The object
of the action on theft, whether it be for double or quadruple
the value of the goods stolen, is merely the recovery of the
penalty; to recover the goods themselves or their value the
owner has an independent remedy by vindication or condic-
tion.  The former is the proper remedy when it is known who
is in possession of the goods, whether this be the thief or any
one else:  the latter lies against the thief or his heir, whether
in possession of the stolen property or not.

TITLE II
OF ROBBERY

Robbery is chargeable also as theft; for who deals with the
property of another more against that other’s will than the
robber?  And thus the description of the robber as an
audacious thief is a good one.  However, as a special remedy
for this offence the praetor has introduced the action for
robbery, or rapine with violence, which may be brought within
a year for four times the value, after a year for simple
damages, and while lies even when only a single thing of the
slightest value has been taken with violence.  This fourfold
value, however, is not all penalty, nor is there an independent
action for the recovery of the property or its value, as we
observed was the case in the action of theft detected in the
commission; but the thing or its value is included in the four-
fold, so that, in point of fact, the penalty is three times the
value of the property, and this whether the robber be taken in
the act or not; for it would be absurd to treat a robber more
lightly than one who carries off property merely secretly.
1 This action is maintainable only where the robbery is attended
with wrongful intention; consequently, if a man by mistake
thought that property was his own, and, in his ignorance of
law, forcibly carried it off in the belief that it was lawful for an
owner to take away, even by force, a thing belonging to him-
self from a person in whose possession it was, he cannot be
held liable to this action; and similarly on principle he would
not in such a case be suable for theft.  Lest, however, robbers,
under the cloak of such a plea, should discover a method of
gratifying a grasping habit with impunity, the law has been
amended upon this point by imperial constitutions, by which
it is enacted that it shall not be lawful for any one to forcibly
carry off movable property, inanimate or animate, even though
he believe it to belong to him; and that whosoever disobeys
this shall forfeit the property, if, in fact, it be his, and if it be
not, shall restore it, and along with it its value in money.  And
by the said constitutions it is also declared that this provision
relates not only to movables (of which alone robbery can be
committed), but also to forcible entries on land and houses,
so as to deter men from all violent seizing upon property what-
soever under the cloak of such excuses.  2 In order to support
this action it is not necessary that the goods of which robbery
has been committed should belong to the plaintiff, provided
they were taken from among his property.  Thus, if a thing be
let, or lent, or pledged to Titius, or even deposited with him
under such circumstances that he has an interest in its not
being carried off -- for instance, by his having undertaken the
entire responsibility for its safe custody; -- or if he possesses
it in good faith, or has a usufruct or any other right in it where-
by he suffers loss or incurs liability through its being forcibly
taken from him, the action will be maintainable by him; not
necessarily in order to restore to him the ownership, but
only to compensate him for what it is alleged he has lost by
its being taken from his goods or withdrawn from his means.
In fact, it may be said generally that where, supposing
property to be taken secretly, the action of theft will lie, the
action on robbery will lie at suit of the same person, if it be
taken with violence.

TITLE III
OF THE LEX AQUILIA

Unlawful damage is actionable under the lex Aquilia, whose
first chapter provides that if a slave of another man, or a quad-
ruped from his flocks or herds, be unlawfully killed, the offender
shall pay to the owner whatever was the highest value thereof
within the year next immediately preceding.  1 From the fact
that this enactment does not speak of quadrupeds simply, but
only of such quadrupeds as are usually included under the
idea of flocks and herds, it is to be inferred that it has no
application to wild animals or to dogs, but only to such beasts
as can properly be said to graze in herds, namely horses, mules,
asses, oxen, sheep, and goats.  It is settled, too, that swine
come under its operation, for they are comprehended in ‘herds’
because they feed in this manner; thus Homer in his Odyssey,
as quote by Aelius Marcianus in his Institutes, says, You will
find him sitting among his swine, and they are feeding by the
Rock of Corax, over against the spring Arethusa.’  2 To kill
unlawfully is to kill without any right; thus a man who kills
a robber is not liable to this action, if he could in no other way
escape the danger by which he was threatened.  3 So, too, where
one man kills another by misadventure, he is not liable under
this statute, provided there is no fault or carelessness on his
part; otherwise it is different, for under this statute care-
lessness is as punishable as wilful wrong-doing.  4 Accordingly,
if a man, while playing or practising with javelins, runs your
slave through as he passes by, a distinction is drawn.  If it be
done by a soldier in his exercising ground, that is to say,
where such practice is usually conducted, he is in no way to
blame; but if it be done by some one else, his carelessness will
make him liable; and so it is with the soldier, if he do it in some
place other than that appropriated to military exercises.  5
So, too, if a man is trimming a tree, and kills your slave as he
passes by with a bough which he lets fall, he is guilty of
negligence, if it is near a public way, or a private path belong-
ing to a neighbour, and he does not call out to give people
warning; but if he calls out, and the slave takes no pains to
get out of the way, he is not to blame.  Nor would such a
man be liable, if he was cutting a tree far away from a road,
or in the middle of a field, even if he did not call out; for
strangers had no business to be there.  6 Again, if a surgeon
operates on your slave, and then neglects altogether to attend
to his cure, so that the slave dies in consequence, he is liable
for his carelessness.  7 Sometimes, too, unskilfulness is undis-
tinguishable from carelessness -- as where a surgeon kills your
slave by operating upon him unskilfully, or by giving him
wrong medicines; 8 and similarly, if your slave is run over by
a team of mules, which the driver has not enough skill to hold,
the latter is suable for carelessness; and the case is the same
if he was simply not strong enough to hold them, provided
they could have been held by a stronger man.  The rule also
applies to runaway horses, if the running away is due to the
rider’s deficiency either in skill or strength.  9 The meaning
of the words of the statute ‘whatever was of the highest
value thereof within the year’ is that if any one, for instance,
kills a slave of yours, who at the moment of his death is
lame, or maimed, or blind of one eye, but within the year was
sound and worth a price, the person who kills him is answer-
able not merely for his value at the time of his death, but for
his highest value within the year.  It is owing to this that the
action under this statute is deemed to be penal, because a
defendant is sometimes bound to pay a sum not merely
equivalent to the damage he has done, but far in excess of it;
and consequently, the right of suing under the statute does
not pass against the heir, though it would have done so if the
damages awarded had never exceeded the actual loss sus-
tained by the plaintiff.  10 By juristic construction of the statute,
though not so enacted in its terms, it has been settled that
one must not only take account, in the way we have described,
of the value of the body of the slave or animal killed, but
must also consider all other loss which indirectly falls upon
the plaintiff through the killing.  For instance, if your slave has
been instituted somebody’s heir, and, before he has by your
order accepted, he is slain, the value of the inheritance you
have missed must be taken into consideration; and so, too, if
one of a pair of mules, or one of four chariot horses, or one of
a company of slave players is killed, account is to be taken
not only of what is killed, but also of the extent to which the
others have been depreciated.  11 The owner whose slave is
killed has the option of suing the wrongdoer for damages in
a private action under the lex Aquilia, or of accusing him on
a capital charge by indictment.

12 The second chapter of the lex Aquilia is now obsolete; 13
the third makes provision for all damage which is not covered
by the first.  Accordingly, if a slave or some quadruped which
comes within its terms, is wounded, or if a quadruped which
does not come within its terms, such as a dog or wild animal,
is wounded or killed, an action is provided by this chapter;
and if any other animal or inanimate thing is unlawfully
damaged, a remedy is herein afforded; for all burning, break-
ing, and crushing is hereby made actionable, though, indeed,
the single word ‘breaking’ covers all these offences, denoting
as it does every kind of injury, so that not only crushing and
burning, but any cutting, bruising, spilling, destroying, or dete-
riorating is hereby denominated.  Finally, it has been decided
that if one man mixes something with another’s win or oil,
so as to spoil its natural goodness, he is liable under this
chapter of the statute.  14 It is obvious that, as a man is liable
under the first chapter only where a slave or quadruped is
killed by express design or through negligence on his part,
so, too, he is answerable for all other damage under this
chapter only where it results from some wilful act or careless-
ness of his.  Under this chapter, however, it is not the highest
value which the thing had within a year, but that which it had
within the last thirty days, which is chargeable on the author
of the mischief.  15 It is true that here the statute does not ex-
pressly say ‘the highest value,’ but Sabinus rightly held that
the damages must be assessed as if the words ‘highest value’
occurred also in this chapter; the Roman people, who enacted
this statute on the proposal of Aquilius the tribune, having
thought it sufficient to use them in the first chapter only.

16 It is held that a direct action lies under this statute only
when the body of the offender is substantially the instrument
of mischief.  If a man occasions loss to another in any other
way, a modified action will usually lie against him; for
instance, if he shuts up another man’s slave or quadruped,
so as to starve him or it to death, or drives his horse so hard
as to knock him to pieces, or drives his cattle over a precipice,
or persuades his slave to climb a tree or go down a well, who,
in climbing the one or going down the other, is killed or
injured in any part of his body, a modified action is in all
these cases given against him.  But if a slave is pushed off
a bridge or bank into a river, and there drowned, it is clear
from the facts that the damage is substantially done by the
body of the offender, who is consequently  liable directly
under the lex Aquilia.  If damage be done, not by the body
or to a body, but in some other form, neither the direct
nor the modified Aquilian action will lie, though it is held
that the wrongdoer is liable to an action on the case; as, for
instance, where a man is moved by pity to loose another’s
slave from his fetters, and so enables him to escape.

TITLE IV
OF INJURIES

By injury, in a general sense, is meant anything which is
done without any right.  Besides this, it has three special
significations; for sometimes it is used to express outrage, the
proper word for which -- contumely -- is derived from the verb
‘to contemn,’ and so is equivalent to the Greek ‘ubris’:  some-
times it means culpable negligence, as where damage is said
to be done (as in the lex Aquilia) ‘with injury,’ where it is
equivalent to the Greek ‘adikema’; and sometimes iniquity and
injustice, which the Greeks express by ‘adikia’; thus a litigant
is said to have received an ‘injury’ when the praetor or judge
delivers an unjust judgement against him.  1 An injury or out-
rage is inflicted not only by striking with the first, a stick, or
a whip, but also by vituperation for the purpose of collecting
a crowd, or by taking possession of a man’s effects on the
ground that he was in one’s debt; or by writing, composing,
or publishing defamatory prose or verse, or contriving the
doing of any of these things by some one else; or by con-
stantly following a matron, or a young boy or girl below the
age of puberty, or attempting anybody’s chastity; and, in a
word, by innumerable other acts.  2 An outrage or injury may
be suffered either in one’s own person, or in the person of a
child in one’s power, or even, as now is generally allowed, in
that of one’s wife.  Accordingly, if you commit an ‘outrage’
on a woman who is married to Titius, you can be sued not
only in her own name, but also in those of her father, if she be
in his power, and of her husband.  But if, conversely, it be the
husband who is outraged, the wife cannot sue; for wives should
be protected by their husbands, not husbands by their wives.
Finally, a father-in-law may sue on an outrage committed on
his daughter-in-law, if the son to whom she is married is in
his power.  3 Slaves cannot be outraged themselves, but their
master may be outraged in their person, though not by all the
acts by which an outrage might be offered to him in the
person of a child or wife, but only by aggravated assaults or
such insulting acts as clearly tend to dishonour the master
himself:  for instance, by flogging the slave, for which an action
lies; but for mere verbal abuse of a slave, or for striking him
with the fist, the master cannot sue.  4 If an outrage is com-
mitted on a slave owned by two or more persons jointly, the
damages to be paid to these severally should be assessed
with reference not to the shares in which they own him, but to
their rank or position, as it is to the reputation and not to
the property that the injury is done; 5 and if an outrage is
committed on a slave belonging to Maevius, but in whom
Titius has a usufruct, the injury is deemed to be done to the
former rather than to the latter.  6 But if the person outraged is
a free man who believes himself to be your slave, you have no
action unless the object of the outrage was to bring you into
contempt, though he can sue in his own name.  The principle
is the same when another man’s slave believes himself to
belong to you; you can sue on an outrage committed on him
only when its object is to bring contempt upon you.

7 The penalty prescribed for outrage in the Twelve Tables
was, for a limb disabled, retaliation, for a bone merely broken
a pecuniary mulct proportionate to the great poverty of the
age.  The praetors, however, subsequently allowed the person
outraged to put his own estimate on the wrong, the judge
having a discretion to condemn the defendant either in the
sum so named by the plaintiff, or in a less amount; and of
these two kinds of penalties that fixed by the Twelve Tables
is now obsolete, while that introduced by the praetors, which
is also called ‘honorary,’ is most usual in the actual practice
of the courts.  Thus the pecuniary compensation awarded
for an outrage rises and falls in amount according to the rank
and character of the plaintiff, and this principle is not im-
properly followed even where it is a slave who is outraged;
the penalty where the slave is a steward being different from
what it is when he is an ordinary menial, and different again
when he is condemned to wear fetters.  8 The lex Cornelia
also contains provisions as to outrages, and introduced an
action on outrage, available to a plaintiff who alleges that he
has been struck or beaten, or that a forcible entry has been
made upon his house; the term ‘his house’ including not
only one which belongs to him and in which he lives but also
one which is hired by him, or in which he is received gratui-
tously as a guest.  9 An outrage becomes ‘aggravated’ either
from the atrocious character of the act, as where a man is
wounded or beaten with clubs by another; or from the place
where it is committed, for instance, in the theatre or forum, or
in full sight of the praetor; or from the rank of the person
outraged, -- if it be a magistrate, for instance, or if a senator be
outraged by a person of low condition, or a parent by his
child, or a patron by his freedman; for such an injury done to
a senator, a parent, or a patron has a higher pecuniary com-
pensation awarded for it than one done to a mere stranger, or
to a person of low condition.  Sometimes too the position of
the wound makes an outrage aggravated, as where a man
is struck in the eye.  Whether the person on whom such an
outrage is inflicted is independent or in the power of another
is almost entirely immaterial, it being considered aggravated
in either case.  10 Finally, it should be observed that a person
who has been outraged always has his option between the
civil remedy and a criminal indictment.  If he prefers the
former, the penalty which is imposed depends, as we have
said, on the plaintiff’s own estimate of the wrong he has
suffered; if the latter, it is the judge’s duty to inflict an extra-
ordinary penalty on the offender.  It should be remembered,
however, that by a constitution of Zeno persons of illustrious
or still higher rank may bring or defend such criminal actions
on outrage by an agent, provided they comply with the
requirements of the constitution, as may be more clearly as-
certained by a perusal of the same.  11 Liability to an action
on outrages attaches not only to him who commits the act, --
the striking of a blow, for instance -- but also to those who
maliciously counsel or abet in the commission, as, for in-
stance, to a man who gets another struck in the face.  12 The
right of action on outrage is lost by condonation; thus, if a
man be outraged, and takes no steps to obtain redress, but
at once lets the matter, as it is said, slip out of his mind, he
cannot subsequently alter his intentions, and resuscitate an
affront which he has once allowed to rest.

TITLE V
OF QUASI-DELICTAL OBLIGATIONS

The obligation incurred by a judge who delivers an unjust
or partial decision cannot properly be called delictal, and yet
it does not arise from contract; consequently, as he cannot
but be held to have done a wrong, even though it may be
due to ignorance, his liability would seem to be quasi-delictal,
and a pecuniary penalty will be imposed on him at the judge’s
discretion.  1 Another case of quasi-delictal obligation is that
of a person from whose residence, whether it be his own,
or rented, or gratuitously lent him, anything is thrown or
poured out whereby another is injured; the reason why his
liability cannot properly be called delictal being that it is
usually incurred through the fault of some other person,
such as a slave or freedman.  Of a similar character is the
obligation of one who keeps something placed or hung
over a public way, which might fall and injure any one.  In
this last case the penalty has been fixed at ten aurei; in that
of things thrown or poured out of a dwelling-house the
action is for damages equivalent to double the loss sustained,
though if a free man be thereby killed the penalty is fixed at
fifty aurei, and even if he be merely injured he can sue for
such damages as the judge shall in his discretion award; and
here the latter should take into account the medical and other
expenses of the plaintiff’s illness, as well as the loss which
he has sustained through being disabled from work.  2 If a
son in power lives apart from his father, and anything is
thrown or poured out of his place of residence, or if he has
anything so placed or hung as to be dangerous to the public,
it is the opinion of Julian that no action lies against the father,
but that the son should be made sole defendant; and the
same principle should be applied to a son in power who is
made a judge, and delivers an unjust or partial decision.
3 Similarly ship-owners, inn and stable keepers are liable
as on a quasi-delict for wilful damage or theft committed
in their ships, inns, or stables, provided the act be done by
some or one of their servants there employed, and not by
themselves; for the action which is given in such cases is not
based on contract, and yet as they are in some sense at fault
for employing careless or dishonest servants, their liability
would seem to be quasi-delictal.  In such circumstances the
action which is given is on the case, and lies at suit of the
injured person’s heir, though not against the heir of the
ship-owner, inn or stable keeper.

TITLE VI
OF ACTIONS

The subject of actions still remains for discussion.  An action
is nothing else than the right of suing before a judge for what
is due to one.

1 The leading division of all actions whatsoever, whether
tried before a judge or a referee, is into two kinds, real and
personal; that is to say, the defendant is either under a con-
tractual or delictal obligation to the plaintiff, in which case
the action is personal, and the plaintiff’s contention is that the
defendant ought to convey something to, or do something
for him, or of a similar nature; or else, though there is no
legal obligation between the parties, the plaintiff asserts a
ground of action against some one else relating to some thing,
in which case the action is real.  Thus, a man may be in
possession of some corporeal thing, in which Titius claims a
right of property, and which the possessor affirms belongs to
him; here, if Titius sues for its recovery, the action is real.  2
It is real also if a man asserts that he has a right of usufruct
over a landed estate or a house, or a right of going or driving
cattle over his neighbour’s land, or of drawing water from the
same; and so too are the actions relating to urban servitudes,
as, for instance, where a man asserts a right to raise his house,
to have an uninterrupted prospect, to project some building
over his neighbour’s land, or to rest the beams of his own
house on his neighbour’s wall.  Conversely, there are actions
relating to usufructs, and to rustic and urban servitudes, of
a contrary import, which lie at the suit of plaintiffs who deny
their opponent’s right of usufruct, of going or driving cattle,
of drawing water, of raising their house, or having an unin-
terrupted view, of projecting some building over the plaintiff’s
land, or of resting the beams of their house in the plaintiff’s
wall.  These actions too are real, but negative, and never
occur in disputes as to corporeal things, in which the plaintiff
is always the party out of possession; and there is no action
by which the possessor can (as plaintiff) deny that the thing
in question belongs to his adversary, except in one case only,
as to which all requisite information can be gathered from the
fuller books of the Digest.  3 The actions which have hitherto
been mentioned, and others which resemble them, are either
of statutory origin, or at any rate belong to the civil law.
There are other actions, however, both real and personal,
which the praetor has introduced in virtue of his jurisdiction,
and of which it is necessary to give examples.  For instance,
he will usually, under the circumstances to be mentioned,
allow a real action to be brought with a fictitious allegation --
namely, that the plaintiff has acquired a title by usucapion
where this, in fact, is not the case; or, conversely, he will
allow a fictitious plea on the part of the defendant, to the effect
that the plaintiff has not acquired such a title where, in point of
fact, he has.  4 Thus, if possession of some object be delivered
on a ground sufficient to legally transfer the same -- for in-
stance, under a sale or gift, as part of a dowry, or as a legacy
-- and the transferee has not yet acquired a complete title by
usucapion, he has no direct real action for its recovery, if he
accidentally loses possession, because by the civil law a real
action lies at the suit of the owner only.  But as it seemed
hard that in such a case there should be no remedy, the
praetor introduced an action in which the plaintiff, who has
lost possession, fictitiously allege that he has acquired a full
title by usucapion, and thus claims the thing as his own.  This
is called the Publician action, because it was first placed in
the Edict by a praetor called Publicius.  5 Conversely, if a
person, while absent in the service of the State, or while in the
power of an enemy, acquires by usucapion property belong-
ing to some one resident at home, the latter is allowed, within
a year from the cessation of the possessor’s public employ-
ment, to sue for a recovery of the property by a rescission of
the usucapion:  by fictitiously alleging, in other words, that
the defendant has not thus acquired it; and the praetor from
motives of equity allows this kind of action to be brought in
certain other cases, as to which information may be gathered
from the larger work of the Digest or Pandects.  6 Similarly,
if a person conveys away his property in fraud of creditors,
the latter, on obtaining from the governor of the province a
decree vesting in them possession of the debtor’s estate, are
allowed to avoid the conveyance, and sue for the recovery of
the property; in other words, to allege that the conveyance
has never taken place, and that the property consequently
still belongs to the debtor.  7 Again, the Servian and quasi-
Servian actions, the latter of which is also called ‘hypothe-
cary,’ are derived merely from the praetor’s jurisdiction.  The
Servian action is that by which a landlord sues for his tenant’s
property, over which he has a right in the nature of mortgage
as security for his rent; the quasi-Servian is a similar remedy,
open to every pledgee or hypothecary creditor.  So far then
as this action is concerned, there is no difference between a
pledge and a hypothec:  and indeed whenever a debtor and
a creditor agree that certain property of the former shall be
the latter’s security for his debt, the transaction is called a
pledge or a hypothec indifferently.  In other points, however,
there is a distinction between them; for the term ‘pledge’ is
properly used only where possession of the property in ques-
tion is delivered to the creditor, especially if that property be
movable:  while a hypothec is, strictly speaking, such a right
created by mere agreement without delivery of possession.  8
Besides these, there are also personal actions which the prae-
tor has introduced in virtue of his jurisdiction, for instance,
that brought to enforce payment of money already owed, and
the action on a banker’s acceptance, which closely resembled
it.  By our constitution, however, the first of these actions has
been endowed with all the advantages which belonged to
the second, and the latter, as superfluous, has therefore been
deprived of all force and expunged from our legislation.  To
the praetor is due also the action claiming an account of the
peculium of a slave or child in power, that in which the issue
is whether a plaintiff has made oath, and many others.  9 The
action brought to enforce payment of money already owed is
the proper remedy against a person who, by a mere promise,
without stipulation, has engaged to discharge a debt due either
from himself or from some third party.  If he has promised by
stipulation, he is liable by the civil law.  10 The action claiming
an account of a peculium is a remedy introduced by the
praetor against a master or a father.  By strict law, such
persons incur no liability on the contracts of their slaves or
children in power; yet it is only equitable that damages should
still be recoverable against them to the extent of the peculium,
in which children in power and slaves have a sort of property.
11 Again, if a plaintiff, on being challenged by the defendant,
deposes on oath that the latter owes him the money which
is the object of the action, and payment is not made to him,
the praetor most justly grants to him an action in which the
issue is, not whether the money is owing, but whether the
plaintiff has sworn to the debt.  12 There is also a consider-
able number of penal actions which the praetor has introduced
in the exercise of his jurisdiction; for instance, against those
who in any way injure or deface his album; or who summon
a parent or patron without magisterial sanction; or who
violently rescue persons summoned before himself, or who
compass such a rescue; and others innumerable.  13 ‘Pre-
judicial’ actions would seem to be real, and may be exemp-
lified by those in which it is inquired whether a man is free
born, or has become free by manumission, or in which the
question relates to a child’s paternity.  Of these the first
alone belongs to the civil law:  the others are derived from
the praetor’s jurisdiction.  14 The kinds of action having been
thus distinguished, it is clear that a plaintiff cannot demand
his property from another in the form ‘if it be proved that
the defendant is bound to convey.’  It cannot be said that
what already belongs to the plaintiff ought to be conveyed to
him, for conveyance transfers ownership, and what is his
cannot be made more his than it is already.  Yet for the
prevention of theft, and multiplication of remedies against
the thief, it has been provided that, besides the penalty of
twice or four times the value of the property stolen, the pro-
perty itself, or its value, may be recovered from the thief by a
personal action in the form ‘if it be proved that the defendant
ought to convey,’ as an alternative for the real action which
is also available to the plaintiff, and in which he asserts his
ownership of the stolen property.  15 We call a real action a
‘vindication,’ and a personal action, in which the contention
is that some property should be conveyed to us, or some
service performed for us, a ‘condiction,’ this term being de-
rived from condicere, which has an old meaning of ‘giving
notice.’  To call a personal action, in which the plaintiff con-
tends that the defendant ought to convey to him, a condiction,
is in reality an abuse of the term, for nowadays there is no
such notice as was given in the old action of that name.

16 Actions may be divided into those which are purely
reparative, those which are purely penal, and those which
are mixed, or partly reparative, partly penal.  17 All real
actions are purely reparative.  Of personal actions those
which spring from contract are nearly all of the same cha-
racter; for instance, the actions on loans of money, or stipu-
lations, on loans for use, on deposit, agency, partnership, sale,
and hire.  If, however, the action be on a deposit occasioned
by a riot, a fire, the fall of a building, or a shipwreck, the
praetor enables the depositor to recover double damages,
provided he sues the bailee in person; he cannot recover
double damages from the bailee’s heir, unless he can prove
personal fraud against the latter.  In these two cases the
action, though on contract, is mixed.  18 Actions arising from
delict are sometimes purely penal, sometimes are partly penal
and partly reparative, and consequently mixed.  The sole
object of the action of theft is the recovery of a penalty,
whether that penalty be four times the value of the property
stolen, as in theft detected in the commission, or only twice
that value, as in simple theft.  The property itself is recover-
able by an independent action in which the person from whom
it has been stolen claims it as his own, whether it be in the
possession of the thief himself or of some third person; and
against the thief himself he may even bring a condiction, to
recover the property or its value.  19 The action on robbery is
mixed, for the damages recoverable thereunder are four times
the value of the property taken, three-fourths being pure
penalty, and the remaining fourth compensation for the loss
which the plaintiff has sustained.  So too the action on un-
lawful damage under the lex Aquilia is mixed, not only
where the defendant denies his liability, and so is sued for
double damages, but also sometimes where the claim is for
simple damages only; as where a lame or one-eyed slave is
killed, who within the year previous was sound and of large
value; in which case the defendant is condemned to pay his
greatest value within the year, according to the distinction
which has been drawn above.  Persons too who are under
an obligation as heirs to pay legacies or trust bequests to our
holy churches or other venerable places, and neglect to do
so until sued by the legatee, are liable to a mixed action, by
which they are compelled to give the thing or pay the money
left by the deceased, and, in addition, an equivalent thing or
sum as penalty, the condemnation being thus in twice the
value of the original claim.

20 Some actions are mixed in a different sense, being partly
real, partly personal.  They are exemplified by the action for
the division of a ‘family,’ by which one of two or more joint
heirs can enforce against the other or rest a partition of the
inheritance, and by the actions for the division of common
property, and for rectification of boundaries between adjoin-
ing landed proprietors.  In these three actions the judge has
power, according as shall to him seem fair and equitable, to
adjudge any part of the joint property, or of the land in dis-
pute, to any one of the parties, and to order any one of them
who seems to have an undue advantage in the partition or
rectification to pay a certain sum of money to the other or the
rest as compensation.  21 The damages recoverable in an
action may be either once, twice, three, or four times the value
of the plaintiff’s original interest; there is no action by which
more than fourfold damages can be claimed.  22 Single
damages only are recoverable in the actions on stipulation,
loan for consumption, sale, hire, agency, and many others be-
sides.  23 Actions claiming double damages are exemplified
by those on simple theft, on unlawful damage under the lex
Aquilia, on certain kinds of deposit, and for corruption of a
slave, which lies against any one by whose instigation and
advice another man’s slave runs away, or becomes disobedient
to his master, or takes to dissolute habits, or becomes worse
in any way whatsoever, and in which the value of property
which the runaway slave has carried off is taken into account.
Finally, as we remarked above, the action for the recovery of
legacies left to places of religion is of this character.  24  An
action for triple damages is grounded when a plaintiff makes
an overstatement of his claim in the writ of summons, in con-
sequence of which the officers of the court take too large a
fee from the defendant.  In such a case the latter will be able
to recover from the plaintiff three times the loss which he
sustains by the overcharge, including in these damages simple
compensation for the sum paid in excess of the proper fee.
This is provided by a distinguished constitution in our Code,
under which a statutory condiction clearly lies for the damages
in question. 25  Quadruple damages are recoverable by the
action on theft detected in the commission, by the action on
intimidation, and by the action grounded on the giving of
money in order to induce one man to bring a vexatious suit
against another, or to desist from a suit when brought.  Under
our constitution too a statutory condiction lies for the re-
covery of fourfold damages from officers of the court, who
exact money from defendants in excess of its provisions.
26 There is this difference between the actions on simple theft
and for the corruption of a slave, and the other of which we
spoke in connexion with them, that by the two former double
damages are recoverable under any circumstances; the latter,
namely the action on unlawful damage under the lex Aquilia,
and that on certain kinds of deposit, entail double damages
on the defendant only if he denies his liability; if he admits
it, simple damages alone can be recovered.  The damages
are double under an action for recovery of legacies left to
religious places not only when the liability is denied, but also
when the defendant delays payment until sued by the order
of a magistrate; if he admits his liability, and pays before
being so sued, he cannot be compelled to pay more than the
original debt.  27 The action on intimidation also differs from
the others which we mentioned in the same connexion, in
that it contains in its very nature an implied condition that
the defendant is entitled to acquittal if, on being so ordered
by the judge, he restores to the plaintiff the property of
which the latter has been deprived.  In other actions of the
same class this is not so; for instance, in the action on theft
detected in the commission, the defendant has under any
circumstances to pay fourfold damages.  28 Again, some actions
are equitable, others are actions of strict law.  To the former
class belong the actions on sale, hire, unauthorised agency,
agency proper, deposit, partnership, guardianship, loan for
use, mortgage, division of a ‘family,’ partition of joint pro-
perty, those on the innominate contracts of sale by commission
and exchange, and the suit for recovery of an inheritance.
Until quite recently it was a moot point whether the last-
named was properly an equitable action, but our constitution
has definitely decided the question in the affirmative.  29 For-
merly too the action for the recovery of a dowry was an
equitable action:  but as we found that the action on stipula-
tion was more convenient, we have, while establishing many
distinctions, attached all the advantages which the former
remedy possessed to the action on stipulation, when employed
for the recovery of a dowry.  The former action being thus
by a judicious reform abolished, that on stipulation, by which
it has been replaced, has deservedly been invested with all the
characteristics of an equitable action, so far as and whenever
it is brought for the recovery of a dowry.  We have also given
persons entitled to sue for such recovery a tacit hypothec
over the husband’s property, but this right is not to give any
priority over other hypothecary creditors except where it is
the wife herself who sues to recover her dowry; it being in
her interest only that we have made this new provision.  30 In
equitable actions the judge has full power to assess on good
and fair grounds the amount due to the plaintiff, and in so
doing to take into account counterclaims of the defendant,
condemning the latter only in the balance.  Even in actions
of strict law counterclaims have been permitted since a re-
script of the Emperor Marcus, the defendant meeting the
plaintiff’s claim by a plea of fraud.  By our constitution, how-
ever, a wider field has been given to the principle of set-off,
when the counterclaim is clearly established, the amount
claimed in the plaintiff’s action, whether real or personal, or
whatever its nature, being reduced by operation of law to the
extent of the defendant’s counterclaim.  The only exception
to this rule is the action on deposit, against which we have
deemed it no less than dishonest to allow any counterclaim to
be set up; for if this were permitted persons might be fraudu-
lently prevented from recovering property deposited under the
pretence of a set-off.  31 There are some actions again which
we call arbitrary, because their issue depends on an ‘arbi-
trium’ or order of the judge.  Here, unless on such order the
defendant satisfies the plaintiff’s claim by restoring or pro-
ducing the property, or by performing his obligation, or in a
noxal action by surrendering the guilty slave, he ought to be
condemned.  Some of such actions are real, others personal.
The former are exemplified by the Publician action, the
Servian action for the recovery of a tenant farmer’s stock, and
the quasi-Servian or so-called hypothecary action; the latter
by the actions on intimidation and on fraud, by that for the
recovery of a thing promised at a particular place, and by
the action claiming production of property.  In all these
actions, and others of a similar nature, the judge has full
power to determine on good and just grounds, according to
the circumstances of each particular case, the form in which
reparation ought to be made to the plaintiff.

32 It is the judge’s duty, in delivering judgement, to make his
award as definite as possible, whether it relate to the pay-
ment of money or the delivery of property, and this even when
the plaintiff’s claim is altogether unliquidated.

33 Formerly, if the plaintiff, in his statement of claim, de-
manded more than he was entitled to, his case fell to the
ground, that is, he lost even that which was his due, and in
such cases the praetor usually declined to restore him to his
previous position, unless he was a minor; for in this matter
too the general rule was observed of giving relief to minors
after inquiry made, if it were proved that they had made an
error owing to their lack of years.  If, however, the mistake
was entirely justifiable, and such as to have possibly misled
even the discreetest of men, relief was afforded even to persons
of full age, as in the case of a man who sues for the whole of
a legacy, of which part is found to have been taken away by
codicils subsequently discovered; or where such subsequently
discovered codicils give legacies to other persons, so that, the
total amount given in legacies being reduced under the lex
Falcidia, the first legatee is found to have claimed more than
the three-fourths allowed by that statute.  Over-statement of
claim takes four forms; that is, it may relate either to the
object, the time, the place, or the specification.  A plaintiff
makes an over-claim in the object when, for instance, he sues
for twenty aurei while only ten are owing to him, or when,
being only part owner of property, he sues to recover the
whole or a greater portion of it than he is entitled to.  Over-
claim in respect of time occurs when a man sues for money
before the day fixed for payment, or before the fulfilment of
a condition on which payment was dependent; for exactly as
one who pays money only after it falls due is held to pay less
than his just debt, so one who makes his demand prematurely
is held to make an over-claim.  Over-claim in respect of place
is exemplified by a man suing at one place for performance of
a promise which it was expressly agreed was to be performed
at another, without any reference, in his claim, to the latter: as,
for instance, if a man, after stipulating thus, ‘Do you promise to
pay at Ephesus?’ were to claim the money as due at Rome,
without any addition as to Ephesus.  This is an over-claim,
because by alleging that the money is due at Rome simply, the
plaintiff deprives his debtor of the advantage he might have
derived from paying at Ephesus.  On this account an arbitrary
action is given to a plaintiff who sues at a place other than
that agreed upon for payment, in which the advantage which
the debtor might have had in paying at the latter is taken
into consideration, and which usually is greatest in connexion
with commodities which vary in price from district to district,
such as wine, oil, or grain; indeed even the interest on loans
of money is different in different places.  If, however, a plaintiff
sues at Ephesus -- that is, in our example, at the place agreed
upon for the payment -- he need do no more than simply allege
the debt, as the praetor too points out, because the debtor has
all the advantage which payment in that particular place gives
him.  Over-claim in respect of specification closely resembles
over-claim in respect of place, and may be exemplified by a
man’s stipulating from you ‘do you promise to convey Stichus
or ten aurei?’ and then suing for the one or the other -- that is
to say, either for the slave only, or for the money only.  The
reason why this is an over-claim is that in stipulations of this
sort it is the promisor who has the election, and who may
give the slave or the money, whichever he prefers; conse-
quently if the promisee sues, alleging that either the money
alone, or the slave alone, ought to be conveyed to him, he
deprives his adversary of his election, and thereby puts him
in a worse position, while he himself acquires an undue ad-
vantage.  Other cases of this form of over-claim occur where
a man, having stipulated in general terms for a slave, for
wine, or for purple, sues for the particular slave Stichus, or
for the particular wine of Campania, or for Tyrian purple;
for in all of these instances he deprives his adversary of his
election, who was entitled, under the terms of the stipulation,
to discharge his obligation in a mode other than that which
is required of him.  And even though the specific thing for
which the promisee sues be of little or no value, it is still an
over-claim:  for it is often easier for a debtor to pay what is of
greater value than what is actually demanded of him.  Such
were the rules of the older law, which, however, has been made
more liberal by our own and Zeno’s statutes.  Where the
over-claim relates to time, the constitution of Zeno prescribes
the proper procedure; if it relates to quantity, or assumes any
other form, the plaintiff, as we have remarked above, is to be
condemned in a sum equivalent to three times any loss which
the defendant may have sustained thereby.  34 If the plaintiff in
his statement of claim demands less than is his due, as for
instance by alleging a debt of five aurei, when in fact he is
owed ten, or by claiming only half of an estate the whole of
which really belongs to him, he runs no risk thereby, for, by
the constitution of Zeno of sacred memory, the judge will in
the same action condemn the defendant in the residue as well
as in the amount actually claimed.  35 If he demands the
wrong thing in his statement of claim, the rule is that he runs
no risk; for if he discovers his mistake, we allow him to set it
right in the same action.  For instance, a plaintiff who is
entitled to the slave Stichus may claim Eros; or he may
allege that he is entitled to a conveyance under a will, when
his right is founded in reality upon a stipulation.

36 There are again some actions in which we do not always
recover the whole of what is due to us, but in which we some-
times get the whole, sometimes only part.  For instance, if the
fund to which our claim looks for satisfaction be the peculium
of a son in power or a slave, and it is sufficient in amount to
meet that claim, the father or master is condemned to pay
the whole debt; but if it is not sufficient, the judge condemns
him to pay only so far as it will go.  Of the mode of ascertaining
the amount of a peculium we will speak in its proper place.
37 So too if a woman sues for the recovery of her dowry, the
rule is that the husband is to be condemned to restore it only
so far as he is able, that is, so far as his means permit.  Ac-
cordingly, if his means will enable him to restore the dowry in
full, he will be condemned to do so; if not, he will be condemn-
ed to pay only so much as he is able.  The amount of the wife’s
claim is also usually lessened by the husband’s right of retaining
some portion for himself, which he may do to the extent of any
outlay he has made on dowry property, according to the rule,
stated in the larger work of the Digest, that a dowry is dimin-
ished by operation of law to the extent of all necessary outlay
thereon.  38 Again, if a man goes to law with his parent or
patron, or if one partner brings an action of partnership against
another, he cannot get judgement for more than his adversary
is able to pay.  The rule is the same when a man is sued on a
mere promise to give a present.  39 Very often too a plaintiff
obtains judgement for less than he was owed through the
defendant’s pleading a set-off:  for, as has already been ob-
served, the judge, acting on equitable principles, would in such
a case take into account the cross demand in the same trans-
action of the defendant, and condemn him only in the residue.
40 So too if an insolvent person, who surrenders all his effects
to his creditors, acquires fresh property of sufficient amount
to justify such a step, his creditors may sue him afresh, and
compel him to satisfy the residue of their claims so far as he
is able, but not to give up all that he has; for it would be
inhuman to condemn a man to pay his debts in full who has
already been once deprived of all his means.

TITLE VII
OF CONTRACTS MADE WITH PERSONS
IN POWER

As we have already mentioned the action  in respect of the
peculium of children in power and slaves, we must now explain
it more fully, and with it the other actions by which fathers
and masters are sued for the debts of their sons or slaves.
Whether the contract be made with a slave or with a child in
power, the rules to be applied are much the same; and there-
fore, to make our statements as short as possible, we will
speak only of slaves and masters, premising that what we say
of them is true also of children and the parents in whose power
they are; where the treatment of the latter differs from that
of the former, we will point out the divergence.

1 If a slave enters into a contract at the bidding of his
master, the praetor allows the latter to be sued for the whole
amount:  for it is on his credit that the other party relies in
making the contract.  2 On the same principle the praetor
grants two other actions, in which the whole amount due may
be sued for; that called exercitoria, to recover the debt of a
ship-master, and that called institoria, to recover the debt of
a manager or factor.  The former lies against a master who
has appointed a slave to be captain of a ship, to recover a
debt incurred by the slave in his character of captain, and it is
called exercitoria, because the person to whom the daily profits
of a ship belong is termed an exercitor.  The latter lies against
a man who has appointed a slave to manage a shop or business,
to recover any debt incurred in that business; it is called insti-
toria, because a person appointed to manage a business is
termed an institor.  And these actions are granted by the
praetor even if the person whom one sets over a ship, a shop,
or any other business, be a free man or another man’s slave,
because equity requires their application in these latter cases
no less than in the former.  3 Another action of the praetor’s
introduction is that called tributoria.  If a slave, with the
knowledge of his master, devotes his peculium to a trade or
business, the rule which the praetor follows, in respect of
contracts made in the course of such trade or business, is that
the peculium so invested and its profits shall be divided between
the master, if anything is due to him, and the other creditors in
the ratio of their claims.  The distribution of these assets is left
to the master, subject to this provision, that any creditor who
complains of having received less than his proper share can
bring this action against him for an account.  4 There is also
an action in respect of peculium and of what has been con-
verted to the uses of the master, under which, if a debt has
been contracted by a slave without the consent of his master,
and some portion thereof has been converted to his uses, he is
liable to that extent, while if no portion has been so converted,
he is liable to the extent of the slave’s peculium.  Conversion
to his uses is any necessary expenditure on his account, as
repayment to his creditors of money borrowed, repair of
his falling house, purchase of corn for his slaves, or of an
estate for him, or any other necessary.  Thus, if out of ten
aurei which your slave borrows from Titius, he pays your
creditor five, and spends the remainder in some other way,
you are liable for the whole of the five, and for the remainder
to the extent of the peculium:  and from this it is clear that if
the whole ten were applied to your uses Titius could recover
the whole from you.  Thus, though it is but a single action
which is brought in respect of peculium and of conversion to
uses, it has two condemnatory clauses.  The judge by whom
the action is tried first looks to see whether there has been any
application to the uses of the master, and does not proceed
to ascertain the amount of the peculium unless there has been
no such application, or a partial application only.  In ascer-
taining the amount of the peculium deduction is first made of
what is owed to the master or any person in his power, and
the residue only is treated as peculium; though sometimes
what a slave owes to a person in his master’s power is not
deducted, for instance, where that person is another slave who
himself belongs to the peculium; thus, where a slave owes a
debt to his own vicarial slave, its amount is not deducted from
the peculium.  5 There is no doubt that a person with whom
a slave enters into a contract at the bidding of his master, or
who can sue by the actions exercitoria or institoria, may in
lieu thereof bring an action in respect of the peculium and of
conversion to uses; but it would be most foolish of him to
relinquish an action by which he may with the greatest ease
recover the whole of what is owing to him under the contract,
and undertake the trouble of proving a conversion to uses, or
the existence of a peculium sufficient in amount to cover the
whole of the debt.  So too a plaintiff who can sue by the action
called tributoria may sue in respect of peculium and conversion
to uses, and sometimes the one action is the more advisable,
sometimes the other.  The former has this advantage, that in
it the master has no priority; there is no deduction of debts
owing to him, but he and the other creditors stand on precisely
the same footing; while in the action in respect of peculium
deduction is first made of debts owing to the master, who is
condemned to pay over to the creditors only what then
remains.  On the other hand, the advantage of the action in
respect of peculium is that in it the slave’s whole peculium is
liable to his creditors, whereas in the action called tributoria
only so much of it is liable as is invested in the trade or
business; and this may be only a third, a fourth, or even a less
fraction, because the slave may have the rest invested in land
or slaves, or out on loan.  A creditor ought therefore to select
the one or the other action by considering their respective
advantages in each particular case; though he certainly ought
to choose that in respect of conversion to uses, if he can prove
such conversion.  6 What we have said of the liability of a master
on the contracts of his slave is equally applicable where the
contract is made by a child or grandchild in the power of his
or her father or grandfather.  7 A special enactment in favour
of children in power is found in the senatusconsult of Macedo,
which has prohibited the giving of loans of money to such
persons, and refused an action to the lender both against the
child, whether he be still in power, or has become independent
by death of the ancestor or emancipation, and against the
parent, whether he still retains the child in his power, or has
emancipated him.  This enactment was made by the Senate
because it was found that persons in power, when dragged
down by the burden of loans which they had squandered in
profligacy, often plotted against the lives of their parents.

8 Finally, it should be observed that where a contract has been
entered into by a slave or son in power at his master’s or
parent’s bidding, or where there has been a conversion to his
uses, a condiction may be brought directly against the parent
or master, exactly as if he had been the original contracting
party in person.  So too, wherever a man is suable by either
of the actions called exercitoria and institoria, he may, in lieu
thereof, be sued directly by a condiction, because in effect the
contract in such cases is made at his bidding.

TITLE VIII
OF NOXAL ACTIONS

Where a delict, such as theft, robbery, unlawful damages, or
outrage, is committed by a slave, a noxal action lies against
the master, who on being condemned has the option of paying
the damages awarded, or surrendering the slave in satisfaction
of the injury.  1 The wrongdoer, that is, the slave, is called
‘noxa’; ‘noxia’ is the term applied to the wrong itself, that is,
the theft, damage, robbery, or outrage.  2 This principle of
noxal surrender in lieu of paying damages awarded is based on
most excellent reason, for it would be unjust that the misdeed
of a slave should involve his master in any detriment beyond
the loss of his body.  3 If a master is sued by a noxal action
on the ground of his slave’s delict, he is released from all
liability by surrendering the slave in satisfaction of the wrong,
and by this surrender his right of ownership is permanently
transferred; though if the slave can procure enough money to
compensate the surrenderee in full for the wrong he did him,
he can, by applying to the praetor, get himself manumitted
even against the will of his new master.  4 Noxal actions
were introduced partly by statute, partly by the Edict of the
praetor; for theft, by the statute of the Twelve Tables; for un-
lawful damages, by the lex Aquilia; for outrage and robbery,
by the Edict.  5 Noxal actions always follow the person of the
wrongdoer.  Thus, if your slave does a wrong while in your
power, an action lies against you; if he becomes the property
of some other person, that other is the proper person to be
sued; and if he is manumitted, he becomes directly and per-
sonally liable, and the noxal action is extinguished.  Conversely,
a direct action may change into noxal; thus, in an independent
person has done a wrong, and then becomes your slave
(as he may in several ways described in the first Book), a
noxal action lies against you in lieu of the direct action which
previously lay against the wrongdoer in person.  6 But no
action lies for an offence committed by a slave against his
master, for between a master and a slave in his power there
can be no obligation; consequently, if the slave becomes the
property of some other person, or is manumitted, neither he
nor his new master can be sued; and on the same principle, if
another man’s slave commits a wrong against you, and then
becomes your property, the action is extinguished, because
it has come into a condition in which an action cannot exist; the
result being that even if the slave passes again out of your
power you cannot sue.  Similarly, if a master commits a wrong
against his slave, the latter cannot sue him after manumission
or alienation.  7 These rules were applied by the ancients to
wrongs committed by children in power no less than by slaves;
but the feeling of modern times has rightly rebelled against
such inhumanity, and noxal surrender of children under power
has quite gone out of use.  Who could endure in this way to
give up a son, still more a daughter, to another, whereby the
father would be exposed to greater anguish in the person of
a son than even the latter himself, while mere decency forbids
such treatment in the case of a daughter?  Accordingly, such
noxal actions are permitted only where the wrongdoer is a
slave, and indeed we find it often laid down by old legal
writers that sons in power may be sued personally for their
own delicts.

TITLE IX
OF PAUPERIES, OR DAMAGE DONE
BY QUADRUPEDS

A noxal action was granted by the statute of the Twelve
Tables in cases of mischief done through wantonness, passion,
or ferocity, by irrational animals; it being by an enactment
of that statute provided, that if the owner of such an
animal is ready to surrender it as compensation for the
damage, he shall thereby be released from all liability.
Examples of the application of this enactment may be
found in kicking by a horse, or goring by a bull, known
to be given that way; but the action does not lie unless
in causing the damage the animal is acting contrary to its
natural disposition; if its nature be to be savage, this remedy
is not available.  Thus, if a bear runs away from its owner,
and causes damage, the quondam owner cannot be sued, for
immediately with its escape his ownership ceased to exist.
The term pauperies, or ‘mischief,’ is used to denote damage
done without there being any wrong in the doer of it, for an
unreasoning animal cannot be said to have done a wrong.
Thus far as to the noxal action.

1 It is, however, to be observed that the Edict of the aedile
forbids dogs, boars, bears, or lions to be kept near where there
is a public road, and directs that if any injury be caused to
a free man through disobedience of this provision, the owner
of the beast shall be condemned to pay such sum as to the
judge shall seem fair and equitable:  in case of any other in-
jury the penalty is fixed at double damages.  Besides this
aedilician action, that on pauperies may also be sometimes
brought against the same defendant; for when two or more
actions, especially penal ones, may be brought on one and
the same ground, the bringing of one does not debar the
plaintiff from subsequently bringing the other.

TITLE X
OF PERSONS THROUGH WHOM WE CAN
BRING AN ACTION

We must now remark that a man may sue either for himself,
or for another as attorney, guardian, or curator:  whereas
formerly one man could not sue for another except in public
suits, as an assertor of freedom, and in certain actions relating
to guardianship.  The lex Hostilia subsequently permitted
the bringing of an action of theft on behalf of persons who
were in the hands of an enemy, or absent on State employment,
and their pupils.  It was, however, found extremely inconvenient
to be unable to either bring or defend an action on behalf of
another, and accordingly men began to employ attorneys for
this purpose; for people are often hindered by ill-health, age,
unavoidable absence, and many other causes from attending
to their own business.  1 For the appointment of an attorney
no set form of words is necessary, nor need it be made in the
presence of the other party, who indeed usually knows nothing
about it; for in law any one is your attorney whom you allow
to bring or defend an action on your behalf.  2 The modes of
appointing guardians and curators have been explained in the
first Book.

TITLE XI
OF SECURITY

The old system of taking security from litigants differed
from that which has more recently come into use.

Formerly the defendant in a real action was obliged to give
security, so that if judgement went against him, and he neither
gave up the property which was in question, nor paid the
damages assessed, the plaintiff might be able to sue either
him or his sureties:  and this is called security for satisfaction
of judgement, because the plaintiff stipulates for payment to
himself of the sum at which the damages are assessed.  And
there was all the more reason for compelling the defendant in
a real action to give security if he was merely the representative
of another.  From the plaintiff in a real action no security was
required if it was on his own account that he sued, but if he
was merely an attorney, he was required to give security for
the ratification of his proceedings by his principal, owing to
the possibility of the latter’s subsequently suing in person
on the same claim.  Guardians and curators were required by
the Edict to give the same security as attorneys; but when
they appeared as plaintiffs they were sometimes excused.
1 So much for real actions.  In personal actions the same rules
applied, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, as we have
said obtained in real actions.  If the defendant was repre-
sented by another person, security had always to be given,
for no one is allowed to defend another without security;
but if the defendant was sued on his own account, he was
not compelled to give security for satisfaction of judgement.
2 Nowadays, however, the practice is different; for if the de-
fendant is sued on his own account, he is not compelled to
give security for repayment of the damages assessed, whether
the action be real or personal; all that he has to do is to
enter into a personal engagement that he will subject himself
to the jurisdiction of the court down to final judgement; the
mode of making such engagement being either a promise
under oath, which is called a sworn recognizance, or a bare
promise, or giving of sureties, according to the defendant’s
rank and station.  3 But the case is different where either
plaintiff or defendant appears by an attorney.  If the plaintiff
does so, and the attorney’s appointment is not enrolled in the
records, or confirmed by the principal personally in court, the
attorney must give security for ratification of his proceedings
by his principal; and the rule is the same if a guardian,
curator, or other person who has undertaken the management
of another’s affairs begins an action through an attorney.  4 If
a defendant appears, and is ready to appoint an attorney to
defend the action for him, he can do this either by coming
personally into court, and confirming the appointment by the
solemn stipulations employed when security is given for
satisfaction of judgement, or by giving security out of court
whereby, as surety for his attorney, he guarantees the observ-
ance of all the clauses of the so-called security for satisfaction
of judgement.  In all such cases, he is obliged to give a right
of hypothec over all his property, whether the security be
given in or out of court, and this right avails against his heirs
no less than against himself.  Finally, he has to enter into
a personal engagement or recognizance to appear in court
when judgement is delivered; and in default of such appear-
ance his surety will have to pay all the damages to which he
is condemned, unless notice of appeal is given.  5 If, however,
the defendant for some reason or other does not appear, and
another will defend for him, he may do so, and it is imma-
terial whether the action be real or personal, provided he will
give security for satisfaction of the judgement in full; for we
have already mentioned the old rule, that no one is allowed
to defend another without security.  6 All this will appear
more clearly and fully by reference to the daily practice of
the courts, and to actual cases of litigation:  7 and it is our
pleasure that these rules shall hold not only in this our royal
city, but also in all our provinces, although it may be that
through ignorance the practice elsewhere was different:  for
it is necessary that the provinces generally shall follow the
lead of the capital of our empire, that is, of this royal city,
and observe its usages.

TITLE XII
OF ACTIONS PERPETUAL AND TEMPORAL,
AND WHICH MAY BE BROUGHT BY AND
AGAINST HEIRS

It should be here observed that actions founded on statutes,
senatusconsults, and imperial constitutions could be brought
at any length of time from the accrual of the cause of action,
until certain limits were fixed for actions both real and per-
sonal by imperial enactments; while actions which were
introduced by the praetor in the exercise of his jurisdiction
could, as a rule, be brought only within a year, that being the
duration of his authority.  Some praetorian actions, however,
are perpetual, that is to say, can be brought at any time
which does not exceed the limit fixed by the enactments re-
ferred to; for instance, those granted to ‘possessors of goods’
and other persons who are fictitiously represented as heirs.
So, too, the action for theft detected in the commission, though
praetorian, is perpetual, the praetor having judged it absurd
to limit it by a year.  1 Actions which will lie against a man
under either the civil or the praetorian law will not always
lie against his heir, the rule being absolute that for delict -- for
instance, theft, robbery, outrage, or unlawful damage -- no
penal action can be brought against the heir.  The heir of the
person wronged, however, may bring these actions, except in
outrage, and similar cases, if any.  Sometimes, even an action
on contract cannot be brought against the heir; this being
the case where the testator has been guilty of fraud, and his
heir has not profited thereby.  If, however, a penal action, such
as those we have mentioned, has been actually commenced
by the original parties, it is transmitted to the heirs of each.
2 Finally, it must be remarked that if, before judgement is pro-
nounced, the defendant satisfies the plaintiff, the judges ought
to absolve him, even though he was liable to condemnation
at the time when the action was commenced; this being the
meaning of the old dictum, that all actions involve the power
of absolution.

TITLE XIII
OF EXCEPTIONS

We have next to examine the nature of exceptions.  Ex-
ceptions are intended for the protection of the defendant, who
is often in this position, that though the plaintiff’s case is a
good one in the abstract, yet as against him, the particular
defendant, his contention is inequitable.  1 For instance, if you
are induced by duress, fraud, or mistake to promise Titius by
stipulation what you did not owe him, it is clear that by the
civil law you are bound, and that the action on your promise
is well grounded; yet it is inequitable that you should be con-
demned, and therefore in order to defeat the action you are
allowed to plead the exception of duress, or of fraud, or one
framed to suit the circumstances of the cases.  2 So too, if, as
a preliminary to an advance of money, one stipulates from you
for its repayment, and then never advances it after all, it is
clear that he can sue you for the money, and you are bound
by your promise to give it; but it would be iniquitous that you
should be compelled to fulfil such an engagement, and therefore
you are permitted to defend yourself by the exception that
the money, in point of fact, was never advanced.  The time
within which this exception can be pleaded, as we remarked
in a former Book, has been shortened by our constitution.
3 Again, if a creditor agrees with his debtor not to sue for
a debt, the latter still remains bound, because an obligation
cannot be extinguished by a bare agreement; accordingly,
the creditor can validly bring against him a personal action
claiming payment of the debt, though, as it would be in-
equitable that he should be condemned in the face of the
agreement not to sue, he may defend himself by pleading
such agreement in the form of an exception.  4 Similarly, if at
his creditor’s challenge a debtor affirms on oath that he is not
under an obligation to convey, he still remains bound; but as
it would be unfair to examine whether he has perjured him-
self, he can, on being sued, set up the defence that he has
sworn to the non-existence of the debt.  In real actions, too,
exceptions are equally necessary; thus, if on the plaintiff’s
challenge the defendant swears that the property is his, there
is nothing to prevent the former from persisting in his action;
but it would be unfair to condemn the defendant, even though
the plaintiff’s contention that the property is his be well
founded.  5 Again, an obligation still subsists even after judge-
ment in an action, real or personal, in which you have been
defendnt, so that in strict law you may be sued again on the
same ground of action; but you can effectually meet the
claim by pleading the previous judgement.  6 These examples
will have been sufficient to illustrate our meaning; the multi-
tude and variety of the cases in which exceptions are neces-
sary may be learnt by reference to the larger work of the
Digest or Pandects.  7 Some exceptions derive their force from
statutes or enactments equivalent to statutes, others from the
jurisdiction of the praetor; 8 and some are said to be perpetual
or peremptory, others to be temporary or dilatory.  9 Perpetual
or peremptory exceptions are obstructions of unlimited dura-
tion, which practically destroy the plaintiff’s ground of action,
such as the exceptions of fraud, intimidation, and agreement
never to sue.  10 Temporary or dilatory exceptions are merely
temporary obstructions, their only effect being to postpone for
a while the plaintiff’s right to sue; for example, the plea of
an agreement not to sue for a certain time, say, five years;
for at the end of that time the plaintiff can effectually pursue
his remedy.  Consequently persons who would like to sue be-
fore the expiration of the time, but are prevented by the plea
of an agreement to the contrary, or something similar, ought
to postpone their action till the time specified has elapsed; and
it is on this account that such exceptions are called dilatory.
If a plaintiff brought his action before the time had expired,
and was met by the exception, this would debar him from all
success in those proceedings, and formerly he was unable to
sue again, owing to his having rashly brought the matter into
court, whereby he consumed his right of action, and lost all
chance of recovering what was his due.  Such unbending rules,
however, we do not at the present day approve.  Plaintiffs
who venture to commence an action before the time agreed
upon, or before the obligation is yet actionable, we subject to
the constitution of Zeno, which that most sacred legislator
enacted as to over-claims in respect of time; whereby, if the
plaintiff does not observe the stay which he has voluntarily
granted, or which is implied in the very nature of the action,
the time during which he ought to have postponed his action
shall be doubled, and at its termination the defendant shall not
be suable until he has been reimbursed for all expenses hitherto
incurred.  So heavy a penalty it is hoped will induce plaintiffs in
no case to sue until they are entitled.  11 Moreover, some per-
sonal incapacities produce dilatory exceptions, such as those
relating to agency, supposing that a party wishes to be repre-
sented in an action by a soldier or a woman; for soldiers may
not act as attorneys in litigation even on behalf of such near
relatives as a father, mother, or wife, not even in virtue of an
imperial rescript, though they may attend to their own affairs
without committing a breach of discipline.  We have sanctioned
the abolition of those exceptions, by which the appointment
of an attorney was formerly opposed on account of the infamy
of either attorney or principal, because we found that they no
longer were met with in actual practice, and to prevent the
trial of the real issue being delayed by disputes as to their
admissibility and operation.

TITLE XIV
OF REPLICATIONS

Sometimes an exception, which prima facie seems just to
the defendant, is unjust to the plaintiff, in which case the
latter must protect himself by another allegation called a
replication, because it parries and counteracts the force of the
exception.  For example, a creditor may have agreed with
his debtor not to sue him for money due, and then have sub-
sequently agreed with him that he shall be at liberty to do so;
here if the creditor sues, and the debtor pleads that he ought
not to be condemned on proof being given of the agreement
not to sue, he bars the creditor’s claim, for the plea is true, and
remains so in spite of the subsequent agreement; but as it
would be unjust that the creditor should be prevented from re-
covering, he will be allowed to plead a replication, based upon
that agreement.  1 Sometimes again a replication, though prima
facie just, is unjust to the defendant; in which case he must
protect himself by another allegation called a rejoinder:  2 and
if this again, though on the face of it just, is for some reason
unjust to the plaintiff, a still further allegation is necessary
for his protection, which is called a surrejoinder.  3 And some-
times even further additions are required by the multiplicity
of circumstances under which dispositions are made, or by
which they are subsequently affected; as to which fuller in-
formation may easily be gathered from the larger work of
the Digest.  4 Exceptions which are open to a defendant are
usually open to his surety as well, as indeed is only fair:  for
when a surety is sued the principal debtor may be regarded
as the real defendant, because he can be compelled by the
action on agency to repay the surety whatsoever he has dis-
bursed on his account.  Accordingly, if the creditor agrees
with his debtor not to sue, the latter’s sureties may plead this
agreement, if sued themselves, exactly as if the agreement
had been made with them instead of with the principal
debtor.  There are, however, some exceptions which, though
pleadable by a principal debtor, are not pleadable by his
surety; for instance, if a man surrenders his property to his
creditors as an insolvent, and one of them sues him for his
debt in full, he can effectually protect himself by pleading the
surrender; but this cannot be done by his surety, because the
creditor’s main object, in accepting a surety for his debtor, is
to be able to have recourse to the surety for the satisfaction
of his claim if the debtor himself becomes insolvent.

TITLE XV
OF INTERDICTS

We have next to treat of interdicts or of the actions by
which they have been superseded.  Interdicts were formulae
by which the praetor either ordered or forbad some thing to
be done, and occurred most frequently in case of litigation
about possession or quasi-possession.

1 The first division of interdicts is into orders of abstention,
of restitution, and of production. The first are those by which
the praetor forbids the doing of some act -- for instance, the
violent ejection of a bona fide possessor, forcible interference
with the internment of a corpse in a place where that may
lawfully be done, building upon sacred ground, or the doing
of anything in a public river or on its banks which may impede
its navigation.  The second are those by which he orders
restitution of property, as where he directs possession to be
restored to a ‘possessor of goods’ of things belonging to an
inheritance, and which have hitherto been in the possession
of others under the title of heir, or without any title at all; or
where he orders a person to be reinstated in possession of
land from which he has been forcibly ousted.  The third are
those by which he orders the production of persons or prop-
erty; for instance, the production of a person whose freedom
is in question, of a freedman whose patron wishes to demand
from him certain services, or of children on the application
of the parent in whose power they are.  Some think that the
term interdict is properly applied only to orders of abstention,
because it is derived from the verb ‘interdicere,’ meaning to
denounce or forbid, and that orders of restitution or pro-
duction are properly termed decrees; but in practice they are
all called interdicts, because they are given ‘inter duos,’ be-
tween two parties.  2 The next division is into interdicts for
obtaining possession, for retaining possession, and for recov-
ering possession.  3 Interdicts for obtaining possession are
exemplified by the one given to a ‘possessor of goods,’ which
is called ‘Quorum bonorum,’ and which enjoins that whatever
portion of the goods, whereof possession has been granted to
the claimant, is in the hands of one who holds by the title of
heir or as mere possessor only, shall be delivered up to the
grantee of possession.  A person is deemed to hold by the
title of heir who thinks he is an heir; he is deemed to hold
as mere possessor who relies on no title at all, but holds a
portion of the whole of the inheritance, knowing that he is
not entitled.  It is called an interdict for obtaining possession,
because it is available only for initiating possession; accord-
ingly, it is not granted to a person who has already had and
lost possession.  Another interdict for obtaining possession
is that named after Salvius, by which the landlord gets pos-
session of the tenant’s property which has been hypothecated
as a security for rent.  4 The interdicts ‘Uti possidetis’ and
‘Utrubi’ are interdicts for retaining possession, and are em-
ployed when two parties claim ownership in anything, in
order to determine which shall be defendant and which plain-
tiff; for no real action can be commenced until it is ascer-
tained which of the parties is in possession, because law and
reason both require that one of them shall be in possession
and shall be sued by the other.  As the role of defendant in
a real action is far more advantageous than that of plaintiff,
there is almost invariably a keen dispute as to which party is
to have possession pending litigation: the advantage consist-
ing in this, that, even if the person in possession has no title
as owner, the possession remains to him unless and until the
plaintiff can prove his own ownership:  so that where the
rights of the parties are not clear, judgement usually goes
against the plaintiff.  Where the dispute relates to the pos-
session of land or buildings, the interdict called ‘Uti possidetis’
is employed; where to movable property, that called ‘Utrubi.’
Under the older law their effects were very different.  In
‘Uti possidetis’ the party in possession at the issue of the
interdict was the winner, provided he had not obtained that
possession from his adversary by force, or clandestinely, or by
permission; whether he had obtained it from some one else in
any of these modes was immaterial.  In ‘Utrubi’ the winner
was the party who had been in possession the greater portion
of the year next immediately preceding, provided that posses-
sion had not been obtained by force, or clandestinely, or by
permission, from his adversary.  At the present day, however,
the practice is different, for as regards the right to immediate
possession the two interdicts are now on the same footing; the
rule being, that whether the property in question be movable
or immovable, the possession is adjudged to the party who
has it at the commencement of the action, provided he had
not obtained it by force, or clandestinely, or by permission,
from his adversary.  5 A man’s possession includes, besides
his own personal possession, the possession of any one who
holds in his name, though not subject to his power; for instance,
his tenant.  So also a depositary or borrower for use may
possess for him, as is expressed by the saying that we retain
possession by any one who holds in our name.  Moreover,
mere intention suffices for the retention of possession; so that
although a man is not in actual possession either himself or
through another, yet if it was not with the intention of
abandoning the thing that he left it, but with that of subse-
quently returning to it, he is deemed not to have parted with
the possession.  Through what persons we can obtain
possession has been explained in the second Book; and it
is agreed on all hands that for obtaining possession intention
alone does not suffice.  6 An interdict for recovering
possession is granted to persons who have been forcibly
ejected from land or buildings; their proper remedy being
the interdict ‘Unde vi,’ by which the ejector is compelled
to restore possession, even though it had been originally
obtained from him by the grantee of the interdict by force,
clandestinely, or by permission.  But by imperial constitutions,
as we have already observed, if a man violently seizes on
property to which he has a title, he forfeits his right of owner-
ship; if on property which belongs to some one else, he has
not only to restore it, but also to pay the person whom he has
violently dispossessed a sum of money equivalent to its value.
In cases of violent dispossession the wrongdoer is liable
under the lex Iulia relating to private or public violence, by
the former being meant unarmed force, by the latter dispos-
session effected with arms; and the term ‘arms’ must be taken
to include not only shields, swords, and helmets, but also
sticks and stones.  7 Thirdly, interdicts are divided into
simple and double.  Simple interdicts are those wherein one
party is plaintiff and the other defendant, as is always the case
in orders of restitution or production; for he who demands
restitution or production is plaintiff, and he from whom it is
demanded is defendant.  Of interdicts which order ab-
stention some are simple, others double.  The simple are
exemplified by those wherein the praetor commands the
defendant to abstain from desecrating consecrated ground,
or from obstructing a public river or its banks; for he who
demands such order is the plaintiff, and he who is attempting
to do the act in question is defendant.  Of double interdicts
we have examples in Uti possidetis and Utrubi; they are
called double because the footing of both parties is equal,
neither being exclusively plaintiff or defendant, but each sus-
taining the double role.

8 To speak of the procedure and result of interdicts under
the older law would now be a waste of words; for when the
procedure is what is called ‘extraordinary,’ as it is nowadays
in all actions, the issue of an interdict is unnecessary, the
matter being decided without any such preliminary step in
much the same way as if it had actually been taken, and a
modified action had arisen on it.

TITLE XVI
OF THE PENALTIES FOR RECKLESS
LITIGATION

It should here be observed that great pains have been
taken by those who in times past had charge of the law to
deter men from reckless litigation, and this is a thing that we
too have at heart.  The best means of restraining unjustifiable
litigation, whether on the part of a plaintiff or of a defendant,
are money fines, the employment of the oath, and the fear
of infamy.  1 Thus under our constitution, the oath has to be
taken by every defendant, who is not permitted even to
state his defence until he swears that he resists the plaintiff’s
claim because he believes that his cause is a good one.  In
certain cases where the defendant denies his liability the
action is for double or treble the original claim, as in pro-
ceedings on unlawful damages, and for recovery of legacies
bequeathed to religious places.  In various actions the damages
are multiplied at the outset; in an action on theft detected in
the commission they are quadrupled; for simple theft they are
doubled; for in these and some other actions the damages
are a multiple of the plaintiff’s loss, whether the defendant
denies or admits the claim.  Vexatious litigation is checked
on the part of the plaintiff also, who under our constitution
is obliged to swear on oath that his action is commenced
in good faith; and similar oaths have to be taken by the
advocates of both parties, as is prescribed in other of our
enactments.  Owing to these substitutes the old action of
dishonest litigation has become obsolete.  The effect of this
was to penalize the plaintiff in a tenth part of the value he
claimed by action; but, as a matter of fact, we found that the
penalty was never exacted, and therefore its place has been
taken by the oath above mentioned, and by the rule that
a plaintiff who sues without just cause must compensate his
opponent for all losses incurred, and also pay the costs of the
action.  2 In some actions condemnation carries infamy with it,
as in those on theft, robbery, outrage, fraud, guardianship,
agency, and deposit, if direct, not contrary; also in the action
on partnership, which is always direct, and in which infamy is
incurred by any partner who suffers condemnation.  In actions
on theft, robbery, outrage, and fraud, it is not only infamous
to be condemned, but also to compound, as indeed is only
just; for obligation based on delict differs widely from obli-
gation based on contract.

3 In commencing an action, the first step depends upon that
part of the Edict which relates to summons; for before any-
thing else is done, the adversary must be summoned, that is to
say, must be called before the judge who is to try the action.
And herein the praetor takes into consideration the respect
due to parents, patrons, and the children and parents of
patrons, and refuses to allow a parent to be summoned by his
child, or a patron by his freedman, unless permission so to do
has been asked of and obtained from him; and for non-
observance of this rule he has fixed a penalty of fifty solidi.

TITLE XVII
OF THE DUTIES OF A JUDGE

Finally we have to treat of the duties of a judge; of which
the first is not to judge contrary to statutes, the imperial laws,
and custom.  1 Accordingly, if he is trying a noxal action, and
thinks that the master ought to be condemned, he should be
careful to word his judgement thus:  ‘I condemn Publius
Maevius to pay ten aurei to Lucius Titius, or to surrender to
him the slave that did the wrong.’  2 If the action is real, and he
finds against the plaintiff, he ought to absolve the defendant;
if against the latter, he ought to order him to give up the
property in question, along with its fruits.  If the defendant
pleads that he is unable to make immediate restitution and
applies for execution to be stayed, and such application
appears to be in good faith, it should be granted upon the
terms of his finding a surety to guarantee payment of the
damages assessed, if restitution be not made within the time
allowed.  If the subject of the action be an inheritance, the
same rule applies as regards fruits as we laid down in speaking
of actions for the recovery of single objects.  If the defendant
is a mala fide possessor, fruits which but for his own negligence
he might have gathered are taken into account in much the
same way in both actions; but a bona fide possessor is not
held answerable for fruits which he has not consumed or has
not gathered, except from the moment of the commencement
of the action, after which time account is taken as well of
fruits which might have been gathered but for his negligence
as of those which have been gathered and consumed.  3 If the
object of the action be production of property, its mere pro-
duction by the defendant is not enough, but it must be ac-
companied by every advantage derived from it; that is to say,
the plaintiff must be placed in the same position he would
have been in if production had been made immediately on the
commencement of the action.  Accordingly if, during the
delay occasioned by trial, the possessor has completed a
title to the property by usucapion, he will not be thereby
saved from being condemned.  The judge ought also to take
into account the mesne profits, or fruits produced by the
property in the interval between the commencement of the
action and judgement.  If the defendant pleads that he is
unable to make immediate production, and applies for a
stay, and such application appears to be in good faith, it
should be granted on his giving security that he will render
up the property.  If he neither complies at once with the
judge’s order for production, nor gives security for doing so
afterwards, he ought to be condemned in a sum representing
the plaintiff’s interest in having production at the commence-
ment of the proceedings.  4 In an action for the division of a
‘family’ the judge ought to assign to each of the heirs specific
articles belonging to the inheritance, and if one of them is
unduly favoured, to condemn him, as we have already said,
to pay a fixed sum to the other as compensation.  Again, the
fact the one only of two joint-heirs has gathered the fruits of
land comprised in the inheritance, or has damaged or con-
sumed something belonging thereto, is ground for ordering
him to pay compensation to the other; and it is immaterial,
so far as this action is concerned, whether the joint-heirs are
only two or more in number.  5 The same rules are applied in
an action for partition of a number of things held by joint-owners.
If such an action be brought for the partition of a single object,
such as an estate, which easily admits of division, the judge
ought to assign a specific portion of each joint-owner,
condemning such one as seems to be unduly favoured to pay
a fixed sum to the other as compensation.  If the property
cannot be conveniently divided -- as a slave, for instance,
or a mule -- it ought to be adjudged entirely to one only of the
joint-owners, who should be ordered to pay a fixed sum to
the other as compensation.  6 In an action for rectification of
boundaries the judge ought to examine whether an adjudication
of property is actually necessary.  There is only one case where
this is so; where, namely, convenience requires that the line
of separation between fields belonging to different owners
shall be more clearly marked than heretofore, and where,
accordingly, it is requisite to adjudge part of the one’s field
to the owner of the other, who ought, in consequence, to be
ordered to pay a fixed sum as compensation to his neighbour.
Another ground for condemnation in this action is the com-
mission of any malicious act, in respect of the boundaries, by
either of the parties, such as removal of landmarks, or cutting
down boundary trees:  as also is contempt of court, expressed
by refusal to allow the fields to be surveyed in accordance
with a judge’s order.  7 Wherever property is adjudged to a
party in any of these actions, he at once acquires a complete
title thereto.

TITLE XVIII
OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS

Public prosecutions are not commenced as actions are, nor
indeed is there any resemblance between them and the other
remedies of which we have spoken; on the contrary, they
differ greatly both in the mode in which they are commenced,
and in the rules by which they are conducted.  1 They are
called public because as a general rule any citizen may come
forward as prosecutor in them.  2 Some are capital, others not.
By capital prosecutions we mean those in which the accused
may be punished with the extremest severity of the law, with
interdiction from water and fire, with deportation, or with hard
labour in the mines:  those which entail only infamy and
pecuniary penalties are public, but not capital.  3 The follow-
ing statutes relate to public prosecutions.  First, there is the
lex Iulia on treason, which includes any design against the
Emperor or State; the penalty under it is death, and even
after decease the guilty person’s name and memory are
branded with infamy.  4 The lex Iulia, passed for the repression
of adultery, punishes with death not only defilers of the
marriage-bed, but also those who indulge in criminal inter-
course with those of their own sex, and inflicts penalties on
any who without using violence seduce virgins or widows of
respectable character.  If the seducer be of reputable con-
dition, the punishment is confiscation of half his fortune; if
a mean person, flogging and relegation.  5 The lex Cornelia on
assassination pursues those persons, who commit this crime
with the sword of vengeance, and also all who carry weapons
for the purpose of homicide.  By a ‘weapon,’ as is remarked
by Gaius in his commentary on the statute of the Twelve
Tables, is ordinarily meant some missile shot from a bow, but
it also signifies anything thrown with the hand; so that stones
and pieces of wood or iron are included in the term.  ‘Telum,’
in fact, or ‘weapon,’ is derived from the Greek ‘telou,’ and
so means anything thrown to a distance.  A similar connexion
of meaning may be found in the Greek word ‘belos,’ which cor-
responds to our ‘telum,’ and which is derived from ‘ballesthai,’
to throw, as we learn from Xenophon, who writes, ‘they
carried with them ‘belei,’ namely spears, bows and arrows,
slings, and large numbers of stones.’  ‘Sicarius,’ or assassin, is
derived from ‘sica,’ a long steel knife.  This statute also inflicts
punishment of death on poisoners, who kill men by their hateful
arts of poison and magic, or who publicly sell deadly drugs.
6 A novel penalty has been devised for a most odious crime
by another statute, called the lex Pompeia on parricide,
which provides that any person who by secret machination
or open act shall hasten the death of his parent, or child, or
other relation whose murder amounts in law to parricide, or
who shall be an instigator or accomplice of such a crime,
although a stranger, shall suffer the penalty of parricide.  This
is not execution by the sword or by fire, or any ordinary form
of punishment, but the criminal is sewn up in a sack with a
dog, a cock, a viper, and an ape, and in this dismal prison is
thrown into the sea or a river, according to the nature of the
locality, in order that even before death he shall begin to be
deprived of the enjoyment of the elements, the air being
denied him while alive, and interment in the earth when dead.
Those who kill persons related to them by kinship or affinity,
but whose murder is not parricide, will suffer the penalties
of the lex Cornelia on assassination.  7 The lex Cornelia on
forgery, otherwise called the statute of wills, inflicts penalties
on all who shall write, seal, or read a forged will or other
document, or shall substitute the same for the real original,
or who shall knowingly and feloniously make, engrave, or
use a false seal.  If the criminal be a slave, the penalty fixed
by the statute is death, as in the statute relating to assassins
and poisoners:  if a free man, deportation.  8 The lex Iulia,
relating to public or private violence, deals with those
persons who use force armed or unarmed.  For the former,
the penalty fixed by the statute is deportation; for the latter,
confiscation of one third of the offender’s property.  Ravish-
ment of virgins, widows, persons professed in religion, or
others, and all assistance in its perpetration, is punished
capitally under the provisions of our constitution, by refer-
ence to which full information on this subject is obtainable.
9 The lex Iulia on embezzlement punishes all who steal money
or other property belonging to the State, or devoted to the
maintenance of religion.  Judges who during the term of
office embezzle public money are punishable with death, as
also are their aiders and abettors, and any who receive such
money knowing it to have been stolen.  Other persons who
violate the provisions of this statute are liable to deportation.
10 A public prosecution may also be brought under the lex
Fabia relating to manstealing, for which a capital penalty is
sometimes inflicted under imperial constitutions, sometimes a
lighter punishment.  11 Other statutes which give rise to such
prosecutions are the lex Iulia on bribery, and three others,
which are similarly entitled, and which relate to judicial ex-
tortion, to illegal combinations for raising the price of corn,
and to negligence in the charge of public moneys.  These
deal with special varieties of crime, and the penalties which
they inflict on those who infringe them in no case amount to
death, but are less severe in character.

12 We have made these remarks on public prosecutions only
to enable you to have the merest acquaintance with them, and
as a kind of guide to a fuller study of the subject, which, with
the assistance of Heaven, you may make by reference to the
larger volume of the Digest or Pandects.


THE END OF
THE INSTITUTES OF JUSTINIAN


Transcribed by
Howard R. Sauertieg,
on historic Route 66,
Albuquerque, New Mexico,
November, 2001.












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 1500  1998 October
 2000  1999 December
 2500  2000 December
 3000  2001 November
 4000  2001 October/November
 6000  2002 December*
 9000  2003 November*
10000  2004 January*


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