| Justinian I (Emperor of the East) - Institutiones - 1869 - 624 pages
...confinnamus, quia multa accidere poseunt ut eam non capias. D. ili. I3. It has been asked, whether, if you have wounded a wild beast, so that it could be...cease to pursue it, it then ceases to be yours, and a<zain becomes the property of the first person who captures it. Others have thought that it does not... | |
| Thomas Collett Sandars - Roman law - 1876 - 772 pages
...confirmamus, quia multa accidere possunt ut earn non capias. D. xli. 13. It has been asked, whether, if you have wounded a wild beast, so that it could be...your property. Some have thought that it does become youra directly you wound it, and that it continues to be youis while you continue to pursue it, but... | |
| William Wirt Howe - Civil law - 1905 - 416 pages
...of sight, it yet could not be pursued without great difficulty. 13. It has been asked, whether, if you have wounded a wild beast, so that it could be...pursue it, but that if you cease to pursue it, it then ceasea to be yours, and again becomes the property of the tirst person who captures it. Others have... | |
| Oliver Joseph Thatcher - Encyclopedias and dictionaries - 1907 - 466 pages
...your sight, it yet could not be pursued without great difficulty. 13. It has been asked, whether, if you have wounded a wild beast, so that it could be...continues to be yours while you continue to pursue it, it then ceases to be yours, and again becomes the property of the first person who captures it. Others... | |
| Great Britain - 1913 - 222 pages
...of sight, it yet could not be pursued without great difficulty. 13. It has been asked, whether, if you have wounded a wild beast, so that it could be...property of the first person who captures it. Others have thought that it does not become your property until you have captured it. We confirm this latter opinion... | |
| |