Imperatoris Iustiniani Institutionum libri quattuor |
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Page 4
... they his clients . But with the family of their patron they had no connection ; their connection was with his gens ; they took the gentile name and became his ' gentiles . ' In this way they were brought within the protection of the law ...
... they his clients . But with the family of their patron they had no connection ; their connection was with his gens ; they took the gentile name and became his ' gentiles . ' In this way they were brought within the protection of the law ...
Page 13
... they did not regulate practices or institutions peculiar to either order , such as the older forms of marriage and adoption1 : nor did they include the leges regiae , law and religion having now been differentiated . Much again relating ...
... they did not regulate practices or institutions peculiar to either order , such as the older forms of marriage and adoption1 : nor did they include the leges regiae , law and religion having now been differentiated . Much again relating ...
Page 14
... they were long used as the foundation of a legal education as , in the three centuries and a half preceding the legislation of Justinian , a mastery of the Institutes of Gaius was considered the proper groundwork of an adequate ...
... they were long used as the foundation of a legal education as , in the three centuries and a half preceding the legislation of Justinian , a mastery of the Institutes of Gaius was considered the proper groundwork of an adequate ...
Page 17
... They were at first unknown , rare , limited in their uses , or else regarded as mere appendages to the privileged objects . Thus , though the Roman res mancipi included a number of moveable articles of great value , still the most ...
... They were at first unknown , rare , limited in their uses , or else regarded as mere appendages to the privileged objects . Thus , though the Roman res mancipi included a number of moveable articles of great value , still the most ...
Page 20
... they conferred : a citizen who disputed such rights would be resisting the authority of the whole people . And it is ... they had enjoyed ; so much did they relish it that they attempted to make their own office permanent , and to ...
... they conferred : a citizen who disputed such rights would be resisting the authority of the whole people . And it is ... they had enjoyed ; so much did they relish it that they attempted to make their own office permanent , and to ...
Common terms and phrases
actio action actionem agnates alia aliena autem bona fide bonorum possessio capitis deminutio causa civil condictio contract creditor cuius debet debtor delict dominus edict eius enactment enim eorum erit etiam exceptio factum fidei fideicommissum fuerit furti furtum Gaius gentium heir heredem heredes hereditas hereditatem ideo iniuria instituted inter interdict iudex iudicio iure iuris ius civile ius gentium jurists Justinian latter legatum lege legis lex Aquilia lex Iulia liberi licet manumission modo neque nihil nisi obligatio obligation pecunia person plaintiff poena possessio possession possessionem possunt postea potest praetor quae quam quia quibus quidem quis quod quoque Roman law rule servus sibi sine sive slave stipulatio sui iuris sunt supr tamen tantum testamento testator Title tutela tutor Twelve Tables Ulpian usucapio usus veluti vero
Popular passages
Page 615 - Possessory interdicts ; it is ' sequens,' or subordinate ; that into prohibitoria, etc., is ' summa ' (§ 1 supr.) or ' principalis' (Gaius iv. 142). § 3. The formula of quorum bonorum is given in Dig. 43. 2. 1 ' quorum bonorum ex edicto meo illi possessio data est, quod de his bonis pro herede aut pro possessore possides, possideresve si nihil usucaptum esset, quodque dolo malo fecisti uti desineres possidere, id illi restituas.
Page 59 - iustitiam colimus, et boni et aequi notitiam profitemur ; aequum ab iniquo separantes, licitum ab illicito discernentes, bonos non solum metu poenarum, verum etiam praemiorum quoque exhortatione efficere cupientes, veram nisi fallor philosophiam, non simulatam affectantes.
Page 481 - obligationum substantia non in eo consistit, ut aliquod corpus nostrum, aut servitutem nostram faciat, sed ut alium nobis obstringat ad dandum aliquid, vel faciendum, vel praestandum,' with which may be compared Bk.
Page 271 - ... proinde fit heres is cui in iure cesserit, ac si ipse per legem ad hereditatem uocatus esset.
Page 490 - Qui columnam transportandam conduxit, si ea, dum tollitur aut portatur aut reponitur, fracta sit, ita id periculum praestat, si qua ipsius eorumque, quorum opera uteretur, culpa acciderit: culpa autem abest, si omnia facta sunt, quae diligentissimus quisque observaturus fuisset.
Page 340 - Et apiscimur possessionem corpore et animo, neque per se animo aut per se corpore.
Page 449 - Et quidem si nihil de partibus lucri et damni nominatim convenerit, aequales scilicet partes et in lucro et in damno spectantur. quod si expressae fuerint partes, hae servari debent...
Page 439 - Cum autem emptio et venditio contracta sit (quod effici diximus simulatque de pretio convenerit, cum sine scriptura res agitur), periculum rei venditae statim ad emptorem pertinet, tametsi adhuc ea res emptori tradita non sit.
Page 616 - Pro possessore vero possidet praedo, — qui interrogatus cur possideat, responsurus sit 'quia possideo...
Page 307 - Servius maintained that the bequest was provisionally valid, whether conditional or not, but became void if the legatee was in the institutus' power on the dies legati cedens, Gaius ii.