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active solidary obligation, Dig. 16. 3. 1. 36; ib. 14 pr. (4) In mandatum qualificatum (Bk. iii. 26. 5) joint mandators incur solidary liability if the debtor is unable to pay himself, Dig. 46. 1. 52. 3: so too with constitutum debiti alieni (note on Bk. iii. 20. 8). (5) Where one room is jointly occupied by two or more persons they are liable in solidum to the actio de effusis et deiectis, Bk. iv. 5. 1 infr., Dig. 9. 3. I. 10; ib. 2-4.

Solidary obligation is terminated-i. e. all the solidary debtors are released, and the right of all the solidary creditors is extinguishedby simple satisfaction of the sole creditor, or by satisfaction of one of the creditors by the single debtor. This may occur (1) by performance, solutio, or (2) by set-off extending to the whole of the debt. But acquittal of one solidary debtor in an action brought on his obligation did not release the rest from theirs: 'plures eiusdem pecuniae mandatores, si unus iudicio eligatur, absolutione quoque secuta non liberantur, sed omnes liberantur pecunia soluta' Dig. 46. 1. 52. 3. Acceptilatio (Bk. iii. 29. 1) was equally inoperative, for it is neither payment nor equivalent to it: and novatio (ib. § 3) extinguished solidary liability only so far as the object of the new obligation was quantitatively equivalent to that of the old. In short, the intervention of any event, which ordinarily destroys an obligation, between the creditor and one of the joint debtors, or between the debtor and one of the joint creditors, does not affect the liability of the other debtors, or the right of the other creditors, unless it is or amounts to performance.

But, though the ultimate liability of each of several solidary debtors for the whole object of the obligation is clear, each ordinarily enjoyed the following rights: (a) except where he had been guilty of dolus, or of culpa in excess of the rest, he could claim to be primarily sued only for an aliquot part of the debt, Dig. 26. 7. 38 pr.: he could be called upon to pay more only if the rest or some of them were insolvent (beneficium divisionis). (b) If another or others of the debtors had been excessively in fault, he could in some cases (e. g. cotutors, Dig. 26. 7. 3 2; ib. 39. 11; ib. 55. 2) demand that he or they should be sued before him (beneficium ordinis sive excussionis). (c) Where he had not been guilty of dolus (Dig. 27. 3. 1. 13 and 14) and paid the whole, he had a ius regressus against the rest by which he could recover their respective shares of what he had paid. In (1) supr. this right of course did not exist : 'in pari delicto potior est condicio defendentis.'

From solidary we have to distinguish what is called correal obliga

tion. This resembles the former, in that two or more creditors (correi stipulandi or credendi) are entitled against one debtor, or two or more debtors (correi promittendi or debendi) are bound to one creditor in respect of one and the same obligation-object, and so far we may say that every correal includes in itself a solidary obligation, each of the two or more creditors being entitled, and each of the two or more debtors being bound, in solidum. But it differs in that there is not only one obligation-object, but only one obligation. The unity of the object here follows necessarily from the unity of the obligation itself: where the liability is solidary, it arises from extraneous causes, for, given a variety of obligations, the natural and usual consequence would be a corresponding variety of objects.

It is thus the unity or identity of the obligation which distinguishes correal from merely solidary obligation: or, to put the matter in another form, when there is correality, there is, objectively, one single obligation, to which a variety of persons are subjectively related in solidum: and their subjective relation may be different.

There is, objectively, but one single obligation. Hence any act or event (and not merely performance or its equivalent, as in cases of solidarity) which puts an end to the objective existence of that single obligation between the creditor and one of the debtors, or the debtor and one of the creditors, extinguishes it between them all; e. g. solutio or performance (Inst. iii. 16. 1, Dig. 45. 2. 3. 1), acceptilatio (Dig. 46. 3. 16), and novatio (Dig. 46. 2. 31. 1). Compensatio, or set-off, extinguishes correal obligation only if it goes to the whole debt, Dig. 20. 4. 4 but if correal debtor A is sued he cannot set off money owed to correal debtor B, unless he and B are partners, Dig. 45. 2. 10. So, too, if the creditor sued one of the debtors, or one of the creditors sued the debtor, the obligation was extinguished for all by the action's reaching the stage of litis contestatio, Gaius iii. 180, Dig. 45. I. 116. In respect of passive correal obligation this was altered by Justinian's constitution in Cod. 8. 41. 28, which enacted that the debt should not be extinguished by litis contestatio, but only by satisfaction of the creditor: for active correal obligation the old rule seems to have continued, Dig. 45. 2. 2; 46. 2. 31. 1. Further consequences of the unity of the obligation are that any act of a correus debendi, by which its performance becomes impossible or more difficult, prejudices the rest: 'ex duobus reis eiusdem Stichi promittendi factis alterius factum alteri quoque nocet' Dig. 45. 2. 18: as also does the interruption of prescription by one of them only.

But the subjective relation of the correi to the obligation need not

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be the same. Hence, as is said in Bk. iii. 16. 2, one correus debendi may be bound 'pure,' another sub condicione: one may be entitled or bound as principal, another only as accessory, as in the case of stipulator and adstipulator, Gaius iii. 110-114, or of debitor and fideiussor, Bk. iii. 20: or one may be in mora without prejudicing the rest, Dig. 22. 1. 32. 4: and other events, though not destroying the objective existence of the obligation, may modify the relation to it of this or that correus. Thus, for the operation of confusio (p. 467 supr.) cf. Dig. 46. 1. 71 pr. 'sed cum duo rei promittendi sunt, et alteri heres extitit creditor, iusta dubitatio est, utrum alter quoque liberatus est, ac si soluta fuisset obligatio, an persona tantum exempta, confusa obligatione et puto aditione hereditatis confusione obligationis eximi personam: ... igitur alterum reum eiusdem pecuniae non liberari'; for capitis deminutio, Dig. 45. 2. 19 'cum duo eandem pecuniam debent, si unus capitis deminutione exemptus est obligatione, alter non liberatur'; for liberatio legata (Bk. ii. 20. 13 supr.), Dig. 34. 3. 3. 3 'si quidem mihi liberatio sit legata, . . . . et cum alio sim debitor, puta duo rei fuimus promittendi, et mihi soli testator consultum voluit, agendo consequar, non ut accepto liberer, ne etiam correus meus liberetur contra testatoris voluntatem, sed pacto liberabor.' Where the creditor agreed by pactum de non petendo not to sue one of two or more correi debendi, the other or rest could take advantage of the pactum only if, as it is said, it was in rem (see on Bk. iv. 14. 4 inf.), even though partners of the other, Dig. 2. 14. 25. 1, 'multum enim interest, utrum res ipsa solvatur, an persona liberetur' Dig. 45. 2. 19, 'in rem pacta omnibus prosunt, quorum obligationem dissolutam esse eius, qui paciscebatur, interfuit' Dig. 2. 14. 21. 5. Hence the pactum de non petendo in rem of one correus debendi benefits the rest whenever on payment by one of them he would have regressus against the others, for otherwise the pactum would be practically inoperative. But if, conversely, one of two or more correal creditors concluded a pactum de non petendo with their joint debtor, the latter could in no case plead it in defence to an action instituted by the other or others: 'si unus ex argentariis sociis cum debitore pactus sit, an etiam alteri noceat exceptio? Neratius, Atilicinus, Proculus, nec si in rem pactus sit, alteri nocere: tantum enim constitutum, ut alter solidum petere possit' Dig. 2. 14. 27 pr.

Correal obligation might arise (1) from contract, usually stipulation in the form given in Bk. iii. 16 pr., though it seems to have been also possible, first to make an ordinary stipulation, followed by another in which the same performance was promised by the same promisor to

another promisee, or to the same promisee by another promisor (e. g. adstipulatio and fideiussio): in bonae fidei contracts correal obligation could be produced by a pactum adiectum directed to this purpose, Dig. 16. 3. 1. 44; 45. 2. 9; (2) from testament, by the testator charging a legacy on one or other of his heirs in the alternative, Dig. 30. 8. 1; 32. 25 pr. To create an active correal obligation by will the testator must state this as his intention explicitly. (3) The obligation was also correal in the cases of express or implied agency pursued by the actiones adiectitiae qualitatis, de peculio, de in rem verso, quod iussu, exercitoria and institoria (see note on Bk. iv. 7 pr. inf.). (4) In a banking partnership the socii were liable correally on all their business transactions, whether entered into by one or all of them, Dig. 2. 14. 9 pr.; 4. 8. 34 pr.; see on Bk. iii. 25. 9. (5) Joint owners of a slave who committed a delict, or of an animal which did damage, were correal debtors in respect of the noxal action, Bk. iv. 8 inf. Dig. 9. 1. 1. 14; 9. 4. 8; 11. 1. 7, ib. 8, ib. 20 pr.

It appears to be the better opinion that a paying correal debtor had not, as such, a ius regressus against the rest (Dig. 35. 2. 62 pr.; cf. Tit. 20. 4 inf.), unless he and they were partners, Dig. loc. cit., or unless, and here only so far as, they had been benefited by the debt which he had discharged, Cod. 8. 40. 2. Savigny contends (Obl. §§ 23-25) that the ius regressus existed in all cases, on the ground that a correal debtor, when sued, could always meet the plaintiff by exceptio doli, unless the latter consented to transfer to him his rights of action against the other correi debendi, and that, when such a cessio could be insisted upon, utiles actiones were in the later Roman law always granted under the fiction that it had actually been made. But that the so-called beneficium cedendarum actionum belonged to every correal debtor as such who paid is far from certain nor is Savigny's other assumption correct, that in every case in which it did exist a fictitious cessio was recognised: for though a paying fideiussor could insist on an actual cessio it is certain he had no regressus against cosureties, Gaius iii. 122, Bk. iii. 20. 4 supr., Dig. 46. 1. 39, Cod. 8. 41. II.

The beneficium divisionis, or right to be sued for only an aliquot share of the debt, belonged to correi debendi only in particular cases, and by special enactment: it was granted to fideiussors by the epistola Hadriani, Bk. iii. 20. 4, and from these was extended to mandators, Cod. 4. 18. 3: Justinian gave it to persons jointly liable on a constitutum, Cod. ib. The effect of Nov. 99 on this branch of law is too much a matter of dispute to admit of discussion.

EXCURSUS VIII

THE ROMAN LITERAL CONTRACT AND ITS HISTORY

THE true old Roman literal contract, commonly called expensilatio, which apparently began to be disused soon after the fall of the Republic, was concluded by the creditor's making, with the debtor's assent, an entry in his domestic account-book or ledger (codex, tabulae) of so much as advanced by him to the latter (expensum ferre), the transaction thus having the appearance of an advance or loan. Such a written entry was not mere evidence of a contract binding on some other ground-res, verba, or consensus: by itself it laid the debtor under a legal obligation to repay the sum in question: ' in nominibus alius expensum ferendo obligat' Gaius iii. 137. There are at least two passages (Cic. ad Att. 4. ep. 18, Valerius Maximus 8. 2. 2) which prove that expensilatio was a mode of creating a new and original obligation. But it seems most ordinarily to have been employed for the purpose of Novation (Bk. iii. 29. 3), when apparently it was called transcriptio, and the entry 'nomen transcripticium' Gaius iii. 128: and in the form transcriptio a persona in personam ('veluti si id quod mihi Titius debet, tibi id expensum tulero' Gaius loc. cit.), it must among business men have been of great value in the simplification and settlement of outstanding accounts. The main object of transcriptio seems to have been the substitution of a strict civil law for a iuris gentium contract; or, as Mr. Poste puts it, 'to metamorphose claims recoverable by actions ex fide bona, e. g. locati conducti, empti venditi, which in many points favoured the defendant, into debts recoverable by the short and sharp remedy of the civil action of condictio, which, when brought for certa pecunia credita, was the more formidable to a dishonest litigant, as it was accompanied by a sponsio poenalis, whereby the vanquished party forfeited a third of the sum in litigation, in addition, if he was the defendant, to the original claim.' That this was its main use seems more than probable on a priori grounds, for it is clear that if 30l. are due to a man on a sale (e. g.), he will prefer to secure by novation a remedy by which he can recover 40%.; and the conclusion is made absolutely certain by a consideration of the only case in which a iuris gentium contract was not 'novated' by entry in the codex. Gaius tells us (iii. 131)

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