Page images
PDF
EPUB

SOHM'S

INSTITUTES OF ROMAN LAW

LEDLIE

London

HENRY FROWDE

&

STEVENS AND SONS, LIMITED

DGMMINAL

NVSTIO

New York

MACMILLAN & CO

112 FOURTH AVENUE

[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

JAMES CRAWFORD LEDLIE, B.C.L., M.A.

OF THE MIDDLE TEMPLE, BARRISTER-AT-LAW

AND OF LINCOLN COLLEGE, oxford

WITH AN INTRODUCTORY ESSAY

BY

ERWIN GRUEBER, DR. JUR., M.A.

OF BALLIOL COLLEGE

READER IN ROMAN LAW IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD

Oxford

AT THE CLARENDON PRESS

LONDON: HENRY FROWDE

OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE, AMEN CORNER

AND

STEVENS & SONS, LIMITED

119 & 120 CHANCERY LANE

M DCCC XCII

вс

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE

IN translating Professor Sohm's Treatise on Roman Law I have been obliged to follow an arrangement, and to avail myself of expressions, to which, in some instances, English readers, not familiar with the terminology and methods of exposition in use among German jurists, will perhaps be inclined to take exception. Such a phrase as 'obligatory right,' or 'petitory action,' or 'heir by necessity,' will strike them as no less strange than the arrangement which treats of the law of procedure under the heading of the law of property. But where the object is to produce a close and faithful translation, the order of the original must, I conceive, be strictly adhered to; and where phrases such as 'Forderungsrecht,' 'petitorische Klage,' 'Noterbe,' occur, for which we have no equivalent at all, or, at any rate, no recognised rendering, translations must be found which, if they are to be accurate, must of necessity be more or less unfamiliar. And this unfamiliarity will not be without its advantages if it saves the student from erroneously importing into a German treatise the ideas associated with some of the commoner terms of English jurisprudence.

I have to express my thanks to Sir William Markby and Mr. E. A. Whittuck for many useful suggestions made during the progress of the translation.

J. C. L.

« PreviousContinue »