Imperatoris Iustiniani Institutionum Libri Quattuor: With Introductions, Commentary, Excursus and Translation, Volume 1John Baron Moyle Clarendon Press, 1883 - Institutiones |
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Page 18
... person must be governed by private law , and thus it is to the plebeian element in the state that the main ... persons who were no part of the populus ; exactly then as the members of the latter ( who had now come to be called patricians ) ...
... person must be governed by private law , and thus it is to the plebeian element in the state that the main ... persons who were no part of the populus ; exactly then as the members of the latter ( who had now come to be called patricians ) ...
Page 67
... person and person defined and determined by a rule of law : this determination by a rule of law consisting in the assignment of a sphere or province to the individual will , in which it is supreme and inde- pendent of every other will ...
... person and person defined and determined by a rule of law : this determination by a rule of law consisting in the assignment of a sphere or province to the individual will , in which it is supreme and inde- pendent of every other will ...
Page 68
... person , and the external world ; the latter again being divided into reasonable and unreasonable , or persons and things . As regards one's own person , our attention is at once directed to the so - called primordial rights , or rights ...
... person , and the external world ; the latter again being divided into reasonable and unreasonable , or persons and things . As regards one's own person , our attention is at once directed to the so - called primordial rights , or rights ...
Page 69
... person is regarded as an individual atom , standing apart by himself ; here he is regarded as a being incomplete , and finding his completeness in the great interconnection of nature . This is especially observable in two points : ( a ) ...
... person is regarded as an individual atom , standing apart by himself ; here he is regarded as a being incomplete , and finding his completeness in the great interconnection of nature . This is especially observable in two points : ( a ) ...
Page 78
... persons ' and ' the law of things , ' though in a sense differing consider- ably from that in which it was understood by the Roman lawyers , and then either to find fault with the latter for not having meant the same as the writer , or ...
... persons ' and ' the law of things , ' though in a sense differing consider- ably from that in which it was understood by the Roman lawyers , and then either to find fault with the latter for not having meant the same as the writer , or ...
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Common terms and phrases
action actionem agnates alia aliena autem bona fide bonorum possessio capitis deminutio causa civil condictio contract creditor cuius debet debtor delict dominus eius enactment enim eorum erit etiam exceptio facere factum familias fidei fideicommissa fideicommissum fuerit furti furtum Gaius 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 liability liberi licet manumission modo neque nihil nisi obligatio obligation pater person plaintiff poena possessio possession 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 119 - Modestinus, who says (Dig. 23. 2. 1), 'nuptiae sunt coniunctio maris et feminae, et consortium omnis vitae, divini et humani iuris communicatio.
Page 392 - Dig. 45. 2. 12. pr., so that correality or joint liability results from the principle 'ubi ambigua oratio est, commodissimum est id accipi, quo res, de qua agitur, magis valeat quam pereat
Page 505 - Furti actio, sive dupli, sive quadrupli, tantum ad poenae persecutionem pertinet. Nam ipsius rei persecutionem extrinsecus habet dominus, quam aut vindicando aut condicendo potest auferre. Sed vindicatio quidem adversus possessorem est, sive fur ipse possidet, sive alius quilibet; condictio autem adversus ipsum furem heredemve ejus, licet non possideat, competit.
Page 23 - ... unde olim patricii dicebant plebiscitis se non teneri, quia sine auctoritate eorum facta essent ; sed postea lex Hortensia lata est, qua cautum est, ut plebiscita universum populum tenerent: itaque eo modo legibus exaequata sunt.
Page 384 - In hac quaestione totius ob rem dati tractatus inspici potest qui in his competit speciebus: aut enim do tibi ut des; aut do ut facias ; aut facio ut des ; aut facio ut facias.
Page 254 - ... extiterit, proinde fit heres is cui in iure cesserit, ac si ipse per legem ad hereditatem...
Page 510 - qui servum servamve alienum alienamve, quadrupedem vel pecudem iniuria occiderit, quanti id in eo anno plurimi fuit, tantum aes dare domino damnas esto.
Page 630 - It is not difficult to understand why fictions in all their forms are particularly congenial to the infancy of society. They satisfy the desire for improvement, which is not quite wanting, at the same time that they do not offend the superstitious disrelish for change which is always present.
Page 518 - Caesare gehört als abl. abs. zu bona si quis condiderit; laudatus tritt nachträglich hinzu. — opprobriis dignum, denn eum qui nocentem infamavit, non esse bonum aequum ob eam rem condemnari: peccata enim nocentium nota esse et oportere et expedire lehrt Paulus fDig.
Page 457 - Quare autem omnino tam improba possessio et usucapio concessa - sit, ilia ratio est quod voluerunt veteres maturius hereditates adiri, ut essent qui sacra facerent, quorum illis temporibus summa observatio fuit, et ut creditores haberent, a quo suum consequerentur.