<p><SPAN name="link442HCH0006" id="link442HCH0006"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Chapter XLIV: Idea Of The Roman Jurisprudence.—Part VI. </h2>
<p>The relation of guardian and ward, or in Roman words of tutor and pupil,
which covers so many titles of the Institutes and Pandects, <SPAN href="#link44note-136" name="link44noteref-136" id="link44noteref-136">136</SPAN>
is of a very simple and uniform nature. The person and property of an
orphan must always be trusted to the custody of some discreet friend. If
the deceased father had not signified his choice, the agnats, or paternal
kindred of the nearest degree, were compelled to act as the natural
guardians: the Athenians were apprehensive of exposing the infant to the
power of those most interested in his death; but an axiom of Roman
jurisprudence has pronounced, that the charge of tutelage should
constantly attend the emolument of succession. If the choice of the
father, and the line of consanguinity, afforded no efficient guardian, the
failure was supplied by the nomination of the praetor of the city, or the
president of the province. But the person whom they named to this public
office might be legally excused by insanity or blindness, by ignorance or
inability, by previous enmity or adverse interest, by the number of
children or guardianships with which he was already burdened, and by the
immunities which were granted to the useful labors of magistrates,
lawyers, physicians, and professors. Till the infant could speak, and
think, he was represented by the tutor, whose authority was finally
determined by the age of puberty. Without his consent, no act of the pupil
could bind himself to his own prejudice, though it might oblige others for
his personal benefit. It is needless to observe, that the tutor often gave
security, and always rendered an account, and that the want of diligence
or integrity exposed him to a civil and almost criminal action for the
violation of his sacred trust. The age of puberty had been rashly fixed by
the civilians at fourteen; <SPAN href="#link44note-1361"
name="link44noteref-1361" id="link44noteref-1361">1361</SPAN> but as the
faculties of the mind ripen more slowly than those of the body, a curator
was interposed to guard the fortunes of a Roman youth from his own
inexperience and headstrong passions. Such a trustee had been first
instituted by the praetor, to save a family from the blind havoc of a
prodigal or madman; and the minor was compelled, by the laws, to solicit
the same protection, to give validity to his acts till he accomplished the
full period of twenty-five years. Women were condemned to the perpetual
tutelage of parents, husbands, or guardians; a sex created to please and
obey was never supposed to have attained the age of reason and experience.
Such, at least, was the stern and haughty spirit of the ancient law, which
had been insensibly mollified before the time of Justinian.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-136" id="link44note-136">
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<p class="foot">
136 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-136">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See the article of
guardians and wards in the Institutes, (l. i. tit. xiii.—xxvi.,) the
Pandects, (l. xxvi. xxvii.,) and the Code, (l. v. tit. xxviii.—lxx.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-1361" id="link44note-1361">
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<p class="foot">
1361 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-1361">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Gibbon accuses the
civilians of having "rashly fixed the age of puberty at twelve or fourteen
years." It was not so; before Justinian, no law existed on this subject.
Ulpian relates the discussions which took place on this point among the
different sects of civilians. See the Institutes, l. i. tit. 22, and the
fragments of Ulpian. Nor was the curatorship obligatory for all minors.—W.]</p>
<p>II. The original right of property can only be justified by the accident
or merit of prior occupancy; and on this foundation it is wisely
established by the philosophy of the civilians. <SPAN href="#link44note-137"
name="link44noteref-137" id="link44noteref-137">137</SPAN> The savage who
hollows a tree, inserts a sharp stone into a wooden handle, or applies a
string to an elastic branch, becomes in a state of nature the just
proprietor of the canoe, the bow, or the hatchet. The materials were
common to all, the new form, the produce of his time and simple industry,
belongs solely to himself. His hungry brethren cannot, without a sense of
their own injustice, extort from the hunter the game of the forest
overtaken or slain by his personal strength and dexterity. If his
provident care preserves and multiplies the tame animals, whose nature is
tractable to the arts of education, he acquires a perpetual title to the
use and service of their numerous progeny, which derives its existence
from him alone. If he encloses and cultivates a field for their sustenance
and his own, a barren waste is converted into a fertile soil; the seed,
the manure, the labor, create a new value, and the rewards of harvest are
painfully earned by the fatigues of the revolving year. In the successive
states of society, the hunter, the shepherd, the husbandman, may defend
their possessions by two reasons which forcibly appeal to the feelings of
the human mind: that whatever they enjoy is the fruit of their own
industry; and that every man who envies their felicity, may purchase
similar acquisitions by the exercise of similar diligence. Such, in truth,
may be the freedom and plenty of a small colony cast on a fruitful island.
But the colony multiplies, while the space still continues the same; the
common rights, the equal inheritance of mankind. are engrossed by the bold
and crafty; each field and forest is circumscribed by the landmarks of a
jealous master; and it is the peculiar praise of the Roman jurisprudence,
that i asserts the claim of the first occupant to the wild animals of the
earth, the air, and the waters. In the progress from primitive equity to
final injustice, the steps are silent, the shades are almost
imperceptible, and the absolute monopoly is guarded by positive laws and
artificial reason. The active, insatiate principle of self-love can alone
supply the arts of life and the wages of industry; and as soon as civil
government and exclusive property have been introduced, they become
necessary to the existence of the human race. Except in the singular
institutions of Sparta, the wisest legislators have disapproved an
agrarian law as a false and dangerous innovation. Among the Romans, the
enormous disproportion of wealth surmounted the ideal restraints of a
doubtful tradition, and an obsolete statute; a tradition that the poorest
follower of Romulus had been endowed with the perpetual inheritance of two
jugera; <SPAN href="#link44note-138" name="link44noteref-138" id="link44noteref-138">138</SPAN> a statute which confined the richest
citizen to the measure of five hundred jugera, or three hundred and twelve
acres of land. The original territory of Rome consisted only of some miles
of wood and meadow along the banks of the Tyber; and domestic exchange
could add nothing to the national stock. But the goods of an alien or
enemy were lawfully exposed to the first hostile occupier; the city was
enriched by the profitable trade of war; and the blood of her sons was the
only price that was paid for the Volscian sheep, the slaves of Briton, or
the gems and gold of Asiatic kingdoms. In the language of ancient
jurisprudence, which was corrupted and forgotten before the age of
Justinian, these spoils were distinguished by the name of manceps or
manicipium, taken with the hand; and whenever they were sold or
emancipated, the purchaser required some assurance that they had been the
property of an enemy, and not of a fellow-citizen. <SPAN href="#link44note-139" name="link44noteref-139" id="link44noteref-139">139</SPAN>
A citizen could only forfeit his rights by apparent dereliction, and such
dereliction of a valuable interest could not easily be presumed. Yet,
according to the Twelve Tables, a prescription of one year for movables,
and of two years for immovables, abolished the claim of the ancient
master, if the actual possessor had acquired them by a fair transaction
from the person whom he believed to be the lawful proprietor. <SPAN href="#link44note-140" name="link44noteref-140" id="link44noteref-140">140</SPAN>
Such conscientious injustice, without any mixture of fraud or force could
seldom injure the members of a small republic; but the various periods of
three, of ten, or of twenty years, determined by Justinian, are more
suitable to the latitude of a great empire. It is only in the term of
prescription that the distinction of real and personal fortune has been
remarked by the civilians; and their general idea of property is that of
simple, uniform, and absolute dominion. The subordinate exceptions of use,
of usufruct, <SPAN href="#link44note-141" name="link44noteref-141" id="link44noteref-141">141</SPAN> of servitude, <SPAN href="#link44note-142"
name="link44noteref-142" id="link44noteref-142">142</SPAN> imposed for the
benefit of a neighbor on lands and houses, are abundantly explained by the
professors of jurisprudence. The claims of property, as far as they are
altered by the mixture, the division, or the transformation of substances,
are investigated with metaphysical subtilty by the same civilians.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-137" id="link44note-137">
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<p class="foot">
137 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-137">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Institut. l. ii. tit
i. ii. Compare the pure and precise reasoning of Caius and Heineccius (l.
ii. tit. i. p. 69-91) with the loose prolixity of Theophilus, (p. 207—265.)
The opinions of Ulpian are preserved in the Pandects, (l. i. tit. viii.
leg. 41, No. 1.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-138" id="link44note-138">
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<p class="foot">
138 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-138">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The heredium of the
first Romans is defined by Varro, (de Re Rustica, l. i. c. ii. p. 141, c.
x. p. 160, 161, edit. Gesner,) and clouded by Pliny's declamation, (Hist.
Natur. xviii. 2.) A just and learned comment is given in the
Administration des Terres chez les Romains, (p. 12—66.) Note: On the
duo jugera, compare Niebuhr, vol. i. p. 337.—M.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-139" id="link44note-139">
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<p class="foot">
139 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-139">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The res mancipi is
explained from faint and remote lights by Ulpian (Fragment. tit. xviii. p.
618, 619) and Bynkershoek, (Opp tom. i. p. 306—315.) The definition
is somewhat arbitrary; and as none except myself have assigned a reason, I
am diffident of my own.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-140" id="link44note-140">
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<p class="foot">
140 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-140">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ From this short
prescription, Hume (Essays, vol. i. p. 423) infers that there could not
then be more order and settlement in Italy than now amongst the Tartars.
By the civilian of his adversary Wallace, he is reproached, and not
without reason, for overlooking the conditions, (Institut. l. ii. tit.
vi.) * Note: Gibbon acknowledges, in the former note, the obscurity of his
views with regard to the res mancipi. The interpreters, who preceded him,
are not agreed on this point, one of the most difficult in the ancient
Roman law. The conclusions of Hume, of which the author here speaks, are
grounded on false assumptions. Gibbon had conceived very inaccurate
notions of Property among the Romans, and those of many authors in the
present day are not less erroneous. We think it right, in this place, to
develop the system of property among the Romans, as the result of the
study of the extant original authorities on the ancient law, and as it has
been demonstrated, recognized, and adopted by the most learned expositors
of the Roman law. Besides the authorities formerly known, such as the
Fragments of Ulpian, t. xix. and t. i. 16. Theoph. Paraph. i. 5, 4, may be
consulted the Institutes of Gaius, i. 54, and ii. 40, et seq. The Roman
laws protected all property acquired in a lawful manner. They imposed on
those who had invaded it, the obligation of making restitution and
reparation of all damage caused by that invasion; they punished it
moreover, in many cases, by a pecuniary fine. But they did not always
grant a recovery against the third person, who had become bona fide
possessed of the property. He who had obtained possession of a thing
belonging to another, knowing nothing of the prior rights of that person,
maintained the possession. The law had expressly determined those cases,
in which it permitted property to be reclaimed from an innocent possessor.
In these cases possession had the characters of absolute proprietorship,
called mancipium, jus Quiritium. To possess this right, it was not
sufficient to have entered into possession of the thing in any manner; the
acquisition was bound to have that character of publicity, which was given
by the observation of solemn forms, prescribed by the laws, or the
uninterrupted exercise of proprietorship during a certain time: the Roman
citizen alone could acquire this proprietorship. Every other kind of
possession, which might be named imperfect proprietorship, was called "in
bonis habere." It was not till after the time of Cicero that the general
name of Dominium was given to all proprietorship. It was then the
publicity which constituted the distinctive character of absolute
dominion. This publicity was grounded on the mode of acquisition, which
the moderns have called Civil, (Modi adquirendi Civiles.) These modes of
acquisition were, 1. Mancipium or mancipatio, which was nothing but the
solemn delivering over of the thing in the presence of a determinate
number of witnesses and a public officer; it was from this probably that
proprietorship was named, 2. In jure cessio, which was a solemn delivering
over before the praetor. 3. Adjudicatio, made by a judge, in a case of
partition. 4. Lex, which comprehended modes of acquiring in particular
cases determined by law; probably the law of the xii. tables; for
instance, the sub corona emptio and the legatum. 5. Usna, called
afterwards usacapio, and by the moderns prescription. This was only a year
for movables; two years for things not movable. Its primary object was
altogether different from that of prescription in the present day. It was
originally introduced in order to transform the simple possession of a
thing (in bonis habere) into Roman proprietorship. The public and
uninterrupted possession of a thing, enjoyed for the space of one or two
years, was sufficient to make known to the inhabitants of the city of Rome
to whom the thing belonged. This last mode of acquisition completed the
system of civil acquisitions. by legalizing. as it were, every other kind
of acquisition which was not conferred, from the commencement, by the Jus
Quiritium. V. Ulpian. Fragm. i. 16. Gaius, ii. 14. We believe, according
to Gaius, 43, that this usucaption was extended to the case where a thing
had been acquired from a person not the real proprietor; and that
according to the time prescribed, it gave to the possessor the Roman
proprietorship. But this does not appear to have been the original design
of this Institution. Caeterum etiam earum rerum usucapio nobis competit,
quae non a domino nobis tradita fuerint, si modo eas bona fide acceperimus
Gaius, l ii. 43. As to things of smaller value, or those which it was
difficult to distinguish from each other, the solemnities of which we
speak were not requisite to obtain legal proprietorship. In this case
simple delivery was sufficient. In proportion to the aggrandizement of the
Republic, this latter principle became more important from the increase of
the commerce and wealth of the state. It was necessary to know what were
those things of which absolute property might be acquired by simple
delivery, and what, on the contrary, those, the acquisition of which must
be sanctioned by these solemnities. This question was necessarily to be
decided by a general rule; and it is this rule which establishes the
distinction between res mancipi and nec mancipi, a distinction about which
the opinions of modern civilians differ so much that there are above ten
conflicting systems on the subject. The system which accords best with a
sound interpretation of the Roman laws, is that proposed by M. Trekel of
Hamburg, and still further developed by M. Hugo, who has extracted it in
the Magazine of Civil Law, vol. ii. p. 7. This is the system now almost
universally adopted. Res mancipi (by contraction for mancipii) were things
of which the absolute property (Jus Quiritium) might be acquired only by
the solemnities mentioned above, at least by that of mancipation, which
was, without doubt, the most easy and the most usual. Gaius, ii. 25. As
for other things, the acquisition of which was not subject to these forms,
in order to confer absolute right, they were called res nec mancipi. See
Ulpian, Fragm. xix. 1. 3, 7. Ulpian and Varro enumerate the different
kinds of res mancipi. Their enumerations do not quite agree; and various
methods of reconciling them have been attempted. The authority of Ulpian,
however, who wrote as a civilian, ought to have the greater weight on this
subject. But why are these things alone res mancipi? This is one of the
questions which have been most frequently agitated, and on which the
opinions of civilians are most divided. M. Hugo has resolved it in the
most natural and satisfactory manner. "All things which were easily known
individually, which were of great value, with which the Romans were
acquainted, and which they highly appreciated, were res mancipi. Of old
mancipation or some other solemn form was required for the acquisition of
these things, an account of their importance. Mancipation served to prove
their acquisition, because they were easily distinguished one from the
other." On this great historical discussion consult the Magazine of Civil
Law by M. Hugo, vol. ii. p. 37, 38; the dissertation of M. J. M.
Zachariae, de Rebus Mancipi et nec Mancipi Conjecturae, p. 11. Lipsiae,
1807; the History of Civil Law by M. Hugo; and my Institutiones Juris
Romani Privati p. 108, 110. As a general rule, it may be said that all
things are res nec mancipi; the res mancipi are the exception to this
principle. The praetors changed the system of property by allowing a
person, who had a thing in bonis, the right to recover before the
prescribed term of usucaption had conferred absolute proprietorship.
(Pauliana in rem actio.) Justinian went still further, in times when there
was no longer any distinction between a Roman citizen and a stranger. He
granted the right of recovering all things which had been acquired,
whether by what were called civil or natural modes of acquisition, Cod. l.
vii. t. 25, 31. And he so altered the theory of Gaius in his Institutes,
ii. 1, that no trace remains of the doctrine taught by that civilian.—W.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-141" id="link44note-141">
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<p class="foot">
141 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-141">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See the Institutes
(l. i. tit. iv. v.) and the Pandects, (l. vii.) Noodt has composed a
learned and distinct treatise de Usufructu, (Opp. tom. i. p. 387—478.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-142" id="link44note-142">
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<p class="foot">
142 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-142">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The questions de
Servitutibus are discussed in the Institutes (l. ii. tit. iii.) and
Pandects, (l. viii.) Cicero (pro Murena, c. 9) and Lactantius (Institut.
Divin. l. i. c. i.) affect to laugh at the insignificant doctrine, de aqua
de pluvia arcenda, &c. Yet it might be of frequent use among litigious
neighbors, both in town and country.]</p>
<p>The personal title of the first proprietor must be determined by his
death: but the possession, without any appearance of change, is peaceably
continued in his children, the associates of his toil, and the partners of
his wealth. This natural inheritance has been protected by the legislators
of every climate and age, and the father is encouraged to persevere in
slow and distant improvements, by the tender hope, that a long posterity
will enjoy the fruits of his labor. The principle of hereditary succession
is universal; but the order has been variously established by convenience
or caprice, by the spirit of national institutions, or by some partial
example which was originally decided by fraud or violence. The
jurisprudence of the Romans appear to have deviated from the inequality of
nature much less than the Jewish, <SPAN href="#link44note-143"
name="link44noteref-143" id="link44noteref-143">143</SPAN> the Athenian, <SPAN href="#link44note-144" name="link44noteref-144" id="link44noteref-144">144</SPAN>
or the English institutions. <SPAN href="#link44note-145"
name="link44noteref-145" id="link44noteref-145">145</SPAN> On the death of a
citizen, all his descendants, unless they were already freed from his
paternal power, were called to the inheritance of his possessions. The
insolent prerogative of primogeniture was unknown; the two sexes were
placed on a just level; all the sons and daughters were entitled to an
equal portion of the patrimonial estate; and if any of the sons had been
intercepted by a premature death, his person was represented, and his
share was divided, by his surviving children. On the failure of the direct
line, the right of succession must diverge to the collateral branches. The
degrees of kindred <SPAN href="#link44note-146" name="link44noteref-146" id="link44noteref-146">146</SPAN> are numbered by the civilians, ascending
from the last possessor to a common parent, and descending from the common
parent to the next heir: my father stands in the first degree, my brother
in the second, his children in the third, and the remainder of the series
may be conceived by a fancy, or pictured in a genealogical table. In this
computation, a distinction was made, essential to the laws and even the
constitution of Rome; the agnats, or persons connected by a line of males,
were called, as they stood in the nearest degree, to an equal partition;
but a female was incapable of transmitting any legal claims; and the
cognats of every rank, without excepting the dear relation of a mother and
a son, were disinherited by the Twelve Tables, as strangers and aliens.
Among the Romans agens or lineage was united by a common name and domestic
rites; the various cognomens or surnames of Scipio, or Marcellus,
distinguished from each other the subordinate branches or families of the
Cornelian or Claudian race: the default of the agnats, of the same
surname, was supplied by the larger denomination of gentiles; and the
vigilance of the laws maintained, in the same name, the perpetual descent
of religion and property. A similar principle dictated the Voconian law,
<SPAN href="#link44note-147" name="link44noteref-147" id="link44noteref-147">147</SPAN>
which abolished the right of female inheritance. As long as virgins were
given or sold in marriage, the adoption of the wife extinguished the hopes
of the daughter. But the equal succession of independent matrons supported
their pride and luxury, and might transport into a foreign house the
riches of their fathers.</p>
<p>While the maxims of Cato <SPAN href="#link44note-148" name="link44noteref-148" id="link44noteref-148">148</SPAN> were revered, they tended to perpetuate in
each family a just and virtuous mediocrity: till female blandishments
insensibly triumphed; and every salutary restraint was lost in the
dissolute greatness of the republic. The rigor of the decemvirs was
tempered by the equity of the praetors. Their edicts restored and
emancipated posthumous children to the rights of nature; and upon the
failure of the agnats, they preferred the blood of the cognats to the name
of the gentiles whose title and character were insensibly covered with
oblivion. The reciprocal inheritance of mothers and sons was established
in the Tertullian and Orphitian decrees by the humanity of the senate. A
new and more impartial order was introduced by the Novels of Justinian,
who affected to revive the jurisprudence of the Twelve Tables. The lines
of masculine and female kindred were confounded: the descending,
ascending, and collateral series was accurately defined; and each degree,
according tot he proximity of blood and affection, succeeded to the vacant
possessions of a Roman citizen. <SPAN href="#link44note-149"
name="link44noteref-149" id="link44noteref-149">149</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-143" id="link44note-143">
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<p class="foot">
143 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-143">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Among the patriarchs,
the first-born enjoyed a mystic and spiritual primogeniture, (Genesis,
xxv. 31.) In the land of Canaan, he was entitled to a double portion of
inheritance, (Deuteronomy, xxi. 17, with Le Clerc's judicious
Commentary.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-144" id="link44note-144">
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<p class="foot">
144 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-144">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ At Athens, the sons
were equal; but the poor daughters were endowed at the discretion of their
brothers. See the pleadings of Isaeus, (in the viith volume of the Greek
Orators,) illustrated by the version and comment of Sir William Jones, a
scholar, a lawyer, and a man of genius.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-145" id="link44note-145">
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<p class="foot">
145 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-145">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ In England, the
eldest son also inherits all the land; a law, says the orthodox Judge
Blackstone, (Commentaries on the Laws of England, vol. ii. p. 215,) unjust
only in the opinion of younger brothers. It may be of some political use
in sharpening their industry.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-146" id="link44note-146">
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<p class="foot">
146 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-146">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Blackstone's Tables
(vol. ii. p. 202) represent and compare the decrees of the civil with
those of the canon and common law. A separate tract of Julius Paulus, de
gradibus et affinibus, is inserted or abridged in the Pandects, (l.
xxxviii. tit. x.) In the viith degrees he computes (No. 18) 1024 persons.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-147" id="link44note-147">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
147 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-147">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Voconian law was
enacted in the year of Rome 584. The younger Scipio, who was then 17 years
of age, (Frenshemius, Supplement. Livian. xlvi. 40,) found an occasion of
exercising his generosity to his mother, sisters, &c. (Polybius, tom.
ii. l. xxxi. p. 1453—1464, edit Gronov., a domestic witness.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-148" id="link44note-148">
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<p class="foot">
148 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-148">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Legem Voconiam
(Ernesti, Clavis Ciceroniana) magna voce bonis lateribus (at lxv. years of
age) suasissem, says old Cato, (de Senectute, c. 5,) Aulus Gellius (vii.
13, xvii. 6) has saved some passages.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-149" id="link44note-149">
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<p class="foot">
149 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-149">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See the law of
succession in the Institutes of Caius, (l. ii. tit. viii. p. 130—144,)
and Justinian, (l. iii. tit. i.—vi., with the Greek version of
Theophilus, p. 515-575, 588—600,) the Pandects, (l. xxxviii. tit.
vi.—xvii.,) the Code, (l. vi. tit. lv.—lx.,) and the Novels,
(cxviii.)]</p>
<p>The order of succession is regulated by nature, or at least by the general
and permanent reason of the lawgiver: but this order is frequently
violated by the arbitrary and partial wills, which prolong the dominion of
the testator beyond the grave. <SPAN href="#link44note-150"
name="link44noteref-150" id="link44noteref-150">150</SPAN> In the simple
state of society, this last use or abuse of the right of property is
seldom indulged: it was introduced at Athens by the laws of Solon; and the
private testaments of the father of a family are authorized by the Twelve
Tables. Before the time of the decemvirs, <SPAN href="#link44note-151"
name="link44noteref-151" id="link44noteref-151">151</SPAN> a Roman citizen
exposed his wishes and motives to the assembly of the thirty curiae or
parishes, and the general law of inheritance was suspended by an
occasional act of the legislature. After the permission of the decemvirs,
each private lawgiver promulgated his verbal or written testament in the
presence of five citizens, who represented the five classes of the Roman
people; a sixth witness attested their concurrence; a seventh weighed the
copper money, which was paid by an imaginary purchaser; and the estate was
emancipated by a fictitious sale and immediate release. This singular
ceremony, <SPAN href="#link44note-152" name="link44noteref-152" id="link44noteref-152">152</SPAN> which excited the wonder of the Greeks, was
still practised in the age of Severus; but the praetors had already
approved a more simple testament, for which they required the seals and
signatures of seven witnesses, free from all legal exception, and
purposely summoned for the execution of that important act. A domestic
monarch, who reigned over the lives and fortunes of his children, might
distribute their respective shares according to the degrees of their merit
or his affection; his arbitrary displeasure chastised an unworthy son by
the loss of his inheritance, and the mortifying preference of a stranger.
But the experience of unnatural parents recommended some limitations of
their testamentary powers. A son, or, by the laws of Justinian, even a
daughter, could no longer be disinherited by their silence: they were
compelled to name the criminal, and to specify the offence; and the
justice of the emperor enumerated the sole causes that could justify such
a violation of the first principles of nature and society. <SPAN href="#link44note-153" name="link44noteref-153" id="link44noteref-153">153</SPAN>
Unless a legitimate portion, a fourth part, had been reserved for the
children, they were entitled to institute an action or complaint of
inofficious testament; to suppose that their father's understanding was
impaired by sickness or age; and respectfully to appeal from his rigorous
sentence to the deliberate wisdom of the magistrate. In the Roman
jurisprudence, an essential distinction was admitted between the
inheritance and the legacies. The heirs who succeeded to the entire unity,
or to any of the twelve fractions of the substance of the testator,
represented his civil and religious character, asserted his rights,
fulfilled his obligations, and discharged the gifts of friendship or
liberality, which his last will had bequeathed under the name of legacies.
But as the imprudence or prodigality of a dying man might exhaust the
inheritance, and leave only risk and labor to his successor, he was
empowered to retain the Falcidian portion; to deduct, before the payment
of the legacies, a clear fourth for his own emolument. A reasonable time
was allowed to examine the proportion between the debts and the estate, to
decide whether he should accept or refuse the testament; and if he used
the benefit of an inventory, the demands of the creditors could not exceed
the valuation of the effects. The last will of a citizen might be altered
during his life, or rescinded after his death: the persons whom he named
might die before him, or reject the inheritance, or be exposed to some
legal disqualification. In the contemplation of these events, he was
permitted to substitute second and third heirs, to replace each other
according to the order of the testament; and the incapacity of a madman or
an infant to bequeath his property might be supplied by a similar
substitution. <SPAN href="#link44note-154" name="link44noteref-154" id="link44noteref-154">154</SPAN> But the power of the testator expired with
the acceptance of the testament: each Roman of mature age and discretion
acquired the absolute dominion of his inheritance, and the simplicity of
the civil law was never clouded by the long and intricate entails which
confine the happiness and freedom of unborn generations.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-150" id="link44note-150">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
150 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-150">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ That succession was
the rule, testament the exception, is proved by Taylor, (Elements of Civil
Law, p. 519-527,) a learned, rambling, spirited writer. In the iid and
iiid books, the method of the Institutes is doubtless preposterous; and
the Chancellor Daguesseau (Oeuvres, tom. i. p. 275) wishes his countryman
Domat in the place of Tribonian. Yet covenants before successions is not
surely the natural order of civil laws.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-151" id="link44note-151">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
151 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-151">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Prior examples of
testaments are perhaps fabulous. At Athens a childless father only could
make a will, (Plutarch, in Solone, tom. i. p. 164. See Isaeus and Jones.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-152" id="link44note-152">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
152 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-152">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The testament of
Augustus is specified by Suetonius, (in August, c. 101, in Neron. c. 4,)
who may be studied as a code of Roman antiquities. Plutarch (Opuscul. tom.
ii. p. 976) is surprised. The language of Ulpian (Fragment. tit. xx. p.
627, edit. Schulting) is almost too exclusive—solum in usu est.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-153" id="link44note-153">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
153 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-153">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Justinian (Novell.
cxv. No. 3, 4) enumerates only the public and private crimes, for which a
son might likewise disinherit his father. Note: Gibbon has singular
notions on the provisions of Novell. cxv. 3, 4, which probably he did not
clearly understand.—W]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-154" id="link44note-154">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
154 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-154">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The substitutions of
fidei-commissaires of the modern civil law is a feudal idea grafted on the
Roman jurisprudence, and bears scarcely any resemblance to the ancient
fidei-commissa, (Institutions du Droit Francois, tom. i. p. 347-383.
Denissart, Decisions de Jurisprudence, tom. iv. p. 577-604.) They were
stretched to the fourth degree by an abuse of the clixth Novel; a partial,
perplexed, declamatory law.]</p>
<p>Conquest and the formalities of law established the use of codicils. If a
Roman was surprised by death in a remote province of the empire, he
addressed a short epistle to his legitimate or testamentary heir; who
fulfilled with honor, or neglected with impunity, this last request, which
the judges before the age of Augustus were not authorized to enforce. A
codicil might be expressed in any mode, or in any language; but the
subscription of five witnesses must declare that it was the genuine
composition of the author. His intention, however laudable, was sometimes
illegal; and the invention of fidei-commissa, or trusts, arose form the
struggle between natural justice and positive jurisprudence. A stranger of
Greece or Africa might be the friend or benefactor of a childless Roman,
but none, except a fellow-citizen, could act as his heir. The Voconian
law, which abolished female succession, restrained the legacy or
inheritance of a woman to the sum of one hundred thousand sesterces; <SPAN href="#link44note-155" name="link44noteref-155" id="link44noteref-155">155</SPAN>
and an only daughter was condemned almost as an alien in her father's
house. The zeal of friendship, and parental affection, suggested a liberal
artifice: a qualified citizen was named in the testament, with a prayer or
injunction that he would restore the inheritance to the person for whom it
was truly intended. Various was the conduct of the trustees in this
painful situation: they had sworn to observe the laws of their country,
but honor prompted them to violate their oath; and if they preferred their
interest under the mask of patriotism, they forfeited the esteem of every
virtuous mind. The declaration of Augustus relieved their doubts, gave a
legal sanction to confidential testaments and codicils, and gently
unravelled the forms and restraints of the republican jurisprudence. <SPAN href="#link44note-156" name="link44noteref-156" id="link44noteref-156">156</SPAN>
But as the new practice of trusts degenerated into some abuse, the trustee
was enabled, by the Trebellian and Pegasian decrees, to reserve one fourth
of the estate, or to transfer on the head of the real heir all the debts
and actions of the succession. The interpretation of testaments was strict
and literal; but the language of trusts and codicils was delivered from
the minute and technical accuracy of the civilians. <SPAN href="#link44note-157" name="link44noteref-157" id="link44noteref-157">157</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-155" id="link44note-155">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
155 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-155">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Dion Cassius (tom.
ii. l. lvi. p. 814, with Reimar's Notes) specifies in Greek money the sum
of 25,000 drachms.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-156" id="link44note-156">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
156 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-156">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The revolutions of
the Roman laws of inheritance are finely, though sometimes fancifully,
deduced by Montesquieu, (Esprit des Loix, l. xxvii.)]</p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-157" id="link44note-157">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
157 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-157">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Of the civil
jurisprudence of successions, testaments, codicils, legacies, and trusts,
the principles are ascertained in the Institutes of Caius, (l. ii. tit.
ii.—ix. p. 91—144,) Justinian, (l. ii. tit. x.—xxv.,)
and Theophilus, (p. 328—514;) and the immense detail occupies twelve
books (xxviii.—xxxix.) of the Pandects.] III. The general duties of
mankind are imposed by their public and private relations: but their
specific obligations to each other can only be the effect of, 1. a
promise, 2. a benefit, or 3. an injury: and when these obligations are
ratified by law, the interested party may compel the performance by a
judicial action. On this principle, the civilians of every country have
erected a similar jurisprudence, the fair conclusion of universal reason
and justice. <SPAN href="#link44note-158" name="link44noteref-158" id="link44noteref-158">158</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="link44note-158" id="link44note-158">
<!-- Note --></SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
158 (<SPAN href="#link44noteref-158">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ The Institutes of
Caius, (l. ii. tit. ix. x. p. 144—214,) of Justinian, (l. iii. tit.
xiv.—xxx. l. iv. tit. i.—vi.,) and of Theophilus, (p. 616—837,)
distinguish four sorts of obligations—aut re, aut verbis, aut
literis aut consensu: but I confess myself partial to my own division.
Note: It is not at all applicable to the Roman system of contracts, even
if I were allowed to be good.—M.]</p>
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