Handbook of the Roman Law,

Predný obal
T. & J. W. Johnson, 1883 - 616 strán (strany)
 

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Populárne pasáže

Strana 103 - ROMAN ANTIQUITIES : or an Account of the Manners and Customs of the Romans.
Strana 217 - ... nee interest, feras bestias et volucres utrum in suo fundo quisque capiat, an in alieno: plane qui in alienum fundum ingreditur venandi aut aucupandi gratia, potest a domino, si is providerit, prohiberi ne ingrediatur.
Strana 49 - And we shall not be far wrong, if we determine its date as about the end of the fourth, or the beginning of the fifth century before Christ.
Strana 203 - Ex contrario plures eandem rem in solidum possidere non possunt: contra naturam quippe est, ut, cum ego aliquid teneam, tu quoque id tenere videaris.
Strana 214 - ... the right to dispose of the | substance of a thing in every legal way, to ' possess it, to use it, and to exclude every ! one else from interfering with it.
Strana 117 - ... the withdrawal of those of his rights which are of a public nature. A right of privacy in matters purely private is therefore derived from natural law. This idea is embraced in the Roman's conception of justice, which "was not simply the external legality of acts, but the accord of external acts with the precepts of the law, prompted by internal impulse and free volition.
Strana 29 - Constitutio principis est, quod imperator decreto vel edicto, vel epistola constituit, nee unquam dubitatum, quin id legis, vicem obtineat, cum ipse imperator per legem imperium accipiat.
Strana 11 - Dirksen ( Uebersicht der bisherigen Versuche zur Kritik und Herstellung des Textes der Zwolf-Tafel-Fragmente).
Strana 17 - ut legum quae comitiis centuriatis ferrentur ante initum suffragium patres auctores fierent...
Strana 58 - The former mode of citing was by titles and initial words, thus : D. de jure dotium, L. profectitia, § si pater ; or vice versa, L. profectitia, § si pater, D. de jure dotium. From this afterwards originated the following : L. profectitia 5, § si pater 6, D. de jure dotium ; and lastly, L. 5. § 6. D. de jure dotium, which is the form now commonly used by the continental jurists of Europe.

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