Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ERRATA, ADDENDA, AND LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
- LIST OF PRINCIPAL ABBREVIATIONS
- PART I CONDITION OF THE SLAVE
- PART II ENSLAVEMENT AND RELEASE FROM SLAVERY
- CHAPTER XVII Enslavement
- CHAPTER XVIII Enslavement (cont.)
- CHAPTER XIX Outline of Law of Manumission during the Republic
- CHAPTER XX Manumission during the Empire. Forms
- CHAPTER XXI Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Manumission by Will (cont.). Dies, Conditio, Institutio
- CHAPTER XXII Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Fideicommissary Gifts
- CHAPTER XXIII Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Statutory Changes
- CHAPTER XXIV Manumission under Justinian
- CHAPTER XXV Manumission. Special Cases and Minor Restrictions
- CHAPTER XXVI Freedom independent of Manumission
- CHAPTER XXVII Freedom without Manumission. Uncompleted Manumission
- CHAPTER XXVIII Questions of Status as affected by Lapse of Time, Death, Judicial Decision, etc.
- CHAPTER XXIX Effect after Manumission of Events during Slavery. Obligatio Naturalis
- APPENDIX I The relation of the contractual actions adiectitiae qualitatis to the Theory of Representation
- APPENDIX II Formulation and Litis Consumptio in the actions adiectitiae qualitatis
- APPENDIX III Form used by Slave in acquisition by Mancipatio, etc.
- APPENDIX IV The essential character of Manumission: Iteratio
- APPENDIX V Manumission vindicta by a, filiusfamilias
- INDEX
CHAPTER XXVII - Freedom without Manumission. Uncompleted Manumission
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- ERRATA, ADDENDA, AND LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
- LIST OF PRINCIPAL ABBREVIATIONS
- PART I CONDITION OF THE SLAVE
- PART II ENSLAVEMENT AND RELEASE FROM SLAVERY
- CHAPTER XVII Enslavement
- CHAPTER XVIII Enslavement (cont.)
- CHAPTER XIX Outline of Law of Manumission during the Republic
- CHAPTER XX Manumission during the Empire. Forms
- CHAPTER XXI Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Manumission by Will (cont.). Dies, Conditio, Institutio
- CHAPTER XXII Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Fideicommissary Gifts
- CHAPTER XXIII Manumission during the Empire (cont.). Statutory Changes
- CHAPTER XXIV Manumission under Justinian
- CHAPTER XXV Manumission. Special Cases and Minor Restrictions
- CHAPTER XXVI Freedom independent of Manumission
- CHAPTER XXVII Freedom without Manumission. Uncompleted Manumission
- CHAPTER XXVIII Questions of Status as affected by Lapse of Time, Death, Judicial Decision, etc.
- CHAPTER XXIX Effect after Manumission of Events during Slavery. Obligatio Naturalis
- APPENDIX I The relation of the contractual actions adiectitiae qualitatis to the Theory of Representation
- APPENDIX II Formulation and Litis Consumptio in the actions adiectitiae qualitatis
- APPENDIX III Form used by Slave in acquisition by Mancipatio, etc.
- APPENDIX IV The essential character of Manumission: Iteratio
- APPENDIX V Manumission vindicta by a, filiusfamilias
- INDEX
Summary
There are several types of case to consider.
I. Concubina. Justinian provided that if a man having no wife made a slave his concubine, and she so remained till his death, he saying nothing as to her status, she became free and her children ingenui, keeping their peculia, and subject to no patronal rights in the heres. This applied only if the will contained no provisions, e.g. a legacy of them, shewing a contrary intent. After varying legislation on legitimation3he further provided that if the dominus freed an ancilla and afterwards married her with written instrumenta dotis, the children already born should be ingenui for all purposes. It is idle to look for legal principle under these rules.
II. Cases of prima facie abortive gift. We have already considered the cases in which a beneficiary could be compelled to accept, so that, gifts took effect, and we shall soon consider the effect of refusal to carry out the gift after acceptance. Apart from this a gift failed if the gift or instrument on which it depended failed to take effect. But cases of exceptional relief were rather numerous. The following list cannot claim completeness.
(a) Relief against failure to enter under the will.
(i) An institutus enters ab intestato, omissa causa testamenti. The gift is good, retaining its modalities.
(ii) Suus heres institutus abstains. The gift is good if not in fraudem creditorum, which on such facts it is likely to be.
(iii) If the heres abstains for a price, he is compellable to buy the slave and free him.
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- The Roman Law of SlaveryThe Condition of the Slave in Private Law from Augustus to Justinian, pp. 609 - 646Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010