登陆注册
15752600000082

第82章

I proceed to notice one or two more contrivances by which theancient trammels of proprietary right were more or lesssuccessfully relaxed, premising that the scheme of this treatiseonly permits me to mention those which are of great antiquity. Onone of them in particular it is necessary to dwell for a momentor two, because persons unacquainted with the early history oflaw will not be easily persuaded that a principle, of whichmodern jurisprudence has very slowly and with the greatestdifficulty obtained the recognition, was really familiar to thevery infancy of legal science. There is no principle in all lawwhich the moderns, in spite of its beneficial character, havebeen so loath to adopt and to carry to its legitimateconsequences as that which was known to the Romans as Usucapion,and which has descended to modern jurisprudence under the name ofPrescription. It was a positive rule of the oldest Roman law, arule older than the Twelve Tables, that commodities which hadbeen uninterruptedly possessed for a certain period became theproperty of the possessor. The period of possession wasexceedingly short one or two years according to the nature of thecommodities and in historical times Usucapion was only allowed tooperate when possession had commenced in a particular way; but Ithink it likely that at a less advanced epoch possession wasconverted into ownership under conditions even less severe thanwe read of in our authorities. As I have said before, I am farfrom asserting that the respect of men for de facto possession isa phenomenon which jurisprudence can account for by itself, butit is very necessary to remark that primitive societies, inadopting the principle of Usucapion, were not beset with any ofthe speculative doubts and hesitations which have impeded itsreception among the moderns. Prescriptions were viewed by themodern lawyers, first with repugnance, afterwards with reluctantapproval. In several countries, including our own, legislationlong declined to advance beyond the rude device of barring allactions based on a wrong which had been suffered earlier than afixed point of time in the past, generally the first year of somepreceding reign; nor was it till the middle ages had finallyclosed, and James the First had ascended the throne of England,that we obtained a true statute of limitation of a very imperfectkind. This tardiness in copying one of the most famous chaptersof Roman law, which was no doubt constantly read by the majorityof European lawyers, the modern world owes to the influence ofthe Canon Law. The ecclesiastical customs out of which the CanonLaw grew, concerned as they were with sacred or quasi-sacredinterests, very naturally regarded the privileges which theyconferred as incapable of being lost through disuse howeverprolonged; and in accordance with this view, the spiritualjurisprudence, when afterwards consolidated, was distinguished bya marked leaning against Prescriptions. It was the fate of theCanon Law when held up by the clerical lawyers as a pattern tosecular legislation, to have a peculiar influence on firstprinciples. It gave to the bodies of custom which were formedthroughout Europe far fewer express rules than did the Roman law,but then it seems to have communicated a bias to professionalopinion on a surprising number of fundamental points, and thetendencies thus produced progressively gained strength as eachsystem was developed. One of the dispositions it produced was adisrelish for Prescriptions; but I do not know that thisprejudice would have operated as powerfully as it has done, if ithad not fallen in with the doctrine of the scholastic jurists ofthe realist sect, who taught that, whatever turn actuallegislation might take, a right, how long soever neglected, wasin point of fact indestructible. The remains of this state offeeling still exist. Wherever the philosophy of law is earnestlydiscussed, questions respecting the speculative basis ofPrescription are always hotly disputed; and it is still a pointof the greatest interest in France and Germany, whether a personwho has been out of possession for a series of years is deprivedof his ownership as a penalty for his neglect, or loses itthrough the summary interposition of the law in its desire tohave afinis litium. But no such scruples troubled the mind ofearly Roman society. Their ancient usages directly took away theownership of everybody who had been out of possession, undercertain circumstances, during one or two year. What was the exacttenor of the rule of Usucapion in its earliest shape, it is noteasy to say; but, taken with the limitations which we findattending it in the books, it was a most useful security againstthe mischiefs of a too cumbrous system of conveyance. In order tohave the benefit of Usucapion, it was necessary that the adversepossession should have begun in good faith, that is, with beliefon the part of the possessor that he was lawfully acquiring theproperty, and it was farther required that the commodity shouldhave been transferred to him by some mode of alienation which,however unequal to conferring a complete title in the particularcase, was at least recognised by the law. In the case thereforeof a Mancipation, however slovenly the performance might havebeen, yet if it had been carried so far as to involve a Traditionor Delivery, the vice of the title would be cured by Usucapion intwo years at most. I know nothing in the practice of the Romanswhich testifies so strongly to their legal genius as the usewhich they made of Usucapion. The difficulties which beset themwere nearly the same with those which embarrassed and stillembarrass the lawyers of England. Owing to the complexity oftheir system, which as yet they had neither the courage nor thepower to reconstruct, actual right was constantly gettingdivorced from technical right, the equitable ownership from thelegal. But Usucapion, as manipulated by the jurisconsults,supplied a self-acting machinery, by which the defects of titlesto property were always in course of being cured, and by whichthe ownerships that were temporarily separated were again rapidlycemented together with the briefest possible delay. Usucapion didnot lose its advantages till the reforms of Justinian. But assoon as law and equity had been completely fused, and whenMancipation ceased to be the Roman conveyance, there was nofurther necessity for the ancient contrivance, and Usucapion,with its periods of time considerably lengthened, became thePrescription which has at length been adopted by nearly allsystems of modern law.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 《相府四小姐:废柴变天才》

    《相府四小姐:废柴变天才》

    代号玫瑰的卧底毒医魂穿至丞相府嫡女,世人欺她辱她甚至要灭了她,她又岂会任人宰割。“荒唐,你签订了本座的契约,现在竟想毁约不成!”“呵,那如果我要灭了你——”他本与她原身签订契约,却不料逐渐恋上这个霸道要毁了冥约的女人。而她,视天下如粪土的毒医,在他濒死之际表白心意。皇子如何,神又如何,她要的是这个自大的玄冥魔王!蓬莱如何,天女如何,他爱的是当年被狸猫换天女的毒医!
  • 古墓探险之悍妞儿别逃

    古墓探险之悍妞儿别逃

    冰棺被打开,冰山美男复活,当山石崩裂,不死族被围困的秘密被揭开,为了寻找自己的儿子,他的父亲带着现代佣兵进入荒芜的山林,当人性面临种种危险,当贪婪遇上死劫,他们又该如何选择?(本文纯属虚构,请勿模仿。)
  • 全能霸主嫡系七小姐

    全能霸主嫡系七小姐

    杀手重生,和她比,甩跑你八百条大街,炼药师?灵术师?驯兽师?不好意思,世界顶级炼药师就是她,大陆上传的风风火火的全系灵术师就是她,驯兽师拼的是精神力?呵呵,她精神力把水晶球都撑爆了。不过,这位太子,你可以去一边吗?不要再缠着我不放了
  • 无鞘之剑

    无鞘之剑

    破碎之心.....破碎之剑.......
  • 重生战凰:狂女狠嚣张

    重生战凰:狂女狠嚣张

    她是将门虎女,第一女将军,她鞠躬尽瘁助夫君登上皇位,却与嫡姐同处后位,结发妻子自此被打入冷宫、武功尽废。她是克星庶女,将军府四小姐,她为扭转命运而强势嚣张,只为将那狼狈为奸的负心汉和嫡姐打入地狱。
  • 妃我倾城,冥王的特工王妃

    妃我倾城,冥王的特工王妃

    她本是叱咤风云,荣华享尽之人,却因意外到来异世,初到就被不识之人吃干抹净,还被迫替嫁,呵呵,姐不发飙,当姐是软柿子好捏是吧?那我就让你们看看。当是乾隆大陆最为尊贵的九皇子,一朝失手身中媚毒,无奈之下对无辜路人下手,待娶了新王妃之后发现似乎,当初做的决定真是太正确不过了,无奈之举什么真是太给力了!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 最强衰神

    最强衰神

    何为气运?一为人心,二为风水,三为功德。一不小心,申运得到了最强气运系统,从此掌控气运,霉运挥挥手没有了,好运招招手就来了。买彩票一次没中过,股票跌的看不到影,出个门还挨板砖,修炼一下还被雷劈,申运笑眯眯的看着他们,发现自己要发了。“我注定了是要成为最强衰神,但是我可不想当反派人物,虽然我偶尔会给别人带来霉运,带来灾难。”
  • 变臭的萝卜

    变臭的萝卜

    文章靠人做,这话确实不假。要做好文章,就得有自圆其说的本领。如何自圆其说呢?那得看你有否发挥联想,能否从常理中找出可以链接的某些变化因素,使之恰到好处地结为一体,让人觉得既耳目一新又无懈可击。
  • 老宅童灵

    老宅童灵

    城外的一个荒村里的一栋老宅两个亲如兄弟的男孩却是两个世界的人、、、、、
  • 最强修真狂少

    最强修真狂少

    修真高手转生都市,拳打富二代,脚踩装X犯,纵情花都,走一段不一样的修真之路!