Search
Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Paulus, Christoph Georg (Berlin)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Paulus, Christoph Georg (Berlin)" )' returned 115 results. Modify search
Sort Results by Relevance | Newest titles first | Oldest titles first
Editio
(730 words)
[German version] The term
editio is derived from the verb
edere (‘to present, to show, to announce’) and has several meanings within the legal realm: (1) The
editio actionis (Dig. 2,13) refers to the announcement required, in order for a trial to be sub judice in the formulary procedure, from the plaintiff towards the defendant, stating the type of charge(-formula) the plaintiff intends to initiate against the defendant. As long as the defendant accepts the formula (
accipere iudicium), the
litis contestatio (attestation of conflict) is established. For a…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Sententia
(465 words)
[German version] [1] Aphorism, v. Gnome [1] II A; Proverbs Aphorism, v. Gnome [1] II A; Proverbs Paulus, Christoph Georg (Berlin) [German version] [2] Legal verdict Literally etymologically derived from the root
sin, the sense of something uttered; in Roman legal terminology, e.g. the sense of a private legal action (cf. e.g. Dig. 28,1,1 on a testament) or a law (cf. Dig. 23,2,44,5).
Sententia in particular meant the verdict, in civil or criminal law, delivered by a judge (
iudex ,
arbiter ). In this sense,
sententia was already used for the process of the
legis actio …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Antestatio
(93 words)
[German version] is the formalised notice of a witness, associated with a tweak of the ear (Plin. HN 11,103), before the permitted use of force by the plaintiff against a defendant who does not comply with the
in ius vocatio and does not offer any
vindex.
Antestatio is attested for the Twelve Tables (1. 1); it became superfluous, and yet was apparently retained, on introduction of the standard procedural
litis denuntiatio . --
Antestatus is a
mancipatio witness, CIL 6.10239. Vocatio in ius; Denuntiatio Paulus, Christoph Georg (Berlin) Bibliography Wieacker, RRG, 448.
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Comperendinatio
(184 words)
[German version] describes according to Gai. Inst. 4,15 an agreement of the parties to appear on the day after next before a
iudex (Fest. 355,1; Prob. 4,9:
in diem tertium sive perendinum; for Roman calculations of court dates cf. Gell. NA 10,24,9), as had already been provided for in the Twelve Tables. It did not require the form of a stipulation because the consequences of missing it were considered sufficient as a sanction. How the transition from the procedure
in iure to
apud iudicem specifically came about in the formular procedure is unclear, because the
comperendinatio is no longer…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Aestimatio litis
(192 words)
[German version] The principle of sentencing to a fine associated with formulary procedure (Gai. Inst. 4,48) made it necessary in civil procedure for all actions not aimed at a fixed sum to be expressed in money value. Both process and result of the estimate required for this are called
aestimatio litis.; it was carried out by the judge, or sometimes by the plaintiff (
iusiurandum in litem, estimate under oath of the amount involved). If the defendant refused to meet his duty of payment in kind, but instead paid the sum of the fine, the plaintiff finally lost …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Mors litis
(172 words)
[German version] (literally: ‘death of a lawsuit’). According to Gai. Inst. 4,104 a means introduced by the
l. Iulia iudiciorum privatorum specially for the
iudicium legitimum (
iudicium ), to limit the duration of lawsuits. Whereas all other lawsuits were limited by the period in office of the magistrates who appointed judges,
ML was what happened when after 18 months there had been no judgment. From the
lex Irnitana (ch. 91, l.2) it followed that this regulation was transferred - evidently by pretending that the municipal process was identical to the
iudicium legitimum - also to this…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Ordo
(1,047 words)
in Latin referred both to an order (e.g. the marching order or that of a legal process) as well as to groups or corporations, into which several or many persons were organized (also in the plural
ordines), e.g. the Roman
equites (
ordo equester). [German version] I. Procedural law In a procedural context the term
ordo is traditionally used in the composition of the '
ordo iudiciorum' (Cod. Iust. 7,45,4). It signified the proper types of legal procedure (cf. still today: 'proper' jurisdiction) both of the formulary procedure (
formula ) as well as of the actions at law proceedings (
legis actio …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Causidicus
(199 words)
[German version] A court orator who appears in court as a champion of a party. Whilst Cic. De or. 1,202 uses the term in an obviously derogatory sense as being distinct from a true orator, and whilst a similar evaluation is evident in Gai. Dig. 1,2,1 (
causas dicentibus),
causidicus is later applied in inscriptions (CIL 5,5894) and constitutions as a neutral vocational title alongside (Cod. Iust. 2,6,6) or identical (Cod. Theod. 2,10,5) to
advocatus . As such, a
causidicus belonged to the state controlled professional association (Cod. Iust. 2,7,11, 1) of orators appearin…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Vadimonium
(205 words)
[German version] (
surety, bail). A legal transaction agreed in a
stipulatio , by which one party in a Roman formulary procedure (Procedural law IV.) commits itself to appear at a certain location in order to enable legal proceedings to take place. This self-committal replaced the practice of providing guarantors (
vades) as had been the practice in the
legis actio . A distinction was made between different kinds of
vadimonium. The voluntary summoning
vadimonium consisted of the promise (regularly sanctioned by fines) to appear near the law court for a final attempt a…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Adsertor
(90 words)
[German version] is a free citizen who pleads in court the case, in particular the liberation, of a slave, who is incapable of being a party to a lawsuit: as plaintiff in the
vindicatio in libertatem including the
manumissio vindicta, as defendant in the
vindicatio in servitutem. On the possibilities of abuse in liberation cases Liv. 3,44 ff. Following preceding relaxation, Justinian ultimately declared slaves capable of acting in liberation cases (Cod. Iust. 7,17). Vindicatio; Manumissio Paulus, Christoph Georg (Berlin) Bibliography E. Ferenczy, in: Studi Donatuti, 1973,…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Edictum
(1,697 words)
[German version] [1] Public announcement by magistrates
Edictum (from
edicere) is a binding public announcement by Roman office bearers (
magistratus ), which presented either concrete orders or a ‘governmental agenda’ [1. 58] for the coming term of office. The word suggests an originally oral announcement [2. 178], but the historically documented form is a recording on an
album (‘white wooden plate’) at the magistrate's office. Literary tradition refers to edicts by
consules ,
aediles ,
praetores , provincial governors, tribuni plebis (
tribunus ),
censores …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Formula
(325 words)
[German version] The written
formula is the essential component of the type of trial which replaced the
legis actio procedure; by means of the
lex Aebutia, 2nd cent. BC, as well as the two
leges Iuliae, 17 BC) and which consequently is generally described as a
formula trial. Despite a slow development, this classical procedural type is distinguished from its predecessor by having far greater flexibility and by being more adaptable to individual cases in the late Republic and the Principate. The text of the suit was no longer ceremonial and…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Vocatio in ius
(355 words)
[German version] In Roman law, the 'call' (in the sense of summons) to stand trial. The VII addressed the problem, fundamental in every jurisdiction (but most particularly at early stages of development), of how to bring an accused person before the court: as long as no direct compulsion is available or permitted, sanctions with at least indirect effect must accompany the summons. Both variants are found in the development of Roman law: for the oldest type of trial, the
legis actio (action under the (XII-Table) law), the Twelve Tables (tab. 1,1 ff.; Tabulae duodecim,
c.450 BC) prescribes…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Rescript procedure
(222 words)
[German version] This type of Roman trial developed from the reign of Hadrian (2nd cent. AD) as a special form of the civil inquiry of cognizance (
cognitio ). Its peculiarity consisted in the fact that the decisive legal issue (i.e. not also the correctness of the facts) was clarified in advance for the specific case by the
princeps, by means of a written response (
rescriptum ) to the written enquiry of the party who would henceforth be the plaintiff, with the consequence that henceforth all that required examination was the correctness of …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Deductio
(345 words)
[German version] [1] Legal term There are many different senses of
deductio in specialized legal language: in civil case-law the expression
in iudicium deducere usually indicates the transition of the dispute to the judgement stage, and so approximately corresponds to the modern concept of pendency.
Deductio in domum is the ceremonial introduction of a wife into her husband's house (Dig. 23,2,5). A further frequent use of
deductio is to denote the ‘deduction’ of specific components of a debt owed to a provider of services: for example the deduction of costs (D…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly