登陆注册
38748300000095

第95章

In the intercourse of life the commonest and most important of all the contracts are unquestionably the four styled Consensual. The larger part of the collective existence of every community is consumed in transactions of buying and selling, of letting and hiring, of alliances between men for purposes of business, of delegation of business from one man to another; and this is no doubt the consideration which led the Romans, as it has led most societies, to relieve these transactions from technical incumbrance, to abstain as much as possible from clogging the most efficient springs of social movement. Such motives were not of course confined to Rome, and the commerce of the Romans with their neighbours must have given them abundant opportunities for observing that the contracts before us tended everywhere to become Consensual, obligatory on the mere signification of mutual assent. Hence, following their usual practice, they distinguished these contracts as contracts Juris Gentium. Yet I do not think that they were so named at a very early period. The first notions of a Jus Gentium may have been deposited in the minds of the Roman lawyers long before the appointment of a Praetor Peregrinus, but it would only be through extensive and regular trade that they would be familiarised with the contractual system of other Italian communities, and such a trade would scarcely attain considerable proportions before Italy had been thoroughly pacified, and the supremacy of Rome conclusively assured. Although, however, there is strong probability that the Consensual Contracts were the latest-born into the Roman system, and though it is likely that the qualification, Juris Gentium, stamps the recency of their origin, yet this very expression, which attributes them to the "Law of Nations," has in modern times produced the notion of their extreme antiquity. For, when the "Law of Nations" had been converted into the "Law of Nature," it seemed to be implied that the Consensual Contracts were the type of the agreements most congenial to the natural state; and hence arose the singular belief that the younger the civilisation, the ******r must be its forms of contract.

The Consensual Contracts, it will be observed, were extremely limited in number. But it cannot be doubted that they constituted the stage in the history of Contract-law from which all modern conceptions of contract took their start. The motion of the will which constitutes agreement was now completely insulated, and became the subject of separate contemplation; forms were entirely eliminated from the notion of contract, and external acts were only regarded as symbols of the internal act of volition. The Consensual Contracts had, moreover, been classed in the Jus Gentium, and it was not long before this classification drew with it the inference that they were the species of agreement which represented the engagements approved of by Nature and included in her code. This point once reached, we are prepared for several celebrated doctrines and distinctions of the Roman lawyers. One of them is the distinction between Natural and Civil Obligations.

When a person of full intellectual maturity had deliberately bound himself by an engagement, he was said to be under a natural obligation, even though he had omitted some necessary formality, and even though through some technical impediment he was devoid of the formal capacity for ****** a valid contract. The law (and this is what the distinction implies) would not enforce the obligation, but it did not absolutely refuse to recognise it; and natural obligations differed in many respects from obligations which were merely null and void, more particularly in the circumstance that they could be civilly confirmed, if the capacity for contract were subsequently acquired. Another very peculiar doctrine of the jurisconsults could not have had its origin earlier than the period at which the Convention was severed from the technical ingredients of Contract. They taught that though nothing but a Contract could be the foundation of an action, a mere Pact or Convention could be the basis of a plea.

It followed from this, that though nobody could sue upon an agreement which he had not taken the precaution to mature into a Contract by complying with the proper forms, nevertheless a claim arising out of a valid contract could be rebutted by proving a counter agreement which had never got beyond the state of a ****** convention. An action for the recovery of a debt could be met by showing a mere informal agreement to waive or postpone the payment.

The doctrine just stated indicates the hesitation of the Praetors in ****** their advances towards the greatest of their innovations. Their theory of Natural law must have led them to look with especial favour on the Consensual Contracts and on those Pacts or Conventions of which the Consensual Contracts were only particular instances; but they did not at once venture on extending to all Conventions the liberty of the Consensual Contracts. They took advantage of that special superintendence over procedure which had been confided to them since the first beginnings of Roman law, and, while they still declined to permit a suit to be launched which was not based on a formal contract, they gave full play to their new theory of agreement in directing the ulterior stages of the proceeding. But, when they had proceeded thus far, it was inevitable that they should proceed farther. The revolution of the ancient law of Contract was consummated when the Praetor of some one year announced in his Edict that he would grant equitable actions upon Pacts which had never been matured at all into Contracts, provided only that the Pacts in question had been founded on a consideration (causa).

同类推荐
  • 上清琼宫灵飞六甲箓

    上清琼宫灵飞六甲箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 医门法律

    医门法律

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 续清凉传

    续清凉传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 涉异志

    涉异志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 银海指南

    银海指南

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 大唐忍者秘史

    大唐忍者秘史

    描写中国忍者世界的开山之作,讲述忍者起源于中国唐代的传奇故事。旨在揭示忍者最初以济世度人与追求心灵解脱为宗旨,引发读者对心灵的深层思考。喜历史者不可不读此书,往日尘嚣,栩栩如生,揭开不载之秘。喜诗文者不可不读此书,一书典故,满纸墨香,尽显唐文风骨。喜悬疑者不可不读此书,旧迷未解,新迷又生,挑战脑力极限。喜玄幻者不可不读此书,奇能异术,惊世骇俗,神奇绝非荒唐。喜言情者不可不读此书,情深似海,心密如丝,道尽人间风月。喜国学者不可不读此书,琴棋书画,儒释岐黄,普涉大国之学。不喜书者不可不读此书,燥热心起,解于清凉,书中自有润海。喜读书者不可不读此书,书以载文,文以言志,乃发无邪之思。
  • 涅磐重生2000

    涅磐重生2000

    一个花花公子被欺骗之后潦倒半生,每天醉生梦死。在wsop比赛中赢得了一千万美元奖金之后意外重生了,从此开启了一段传奇的旅程。
  • 豢凤

    豢凤

    儿时的一场华美的梦,她是天底下最受宠爱的皇女,受人仰慕。新帝登基,皇帝不是她,可她却成了争斗的牺牲品。受牢狱之苦,只觉得此生已尽。她曾经约定,要娶到心爱的王君。她曾经无志,只想做个逍遥王爷。可,命运不由她。
  • 快穿之宿主她有点懒

    快穿之宿主她有点懒

    【简介无能,逻辑党慎入,1v1宠文】有一天,暮兮醒了,然后她去了三千世界做任务。 后来,她发现,她在每一个位面都会遇到一个熟人。
  • 万凤朝凰

    万凤朝凰

    恋人早夭、家产被夺,这已经够背的了,竟然还要被迫与讨厌的人结婚?难得的穿越人生怎么会变成摆满杯具餐具的茶几?!且看现代审计助理穿越为古代女商人,如何扭转落魄人生,创业赚钱、发家致富!还有曾经伸出黑手的谁谁,休想逃过本小姐的手心!还有绝色表哥、潇洒护卫、妙手厨男、刁蛮少爷……作为女尊国的女人,我算很专一的,你们不要总是纠缠不清!可是那个男尊国的君王,你步步紧逼,又是什么意思?
  • 弑邪录

    弑邪录

    黄天道道,苍天渺渺,少年一步一步走向巅峰,且看我天地浩荡,任谁也阻挡不住我不退缩的脚步。
  • 弑尽诸天

    弑尽诸天

    文明在湮没,时代在消亡,留下的是一曲曲史诗般的战歌。诸天浩大,一只幽暗的巨手推动着轮回,最终天地崩毁,重开纪元。神秘少年穿梭万古,回到到辉煌浩大的天荒世界,走过天地界限,弑杀诸天。依稀记得,那道背影缓缓转身,傲对苍天,不屈不服,天音响彻了寰宇:“我身前,有圣贤,有身后,是众生。”为你展现这片浩大,神秘的古老世界,揭开远古天地间的重重疑团。上下四方曰宇,古往今来曰宙!嫩嫩的新书,希望你们喜欢!
  • 王道美人之痞皇传

    王道美人之痞皇传

    此书换血大修,将以《云起无疆》重发凤凰涅槃,浴火重生,换血大修,云起无疆近日得一资深书友建议:提高代入感,精简累赘,早现金手指,提升矛盾冲突深以为然,于是重写,争取签约。洗碗碗对不起收藏的书友了,不过,希望喜欢的朋友继续支持。
  • 当异世界魔王被传送到异世界

    当异世界魔王被传送到异世界

    当一位魔王被传送到异世界的时候,他会有什么样的操作来在这个世界称霸。
  • EXO金钟大我爱你无悔

    EXO金钟大我爱你无悔

    “钟大啊,此生,我爱过你,我也知足了,我走了,不要想我,和她好好过日子,照顾好伯贤,瑾玉妍真的爱你,希望你们今后能过好日子,还有,请原谅我。”“对不起,伯贤,我没有告诉你,希望你不要想我太久,早点找个好姑娘吧,谢谢你,对不起,我爱你。”“瑾玉妍,照顾好金钟大,别让他受累,一定要让他幸福。”