Compendium of Modern Civil Law

Pirmais vāks
editor, 1845 - 400 lappuses

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xii. lappuse - I know also, that laws and institutions must go hand in hand with the progress of the human mind. As that becomes more developed, more enlightened, as new discoveries are made, new truths disclosed, and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances, institutions must advance also, and keep pace with the times.
75. lappuse - Longobardorum leges accepit. *But this féodal polity, which was thus by degrees established [ *48 ] over all the continent of Europe, seems not to have been received in this part of our island, at least not universally, and as a part of the national constitution, till the reign of William the Norman (o).
72. lappuse - Oxford, (b) to teach it to the people of this country. But it did not meet with the...
269. lappuse - ... 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.
74. lappuse - And we find the same jealousy prevailing above a century afterwards (g), when the nobility declared, with a kind of prophetic spirit, " that the realm of England hath never been unto this hour, neither by the consent of our lord the king, and the lords of parliament, shall it ever be, 'ruled or governed by the civil [*20] law
54. lappuse - D. 23. 3. fr. 5. § 6 ; orfr. 5. § 6. D. 23. 3. 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. 1 Mackeld.
236. lappuse - ... anything which may be the subject of property, for one's use and enjoyment, either as owner or as the proprietor of a qualified right in it, and either held personally or by another who exercises it in one's place and name. Possession includes the act or state of possessing and that condition of facts under which one can exercise his power over a corporeal thing at his pleasure to the exclusion of all other persons. Possession includes constructive possession which means not actual but assumed...
4. lappuse - Xo body of law depends," or it would seem can depend, "merely upon the enactments of the legislative power. A great number of its maxims, and principles originate and are formed, in all nations and at all times, by the opinions and manners of the people, by the decisions of the judges, and by scientific exertions for the elaboration and development of the law which already exists as well as that which lives in the minds of the people.
233. lappuse - Furiosus, et pupillus sine tutoris auctoritate, non potest incipere possidere, quia affectionem tenendi non habent, licet maxime corpore suo rem contingant, sicuti si quis dormienti aliquid in manu ponat.
123. lappuse - When this fundamental distinction is violated, a door is opened at once to the most injurious and arbitrary invasions of "the rights of individuals by the ruling power; and in general, wherever the judicial power is allowed to encroach too far on the widely extended domain...

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