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Transcripts Of Meetings Of The State Of Georgia Legislative Overview Committee And Select Committee, Vol. Iii, State Of Georgia Jan 1983

Transcripts Of Meetings Of The State Of Georgia Legislative Overview Committee And Select Committee, Vol. Iii, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


A Note On The Georgia Contracts Code, Julian B. Mcdonnell Jan 1979

A Note On The Georgia Contracts Code, Julian B. Mcdonnell

Scholarly Works

Among all of these codes, the present Code of Georgia enjoys a distinguished pedigree. It traces its origins and many of its provisions to the original Georgia Code of 1860. The story of that original Georgia Code has been largely lost to history, undoubtedly because it arrived simultaneously with the Civil War. For its time, the Georgia Code of 1860 was a remarkable legal document. Previous codifications in Anglo-American jurisdictions had been limited to reducing statutory materials to systematic written form or establishing new procedural systems. The Georgia Code of 1860 was the first codification of the substantive areas of …


Georgia Constitution Of 1976, Effective January 1, 1977, State Of Georgia Jan 1976

Georgia Constitution Of 1976, Effective January 1, 1977, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


The Origins Of Usus, Alan Watson Jan 1976

The Origins Of Usus, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

It has long been recognized that the XII Tables was not a complete statement of the law, and that some topics of great legal importance were either not set out or were very partially treated. The general opinion has been, however, that the fragmentary state of our knowledge of the XII Tables' provisions makes it impossible to be precise as to the the topics not dealt with or treated only in part. Recently, though, I have tried to show that we have some information on the great majority of the clauses in the XII Tables: hence on this view, where …


Findings And Recommendations Of The Constitutional Revision Commission Of 1969, State Of Georgia Jan 1976

Findings And Recommendations Of The Constitutional Revision Commission Of 1969, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


The Mixed Courts Of Egypt: A Study Of The Use Of Natural Law And Equity, Gabriel M. Wilner Mar 1975

The Mixed Courts Of Egypt: A Study Of The Use Of Natural Law And Equity, Gabriel M. Wilner

Scholarly Works

The system of Mixed Courts in Egypt was an unusual institution. It represented an international solution in the context of what was obviously a colonial situation. The system lasted 74 years from 1876 to 1949. A system of law was established whose sources were general codes created especially for use by the Mixed Courts. The Charter of the Mixed Courts specified two residual sources of law. It is these sources and their application upon which this paper is principally focused. Article 34 reads: "The new Courts, in the exercise of their jurisdiction in civil and commercial matters, and within the …


Emptio, "Taking", Alan Watson Jan 1975

Emptio, "Taking", Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

According to Festus, "Emere, quod nunc est mer cari, antiqui acdpiebant pro sumere" and modern philologists do accept some such meaning as the original in Latin.)

The Thesaurus Linguae Latinae) however, thinks there is no certain example of this sense of emere and considers the instances adduced by Skutsch) to be scarcely convincing. I should like to produce for consideration a different instance drawn from the derivative emptio or emptor. The instance in question may not take us as far back as emere = sumere but will at least to emere = accipere.


Emptio, "Taking", Alan Watson Jan 1975

Emptio, "Taking", Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

According to Festus, "Emere, quod nunc est mer cari, antiqui acdpiebant pro sumere" and modern philologists do accept some such meaning as the original in Latin. The Thesaurus Linguae Latinae however, thinks there is no certain example of this sense of emere and considers the instances adduced by Skutsch to be scarcely convincing. I should like to produce for consideration a different instance drawn from the derivative emptio or emptor. The instance in question may not take us as far back as emere = sumere but will at least to emere = accipere. Roman legal tradition tells us that the …


A New Role For An Ancient Writ: Postconviction Habeas Corpus Relief In Georgia (Part Ii), Donald E. Wilkes Jr. Sep 1974

A New Role For An Ancient Writ: Postconviction Habeas Corpus Relief In Georgia (Part Ii), Donald E. Wilkes Jr.

Scholarly Works

In Part I of this Article, appearing in Volume 8 of the Georgia Law Review at page 313, Professor Wilkes traced the development of postconviction habeas corpus in Georgia up to 1967. In this the second part of the Article, he examines the background and passage of the Georgia Habeas Corpus Act of 1967. Finally, Professor Wilkes assesses the degree to which the Act has fulfilled its purposes, and suggests several possible changes for the future.


The Rescripts Of The Emperor Probus (276-282 A.D.), Alan Watson Jun 1974

The Rescripts Of The Emperor Probus (276-282 A.D.), Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

In an earlier study, I examined the private law in the rescripts of Carus and his two sons, the Emperors who ruled from 282 to 284, immediately before the accession of Diocletian, and found as the main conclusion that, despite everything, the quality of legal decision had remained reasonably high. This paper considers the four rescripts that survive from the troubled reign of the preceding Emperor, Probus. None contains a great legal innovation; none shows a drastic lowering of legal standards. Their importance lies in what they reveal about general matters. Despite the enormous military and economic problems of the …


Tignum Iunctum: The Xii Tables And A Lost Word, Alan Watson Jan 1974

Tignum Iunctum: The Xii Tables And A Lost Word, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

A text of the scholar Festus, which is famous among Latinists and lawyers alike, reads:

Tignum non solum in aedificiis, quo utuntur, appellatur, sed etiam in vineis, ut est in XII: "Tignum iunctum aedibus vineave et concapit ne solvito".

For the quotation from the XII Tables, the manuscripts showsome variation for 'vineave': 'victum' in W, 'vineaque' in V and 'minerve' in X. But these we can happily leave aside and com to the crux of the text, 'concapit', which appears in all the manuscripts. "'Concapit', a corrupt word, and difficult of explanation" say Lewis and Short! And the emendations proposed …


A New Role For An Ancient Writ: Postconviction Habeas Corpus Relief In Georgia (Part I), Donald E. Wilkes Jr. Jan 1974

A New Role For An Ancient Writ: Postconviction Habeas Corpus Relief In Georgia (Part I), Donald E. Wilkes Jr.

Scholarly Works

Because it has been esteemed in this state for centuries, the writ of habeas corpus has played a significant role in the history of Georgia civil liberties. Indeed, one Georgia court early state that "[w]hen the writ is applied for, no inquiry is made as to the complexion of the petitioner, or the place of his permanent allegiance. All of every condition, of every country and of every complexion are equally entitled to it, the native of South Africa, not less than the Peer of the Realms." In the first part of his Article, Professor Wilkes examines the origins of …


Illogicality And Roman Law, Alan Watson Jan 1972

Illogicality And Roman Law, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

It is a commonplace that Rome's greatest contribution to the modern world is its law.

Whether this is strictly true or not, Roman law is certainly the basis of the law of Western Europe (with the exception of England and Scandinavia), of much of Africa including South Africa, Ethiopia and in general the former colonies of countries in continental Europe, of Quebec and Louisiana, of Japan and Ceylon and so on. Perhaps even more important for the future is that International law is very largely modelled, by analogy, on Roman law. Just think of the perfectly serious arguments of a …


The Original Meaning Of Pauperies, Alan Watson Jan 1970

The Original Meaning Of Pauperies, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

The very name, 'actio de pauperie', presents us squarely with the problem. Why should this action -- dealing with damage caused by animals -- and this action alone come to be called 'the action on poverty'? For the word 'pauperies' in the later Republic and the Empire does have the primary meaning of 'poverty'. This problem does not stand by itself. The 'actio de pauperie' is old, and goes back at least to the XII Tables. Why does it -- apparently at least -- give a remedy for damage of all kinds, whereas the later lex Aquilia of 287 B.C. …


Jailing The Innocent: The Plight Of The Material Witness, Ronald L. Carlson Oct 1969

Jailing The Innocent: The Plight Of The Material Witness, Ronald L. Carlson

Scholarly Works

Unknown to many lawyers, American legal history is marred with numerous recorded episodes of extended imprisonment of innocent American citizens. Frequently guiltless of any offense, these citizens are held because they happen to be witnesses to a crime and are financially unable to post a bond to insure their appearance to testify at the trial of the person accused of committing it. Not simply a feature of law from a bygone era, these incidents of imprisonment continue to arise today. Occasionally, a situation occurs wherein the man accused of the crime is released on bail and spends his time before …


An Unprincipled Decision On A Will, Alan Watson Feb 1969

An Unprincipled Decision On A Will, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

In this article Professor Alan Watson reviews the decision of Alfenus from Ancient Rome (D.28.5.45 Alfenus 5 dig).


Morality, Slavery And The Jurists In The Later Roman Republic, Alan Watson Feb 1968

Morality, Slavery And The Jurists In The Later Roman Republic, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

The problem I wish to discuss is the moral attitude of the later Republican jurists to slavery. The prominent jurists of the time belong to the upper classes and, although it would be wrong to generalize from the jurists to other members of the aristocracy, we shall have a certain glimpse into the social attitudes of the period if we can gain a reasonably clear picture from the jurists. I will deal only with juristic discussion, and not with the statutes and edicts which concern slavery. No doubt the jurists would play a part in shaping these, but public political …


Towards A New Hypothesis Of The 'Legio Actio Sacramento In Rem', Alan Watson Jan 1967

Towards A New Hypothesis Of The 'Legio Actio Sacramento In Rem', Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

According to Gaius, the form of the 'legis actio sacramento in rem' was as follows:

A. Hunc ego hominem ex iure quiritium meum esse aio secundum suam causam. Sicut dixi, ecce tibi vindictam imposui. (As he said this he 'festucam imponebat').

B. (Eadem dicebat e faciebat). Praetor. Mittite ambo hominem.

A. Postulo anne dicas qua ex causa vindicaveris.

B. Ius feci, sicut vindictam imposui.

A. Quando tu iniuria vindicavisti, quingenario (or 'quinquagenario') sacramento te provoco.

B. Et ego te.

A & B to the witnesses. Testes estote.

It is, I think, universally accepted first that both parties to the action …


Identity Of Sarapio, Socrates, Logus And Nilus In The Will Of C. Longinus Castor, Alan Watson Jan 1966

Identity Of Sarapio, Socrates, Logus And Nilus In The Will Of C. Longinus Castor, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

This article examines the Will of C. Longinus Castor which was executed and sealed on 17th of November 189 A.D. The Will names five different individuals as beneficiaries and this article examines the relationship between them and C. Longinus Castor.


'Apochatum Pro Uncis Duabus', Alan Watson Jan 1963

'Apochatum Pro Uncis Duabus', Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

Two of the Transylvanian sale triptychs contain the clause 'apochatum pro uncis duabus.' The first document dates from 142 A.D., the second from 160 A.D. What meaning is to be attributed to 'apochatum (or apochatam) pro uncis duabus', literally 'receipted for two ounces'?

The real explanation, I suggest, is that 'apochatum pro uncis duabus', 'receipted for two unciae', refers to the present 'mancipatio', not to a previous one, and that the point of the clause is to limit the 'actio auctoritatis' to four 'unciae', a negligible sum.


Consensual 'Societas' Between Romans And The Introduction Of 'Formulae', Alan Watson Jan 1962

Consensual 'Societas' Between Romans And The Introduction Of 'Formulae', Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

A very common view still held seems to be that until the second half of the second century B.C. and the passing of the 'lex Aebutia', 'formulae' were not available in actions between 'cives'. This has been very forcefully attacked, especially by Kunkel and Kaser, and the purpose of the present note is merely to add another argument to theirs.


The Form And Nature Of 'Acceptilatio' In Classical Roman Law, Alan Watson Jan 1961

The Form And Nature Of 'Acceptilatio' In Classical Roman Law, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

Until recently, it would seem to have been agreed among Romanists that in early classical roman law only one form of words, namely 'Habesne acceptum? habeo' was permitted for a valid 'acceptilatio', but that by the time of Ulpian a second form (and no more), namely 'Acceptum facis? facio' had been accepted. Indeed, that this was the position is accepted without discussion by Mr. Nicholas in a very thorough article on the form of the stipulation. Mr. Nicholas' main goal is to show that in classical law 'stipulatio' was a formal act and required to be made in one of …


'Arra' In The Law Of Justinian, Alan Watson Jan 1959

'Arra' In The Law Of Justinian, Alan Watson

Scholarly Works

So much has been written in recent years on 'arra' in Justinian's law that one hesitates to add to it. But there is, I submit, a solution to the problem raised by the texts which is simpler than any so far suggested, and which gives a satisfactory result.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1974, State Of Georgia Dec 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1974, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1972, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1972, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1970, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1970, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1968, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1968, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1967, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1967, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1966, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1966, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.


Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1962, State Of Georgia Feb 1945

Georgia Constitution Of 1945 As Amended Through 1962, State Of Georgia

Current and Historical Georgia Constitutions & Related Materials

No abstract provided.