10 ENGLISH BOOKS RELATING TO «USUCAPIENT»
Discover the use of
usucapient in the following bibliographical selection. Books relating to
usucapient and brief extracts from same to provide context of its use in English literature.
1
Roman Private Law in the Times of Cicero and of the Antonines
If a usucapient has lent or deposited a thing, his possession is uninterrupted, so
long as it is held for him by the borrower or depositary, but if they formally deliver
it to another, the usucapient's possession is broken (fr 33 § 4). Mere notice from ...
2
Historical Introduction to the Private Law of Rome
Gaius characterises it as a dishonest acquisition, inasmuch as the usucapient
knew that what he had taken possession of was not his. But, as already
explained, the usucapion of the XII. Tables did not require bona fides on the part
of the ...
James Muirhead, Henry Goudy, Alexander Grant, 2009
3
A Dictionary of Words and Phrases Used in Ancient and Modern Law
Usucapient. One who holds or claims title by usucaption. Usucapio. In Roman
law, a mode of acquiring property by possession for a certain period; which
possession must have been obtained in good faith and under some method of
transfer ...
Adj. possessing &c. v.; worth; possessed of, seized of, master of, in possession of;
usucapient†; endowed with, blest with, instinct with, fraught with, laden with,
charged with. possessed &c. v.; on hand, by one; in hand, in store, in stock; in
one's ...
5
Roget's Thesaurus of English Words and Phrases
... in possession of ; usucapient; endowed —, blest —, instinct —, fraught —,
laden —, charged- with. possessed &c. v.; on hand, by one; in hand, in store, in
stock; in one's -hands, — grasp, — possession; at one's -comrnand, — disposal;
one's ...
Christopher Orlando Sylvester Mawson
6
Tracing the Earliest Recorded Concepts of International Law: ...
364–370, 375–378, 386–387, 392–394, 396. in the few documents pertinent to
this right there is no clear evidence that the Hittites considered this right to have
positive, acquisitive value, namely as acquiring title, making the usucapient
owner.
7
The Institutes of Gaius and Rules of Ulpian: the former from ...
Bona fides in usucapion of a thing delivered to the usucapient by one who was
not its owner (see Usucapion, 3), was belief by the usucapient, at the moment of
acquiring, that the party from whom he had received the thing was in fact its
owner, ...
Gaius, Domitius Ulpianus, Wilhelm Studemund, 1904
8
The Institutes of Gaius: Commentary
It was not, however, interrupted by the mere fact of the usucapient's death ; his
heres could complete the period, counting not only the deceased's period of
possession, but also the period during which the thing remained undisturbed in
the ...
Gaius, Francis De Zulueta, 1953
9
A Portuguese-English Dictionary
... habitual, accustomed, everyday. usuario -ria (adj.) designating one having the
right of use; useful; (m.) user. usucapiente (adj.; m.,f., Law) usucapient. usucapir (
v.t.. Law) to usucapt. usufruir [25] (v.t.) to usufruct, enjoy the fruits of. usufruto (m.)
...
James Lumpkin Taylor, Priscilla Clark Martin, 1970
10
The Encyclopaedia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, ...
(Jains characterizes it as adishonestacquisition, inasmuch as the usucapient
knew that what he had taken possession of was not his. But, as already
explained, the usucapion of the XII. Tables did not require bona Jules on the part
of the ...