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Borkowski & du Plessis: Textbook on Roman Law 3e
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Liability in the Roman law of delict was strictly personal. This meant that:
In the Roman law of theft:
Contrectatio as a requirement of theft in classical Roman law:
One of the requirements for theft was the thief's interference had to have been fraudulent. This meant:
Objects that could be stolen included:
Robbery (Rapina):
The delict iniuria in classical Roman law:
The historical antecedents of iniuria mentioned in the Twelve Tables did not include:
In classical Roman law, the actio iniuriarum:
According to Ulpian in D.9.2.1pr, the Lex Aquilia "took away the force of all earlier laws which dealt with unlawful damage [to property]." This means:
Chapter 2 of the Lex Aquilia dealt with:
Under chapter 3 of the Lex Aquilia, loss was calculated (according to the continental view):
To succeed with an action under the Lex Aquilia, a plaintiff had to prove (among other things) that he had suffered loss. Such loss:
The Praetorian extension of the corpori corpore requirements in the Lex Aquilia presumably occurred in the following order:
Corruption of slaves, a Praetorian delict,:
Someone who had been forced to enter into a transaction or to commit a disadvantageous act:
The quasi-delict, res suspensae:
Under the Lex Aquilia, contributory negligence:
Under the action for robbery (actio vi bonorum raptorum):
Threats which amounted to duress: