1. Formalizing Roman Law

1.
Formalizing Roman Law

The Twelve Tables (451–449 B.C.E.)

Although Rome’s elite successfully overthrew the Roman monarchy and established the republic in 509 B.C.E., more challenges lay ahead. For the next two centuries, the city’s patricians and the rest of its citizens battled over the course the new government should take and their respective roles in it. Promulgated between 451 and 449 B.C.E., the Twelve Tables were a turning point in this struggle, marking the republic’s first step toward establishing a fair system of justice. Surviving in fragments only, this code, the earliest in Roman law, was based largely on existing customs. The following excerpts illuminate not only the social and economic landscape of early Rome, but also the foundation of Roman jurisprudence.

From Ancient Rome Statutes, trans. Allan Chester Johnson et al. (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1961), 9–17.

Table I. Proceedings Preliminary to Trial

If the plaintiff summons the defendant to court the defendant shall go. If the defendant does not go the plaintiff shall call a witness thereto. Only then the plaintiff shall seize the defendant.

If the defendant attempts evasion or takes flight the plaintiff shall lay hand on him.

If sickness or age is an impediment he who summons the defendant to court shall grant him a vehicle. If he does not wish he shall not spread a carriage with cushions.

For a freeholder`1 a freeholder shall be surety;2 for a proletary3 anyone who wishes shall be surety.

There shall be the same right of bond and of conveyance with the Roman people for a steadfast person and for a person restored to allegiance.4

When the parties agree on the matter the magistrate shall announce it.

If they agree not on terms the parties shall state their case before the assembly in the meeting place or before the magistrate in the market place before noon. Both parties being present shall plead the case throughout together.

If one of the parties does not appear the magistrate shall adjudge the case, after noon, in favor of the one present.

If both parties are present sunset shall be the time limit of the proceedings. . . .

Table II. Trial

The penal sum5 in an action by solemn deposit shall be either 500 asses or 50 asses.6 . . . It shall be argued by solemn deposit with 500 asses, when the property is valued at 1,000 asses or more, but with 50 asses, when the property is valued at less than 1,000 asses. But if the controversy is about the freedom of a person, although the person may be very valuable, yet the case shall be argued by a solemn deposit of 50 asses. . . .

Table III. Execution of Judgment

Thirty days shall be allowed by law for payment of confessed debt and for settlement of matters adjudged in court.

After this time the creditor shall have the right of laying hand on the debtor. The creditor shall hale the debtor into court.

Unless the debtor discharges the debt adjudged or unless someone offers surety for him in court the creditor shall take the debtor with him. He shall bind him either with a thong or with fetters of not less than fifteen pounds in weight, or if he wishes he shall bind him with fetters of more than this weight.

If the debtor wishes he shall live on his own means. If he does not live on his own means the creditor who holds him in bonds shall give him a pound of grits daily. If he wishes he shall give him more.

. . . Meanwhile they shall have the right to compromise, and unless they make a compromise the debtors shall be held in bonds for sixty days. During these days they shall be brought to the praetor7 into the meeting place on three successive market days, and the amount for which they have been judged liable shall be declared publicly. Moreover, on the third market day they shall suffer capital punishment or shall be delivered for sale abroad across the Tiber River.

On the third market day the creditors shall cut shares. If they have cut more or less than their shares it shall be without prejudice.

Table IV. Paternal Power

A notably deformed child shall be killed immediately.

To a father . . . shall be given over a son the power of life and death.

If a father thrice surrenders a son for sale the son shall be free from the father.8

To repudiate his wife her husband shall order her . . . to have her own property for herself, shall take the keys, shall expel her.9

A child born within ten months of the father’s death shall enter into the inheritance. . . .

Table V. Inheritance and Guardianship

. . . Women, even though they are of full age,10 because of their levity of mind shall be under guardianship . . . except vestal virgins, who . . . shall be free from guardianship. . . .

The conveyable possessions of a woman who is under guardianship of male agnates11 shall not be acquired by prescriptive right unless they are transferred by the woman herself with the authorization of her guardian. . . .

According as a person has made bequest regarding his personal property or the guardianship of his estate so shall be the law.

If anyone who has no direct heir dies intestate the nearest male agnate shall have the estate.

If there is not a male agnate the male clansmen shall have the estate.

Persons for whom by will . . . a guardian is not given, for them . . . their male agnates shall be guardians.

If a person is insane authority over him and his personal property shall belong to his male agnates and in default of these to his male clansmen. . . .

If a Roman citizen freedman dies intestate without a direct heir, to his patron shall fall the inheritance . . . from said household . . . into said household. . . .

Table VI. Ownership and Possession

. . . If any woman is unwilling to be subjected in this manner12 to her husband’s marital control she shall absent herself for three successive nights in every year and by this means shall interrupt his prescriptive right of each year.13 . . .

One shall not take from framework timber fixed in buildings or in vineyards. . . . One shall be permitted neither to remove nor to claim stolen timber fixed in buildings or in vineyards, . . . but against the person who is convicted of having fixed such timber there an action for double damages shall be given. . . .

Table VII. Real Property

If a watercourse conducted through a public place does damage to a private person the said person shall have the right to bring an action . . . that security against damage may be given to the owner.

. . . Branches of a tree shall be pruned all around to a height of fifteen feet.

If a tree from a neighbor’s farm has been felled by the wind over one’s farm, . . . one rightfully can take legal action for that tree to be removed.

. . . It shall be lawful to gather fruit falling upon another’s farm. . . .

A slave is ordered in a will to be a free man under this condition: “if he has given 10,000 asses to the heir”; although the slave has been alienated by the heir, yet the slave by giving the said money to the buyer shall enter into his freedom. . . .

Table VIII. Torts or Delicts

. . . If anyone sings or composes an incantation that can cause dishonor or disgrace to another . . . he shall suffer a capital penalty.14

If anyone has broken another’s limb there shall be retaliation in kind unless he compounds for compensation with him.

. . . If a person breaks a bone of a freeman with hand or by club, he shall undergo a penalty of 300 asses; or of 150 asses, if of a slave.

If one commits an outrage against another the penalty shall be twenty-five asses.

. . . One has broken. . . . One shall make amends.

If a quadruped is said to have caused damage an action shall lie therefore . . . either for surrendering that which did the damage to the aggrieved person . . . or for offering an assessment of the damage.

If fruit from your tree falls onto my farm and if I feed my flock off it by letting the flock onto it . . . no action can lie against me either on the statute concerning pasturage of a flock, because it is not being pastured on your land, or on the statute concerning damage caused by an animal. . . .

If anyone pastures on or cuts by night another’s crops obtained by cultivation the penalty for an adult shall be capital punishment and after having been hung up, death as a sacrifice to Ceres. . . . A person below the age of puberty at the praetor’s decision shall be scourged and shall be judged as a person either to be surrendered to the plaintiff for damage done or to pay double damages.

Whoever destroys by burning a building or a stack of grain placed beside a house . . . shall be bound, scourged, burned to death, provided that knowingly and consciously he has committed this crime; but if this deed is by accident, that is, by negligence, either he shall repair the damage or if he is unable he shall be corporally punished more lightly.

Whoever fells unjustly another’s trees shall pay twenty-five asses for each tree.

If a thief commits a theft by night, if the owner kills the thief, the thief shall be killed lawfully.

By daylight . . . if a thief defends himself with a weapon . . . and the owner shall shout.

In the case of all other . . . thieves caught in the act freemen shall be scourged and shall be adjudged as bondsmen to the person against whom the theft has been committed provided that they have done this by daylight and have not defended themselves with a weapon; slaves caught in the act of theft . . . shall be whipped with scourges and shall be thrown from the rock;15 but children below the age of puberty shall be scourged at the praetor’s decision and the damage done by them shall be repaired. . . .

If a patron defrauds a client he shall be accursed.16

Unless he speaks his testimony whoever allows himself to be called as a witness or is a scales-bearer shall be dishonored and incompetent to give or obtain testimony. . . .

If anyone pastures on or cuts stealthily by night . . . another’s crops . . . the penalty shall be capital punishment, and, after having been hung up, death as a sacrifice to Ceres, a punishment more severe than in homicide. . . .

Table IX. Public Law

Laws of personal exception shall not be proposed. Laws concerning capital punishment of a citizen shall not be passed . . . except by the Greatest Assembly. . . .

. . . Whoever incites a public enemy or whoever betrays a citizen to a public enemy shall be punished capitally.

For anyone whomsoever to be put to death without a trial and unconvicted . . . is forbidden.

Table X. Sacred Law

A dead person shall not be buried or burned in the city.17 . . .

. . . Expenses of a funeral shall be limited to three mourners wearing veils and one mourner wearing an inexpensive purple tunic and ten flutists. . . .

Women shall not tear their cheeks or shall not make a sorrowful outcry on account of a funeral.

A dead person’s bones shall not be collected that one may make a second funeral.

An exception is for death in battle and on foreign soil. . . .

Table XI. Supplementary Laws

. . . There shall not be intermarriage between plebeians and patricians.

Table XII. Supplementary Laws

It is forbidden to dedicate for consecrated use a thing concerning whose ownership there is a controversy; otherwise a penalty of double the value involved shall be suffered. . . .

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

  1. What are the principal concerns expressed in this code?

    Question

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    What are the principal concerns expressed in this code?
  2. What do these concerns suggest about Roman society at the time?

    Question

    x7jJnBJreuV95yBM8Ug6QR++GW0PDiFRg+QsOILDplgDjrJqkHvrH0uew9NZASs2jp1OOi0NT043c1q7w9uRpE8twn7mgHQ6uFeVo97jDjMEUIRxoivzwMHUziqI4zOAueOOZBLX1hrfNALZ
    What do these concerns suggest about Roman society at the time?
  3. In what ways did these laws represent a triumph for the plebeian class?

    Question

    ydgq8UhLXQMRTmTRkAX+W22WH0Gr6qPf9cxL0H4Iiohbf991Cn1ZOKWfl1sfpVe2fEUMZ4NwQoNAfRLjg9KoodQk+ucM6J/aN3FDbIjQPpT4xEmFySB1s7hVBKhichM3c/OMJB8PXojKGfh50xArLsg/aSo=
    In what ways did these laws represent a triumph for the plebeian class?