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Corpus Juris Civilis
Book IV




TITLE I. Concerning Property Loaned and the Oath.
TITLE II. Where a Certain Thing Is Demanded.
TITLE III. Concerning Suffrage.
TITLE IV. Concerning the Prohibited Sequestration of Money.
TITLE V. Concerning the Recovery of a Debt Which Was Paid Without Being Due.
TITLE VI. Concerning the Action for Recovery of Property Given for Some Consideration.
TITLE VII. Concerning the Action for Recovery on Account of a Dishonorable Consideration.
TITLE VIII. Concerning the Action for the Recovery of Stolen Property.
TITLE IX. Concerning the Personal Suit for Recovery under the Law, Where There Is No Consideration, Or Where the Consideration Is Unjust.
TITLE X. Concerning Obligations and Actions.
TITLE XI. Actions Should Be Brought by Heirs and Against Heirs.
TITLE XII. A Wife Cannot Be Sued on Account of Her Husband, Or a Husband on Account of His Wife, Or a Mother on Account of Her Son.
TITLE XIII. A Son Cannot Be Sued on Account of His Father, Or a Father on Account of His Emancipated Son, Or a Freedman on Account of His Patron, Or a Slave on Account of His Master.
TITLE XIV. Whether a Slave Is Liable for His Own Act after His Manumission.
TITLE XV. When the Treasury, Or a Private Individual, Can Or Should Sue Debtors Or Their Debtors.
TITLE XVI. Concerning Hereditary Actions.
TITLE XVII. For What an Amount Heirs Can Be Sued on Account of the Crimes of Deceased Persons.
TITLE XVIII. Concerning the Sum of Money Agreed upon.
TITLE XIX. Concerning Proofs.
TITLE XX. Concerning Witnesses.
TITLE XXI. Concerning the Confidence to Be Reposed in Written Instruments, and Their Loss, and When Receipts and Counter-Receipts Should Be Given, and Concerning What Things Can Be Done without Their Being Committed to Writing.
TITLE XXII. What Has Actually Been Done Has More Force than What Has Been Simulated and Expressed in Words.
TITLE XXIII. Concerning Loans for Use.
TITLE XXIV. Concerning the Action of Pledge.
TITLE XXV. Concerning the Actio Institoria and the Actio Exercitoria.
TITLE XXVI. When Business Is Said to Have Been Transacted with One Who Is under the Control of Another, Or With Reference to Peculium; Or Where Something Has Been Done by the Order of Another; Or Where Anything Is Employed for the Benefit of the Property of the Person in Control.
TITLE XXVII. By Means of What Persons Property Can Be Acquired by Us.
TITLE XXVIII. Concerning the Macedonian Decree of the Senate.
TITLE XXIX. Concerning the Velleian Decree of the Senate.
TITLE XXX. Concerning Money Which Is Not Counted out.
TITLE XXXI. Concerning Set-Off.
TITLE XXXII. Concerning Interest.
TITLE XXXIII. Concerning Maritime Loans.
TITLE XXXIV. Concerning the Action on Deposit, and the Counter Action.
TITLE XXXV. Concerning the Action of Mandate, and the Counter Action.
TITLE XXXVI. Concerning a Slave Who Has Directed a Stranger to Purchase Him.
TITLE XXXVII. Concerning the Action of Partnership.
TITLE XXXVIII. Concerning the Contract of Purchase and Sale.
TITLE XXXIX. Concerning the Inheritance Or Sale of Rights of Action.
TITLE XL. What Property Cannot Be Sold, and What Persons Are Forbidden to Sell Or Purchase It.
TITLE XLI. What Property Should Not Be Exported.
TITLE XLII. Concerning Eunuchs.
TITLE XLIII. Concerning Fathers Who Have Sold Their Children.
TITLE XLIV. Concerning the Rescission of a Sale.
TITLE XLV. When It Is Permitted to Refuse to Comply with a Contract of Sale.
TITLE XLVI. Where a Sale Is Made on Account of Public Contributions.
TITLE XLVII. Land Cannot Be Purchased without the Payment of Taxes Or Balances Which Are Due.
TITLE XLVIII. Concerning the Risks and Advantages Attaching to Property Sold.
TITLE XLIX. Concerning the Actions of Purchase and Sale.
TITLE L. Where Anyone Has Purchased Property For Another, Or For Himself In The Name Of Another, Or With Money Belonging To Another.
TITLE LI. Concerning the Prohibited Alienation and Hypothecation of the Property of Others.
TITLE LII. Concerning the Alienation of Property Owned in Common.
TITLE LIII. Those Who Have Charge of the Affairs of Others Are Not Forbidden to Alienate Their Own Property.
TITLE LIV. Concerning Agreements Entered into between Vendor and Purchaser.
TITLE LV. Where a Slave Is Sold for the Purpose of Being Sent out of the Country.
TITLE LVI. Where a Slave Has Been Sold on Condition that He Should Not Be Prostituted.
TITLE LVII. Where a Slave Has Been Alienated under the Condition that He Will Or Will Not Be Manumitted.
TITLE LVIII. Concerning Edilitian Actions.
TITLE LIX. Concerning Monopolies, Unlawful Agreements of Merchants, the Artificers Or Contractors, and the Illegal and Prohibited Practices of Bath Proprietors.
TITLE LX. Concerning Fairs and Markets.
TITLE LXI. Concerning Duties on Merchandise, and Offences to Which They Are Subject.
TITLE LXII. New Duties on Merchandise Cannot Be Established.
TITLE LXIII. Concerning Commerce and Merchants.
TITLE LXIV. Concerning the Exchange of Property and the Actio Praescriptis Verbis.
TITLE LXV. Concerning Leasing and Hiring.
TITLE LXVI. Concerning the Law of Emphyteusis.
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