Depositum (Deposit for Custody)

Depositum was a contract by which one person (depositor) delivered a thing to another (depositarius) to keep for him gratuitously and to return it on demand. It was a contract of the Jus Gentium, and a bona fidei negotium. It was distinguished from mutuum in that the ownership of the property did not pass to the depositary, and from Commodatum in that the depositary had no right to use the property. As in the case of the other real contracts, the contract of deposit was created by the delivery of the thing to the depositary.

The contract was for the sole benefit of the depositor and the depositary was liable only for fraud (dolus) or for loss or injury caused by some positive act of commission on his part. He was not liable for mere inattention or passive negligence. He was bound to return the thing on demand. The depositor was required to pay all expense incident to the custody of the thing, and also all damages to the depositary caused by the thing deposited if he knew it was likely to cause damage, for example, where one deposited a slave whom he knew to be dishonest. The depositor had an actio depositi directa against the depositary, and the latter had an actio depositi contraria against the depositor.

It will be observed that the Roman law of deposit was substantially the sam6 as the English law of deposit.

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)