Hire of Things

The hire of things includes the hire of all kinds of property, whether houses, lands or chattels. The Roman law did not, except to a very limited extent, make any distinction in law between real and personal property as these terms are under- stood in English law. The law relating to the hire of lands and houses corresponded to the English law of landlord and tenant or leases of real property ; the hire of chattels corresponded to the English law of bailments. The Roman locator was the same as the English landlord or lessor where the subject-matter of the contract was land or a house, and was the same as the English bailor or letter where the subject-matter was a chattel. In the case of the hirer of lands or houses, however, certain special terms were employed.

The hirer of a house (praedium urbanum) was called inquilinus, and the rent he paid was called pensio. The hirer of a farm was called colonus, and the rent he paid reditus (Hunter, 507).

The contract of hire created only a right in personam and not a right in rem.

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Effects of Marriage with Manus

Slavery by Birth

Mandate (Mandatum)