Tender

Tender might consist in a simple offer to pay (oblatio) or in a formal tender by depositing the money due in a sealed bag either in a temple or in some other place by order of a court (depositio et obsignatio). (Code, 8, 43, 9; Code, 4, 37, 19.) It is not clear whether the formal tender was more effective in discharging the debt and its accessories, such as interest and securities, than the informal offer, but it seems that the debt itself was discharged by either mode. Thus where a debtor took the money to the creditor for the purpose of paying the debt, but the creditor, without good reason, refused to take the money, and the debtor accidentally lost it on the way home, it was held that the debtor could not be compelled to pay the money. (Dig. 46, 3, 72.) In the case of money deposited, the creditor's only remedy was against the depositary. (Hunter, 637.)

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Curators

The Several Kinds of Tutors

Nexum