The Several Kinds of Tutors
(1) Testamentary Tutors. These were appointed by the will of the deceased paterfamilias of the pupil. This mode of appointment was authorized by the Twelve Tables.
(2) Statutory Tutors. These succeeded to the tutela by virtue of the provisions of the Twelve Tables or of some other Statute, but only if there were no testamentary tutors. They were called legitimi tutor es. They were the agnates (by Justinian's legislation, the nearest of kin, whether agnates or cognates) who in case of the death of the pupil would succeed to his inheritance. They were appointed upon the principle that those who had the advantage of the inheritance ought to bear the burden of the tutela (ubi entolumentum successionis ibi et onus tutelcs). In this connection may be mentioned also the guardianship of the patron over his freedman, and of the father over his emancipated child.
(3) In the absence of a testamentary or statutory tutor, power was ' given to certain magistrates to appoint a tutor. Tutors so appointed were called tutores dativi.
Note. — A woman could not exercise the office of tutor, but during the later Empire it became the practice to appoint a mother tutor to her children in the absence of a testamentary or statutory tutor.
After several enactments on the subject, Justinian finally excluded women from the office of tutor, ex- cept in the case of mothers to their children and grandmothers to their grandchildren. (Hunter, 918.)