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Pledge law in roman law

Sanja Maksimovic, +1 more
- Vol. 34, pp 1-12
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TLDR
In Roman law, in a group of real rights to someone else`s property (jus in re alien), there were, among the others, included the pledge right as mentioned in this paper, which is the right of security.
Abstract
THE legal institutes of the ancient Rome, particularly those referring to the Law of Things and Law of Contract, have had a great influence on the solutions which are nowadays still used. Up to this very day, there have been preserved some institutes of Roman law such as: the protection of property, the divisions of things, the right to the property, the right of servitude and the classification of contracts. IN Roman law, in a group of real rights to someone else`s property (jus in re alien), there were, among the others, included the pledge rights. The pledge right is the right of security. Among the pledge rights, the Romans included fiducia, pignus and mortgage.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The concept of property in roman law

TL;DR: The significance of the Roman law in the development of the property institute, within the Law of Things, is enormous as discussed by the authors, which is why there were a large number of lawsuits that in different ways protected the property of the owners of things, that is, those who, in a conscientious manner, came into possession of such things.
References
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The service contract in Roman law

TL;DR: The service contract has been existing since Roman law as mentioned in this paper and it originates from the locatio operis conductio contracts, the contract by which one party a conductor -was obliged to perform a specific job, such as a shoe making, wine transportation, etc., and the other party a locator was obliged to pay the specified fee.