si contra jus vel utilitatem publi- quod per
mendacium
et obreptionem
cam (Cod.
cam (Cod.
Thomas Carlyle
] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
303
Connon is, however, clear that the legislative authority
of the prince (at least, of the Eoman Emperor) was unfettered
by the necessity of taking counsel; he cites the opinion of
Papinian that the Law is "consultum virorum prudentum,"
but adds that this does not imply that the prince must consult
the jurists; it is customary to do so, and it is right and
honourable, as the Code says " Humanum est," &c. (' Code,' i.
14, 8), but as Bartolus says, this is a counsel of " Humanitas,"
not a legal necessity. Connon holds clearly and emphatically
that the legislative power of the prince was as complete as
that of the whole Eoman people. 1
On the other hand, he contemptuously repudiates the notion
that law is superior to custom; their authority is equal, and
the later prevails over the earlier2; and he is equally dogmatic
in repudiating the doctrine that the prince is " legibus solutus. "
The prince is, indeed, over the people, but he is still one
of the people, and he wishes that all princes should re-
member the " Digna Vox " (' Code,' i. 121, 4), and should suffer
their authority to be controlled by the law and by equity. 3
A little later he lays down dogmatically the principle that an
unjust law is not a law at all, and should be corrected or
annulled; and that, if a king by hereditary right becomes a
tyrant and violates the divine and human laws, he should
be deposed. The law and the king are sacred, and not to be
violated, but evil law is to be abrogated and the tyrant to be
expelled. Until this has been done, they must be obeyed;
cum et illi regnandi pot est os data est,
et nobis imposita necessitas parendi.
Sic fit ut nulla lex non de populi
volunt ate constituatur, et sit tanquam
pactum quod dam consentientium inter
se civium, ut dicebat Lycophron
sophistes; quod eam aut sciscunt ipsi,
aut is cui eius sciscendae ferendaequo
dederunt potestatem. Ergo vel utilitas
ipsa justi prope mater et equi, ut
scribit Horatius, vel conventio ipsa
nostra, nos obligat legibus, iis ut
omnes pexere debeamus. "
1 Id. id. , 8 (p. 29).
>> Id. id. , 10 (p. ii).
? Id. id. , 8 (p. 28): "Quod si ita
est, ne prince ps quidem ipse legibus
solutus est, quoniam ita praeest
populo, ut unus tamen sit de populo,
'Digna vox est majestate Regnantis
. . . et re vera majus imperii est
submittere legibus principatum. Et
oraculo praesentis edioti quod nobis
licere non patimur, aliis indicamus. '
Quod utinam sibi oditum puterint
omnes principes omnium qui unius
imperio subsunt populorum: et poten-
tiain suam jure, lege, equitate prae-
ponderari sinant. "
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? 304 THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY. [PABT III.
but when it is done, men are free from them. 1 We cannot
say that these conceptions of Connon are derived from those
of Alciatus, but there are obviously important parallels
between them.
Francois Duaren was also a pupil of Alciatus and a con-
temporary of Connon, dying in 1559, and in his Commentaries
on the 'Digest' we find some important observations on the
sources of law and the authority of the prince.
There is no doubt, he says in one place, that the prince
can make law, but he raises the question how far the people
also have the right to do this, and he contends that they
clearly possessed this right in the time of Julianus, that is, in
the second century; he also cites Dion and Suetonius as showing
that Augustus and Caligula were in the habit of submitting
legislative proposals to the people, and in a later passage he
suggests that it is at least possible that the people shared
their power of legislation with the prince, and did not re-
nounce it entirely, and he cites the words of Julianus as
illustrating this. 2
1 Id. id. , 8 (p. 30): "Haec igitur
disputationis nostrae summa sit, in-
justam legem, legem non esse, et vel
tollendam esse, errore cognito, vel
certe corrigendam; dum id fiat
parendum ei esse.
Ut ei qui justa hereditate rex est,
tyranuk-os mores induat, divina atque
humana jura pervertat, suorum non
salutem petat, sed sanguinem, eiicien-
dus regno est: dum id fiat, rex est:
nec attentandus a quoquam est, nisi
communi suorum decreto deliberatum
sit et constitutum. Sanctum est,
enim nomen legis, sanctum et regis:
neutrum quod fieri potest violandum:
sed ilia abroganda, si mala est; hie,
si tyrannus, expollendus est. Tum
utrique impune non pareas, utroque
solutus. Ante vero si obedientiam
abjeceris, manus quodammodo videris
afferre patriae. "
Cf. 'Sachsenspiegel,' iii. , 54, 4
(cf. vol. iii. p. 61, note 2). Vacarius,
cf. this volumo, p. 23, note 4.
* F. Duarenus, 'Comment, in
Digest. ' i. 3, cap. 3: "Principem
nulla dubitatio est legem condere posse,
cum potestas populi in eum translata
sit. . . . Sed de populo quaeri potest
an legis constituendae potestatem
habeat. Et Julianus satis aperte
ostendit in 1. De qui bus, hie (Dig.
i. 3, 32) tempore suo populum legem
condere potuisse. Ac scribit Dion,
Augustum leges ad populum ferre
solitum, postquam urbis imperium ei
delatum est. Sed et Suetonius, de
Caligula loquens: 'tentavit, inquit, et
comitiorum more revocato, suffragia
populo reddere. '"
Id. id. , i. 4, cap. i. : "Nam jus
quod prinoeps constituit, vim legis
habet, etsi non intervenerit populi
consensus, sed sola principis voluntas.
? ? . . . Quarm'is autem juris consti-
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? CHAP. V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTCB. Y.
305
His treatment of custom seems to us to be related.
He first asks whether custom can override the law when
made by the prince, for "the event shows that the law did
not correspond with the customs of the people "; and he cites
as from Gratian the words of St Augustine that laws are
confirmed when they are approved by the custom of those
who are concerned. He also repudiates the interpretation
of the famous rescript of Constantino as moaning that custom
could not override law; Constantino only meant that custom
had in itself no greater authority than law. 1
Duaren accepts the principle that the prince is "legibus
solutus," though he adds that he does voluntarily submit to
the law, and he cites "Digna Vox" (' Code,' i. xiV. 4), but
he very emphatically contradicts the conception that the
rescripts of tho prince are to be always obeyed. They have
no authority against the law or the public interest, they
cannot deprive a man of his legal rights, they cannot annul
a judicial decision (" res judicata ") when there is no legal
right of appeal. 2
tuendi potestas fuerit principi concessa
a populo: tamen credibilo est popu-
lum eam potestatem mag is cum prin-
cipe quodammodo communicasso,
quam a se omnino abdicasse, quod et
Julianue ostendit, paulo ante dis-
putans de consuetudine. D. 1. De
quibus, supra prox. Tit. (Dig. i. 3, 32). "
1 Id. id. , i. 3, cap. 12, 4: "Poet-
quam vero desiit populus leges condere,
queritur, an possit consuetudo jus a
principe constitutum tollere. Et
exist imo, si princeps ab initio non
eoegerit inobedientes ad parendum legi,
sed dissimulaverit longo tempore,
adeo ut consuetudo inoleverit paulatim
legi contraria, ea consuetudine legem
abrogari. Eventus enim docet eam
legem moribus populi non convenien-
tem, atque ideo contemnendam esse.
Can. erit autem 4 Dist. (Oratian
Decret. D. 4). Inde illud Augustini
oelebratum est, 'leges firmantur, cum
moribus utentiumapprobantur. . . . '
Verum obiicitur nobis resoriptum
Constantini 1. 2. Quae sit longa
consuetudo (Cod. viii. 52, 2). . . . Ex
quo consequi videtur legem consuetu-
dine abrogari non posse.
Sed alius mihi videtur eorum
verborum sensus quam vulgo credatur.
Non enim his verbis signifiest Con-
stantinus, si consuetudo legi omnino
contraria sit, non posse legem ea
abrogari, sed consuetudinem majoris
auctoritatis non esse quam legem,
imitatur enim legem, et vim legis
habet. "
* Id. id. , i. 3, cap. 5: "Excipitur
Princeps, qui legibus solutus est lege,
et sonatas consultis. . . . Sed is se
sponto sua legibus se subiicit, et
secundum leges profitetur se vello
vivere 1. Digna Vox (C. i. 14, 4). "
Id. id. , i. 4, cap. 4: "Resoriptum
parendum esse sine recusatione. . . .
Quae res multas cautiones habet,
ut saepe acoidit ut rescripto parendum
? ? VOL. VI.
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? 306
[PABT in.
THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
This means, as we understand it, that while the prince
stands personally in some way outside of the law, he cannot
interfere with the due process of law, or, by his brief, deprive
a man of his legal rights. We are again reminded of
Alciatus.
We turn to another French Civilian of a little later date,
Nicolas Vigeliu8, whose work on the' Digest' was first published
in 1568.
His discussion of the sources of law does not seem to us
to be much more than a collection of some of the passages
in the 'Digest' and 'Code' which refer to it,1 except when
he deals with the relation of custom to law. This he discusses
in some detail, and he states his own conclusions dogmatically.
He first refers to it in dealing with what he terms "Ex-
ceptiones adversus leges. " The seventeenth "exceptio" is
"nisi lex alia lege vel consuetudine sit mutata," and he cites
some words of that passage of Julianus, to which we have
so often referred, in which he says that laws are abrogated
not only by the will of the legislator, but also by the tacit
consent of all, " per desuetudinem. " 2
Vigelius returns to the subject a little later, and at some
length. Custom, he says, has the force of law, and he confirms
this by citing various passages from the' Digest' and the' Code. '
He cites as an "exceptio" that important rescript of Con-
stantino which seems to imply that custom had no force
against law (' Code,' viii. 52, 2) and some words of Ulpian
(Digest, i. 32, 3); but he concludes dogmatically that if the
non sit; idque variis ex causis, propter Quaeritur de eo, qui adversus senten-
quas hodie in judiciis rescripta im- tiam rescriptum impetravit. Et cer-
pugnari solent. Primum, quod re- tum est, si res judicata sit, ut nullua
scriptum juri contrarium sit, aut supersit locum appellationi aut supplica-
contra utilitatem publicam, 1. neo tioni, rescripta ejus i
1. rescripta C. De Preoibus impetrata, nullius esse momenti. . . .
imper. offer. 1. ult (Cod. i. 19, 3, and 7). Praeteroa adversum rescriptum obiicitur
C.
si contra jus vel utilitatem publi- quod per mendacium et obreptionem
cam (Cod. i. 22, 6). Quo in genere impetratum sit. "
poni debet rescriptum, quo jus alienum 1 Vigelius, 'Digestorum Juris Civilia
tollitur . . . unde intelligitur rescripta Libri Quinquaginta,' i. , 1,4; i. 3, I;
impetrari solum posse a principe de iis i. 4, 1 i i. 4, 3.
quae nomini damnum inferunt. . . . * Id. id. , i. 7, 17.
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? CHAP. V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 307
custom were subsequent to the written law, it prevails against
it. (We cite the last words of the passage. )1
When he turns to the relations of the prince to the law,
while he cannot directly repudiate the doctrine "Princeps
legibus solutus," he argues that to act upon this is contrary
to the " Digna Vox," and that in several cases the Emperor
had said they would not act upon it, but that while they were
"legibus soluti" they lived according to the laws; and he
quotes some lines of Claudian. 2 Vigelius clearly does not
like the principle that the prince is " legibus solutus. " When
we come to the authority of the prince's briefs, he states
dogmatically the limits which are set upon it by the law.
In spite of the reverence which is due to the briefs of the prince,
no such brief is to be accepted in a Court of Law which is
contrary to the general law or the public service, unless it is
such that it inflicts no injury upon anyone. 3
1 Id. id. , i. 8 (col. 28): "Ergo si
scripta lex extet contra consuetudinom,
consuetudo legi scriptae cedit. Hujus
exceptionis replicatio haeo est: nisi
lex scripta consuetudinem praocesserit,
tunc enim consuetudo postea in-
secuta praecedentem legem tollit,
eaque potior habetur. "
? Id. id. , i. 7, 18: "Exceptio,
nisi imperator vel Augusta leges non
observaverit. Haeo exceptio ap-
probatur 1. Princeps, 31 ft. De
Legibus (Dig. i. 3, 31); his verbis
princeps legibus solutus est. . . .
Plane non omne quod licet hones-
tum est. Itaque quamvis principi
liceat praeter leges vivere, decet
tamen eum vivere secundum leges.
Quod approbatur 1. Digna Vox (Cod.
i. xiv. 4). . . . Concordat 1. ex
imporfecto 23 S. De Legibus. . . .
'Ex imperfecto testamento legata vel
rldeicomnissa imperatorem vindicare
invorecundum est. ' Decet enim tantae
majestatis, eas sorvare leges, qui bus ipse
solutus ease videtur. Concordat item 1.
ex imperfecto 3 C. de testamentis, his
verbis (Cod. vi. 23, 3). Ex testamento
nec imperatorem hereditatem vindicare,
saepe constitutum est. Licet enim
lex imperii solemnitatibus juris impera-
torem solverit, nihil tam proprium
imperii est, quam legibus vivere.
Concordat denique Instit, quibus modis
testamenta infir. fin. ubi. ; Impp.
Sevorus et Antoninus (Inst. i. xvii. 8).
'Licet (inquiunt) legibus soluti simus,
attamen legibus vivimus,' Hue perti-
net versus apud Claudianum poetam.
'In commune jubes si quid, oensesvo
tenendum. Primus jussa subi: tuno
observatior aequi, Fit populus, nec ferre
vetat, cum viderit ipsum, Auctorem
parere sibi. "
* Id. id. , i. 10 (col. 35): "Primo:
Rescriptum principis regulariter utile
est, et servandum. . . . Concordat I.
sacrilegii ix. Cod. De Diversis re-
scriptis, his verbis (Cod. i. xxiii. 5).
'Sacrilegii ins tar est, super quibus-
cunque administrationibus vel dignita-
tibus promulgandis obviare beneficiis. '
? ? . . . Hujus regulae oxceptiones sequun-
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? 308
[pabt in.
THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
A little later still, we come to another important French
Civilian who lectured at Bourges from 1551 to 1572, H. Doneau,
whose work, 'Commentariornm de Jure Civili,' was first
published in 1589-90. 1
Doneau is, in the first place, clear that law is established
by the Eoman people, for the prince only holds the legislative
power because the people have conferred it upon him, and it
is immaterial whether the people makes laws itself, or whether
it does this by those to whom it gives the power to do so. 2
In another place Doneau seems to speak as though the con-
sent of the citizens were still required to make law, and he
cites the important passages which speak of the " communis
resipublicae sponsio" as a necessary element in legislation;
this is the more significant as he adds that the obligation of
law is greater when it represents a man's own consent, than
when it is imposed upon him by the will and authority of
another. 3
1. ult. C. Si contra jus, et his verbis
(Cod. i. xxii. 6), 'Omnes cujusque
majoris vel minoris administrationis
nostrae univeraao reipublicae judices
monemus, ut nullum rescriptum, nullam
pragmaticam sanctionem, nullam sac-
ram adnotationem, quae generali juri
vel utilitati publicae adversa esse
videatur, in disceptationem cujus-
libet litigii patiantur proferri; sed
generales sacras constitutiones, modis
omnibus nondubitant observandas. . . . '
Concordat 1. nec 3 C. De precibus Imp.
offerendis hisco verbis. 'Neo damnosa
flsco, nec juri contraria postulari
oportet' (Cod. i. xix. 3). Propositae
exceptionis replicatio haec est. 'Nisi
rescriptum contra jus nemini obsit,
et prosit petenti': quae replicatio
npprobatur 1. Rescripta, 7 C. De
Precibus Imp. off. his verbis (Cod. i.
six. 7). 'Rescripta contra jus elicita
ab omnibus judicibus praocipimus
rcfutari: nisi forte aliquid est quod
non laedat alium et prosit petenti, vel
crimen supplicantibus indulgeat. '"
1 We wish to express our great
obligations to the excellent work of M.
Eysell, 'Doneau, sa vie et ses ouviagos,'
both for his detailed study of Doneau
and for his valuable account of the
other Civilians with whom wo have
been dealing.
* H. Doneau,' Opera Omnia,' vol. i. ,
ed. Rom. 1828, i. 8, 6. 'Commen-
tariorum de Jure Civili': "Lex totius
populi Romani constitutio est. . . .
Penes hunc summa juris constituendi
potestas fuit. Nam, ne princeps
quidem, postea hac potestate prae-
ditus esset, nisi populus potestatem
suam in ilium contulisset. . . . i. 8, 14.
Jam ante dixi, nihil interesse, utrum
quis quid constituat, aut decernat ipse,
an vero ii, quibus ipse constituendi aut
decernondi potestatem dedit. "
? Id. id. id. , i. 16, 6: "Acoedit ad
haec consensus civium in jura et leges,
ex quo lex, 'Communis reipublicae
? ? sponsio,' dicitur in 1. i. , 1. ii. Dig. De
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? chap, V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
309
It seems reasonable to relate this to Doneau's treatment
of custom in relation to law. He interprets the rescript of
Constantino (' Cod. ,' viii. 52, 2) as referring not to a particular
custom, but to custom in general, that is, as meaning that
custom, as such, is not superior to law as such; and that if
a particular custom and a particular law are in conflict, the
later in time is superior. 1
When Doneau turns to the relation of the prince to the
existing law, he asserts dogmatically that all men are under
the law, even the prince. It is true that the prince is " legibus
et solemnitatibus juris solutus" by the " Lex Eegia " of the
Eoman people, but he is bound "communi principum lege
et sua," for the prince wills to live according to the law. 2
He returns to the question in his Commentary on the ' Code,'
and contemptuously brushes aside the contention of those
who favoured the prince, that it was derogatory to his dignity
that he should not be able to do whatever he pleased, and ho
points out that the Empire rests upon good laws, which are
established not only by the words of the prince but by his
example.
Connon is, however, clear that the legislative authority
of the prince (at least, of the Eoman Emperor) was unfettered
by the necessity of taking counsel; he cites the opinion of
Papinian that the Law is "consultum virorum prudentum,"
but adds that this does not imply that the prince must consult
the jurists; it is customary to do so, and it is right and
honourable, as the Code says " Humanum est," &c. (' Code,' i.
14, 8), but as Bartolus says, this is a counsel of " Humanitas,"
not a legal necessity. Connon holds clearly and emphatically
that the legislative power of the prince was as complete as
that of the whole Eoman people. 1
On the other hand, he contemptuously repudiates the notion
that law is superior to custom; their authority is equal, and
the later prevails over the earlier2; and he is equally dogmatic
in repudiating the doctrine that the prince is " legibus solutus. "
The prince is, indeed, over the people, but he is still one
of the people, and he wishes that all princes should re-
member the " Digna Vox " (' Code,' i. 121, 4), and should suffer
their authority to be controlled by the law and by equity. 3
A little later he lays down dogmatically the principle that an
unjust law is not a law at all, and should be corrected or
annulled; and that, if a king by hereditary right becomes a
tyrant and violates the divine and human laws, he should
be deposed. The law and the king are sacred, and not to be
violated, but evil law is to be abrogated and the tyrant to be
expelled. Until this has been done, they must be obeyed;
cum et illi regnandi pot est os data est,
et nobis imposita necessitas parendi.
Sic fit ut nulla lex non de populi
volunt ate constituatur, et sit tanquam
pactum quod dam consentientium inter
se civium, ut dicebat Lycophron
sophistes; quod eam aut sciscunt ipsi,
aut is cui eius sciscendae ferendaequo
dederunt potestatem. Ergo vel utilitas
ipsa justi prope mater et equi, ut
scribit Horatius, vel conventio ipsa
nostra, nos obligat legibus, iis ut
omnes pexere debeamus. "
1 Id. id. , 8 (p. 29).
>> Id. id. , 10 (p. ii).
? Id. id. , 8 (p. 28): "Quod si ita
est, ne prince ps quidem ipse legibus
solutus est, quoniam ita praeest
populo, ut unus tamen sit de populo,
'Digna vox est majestate Regnantis
. . . et re vera majus imperii est
submittere legibus principatum. Et
oraculo praesentis edioti quod nobis
licere non patimur, aliis indicamus. '
Quod utinam sibi oditum puterint
omnes principes omnium qui unius
imperio subsunt populorum: et poten-
tiain suam jure, lege, equitate prae-
ponderari sinant. "
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? 304 THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY. [PABT III.
but when it is done, men are free from them. 1 We cannot
say that these conceptions of Connon are derived from those
of Alciatus, but there are obviously important parallels
between them.
Francois Duaren was also a pupil of Alciatus and a con-
temporary of Connon, dying in 1559, and in his Commentaries
on the 'Digest' we find some important observations on the
sources of law and the authority of the prince.
There is no doubt, he says in one place, that the prince
can make law, but he raises the question how far the people
also have the right to do this, and he contends that they
clearly possessed this right in the time of Julianus, that is, in
the second century; he also cites Dion and Suetonius as showing
that Augustus and Caligula were in the habit of submitting
legislative proposals to the people, and in a later passage he
suggests that it is at least possible that the people shared
their power of legislation with the prince, and did not re-
nounce it entirely, and he cites the words of Julianus as
illustrating this. 2
1 Id. id. , 8 (p. 30): "Haec igitur
disputationis nostrae summa sit, in-
justam legem, legem non esse, et vel
tollendam esse, errore cognito, vel
certe corrigendam; dum id fiat
parendum ei esse.
Ut ei qui justa hereditate rex est,
tyranuk-os mores induat, divina atque
humana jura pervertat, suorum non
salutem petat, sed sanguinem, eiicien-
dus regno est: dum id fiat, rex est:
nec attentandus a quoquam est, nisi
communi suorum decreto deliberatum
sit et constitutum. Sanctum est,
enim nomen legis, sanctum et regis:
neutrum quod fieri potest violandum:
sed ilia abroganda, si mala est; hie,
si tyrannus, expollendus est. Tum
utrique impune non pareas, utroque
solutus. Ante vero si obedientiam
abjeceris, manus quodammodo videris
afferre patriae. "
Cf. 'Sachsenspiegel,' iii. , 54, 4
(cf. vol. iii. p. 61, note 2). Vacarius,
cf. this volumo, p. 23, note 4.
* F. Duarenus, 'Comment, in
Digest. ' i. 3, cap. 3: "Principem
nulla dubitatio est legem condere posse,
cum potestas populi in eum translata
sit. . . . Sed de populo quaeri potest
an legis constituendae potestatem
habeat. Et Julianus satis aperte
ostendit in 1. De qui bus, hie (Dig.
i. 3, 32) tempore suo populum legem
condere potuisse. Ac scribit Dion,
Augustum leges ad populum ferre
solitum, postquam urbis imperium ei
delatum est. Sed et Suetonius, de
Caligula loquens: 'tentavit, inquit, et
comitiorum more revocato, suffragia
populo reddere. '"
Id. id. , i. 4, cap. i. : "Nam jus
quod prinoeps constituit, vim legis
habet, etsi non intervenerit populi
consensus, sed sola principis voluntas.
? ? . . . Quarm'is autem juris consti-
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? CHAP. V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTCB. Y.
305
His treatment of custom seems to us to be related.
He first asks whether custom can override the law when
made by the prince, for "the event shows that the law did
not correspond with the customs of the people "; and he cites
as from Gratian the words of St Augustine that laws are
confirmed when they are approved by the custom of those
who are concerned. He also repudiates the interpretation
of the famous rescript of Constantino as moaning that custom
could not override law; Constantino only meant that custom
had in itself no greater authority than law. 1
Duaren accepts the principle that the prince is "legibus
solutus," though he adds that he does voluntarily submit to
the law, and he cites "Digna Vox" (' Code,' i. xiV. 4), but
he very emphatically contradicts the conception that the
rescripts of tho prince are to be always obeyed. They have
no authority against the law or the public interest, they
cannot deprive a man of his legal rights, they cannot annul
a judicial decision (" res judicata ") when there is no legal
right of appeal. 2
tuendi potestas fuerit principi concessa
a populo: tamen credibilo est popu-
lum eam potestatem mag is cum prin-
cipe quodammodo communicasso,
quam a se omnino abdicasse, quod et
Julianue ostendit, paulo ante dis-
putans de consuetudine. D. 1. De
quibus, supra prox. Tit. (Dig. i. 3, 32). "
1 Id. id. , i. 3, cap. 12, 4: "Poet-
quam vero desiit populus leges condere,
queritur, an possit consuetudo jus a
principe constitutum tollere. Et
exist imo, si princeps ab initio non
eoegerit inobedientes ad parendum legi,
sed dissimulaverit longo tempore,
adeo ut consuetudo inoleverit paulatim
legi contraria, ea consuetudine legem
abrogari. Eventus enim docet eam
legem moribus populi non convenien-
tem, atque ideo contemnendam esse.
Can. erit autem 4 Dist. (Oratian
Decret. D. 4). Inde illud Augustini
oelebratum est, 'leges firmantur, cum
moribus utentiumapprobantur. . . . '
Verum obiicitur nobis resoriptum
Constantini 1. 2. Quae sit longa
consuetudo (Cod. viii. 52, 2). . . . Ex
quo consequi videtur legem consuetu-
dine abrogari non posse.
Sed alius mihi videtur eorum
verborum sensus quam vulgo credatur.
Non enim his verbis signifiest Con-
stantinus, si consuetudo legi omnino
contraria sit, non posse legem ea
abrogari, sed consuetudinem majoris
auctoritatis non esse quam legem,
imitatur enim legem, et vim legis
habet. "
* Id. id. , i. 3, cap. 5: "Excipitur
Princeps, qui legibus solutus est lege,
et sonatas consultis. . . . Sed is se
sponto sua legibus se subiicit, et
secundum leges profitetur se vello
vivere 1. Digna Vox (C. i. 14, 4). "
Id. id. , i. 4, cap. 4: "Resoriptum
parendum esse sine recusatione. . . .
Quae res multas cautiones habet,
ut saepe acoidit ut rescripto parendum
? ? VOL. VI.
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? 306
[PABT in.
THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
This means, as we understand it, that while the prince
stands personally in some way outside of the law, he cannot
interfere with the due process of law, or, by his brief, deprive
a man of his legal rights. We are again reminded of
Alciatus.
We turn to another French Civilian of a little later date,
Nicolas Vigeliu8, whose work on the' Digest' was first published
in 1568.
His discussion of the sources of law does not seem to us
to be much more than a collection of some of the passages
in the 'Digest' and 'Code' which refer to it,1 except when
he deals with the relation of custom to law. This he discusses
in some detail, and he states his own conclusions dogmatically.
He first refers to it in dealing with what he terms "Ex-
ceptiones adversus leges. " The seventeenth "exceptio" is
"nisi lex alia lege vel consuetudine sit mutata," and he cites
some words of that passage of Julianus, to which we have
so often referred, in which he says that laws are abrogated
not only by the will of the legislator, but also by the tacit
consent of all, " per desuetudinem. " 2
Vigelius returns to the subject a little later, and at some
length. Custom, he says, has the force of law, and he confirms
this by citing various passages from the' Digest' and the' Code. '
He cites as an "exceptio" that important rescript of Con-
stantino which seems to imply that custom had no force
against law (' Code,' viii. 52, 2) and some words of Ulpian
(Digest, i. 32, 3); but he concludes dogmatically that if the
non sit; idque variis ex causis, propter Quaeritur de eo, qui adversus senten-
quas hodie in judiciis rescripta im- tiam rescriptum impetravit. Et cer-
pugnari solent. Primum, quod re- tum est, si res judicata sit, ut nullua
scriptum juri contrarium sit, aut supersit locum appellationi aut supplica-
contra utilitatem publicam, 1. neo tioni, rescripta ejus i
1. rescripta C. De Preoibus impetrata, nullius esse momenti. . . .
imper. offer. 1. ult (Cod. i. 19, 3, and 7). Praeteroa adversum rescriptum obiicitur
C.
si contra jus vel utilitatem publi- quod per mendacium et obreptionem
cam (Cod. i. 22, 6). Quo in genere impetratum sit. "
poni debet rescriptum, quo jus alienum 1 Vigelius, 'Digestorum Juris Civilia
tollitur . . . unde intelligitur rescripta Libri Quinquaginta,' i. , 1,4; i. 3, I;
impetrari solum posse a principe de iis i. 4, 1 i i. 4, 3.
quae nomini damnum inferunt. . . . * Id. id. , i. 7, 17.
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? CHAP. V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. 307
custom were subsequent to the written law, it prevails against
it. (We cite the last words of the passage. )1
When he turns to the relations of the prince to the law,
while he cannot directly repudiate the doctrine "Princeps
legibus solutus," he argues that to act upon this is contrary
to the " Digna Vox," and that in several cases the Emperor
had said they would not act upon it, but that while they were
"legibus soluti" they lived according to the laws; and he
quotes some lines of Claudian. 2 Vigelius clearly does not
like the principle that the prince is " legibus solutus. " When
we come to the authority of the prince's briefs, he states
dogmatically the limits which are set upon it by the law.
In spite of the reverence which is due to the briefs of the prince,
no such brief is to be accepted in a Court of Law which is
contrary to the general law or the public service, unless it is
such that it inflicts no injury upon anyone. 3
1 Id. id. , i. 8 (col. 28): "Ergo si
scripta lex extet contra consuetudinom,
consuetudo legi scriptae cedit. Hujus
exceptionis replicatio haeo est: nisi
lex scripta consuetudinem praocesserit,
tunc enim consuetudo postea in-
secuta praecedentem legem tollit,
eaque potior habetur. "
? Id. id. , i. 7, 18: "Exceptio,
nisi imperator vel Augusta leges non
observaverit. Haeo exceptio ap-
probatur 1. Princeps, 31 ft. De
Legibus (Dig. i. 3, 31); his verbis
princeps legibus solutus est. . . .
Plane non omne quod licet hones-
tum est. Itaque quamvis principi
liceat praeter leges vivere, decet
tamen eum vivere secundum leges.
Quod approbatur 1. Digna Vox (Cod.
i. xiv. 4). . . . Concordat 1. ex
imporfecto 23 S. De Legibus. . . .
'Ex imperfecto testamento legata vel
rldeicomnissa imperatorem vindicare
invorecundum est. ' Decet enim tantae
majestatis, eas sorvare leges, qui bus ipse
solutus ease videtur. Concordat item 1.
ex imperfecto 3 C. de testamentis, his
verbis (Cod. vi. 23, 3). Ex testamento
nec imperatorem hereditatem vindicare,
saepe constitutum est. Licet enim
lex imperii solemnitatibus juris impera-
torem solverit, nihil tam proprium
imperii est, quam legibus vivere.
Concordat denique Instit, quibus modis
testamenta infir. fin. ubi. ; Impp.
Sevorus et Antoninus (Inst. i. xvii. 8).
'Licet (inquiunt) legibus soluti simus,
attamen legibus vivimus,' Hue perti-
net versus apud Claudianum poetam.
'In commune jubes si quid, oensesvo
tenendum. Primus jussa subi: tuno
observatior aequi, Fit populus, nec ferre
vetat, cum viderit ipsum, Auctorem
parere sibi. "
* Id. id. , i. 10 (col. 35): "Primo:
Rescriptum principis regulariter utile
est, et servandum. . . . Concordat I.
sacrilegii ix. Cod. De Diversis re-
scriptis, his verbis (Cod. i. xxiii. 5).
'Sacrilegii ins tar est, super quibus-
cunque administrationibus vel dignita-
tibus promulgandis obviare beneficiis. '
? ? . . . Hujus regulae oxceptiones sequun-
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? 308
[pabt in.
THE EARLIER SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
A little later still, we come to another important French
Civilian who lectured at Bourges from 1551 to 1572, H. Doneau,
whose work, 'Commentariornm de Jure Civili,' was first
published in 1589-90. 1
Doneau is, in the first place, clear that law is established
by the Eoman people, for the prince only holds the legislative
power because the people have conferred it upon him, and it
is immaterial whether the people makes laws itself, or whether
it does this by those to whom it gives the power to do so. 2
In another place Doneau seems to speak as though the con-
sent of the citizens were still required to make law, and he
cites the important passages which speak of the " communis
resipublicae sponsio" as a necessary element in legislation;
this is the more significant as he adds that the obligation of
law is greater when it represents a man's own consent, than
when it is imposed upon him by the will and authority of
another. 3
1. ult. C. Si contra jus, et his verbis
(Cod. i. xxii. 6), 'Omnes cujusque
majoris vel minoris administrationis
nostrae univeraao reipublicae judices
monemus, ut nullum rescriptum, nullam
pragmaticam sanctionem, nullam sac-
ram adnotationem, quae generali juri
vel utilitati publicae adversa esse
videatur, in disceptationem cujus-
libet litigii patiantur proferri; sed
generales sacras constitutiones, modis
omnibus nondubitant observandas. . . . '
Concordat 1. nec 3 C. De precibus Imp.
offerendis hisco verbis. 'Neo damnosa
flsco, nec juri contraria postulari
oportet' (Cod. i. xix. 3). Propositae
exceptionis replicatio haec est. 'Nisi
rescriptum contra jus nemini obsit,
et prosit petenti': quae replicatio
npprobatur 1. Rescripta, 7 C. De
Precibus Imp. off. his verbis (Cod. i.
six. 7). 'Rescripta contra jus elicita
ab omnibus judicibus praocipimus
rcfutari: nisi forte aliquid est quod
non laedat alium et prosit petenti, vel
crimen supplicantibus indulgeat. '"
1 We wish to express our great
obligations to the excellent work of M.
Eysell, 'Doneau, sa vie et ses ouviagos,'
both for his detailed study of Doneau
and for his valuable account of the
other Civilians with whom wo have
been dealing.
* H. Doneau,' Opera Omnia,' vol. i. ,
ed. Rom. 1828, i. 8, 6. 'Commen-
tariorum de Jure Civili': "Lex totius
populi Romani constitutio est. . . .
Penes hunc summa juris constituendi
potestas fuit. Nam, ne princeps
quidem, postea hac potestate prae-
ditus esset, nisi populus potestatem
suam in ilium contulisset. . . . i. 8, 14.
Jam ante dixi, nihil interesse, utrum
quis quid constituat, aut decernat ipse,
an vero ii, quibus ipse constituendi aut
decernondi potestatem dedit. "
? Id. id. id. , i. 16, 6: "Acoedit ad
haec consensus civium in jura et leges,
ex quo lex, 'Communis reipublicae
? ? sponsio,' dicitur in 1. i. , 1. ii. Dig. De
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? chap, V. ] CIVILIANS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.
309
It seems reasonable to relate this to Doneau's treatment
of custom in relation to law. He interprets the rescript of
Constantino (' Cod. ,' viii. 52, 2) as referring not to a particular
custom, but to custom in general, that is, as meaning that
custom, as such, is not superior to law as such; and that if
a particular custom and a particular law are in conflict, the
later in time is superior. 1
When Doneau turns to the relation of the prince to the
existing law, he asserts dogmatically that all men are under
the law, even the prince. It is true that the prince is " legibus
et solemnitatibus juris solutus" by the " Lex Eegia " of the
Eoman people, but he is bound "communi principum lege
et sua," for the prince wills to live according to the law. 2
He returns to the question in his Commentary on the ' Code,'
and contemptuously brushes aside the contention of those
who favoured the prince, that it was derogatory to his dignity
that he should not be able to do whatever he pleased, and ho
points out that the Empire rests upon good laws, which are
established not only by the words of the prince but by his
example.