Una reflexión sobre la impronta romana del 'beneficio de separación de patrimonios' en el Código Civil catalán

Publication date

2013-05-10T17:51:58Z

2013-05-10T17:51:58Z

2011

2013-05-10T17:51:58Z

Abstract

The roman institution of the separatio bonorum is a pretorian remedy that relies on the principle of equity, created as to protect the deceased creditors and/or legatees. It provides them a"benefit" in the case of selling the goods of the heir-deubtor, enabling them to separate and reserve for themselves that whole patrimonium, as to avoid that by the act of selling, the heirs creditors could go to it; and like this they maintain intact their guarantee, which relies on the whole goods and assets left by the deceased. The separation of patrimonies implied the existence of 2 different groups of goods: that of the heirs" and that one of the deceased, which are not the same in legal terms, in spite of having a common owner at this point, the heir. This institution was regulated in the 6th title of the 42nd book of the Digesto, and in the 72th title, 7th book of the Justinean Code, and its interest is really high due to its material complexity and its procedure. The aim of this work is to analyze the institution of the separatio bonorum in Roman Law, and its importance in the same figure, actually regulated in the 4th book of the Catalan civil code.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

Spanish

Publisher

Universidad de Castilla-La Mancha

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: http://www.ridrom.uclm.es/documentos7/Dominguez7_pub.doc

RIDROM. Revista Internacional de Derecho Romano, 2011, num. 7, p. 199-280

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Rights

cc-by-nc-nd (c) Domínguez Tristán, Paula, 2011

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es