登陆注册
5633000000074

第74章

There is an aphorism of Savigny which has been sometimesthought to countenance a view of the origin of property somewhatsimilar to the theories epitomised by Blackstone. The greatGerman jurist has laid down that all Property is founded onAdverse Possession ripened by Prescription. It is only withrespect to Roman law that Savigny makes this statement, andbefore it can fully be appreciated much labour must be expendedin explaining and defining the expressions employed. His meaningwill, however, be indicated with sufficient accuracy if weconsider him to assert that, how far soever we carry our inquiryinto the ideas of property received among the Romans, howeverclosely we approach in tracing them to the infancy of law, we canget no farther than a conception of ownership involving the threeelements in the canon -- Possession, Adverseness of Possession,that is a holding not permissive or subordinate, but exclusiveagainst the world, and Prescription, or a period of time duringwhich the Adverse Possession has uninterruptedly continued. It isexceedingly probable that this maxim might be enunciated withmore generality than was allowed to it by its author, and that nosound or safe conclusion can be looked for from investigationsinto any system of laws which are pushed farther back than thepoint at which these combined ideas constitute the notion ofproprietary right. Meantime, so far from bearing out the populartheory of the origin of property, Savigny's canon is particularlyvaluable as directing our attention to its weakest point. In theview of Blackstone and those whom he follows, it was the mode ofassuming the exclusive enjoyment which mysteriously affected theminds of the fathers of our race. But the mystery does not residehere. It is not wonderful that property began in adversepossession. It is not surprising that the first proprietor shouldhave been the strong man armed who kept his goods in peace. Butwhy it was that lapse of time created a sentiment of respect forhis possession -- which is the exact source of the universalreverence of mankind for that which has for a long period defacto existed -- are questions really deserving the profoundestexamination, but lying far beyond the boundary of our presentinquiries.

Before pointing out the quarter in which we may hope to gleansome information, scanty and uncertain at best, concerning theearly history of proprietary right, I venture to state my opinionthat the popular impression in reference to the part played byOccupancy in the first stages of civilisation directly reversesthe truth. Occupancy is the advised assumption of physicalpossession; and the notion that an act of this descriptionconfers a title to "res nullius," so far from beingcharacteristic of very early societies, is in all probability thegrowth of a refined jurisprudence and of a settled condition ofthe laws. It is only when the rights of property have gained asanction from long practical inviolability and when the vastmajority of the objects of enjoyment have been subjected toprivate ownership, that mere possession is allowed to invest thefirst possessor with dominion over commodities in which no priorproprietorship has been asserted. The sentiment in which thisdoctrine originated is absolutely irreconcilable with thatinfrequency and uncertainty of proprietary rights whichdistinguish the beginnings of civilisation. Its true basis seemsto be, not an instinctive bias towards the institution ofProperty, but a presumption arising out of the long continuanceof that institution, that everything ought to have an owner. Whenpossession is taken of a "res nullius," that is, of an objectwhich is not, or has never been, reduced to dominion, thepossessor is permitted to become proprietor from a feeling thatall valuable things are naturally the subjects of an exclusiveenjoyment, and that in the given case there is no one to investwith the right of property except the Occupant. The Occupant inshort, becomes the owner, because all things are presumed to besomebody's property and because no one can be pointed out ashaving a better right than he to the proprietorship of thisparticular thing.

Even were there no other objection to the descriptions ofmankind in their natural state which we have been discussing,there is one particular in which they are fatally at variancewith the authentic evidence possessed by us. It will be observedthat the acts and motives which these theories suppose are theacts and motives of Individuals. It is each Individual who forhimself subscribes the Social Compact. It is some shiftingsandbank in which the grains are Individual men, that accordingto the theory of Hobbes is hardened into the social rock by thewholesome discipline of force. It is an Individual who, in thepicture drawn by Blackstone, "is in the occupation of adetermined spot of ground for rest, for shade, or the like." Thevice is one which necessarily afflicts all the theories descendedfrom the Natural Law of the Romans, which differed principallyfrom their Civil Law in the account which it took of Individuals,and which has rendered precisely its greatest service tocivilisation in enfranchising the individual from the authorityof archaic society. But Ancient Law, it must again be repeated,knows next to nothing of Individuals. It is concerned not withIndividuals, but with Families, not with single human beings, butgroups. Even when the law of the State has succeeded inpermeating the small circles of kindred into which it hadoriginally no means of penetrating, the view it takes ofIndividuals is curiously different from that taken byjurisprudence in its maturest stage. The life of each citizen isnot regarded as limited by birth and death; it is but acontinuation of the existence of his forefathers, and it will beprolonged in the existence of his descendants.

同类推荐
  • 困知记

    困知记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • THE RED FAIRY BOOK

    THE RED FAIRY BOOK

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 华严经谈玄抉择

    华严经谈玄抉择

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 秦并六国平话

    秦并六国平话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • NORTH AND SOUTH

    NORTH AND SOUTH

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 穿越异世的悠闲生活

    穿越异世的悠闲生活

    你以为我是法师吗,其实我体质三维是最强哒。你以为我是战士吗,其实我的弓箭射的贼准哒。你以为我是射手吗,其实我的法术你是挨不起哒。其实这只是一本某人意外获得系统特殊权限,只能不停地赚钱氪金的故事,至于有了系统咸鱼,那是求而不得滴。
  • 七里樱

    七里樱

    年少时,我们,似乎成为了世界的主角,遗憾过,苦恼过,伤心心过,但庆幸的是在那个即将逝去的青春里,你世界的男主随着四季辗转在你身旁,陪你笑,陪你哭……终有一天,你发现他只是喜欢你身边的那个人而已…“你知道的,我喜欢她哎。”“没事…”至少我的青春,你来过就好。
  • 王爷之妻是神医

    王爷之妻是神医

    “我签,从此以后你我在无任何挂隔。”然后魏雨衣就走了。三年以后,有一个王爷宠着一个女人,那个女人救了他一命,他们彼此心生爱慕,婚后那个王爷可叫一个宠啊。怕她受伤,怕她难受……。这就是一个“宠妻狂魔”。
  • 重生之狐狸不是妖

    重生之狐狸不是妖

    重生成为炮灰怎么破?林卿卿表示,剧情都在手当然是攻略大佬,从此走上人生巅峰啊!大佬太高冷怎么破?她表示,天下还没有她林卿卿拿不下的男人,就喜欢这种有难度的。被攻略的某人:……
  • 池谕思故渊

    池谕思故渊

    青春是一场盛大的暗恋.林故渊,他本应是我触不可及的梦.可是,这梦居然成真了.“你喜欢我,我也喜欢你.”“池谕,你知道我为什么喜欢你吗?”“为什么啊?”“因为你傻。”傻都是装出来的,只不过是想得到你独有的偏爱而已.
  • 非酋头号玩家

    非酋头号玩家

    这个世界变成了游戏。一人能够翻手为云覆手为雨只有怪物,没有NPC的世界实力为制度,凭借实力一览群雄,压迫生灵。他目睹了龙王九子的游离,只要是人都对他疑心生暗鬼,没有人知道他原来是一个非洲酋长。当肝帝非洲人与浪漫欧洲人相互较量时,会产生怎样的火花?
  • 重生之我本彪悍

    重生之我本彪悍

    黎易倾重生了,重生到所有转折的开始,父母还未因为寻她而失踪,她也未因为被极品亲戚贩卖而迈上那条不归路,所有的一切都还没有开始。黎易倾是谁?她是一朵只可远观而不可亵玩的霸王花!1994年,那时年少,她的人生才刚开始。那是满路黄金的时代,也是属于黎易倾的时代!权势滔天?名利场只是游乐场,钱权势,你要哪个?打折出售!以力量为墙,表世界,权势相逐;里世界,强者为尊。重生的黎易倾悠然游走在中间的灰色地带,让那权势俯首,力量称臣!#¥¥#&&#本文纯属虚构,若有雷同巧合让道!个人欢乐所作,谢-绝-拍-砖!
  • 泪洒芳华万世缘

    泪洒芳华万世缘

    一场史无前例的灾变,尸横遍野,血流成河……灾变以无法控制的速度吞噬着整个人类的生存,继而粮食短缺,食不果腹,百姓易子相食,甚至有人为食的部族出现…各路诸侯各剧一方,以自己的方式生存!一段穿越,一场奇缘,一世爱恋,一场腥风血雨的角逐,见证一场惊涛骇浪的传奇!
  • 我大概是个假神仙

    我大概是个假神仙

    “作者,能安排一个正常点的boss么?”“主角都没有小基基,你还指望有正常的配角?”“老子是正宗系统,绝对没有bug......”“这个怎么可能是bug呢?这是程序员的彩蛋......”“那么只有一种可能了,我可能是个假的神仙......”假吧意思建个群吧,欢迎加群:730251465
  • 博物汇编神异典二氏部汇考

    博物汇编神异典二氏部汇考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。