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Heyman, Peter · 1587

prived of the inheritance, this interdict does not harm the occupant; I remember having learned this from my teacher Iacobus Menochius a prominent 16th-century Italian jurist.
XXXVI.
This interdict has a place in both incorporeal and corporeal things, and it applies only to a legatee, not to one who receives a gift in contemplation of death.
XXXVII.
In the second head of the interdict, the Praetor Roman magistrate provides for the legatees; for unless they are lawfully satisfied by the heir in the name of the legacies, the Praetor promises possession of the goods for the sake of preserving the legacies.
XXXIIX.
The third interdict for the Acquiring of possession is called SALVIANUM the Salvian interdict, and it is competent for the lessor to acquire possession of goods brought onto the leased property by the lessee, which are obligated for the rent and the deterioration of the leased thing.
XXXIX.
The direct action of this interdict is given against the tenant farmers themselves and their heirs; the "useful" a legal action extended by analogy beyond its original scope action is given against outside possessors, for goods obligated for no other reason than rent and deterioration.
XL.
But whether this interdict has a place in rural as well as urban estates is disputed in various ways by the Doctors. We believe that in rural ones, if the goods are expressly obligated, the direct interdict is given, contrary to the common opinion; in urban ones, where goods are tacitly obligated, we believe a useful one is given.
XLI.
This interdict has a place regarding all the goods of the lessee, even if they are for sale, provided they were brought into the house for the purpose of sale; as it does also for money, if it were brought into the house as if it were household furniture.
XLII.
These are the three interdicts for Acquiring possession, although there are many other ways of acquiring possession, since those come more from Edicts and Constitutions than from Interdicts.