This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

[Z. disp. 4. th. 7. lit. B.] For neither between human blood (the redemption of which, of whatever kind it may be, is permitted—l. 1. ff. de bon. eor. qui ante sent. Octav. Cacheranus decis. 66. n. 1. & 9. Heigius p. 2. q. 24. n. 2. & 3. Hering. cap. 10. n. 349. Menoch. lib. 2. arbitr. centur. 4. cas. 315. n. 18. & seq.) and money does any analogy or legitimate commensuration intervene—arg. l. 22. in fin. C. de admin. & peric. tut. l. 79. §. 1. ff. de leg. 3. Gayl. 2. obs. 11. n. 3. Mollerus p. 2. Const. 44. n. 19. Heigius p. 2. q. 1. n. 45. Colerùs d. tr. p. 2. cap. 3. n. 26 & seq.
111. It is also possible to find civil causes (concerning which see Hering. d. cap. 10. n. 361. with 3 seqq. Schneidewin ad pr. Inst. de act. verf. Actio &c. n. 2. Zobelius p. 1. differ. Iur. civ. & Saxon. 9. n. 4. with seq.). These, even if they require the faith of proof as a support and a certain fulcrum—l. 10. 13. & 17. C. h. Menoch. 1. prejumt. 97. n. 29. with seq. & lib. 2. q. 51. n. 49. Vvmius d. disp. 1. 5. n. 20.—nevertheless [require] not one so full and perfected in all the requirements of absolution. Wherefore, two imperfect proofs may also be joined here, whether they exist of the same or of a different kind, provided only that they tend toward one and the same end—Hering. cap. 11. n. 46. Mynsing. 2. obs. 100. n. 3. & 6. Vvmius n. 21.
SINCE we have already provided the material cause, explained and resolved for the sake of the intellectual equipment of the preceding thesis, the series of legitimate synapheia (connection) and connexitas now demands, a) that we also bring the genuine form of PROOF onto the stage. b)
a) l. 9. §. 4. in pr. ibiq; Accurs. lit. F. ff. de off. Procons. Musculus d. tr. memb. 1. class. 1. n. 40. & seq. For this gives being and perfection to a thing—Heigius p. 1. q. 33. n. 27.—it rules and preserves all things that breathe and flourish in the spacious and beautiful machine of the world—Parthen. litig. lib. 1. cap. 15. n. 4. Dn. Arumæus discours. 3. Academ. ad A. B. th. 1. in pr. It serves intelligence and perspicuity—Cammanus disp. 2. de Regal. th. 3. Schneidewin ad pr. Inst. de hæredib. quæ ab intest. def. n. 1. Menoch. in proœm. tr. de arbitr. qq. n. 12. & 13.—and shows what must be placed earlier and what later—Mascardus q. 6. n. 7. Whence that saying, usurped by antiquity, religious in frequent discourse:
By order you shall arrive where it is not permitted to go by labor.
When, conversely, if the functions of things are disturbed by promiscuous acts—l. 2. 3. C. de Testam.—a most hateful ataxia (disorder) and hysteron proteron (reversal of order) arises.
b) For form is the very consummation and building up of a thing—Iacob. Schultheß p. 2. q. pract. 74. n. 3. & seqq. Pfeil centur. 2. cons. 200. n. 6. Hering. cap. 11. n. 23. Heigius p. 1. q. 33. n. 62. Reusnerus lib. 4. decis. 5. n. 13. 14. 17. & 18. Surdus decis. 268 n. 8. & seq. Mollerus p. 1. Const. 29. n. 4. Pantzschmanus lib. 1. q. pract. 9. n. 12. & 13. Cubach in Brocard. general. cap. 9. Brocard. 24. & seq. This consists in this: that the PROOF is made not en parodō (by the way) and in passing, but with the other party cited for its expedition—arg. l. 39. ff. de adopt. & l. 47. ff. de re iud.—and with a just and substantial term set for it—Wesenb. in cap. ff. h. n 8. Schultheß d. q. 74. n. 69. & 2. seqq. Mollerus d. p. 1. Const. 16. n. 2. Colerùs d. tr. p. 1. cap. 2. n. 53.—which, in the customs of our local courts, is generally six weeks and three days—Moller. d. loc. n. 1. & 3. Wesenb. loc. alleg. Berlich p. 1. conclus. pract.