women were not primarily reckoned as members of the
community. Over sons and grandsons who were
-in potestate- the power of the -pater familias- subsisted
concurrently with the royal jurisdiction; that power,
however, was not a jurisdiction in the proper sense
of the term, but simply a consequence of the father’s
inherent right of property in his children.
We find no traces of any jurisdiction appertaining
to the clans as such, or of any judicature at all
that did not derive its authority from the king.
As regards the right of self-redress and in particular
the avenging of blood, we still find perhaps in legends
an echo of the original principle that a murderer,
or any one who should illegally protect a murderer,
might justifiably be slain by the kinsmen of the person
murdered; but these very legends characterize this
principle as objectionable,(3) and from their statements
blood-revenge would appear to have been very early
suppressed in Rome through the energetic assertion
of the authority of the community. In like manner
we perceive in the earliest Roman law no trace of
that influence which under the oldest Germanic institutions
the comrades of the accused and the people present
were entitled to exercise over the pronouncing of judgment;
nor do we find in the former any evidence of the usage
so frequent in the latter, by which the mere will
and power to maintain a claim with arms in hand were
treated as judicially necessary or at any rate admissible.
Crimes
Judicial procedure took the form of a public or a
private process, according as the king interposed
of his own motion or only when appealed to by the
injured party. The former course was taken only
in cases which involved a breach of the public peace.
First of all, therefore, it was applicable in the
case of public treason or communion with the public
enemy (-proditio-), and in that of violent rebellion
against the magistracy (-perduellio-). But the
public peace was also broken by the foul murderer (-parricida-),
the sodomite, the violator of a maiden’s or matron’s
chastity, the incendiary, the false witness, by those,
moreover, who with evil spells conjured away the harvest,
or who without due title cut the corn by night in
the field entrusted to the protection of the gods
and of the people; all of these were therefore dealt
with as though they had been guilty of high treason.
The king opened and conducted the process, and pronounced
sentence after conferring with the senators whom he
had called in to advise with him. He was at
liberty, however, after he had initiated the process,
to commit the further handling and the adjudication
of the matter to deputies who were, as a rule, taken
from the senate. The later extraordinary deputies,
the two men for adjudicating on rebellion (-duoviri
perduellionis-) and the later standing deputies the
“trackers of murder” (-quaestores parricidii-)
whose primary duty was to search out and arrest murderers,