The establishment of the facts assumed the form of
a wager, in which each party made a deposit (-sacramentum-)
against the contingency of his being worsted; in important
causes when the value involved was greater than ten
oxen, a deposit of five oxen, in causes of less amount,
a deposit of five sheep. The judge then decided
who had gained the wager, whereupon the deposit of
the losing party fell to the priests for behoof of
the public sacrifices. The party who lost the
wager and allowed thirty days to elapse without giving
due satisfaction to his opponent, and the party whose
obligation to pay was established from the first—consequently,
as a rule, the debtor who had got a loan and had not
witnesses to attest its repayment—became
liable to proceedings in execution “by laying
on of hands” (-manus iniectio-); the plaintiff
seized him wherever he found him, and brought him
to the bar of the judge simply to satisfy the acknowledged
debt. The party seized was not allowed to defend
himself; a third person might indeed intercede for
him and represent this act of violence as unwarranted
(-vindex-), in which case the proceedings were stayed;
but such an intercession rendered the intercessor
personally responsible, for which reason the proletarian
could not be intercessor for the tribute-paying burgess.
If neither satisfaction nor intercession took place,
the king adjudged the party seized to his creditor,
so that the latter could lead him away and keep him
like a slave. After the expiry of sixty days
during which the debtor had been three times exposed
in the market-place and proclamation had been made
to ascertain whether any one would have compassion
upon him, if these steps were without effect, his
creditors had the right to put him to death and to
divide his carcase, or to sell him with his children
and his effects into foreign slavery, or to keep him
at home in a slave’s stead; for such an one
could not by the Roman law, so long as he remained
within the bounds of the Roman community, become completely
a slave.(6) Thus the Roman community protected every
man’s estate and effects with unrelenting rigour
as well from the thief and the injurer, as from the
unauthorized possessor and the insolvent debtor.
Guardianship
Protection was in like manner provided for the estate of persons not capable of bearing arms and therefore not capable of protecting their own property, such as minors and lunatics, and above all for that of women; in these cases the nearest heirs were called to undertake the guardianship.