<<
>>

The rules of intestate succession came into operation when a person failed to create a valid will or when the will he composed was later declared legally invalid.

Furthermore, these rules came to the fore if the heir or heirs nominated in a will could not accept the inheritance or refused to do so.[1042] The law of intestate succession underwent various important phases of development: the sequence of succession on intestacy was first prescribed by the Law of the Twelve Tables; in the later republican age considerable changes were effected by the praetor in an attempt to rectify some defects in the early system; finally, Justinian reformed the law again and thereby created his well-known system that served as the foundation of many modern systems.

5.2.1     

<< | >>
Source: Mousourakis G.. Fundamentals of Roman Private Law. Springer, 2012.— 366 p.. 2012

More on the topic The rules of intestate succession came into operation when a person failed to create a valid will or when the will he composed was later declared legally invalid.:

  1. The law of testamentary succession elaborated the rules pertaining to the creation of a valid will, the nature of the dispositions that could be included in a will and the effect of these dispositions.
  2. Praetorian Intestate Succession
  3. Intestate Succession
  4. Intestate Succession in Justinian's Law
  5. The first person that after having built a fence around a piece of land, declared: This is mine, and found people simple-minded enough to believe him, was the real founder of society.
  6. Intestate succession
  7. Praetorian intestate succession
  8. 3. INTESTATE SUCCESSION
  9. Intestate Succession Under the Law of the Twelve Tables
  10. Intestate Succession
  11. This chapter addresses the origin and developmentof Roman legal sources - that is, the methods and procedures for establishing new legally binding rules, standards, and norms.
  12. The law of succession addresses the legal destiny of a person’s rights and duties after his death.
  13. After having treated, in the first two chapters, the problems of mandatory norms — rules and principles — and of power-conferring rules, purely con­stitutive rules and definitions, we will now set out to examine permissive sen­tences.