Fideicommissum
A fideicommissum is a type of bequest in which the beneficiary is encumbered to convey parts of the decedent's estate to someone else. For example, if a father leaves the family house to his firstborn, on condition that they will bequeath it to their first child. It was one of the most popular legal institutions in ancient Roman law for several centuries. The word is a conjunction of the Latin words fides (trust) and committere (to commit), and thus denotes that something is committed to one's trust.
Text and translation
Inprimis igitur sciendum est opus esse, ut aliquis heres recto iure instituatur eiusque fidei committatur, ut eam hereditatem alii restituat; alioquin inutile est testamentum in quo nemo recto iure heres instituitur.
(First of all we know that it is required, that the one heir is duly appointed and it is committed to his trust to transfer the inheritance to another; otherwise the testament in which no heir has duly been appointed is void.)
— Institutes of Justinian, 2.23.1
Verba autem [utilia] fideicommissorum haec [recte] maxime in usu esse uidentur peto, rogo, volo, fidei committo; quae proinde firma singula sunt, atque si omnia in unum congesta sint.
(The words which are properly and commonly used to install a fideicommissum are 'I beg', 'I ask', 'I wish', 'I entrust'; these [words] are therefore sufficient individually, but also if all combined.)
— Institutes of Justinian, 2.23.2
Exegesis
This fragment dates to the reign of Caesar Augustus, who first decreed certain requirements for the institution of the fideicommissum.[1] The institution itself was first mentioned in 200 BC by Terence in Andria, 290–98: "tuae mando fide".[2]
It functioned thus: the testator nominated an heir to act as fiduciarius, entrusted with devising the inheritance to a beneficiary denominated the "fideicommisarius".
Purpose and enforceability
The fideicommissum enabled the heres to be left with the desire of the testator to devise his estate to the proscripti, and the heres would execute the transfer to them.
Institutes, 2.23.1 indicates that Augustus instituted the fideicommissum as legally binding by favouring it in individual cases. Thus its acceptance was directly based on Emperor's Acts, but even previous to this the fideicommissum was always enforceable.[3] The true reason for it lies in the nature of the institution itself. Personal security in Rome was much more important than it is today, primarily because the Romans more greatly valued the duties of friendship.[4] Therefore certain legal institutions were simply premised on bona fides, e. g. the tutela, societas, and depositum, which did not decrease but rather reinforced their security. Breach of a fiduciary agreement led inevitably to being infamis, which meant lifetime incapacity of making any commercial actions.[5] This threat was sufficient force to guarantee that the fiduciaries would satisfy their obligations. Being a matter of honores, consideration was not required.
Applicability
The great success of the fideicommissum as a clever fraus legi fracta is proved by reference to its long use; redefined by Justinian I, it may have by his reign existed for 700 years.[6] The reasons lie in the great variety of cases it could resolve and the absence of formal requirements to satisfy.
The practical informality and flexibility of fideicommissum is described in Institutes, 2.23.2. There was no need for a certain formula, any word describing the beneficiaries, such as rogo, peto, or volo, employed with the term "fidei tuae committo" sufficiently instituted a fideicommissum.[7] It could be constituted in a will or in a codicil, made orally or even declared by mere gestures. Most attractive of all, it could be added or revoked or varied after the institutio heredes itself.[8] Taking all these advantages in account, it is not surprising that the legatus, with its strict formal requirements, was far less popular.[9] In later eras, a gradual assimilation of legates and fideicommissa took place; under Justinian, the two institutions were fused, in an example of the vulgarisation of Roman Law after its classic era.
Restricted capacitas
Most important, the fideicommissum enabled transferring property by will to those excluded from inheriting. The lex Voconia in 169 BC for example did not allow women to be appointed as an heir of Romans listed as wealthy by the censor.[10] Later, Augustus enforced his leges Julia by introducing harsh leges caducariae, which punished the unmarried and the childless by denying their capacitas, the privilege of inheriting (the Lex Julia de Maritandis Ordinibus was passed in 18 BC and the lex Papia Poppeia in 9 AD (Inst. 1.145)).[11] But the fideicommissum enabled a prosperous pater familias to appoint his amicus as an heir, who would then be trusted with transferring the inherited property to the unmarried filia. This would ensure her being provided for after his death.
Settlements
Holding property within a family was of great importance for several reasons. Practically, it ensured the survival of the familia, its name and wealth. Furthermore it was demanded by the sacral necessity of worshipping the penates, who would cease to exist if the family did. Most important though, the Roman aristocracy relied on a careful and necessary balance of property, to ensure a balance of power. This could be guaranteed by installing a fideicommissum. It was able to regulate the succession of several generations by will and hence incorporates the Roman root of family settlements.[12] Unlike legates, which only allowed passing estate on to a heres, and usufructus, which required a determinate person, the fideicommissum could be granted to incertae personae.[13] Using a fideicommissary substitution (making one fideicommissum subject to another, enabling the preservation of property within a family for generations through successive trusts) the grantor could therefore direct his filius to transfer the estate on to his son at death and so on in perpetuity.[14]
Legacies
Legates are by nature very similar to the fideicommissum, but the latter did not suffer from the same restrictions. Legates could only be charged on a heres, and the lex Falcidia in 41 BC constrained the legacy to three quarters of the entire inheritance.[15] This of course did not apply for the fideicommissum and with such could be evaded.
Freeing slaves
Another existing use of the fideicommissum is described in G 2.263-266: libertas quoque servo per fideicommissum dari potest if the heres or legatarius is requested to perform the manumissio to become the patronus of the slave so freed. Freeing slaves was attractive for the dominus for several reasons. Firstly, he could get rid of slaves who were of no use to him (because they were thugs, uneducated or incapable of working). Secondly, a freed slave owed the dominus who freed him honor et sequi, including the procession to the grave. This led to a great number of slaves being freed on the death bed. Rome was gradually crowding with freed slaves, enlarging the poor classes within society. Therefore Augustus passed laws against luxury. They restricted liberation of slaves, but could be partly evaded by the fideicommissum. The fideicommissum also gave way to granting the rights of a patronus to the person who was committed to freeing the slave.
References
- ^ Kaser, 6, § 77, I.
- ^ Terence, Andria 290–98; Watson, p. 84 et seq.; Buckland, Main Inst., p. 230.
- ^ Curzon, p. 119; Buckland, Main Institutions, p. 228; Der Neue Pauly, Vol. 4, "fideicommissum".
- ^ Watson, p. 119.
- ^ Derived from the sacral laws in the Twelve Tables, infames were excluded from the right of making applications in any trials and from holding certain offices. Far worse than this, they could not make valuable promises anymore, and this, being the basis of any mancipatio as the most commonly used form of agreement, made them incapable of participating in commercial life (Kaser, 2, § 14, III).
- ^ The first mention dates to the 2nd century BC (see above), Der Neue Pauly, Vol. 4, "fideicommissum", and similar forms were known, e.g . the fiducia, Watson, p. 84 et seq.; Buckland, Main Inst., p. 230.
- ^ Kaser 6, § 77 II 1.
- ^ As shown in G. 2, 249; PS 4, 1, 5-6; and Buckland/McNair p. 163; 170; supported by Borkowski/du Pellis 8.9.2.3.
- ^ The terms under which the legatus was instituted are explained in Buckland, Main Inst. p. 231, with details on the gradual assimilation of legates and fideicommissa, which under Justinian led to the fusion of the two former separate institutions (an example of the vulgarisation of Roman law after its classic era).
- ^ Inst. 2.274; 226. What the lex Voconia was aiming at it not entirely sure. It may have tried to reduce luxury enjoyed by women, but more likely it reduced women's role in the preservation of the penates. Der Neue Pauly Vol. 7, "lex voconia"; Borkowski/de Plessis 8.4.1.3 (b).
- ^ Details with Kaser 6, § 77 II 2c; Der Neue Pauly Vol. 2 "caducum".
- ^ Kaser 6, § 77 II 3; Curzon p. 119.
- ^ Buckland, Main Inst., p. 231.
- ^ Evidence of this has been found in the so-called Testamentum Dasumii, where the testator wishes his land to be given to liberti with a right of survivorship. On the death of the survivor it is to go to posteri. Whereas the Senatus Consultum Pegasianum (A.D. 73) tried to restrict this by granting to the fiduciarius a quarter of the estate, it was Hadrian who stopped settlements being created by prohibiting fideicommissa ad incertae personae. Later, the classical jurists introduced a thing such as a fideicommissum for the familia, which allowed tying up property for four generations. This may have been, says Buckland, inspiring for the remark of Bereford in Belyng’s case (Y. BB. 5Ed. II, Easter Term). For closer details see: Buckland, Main Institutions, p. 232 et seq.
- ^ Inst. 2, 16; Der Neue Pauly Vol. 7 "lex Facidia"; Buckland, Main Institutions, p. 168; 231.
Literature
- Borkowski, Andrew, and Paul du Plessis. Textbook on Roman Law, 3rd ed. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005.
- Buckland, William Warwick. The Main Institutions of Roman Private Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1931.
- Curzon, L. B. Roman Law. London: Macdonald & Evans Ltd., 1966.
- Der Neue Pauly. Edited by Hubert Cancik and Helmuth Schneider. Stuttgart et al.: J.B. Metzler Verlag, Vol. 2: 1997; Vol. 4: 1998; Vol. 7: 1999.
- Kaser, Max. Roman Private Law, 2nd ed. Translation by Rolf Dannenbring of Romisches Privatrecht, 6th ed. London: Butterworths, 1968.
- Watson, Alan. Roman Private Law around 200 BC. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1971.