- Condictio indebiti
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The condictio indebiti is an action in civil (Roman) law whereby a plaintiff may recover what he has paid the defendant by mistake. This action does not lie, 1. if the sum was due ex aequitate, or by a natural obligation; 2. if he who made the payment knew that nothing was due, for qui consulto dat quod non debet, praesumitur donare (who gives purposely what he does not owe, is presumed to make a gift).[1][2][3]
The action is extant in civil (Roman) or hybrid law regimes, e.g. South Africa and Scotland .[4]
See also
Further reading
- Outlines of Roman Law By Thomas Whitcombe Greene
- Roman-Frisian law of the 17th and 18th century By J. H. A. Lokin, Frits Brandsma, C. J. H. Jansen
- Imperatoris Iustiniani Institutionum Libri Quattuor By John Baron Moyle, Justinian
- "The evolution of the law of unjustified enrichment"
References
- ^ Walter A. Shumaker, George Foster Longsdorf. The cyclopedic law dictionary. Second edition, 1922.
- ^ Bell, Diet; Calv. Lex.; 1 Kames, Eq. 307.
- ^ John Trayner. Latin phrases and maxims: collected from the institutional and other writers on Scotch law. Edinburgh: William Paterson, 1861.
- ^ See e.g. The common law of South Africa By Manfred Nathan, Johannes Voet
Categories:- Latin legal terms
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