Actio ad supplendam legitimam

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

With the actio ad supplendam legitimam the plaintiff in ancient Roman law could assert his compulsory portion supplement claims if the deceased had given him too little as the person entitled. The aim of the action was regularly to obtain the compulsory portion of the inheritance.

The compulsory portion legal actio ad supplendam legitimam was developed in the post-classical imperial law and went into its latest version of Justinian I return.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ A b Herbert Hausmaninger , Walter Selb : Römisches Privatrecht , Böhlau, Vienna 1981 (9th edition 2001) (Böhlau-Studien-Bücher) ISBN 3-205-07171-9 , p. 350.