Tamriel Data:Lex Imperia IV

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Book Information
Lex Imperia IV
Added by Tamriel Data
ID T_Bk_LexImperia_04
Up Lex Imperia
Prev. Part III Next Part V
Value 20 Weight 4
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Found in the following locations:
  • Only found in random loot

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IV.XI Rights of Accession
1. Private Citizens have free disposition of the property theirs, subject to modifications established by Law
2. Property not belonging to private Citizens is administered by an Imperial Executor, and cannot be alienated except in the forms and in pursuance of peculiar regulations 3. Highways, roads and streets, passable rivers and streams, shores, ports, and shiproads, and all areas of Imperial territory, which are not susceptible to private proprietorship, are considered property of the Emperor, and dependencies of the Imperial domain
4. All unclaimed and owner-less property, and that of persons who die without heir, are property of the Emperor
5. All gates, moats, ramparts or places of war, and fortresses erected by the Legion, are property of the Emperor
6. Common property is that to the ownership or produce of which the inhabitants of one or more communes have an acquired right

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IV.XXII Rights of Usufruct, Commons, and Habitation

IV.XXII.i Right of Usufruct
1. Usufruct is the right of enjoying the advantage of things that are in the rightful property of the proprietor citizen, in the same manner as the proprietor citizen, but on condition of this right being agreeable with the preservation of the substance of the thing proper
2. Usufruct is established by Law or by citizen consent
3. Usufruct may be established in simple manner or by condition
4. Usufruct may be established over every species of property, movable, immovable, or of arcane nature
5. In order to enjoy usufruct, the citizens involved must first establish security and make inventory of the property in question

IV.XXII.ii Right of Commons and Habitation
1. The rights of commons and habitation are established and forfeited in the same manner as those of usufruct
2. Likewise, the rights of commons and habitation cannot be enjoyed without first establishing security and making inventory of the property in question
3. A citizen who enjoys right of habitation must care for this property as a proper citizen befits
4. Citizens who have right of commonage over the fruits of an estate, may not exploit these for more than is necessary to their wants and those of their next of kin
5. Citizens who have right of commonage cannot yield or let this right to others
6. Citizens who have right of habitation in a domicil, may bring their family to live there even if they were not married at the time when the right of habitation was conferred upon them
7. The right of habitation can neither be ceded nor hired
8. Commonage in woods, forests, jungle, and other places of wilderness are regulated by particular law, or by the Will of the Emperor if they fall under his direct territories

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