Praefationes Iustiniani
Liber II
I.De iurisdictione.
I.Concerning Jurisdiction.
II.Quod quisque iuris in alterum statuerit, ut ipse eodem iure utatur.
II.Each One Must Himself Use the Law Which He Has Established for Others.
III.Si quis ius dicenti non obtemperaverit.
III.Where Anyone Refuses Obedience to a Magistrate Rendering Judgment.
IV.De in ius vocando.
IV.Concerning Citations Before a Court of Justice.
V.Si quis in ius vocatus non ierit sive quis eum vocaverit, quem ex edicto non debuerit.
V.Where Anyone Who is Summoned Does Not Appear, and Where Anyone Summoned a Person Whom, According to the Edict, He Should Not Have Summoned.
VI.In ius vocati ut eant aut satis vel cautum dent.
VI.Persons Who Are Summoned Must Either Appear, or Give Bond or Security to Do So.
VII.Ne quis eum qui in ius vocabitur vi eximat.
VII.No One Can Forcibly Remove a Person Who Has Been Summoned to Court.
VIII.Qui satisdare cogantur vel iurato promittant vel suae promissioni committantur.
VIII.What Persons Are Compelled to Give a Surety, and Who Can Make a Promise Under Oath, or Be Bound by a Mere Promise.
IX.Si ex noxali causa agatur, quemadmodum caveatur.
IX.In What Way Security Must Be Given in a Noxal Action.
X.De eo per quem factum erit quominus quis in iudicio sistat.
X.Concerning One Who Prevents a Person From Appearing in Court.
XI.Si quis cautionibus in iudicio sistendi causa factis non obtemperaverit.
XI.Where a Party Who Has Given a Bond to Appear in Court Does Not Do So.
XII.De feriis et dilationibus et diversis temporibus.
XII.Concerning Festivals, Delays, and Different Seasons.
XIII.De edendo.
XIII.Concerning the Statement of a Case.
XIV.De pactis.
XIV.Concerning Agreements.
XV.De transactionibus.
XV.Concerning Compromises.
Liber XLVII
I.De privatis delictis.
I.Concerning Private Offences.
II.De furtis.
II.Concerning Thefts.
III.De tigno iuncto.
III.Concerning the Theft of Timbers Joined to a Building.
IV.Si is, qui testamento liber esse iussus erit, post mortem domini ante aditam hereditatem subripuisse aut corrupisse quid dicetur.
IV.Where Anyone Who is Ordered to be Free by the Terms of a Will, After the Death of His Master and Before the Estate is Entered Upon, is Said to Have Stolen or Spoiled Something.
V.Furti adversus nautas caupones stabularios.
V.Concerning Theft Committed Against Captains of Vessels, Innkeepers, and Landlords.
VI.Si familia furtum fecisse dicetur.
VI.Concerning Thefts Alleged to Have Been Made by an Entire Body of Slaves.
VII.Arborum furtim caesarum.
VII.Concerning Trees Cut Down by Stealth.
VIII.Vi bonorum raptorum et de turba.
VIII.Concerning the Robbery of Property by Violence, and Disorderly Assemblages.
IX.De incendio ruina naufragio rate nave expugnata.
IX.Concerning Fire, Destruction, and Shipwreck, Where a Boat or a Ship is Taken by Force.
X.De iniuriis et famosis libellis.
X.Concerning Injuries and Infamous Libels.
XI.De extraordinariis criminibus.
XI.Concerning the Arbitrary Punishment of Crime.
XII.De sepulchro violato.
XII.Concerning the Violation of Sepulchres.
XIII.De concussione.
XIII.Concerning Extortion.
XIV.De abigeis.
XIV.Concerning Those Who Steal Cattle.
XV.De praevaricatione.
XV.Concerning Prevarication.
XVI.De receptatoribus.
XVI.Concerning Those Who Harbor Criminals.
XVII.De furibus balneariis.
XVII.Concerning Thieves Who Steal in Baths.
XVIII.De effractoribus et expilatoribus.
XVIII.Concerning Those Who Break Out of Prison, and Plunderers.
XIX.Expilatae hereditatis.
XIX.Concerning the Spoliation of Estates.
XX.Stellionatus.
XX.Concerning Stellionatus.
XXI.De termino moto.
XXI.Concerning the Removal of Boundaries.
XXII.De collegiis et corporibus.
XXII.Concerning Associations and Corporations.
XXIII.De popularibus actionibus.
XXIII.Concerning Popular Actions.