Caput VII. Lex Aquilia, Actio De Pauperie
by Michael Lambert
January 2026
Caput VII. Lex Aquilia, Actio De Pauperie
by Michael Lambert
January 2026
Caput VII. Lex Aquilia, Actio de Pauperie
ego tibi me obnoxium esse fateor culpae compotem
I confess, I am liable to you, sharing the guilt
Said rarely, those who acknowledge own fault
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Roman Law and the Citizen
Roman Law and the Citizen series was presented in January 2025
We continue to explore the development and maturation of Roman jurisprudence. You, as a Roman citizen during the Principate era, what are your legal options to redress iniuria, ‘harm’ committed against self?
This six-part series continues in two, three-month segments during the period January-March and July-September
(To familiarize yourself with Roman jurisprudence, consult the introduction: January 2025)
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uberrimae fidei
Of the fullest confidence
Said by the promisee to the promisor, the disclosure of all facts
Introduction
legalis rusticis pro animalibus, legal liability for animals, the owners of animals under lex Aquilia were not usually liable for the damage their animals caused if the owner was not at fault for the loss
The usual course of action is to bring an action under the lex Duodecim Tabularum, the Laws of the Twelve Tables, or simply the Twelve Tables which creates the liability of pauperies, impoverishment
pauperies imposes liability on an animal owner on a no-fault basis. The actio de Pauperie is an action that is available to someone who has suffered damages due to the behaviour of another person’s animal
The animal owner can escape liability by surrendering the animal, the actio naxalis, noxal surrender. In addition, the animal owner’s liability may be further limited during court proceedings
Liability applies to domitae naturae, a tame animal or mansuetae naturae, a mild animal. An example of an animal of either nomenclature is “cattle” or “sheep”
Nota bene. Common practice refers to all animals within the farm or home as: domitae naturae
Finally, liability follows the animal, in the same manner as liability follows a slave
actio de Pauperie is not available in the circumstance of ferae naturae, naturally wild animals, such as bears or lions, designated as “dangerous”. If the wild animal escapes the owner’s control, special legal provisions exist under the curule Aediles, who has a policing function. Separate liability exists for animals designated ferae naturae
Nota bene: the ferae naturae, the ownership of a wild animal is qualified. The creature must be on a leash to indicate active, actual control and possession. If the ferae naturae is loose, the owner is liable
See Caput VII. Case LXIII. Edict Curule Aediles
actio de Pauperie
For the actio de Pauperie to succeed the petitor, the petitioner, also known as the plaintiff, alleges a harm committed and cites the defensor, the defendant animal owner, for the harm committed by the animal
Nota bene. Caput I. Lex Aquilia and Statute Law, January 2025 provides a comprehensive background to the development of Roman jurisprudence. The chapter also outlines the procedure to bring an action before the law court
Roman jurisprudence, for the actio de Pauperie to succeed, the petiitor must establish:
- The defensor is the owner of the animal in question,
- The animal is domitae naturae,
- The harm by the animal is actual physical damage or injury, and
- The animal’s behaviour is outside the accepted behaviour of a creature of that kind
Both the petitor and defensor put forward arguments to support position. The same argument may be cited by the other side asserting own interest. The first argument is volenti non fit iniuria, with the sense the plaintiff knows the risk of sustaining injury. The second argument is sponte feritate commota, with the sense the plaintiff knows the animal behaves according to instinct, with the added caveat, warning: the animal is neither provoked nor irritated by someone or something external
The lex Aquilia in 286 BCE provides legislative guidance when claiming pecuniary compensation for property damage
The physical damage or injury is damnum iniuria datum, damage unlawfully inflicted. The petitor must show actual harm or injury to establish his claim. If successful, the claim is praemia rei pecuniariae, a monetary reward for things. If the petitor is successful to this point in the proceedings, the actual sum awarded is based on the following formula. Again, the lex Aquilia provides guidance to calculate the formula, in that; the replacement value is pretium magni ex prior anno, the highest price from the previous year. The issue is agreeing on the previous year’s highest pecuniary sum
Nota bene. Pecuniary compensation is compensatory, not punitive
Prior to the petitor and the defensor going before the iudex, the judge; the respective lawyers meet outside the court for the purpose of agreeing on the relevant facts of the action to achieve the calculable sum to meet the requirement of pecuniary compensation
At the commencement of the trial, the lawyer for the petitor stands and makes opening remarks. His statement reviews the facts and concludes by stating the formula (with its agreed sum for pecuniary compensation)
The iudex reviews the statements by the respective lawyers. He then confirms the pecuniary compensation is in accord with accepted procedure and practice. If all is correct, the iudex pronounces the agreed sum for pecuniary compensation
Outside the court, a few days later; the defensor pays his lawyer the agreed sum, who pays his opposite colleague, then the petitor
Nota bene: Roman jurisprudence does now allow a lawyer to charge his client a fee for his appearance before the iudex in the law court. Lawyers may only charge fees for work outside the court room, such as writing legal documents or handling business affaires: a testamentary will, a bill of sale, a deed to a property, and so forth
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The Cases give an insight into daily life, the behaviour and attitudes, of lives lead
Cases cited below: LV to LXIII inclusive
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Case LV
The obiter dictum holds the animal owner is responsible, “Pauperies est damnum sine iniuria facientis datum,” “…without the doer’s wrongfulness.”
The obiter dictum clearly establishes: if an animal committed a harm, the owner is liable. The owner has two options, either noxal surrender of the animal or provide an evaluation for pecuniary compensation. Whatever act the animal committed, the act itself is the iniuria, the injury. Therefore, an animal can do no wrong
Roman jurisprudence considers a quadruped to be any four-footed creature, from a lamb to a bull. The animal is considered sensu caret, translated literally, “a sense of feeling” hence, “…lacks understanding”
Nota bene. The Romans extend the same legal argument of sensu caret to madmen and young children, a lack of understanding on the part of the person’s own behaviour, their acts
Paulus, a jurist; in action D.9.1.4, extends the category of animal to include “geese”
Case LVI
This action examines the two central arguments cited above (in the opening of this chapter), namely, the first argument is volenti non fit iniuria, with the sense the plaintiff knows the risk of sustaining injury. The second argument is sponte feritate commota, with the sense the plaintiff knows the animal behaves according to instinct, with the added caveat, warning: the animal is neither provoked nor irritated by someone or something external
The opening phrase in the obiter dictum is commota feritate, the “wildness is stirred.” If you pet or stroke a horse and the animal kicks during the stroking, then the animal behaves according to instinct
The second example, mules are pulling a cart, but the hill is steep. The muleteers abandon the cart and team for fear of being crushed. The action is allowed
The third example. You are riding a horse. While riding, the horse inadvertently treads on the foot of a passing slave. The slave’s foot is broken. Neither you nor the slave are at fault. The action is not allowed. In the alternate, there may be an action for damages on the basis of an in factum suit
The fourth example. You are a groom and lead a horse into the stable. The horse sniffs the presence of a mule. The horse reacts and kicks the groom, breaking the groom’s leg. The groom sues the owner of the mule. The action is allowed
Note the closing sentence of the obiter dictum, sed et si instigatu alterius fera damnum dederit, cessabit haec actio, “But also, if a wild animal inflicted loss at a third party’s instigation, this action fails.”
Case LVII
Paulus1. D.9.1.2.1. in the twenty-second book on the Edict. obiter dictum. A Dog Attacks a Trespasser. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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si quis aliquem evitans, magistratum forte, in taberna proxima se immississet ibique a cane Feroce laesus esset, non posse agi canis nomine quidam putant, at si solutus fuisset, contra | If a person who was avoiding somebody, a magistrate; had hid in a nearby shop and was there wounded by a ferocious dog, some think that there can be no suit in the name of the dog; but if it had been off the leash, the reverse. | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Paulus, a jurist | |
Roman jurisprudence, the bias is against dogs. Dogs are required to be kept on a leash during daylight hours. On what basis is the private shopkeeper exempt from this municipal ordinance? The shopkeeper has no exemption
The opening of the obiter dictum implies a bias against the plaintiff, his walking into a shop to avoid meeting someone on the street. A shop is a “private” enclosure for the specific purpose of conducting business particular to that shop. Example, it is about to rain heavily, you step inside a shop to avoid getting wet. Is there a difference between avoiding someone and avoiding rain?
The obiter dictum cites the phrase cane feroce, a “ferocious dog.” Simply looking at the dog, you, the onlooker, assume the principle of sponte feritate commota, the animal’s behaviour is in accord with its instinct. The dog’s instinct may be either “mild” or “ferocious.” What is the instinct of a dog? Is dog’s bite indicative of ferocity? What if the bite is a “nip’ by a toy-sized animal?
Proculus, a jurist; held the plaintiff had a statutory action under lex Aquilia. Julianus, a jurist; held a statutory action if the animal were on a leash, if not on a leash, then an in factum suit
Case LVIII
Ulpianus1. D.9.1.1.9. in the eighteenth book on the Edict. obiter dictum. An Ox Upsets a Cart. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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sive autem corpore suo pauperiem quadrupes dedit, sive per aliam rem, quam tetigit quadrupes, haec actio locum habebit, ut puta si plaustro bos obtrivit aliquem vel alia re deiecta | Whether the quadruped inflicts pauperies with its own body or through something else that the quadruped touches, this action lies, for example, if an ox crushes someone with a cart or something else it upset | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Ulpianus, a jurist | |
Causation and liability, the quadruped is an ox, a large and heavy animal
Roman jurisprudence and causation: does the defendant’s act cause the plaintiff loss? If the event was directly caused, the plaintiff can sue under lex Aquilia. In the alternate, if the event was indirectly caused, then sue under in factum action
Direct and indirect causation, the Romans exclude remote or speculative losses
Current era jurisprudence addresses the causal relationship of negligence and law in that losses may occur due to events involving numerous interlinked sequences, i.e., causes. The Romans did not address points of law, such as, “proximate cause” and limits to liability, such as “foreseeable” or “direct” results of acts
Roman jurisprudence restricts the “duty of care” one citizen owes toward another regarding another’s property. lex Aquilia liability is defendant’s obvious misconduct. Controversies occurred within Roman law. The controversies occur in actions where the chain of causation did not run in accord with the likeliest outcome, instead; the event is interrupted by a second cause, particularly a second wrongful act by another person
Example: you, the teamster; swerve your cart to avoid running into a wildly, bucking horse. As a result of your swerving the ox and cart, the cart goes into a roadside ditch. The cart is destroyed
As the plaintiff teamster, the defendant alleges “contributory negligence.” You could have simply stopped the ox and cart in the road: no swerving, no damaged cart
The best course of action, sue in factum
Case LIX
Ulpianus1. D.9.1.1.8. in the eighteenth book on the Edict. obiter dictum. The Aggressor Doctrine. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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et si alia quadrupes aliam concitavit ut damnum daret, eius quae concitavit nomine agendum erit… cum arietes vel boves commississent et alter alterum occidit, Quintus Mucius 2 distinxit, ut si quidem is perisset qui adgressus erat, cesserat actio, si is, qui non provocaverat, competeret actio, quamobrem eum sibi aut noxam sarcire aut in noxam dedere oportere | Also, if one quadruped provokes another to inflict loss, an actio will lie in regard to the one provoking… When rams or oxen had fought and one slew the other, Quintus Mucius distinguished, if the one who was the aggressor died, the action fails, but if the one who had not provoked, the action lies. Wherefore he (the owner) ought either to recompense the injury or make noxal surrender | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Ulpianus, a jurist | |
| 2 | Quintus Mucius, a jurist | |
Animals bump into each other
“Bumping” may be a matter of a crowded enclosure versus bumping during rutting season. If the bumping occurs during rutting, then the action may be sponte feritate commota, that is; “within the instinct” of the male species for access to the female species for the express purpose of matting with the corollary to exclude other male members of said species
Why is an animal held accountable for its behaviour, when the behaviour is “within the instinct of the species”? Further, an animal is considered sensu caret, translated literally, “a sense of feeling” hence, “…lacks understanding”
Case LX
Ulpianus1. D.9.1.1.12-13. in the eighteenth book on the Edict. obiter dictum. Noxal Surrrender. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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et cum etiam in quadrupedibus noxa caput sequitur, adversus dominum haec actio datur, non cuius fuerit quadrupes, cum noceret, sed cuius nunc est. plane si ante litem contestatam decesserit animal, extincta erit actio | And since also with quadrupeds liability follows the doer, this action is given against the present owner, not the owner at the time the damage occurred. Obviously, should the animal have died before the issue is joined, the action will be extinguished | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Ulpianus, a jurist | |
Case LV establishes an animal, a quadruped can do no wrong, but if the creature causes harm, then liability, on a no-fault basis accrues to the owner, hence the owner is said to be pauperies, impoverished
The owner of the animal can avoid payment of damages by surrendering the creature to the petitor, known as noxal surrender
Nota bene: noxalis, noxale is a 3rd declension adjective with the sense: harmful or guilty
noxia, noxia is a 1st declension feminine noun, with the sense: harm, damage, guilt, fault
The following phrase is useful: desertori noxia fore…, “The blame should fall on…”
If the animal causes iniuria, “harm” and is then sold to another owner; the new owner is liable
Nota bene. Regarding slaves and animals: on sale to the new owner, existing liability transfers to the new owner
For the new owner to avoid liability, he demands of the seller, at the time of sale, a statement of no known liability
If the seller denies liability at time of sale, but liability is revealed post-sale, the former owner is liable
If the animal dies before or during the action; the former owner is liable
If an animal dies, noxal surrender cannot be conducted; the former owner is liable
If a third party kills the animal, the third party is liable
Case LXI
Gaius1. D.9.1.3. in the seventh book on the Provincial Edict. obiter dictum. Measure of Damages. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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ex hac lege iam non dubitatur etiam liberarum personarum nomine agi posse, forte si patrem familias aut filium familias vulneraverit quadrupes, scilicet ut non deformitatis ratio habeatur, cum liberum corpus aestimationem non recipiat, sed impensarum in curationem factarum et operarum amissarum quasque amissurus quis esset inutilis factus | On the basis of this law it is not now doubted that action can be brought with respect to free persons, i.e; if a quadruped wounds a paterfamilias or a son in his father’s power, obviously, not that account be taken of disfig-urement, since a free person’s body does not admit of evaluation, but rather of medical expenses and of lost pay or what he will lose by being disabled | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Gaius, a jurist | |
Gaius allows recovery of consequential damages for an injured free borne person, regardless of whether the person is in the power of the paterfamilias (as per Roman law and customary tradition)
Pecuniary compensation is compensatory, it is not punitive. The petitor, the “plaintive” may claim medical expenses and lost wages but cannot claim for disfigurement for bodily damage. The rationale for not allowing damages to a free borne person is on the basis that a free borne person: corpus liberum non aestimationem recipit, a “freeman’s body does not allow evaluation”.
If a bull gores a slave (a slave is a thing); since a slave can be purchased and sold, their body is subject to evaluation. Therefore, compensation may include disfigurement, along with medical expenses and lost earnings awarded to the master
Nota bene: The Roman court struggled for a long time regarding the issue of awarding pecuniary compensation in instances of injury to free borne persons. A freeman, his body is not subject to evaluation, corpus liberum non aestimationem recipit
The leading case that allows the “thin edge of the wedge”, pecuniary compensation for a free borne man to receive compensation for personal, actual physical harm is the Cobbler’s Apprentice case. It is recommended you read the case. See:
Caput IV, Case XXVIII. Cobbler’s Apprentice
Caput IV, Case XXIX. Cobbler’s Apprentice. Excessive Punishment
Caput V, Case XLIII. Cobbler’s Apprentice. Settlement
The exact date of Cases XXVIII, XXIX, XLIII is presumed to occur in the first half of the 3rd Century CE, the beginning of the late-Empire era
Case law has a significant effect on statute law, the recognition of damnum emergens, the “apparent damage” and lucrum cessans, the “forfeited profit”. Still, recognition of physical harm, that is “actual bodily damage”, in this circumstance, the cobbler’s apprentice lost sight of one eye; is not granted due to the lingering prohibition of corpus liberum non aestimationem recipit, a “freeman’s body does not allow evaluation”. A free borne person is a homo sapiens
The date of Case LXI is unknown but presumed to occur at the same time or after the celebrated Cobbler’s Apprentice case
The significant fact regarding the above cited cases is that the Roman court recognizes for the first time a free borne person may receive compensation, in addition to medical expenses and lost wages; compensation for personal, actual physical harm
Since the free borne person is homo sapiens, not a thing – a slave; compensation for personal, bodily injury is still not recognized, corpus liberum non aestimationem recipit
Case LXII
Ulpianus1. D.9.1.1.10. in the eighteenth book on the Edict. obiter dictum. Wild Animal, Escaped Bear. Lex Aquilia. liability | |||
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In bestiis autem propter naturalem feritatem haec actio locum non habet, et ideo si ursus fugit et sic nocuit, non potest quondam dominus conveniri, quia desinit dominus esse, ubi fera evasit, et ideo et si eum occidi, meum corpus est | In the case of wild animals, because of their natural wildness, this action does not lie. So, if a bear escapes and thereby does harm, the former owner cannot be sued, since he ceases to be the owner when the wild animal escaped. And so if I slew it, the body belongs to me | ||
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Footnote. | 1 | Ulpianus, a jurist | |
Roman jurisprudence asserts that a ferae naturae, a “wild animal” is the owner’s property, therefore, under owner’s control
Ulpianus contradicts established jurisprudence. A hypothetical case is posed. You visit a caged bear. The bear thrusts its paw out through the interval space between the bars and harms you, an open wound cut. The owner is liable for the damage
Nota bene. Case LXII cites Roman jurisprudence in error
Many jurists feel the opening sentence was altered when the obiter dicta were compiled under Emperor Justinian, reflecting Byzantine law
Case LXIII
The Curule Aediles imposes two sets of fines, death of a free man is 200 solidi, for the injury of a free man, …quanti bonum aequum iudici videbitur, “…as much as seems good and fair to a judge”
What is the worth of a fine? The Curule Aediles, as cited in the Digest; the original fine of 200 solidi may have been 200,000 sesterces, a sum of money equal to about two hundred times the annual wage of an unskilled workman in Rome
Conclusion
Concerning an actio de Pauperie, for the petitor to succeed, he must assert four points (bullet points, top of page 2). To either advance or refute the argument, lawyers on either or both sides assert two broad points concerning an animal’s behaviour relative to their client’s act or acts in the alleged action:
The first argument is volenti non fit iniuria, with the sense the person knows the risk of sustaining injury. The second argument is sponte feritate commota, with the sense the person knows the animal behaves according to instinct, with the added caveat: the animal is neither provoked nor irritated by someone or something external
In our era, for the defensor to avoid liability, many jurisdictions allow noxal surrender. See Case LX
Roman jurisprudence is concerned with herd animals. Over time, the definition of which creature constitutes a “herd” animal evolves to include horse, dog, and geese. Today, many animal species are often “classified” as “working” animals, such as: the seeing-eye dog. What is absent from the cited cases is a creature serving in the role of a “pet”
Case LXII. Wild Animal. Escaped Bear, cited above, the juristic comment may have been altered at the time the obiter dicta were compiled under Emperor Justinian. For another example of altered text, see Caput IV. Case XXIII. Defining Duty of Care. Tree Trimmer
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debitor non praesumitur donare
A debtor is not presumed to give
Said of those who evade their legal obligation to pay debts
neccessitas non habet legem
Necessity knows no law
Said of those whose acts lack plans
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