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Roman Civil Law Roman law is the legal system of ancient Rome, including the legal developments spanning over a thousand years of jurisprudence, from the Twelve Tables (c. 449 BC), to the ''Corpus Juris Civilis'' (AD 529) ordered by Eastern Roman emperor Just ...
, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons";Encyclopedic dictionary of Roman law By Adolf Berger
/ref> hence, compounds in
legal Latin A number of Latin terms are used in legal terminology and legal maxims. This is a partial list of these terms, which are wholly or substantially drawn from Latin. __TOC__ Common law Civil law Ecclesiastical law See also * B ...
refer to various types of actions: *
condictio causa data causa non secuta The ''condictio causa data causa non secuta'' under Roman law was an action (" condictio") for recovery of a transfer of property, where the purpose for the transfer had failed (''causa non secuta''). During the recognition of innominate contracts ...
* condictio cautionis * condictio certae pecuniae * condictio certae rei *
condictio certi In Roman Civil Law, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons"; hence, compounds in legal Latin refer to various types of actions: *condictio causa data causa non secuta *condictio cautionis *condictio certae pecuni ...
* condictio ex causa furtiva * condictio ex injusta causa * condictio ex lege * condictio ex paenitentia *
condictio furtiva In Roman Civil Law, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons"; hence, compounds in legal Latin refer to various types of actions: *condictio causa data causa non secuta * condictio cautionis * condictio certae pecuni ...
*
condictio incerti In Roman Civil Law, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons"; hence, compounds in legal Latin refer to various types of actions: *condictio causa data causa non secuta * condictio cautionis * condictio certae pecuni ...
* condictio indebiti * condictio liberationis * condictio ob causam datorum * condictio ob injustam causam * condictio ob rem dati * condictio ob turpem causam * condictio possessionis *
condictio sine causa In Roman Civil Law, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons"; hence, compounds in legal Latin refer to various types of actions: *condictio causa data causa non secuta * condictio cautionis * condictio certae pecuni ...
*
condictio triticaria In Roman Civil Law, a Condictio (plural ''condictiones'') referred to an "action" or "summons"; hence, compounds in legal Latin refer to various types of actions: *condictio causa data causa non secuta * condictio cautionis * condictio certae pecuni ...


See also

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Unjust enrichment In laws of equity, unjust enrichment occurs when one person is enriched at the expense of another in circumstances that the law sees as unjust. Where an individual is unjustly enriched, the law imposes an obligation upon the recipient to make res ...


References

{{Italic title Roman law