Di Astud Chor

Di Astud Chor ("On the Securing of Contracts"; astud is the infinitive of the verb ad•suidi 'holds fast, binds'[1]) is an Old Irish legal tract on contracts. It treats the various circumstances that determine when contracts are binding on a party and when they are not. Its existence was first brought to the attention of modern scholarship by Neil McLeod, whose edition (with translation and notes) appeared in 1992.[2] The tract is a collection of material from varying dates, some no earlier than the 8th-century, some much earlier.[3] For instance, it contains a poem on contractual surplus adjustment that can be dated, based on style, to the early 7th-century.[4]

Four versions were distinguished by McLeod, A (Corpus Iuris Hibernici 985.241002.31), B (CIH 1348.211359.25), C (CIH 2040.282045.36, 2046.342050.32), and D (1962.281963.35).[5] McLeod divided it into 60 paragraphs of text in two distinct sections. Part one (paragraphs 136) concerns the general rules determining contracts to be binding, whereas part two (paragraphs 3760) concerns exceptional cases, particularly cases where previously undisclosed defects exist, that allow a contract to be abandoned.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. Kuno Meyer, Contributions to Irish Lexicography; V. 1, Pt. 1: A-C (M. Niemeyer, 1906), p. 26.
  2. Breatnach, Companion, p. 244; McLeod, Early Irish Contract Law, passim
  3. McLeod, Early Irish Contract Law, p. 111
  4. Stacey, Road to Judgment, p. 50
  5. Breatnach, Companion, p. 2445; McLeod, Early Irish Contract Law, pp. 95101
  6. Breatnach, Companion, p. 245

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/22/2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.