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- Cautelary_jurisprudence abstract "Cautelary jurisprudence is law made in a precautionary way prior to or outside of the normal legislative enactment. It meant empirical, practical legal efforts aimed at solving individual cases, as distinguished from regular jurisprudence which sought to establish abstract rules under which individual cases would fall. Its first proponent was Quintus Mucius Scaevola Pontifex, who thus gave his name to the Roman designation for this kind of law, the cautio muciana.Cautelary law is a tentative "procedure" used by lawyers. Initially, in Ancient Rome, the idea of inheritance as being subject to conditions was not in practice. With cautio muciana it gave those who are to inherit a legacy, the legatees, a "negative authority" over something which otherwise would not have occurred until the death of the owner of the legacy, the legator. It thus also makes it possible for the legator to gain promises from legatees.The legatee provides a stipulatio or cautio, promising something in return for a legacy. Thus, for example, it may be stipulated in the negative, "I agree that I can have full and exclusive use of, and live in the house, so long as I am not married."The cautio muciana is one of a long list of legal devices invented used by the Romans to address practical situations without changes of general principles.Cautelary jurisprudence nowadays is associated with inheritance law and the administration of trusts. The various inventions by lawyers of these new, arrangements, or forms of law, are often enacted outside of nation or state legislature, but with agreement amongst other lawyers and/or judges. Often, many years later, such arrangements are fully enacted as a 'catching up' exercise by the legislature.".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageID "20589499".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageLength "2491".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageOutDegree "18".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageRevisionID "514334778".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Category:Jurisprudence.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Cautio_muciana.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Inheritance.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Inheritance_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Judge.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Jurisprudence.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Lawyer.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Lawyers.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Legatee.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Legator.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Legislature.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Quintus_Mucius_Scaevola_Pontifex.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Rule_According_to_Higher_Law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Rule_according_to_higher_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Rule_of_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Stipulatio.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Trust_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLink Trusts.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cautelary jurisprudence".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence hasPhotoCollection Cautelary_jurisprudence.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Original_research.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Refimprove.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence subject Category:Jurisprudence.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence subject Category:Roman_law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence hypernym Law.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence type Article.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence type Person.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence type Article.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence type Science.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence comment "Cautelary jurisprudence is law made in a precautionary way prior to or outside of the normal legislative enactment. It meant empirical, practical legal efforts aimed at solving individual cases, as distinguished from regular jurisprudence which sought to establish abstract rules under which individual cases would fall.".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence label "Cautelary jurisprudence".
- Cautelary_jurisprudence sameAs m.0520q05.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence sameAs Q5054692.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence sameAs Q5054692.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence wasDerivedFrom Cautelary_jurisprudence?oldid=514334778.
- Cautelary_jurisprudence isPrimaryTopicOf Cautelary_jurisprudence.