Page:Medical jurisprudence (IA medicaljurisprud03pari).pdf/444

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
  • bentur injusti, hi injusti censeantur, donec justi fuerint approbati.

"In hac specie partitæ erant Iudicum sententiæ. Quidam enim censebant juris definitioni hic esset insistendum, cum partus editus sit mense duodecimo ferè completo, si menses his accipiamus lunares, et vir ante obitum quatuordecim dies graviter decubuerit, ideoque credibile non fuerit eum de vene exercenda cogitasse. Alii (qui numero vincebant) judicabant partum legitimum, quòd mulier esset probatis moribus ac pndicitiâ minimè suspectâ, quòd etiam ex marito quantumvis ægroto concipere potuerit, tardiorisque partus caussam ex Hippocratis sententia esse potuisse, quod viri infirmi semen fuerit humidius et excrementosius eoque minus concoctum. Senatus tamen expedire censuit, ut partes ad transigendum monerentur. Transactione autem non succedente, partus frequentioribus suffragiis declaratus fuit legitimus,

et patri heres.[1]."

The learned author of these notes, Francis Hargrave, one of the King's Counsel, died while our work was at press: the profession have lost a most profound and erudite lawyer; the learned, an elegant scholar; and his friends, a man whose amenity of manner and kindness of heart surpassed the ordinary bounds of human benevolence.

  1. 27. Octobris. Anno 1634.