Book 22. (7 results) Dancer of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
28
99
Anyone who came on them could now claim them".
28
100
To be sure, they remained, even now, the slaves of Ionicus, but this proprietorship was now such that, if the case arose, it must yield to a new claimancy.
28
101
This point in Gorean law is apparently motivated by the consideration that a slave always have some master.
28
102
In the case of a master's death the slave, like other property, passes to the heirs, or, if there are no heirs, to the state.
28
103
"They have not been eaten".
28
104
"Not yet," pointed out Mina.
28
105
"Consider," said Tupita.
Anyone who came on them could now claim them".
To be sure, they remained, even now, the slaves of Ionicus, but this proprietorship was now such that, if the case arose, it must yield to a new claimancy.
This point in Gorean law is apparently motivated by the consideration that a slave always have some master.
In the case of a master's death the slave, like other property, passes to the heirs, or, if there are no heirs, to the state.
"They have not been eaten".
"Not yet," pointed out Mina.
"Consider," said Tupita.
- (Dancer of Gor, Chapter )