Book 23. (1 results) Renegades of Gor (Individual Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
393
Although there are various legal qualifications involved, which vary from city to city, effective, or active, possession is generally regarded as crucial from the point of view of the law, such possession being taken, no other claims forthcoming within a specified interval, as conferring legal title.
Although there are various legal qualifications involved, which vary from city to city, effective, or active, possession is generally regarded as crucial from the point of view of the law, such possession being taken, no other claims forthcoming within a specified interval, as conferring legal title.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 16, Sentence #393)
Book 23. (7 results) Renegades of Gor (Context Quote)
Chapter #
Sentence #
Quote
16
390
She must then take action.
16
391
She might turn herself over to a praetor, hoping for mercy, as she had surrendered herself.
16
392
Or perhaps she might solicit some person to make active claim upon her, such a claim, after certain intervals, superseding prior claims.
16
393
Although there are various legal qualifications involved, which vary from city to city, effective, or active, possession is generally regarded as crucial from the point of view of the law, such possession being taken, no other claims forthcoming within a specified interval, as conferring legal title.
16
394
This is the case with a kaiila or a tarsk, and it is also the case with a slave.
16
395
In such a case, presumably the woman would expect the master who has then put claim on her to free her.
16
396
That would presumably be the point of the matter.
She must then take action.
She might turn herself over to a praetor, hoping for mercy, as she had surrendered herself.
Or perhaps she might solicit some person to make active claim upon her, such a claim, after certain intervals, superseding prior claims.
Although there are various legal qualifications involved, which vary from city to city, effective, or active, possession is generally regarded as crucial from the point of view of the law, such possession being taken, no other claims forthcoming within a specified interval, as conferring legal title.
This is the case with a kaiila or a tarsk, and it is also the case with a slave.
In such a case, presumably the woman would expect the master who has then put claim on her to free her.
That would presumably be the point of the matter.
- (Renegades of Gor, Chapter 16)