THE NON-ROMAN ORIGIN OF THE PHRASE „SOCIETAS DELINQUERE NON POTEST“ Cover Image

НЕРИМСКИЯТ ПРОИЗХОД НА ФРАЗАТА „SOCIETAS DELINQUERE NON POTEST“
THE NON-ROMAN ORIGIN OF THE PHRASE „SOCIETAS DELINQUERE NON POTEST“

Author(s): Víctor Martínez Patón
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, History of Law, Civil Law, Roman law
Published by: Софийски университет »Св. Климент Охридски«
Keywords: criminal liability of juristic persons; societas delinquere non potest, legal latin phrases; Franz von Liszt

Summary/Abstract: The phrase societas delinquere non potest has been for more than a century attributed to Roman Law. In European law, constructing Roman jurisprudence as a precedesor was particularly effective in legitimizing the denial of criminal liability to corporations. In Spain, for instance, legal persons were only considered subject to criminal law from 2010 onwards, through the LO 5/2010 (23rd of July). In this article, I show evidence to argue that the phrase was actually coined by German legal expert Franz von Liszt as late as 1881, in the first edition of his Das Deutsche Reichsstraftrecht. Because Listz wrote it in Latin, later authors soon started to assume its Roman origins and turned it into an axiom in the early years of the 20th century, obscuring until now the real origins and history of the phrase.

  • Issue Year: 2023
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 411-450
  • Page Count: 40
  • Language: Bulgarian