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Statuarius, Jacob · 1588

XCIX Note: The original text marks this as XCIX, though it follows XCVII.
12. With caution provided, it allows one of the consorts of the suit, even without the mandate of the absent consort, to act for him in judgment, provided the absent one does not expressly resist and contradict.
XCIX.
13. It causes the instance legal proceedings to begin to run from the day of the contestation of the suit, not from the edition of the action or the offering of the written pleading, which precede the contestation of the suit.
C.
14. It makes the thing litigious, so that the thing introduced into judgment can no longer be alienated after the contestation of the suit.
CI.
15. It interrupts every prescription, even if the suit has been contested before arbitrators.
CII.
16. If damage is done by a neighbor, it requires it to be restored.
CIII.
Furthermore, the following effects make the condition of the plaintiff worse. For first, after the suit is contested, the judge can neither be recused, nor declined, nor can one appeal from him before the sentence.
CIIII.
Then, a creditor who has contested a suit with one of the sureties cannot reintegrate the petition of division against all.
CV.
Thirdly, the procurator cannot be changed, nor the defender revoked, after the suit is contested.
CVI.
Fourthly, he who has contested a suit with a procurator without a guarantee of ratification cannot demand a guarantee from him any longer, since the security of ratification is required only before the contestation of the suit.
THE END.