Institutio Oratoria
Quintilian
Quintilian. Institutio Oratoria, Volume 1-4. Butler, Harold Edgeworth, translator. Cambridge, Mass; London: Harvard University Press, William Heinemann Ltd., 1920-1922.
The son who was made heir by the will finds his way barred by the law
A disinherited son shall receive none of his father's property.The basis is one resting on the letter of the law and intention, and the problem is whether he can inherit by any means at all? can he do so in accordance with the intention of his father? or in virtue of the fact that he was made heir by the will? The problem confronting the bastard is twofold, since he was born after the two legitimate sons
The first problem involves a syllogism: are those sons who have been cast out from their own family to be regarded as though they had never been born? The second is concerned with the letter of the law and intention. For it is admitted that he was not born before any legitimate son, but he will defend his claim by appealing to the intention of the law, which he will maintain to imply that the bastard, born when there was no legitimate son in the family, should rank as legitimate.
He will dismiss the letter of the law, pointing out that in any case the position of a bastard is not prejudiced by the fact that no legitimate son was born after him, and arguing as follows:—
Suppose that the only son is a bastard, what will his position be? Merely that of a citizen? and yet he was not born after any legitimate son. Or will he rank as a son in all respects? But he was not born before the legitimate sons. As it is impossible to stand by the letter of the law we must stand by its intentions.
It need disturb no one that one law should originate two bases. The law is twofold, and therefore has the force of two laws. [*](101) To the son who desires to re-enter the family, the disinherited's first reply is,
Even though you are allowed to re-enter the family, I am still the heir.The basis will be the same as in the claim put forward by the disinherited son, since the question at issue is whether a disinherited son can inherit.
Both the disinherited and the bastard will object,
You cannot re-enter the family, for our father did not die childless.But in this connexion each will rely on his own particular question. For the disinherited son will say that even a disinherited man does not cease