Res nullius is a doctrine.[1] The expression "res nullius" (lit: nobody's thing) is a Latin term derived from private Roman law whereby res (an object in the legal sense, anything that can be owned, even a slave, but not a subject in law such as a citizen, nor land) is not yet the object of rights of any specific subject. Such items are considered ownerless property and are free to be acquired by means of occupatio.[2] Its use as a legal concept continues in modern civilian legal systems.

Examples of res nullius in the socio-economic sphere are wild animals (ferae naturae) or abandoned property (res derelictae). Finding can also be a means of occupation (i.e. vesting ownership), since a thing completely lost or abandoned is res nullius, and therefore belonged to the first taker.[3] Specific legislation may be made, e.g. for beachcombing.

Scope

Wild animals

In common law legal systems, forest laws, and game laws have specified which animals are res nullius and when they become someone's property. Wild animals are regarded as res nullius, and as not being the subject of private property until reduced into possession by being killed or captured (see, e.g. Pierson v. Post):

A bird in the hand is owned; a bird in the bush is not.

Even bees do not become property until hived.[4] An exception in the United Kingdom is the mute swan: The U.K. Monarch retains the right to assert ownership of unmarked mute swans, which he currently does on stretches of the Thames and its tributaries.

Likewise in common law systems, abandoned things are generally the property of the owner of the land in which they are found. Exceptions include treasure trove, for which specific law applies, generally making it Crown property; and some types of shipwreck:

Modern public international law

A concept derived from res nullius by allegory is terra nullius.[5] Using it, a state may assert control of an unclaimed territory by occupying it.

This terra nullius principle was used to justify colonization of much of the world, as exemplified in the competition for influence within Africa by the European powers (see the scramble for Africa). The concept was applied even where there were indigenous peoples residing in what Europeans considered newly discovered land, as in Australia.[6] It was also used by English colonists in Ireland, based on similar grounds to those used in the Americas and Australia: in the early stages of the Munster Plantation it was argued that much of Ireland was res nullius as the Gaelic Irish were "not thrifty, and civil and human creatures, but rather savage and brute beasts." (Anthony Trollope) Much of the native population had been killed during the Desmond Rebellions, and Irish land use was seen as inefficient, based mostly on pastoralism; thus, land could be claimed as res nullius and planted with English, Welsh and Scottish colonists.[7] It was also used with regard to plantation of the Ards Peninsula.[8][9]

See also

References

  1. Johnston. The International Law of Fisheries. 1987. p 309.
  2. "Argument from Roman law in current international law: Occupation and acquisitive prescription" (PDF).
  3. Kelly, Joseph (1910). "Roman law" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 8. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  4. One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Game laws". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 440.
  5. Benton, Lauren; Straumann, Benjamin. Acquiring Empire by Law: From Roman doctrine to early modern European practice. p. 2.
  6. Nicholas, Barry (1962). An Introduction to Roman Law. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. p. 132. ISBN 0-19-876063-9. OCLC 877760.
  7. Canny, Nicholas (3 May 2001). Making Ireland British, 1580-1650. OUP Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-154201-5 via Google Books.
  8. Anderson, Martin (26 September 2012). Interlocutors of Paradise. Skylight Press. ISBN 9781908011565 via Google Books.
  9. McCormack, Anthony M. (26 May 2004). "The social and economic consequences of the Desmond rebellion of 1579–83". Irish Historical Studies. 34 (133): 1–15. doi:10.1017/S0021121400004053. S2CID 163236073 via Cambridge University Press.


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