Most Roman inheritances were not intestate. Instead, they were governed by a
will (
testamentum). Some Roman writers speak of producing a will as a duty (
officium).
Henry Maine in 1861 characterised the Roman approach as a "horror of intestacy." Only a
pater familias (male head of household) could make a will that disposed of a whole estate. But any
Roman citizen who had reached the
age of majority could make a will for property that they possessed in their own right. Women could make wills through a process of fictional sale (
coemptio), until the reign of
Hadrian, when they were given the ability to make a will through their
tutor (legal guardian). Non-Romans (
peregrini) and people with
intellectual disabilities could not make wills under Roman law. Exiles were not allowed to make wills either and this ban was retrospective; being sent into exile voided any will that the exile had already made. The will had to name an heir. In addition to this, it could name a legal guardian (
tutor) for underage children, manumit slaves, and leave legacies to third parties.
Early methods of testament The earliest form of Roman will was made at an assembly of the people called the
comitia calata ("summoned assembly") which was held twice a year. Soldiers could also make a will before they went into battle, called an
in procinctu ("with togas girded up"). Both of these methods had ceased to be used by the
Late Republic. They were replaced by the
testamentum per aes et libram ("the will made by bronze and scales"). This form of will rested on the
legal fiction that the
testator was formally conveying (
mancipatio) his property to a trustee (
familiae emptor, "buyer of the household") who would then convey it to the chosen heirs on his death. The act of conveyance had to be witnessed by a scale-bearer (
libripens) and five other witnesses . Initially, the will was made orally, but written wills became common early. By the Late Republic, the actual ceremony was no longer carried out, although the term was still being used in the second century AD. From the second century BC, all that was required was a written will sealed by seven witnesses (
signatores).
Documentation with part of a Roman will, found in
Wales Wills usually took the form of three wooden writing tablets (
tabulae). One surface of each was covered with
wax and a copy of the will was written on two of the tablets. The tablets were tied together, so that one copy was visible (
scriptura exterior) and the other was not (
scriptura interior). The seals of the witnesses were placed over the cord, so that it was impossible to open the tablet and view the inner copy without breaking the seals. This design was intended as a guarantee against tampering. This form was mandated by the
senatus consultum Neronianum of AD 61, but it was probably the usual form before that.
Designating heirs To be valid, a will had to name an heir or heirs (
heres or
heredes). These could be designated using the phrases "Be thou, so-and-so my heir" or "I order that so-and-so be my heir" (
Titius heres esto or
Titium heredem esse iubeo). Any other phrase, like "I wish that so-and-so be my heir" or "I make so-and-so my heir" (
Titium heredem esse volo or
Titium heredem facio), would not be valid. If there was no valid heir then the whole will would fail, including legacies left to people other than the heir. Under the principle of
universalis successio ("total inheritance"), the heir inherited all rights and obligations of the deceased, including all their debts. Thus, becoming heir to a heavily indebted estate could lead to
bankruptcy. Most people were granted a hundred days to consider whether to accept the role of heir. But children who had not been emancipated before death (
sui heredes) and slaves who were simultaneously freed and appointed heir in the will could not refuse the role. Under the civil law, there was an assumption that all children of the deceased were heirs unless the testator specifically disinherited them (by name for male children, by general statement for female children). Under the praetor's law, this rule was extended to emancipated sons. Sometimes a testator would disinherit their children in order to avoid them becoming liable for any debts and then require the named heir to pass the property to the children through a
fideicommissum. The will could also name substitute heirs, who would take over the role of the heir if the initial heir died before the testator or refused to accept the will. Justinian introduced a rule called "the privilege of inventory" (
beneficium inventarii), according to which, if an heir began making an inventory of the estate within thirty days of learning that they were the named heir, then they would only be liable for debts from items contained in the inventory. Under the civil law, the heir claimed the estate through a
hereditatis petitio ("claim of heirdom"). The praetor's law provided an alternative, the
bonorum possessio ("order for possession of the estate"), where the heir was determined by the ruling of a magistrate. This ruling might be
secundum tabulas ("in accordance with the will") or
contra tabulas ("contrary to the will"). These two systems were very complicated, leading to efforts to simplify them and, eventually, they were merged.
Invalid heirs Heirs had to be specific
natural persons. It was impossible under Roman law to make a community, state, trust, or company the heir. The heir could not be any "unknown person" (
incerta persona), e.g. a child who had not been born when the will was written. Foreigners (
peregrini) could not be named as heirs. Under the
Lex Julia de maritandis ordinibus of 18 BC and the
Lex Papia Poppaea of AD 9, unmarried adults could not inherit or receive legacies and married adults without children could only receive half the inheritance.
Manumissions Originally, the testator was able to manumit any number of slaves in the will. Under
Augustus, the
Lex Fufia Caninia of 2 BC placed an absolute maximum limit of one hundred manumissions and lower limits for estates which had smaller numbers of slaves. The motivation for this may have been a desire to limit the number of
freedmen and/or to prevent the testator from bankrupting the estate. Somewhere between 5% and 8% of all Roman manumissions were testamentary manumissions.
Legacies The testator could leave legacies to third parties, which the heir was obliged to pay from the estate. Legacies could provide a method for leaving property to people who could not legally be heir, but foreigners, communities, and uncertain persons could not be legatees either. Unlike the heir, legatees were not liable for the estates debts. Legacies could be
per vindicationem ("by claim"), where the legatee became owner of the property in question, or
per damnationem ("by obligation"), where the heir was required to make a regular payment to the legatee from the property. A legacy was only valid if the phrase "to whom I give and legate" (
cui do lego). Legacies could include
dowries, money given to slaves (
peculium), furniture, wine, and so on.
Annuities might be granted to servants of the deceased, to be paid on a certain day each year for the rest of the servant's life. A lifetime
usufruct of a property was often granted to the widow of the deceased. Legacies were often used to leave money to towns or associations for specific purposes (e.g., holding games in honour of the deceased, constructing public buildings, providing heating for the
bathhouse or oil for the
gymnasium. Under the
Lex Falcidia of 40 BC, legacies could not take up more than three-quarters of the total estate (i.e. the heirs had to receive at least a quarter). If the legacies were more than this amount, then they would be reduced in order to ensure that the heirs received a quarter of the total value of the estate. Justinian merged legacies into the system of
fideicommissa discussed below.
Challenging the will Under the
Twelve Tables, testators had complete
freedom of testation. In the Late Republic, children could file a "complaint of the undutiful will" (
querela inofficiosi testamenti) before the
centumviral court, if the will gave them less than one quarter of what they would have gotten in the event of intestacy and there was no reason why they had been excluded. The heirs would have to demonstrate that they had always behaved in a dutiful manner towards the deceased. If they won the case, they got the full share that they would have received in case of intestacy. This was based on the legal fiction that the testator could not have been of
sound mind when that part of the will was written. The claim only voided the specific section of the will dealing with the claimant, not the whole will. The law mostly did not specify what were valid reasons for disinheriting someone. Thus, it was generally determined by the social expectations of the jury. Fourth-century laws mention "immorality" and becoming a
gladiator as reasons and Justinian provided a full list in AD 542. Even when a disinheritance was totally legal, there was strong social pressure against disinheriting children and direct descendants. ==
Fideicommissum==