Online Encyclopedia

ALLUVION (Lat. alluvio, washing against)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 710 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALLUVION (
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Lat. alluvio, washing against)
  , a word taken from
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Roman law, in which it was one of the examples of accessio, that is, acquisition of
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property without any act being done by the acquirer . It signifies the gradual accretion of
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land or formation of an island by imperceptible degrees . If the accretion or formation be by a torrent or flood, the property in the severed portion or new island continues with the
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original owner until the trees, if any, swept away with it take root in the ground . Alluvion never attached at all in the case of agri limitati, that is, lands belonging to the state and leased or sold in plots . Dig. xli . 1, 7, is the main authority .
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English law is in general agreement (except as to agri limitati) with Roman, as appears from the
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judgment in Foster v . Wright, 1878, 4 C.P.D . 438 . The Scottish law, as laid down by the House of Lords in
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Earl of Zetland v . Glover Incorporation, 1872, L.R . 2 H.L., Sc., 70, is in accordance with the English .

End of Article: ALLUVION (Lat. alluvio, washing against)
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