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Possession

Possession is a complex legal concept with no single, uniform definition. There are two key elements - corpus, the physical control over an object, and animus, the intent to exercise that control as owner. In Roman law, possession was distinguished from mere detention and was protected via possessory interdicts. A possessor had advantages like protection and could eventually acquire ownership through lapse of time. Modern analyses continue to debate the nature of possession and how it arises in different contexts.

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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
7K views9 pages

Possession

Possession is a complex legal concept with no single, uniform definition. There are two key elements - corpus, the physical control over an object, and animus, the intent to exercise that control as owner. In Roman law, possession was distinguished from mere detention and was protected via possessory interdicts. A possessor had advantages like protection and could eventually acquire ownership through lapse of time. Modern analyses continue to debate the nature of possession and how it arises in different contexts.

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Zeesahn
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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  • Introduction to Possession: This section provides a foundational understanding of possession, including its definitions, advantages, and elements.
  • Anmus Possidende: Focuses on the intent to possess and the subjective element of possession.
  • Theories of Possession: Discusses theories relating to how possession is justified and measured in legal terms, including criticisms and explanations.
  • Acquisition and Types of Possession: Details different ways possession is acquired and various forms and implications of possession.

POSSESSION:

According to salmond, in the whole range of legal theory , there is no


conception more difficult than that of possession.

Possession is a polymorphous term which may have different meaning in


different contexts. It is impossible to work out a completely logical and promise definition of
possession uniformly applicable to all situations in the context of all status.

The roman law had its main aim to protect ownership and it war in this
connection that the law regording the position developed. The roman law was mainly
concerned with developing a theory to distinguish detention and possession from each other .
ti was called as possesi or possession civilis.

A POSSESSOR HAD TWO ADVANTAGE:

First, he had a right to protection by the possessory interdicts.

Second, after the expiry of the prescribed period, the possessor could acquire
ownership.

ELEMINTS OF POSSESSION :

There are two elements of possession and those are the corpus of possession
and animus are the intention to hold possession.

The two demands must be present in the case of possession and neither of
them alone is sufficient to constitute possession.

According to Holland, a moment reflection must show that possession in


any sense of the form must imply firstly some actual power over the object possessed and
secondly some amount of will to avail oneself of that power. He further added that the
romance by whom this topic was created , treated with great fullness or subtlety describe
these essential of possession by the terms corpus and animus respectively.

a) The first source is the physical power of the possession wrists like savingly
are of the view that possession means an intention couple with the physical
power to exclude all person from the use of that material object.
b) Another source is the personal presence of the possession presence itself is
protection there may also be personal presence without any real power of
exclusion.
c) Another measure of security is custom. There is a tendency among human
beings to follow establish usage and this is an important sources of due facto
security and possession.
d) another measure of security may be secrecy. If a man wants to keep a thing
safe from others he may keep it hide.
e) Respect for right full claim is also a measure. A right full claim will readily
obtain that general acquisance which is essential to de facto security.
f) Another measure of security is the manufacture of the animus domini. The
visibility of the claim is another element in de facto security of its enjoyment.

CORPUS OF POSSESSION:

Corpus means that there exists such physical power or physical contact of
the possession in relation to the thing possessed so as to give rise to the reasonable
assumption that other people will not interfere with it. It can consider under two heads:

Relation of the possessor to other persons.

Relation of the possessor to the thing possessed.

2)relation of the possessor to other person:

A person is in possession of a thing when the facts are such to create a


reasonable expectation that he will not be interfered with the use of it. He must have some
sort of security for the acquiescence and not inferior with other persons.

The measure of security is that which normally and reasonably satisfies the
animus domini. The following are the sources from which such measure of security can be
derived.

3)relation to the possessor to the thing possessed :

According to salmond, the necessary relations between the possessor and


the thing possessed is such as to admit of his making such use of it as awords with the nature
of the thing and of his claim to it.

Paton is also of the same view he says that in corpus there are two
elements:

1) The possessors physical relation to the res --- object


2) The relation of the possessor to the rest of the world.

4)corpus depends upon the nature of the thing:

Ancona vs rogers:

A was permitted to put goods in a room of b goods kept


there locked and key taken away a was held to be in possession of the room.
ANMUS POSSIDENDI:

1) Animus possidendi or the subjective element in possession is the intent to


appropriate to oneself the exclusive use of the thing possessed the
animus is possidendi the conscious intention of the individual to exclude
other from the control of an object.
2) According to Holland, to some possibility of physical control, there must
at any rate for the commencement of possession be super added a will to
exercise such control.
3) There are certain aspects of animus possidendi have to be consider:
a) The animus possidendi is not necessarily a claim of right it
may be consciously wrong full. The theif has a possession
not less real than that of true owner.
b) The claim of the possessor may be exclusive. He must
intend to exclusive other person from the use of the things
possessed. However, the exclusion need not be absolute.
c) The animus domini need not amount to a claim intent to use
the thing as owner .the animus possidendi need not be claim
to the use of the thing at all as in the case of a pledge or a
bailer with a lier.
d) The animus possidendi need not be claim on ones own
behalf it may even through servant, agent or trusted.
e) The animus possidendi need not be specified but may be
merely general . a general intent with respect to a class of
things is sufficient to confer possession of the individual
object belonging to that class even though their individual
exercise is unknown .

POSSESSION IN FACT AND IN LAW:

1) Possession is divided into two categories:


Possession in fact
Possession in law
2) Possession in fact is actual or physical possession. It is a physical
relation to a thing. Possession in law means possession in the eyes of
law it means a possession which is recognised and protected by law.
3) Generally a person who is in defacto possession of a thing also
comes to have dejure possession however sometimes possession
may exist in fact and not in law eg: servant holds for master .
4) According to keeton, possession in law and possession in fact are not
invariably loterminure , although very frequently they are.
5) Roman lawyers used :
Possession naturalis ( possession in fact)
Possession civilis ( possession in law)

SAVINGS THEORY OF POSSESSION:

1) Both the corpus of possession and the animus possidendi must be


present to constitute possession.
2) By corpus is meant an effective physical control of the object. By
animus is meant the mental demand or the intention to hold the object
as owner against all other.
3) Savings theory explain as to why the tenant ,the borrower and the
agent had no possession in Rome law they hade no animus domini as
they did not intend to hold the object in their own rights.

CRITICISM:

1) He wrongly assumed that corpusand animus which were


required for accusations constituted possession itself he did not
make the change in the conception of possession which took place
later.
2) Roman law did not protect a possession acquired unlaw full the
possession by theif was not protected in law. A person who last a
possession by way of violence was still in possession.

IHERING THEORY OF POSSESSION:

1) Iherings theory is more objective and it a sociological approach to


possession.
2) He takes up the question as to why roman law protected possession
by means of interdicts. The answer according to him is that person
holding the property in majority of the case would be owners and
possession was attribute to such owners so that interdicts right be
available to them.
3) This theory is more in consonance with roman law and this theory
is flexible. It explain those cases which saving theory didnt .

CRITICISM:

1) It looks at possession from the point of view of interdicts and


therefore it is incapable of explaining the cases where law refused
possessiory rights to the persons who were in effective control.
2) The case in which the person did not look like an owner but for
certain purpose law recognised them to be in possession can not be
explained by inhering theory.

ACQUISITION OF POSSESSION:

1) TAKING:
It implies an act exclusively on the part of the person who takes the
possession .
It is done with out the concent of the previous possessor .
Takings is original or derivative. The original takes place when the
object has no previous owner as re nullics (catching a wild animal) wnen
the possession has the owner already it is called derivative.
2) DELIVERY OR TRADITIO:
Delivery means the voluntary requirement of possession by one
person in favour of another it is acquired by consent and co operation of
previous owner.
Deliver may be actual or constructive in actual delivery
immediate possession is given to the transfer constructive delivery is that
which is not direct or actual.
The two categories of actual delivery are based on whether a
person return mediate possession are not.
There are three kinds of constructive delivery.
Tradition brevi manu
Constitution possessorium
Attornment
OPERATION ON LAW:
This happens when, as a result of law, possession changes in hands
For eg: if a person dies the possession of his property is transferred to
his legal representatives.

RES NULLIUS:
The first finder of a thing has a good title to that thing against all but
the true owner
It is immaterial if the thing is found on the property of another purson.
The rule dose not apply if the owner of the property on which the
thing is found is in possession of the thing itself and the property.
The same is the case if the finder finds the thing as the servant or
agent of another person.
The rule also does not apply if the possession of one thing war got
through trespass or other wrong ful act.

KINDS OF POSSESSION:
1) Immediate and mediate possession:

Immediate possession is also called direct possession and mediate


possession is also called as indirect possession.

Salmond speaks of three types of mediate possession his first mediate


possession a one that is acquired through agent or servant. The second
mediate possession is with a person who hold it on my behalf and who
is bound to hand over on demand in the third sat gory the mediate
possession is with one person but he is bound to return the same after a
certain period or filfillment of certain conditions

In English law this distiriction is not of great use the English law
favours exclusiveness of possession and it grants possession to one
person and one person along at the time.

CORPOREAL AND IN CORPOREAL:

Corporeal possession is the possession of a matcrial object and


incorporeal possession is possession of anything than the material object.

Corporeal possession is possession of a thing and incorporeal


possession is possession of a rights.

REPRESENTATIVE POSSESSION:

Owner has possession of a thing through an agent or servant.

The roal possession is that of actual owner and not that of


representative.

The essential of representative possession lies in the fact that


the master has the animus to exercise control over the thing.

CONCERRENT POSSESSION:

Possession may be in the hand of two or more persons at the same


time claim which are not adverse and which are not mutually destructive & admit of
concurrent realism.

In the case of concurrent possession, mediate and immediate


possession may exist in respect of the same thin.

DERATIVE POSSESSION:

The holder of the thing combines in himself both the physical and
mental element which constitute legal possession.

A creditor has a derivative possession of the thing pledged to him.


CONSTRUCTIVE POSSESSION:

It is not actual possession it is a possession in law and not


possession in fact.

Handing over the key to the tenant.

ADVERSE POSSESSION:

To be adverse. Possession must be an invasion of ownership of


another.

It should be actual exclusive and adequate in continuity and


publicity.

The act of possession must be exercised with out violence with


out stealth and with out permission.

The conception of adverse possession is very important in law


because when it is had the period said down by law it extinguister the title of the three owner
and creater a title in the adverse possessor.

Common questions

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'Animus possidendi' refers to the intention to possess and exclude others from the use of the object . Keeton notes that possession in fact (de facto) can exist without being recognized legally (de jure) when the possessor's intent is not aligned with legal rights, such as with servants holding objects for their masters . This distinction highlights scenarios where possession in everyday context does not necessarily confer legal recognition or protection, as recognized in Roman law .

Immediate possession, also known as direct possession, is when an individual physically holds an object themselves. For example, a person holding a watch directly has immediate possession . Mediate possession occurs when someone holds an object on another's behalf, such as an agent or servant holding goods for an employer, demonstrating indirect control over the items .

Intention, or 'animus', differentiates mere custody from legal possession by determining the possessor's subjective stance toward the object. While custody provides mere physical control (corpus), legal possession requires 'animus possidendi', where the individual intends to assert control for themselves and exclude others . Without this intention, as in the case of bailees or custodians holding items on behalf of others, possession is not legally recognized .

Salmond defines 'corpus' in possession as having a physical relation to the object such that it creates a reasonable expectation of non-interference from others . The 'corpus' is crucial for providing security to the possessor, as it involves a relationship where the possessor can use the item consistent with its nature and their claim to it, providing a measure of security through legal acquiescence and recognition .

Adverse possession refers to a situation where a person gains legal ownership of property by possessing it in a manner that is hostile, actual, open, and continuous for a statutory period, thus extinguishing the true owner's legal claim . The critical characteristics include possessing the property without permission (hostility), being physically present (actual), maintaining visible and apparent control (openness), and sustaining this possession consistently over time (continuity).

Savigny's theory asserts that possession consists of both control ('corpus') and an intention to control ('animus'), emphasizing an exclusive right to hold the object against all others . This mirrors Roman law but criticizes its failure to account for possession that may occur without 'animus domini', such as agents or tenants who do not have the intent to own (animus domini), whereas Roman law focused on protections via civil possession .

Roman law distinguishes possession ('possessio' or 'possession civilis') from mere detention by emphasizing two essential elements: 'corpus' and 'animus'. 'Corpus' refers to the physical power or control over the object, indicating a reasonable assumption that others will not interfere . 'Animus' is the intention to possess the object as one's own against all others . Mere detention lacks this intention, distinguishing it from true possession .

Ihering's theory posits a sociological approach wherein possession is protected by interdicts because most possessors are owners, thus requiring legal defense . The criticism of this theory lies in its focus on legal mechanisms (interdicts) without fully addressing scenarios where possession is conferred for reasons beyond ownership appearances, failing to explain why non-owner possessors are sometimes granted legal status .

Savings' theory is criticized for conflating the conditions for acquiring possession ('corpus' and 'animus') with possession itself, neglecting the evolution of legal concepts that separate mere control from rightful possession . It fails to account for changes where possession is legally recognized despite lacking traditional qualifications, such as the absence of 'animus domini' in cases like tenancy or agency arrangements, illustrating an outdated and rigid framework .

Personal presence serves as a source of security in possession by creating a physical presence that discourages interference. Even without the actual power to exclude, the possessor's presence alone provides a form of protection contributing to the stability and security of their hold over the object . This aligns with human tendencies to respect established control and is integral to maintaining de facto security in possession contexts .

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