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POENA

POENA The original sense of this word, which is derived from the Greek ωροτϝω (Curtius, Gr. Etym. No. 373), seems to have been composition paid by a delinquent to the party injured by him, or to his kinsmen, in order to escape vengeance (Dig. 50, 16, 131 pr., “poena est noxae vindicta;” cf. the expressions “poenas solvere, pendere” ). (Rubino, Untersuchungen über röm. Verfassung, p. 460; Ihering, Geist. d. R. R. 1.126.) When crimes came to be visited with punishment by the state, the word poena meant a penalty or punishment threatened by the law on account of offences, whether such penalty was exacted at the suit of the injured party, as in the case of theft, or was a consequence of a judicium publicum.

The conception of poena differs from that of multa, as Ulpian exclaims in a well-known passage of the Digest (Dig. 50, 16, 131.1). Multa or mulcta was a pecuniary penalty ( “cujus animadversio hodie pecuniaria est” ), though by the law of the Twelve Tables it had been pecuaria or a certain number of oxen and sheep. (Plin. Nat. 18.12; Festus, s. vv. Multam, Peculatus.) It was one of the modes of punishment by which the higher magistrates enforced their supreme executive authority, but the right of imposing a multa on offenders was extended to inferior magistrates, and in Ulpian's time belonged to every person who was invested with judicial power in civil or administrative matters, such as municipal magistrates and praesides provinciarum ( “item multam is dicere potest, cui judicatio data est” ). A multa was imposed according to the discretion of the magistrate, and its amount was determined by the pleasure of him who imposed it, unless a maximum amount was fixed by law. On the other hand, a poena was only inflicted when it was imposed by some lex or some other legal authority (quo alio jure). (Cf. Paulus in Dig. 50, 16, 244 (Labeo): “Si qua poena est, multa est; si qua multa est, poena est.” (Paulus): “Utrumque eorum falsum est; namque harum rerum dissimilitudo ex hoc quoque apparet, [p. 2.441]quod de poena provocatio non est. Ex hoc quoque earum rerum dissimilitudo apparere poterit, quia poenae certae singulorum peccatorum sunt, multae contra, quia ejus judicis potestas est, quantum dicat, nisi cum lege est constitutum quantum dicat.” ) A poena was not necessarily pecuniary, but might affect a person's caput and existimatio. Cicero enumerates the following kinds of poenae, viz. damnum, vincula, verbera, talio, ignominia, exilium, mors, and servitus (Cic. de Leg.; Aug. C. D. 21.1. 2; de Or. 1.43, 194; de Off. 3.5, 23; pro Caec. 34, 100). A poena might be inflicted by any one whose function it was to take cognisance of crimes. When no poena was imposed, then a multa might be the punishment.

[G.L] [E.A.W]

hide References (2 total)
  • Cross-references from this page (2):
    • Pliny the Elder, Naturalis Historia, 18.12
    • Cicero, De Legibus, 1
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