Occupatio


Occupatio was an original method of acquiring ownership of un-owned property by occupying with intent to own.

Roman legal writings on acquisition by ''occupatio'' (occupation)

Nicholas argues this is the "archetype" of all other Roman law methods of original acquisition. According to the Roman jurist Gaius, any previously unowned thing becomes the just property of the first occupant able to "capture" it:
Abandoned goods was also res nullius and subject to acquirement through occupatio. Land, however, was excluded and could not be acquired using occupatio.

Occupatio in the modern world

The Roman law Occupatio has continued relevance in present times, partly due to its adoption by legal systems across Europe, Africa and North America. It is also used in international law.

Domestic legal systems

Legal systems across the modern world continue to employ a form of occupatio. A full discussion of each legal system is outwith the discussion of this article but see: South African property law, civilian property law, Scots Law, Occupatio.

International law

International law adopts much of Roman property law in regards to acquisition of sovereignty due to the European nature of early European discovery voyages such as Christopher Columbus. Occupatio was later employed under public international law as the basis of acquisition of states ownership of vacant territory. An example of occupatio under international law is the United Kingdom's acquisition of ownership of Rockall in the North Atlantic Ocean by the Island of Rockall Act 1972.