Theologians and Contract Law: The
Moral Transformation of the Ius Commune (ca. 1500-1650)
by Wim Decock
The
Roman legal tradition is the ancestor of modern contract law but there is no
agreement as to how and when a general law of contract emerged. Wim Decock’s
thesis is that an important step in this evolution was taken by theologians in
the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. They transformed the Roman legal
tradition (ius commune) by insisting on the moral foundations of contract law.
Theologians emphasized that the enforceability of contracts is based on
voluntary consent and that a contract should not enrich one party at another's
expense. While their main concern was the salvation of souls, theologians
played a key role in the development of a systematic contract law in which the
founding principles were freedom and fairness.
Theologians and Contract Law is winner of the Heinz
Maier-Leibnitz-Preis 2014 (German Research Foundation) as well
as the Raymond Derine Prijs 2012 (Raymond Derine PhD Prize) and the ASL-Prijs
Humane Wetenschappen 2012 (ASL Award for Humanities 2012) by the Academische Stichting
Leuven. Decock's book is also awarded the "Juristisches Buch des
Jahres" (Law book of the year) by Neue Juristische Wochenschrift
(47/2013: 3420).