CODE HENRI. A digest of the laws of Hayti, enacted1 by Henri, king of Hayti. It is based upon the Code Napoleon, but not servilely copied. It is said to be judiciously3 adapted to the situation of Hayti. A collection of laws made by order of Henry III of France, is also known by the name of Code Henri.
CODE, JUSTINIAN, civil law. A collection of the constitutions of the emperors, from Adrian to Justinian; the greater part of those from Adrian to Constantine are mere4 rescripts; those from Constantine to Justinian are edicts or laws, properly speaking.
2. The code is divided into twelve books, which are subdivided5 into titles, in which the constitutions are collected under proper heads. They are placed in chronological6 order, but often disjointed. At the head of each constitution is placed the name of the emperor who is the author, and that of the person to whom it is addressed. The date is at the end. Several of these constitutions, which were formerly7 in the code were lost, it is supposed by the neglect of "copyists. Some of them have been restored by modern authors, among whom may be mentioned Charondas, Cugas, and Contius, who translated them from Greek, versions.
CODE, OF LOUISIANA. In 1822, Peter Derbigny, Edward Livingston, and Moreau Lislet, were selected by the legislature to revise and amend8 the civil code, and to add to it sucb laws still in force as were not included therein. They were authorized9 to add a system of commercial law, and a code of practice. The code they prepared having been adopted, was promulgated10 in 1824, under the title of the " Civil Code of the State of Louisiana."
2. The code is based on the Code Napoleon, with proper and judicious2 modifications11, suitable for the state of Louisiana. It is composed of three books: 1. the first treats of persons; 2. the second of tbings, and of the different modifications of property; 3. and the third of the different modes of acquiring the property of tbings. It contains 3522 articles, numbered from the beginning, for the convenience of reference.
3. This code, it is said, contains many inaccurate12 definitions. The legislature modified and changed many of the provisions relating to the positive legislation, but adopted the definitions and abstract doctrines13 of the code without material alterations14. From this circumstance, as well as from the inherent difficulty of the subject, the positive provisions of the code are often at variance15 with the theoretical part, which was intended to elucidate16 them. 13 L. R. 237.
4. This code went into operation on the 20th day of May,. 1825. 11 L. R. 60. It is in both the French and English languages; and in construing17 it, it is a rule that when the expressions used in the French text of the code are more comprehensive than those used in English, or vice18 versa, the more enlarged sense will be taken, as thus full effect will be given to both clauses. 2 N. S. 582.
CODE, NAPOLEON. The Code Civil of France, enacted into law during the reign19 of Napoleon, bore his name until the restoration of the Bourbons when it was deprived of that name, and it is now cited Code Civil.