20.17. 17. A Law of Rhodes.
[14]
The inhabitants of Rhodes went further.
Sextus Empiricus observes that among those people a son could not be
excused from paying his father's debts by renouncing the succession.
This law of Rhodes was calculated for a republic founded on commerce.
Now I am inclined to think that reasons drawn from commerce itself
should make this limitation, that the debts contracted by the father
since the son's entering into commerce should not affect the estate or
property acquired by the latter. A merchant ought always to know his
obligations, and to square his conduct by his circumstances and present
fortune.
Footnotes
[14]
"Hypotiposes," Book i, chap. 14.