QUASI TRADITIO
quasi traditio (kway-sI [or -zI] tr<<schwa>>-dish-ee-oh). [Latin “as if transfer”] Roman law.
A party’s acquisition of a servitude by using it with the informal permission or acquiescence of the
owner.
“According to the civil law again a servitude — that is, a limited right of user in respect of a
thing not one’s own, e.g. a usufruct or a right of way — could only be created by means of certain
definite legal forms. The praetorian law, on the other hand, allowed a servitude to be created by a
so-called quasi traditio servitutis; that is, it was satisfied if one party gave the other, without any
form, permission to exercise the right of user in question.” Rudolph Sohm, The Institutes: A
Textbook of the History and System of Roman Private Law 82 (James Crawford Ledlie trans., 3d
- 1907). [Blacks Law 8th]