[Generated AI Legal Studies] Date: April 14, 2026
The Doctrine of Producto Illicito : Ownership, Accession, and the Limits of Restitution in Civil Law producto illicito
A thief steals a pregnant mare. The foal born is a producto illicito relative to the thief. According to the principle nemo suam turpitudinem allegans auditur , the thief cannot claim ownership of the foal. The original owner retains a vindicatory claim over both the mare and its producto illicito (foal). If the foal has been sold, the thief is liable for unjust enrichment. 4. The "Bad Faith Possessor" Rule Most civil law systems impose strict liability on the possessor in bad faith (the producer of illicit product). Article 549 of the French Civil Code provides that "the possessor in good faith acquires the fruits." By converse implication, the possessor in bad faith does not acquire the fruits. The producto illicito must be returned to the owner or, if return is impossible, compensated for at the highest market value. [Generated AI Legal Studies] Date: April 14, 2026
Modern legal systems treat producto illicito as an "economic advantage derived from crime." Under EU Directive 2014/42/EU and similar legislation, the state can seize the product without a criminal conviction if it is proven by a balance of probabilities that the product is illicit. In common law, the concept of "fruits of the crime" is similar but rooted in equity and constructive trusts. A murderer cannot inherit from his victim (the "slayer rule"). However, civil law's producto illicito is broader: it applies to all accessions by a bad-faith possessor, not just criminal proceeds. The civil law approach is more systematic, categorizing producto illicito as a failure of the accession principle rather than a constructive trust. 8. Conclusion The doctrine of producto illicito serves a vital function: it prevents the legal system from validating or protecting the results of illegal activity. A producto illicito is not a "fruit" in the legal sense; it is a legal anomaly. The producer acquires no property right, the good-faith owner retains a superior claim, and in the absence of an owner, the product is forfeited to the state. The original owner retains a vindicatory claim over
The concept of producto illicito (illicit product) arises at the intersection of property law (accession) and the principle of nemo auditur propriam turpitudinem allegans (no one can be heard to plead their own turpitude). This paper examines how civil law jurisdictions treat fruits or products generated from illegal activities or illegal contracts. While natural and industrial fruits are typically governed by the right of accession ( accessio ), illicit products pose a unique challenge: they cannot be claimed by the perpetrator of the illegality, nor can they be easily integrated into the patrimony of the state without due process. This analysis concludes that producto illicito is not a true proprietary right but a form of quasi-custodial liability, subject to confiscation without compensation. 1. Introduction In classical Roman law and modern civil codes (e.g., French, Spanish, Italian, Louisiana Civil Code), the concept of fruits ( fructus ) is fundamental. Fruits are divided into natural (produced by a thing without human intervention), industrial (produced by cultivation), and civil (rent, interest). However, when the underlying source or the act of production violates the law or public policy, the resulting product is not considered a legitimate fruit but a producto illicito .