This thesis is grounded in Navarrese court cases from the sixteenth until the eighteenth centuries, and concerns the agotes of northern Spain. This social group was kept at the margins of Navarrese communities during the early modern period, confined to certain jobs and allowed to live only in certain neighborhoods. Nevertheless, throughout the early modern period agotes and non-agotes litigated agote rights in courts. This thesis utilizes court cases brought by both agotes and non-agotes in order to understand the concerns of both agotes and non-agotes. These concerns centered around the physical spaces into which agotes were allowed, as well as their rights to enter into marriage and professional contracts. The thesis argues that, during this period, agotes and non-agotes were highly concerned with the access into exclusive spaces that agotes had, and attempted to control that access through the court system.