THE ACQUISITION IMMOVABLES THROUGH LONG-TERM USE

THE ACQUISITION IMMOVABLES THROUGH LONG-TERM USE

HOOPS, B. /   / MARAIS, E.

190,00 €
IVA incluido
Disponible en 1 mes
Editorial:
INTERSENTIA
Año de edición:
2022
Materia
Derecho civil
ISBN:
978-1-83970-165-8
Edición:
1
190,00 €
IVA incluido
Disponible en 1 mes

Launched in 1993, The Common Core of European Private law is the oldest ongoing collective comparative law efort in Europe. Putting cases at their heart, each book in this series analyses a selected legal topic on the basis of real and fctional facts across diferent European and other jurisdictions. The likely outcome of the decision and its underlying legal rules are clearly set out case by case and jurisdiction by jurisdiction. In addition, the national reporters put the respective legal rules into the relevant cultural context. In this way, the collaborative efort brings not only the inner structures of national laws in Europe to the fore, but also the diferent cultural sensitivities forging
their development in the frst place. It allows a reliable map of what is diferent and what is common in the various private laws across Europe to be drawn, without any specifc agenda for or against the further harmonisation of private law in Europe.
The series comprises more than 20 volumes of work of more than 300 academics and is an invaluable tool to understand private law across Europe.
In this book, which is part of the Common Core of European Private Law series, reporters consider legal institutions - such as the well-known acquisitive prescription and adverse possession - that allow squatters and other persons who have occupied the private or public land of others to acquire that land through mere long-term use.
Rules permitting such acquisition have existed since Roman times and are said to promote legal certainty as regards ownership of land. The reporters investigate how these rules work in their legal systems today and whether this justifcation still holds water, especially given that land is now registered in most countries. Registration seems to obviate the necessity for rules permitting acquisition of land through mere long-term use, as land registration systems create clarity as to who owns the land.

Artículos relacionados