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Summary Property Law

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Readings (Book) , Lectures, Cases, workshops

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  • May 9, 2021
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  • 2020/2021
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Property Law
(The Hague University of Applied Sciences)
2020-21




Table of Contents
Lecture 1 – Introduction to Property Law..................................................................................4
Civil Law and Common Law Traditions...................................................................................4
Property Law vs. Intellectual Property Law...........................................................................5
Nature of Property Rights......................................................................................................5
Principle of Numerus Clauses and Transparency...................................................................5
[3] Ground Rules of Property Law..........................................................................................6
International and European Initiatives to Unify and Harmonize Property Law.....................6
Lecture 2 – Possession and Ownership......................................................................................7
Civil Law Approach.................................................................................................................7
France.................................................................................................................................8
Germany.............................................................................................................................9
Common Law Approach.......................................................................................................10
Types of Interference.......................................................................................................10
Fundamental Difference Between Civil Law and Common Law Systems............................11
Lecture 3 – Property Rights Over Movables and Immovables.................................................12
Civil Law Jurisdictions [France and Germany]......................................................................12
The Right of Ownership........................................................................................................12
It is the most extensive entitlement a person can have with regard to an object.
Ownership is from which all other property rights originate. The numerus clausus of
property rights may differ per jurisdictions  Some jurisdictions may or may not
recognize property rights of other jurisdictions..............................................................12
France...............................................................................................................................12
Germany...........................................................................................................................12
Limitations to Right of Ownership...................................................................................13
Co-ownership...................................................................................................................13
Limited Property Rights........................................................................................................14
Real Servitude...................................................................................................................14
Personal Servitude...........................................................................................................15

, Right of Superficies...........................................................................................................16
Lecture 4 – Tangible Property Rights in Common Law............................................................17
Strict Distinction Between Land and Goods in England.......................................................17
Land......................................................................................................................................17
Numerus Clauses [England]..............................................................................................17
Concept of Estates............................................................................................................17
Possession as a Basis of the Protection Against Dispossession.......................................17
Possession by Several Persons.........................................................................................18
Leases...............................................................................................................................18
Easements........................................................................................................................19
Profits A Prendere............................................................................................................19
Goods...................................................................................................................................19
Lecture 5 – Creation of Property Rights...................................................................................21
Derivative and Original Acquisition of Property..................................................................21
Accession of Movables to Land........................................................................................21
Commingling.....................................................................................................................23
Specificatio.......................................................................................................................23
Acquisitive Prescription....................................................................................................24
Lecture 6 – Transfer of Property Rights...................................................................................27
Prerequisites.........................................................................................................................27
Voluntary and Involuntary Transfer.....................................................................................27
Transfer of Money................................................................................................................27
Common Law....................................................................................................................27
Civil Law............................................................................................................................27
Transfer – Traditional v. Consensual....................................................................................28
France...............................................................................................................................28
England.............................................................................................................................28
German Law.....................................................................................................................29
Exceptions to Consensual System....................................................................................29
Types of Traditio...................................................................................................................30
Transfer of Land...................................................................................................................30
Germany...........................................................................................................................30
England.............................................................................................................................32
France...............................................................................................................................34
Transfer for Security Purposes.............................................................................................35

, Common Law....................................................................................................................35
France...............................................................................................................................35
Germany...........................................................................................................................36
Lecture 7 – Destruction of Property Rights..............................................................................37
Destruction of the Object.....................................................................................................37
France...............................................................................................................................37
Germany...........................................................................................................................37
Destruction of Property Right..............................................................................................37
France...............................................................................................................................37
Germany...........................................................................................................................38
Abandonment.......................................................................................................................39
France...............................................................................................................................39
Germany...........................................................................................................................40
Merger of Rights...................................................................................................................40
Termination of Rights...........................................................................................................40
Extinctive Prescription..........................................................................................................41
France...............................................................................................................................41
Germany...........................................................................................................................41
Specific Instances of Destruction of Limited Property Rights..............................................41
Common Law........................................................................................................................41
Destruction of the Object.................................................................................................41
Destruction of Property Rights.........................................................................................42
Cases.........................................................................................................................................43

, Lecture 1 – Introduction to Property Law
Property law is the law that deals with entitlements [rights to objects] to property. It
concerns rights that a person has against a considerable group of other persons
regarding an object.

Objects are:
1. Tangible (corporeal) objects
a. Movable  goods
b. Immovables  land
2. Intangible (incorporeal) objects
a. Intellectual property rights

Civil Law and Common Law Traditions
France
Based on French Civil Code (1804) and part of patrimonial law  the overall
collection of assets and debts a person has.
– Initial focus on land
– Historical development  from feudal regime to French Civil Code (Cciv)

Art. 544 CCIV  “Ownership is the right to enjoy and dispose of objects in the most
complete manner, provide they are not used in a way prohibited by
status/regulations”

Art. 543 CCIV  “… an object may have a right of ownership, mere right of
enjoyment or only a right of servitude”

Germany
Based on German Civil Code 1900 and based on Roman Law. Content is similar to
French Law  Right of Ownership (restricted to corporeal objects)

Numerus clausus – limited number of property rights  people cannot create any
other property rights than those already provided by the legal system.

England and Wales
No Civil Code but instead a mixture of statutory and case law. A distinction is made
between real property [land] and personal property [things].

– Real property  feudal basis with case law and statutory intervention
– Personal property  little statutory intervention
– Numerus clausus

There is no ownership, instead the focus is on possession  same concept as Civil
Law systems, different terminology.

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