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Contractualisation of Ownership: The Evolution of Economic Ownership in Civil Law, Slides of Commercial Law

The concept of economic ownership in civil law, which arises when an individual or entity holds the economic benefits of an asset despite not formally owning it. Through case studies and legal analysis, the document demonstrates how contractual arrangements can create economic ownership and challenges the traditional civil law approach to ownership. The document also discusses the implications of economic ownership for european property law and modern property law developments.

Typology: Slides

2011/2012

Uploaded on 12/30/2012

dilawar
dilawar 🇮🇳

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Contractualisation of Ownership

About legal ownership and economic ownership

Economic or beneficial ownership

The “classical” 19th century civil law approach towards ownership was static and formalistic. Developments in French and German law show, however, that this approach is changing. Ownership is becoming a flexible tool. By limiting owner’s rights through contract law, the contractual arrangements can, in fact, be so strong that the formal non-owner may be characterized as “economic” owner. Such economic ownership puts pressure on the classical civil law approach, thus bringing the civil law closer to the flexible common law perception of ownership. Contractualisation of civil law ownership is thus a necessary step towards developing a European property law.

Contractualisation:

  • Content and purpose of the right of ownership shaped by party agreements, thereby creating economic ownership
  • Trust, Fiducie, Treuhand

ProCall (HR 13 June 2003, NJ 2004)

  • ProCall collecting payments on behalf of Beatrixziekenhuis
  • Payments collected on bankaccount of ProCall but

“concerning Beatrix-hospital”

  • Payments held to fall into the bankrupt estate of ProCall
  • Complete beneficial interest with economic owner Beatrix-

hospital

Kas-associatie/Drying (HR 23 September

1994, NJ 1996, 461)

  • Intermediated securities
  • Bankrupt intermediator buying securities for and on behalf of

Drying and registering these securities on an account provided by Kas-associatie

  • Complete beneficial interest with economic owner

Drying

Effectenkantoor (intermediary, not registered)

Kasassociatie (sub-intermediary,

registered)

Central depository

Roman law: a more equitable

example?

  • Ius civile, ius gentium and ius honorarium
  • Bonitary ownership
  • Fideicommissum
  • Placement of ownership in Roman law, the classification of

Gaius

What to do?

  • Common law (equity)
  • Forms of economic ownership in modern law
  • Modern developments influencing property law
  • Beneficial ownership in tax law?

Revisiting ProCall and Drying

  • A Roman solution
  • A common law solution

Economic ownership

  • A new type of relation to property?