Time Limited Interests in Land -

Time Limited Interests in Land

Buch | Hardcover
576 Seiten
2012
Cambridge University Press (Verlag)
978-1-107-02612-4 (ISBN)
87,25 inkl. MwSt
How legal institutions of limited duration such as leases and personal servitudes can play an important role in estate planning in European jurisdictions. Moreover, developers and local authorities could use the outdated institutions of building rights and hereditary land leases to advance social housing and upgrade barren agricultural land.
A comprehensive comparative treatment of six instances of time-limited interests in land as encountered in fourteen European jurisdictions. The survey explores the commercial or social origins of each legal institution concerned and highlights their enforceability against third parties, their content and their role in land development. The commercial purpose of residential and agricultural leases is contrasted with the social aim of personal servitudes (and its common-law equivalent liferent) to provide sustenance for life to mostly family members making the latter an important estate planning device. Whereas the ingrained principles of leases and personal servitudes restrain the full exploitation of land, it is indicated that public authorities and private capital could combine to turn the old-fashioned time-limited institutions of hereditary building lease (superficies) and hereditary land lease (emphyteusis) into pivotal devices in alleviating the acute shortage of social housing and in promoting the fullest exploitation of pristine agricultural land.

Cornelius Van Der Merwe read law at Bloemfontein and Oxford and obtained a LLD from the University of South Africa. He held chairs in Private Law at the Universities of South Africa and Stellenbosch, in Civil Law at the University of Aberdeen and is presently a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Stellenbosch. He is the main author of the South African 'Property and Trust Law' in the International Encyclopedia of Laws (Kluwer, 2002) and the co-editor of Introduction to the Law of South Africa (Kluwer, 2004). Alain-Laurent Verbeke is Professor of Law at the Universities of Leuven and Tilburg, teaching contracts, property, estate planning, private international law, comparative law, negotiation and mediation. He is also a Visiting Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and at UCP Global School of Law, Lisbon. In addition to his teaching, he is also a founding partner with GREENILLE, a private client law firm with attorneys in Brussels and Antwerp and notaries and attorneys in Amsterdam and Rotterdam. He has vast experience in negotiating large inheritance, divorce and contract cases and is regularly acting as an arbitrator in national and international contract and inheritance cases.

Part I. Introduction: 1. Setting the scene; 2. General introduction; 3. Historical evolution of the maxim 'sale breaks hire'; 4. The many faces of usufruct; Part II. Case Studies; Part III. Concluding Remarks.

Reihe/Serie The Common Core of European Private Law
Zusatzinfo 1 Tables, black and white
Verlagsort Cambridge
Sprache englisch
Maße 160 x 236 mm
Gewicht 1040 g
Themenwelt Recht / Steuern EU / Internationales Recht
Recht / Steuern Privatrecht / Bürgerliches Recht Sachenrecht
ISBN-10 1-107-02612-1 / 1107026121
ISBN-13 978-1-107-02612-4 / 9781107026124
Zustand Neuware
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