Private Property Law
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A Private Property Law is a legal law that can assign property rights (of ownership of real property).
- Example(s):
- Real Property Law, such as: Land Ownership and Rights Law, and Landlord-Tenant Law.
- Personal Property Law, such as: Chattels Law, Bailments Law, Lost, Mislaid, and Abandoned Property Law, Gifts Law.
- Intellectual Property Law, such as: Copyright Law, Trademark Law, Patent Law and Trade Secret Law.
- Digital or Cyber Property Law, such as Domain Names Law, Digital Assets Law, Data Ownership Law.
- Cultural Property Law.
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Ownership, Tenancy, Possession (Law), Personal Property, Common Law, Legal System, Civil Law (Legal System).
References
2015
- (Wikipedia, 2015) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/property_law Retrieved:2015-3-1.
- Property law is the area of law that governs the various forms of ownership and tenancy in real property (land as distinct from personal or movable possessions) and in personal property, within the common law legal system. In the civil law system, there is a division between movable and immovable property. Movable property roughly corresponds to personal property, while immovable property corresponds to real estate or real property, and the associated rights and obligations thereon.
The concept, idea or philosophy of property underlies all property law. In some jurisdictions, historically all property was owned by the monarch and it devolved through feudal land tenure or other feudal systems of loyalty and fealty.
Though the Napoleonic code was among the first government acts of modern times to introduce the notion of absolute ownership into statute, protection of personal property rights was present in medieval Islamic law and jurisprudence, and in more feudalist forms in the common law courts of medieval and early modern England.
- Property law is the area of law that governs the various forms of ownership and tenancy in real property (land as distinct from personal or movable possessions) and in personal property, within the common law legal system. In the civil law system, there is a division between movable and immovable property. Movable property roughly corresponds to personal property, while immovable property corresponds to real estate or real property, and the associated rights and obligations thereon.
1954
- Felix Cohen, "Dialogue on Private Property" (1954) Rutgers LR 357.