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The second part (dealing with Law of obligations) entered into force in 1996.
It forms part of the general law of obligations.
Delict in Roman law fell under the law of obligations.
A sole trader acquires rights and duties as normal under the general law of obligations.
For example, it is clear that a choice must be made between the law of obligations and the law of contract.
Another dimension of the theoretical debate in contract is its place within, and relationship to a wider law of obligations.
He has dealt mainly with the law of obligations and contracts and property rights of the family.
He further separates the law of obligations into contracts, delicts, semi-contracts, and semi-delicts.
He is an expert of Law of Obligations.
Tort law or delict law falls within the law of obligations.
In her research, Schwenzer primarily focuses on law of obligations, commercial law and family law.
Since the modernisation of the Law of Obligations in 2001, the legal doctrine is provided for by statute.
French contract law is part of the law of obligations found in the Code Civil dealing with contracts.
A Historical Introduction to the Law of Obligations (1999)
Law of obligations (contract, restitution, and tort)
The distinction between indemnity and damages is subtle, but they may be differentiated by considering the roots of the law of obligations.
The law of obligations includes the law of contracts, delicts (or torts) and restitution.
Using these frames of reference, lawyers advocate particular legal doctrines and mould the fundamental principles of the law of obligations.
The law of obligations is one of the component private law elements of the civil system of law.
This secured unjust enrichment English law as the third pillar of the law of obligations, along with contract and tort.
Võlaõigus ettevõtluses (Law of Obligations in Business Activity, 2001)
Local Dutch laws took much from Roman law, particularly in the law of obligations and in the practice of written codes.
The legal term originates in the Roman law of Obligations; where entering into an in solidum agreement involved a high degree of risk.
Reinhard Zimmermann: The Law of Obligations.
The most significant changes were made in 2002, when the Law of Obligations, one of the BGB's five main parts, was extensively reformed.