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By comparison with other areas of private law, the law of
succession has been neglected by modern scholars. This volume
contributes to its rehabilitation by examining key issues in
succession law from a variety of perspectives: national, historical
and comparative. In particular it seeks to extend the techniques of
legal comparison into an area of law where hitherto they have been
little used. The jurisdictions most prominently featured are the
mixed jurisdictions of Scotland and South Africa, but there are
frequent comparative references, and special attention is given to
the Netherlands as the country which has most recently re-written
its succession law. The authors of the individual chapters are
drawn from Scotland, South Africa, Germany, Italy and the
Netherlands. Among the topics covered are freedom of testation,
testamentary conditions and public policy, forfeiture clauses and
events, revocation of wills by changed circumstances, revocation of
mutual wills, fideicommissary substitutions, and succession
agreements. The volume opens with an overview of the state of
comparative law and with a consideration of compulsory heirship in
Roman law.
Placed uniquely at the intersection of common law and civil law,
mixed legal systems are today attracting the attention both of
scholars of comparative law, and of those concerned with the
development of a European private law. Pre-eminent among the mixed
legal systems are those of Scotland and South Africa. In South
Africa the Roman-Dutch law, brought to the Cape by the Dutch East
India Company in 1652 was, from the early nineteenth century
onwards, infused with and re-moulded by the common law of the
British imperial master. In Scotland a more gradual and elusive
process saw the Roman-Scots law of the early modern period fall
under the influence of English law after the Act of Union in 1707.
The result, in each case, was a system of law which drew from both
of the great European traditions whilst containing distinctive
elements of its own. This volume sets out to compare the effects of
this historical development by assessing whether shared experience
has led to shared law. Key topics from the law of property and
obligations are examined, collaboratively and comparatively, by
teams of leading experts from both jurisdictions. The individual
chapters reveal an intricate pattern of similarity and difference,
enabling courts and legal writers in Scotland and South Africa to
learn from the experience of a kindred jurisdiction. They also, in
a number of areas, reveal an emerging and distinctive jurisprudence
of mixed systems, and thus suggest viable answers to some of the
great questions which must be answered on the path towards a
European private law.
Scotland has a special claim for the attention of comparative
lawyers, of legal historians, and of those who seek to identify a
common core in European private law or to develop a new jus
commune. For Scotland stands at the intersection of the two great
traditions of European law-of the law of Rome, received and
developed in Continental Europe, and of the law which originated in
England but was exported throughout the British Empire. In
Scotland, uniquely in Europe, there is to be found a fusion of the
civil law and the common law. Law in Scotland has a long history,
uninterrupted either by revolution or by codification. It is rich
in source material, both printed and archival. Yet hitherto the
history of legal doctrine has been relatively neglected. This work
is the first detailed and systematic study in the field of private
law. Its method is to take key topics from the law of obligations
and the law of property and to trace their development from
earliest times to the present day. A fascinating picture emerges.
The reception of civil law was slow but profound, beginning in the
medieval period and continuing until the eighteenth century. Canon
law was also influential. This was flanked by two receptions from
England, of Anglo-Norman feudalism in the twelfth century and
beyond, and, more enduringly, of aspects of English common law in
the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In addition there was much
that was home-grown. Over time this disparate mixture was
transformed by legal science into a coherent whole.
Intestate Succession is the second volume in the Comparative
Succession Law series which examines the principles of succession
law from a comparative and historical perspective. This volume
discusses the rules which apply where a person dies either without
leaving a valid will, or leaving a will which fails to dispose of
all of the person's assets. Among the questions considered are the
following: What is the nature of the rules for the disposal of the
deceased's assets? Are they mechanical or is there an element of
discretion? Are particular types of property dealt with in
particular ways? Is there entitlement to individual assets (as
opposed to money)? Do the rules operate in a parentelic system or a
system of some other kind? Are spouses treated more favourably than
children? What provision is made for extra-marital children, for
adopted children, for step-children? Does cohabitation give rise to
entitlement? How are same-sex couples treated? Broader questions
also arise of a historical and comparative nature. Where, for
example, do the rules in intestate succession come from in
particular legal systems? Have they been influenced by the rules in
other countries? How are the rules explained and how are they
justified? To what extent have they changed over time? What are the
long-term trends? And finally, are the rules satisfactory, and is
there pressure for their reform? As in the first volume, this book
will focus on Europe and on countries which have been influenced by
the European experience such as Australia, New Zealand, South
Africa, the United States of America, Quebec, and the countries of
Latin America. Further chapters are devoted to Islamic Law and
Nordic law. Opening with a discussion on Roman law and concluding
with an assessment of the overall development of the law in the
countries surveyed, this book will provide a wider reflection on
the nature and purpose of the law of intestate succession.
In Twelve Volumes. V1, Ernest D. Roth; V2, Alfred Hurty; V3, Childe
Hassam; V4, Philip Kappel; V5, John Taylor Arms; V6, Arthur
Heintzelman; V7, George Elbert Burr; V8, Kerr Eby; V9, Troy Kinney;
V10, Louis C. Rosenberg; V11, Martin Lewis; V12, Frank W. Benson.
In Twelve Volumes. V1, Ernest D. Roth; V2, Alfred Hurty; V3, Childe
Hassam; V4, Philip Kappel; V5, John Taylor Arms; V6, Arthur
Heintzelman; V7, George Elbert Burr; V8, Kerr Eby; V9, Troy Kinney;
V10, Louis C. Rosenberg; V11, Martin Lewis; V12, Frank W. Benson.
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