Public Property
Property that does not have a specific owner, such as roads, streets, alleyways, bridges, as well as vacant land, cannot be owned by individuals, except when provided by law. Articles 23-28 of the Civil Code relate to public property. Article 28 provides that property without an owner (treasure troves) must be spent by the state for charitable purposes.
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More on the topic Public Property:
- Guardianship (tutela) was a legal institution developed to protect children whose paterfamilias had died before they were of an age to manage their own property (property which, presumably, they had inherited from him).
- One issue that marriage always raises centers on property: if two persons from different families form a household, what effect will that have not only on the property they each own at the time the marriage is contracted but also on what they acquire during the marriage?
- Chapter 1 Evaluation for COVID-19 Outbreak Public Policies in the World Within the Scope of Global Public Goods (GPGs)
- Market proponents argue that people are more likely to take care of what they own personally, and that commonly owned goods would be better looked after if they were in private hands: 'people who litter in public parks and public thoroughfares do not, in general, dump trash in their own back yards' (Seneca amp; Taussig 1984: 85).
- Classification of Property
- CLASSIFICATION OF PROPERTY
- INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY
- THE PLACE OF PROPERTY LAW UNDER ISLAMIC JURISPRUDENCE
- Private Property
- Interests in Property
- Types of Property
- Intellectual Property Rights
- BASIC CONCEPTS OF PROPERTY UNDER ISLAMIC LAW
- Lessons Learned and Property Bubbles
- ‘uncontrolled expansion of libertarian ideology into lawyers’ common consciousness—to the point where lawyers have come to feel genuinely affronted and indignant when any authority tries to articulate a public obligation of lawyers that may end up putting them at odds with clients. We have no public obligations, they claim; we are private agents for private parties (though at the same time they claim privileges and immunities that ordinary citizens don’t have); our loyalties to clients must
- Property
- RECOVERY OF PROPERTY: VINDICATION AND POSSESSORY INTERDICTS
- Recovery of Property
- CHAPTER 4 Property
- In the previous section we saw how a child-in-power (like a slave) can acquire both property and obligations for a paterfamilias.
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