property - Gyldendal - Den Store Danske

Limitations of acceptance may result from e.g

property rights, full property rights, the right to in every respect to have the use of private property, to the extent that there are made specific restriction, by private contract or by lawa pantsætnings or lease, and restrictions according to the legislation due to provisions in the bl. Ownership is also referred to the immediate property, because the court is not derived from another higher right. In contrast to the complete property is partial or limited property rights, providing access to a has a property in a special sense, e.g. pledge, easement or tenancy rights.

environment or byplanlovgivningen

The parties to the agreement can have a number of problems in relation to the third party by property the transfer this problem can be referred to as the transfer of ownership transition. It can for example be a question of when the buyer obtains protection against dobbeltsalg or protection against the seller's creditors carries out an attachment of the goods sold. Or it may be a question whether a seller can maintain an access to terminate a purchase or to make an objection of invalidity applicable to a buyer's creditors and aftaleerhververe. Ownership passes not necessarily at a particular time in the course of an agreement.

There will often be talking about different times, depending on the nature of the problem, and partly the nature of the transferred goods, e.g.

real estate, movable property or claims. The transfer of ownership inviolability is guaranteed by the Basic law §. The protection consists in the fact that the public only under certain conditions may require that an owner waives its property: a Sale can only be made against full compensation, renunciation can only be made where the public interest requires it, and the interference must have a legal basis in the law. Such ordered abandonment termed expropriation. The protection includes not only the full ownership of a thing or a property, but also limited rights such as leasehold and mortgage law as well as intellectual property rights, e.g. Also publicly created rights can be protected, e.g. rights according to a granted patent or the right to a due benefit. The constitution § thus places limits on the legislature's freedom to regulate, and these limits must the legislature, of course, be paid to the design of laws, regulations, e.g.

land-use planning, nature conservation and commercial regulation.

The private citizen, who believes that a law goes beyond what The constitution, section allows, may refer the issue to the courts. The Danish Parliament has adopted a draft law on expropriation, a minority of one third of its members require that the bill cannot be promulgated before it has been held new elections to the Folketing, and the proposal is adopted. Ejendomsretsbegrebet was first known in English law in the -t. the notion of a right in immovable property or movable property was probably originally linked to the use or exploitation of the asset and was based not on an abstract ejendomsretsbegreb.

The ownership concept gained a foothold in Denmark under the influence of the natural law, who viewed ownership as an absolute right which could not be limited by the power of the state.

Against this view argued Anders Sandøe Ørsted in the early t.

under the influence of foreign theory, that ownership may be subject to the restrictions, which were necessary to the society, 'the legal Breakdown best Interests of the child', as he put it.