Property Detentor II
Property Detentor II
Property Detentor II
A. Types of possession.
58. As the law of possession plays a role in acquisition (and loss) of property, the notion of
possession is first developed a little more.
As said, the - originally factual - notion of possession (factual means possession seen as
factual power over a thing), developed into a more complex notion by accepting the idea that
you can possess for another and that you can possess through others. In the classical Roman
law and Germanic tradition (revived by R. von JHERING) (including the Anglo-Saxon
tradition), the concept of possession starts from the factual (corpus or factum possidendi)
element (a person who possesses for another is also called possessor). In the modern roman
tradition (e.g. SAVIGNY), rather the element of animus possidendi (for whom one
possesses) is stressed. But all this is rather a question of terminology than of basic
differences as to the legal consequences and protection of possession. The modern terminology rather leans again towards the romanistic, but the more far-reaching effects of
possession in the germanistic tradition have been adopted, esp. in French and Belgian law.
The French (and Belgian) civil code does not follow Savignys terminology systematically1,
but it has been interpreted in this way later on (under the influence of Savigny).
59. Combination of both notions gives rise to basically three possible situations:
1 A person who factually possesses for himself (direct possession, unmittelbarer Besitz) :
he has factual control AND intention to control. This is a form of possessio civilis
(Eigenbesitz, selbstndiger Besitz)
As will be seen in studying the rules on acquisition of possession, direct possession also
includes the possession through instruments securing control, such as the keys to the place
where the goods are stored, etc. (also called symbolic possession)
2 A person who holds the thing for another (detentio2, Fremdbesitz, in Austria Inhaber,
in English normally called custody in a large sense); this is only possessio naturalis, no
possessio civilis.
Some classical applications in continental law are loan (bruikleen, Leihe, commodatum),
1 It does in e.g. Art. 2228 CC.
2 Portuguese CC art. 1253 : simples detenao.
46
lease (huur, locatio, Miete), deposit (depositum, bewaargeving, Verwahrung), etc.3, and in
Anglo-American law the different forms of bailment.
NB. German law makes a further distinction: if the person who holds the thing does it
merely in the exercise of a subordinate function (subordination, under the authority of
someone else, such as an employee), and not on the basis of a legal relationship which gives
him the right to detain the thing, he is only a Besitzdiener (possession servant) and the
possession of the Besitzherr (possession master) is a direct one - see BGB 855 and 973.
The detentor has in principle a right to possess, the Besitzdiener not. Most other systems do
not know this more subtle distinction explicitly.
3 The same situation seen from another partys perspective : a person possessing through
someone else who holds the thing for him : indirect or mediate possession (mittelbarer
Besitz)4. This may also be called constructive possession. In normal English terminology,
this is not a possession s.s.
A very specific case of such possession is possession of rights by incorporation in a
negotiable instrument.
Note 1. Interversio tituli.
60. Whether one holds a thing for oneself or for another is basically determined by the will
of the holder (See e.g. ABGB 309). However, in many jurisdictions, if someone is bound,
by contract or by another legal relationship, to hold a thing for somebody else, not his
subjective will counts, but his due will, unless one publicly refuses to recognise any longer
the right of the person for whom it was hold : nemo sibi ipse causam possessionis mutare
potest 5; the title under which one possesses can only be changed by a so-called interversio
tituli (interversion de titre), which can only take place publicly. Most jurisdictions
recognize an interversio tituli in 2 cases : in case of public opposition against the person for
whom one has started to possess, and in case of acquisition form a third party (other than the
person for whom one has started to possess)6. There is always a presumption that one
possesses in the name of the person for whom one started to possess7, until it is proven that
the conditions of such an interversio are met.
However, when we try to give more detailed rules, different jurisdictions will have different
criteria for an interversio tituli. This has important consequences for third parties acquiring
the goods from an unfaithful detentor without coming into direct possession. See infra.
Further, systems as Dutch law do apply the notion of due will not only to cases where a
3 See art. 2236 II CC.
4 See BGB 868, Art. 2228 CC, Port. CC art. 1252, 1, etc.
5 See ABGB 319 and 1462; Art. 2240 C.C.; Art. 1141 Italian CC.
6 CC art. 2238; art. 1265 Portuguese CC.
7 Comp. Art. 2231 CC, Art. 1257 Portuguese CC; Spanish CC Art. 436.
47
person owes recognition of ownership to another party, but also where he only owes a
recognition of a limited real right to another party (e.g. pledge without dispossession), being
himself the owner.
Note 2. Obligational relationship and possession.
60 b. If the legal relationship between the (indirect) possessor and the detentor (in Germany
called Besitzmittlungsverhltnis) is an obligational relationship (e.g. contractual), the right
of possession (and of property) of the possessor loses its independence in systems like
German law, and becomes as it where accessory to his obligatory right (creditors right) (for
some consequences, see infra transfer of possession). In such a relationship, the owner has
no revindication under German law, which differs on this point from most other continental
systems. This construction, which implies that the property right is (temporarily) accessory
to the obligatory right, is very questionable in the light of the general notion of property.
Dutch law has developed the opposite conception, i.e. that the obligatory right is accessory
to the property right. This seems to be the position of most Latin systems.
48
to acquire such a right), Art. 1263a Portuguese CC (by repetition of publicly made material acts to exercise
the right).
10 According to ABGB 312, possession of land can be acquired by Betretung, Verrainung, Einzunung,
Bezeichnung oder Bearbeitung. Art. 1605 CC implies that possession of immovables can be acquired by
acquiring possession of the keys.
11 Explicitly in ABGB 321.
12 See e.g. BGB 857 : succession also applies to possession; Protuguese CC art. 1255, Spanish CC art. 440.
13 Comp. A contrario art. 2237 CC (heirs of a detentor only acquire detentio). Sometimes, the heir acquires a
better right (see eg Spanish CC art. 442).
49
creditors rights separately. Apart from the rules described below, one also has to take into
account the classical principles like specification etc. (see supra).
a. Transfer of possession (delivery) of tangible movables.
63. Not all methods of transferring possession have the same effect, precisely because in
most jurisdictions, in case of conflicts between property rights, direct possession gives a
stronger position than to indirect possession. More precisely : a possession which is either
direct or indirect but not via (i.e. dependent on) the alienator, grants a stronger position than
indirect possession, which is still dependent on the alienator himself. In relation to such third
parties, a transfer may thus lead to stronger and weaker forms of possession.
The difference between strong and weak possession is mainly relevant in the following
cases :
- bona fide acquisition from a non-owner or person without authority;
- acquisition of a possessory security right (pledge sensu stricto) and some other cases where
a right has to be invoked against the creditors of the alienator.
1 Transfer of possession leading to direct possession of tangibles.
64. Direct possession of things is clearly a strong form of possession.
- It is acquired by direct material transfer (delivery s.s. or actual delivery, i.e. "from hand
to hand"14).
- It can also be acquired by traditio symbolica (bergabe durch Zeichen15, esp. by
handing over the keys: traditio clavium16 or other instruments granting power of
control17),
- or by traditio longa manu s.s. (show from the tower, more generally by giving the
acquirer information on how to fetch the goods himself),
depending on the nature and situation of the thing. See e.g. BGB 929 I.
In English, the notion of constructive delivery is used for these other forms of delivery, but
this notion is sometimes used in an even wider sense, including also the constitutum
possessorium (see infra) (mostly, the c.p. is not seen as a form of delivery).
Such a transfer can be effected by the alienator or by a third party, but is finished only when
the thing is in the power of the acquirer (or his agent18). When the goods are transported, it
depends on the question who exercises control over the carrier (for whom he is detaining the
goods); there may be a presumption that possession is only acquired at arrival19.
14 ABGB 426, Swiss ZGB 922 I, Portuguese CC art. 1263 b (general ) and 669 (as to pledge).
15 ABGB 427
16 E.g. Art. 1602 II CC.
17 Art. 922 I Swiss ZGB; art. 669, 2 Portuguese CC
18 Explicitly mentioned in art. 923 Swiss ZGB.
19 Comp. ABGB 429; however, when the buyer has consented to the mode of transportation, there is a
presumption that the carrier is detaining the goods for the buyer.
50
Where the acquirer detained the goods already for another party, mere agreement of that
other party that he now holds them for himself is sufficient (traditio brevi manu)20.
Direct material transfer does not lead to possession yet, when the acquirer does not (yet)
detain the things as owner. This is not only the case where there is no acquisition at all (a
tenant, borrower, bailee etc.) but also where acquisition takes place under reservation of title.
In the last case, the acquirer only acquires possession in the legal sense (Eigenbesitz) when
the condition precedent (namely payment) is fulfilled.
Insofar as rights are incorporated by their debtor in a negotiable instrument, possession of
the right is transferred by transferring possession of the document. When rights are
incorporated in a book entry (in the books of a clearing institution, i.e. another part than the
debtor or the issuer of the right (dematerialised rights), this cannot apply, but possession of
the right can be transferred by notice to the clearing institution (see infra 4).
2 Transfer of possession leading to indirect possession still dependent on the alienator
himself:
65. Indirect possession can be transferred by mere agreement, whereby the alienator now
holds the thing for the acquirer21 - such agreement is called constitutum possessorium. It is
considered a form of constructive delivery in the large sense, not in a stricter sense. Equally,
in English terminology, the acquirer is not considered to be in possession.
65a. An explicit agreement is not necessary where it is implied by law in a legal relationship
(on the basis of which the transferor is obliged to start holding the goods for another party),
but legal systems may differ as to the situations in which such an implied agreement is
accepted22. In the ius commune, it was also disputed whether such a constitutum
possessorium was possible outside a nominate contract of relationship under which the
transferor continues to detain the goods in another quality (as bailee or custodian, borrower,
carrier, etc.) (it is the question whether the Besitzmittlungsverhltnis can only be a nominate
contract or also an innominate one)23. English law tends to accept a constructive delivery in
case of a nominate relationship such as bailment. Austrian law does not require a nominate
contract, but only that an intention is found24. Art. 717 I and 924 I Swiss ZGB require a
specified relationship.
20 See e.g. BGB 929 II, ABGB 428 2nd sentence, Art. 1606 III in fine CC, and NBW 3:115 b.
21 See e.g. BGB 930, ABGB 428 1st sentence, Art. 1606 III CC, NBW 3:115, Portuguese CC 1263 c and
1264.
22 For examples in German law, see BGH 73. BGHZ, (253) 258; BGH, NJW 1989, (2542) 2543 f. Such an
implied agreement is much more widely accepted in French-Belgian-Portuguese-Italian law see my
analysis infra.
23 Comp. A. WACKE, Eigentumserwerb durch Konsens oder bergabe, ZEUP 2000, (254) 260. An
innominate Besitzmittlungsverhltnis is also called an abstract Besitzmittlungsverhltnis.
24 ABGB 428 (erweislich)
51
A, detaining the goods for O (owner), did agree with C to detain them for C, who bought them from B (but B
did not buy them from A). If C had bought the goods from A, he would not have been protected against O; as
his possession was not dependent on the alienator (being B), he was protected. The agreement A C
apparently amounts to an interversio tituli.
27 Issuing a document incorporating a claim on the other hand is not a transfer of possession of an existing
thing or right, but simply the creation of a new right.
52
the document will not incorporate the full ownership of the thing28.
65e. In many systems, this form of delivery is not possible for gratuitous transfers (gifts);
however, this is usually explained by the fact that the contract itself (the donation) is not
binding as long as there is no formal deed or factual delivery.
3 Metaphorical application of the rules on transfer of possession to creditors rights.
66. In the field of claims, the idea has been developed that possession can be transferred by
giving notice of the transfer to the third party holding the right, i.e. assignment in the
factual sense of the word. One could indeed say that the debtor holds the right for the
creditor. Most legal systems indeed have considered obligatory rights as an object of quasipossession. Possessor of a claim is the person known as its creditor by the debtor. Transfer of
such a possession is therefore normally effected by notice to (or acceptance by) the debtor at least in order to give the transferee a possession which is equivalent to direct possession.
This is basically the approach in Scots, Nordic (Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark),
Italian, French (with exceptions), Belgian (with exceptions), Dutch (except for silent
pledge), Portuguese and Greek law, and for a common law assignment under English and
Irish law.
NB. Where the claim has been incorporated in a negotiable instrument, its possession will
not be transferred by notice to the debtor, but only by transfer of possession of the
instrument (direct or indirect). Where the claim is a dematerialised security, it is possessed
via the clearing institution and possession is transferred by due notice to that institution.
German law has gone less far in applying the rules on material things to creditors rights,
notably in the field of acquisition of property. It does not accept that creditors rights are the
object of (quasi-)possession. It has therefore chosen a very different approach, which is not
only relevant for creditors rights, but also for material things detained by a third party.
According to German law, creditors rights can be assigned by mere agreement between
alienator and acquirer; as a consequence, the protection of acquirers in good faith, which is
based on possession, does not apply either.
German law is in part followed by Austrian and Spanish law (assignment does not require
communication).
66b. We will see infra that in jurisdictions where (the possession of) a claim is transferred by
notice, this will under certain conditions also create a protection for the bona fide acquirer.
In this sense, the possession of the assignee who is known to the debtor (as the new
creditor) is a stronger form of possession, even if it is a form of indirect possession. This
raises the question whether indirect possession of material things can also have such a
stronger form question now discussed under 4. In German law, notice is not relevant for
the transfer of possession of claims, but in principle there is neither a protection for the bona
28 It may incorporate an equitable interest in the thing, or a mere obligatory right
53
fide acquirer of claims. Nevertheless, the German rules on assignment will have importance
for the transfer of possession of material things, too (also under 4).
4 Transfer of indirect possession of material things.
67. The question arises under which conditions indirect possession via a third party (not
being the transferor) (such as a bailee or custodian, a carrier, a borrower, a lessor etc.) gives
the transferee the same position as a direct possession at least in case of conflict with other
parties in relation to the alienator.
This will be the case when the possession of the acquirer is no longer deemed to be
dependent on the transferor. In many systems, this is done by notice to the detentor 29, but
this is not the only possible rule.
aa) Negotiable instruments representing the things.
68. Most legal systems have accepted that transfer of possession can take place by transfer of
a negotiable instrument incorporating title to the goods or some property interest in the
goods30. Such instruments can be issued by the party in possession of the goods. Such a
transfer by transfer of the instrument takes place according to the normal rules of transfer of
possession of movables. For some documents (documents to order), also an indorsement
(rugtekening, endossement) is required.
In English law, only a few documents are considered to incorporate the title, esp. bills of
lading, but not delivery orders or delivery warrants.
In German law again, the instrument primarily incorporates the Herausgabeanspruch, which
may be an obligatory right, to which property is accessory31. One could thus distinguish
between countries viewing the transfer of the document as a delivery of the goods and those
seeing it only as the transfer of a claim to the goods (assignment).
Where possession takes place through possession of a document, it evidently remains
dependent on possession of the goods by the party who has issued the document. When the
issuer loses possession of the goods, the possessor of the document also loses possession of
the goods.
bb) Detentor has not issued an instruments representing the things possibility of
delegation of possession.
69. In most other cases (where no title document is issued) the third part detaining the thing
29 In Dutch scholarship often incorrectly called traditio longa manu.
30 Explicitly in art. 925 I Swiss ZGB.
31 The only document, which is seen as incorporating primarily a property right, is the Hypothekenbrief
54
will accept to hold it for an acquirer (instead of the transferor) when requested to do so. In
contemporary dealings with securities, some specific forms of such requests have been
developed (girale transfer of securities, i.e. by instruction given to the custodian). A
characteristic feature here is that the indirect possession32 of the investor no longer relates to
individualised securities, but to an undivided (proportional) share of the pool (totality) of
securities of the same kind33. In most cases, the system has even two-tiers (the individual
investor has a share in the pool of securities held by the intermediary either directly or as a
share in the pool of these securities in a central depository). A further step consists in
dematerialisation of the bearer security by replacing the document (the indirect possession
of which is transferred through a book entry in the books of the intermediary or custodian)
from the very beginning (issue of the security) by a mere book entry in the books of the
clearing institution34.
69a. Apart from these special cases, the question arises whether mere notice to the third
party is sufficient. In the tradition of the ius commune, indirect possession was only
equivalent to direct possession when the thing was detained by such a third party who
accepts that he will hold the thing for the acquirer and no longer for the alienator.
This is in principle still the case:
- in German law, which qualifies this form of tradition as a real tradition under 929 BGB
or at least under 934 II BGB, and
- in English law (see Sales of Goods Act S. 29 (4)).
70. In Swiss35, Austrian and Dutch law, the above mentioned rule (that indirect possession
was only equivalent to direct possession when the thing was detained by a third party who
accepts that he will hold the thing for the acquirer and no longer for the alienator) is no
longer valid. In the Netherlands, it was rejected by the Hoge Raad in 192936. The Hoge Raad
decided that the detentor was bound to detain the goods for the transferee as soon as the
agreement between transferor and transferee (to transfer possession) has been notified to
him. Notice (Anweisung) is required, consent of the detentor not. This has been codified in
art. 3:115 c NBW; notice to the detentor is sufficient to give the acquirer in principle the
same position as a direct possessor. The figure seems to be copied from the figure of
assignment of obligatory rights against a third party (infra b); but contrary to German law, it
is possession itself which is the main object of the assignment.
32 This indirect possession leads to co-ownership in jurisdictions where the ownership is vested in the
investors, to a common equitable interest of the investors where this is recognised (the legal title is vested in
the custodian or clearing institution). Where the investor has merely an obligatory right to the deposited
securities, there is no indirect possession.
33 Also, a more detailed analysis can show that the transfer of such securities is not immediate but mediate
(the acquirer derives its possession from the depository or intermediary rather than from the alienator).
34 As with assignment of non-incorporated nor dematerialised claims (nominative shares e.g.), transfer is
effected by notice, however not to the debtor (issuer), but to a third party.
35 See Art. 924 II ZGB.
36 HR 1-11-1929, NJ p. 1745, Proehl & Gutmann.
55
70a. In German law, notice to the detentor does not give the acquirer the same position as a
direct possessor (consent of the detentor is required in order to create this position). On the
other hand, the acquirer has nearly the same position on a different legal basis (a surrogate
for tradition): it is again the Herausgabeanspruch, which is the primary object of transfer,
because of the above mentioned rule that the right of possession (and of property) of the
indirect possessor loses its independence in German law, and becomes as it where accessory
to his obligatory right (creditors right), when there is an obligatory relationship between the
indirect possessor and the detentor.
It follows from this rule, that (indirect) possession (and consequently property) can be
transferred by assigning this obligatory right to the acquirer: the Abtretung des
Herausgabeanspruchs (BGB 870 and 931). This is qualified as a form of bergabesurrogat. Due to the absence of a requirement of notice for the assignment of an obligatory
claim (including the Herausgabeanspruch) (see supra), the acquirer acquires this position
even more simply as under Dutch law (etc.), namely without such notice. Where the goods
are in the hands of a third party (detentor), the transferee thus acquires (indirect) possession
which is independent from the transferor as soon as the transferor entitles him to claim the
goods directly from the detentor without an agreement with the detentor and without even
giving notice to the detentor. Certainly, other legal systems also recognise transfer of
(indirect) possession by mere agreement between transferor and transferee (without notice to
the detentor), but such a transfer is then assimilated to a mere constitutum possessorium; the
possession of the acquirer is considered to be dependent on the possession of the transferor
and has more limited effects under property law. In German law, the Abtretung des
Herausgabeanspruchs by mere agreement between transferor and transferee is sufficient and
in principle not assimilated to the constitutum possessorium (as soon as the said entitlement
is given to the transferee).
It is, however, doubtful whether the position of such an acquirer is in all respects equal to the
position of an acquirer by notice to the detentor under Dutch, Swiss and Austrian law or with
the consent of the detentor under German law, and whether it is really fully independent
from the possession of the transferor. Even in German law, if one looks closer, notice to the
detentor is in fact necessary in order to reach the same effects as a direct transfer of
possession (and not merely those of a constitutum possessorium). The only case where a full
transfer - with all effects - takes place without communication to the party detaining the
goods is - as well under German law as under e.g. Dutch or French-Belgian law - the case
where that party has issued a negotiable instrument representing the (title in the) goods.
Another consequence of the German reasoning is that the acquirer is bound by all
(obligatory) exceptions which the detentor could rely upon against the alienator (see BGB
986 II) - a rule which is less evident in the system of transfer by communication to the
detentor. although it will usually be present there, too (but as a separate rule37). An
exception is found in the case of abstract negotiable instruments representing the goods or
37 Eg Art. 924 II ZGB, which explicitly states that the third party may refuse delivery to the acquirer for the
56
38 Cass. 11-7-1907, Pas. 328; Cass. 10-7-1941, Pas. 295; DE PAGE, Trait, VI n 1048.
39 German law; Art. 856 ff Swiss ZGB; Belgian case law.
40 Eg Art. 921 ZGB.
57
A. Basic distinctions.
73. The different ways of acquiring property are classified into:
- original v. derivative
- particular v. universal acquisition.
NB. As to immovables (land), the effect of these distinctions is set aside in some
jurisdictions by according an absolute or nearly absolute value to the land register (so-called
positive systems of land registration; comp. the Australian Torrens Act, copied in a number
of countries (see infra). Certain continental systems are certainly closer to such a system than
others (namely Germany, Austria, Switzerland and to a lesser extent the Netherlands), but
none has fully introduced it (see infra No. 140).
Similar systems have been set up for certain intellectual property rights (the system of
trademark registration e.g.).
58
succession as a heir (legal heir) or testamentary heir / legatee (if the bequest is general or
under a general title) or contractual heir (contractual institution of heir is under French
and Belgian law only in exceptional cases admitted). The acquisition will not be
universal in jurisdictions where the heirs do not immediately acquire title to the estate,
but merely a claim or an equitable interest.
formation of a marital community of goods in jurisdictions recognising this form of coownership;
formation of a general partnership (without legal personality) in jurisdictions recognising
this form of co-ownership;
merger and splitting up of companies; some cases of liquidation of companies or other
legal entities
in Belgian law : transfer of a branch of activity by way of contribution to a company, or
sometimes even sale (new rules since 1996 Companies Act).
Acquisition under a general title implies acquisition of assets and debts, but such
transmission can take ultra vires (the heir is bound to pay the debts even if they exceed the
assets) or intra vires (the heir is only bound to pay the debts within the limits of the
assets).
75. The legal systems provide some protective measures in favour of the creditors of either
the old or the new owner and in favour of the acquirer. Under Belgian law, they are basically
the following:
- in systems with a succession ultra vires, a heir can nevertheless avoid liability ultra
vires by a so-called beneficiary acceptance (acceptance under the benefice of inventory);
- the creditors of the deceased can claim a separation of estates in case the heir could be
insolvent (art. 878 CC). Comp. analogous rules in marital property law (art. 1399, 1410 CC).
Apart from the beneficiary acceptance or other forms of limitation of transmission of debts,
the acquirer under general title is in principle not protected against liabilities he was unaware
of. Hes equally not protected against older property rights on the goods he inherits, etc. (see
infra the different solution for other types of acquisition).
59
C. Original acquisition
75. Original acquisition is always specific = under particular title, i.e. always concerns
specific things (ut singuli). Moreover, when acquisition is specific, debts are not transmitted
(for exceptions, see infra under D).
Original acquisition is the normal mode of acquisition of things which did not yet exist
before (which is especially the case with creditors rights and intellectual property rights). It
is less frequent with existing things.
Most of the modes of original acquisition are effects of the unity and specialty and
determination principle, or of possession.
1. On the basis of possession.
76. In continental systems, these modes are basically the following:
a) Prescription and/or usucapio.
aa) Possessors in good faith.
77. Possessors in good faith will often be protected by the rules on bona fide acquisition,
which may also include a time requirement. These prescriptions are dealt with in connection
with transfer of property (infra), because such acquisition has not all the characteristics of
original acquisition. In the French and Belgian tradition however, theyre usually discussed
here and not in relation with transfer; the reason for this is that possession also creates a
presumption of ownership (and thus shifts the burden of proof to the other party).
But apart from this form of protection, they may also acquire when the conditions for
prescription are met.
aaa) There may be a possibility to acquire by acquisitive prescription on the basis of adverse
possession (usucapio, Ersitzung). Adverse possession (verjaringsbezit) is possession for
oneself (Eigenbesitz)41 (see supra for this notion), meeting certain additional requirements,
traditionally the following42 :
Continuous (unless the interference is temporary43);
Undisturbed;
Public;
Unambiguous;
not based on mere tolerance;
not based on violence.
41 Art. 2229 in fine, 2232 and 2233 CC; ABGB 1462, Port. CC Art. 1290
42 See also ABGB 1462; CC art. 2229, art. 1941 Spanish CC, BGB 937 ff., Port. CC Art. 1297 and 1300.
43 For more detailed rules, see eg Art. 728 II ZGB.
60
As said earlier, in jurisdictions with a modern land register, it is moreover often not
possible to have such possession of land or other immovables under that register, without
being registered as owner44 (this rule does not apply to unregistered land, if any).
The period of adverse possession required for prescription is normally determined by statute:
- for moveable things : often 3 years (NBW art. 3:99, ABGB 1466, sometimes 6 years
see art. 1476 ABGB), 3 years and a valid titulus (art. 1299 Portuguese CC and 1955
Spanish CC in the absence of such a titulus, comp. Infra bb) ), 5 years under art. 728
Swiss ZGB, 10 years according to BGB 937 (where even later knowledge mala fides
superveniens prevents acquisition)
- for immovables : often 10 years (NBW art. 3:99; ZGB 661 if registered as owner), 10 or
20 years according to the French and Belgian CC art. 2265-2266 (but this acquisition
must be based on a valid titulus, and is thus rather a rule for bona fide acquisition based
on transfer), see infra), 10 or 20 years according to Art. 1294 ff. Portuguese CC (10 years
if registered45, 15 years if unregistered), 15 years under English law for unregistered land
(equally, possession must be based on good root of title), 30 years under the German
BGB ( 900 Buchersitzung, only if registered as owner) and the Austrian ABGB (
1470 and 1477), etc.
- for registered movables there may be special rules, eg. Art. 1298 Portuguese CC
(possession of 2 years if registered, otherwise 10 year)
If these requirements are not met, acqusition by prescription is possible under the conditions
set out for possessors in bad faith (see under bb).
bbb) In other cases, acquisition is the result of being in possession (acquired in good faith) at
the time when the rei vindicatio by the owner becomes extinct due to extinctive prescription.
This is the rule found in art. 2279 II French and Belgian CC and 169 2 Polish CC for
moveable things (3 years after loss or theft of the thing).
bb) Possessors in bad faith.
aaa) 78. Here also, there may be a possibility to acquire on the basis of adverse possession
(usucapio, prescription acquisitive, verkrijging verjaring, Ersitzung), meeting the same
requirements as mentioned supra. Thus after 30 years of adverse possession (requirements,
see supra) in Belgian and French law (art. 2229 juncto 2262-2263 CC) and Swiss law (art.
662 ZGB, but only possible when the land is unregistered or is registered in the name of a
person death or absent since 30 years).
A more complicated system is found in Spanish and Portuguese law :
- for unregistered movables after 6 years in Spanish and Portuguese law (art. 1955 Spanish
44 See e.g. BGB 900. See also Swiss ZGB art. 661. however, under Swiss law, unregistered owners can
61
registered titulus, or 10 years of adverse possession after registration of possession, which is possible after 5
years of adverse possession even if not based on a titulus.
47 Whereas eg Art. 1313 Portuguese CC explicitly states that the rei vindicatio does not prescribe.
48 See Art. 5:4 NBW; ABGB 381-82; BGB 958, ZGB 718 (goods without master in general), Italian CC
art. 923, Portuguese CC art. 1318.
49 See, under strict conditions, Art. 658 Swiss ZGB, namely when it follows from the land register that the
land is without owner (art. 658 I) of thta it is unregistered land (658 II), with special rules for new formed
land (art. 659).
50 Eg Art. 1345 Portuguese CC.
51 ABGB 383-384; BGB 959-964; art. 564 CC, Swiss ZGB 719, Portuguese CC 1319-1322, Italian CC
924-926.
52 For a definition, see eg Art. 723 I Swiss ZGB.
53 50 % to the finder under Art. 716 CC, BGB 984, Italian CC 932, Spanish CC Art. 351 and Art. 1324 I
Portuguese CC (under the latter, the finder loses its right if a) he hides the treasure for the owner or b) the
treasure is not manifestly more than 20 years old or hidden and he makes no declaration to the public
62
some countries, treasures fully belong to the owner of the place, but the owner is obliged54
or may be obliged55 to pay a remuneration to the finder. There may be special rules for
antique objects and/or natural curiosities56.
dd) Other found goods.
As to other things (other than treasures)57 found in a public place, there are a number of
varying rules and questions.
1 Statutes may impose on the finder a duty of care and additionally a duty to declare the
thing to the public authority58 and sometimes to deposit it;
2 When the owner is found within a certain period, there may be rules to remunerate the
finder59; the finder will become owner if the claimant does not pay;60
3 When the owner (or person entitled to possession) does not revindicate them within that
period, ownership may go the finder61, or to the public authority62.
Goods found in a private place (without being a treasure) do not lead to a good faith
possession and are acquired only by the long prescription period63. In principle, the finder
has a duty to hand them over to the owner of the place64.
ee) Capture
Some jurisdictions still recognise in their legislation the right to capture ships (or other
authority); 1/3 to the finder, the landowner and the State under ABGB 398; 100 % to the finder under
Dutch NBW 5:5 and 6, under certain conditions, etc.
54 According to Swiss ZGB 723 II and III, the treasure fully belongs to the owner of the place, but the finder
is entitled to a remuneration up to maximum 50 %.
55 Under common law, it is full property of the landowner, who may, however, be obliged to pay an
equitable sum to the finder (see e.g. the Irish Supreme Court case Webb v. Ireland [1988] IR 372.
56 Eg Swiss ZGB 724, Italian CC 932. Comp. Art. 351 III Spanish CC for objects interesting for art or
science.
57 For wrecked ships, see Art. 725 ZGB.
58 Eg BGB 973 ff., Art. 927 Italian CC (publication will follow), Art. 1323 I Portuguese CC.
59 Eg for costs and a procentual remuneration under Art. 1323 III Portuguese CC (with a right of retention in
1323 IV), for costs and a procentual remuneration under art. 930 Italian CC, for costs and remuneration under
Art. 722 II ZGB. Comp. BGB 973-974.
60 Comp. BGB 973-974.
61 Eg after 1 year under Art. 1323 II Portuguese CC, Art. 929 I Italian CC.; after 6 months under BGB 973974; however, the former owner retains an enrichment claim during 3 years. Many jurisdictions are less
favourable to the finder. In Austria, the finder acquires a right of usage 1 year after publication; acquisition of
property only takes place according to the rules of prescription by a possessor in good faith (see ABGB 388
ff). In Switzerland, the finder acquires if the owner could not be found after 5 years, see Art. 720 I and 722 I
ZGB.
62 Belgian Act of 21 Feb 1983.
63 E.g. in Belgium Trib. Brussels 24 May 1989, JT 568 (securities found in a bank agency).
64 Eg Swiss ZGB Art. 720 II and 722 II, in case of an inhabited house or a public building. The owner of the
place acquires the thing ig its owner is not found within 5 years.
63
are some specific rules for fruits hanging over the neighbouring property (see e.g. BGB 911: to the owner
of the underlying land).
68 See BGB 956, CC art. 549 (requiring an otherwise valid titulus adquirendi), ABGB 330 (peaceful
possession).
69 See explicitly Art. 1270 Portuguese CC.
70 Art. 895 Swiss ZGB.
64
The roman tradition distinguishes 1 accessio (accession; fixtures and attachments, Zuwachs
and Verbindung) when a thing is incorporated in another thing, which does not lose its
identity, 2 Specificatio (Verarbeitung) when a new thing is made and the things used for its
fabrication lose their identity or 3 Commixtio when different fluids or other materials are
mixed and thereby lose their identity are fluids. However, the practical rules do distinguish
arthaer according to the following situations.
1 Immovable natural accession
79a. Most codes have a number of provisions on several natural forms of accession to
land, where the land grows due to phenomena which are usually natural71.
2 Immovable accession or fabrication by men72
79b. For immovables, the basic principle is that owner of the land is automatically owner of
buildings, works and plantations73, unless another party has :
- a right of superficies (which can be acquired by legal act (constitution), but also by
possession plus prescription)74, or.
- a ius tollendi (right to take away). This is eg granted to the owner of materials which
have been used without the consent of their owner by the owner of the land, and on the
condition that their separation does not cause a disproportionate harm75.
- a right of reverse accession : where the construction is clearly more worth than the land, the
party in good faith may opt for a reverse accession (i.e. the owner of the construction
materials becomes owner of the land) against an equitable compensation76.
The party who constructed or planted on anothers ground in bad faith, may be obliged by
the landowner to take away that construction or plantation77.
Where the party who has lost ownership of incorporated things or did construct or plant on
anothers ground has no ius tollendi, and is neither obliged to take the materials
(construction or plantation) away, it may have in some circumstances an claim based upon
71 See e.g. Art. 556-563 CC; 405 and 408-413 ABGB, Art. 1328-1333 Portuguese CC, Art. 366-374 Spanish
65
un justified enrichment78.
Specific rules can be found on trees hanging over the neighbouring land, or constructions
crossing the border of ones land, or the case where a party builds on another partys land
with materials of a third party79.
3 Movable accession or specification80
79c. For movables, too, there may be in some circumstances a ius tollendi, eg where a part
where has been used without the knowledge of its owner81, or in Swiss and Italian law in all
cases where the different parts can easily be separated82.
Otherwise, most legal systems start with the rule that where there is a principal part, its
owner becomes owner of the whole.
- As to movable accessio, In some systems, there is always a principal part83, in others
there is proportional co-property if none of the parts is by nature the principal part84.
- As to specificatio (Verarbeitung) or Commixtio , this is the case where on part is clearly
more valuable than the other different fluids or other materials85. In the French and Belgian
CC, its owner becomes owner of the whole, except where all the material stems from one
party, and it is more valuable than the work and it has been used without the knowledge of
its owner; in such case the latter may opt for compensation instead of ownership86. Other
Codes distinguish between workers in good faith and workers in bad faith87.
Where there is not clearly a principal part (such as in case of commixtio), several Codes
distinguish the case where the material stems from one party only (that party becomes owner
of the new thing, unless the fabrication was done without its knowledge, in which case it has
the choice to opt for compensation)88 and the case where material from more than one party
was used (this creates a proportional co-property).
When there is no proportional ownership, the acquisition is often subject to enrichment
78 Along these lines Art. 935 Italian CC and 1341 Portuguese CC. Under Art. 362-363 Spanish CC, such a
party in bad faith it not entitled to compensation. See for more specific rules Art. 554 and 555 CC, Art. 672 ff
ZGB, Art. 1339 ff Portuguese CC, etc.
79 Eg Art. 937 Italian CC.
80 Accession by industry in Portuguese terminology
81 Art. 568 and 573 CC (only in case where the other part is much more valuable). According to ABGB
415 he has a choice.
82 Art. 938 I Italian CC. See also Art. 378 Spanish CC.
83 Criteria to determine which part is the principal are found in Art. 567 and 569 CC in the following order :
nature, value, volume.
84 See BGB 947, ZGB Art. 727, ABGB 414-416 and Art. 938 I and II Italian CC.
85 Eg Art. 940 Italian CC.
86 Art. 575 CC.
87 Eg Swiss ZGB Art. 726 II, Art. 1336 ff Portuguese CC, Art. 383 Spanish CC.
88 Art. 576 CC.
66
obligations89, 90.
Except in case where separation takes place, the unity principle is mandatory in that it
excludes separate ownership of components, but it can be determined by contract which
party will be the owner91.
4 Accessory rights
79d. Accession is also applied by analogy to choses in action (creditors rights): accessory
rights are automatically transmitted with the principal thing of which they are an accessory
(accessorium sequitur principale). Accessory rights under Belgian law are e.g.:
1 Qualitative rights (they belong to somebody in his quality of owner of a certain
thing)92. E.g. the warranties of the buyer are normally qualitative, thus transmitted to the
new owner when the thing is sold again; the owner can thus act directly against the producer.
2 Statutory usufruct of the parents (accessory to parenthood);
3 Accessory right of superficies (accessory to a tenancy agreement, to a marriage, etc.)
4Security rights, at least the dependent ones (pledge, mortgage, reservation of title, claims
against sureties, direct actions, etc.)93; not the so-called independent guarantees.
5 All real servitudes (easements).
Some jurisdictions provide for a more general rule, according to which rights can become
accessory by destination of their owner (see eg Art. 644-645 Swiss ZGB).
3. Acquisition based on the principle of determination and specialty : confusio.
79e. By virtue of the principle of determination or certainty of subject-matter, property rights
cannot relate to an unspecified item in a mass of generic things. Confusion (confusio,
vermenging, Vermischung) of generic goods therefore ends ownership of the separate items
of such a mass. The fact that there can be no separate ownership of (incorporated) parts or
unspecified goods does not exclude the possibility of co-ownership94. E.g. generic goods
given in custody by different owners and confused in a warehouse. Both owners, who were
formally owner of certain goods, can have a share in the ownership of the totality of mixed
goods. Specific statutory applications can be found in case of security depositories (CSDs).
If, however, the mass is factually in possession of a single party, and there is no agreement
or other specific ground for such a co-ownership or other title relating to (a share in) the
89 For accession : Art. 566 CC; Art. 938 II Italian CC (differently calculated depending on consent or not) .
67
whole mass95, there will be exclusive ownership by the party in factual possession, and a
party which lost its property by confusion will merely have an obligatory claim96.
Confusion does not take place in those cases where a property interest survives through
tracing or real subrogation (see infra). Apart from separate patrimonies, this will also be the
case with factual universalities which are sufficiently separated
4. Servitudes created by law.
5. Expropriation, forfeiture and other institutions of public law.
(...)
6. Return of goods as a consequence of avoidance, termination, etc. of the underlying
transaction.
80. This does only apply to causal systems of transfer, not to so-called abstract systems
like the German one. See infra.
95 In continental systems, this only relates to co-ownership or co-titularity of other property rights (pledge,
68
b) Subrogation.
83. In case of subrogation, a party who loses a property interest in a thing (called the
subrogated party) acquires a property interest in the thing replacing the first one, thus
preserving the patrimonial value he had in the first one.
A classical distinction is made between personal subrogation and real subrogation.
1. Personal subrogation.
83a. Here, a party acquires a claim by paying its creditor. Subrogation is basically accepted
where the solvens pays a debt in which he has no share (or pays more than its share)
(personal subrogation s.s.).
In a larger sense, it also takes places in a number of other cases where a creditors right is
transmitted on the basis of payment by a person who is not the debtor (or not the final
debtor). E.g. Art. 58 Belgian Insurance contracts Act 1992: when an insurance company
pays compensation on the basis of a first party insurance (fire, theft etc.), is subrogated in the
rights the first party acquired due to the fact giving rise to the payment by the insurer.
Difference between subrogation and assignment (transfer): there is no publicity mechanism
in case of subrogation, and thus normally no protection of the acquirer in good faith either
2. Real subrogation.
83b. Here, a good (thing, creditors right, etc.) is (normally in fact) replaced by another good
in such a way that the person who was entitled to the first good now obtains a similar title to
the replaced good. The extent to which this form of acquisition is accepted, varies from
jurisdiction to jurisdiction. Usually, it is not generally accepted, but only on the basis of
some more specific rules. Apart from a number of specific cases, it can be found in the
following ones.
aa) General subrogation in the case of separate patrimonies.
83c. Where the law recognises a whole of assets as forming a separate patrimony
(characterised by assets and debts), there is a generalised real subrogation. The contents of
such patrimonies is floating. Typical examples (apart from legal persons) are the
matrimonial community, partnerships, the estate of a deceased person, etc. In the case of
fideicommissum or Nacherbschaft97, the goods subject to it form a separate estate (separate
from the remaining part of the inheritance).
bb) Subrogation where a tangible is replaced by a claim (a creditors right).
97 See e.g. BGB 2111.
70
rights.
71
Anglo-American law, equity will normally lead to the opposite result (often by constructive
trust).
84a. The right resulting from a seizure or attachment of assets of ones debtor is qualified
very differently in different jurisdictions101.
In Belgium, the Netherlands, Japan and a number of Central and Eastern European countries,
a seizure will not grant any priority to the creditor taking the initiative. It gives rise to some
form of collective liquidation102. Thus, one could speak of a kind of general pledge or charge
in favour of the general (unsecured) creditors in case of bankruptcy, seizure and similar
cases (differing from a normal charge or pledge because of its collective character: it doesnt
profit to one single creditor, but to all of them). This right of the general creditors will be
discussed under III.
In many other jurisdictions, seizure or attachment grants a priority to the party effecting it
(Germany, Spain, Portugal, most Latin American countries). In Italy, this is true for
immovables, in France for immovables and most claims (except wages)
101 See for details e.g. K. KERAMEUS, Distribution proceedings and relationships among creditors in a
comparative perspective, in Private Law in the international Arena, Liber amicorum Kurt Siehr, Asser
Press2000, 311 ff.
102 Swiss law equally considers a seizure as a collective measure, but grants the other creditors only a short
time in order to have equal ranking (1 month).
72
E. Loss of property.
85. Loss of property is normally the mirror of acquisition by another party. In most cases, it
follows from the acquisition by the other party.
In other cases, such acquisition rather :
- follows from the loss by the first one (e.g. loss of property rights because the period of time
has lapsed; abolition of a servitude103, etc.), or
- is only possible because the first party has lost its property by renunciation (derelictio and
other forms of renunciation). There may be specific rules as to the possibility to waiver one's
title to immovable property (e.g. BGB 928 allows a renunciation, with the effect that the
land becomes property of the state). Renunciation is in most cases qualified as a unilateral
legal act, which has no translative character (but merely "abdicative"). Even where a third
party profits from a renunciation by the first party, it is not considered to derive its right or
title from the latter.
103 By raditation, eg Art. 734 Swiss ZGB; or when it becomes useless (art. 710 bis Belgian CC, 736 Swiss
73
those cases where one co-owner can oblige the others to buy him out, or inversely co-owners
can squeeze out one among them).
Accrual may also take place on the basis of survivorship, i.e a rule or clause according to
which upon the death of one of the joint owners, his share automatically accrues to the share
of the others (this is a frequent rule in systems of joint property between spouses and is
sometimes stipulated in partnerships) (NB. Where there is no survivorship, there may either
be a rule of continuation with the heirs of the deceased or a rule of liquidation of the joint
ownership).
85d. The declaratory character of a partition as a mutual renunciation and accrual between
joint owners basically refers to the fact that after such partition, the (full) owner of the assets
continues the title as it was acquired by the joint owners. It must be distinguished from the
so-called retro-active character of partition, which basically means a validation of acts
relating to assets subject to joint ownership by one or more of the owners without sufficient
authority, validation which takes place when these assets are afterwards attributed to that (or
those) (co-)owner(s). This retrospective effect is only found where the co-ownership is a
joint ownership (where the co-owners do not own a share in each of the things separately,
but an abstract share in the whole patrimony) and not in case of a simple tenancy in common
(co-ownership of single things).
75
104 For claims, comp. Draft art. 12.102(2) PECL : Future claims arising under an existing or future contract
may be assigned if at the time when they come into existence, or at such other time as the parties agree, they can
be identified as claims to which the assignment relates.
76
B. The requirement of a valid titulus (iusta causa adquirendi or titulus adquirendi) v. the
abstraction principle.
1. Causal v. abstract systems.
a) Principle
91. Jurisdictions can basically be qualified as causal or abstract systems in relation to
transfer of property.
In a causal system of transfer of property, the validity of transfer is dependent upon (the
validity of) an underlying relationship. Transfer requires a legal relationship which justifies
transfer of property - normally a valid obligation to give: titulus or iusta causa adquirendi
(confusing because its not title in the English sense, where sometimes the expression
"(good) root of title" is used).
Most continental systems are causal, e.g. our French-Belgian-Italian-Portuguese system, but
also Austrian law (ABGB 380, 424-425), Spanish law, Swiss law (confirmed by SBG
1929), Dutch law (confirmed by HR 5-5-1950), Polish law (art. 156 CC)
In abstract systems of transfer (e.g. Germany, see a contrario BGB 873 and 929; Greece,
Czech Republic; South Africa105, etc., and in a certain sense also Anglo-American and Scots
law), no titulus is necessary. The invalidity of the underlying titulus - i.e. the fact that the
transfer is not "justified" by an underlying obligation - does not automatically annul the
transfer itself. In case the transfer is abstract from an invalidity of the underlying transaction,
the transfer is at first valid. In case of absence of titulus, restitution (for "unjust enrichment")
must be claimed; but a restitutionary action is not a real action, but only an "obligatory
action, which will e.g. not be valid in case of bankruptcy of the acquirer. In the meantime,
the acquirer was the owner and had thus the authority to dispose of the thing. Causality
especially protects the alienator against a) the creditors of the buyer in case of its insolvency
and b) successors in bad faith of the buyer.
In causal systems, the party acquiring without valid titulus never becomes owner, even if the
invalidity manifests itself only after conveyance; if meanwhile he has sold the thing to a
third party, that party has thus "acquired" a non domino. In an abstract system, the third
party will normally have acquired a domino (from the owner).
Similar rules can be found in English law, which has a more or less abstract system106.
NB. The so-called Abstraktionsprinzip (abstraction principle) is not limited to a distinction
between the underlying obligation and the transfer of property itself. This distinction
(Trennungsprinzip, i.e. principle of separation) is found in most legal systems; the
Abstraktionsprinzip goes much further by making the one in principle independent from the
105 Commissioner of Customs & Excise v. Randles Brothers & Hudson Ltd. 1941 AD (369) at 398.
106 see Bowmakers Ltd. v. barnet Instruments Ltd. [1945] KB 65.
77
107 This also raises more complex questions in the field of the law of obligations, such as the question at
which moment the promise in favour of the third party becomes irrevocable.
78
property to the (legal or testamentary or contractual) heir. Under French-Belgian-Italian law, such automatic
transmission takes place in favour of legal heirs, as well as in case of a universal bequest or a bequest under
universal title (called testamentary heirs in other countries). As to specific bequests (particular title), it is
disputed whether there is an obligation to give or an automatic transmission of property. However, it is
possible to oblige the heir (onus) to transfer property of goods to another beneficiary see e.g. Art. 651 I
Italian CC.
109 The last example is found eg in Art. 692 II ZGB.
110 Examples : art. 893 French and Belgian CC (donations require a notarial deed or actual traditio; some
forms of indirect donation are binding, too); art. 947 Portuguese CC requires a writing or traditio for
donations, and a notarial deed in case of donation of land. Other systems are more liberal : Swiss law accepts
a traditio by constitutum possessorium also in case of donations (R063 395, J.T. 1939, 5).
79
are also restrictive rules as to proof of the "date" of an act (in order to avoid antedating) - the
requirement of "data certa". These restrictive rules will mostly apply to security agreements
and may apply to all non-commercial agreements.
b) Conditions as to the object of the obligation.
93. A thing must meet certain conditions in order to be the object of an obligation to transfer,
namely:
- it has to be determinable (at least as to its kind);
- normally, it may be future (not yet existing); in some cases, however, the titulus can only
concern present goods (e.g. donations under Belgian law);
- the property right transferred or created must be recognised by law (the numerus clausus);
otherwise the titulus cant have any effects under property law. See also supra
c) Types of invalidity.
94. There are different types of invalidity or limitations which can - in causal systems prevent a valid transfer. The main categories are the following.
1 Restrictions of the titulus.
95. If the titulus only tends to constitute a limited property right, a more extended right is not
acquired on the basis of such a titulus. E.g. delivery of goods in performance of a sale under
reservation of title, does not make ownership pass (until the goods are paid).
This only applies if the (intended) limitation of the property right is valid or recognised
under the law.
Inversely, it is also possible that title is transferred with reservation of a limited property
interest (reservation of usufruct or easement eg). The most frequent case is the reservation of
a security right (pledge or mortgage eg); some jurisdictions imply a reservation of a security
right by law each time title passes before payment (eg for movables the right of retention
until delivery, the right of stoppage in transitu, and the sellers lien after delivery; for
immovables, the unpaid sellers lien, even after registration of teh transfer provided the lien
is also registered).
2 Nullities.
96. We distinguish the following categories.
aa) Absolute nullities (void)
96a. When a contract is void (absolute nullity), anybody can invoke the nullity at any
moment. In Latin systems, a contract is void when it is contrary to public order. E.g. certain
agreements in restraint of trade or in restraint of the free circulation of assets (see supra no.
80
19), most agreements to change the legal order of succession (inheritance). Other continental
jurisdictions may have a larger notion of voidness, including cases which would be qualified
as merely relative nullities in Latin systems. Nullity could then also be the effect of lack of
(prescribed) formalities (thus, several jurisdictions require a formal deed (notarial) for sale of
land, e.g. BGB 313; not so in French and Belgian law). In French and Belgian law, lack of
form is only a relative nullity if the requirements of form are meant to protect the parties (as
they usually do).
bb) Relative nullities
96b. Classical examples are contracts avoided for mistake, misrepresentation, fraud, threats,
abuse of circumstances, incapacity, or absence of authority of the agent who concluded it.
Contracts can be avoided in such grounds, but only by the protected party. In French-Belgian
law, there is usually a limitation period of 10 years. They concern mainly defects of consent
(error, fraud, threats, grossly unfair advantage) and similar grounds in particular legislation
(non-respect of duties to inform).
cc) Relative nullities for the protection of third parties,
96c. These are mainly found in the interest of the "family" (spouse and children), protected
against dispositions by one spouse threatening the stability of the family (protection of the
family home and other important assets). They entitle the other spouse to annul that act (art.
215, 224 Belgian CC, art. 215 al. 3 and 220-1 to 220-3 French CC). Under certain
conditions, however, the interest of the other party (if in good faith) prevails.
A nullity has been introduced in those jurisdictions because a mere limitation of the authority
to dispose would not have fully the same effect (the contracting spouse would otherwise
remain liable in damages); in other jurisdictions, the situation may be qualified as an absence
of the authority to dispose (which means that at least implicitly some type of property
interest is granted to the other spouse).
Another example relates to some grounds for avoidance of bequests by the heirs of the
testator.
dd) Inopposability to the creditors
96d. This is the effect of the actio Pauliana (action for inopposability because of fraud
against creditors) and some similar actions in insolvency law.
3 Different forms of resolutive conditions and termination.
97. They are mainly the following.
aa) Fulfilment of a condition subsequent (resolutive condition). In many systems, this
81
immediately affects the property right111. Such conditions are e.g. inserted in a contract
(titulus) in order to reinforce some engagement of the acquirer not to alienate the goods.
Note. In causal systems, resolutive conditions can be used as a mechanism to give some
proprietary effect to obligations or charges imposed on the acquirer, e.g. an obligation not to
alienate the acquired goods during a specified period of time (this evidently presupposes the
validity of such obligations or conditions). One could also qualify the rule of survivorship in
joint property as a resolutive condition (upon the death of one co-owner, its share accrues to
the share of the others), but in most jurisdiction accrual is not a translative but a
declarative acquisition (see supra).
bb) Termination for non-performance of a synallagmatic contract, revocation of donations
(where permitted), etc. Insofar as termination has retroactive effect (which is normally the
case under French-Belgian-Italian law, not under e.g. Dutch law), it also has a real effect
(affects the transfer of property based on the terminated obligation).
aa)-bb) NB. They may be subject to publicity requirements (esp. for immovables).
cc) Reduction of gifts and bequests (i.e. all gratuitous contracts or other acts to give,
including indirect donations, contractual institution of heir, foundations, etc., as well gifts in
full ownership as granting only a limited interest) on the demand of legitimate heirs, in those
legal systems giving such protection to certain types of heirs (esp. children and/or spouse), as
e.g. in French and Belgian law (it may also be that reduction only creates a claim against the
acquirer and does not terminate the underlying contract). Some types of gifts may be
exonerated from reduction (some matrimonial and other family arrangements, usual gifts,
some life insurance contracts for the benefit of a third party, etc.)
4 Setting aside the contract through a unilateral take-over by a third party based on a
(statutory) right of preference
98. Take-over is an additional remedy introduced by statute to protect some rights of preemption and similar rights. Not all statutory rights of pre-emption are protected in this way.
Conventional rights of preference or pre-emption are normally not protected in this way,
except those registered in the land register in jurisdictions where this is possible (eg Art.216a
ff. Swiss ZGB, Vormerkung).
Examples of such rights :
- heirs in case of sale of the share of other heirs112;
- co-owners in case of sale of a share in the property (art. 815-14 French CC, art. 682 I Swiss
ZGB)
- owners of land charged with limited property rights such as superficies (eg art. 682 II
111 In French and Belgian law in connection with the idea of retro-activity; in Dutch law Art. 3/84 IV j 3:38
II NBW).
112 E.g. Art. 577 4 Belgian CC; French CC.
82
Swiss ZGB and 1535 Portuguese CC) or some easements (right of way, art. 1555 Portuguese
CC)
- family members in case of the sale of a rural estate (farm), eg in art. 42-47 Swiss federal
Act of 4 October 1991 on the law of rural estates (formerly Swiss federal Act of June 12,
1951) and similar rights in the various regional laws in Spain (right of bolorio in the
Aragonese compilation, retracto gentilicio in the Fuero Nuevo of Navarra, saca foral in
Basque Civil Law and Torneria in the Catalan compilation)
- farmers in case of sale of the farm by the landlord113;
- tenants in case of sale of the leased house (under certain conditions in French law)114
- neighbours in case of sale of neighbouring land115;
- the person against whom a disputed right is exercised, in case of sale of the right (lex
Anastasiana, art. 1699 Belgian and French CC)
- rights of take-over in favour of public authorities, based on planning and zoning law,
environmental protection law, rural law, economic expansion law, etc.
The right of take-over is an additional remedy apart from 1 the contractual liability of the
landlord and 2 a possible liability in tort of the buyer for violation of the right of preference.
The party taking over can stand in the shoes of the buyer and simply ask performance of the
sale in his own favour; the contract (titulus) is not terminated or avoided, but continued with
a different creditor (buyer); the original buyer is deemed never to have acquired any right.
On the basis of tort law, he could maybe require a conveyance by way of specific
performance, but this would imply a double transfer (and not a take-over of the first transfer
by another party).
Again, in other jurisdictions, similar results can be reached by a restriction of the authority to
dispose. This conception is used esp. in cases of co-property116.
* *
*
99. When the titulus is (retroactively) invalid, the transfer of property (or constitution of
limited property rights) is also (retroactively) invalid, and the property of goods which would
have been delivered already returns in principle automatically to the alienator. He can
revindicate them and is not limited to a restitutionary remedy (action for undue payment). If,
however, the acquirer became owner on another ground (such as accession, confusion of
generic goods, etc.), there is only a claim for restitution (of the goods or the enrichment), just
like in abstract systems.
d) Possible modalities of the obligation.
113 Art. 51 Belgian Agricultural leases Act, Art. 390 French Code rural, etc. In Dutch law the right of pre-
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100. The obligation to give can be an obligation which is immediately due or an obligation
with a time term (due at a certain time); it can be an unconditional obligation or subject to a
condition (precedent; for conditions subsequent, see supra). Certain conditions may be void
(under the applicable law of obligations), many conditions may be implied by law.
It is necessary to distinguish the modalities of the obligation from those of the conveyance.
Eg. Payment is a frequent condition for the passing of title (reservation of title until
payment), as a modality concerning the conveyance (not the underlying obligation) - see
further.
In systems presuming an immediate conveyance (see infra, eg French law, British SGA), the
fact that the conveyance is deemed to have taken place at the time the contract (of sale eg)
was concluded, does not deprive the modalities of the obligation of its effect. When goods
are sold with the provision that performance is due only at a certain date, or subject to a
suspensive condition, conveyance will also be presumed to have effect only at that date or
after fulfilment of that condition (comp. infra).
3. Invalidities in abstract systems.
101. In abstract systems (e.g. German law), too, invalidity of the act of transfer is the normal
effect in case of threats (violence) or fraud; further also when the underlying act is contra
bonos mores (sittenwidrig). However, it is the act of delivery itself - which is seen as a legal
act (agreement) (see below) - which will be invalidated on those grounds. A difference
remains mainly because the grounds for invalidity of the act of delivery are more restricted
than those for the invalidity of contracts (in the sense of obligational agreements).
On the other hand, some of the defects mentioned supra are seen specifically as defects of
the act of disposition itself. Thus, the rules on protection of the "family" (spouse and
children) against dispositions by one spouse threatening the stability of the family
(protection of the family home and other important assets), will have similar effects; a preemption or priority right with real effect will invalidate a transfer violating it; etc. The
acquiring party will be protected according to the normal rules on bona fide acquisition,
unless stricter rules apply117.
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C. Conveyance.
Introduction.
102. Comparative analysis shows that, despite the fact that most legal systems (apart from
some Nordic) provide that property passes (or is created, in case of limited property rights) at
one single moment, there are 3 elements which all three play a role in triggering some of the
effects of transfer of property : agreement, publicity (for movables : factual possession) and
payment. Only in case they all 3 coincide, transfer of property is really a unitary event. If
not, the transferred property right is - at least functionally - in some way split up and
transferred in several stages.
Although such is my conclusion, in order to reach it, it is necessary to summarise the various
rules and concepts by which this result is reached in the different legal systems, leading
mostly to different schemes with similar results, but sometimes also to different results. The
question which is probably the least homogeneously solved, concerns the position of the
(general or concurring) creditors of the transferor. This question will therefore be discussed
separately in the end of this Part.
1. Different views of the notion of conveyance.
102a. In the most general sense, transfer of property takes place through some act, for which
we do use here the word conveyance in a general sense (Du. levering, Fr. livraison). In the
continental tradition, this act is called translative when it transfers an existing right of
ownership or an existing limited property right and constitutive when it creates a new
limited property right (by splitting it off from ownership). Apart from these, an act is called
abdicative when it consists of a renunciation to property and declarative in case of
accrual of property rights (see supra). Abdicative and declarative acts are also forms of
conveyance, even if not all rules concerning transfer of property apply to abdicative and
declarative acts (see again supra). These different types of acts are the only types of acts of
disposal (Verfgungsgeschfte), i.e. legal acts with property effects. The rules governing the
conveyances do not apply to other legal acts under property law, such as expropriation,
occupation, seizure, etc.
National traditions have rather different conceptions of the general notion of conveyance.
a) Conveyance as an agreement and/or as a factual act.
102b. The two extreme positions are the following:
- on the one hand, the conception of conveyance as purely a legal act - more specifically an
agreement between transferor and transferee (which does not necessarily mean that
conveyance doesnt have to meet other requirements, too, such as formalities) (whereby this
act will be an abstract one in abstract systems and a causal one in causal systems);
- on the other hand, the conception of conveyance as a purely factual act (Naturalakt or
85
118 As long as the Einigung is not completed with bergabe or Eintragung, the agreement is not
binding on the parties - BGH 25-10-1978, NJW 1979, 214 (case where reservation of title was unilaterally
stipulated after the sale and the Einigung, but before delivery; it was considered a breach of contract, but
preventing an effective transfer).
119 OGH 18-6-1986, ZA 1987, 51.
120 This is the opinion of i.a. G. VETTORI, Consenso traslativo e circolazione dei beni, Giuffr Milano
1995.
86
place and under which conditions, is a question independent from the obligation to give in
the strict sense; this obligation is traditionally qualified as an obligation to do (facere)121.
Ad 1.
Note 1. The prevailing view in the older ius commune did not recognise an obligation to give
i.e. to transfer property but only an obligation to procure possession (vacuam
possessionem tradere) on the one hand and an obligation to guarantee the peaceful
possession (garantie dviction) on the other hand. This explains the structure of the
provisions of the Code Napoleon, still providing as obligations of the seller only (1) the
obligation to deliver and (2) to guarantee. Only more modern codes, such as BGB 433
explicitly provide for an obligation to transfer property (called Verschaffensprinzip in
German doctrine).
Note 2. Part of the contemporary French and Italian doctrine equally holds that there is no
obligation to give in most contracts of sale (and only an obligation to guarantee peaceful
possession), because transfer follows from the contract itself. In my view, this is incorrect on
both points.
On the one hand, in contemporary French or Italian law, there is a breach of contract of the
seller where the buyer has not acquired ownership.
On the other hand, the fact that the contract and its performance take place by one single act
does not prevent to analyse that act as having two aspects, an obligational and a real one
(see supra). Even in Italian law (which is stricter than French law on this point, see infra),
there are many cases where the obligation to give and its performance are clearly
distinguished122; in case of sale of land, it is perfectly possible to postpone the real
agreement by concluding instead of a sale a preliminary contract (contratto
preliminare) containing the obligation to give (thus, in fact the contratto preliminare
corresponds to what is called sale in all other systems, whereas the italian vendito (sale)
corresponds to the act of conveyance in other systems).
2. Conditions for conveyance insofar as no older property rights are infringed (the transferor
having the necessary authority to dispose of the things).
103b. We deal first with the situation where the transferor has the necessary authority to
dispose of the asset123. In this situation conditions, which are only relevant for the protection
of bona fide acquirers in case of lack of this authority by the transferor, do not have to be
fulfilled. On the other hand, a perfect acquisition does not necessarily protect the acquirer yet
121 See for this distinction between conveyance as performance of the obligation to give and delivery as
performance of an obligation to do : N. CATALA, La nature juridique du paiement, LGDJ Parijs 1961, nr.
37.
122 See CHIANALE p. 39 ff.
123 On the other hand, in case of conflict, one must already know the rule son transfer in order to know
whether the alienator still has the authority to dispose of the goods in a system where title passes by mere
agreement, a second sale of the same object is a sale by a seller without authority, whereas the same seller
still has authority if title did not yet pass on the basis of the first sale.
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against the possibility that creditors of the transferor still execute against the asset, or that
after their acquisition another third party acquires it in good faith. These situations will be
dealt with infra.
a) Movables (goods not subject to registration124).
1 Requirements (such as agreement, form, material act)
aa) Conveyance by procuring possession.
aaa) General rule.
104. The obligation to give is normally performed by procuring to the acquirer possession in
the civilian (legal) sense of the word125, i.e. by delivery in a large sense. As possession does
not necessarily imply direct possession by the acquirer, conveyance can take place without
delivery in a strict sense (of factual delivery). The way possession is procured (delivery or
equivalent acts) has been discussed supra.
A superficial analysis often leads to the idea that there is a big difference between:
- on the one hand the French-Belgian-Italian-Portuguese system and the British Sale of
Goods Act,
- and on the other hand e.g. the Dutch, Austrian, Spanish or German system and English law
outside sales.
French authors tend to deny the fact that the agreement with the transfer of property
(conveyance) implies normally the procuring of possession (in the legal sense, including
indirect possession) of the things. This is nevertheless the case, albeit not necessarily a
factual possession; possession can be supplied by mere agreement if the alienator is already
in possession of the thing (see supra - delivery in the large sense).
It is true, that there is a difference of perspective:
- in the German and Dutch tradition, transfer of ownership is seen as an effect of i.a. the
transfer of possession,
- whereas in the French tradition, transfer of possession is rather seen as an effect of the
agreement to transfer ownership.
In fact, there is no difference on this point: all these systems have as a basic rule that, apart
from additional requirements and exceptions, consensual transfer of possession and of
ownership are one and the same act. The real difference will be indicated below, 2.
104a. The rule that delivery s.l. - i.e. transfer of possession - can normally take place by mere
agreement, found in most legal systems, has already been explained supra (transfer of
possession). Although transfer of possession can in nearly all systems in principle take place
124 In many legal systems, some specific movable things are subject to registration, too, and hence treated in
the same way as immovables. This is mainly the case with ships.
125 See e.g. 3:90 NBW; BGB 929 ff (although this is not formulated in terms of possession, it is
understood as such), Art. 714 I Swiss ZGB.
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by mere agreement, the effects of such a transfer may be different depending on whether the
result is direct or indirect possession. This distinction is, however, normally relevant only in
situation where the transferor lacks the necessary authority to dispose of the goods126 (and in
some jurisdictions also in case of insolvency of the party in direct possession of the thing).
bbb) Exceptions - esp. for security rights.
104b. Most legal systems have some exceptions to the rule that delivery can take place by
mere agreement, exceptions other than those discussed supra in relation to transfer of
possession (namely the cases where transfer of possession cannot take place by mere
agreement). Further exceptions are found
1 Where the contract provides so - especially where reservation of title (until payment) is
stipulated, see infra.
2 In a number of specific statutory provisions. The main exception in most jurisdictions
(Belgian-French-Italian law, Austrian law, Swiss law127, English law, etc.) concerns the
constitution of a security right other than reservation of title.
Most legal systems indeed differentiate between security interests for purchase money (esp.
reservation of title) and other security interests. For the first, see infra 2). For the
constitution of the latter, a factual dispossession or another type of publicity (such as
registration in some cases) is traditionally required (even inter partes), although this could
also be understood as a requirement for the opposability against third parties only. Only a
few jurisdictions have accepted in general the possibility to create a security interest without
publicity, especially:
- German law, where the requirement of dispossession for pledge was circumvented by
admitting fiduciary transfer of ownership (instead of pledge) (Sicherungsbereignung).
- Dutch law, which until 1992 had the same position as German law; the NBW of 1992 has
invalidated such fiduciary transfers, but instead recognised the constitution of a right of
pledge without publicity (by agreement in writing).
Pledge by dispossession is generally found in all jurisdictions. Pledge by registration is
inexistent in some jurisdictions, and restricted to specific cases in a number of others128. A
general system of registration of security interests in movables exists in the UK (fixed
charges, further a floating charge is possible on assets of companies) and the US (Art. 9
126 Apart from this, direct possession, and thus delivery in a strict sense, is often required for gifts
(donations). However, in the French-Belgian system (and in the English one), delivery is in case of gifts not
an element of conveyance, but a requirement for the binding character of the promise in the absence of a
formal deed.
127 Art. 717 II and 884 ZGB.
128 E.g. in Belgium, pledge by regsitration is only available to enterprises and farmers, in France to
enterprises (nantissement du fonds de commerce) and on some specific goods, in Swiss law on cattle (art.
885 ZGB), etc.
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UCC)129.
As to gratuitous transfers, there are normally no additional requirements for conveyance.
Where specific formalities (incl. actual delivery) are required for donations, these
requirements rather relate to the contract of donation and not to the act of conveyance.
bb) Conveyance by agreement without transfer of possession.
105. Where the owner has no possession anymore, conveyance has to take place by
agreement, without transfer of possession. Historically, this has been developed and
constructed as an assignment of the revindication (Abtretung des Herausgabeanspruchs).
In the French-Belgian-Italian legal system, mere agreement is sufficient. Other systems
sometimes impose formalities, such as e.g. Dutch law, where a written act (writing) is
required (art. 3:95). English common law requires a deed.
Under German law again, revindication is considered to be accessory to the obligatory right
if there is such a right against the possessor. Ownership is transferred by assignment of the
claim against the possessor (e.g. the thief). Only in the absence of such a claim, the action of
revindication itself can be transferred.
2 Time of conveyance; suspensive terms and conditions, including payment (reservation of
title)
aa) Differences as to a presumption of conveyance at the time of conclusion of the contract
ande without actual delivery.
106. Under German130 and Dutch law, conveyance requires, as explained, in principle a
separate agreement (Einigung) as well as a factual act, which can however, be waivered
(replaced by constitutum possessorium). There is neither a presumption that parties have
already agreed on transfer of property when concluding the obligatory contract, nor a
presumption that they have agreed on transfer without some form of factual delivery.
Therefore:
1 Title passes with actual delivery unless a different form of conveyance was agreed on (in
principle expressly); and
2 a reservation of title can still be made after the contract of sale was concluded, until the
moment of conveyance.
129 The security interest attaches without publicity, i.e. it is effective against the debtor, but its
perfection (effect against creditors and other third parties) requires registration , apart from a limited
number of exceptions.
130 The Prussian Allgemeines Landrecht (ALR) provided that the contract of sale did already grant the buyer
a ius ad rem, an anticipatory property right securing the first buyer a priority against a second buyer in bad
faith, but no other attributes of ownership (see ALR Th. I Tit. 19 4-6).
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Where transfer cannot take place yet because the goods are not yet ascertained or do not yet
exist (i.e. a further objective requirement for transfer has to be fulfilled), the real agreement
can be concluded before the agreed act of delivery takes place. Under Dutch law131, the
agreement does not have to be repeated at the latter moment, and it prevents the seller to
reserve title afterwards. Under German law, the agreement must continue until delivery is
completed; if parties have not agreed on a constitutum possessorium, the seller can withdraw
its consent to transfer (Einigung) as long as the required factual delivery has not taken place
(even if he is not allowed to do so)132. But it is possible to subject the passing of title to a
suspensive condition (see under cc).
106b. Under Austrian law, there is a presumption that the obligatory contract already
includes the real agreement (therefore, reservation of title can no longer be made after this
agreement). But there is no presumption that title already passes before factual delivery,
unless parties have explicitly agreed on delivery constituto possessorio. A more or less
similar situation is found in Spanish law.
107. Conveyance is usually not treated separately in the Belgian-French-Italian-Portuguese
tradition, because:
- it can not only in most cases normally take place by mere agreement (this is also the cases
in other systems),
- but is in case of conveyance based on a contract also presumed to take place immediately,
unless the contract provides a different moment of time.
Thus, there is:
- as well a presumption that the real agreement is included in the obligatory contract
(presumption which does not apply where the obligation does not arise form a contract);
- as a presumption - at least in sales and donations - that parties have conveyed the goods
constituto possessorio (apart from cases where a delivery constituto possessorio is normally
not possible, as for unascertained goods) - see art. 1138 French and Belgian CC, and 408 I
Portuguese CC for existing and determined goods. This second presumption is the real
difference between the French-Italian-Belgian-Portuguese system and the other systems.
As to generic goods, it is not presumed that the buyer acquires an undivided interest in
generic goods, but this can be agreed explicitly. Where this is not the case, in French and
Belgian law unilateral specification is sufficient in case of sale (the fact that specification is
delegated to one of the parties does not prevent the real agreement to be perfected,
specification being seen as a material act); a bilateral reception (inspection) is necessary in
case of fabrication and similar contracts. Art. 408 II Portuguese CC generally requires that
determination is done with the knowledge of both parties.
These rules do not exclude that passing of title is suspended, not only by a suspensive
131 See e.g. art. 3:97 Dutch BW.
132 See BGH 25-10-1978, NJW 1979, 214.
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condition, such as payment (see under cc), but also by a suspensive term (see under bb) or
until a further act of delivery has been fulfilled. Thus, at least the second presumption is not
mandatory; parties can stipulate that title will pass only at factual delivery, unless such a
clause would be a merely potestative condition in a donation. The real agreement can
thus be perfected (and binding) before title passes, and from that moment on reservation of
title can no longer be made.
The first presumption is mandatory in donations. According to the dominant view in Italian
law (but not in French and Belgian law), it is also mandatory in sales (art. 1376 C.C.)133.
However, parties may derogate from the rule by calling their agreement a preliminary
contract instead of a sale.
The presumption can only function in case of conveyance based on a contract; when the
obligation to give does not arise out of a contract, a separate agreement is necessary.
On the other hand, passing of title at the time of conclusion of the contract and before actual
delivery, does not deprive the seller to retain the goods until payment (and even to
stoppage in transitu until they have arrived at the buyers), unless credit was given to the
buyer (period of time for payment). This right of retention of the seller (possessory lien),
which amounts to a kind of pledge is found in most jurisdictions. In the French-Belgian
tradition, it relativises the idea that a full transfer takes place by mere agreement.
107a. Similar presumptions on immediate transfer are found in English and Scottish sales
law: According to the SGA S. 18 (1), property in specific goods is presumed to pass at the
date the contract is made (Id. In US law) . Possession in the more restricted English sense,
and thus (factual) delivery, is not required. Here again, there is a conveyance constituto
possessorio without saying it.
As to generic goods, an immediate undivided interest is presumed in some cases (according
to the Amendment of the SGA in 1995); outside such cases, property is presumed to pass at
unilateral specification with the assent of the other party (which is again presumed) (see
SGA S. 18 (5).
The presumption of on immediate transfer is not found outside sales law; constructive
delivery remains possible, but is not presumed.
107b. Swiss law also often accepts that the agreement on transfer is already implied in the
underlying contract, unless parties have stipulated otherwise134.
bb) Suspensive terms.
Traditionsprinzip, ZEuP 1993, (52) 61 v., 64 (referring for Swiss law to P. LIVER en HAAB / SIMONIUS.
93
108. As said, under the French-Belgian-Italian legal system, passing of title may be
suspended by a suspensive period of time, where the underlying obligation allows this, i.e.
normally where the underlying obligation is itself under a suspensive period of time.
Systems requiring an explicit real agreement for the passing of ownership, such as Dutch and
German law, exclude that this agreement is perfected as long as there is a suspensive period.
Thus, under Dutch law, a delivery with a suspensive period is automatically converted into
an instantaneous delivery with reservation of usufruct (art. 3:85, 2 NBW). Contrary to
French law, it is possible to postpone the real agreement, but not to conclude the real
agreement and postpone passing of title - at least not to postpone it longer than factual
delivery.
cc) Suspensive conditions, esp. payment; reservation of title.
1 Payment of the goods.
108c. Payment of the goods is a condition for the passing of title whenever this is required
by law or contract.
In most jurisdictions, payment is not a condition imposed or implied by law, and
reservation of title thus has to be stipulated. This is especially the case in systems where
there is no presumption of conveyance (as indicated above).
In systems where conveyance is presumed, this may be compensated by a statutory
protection of the unpaid seller. Thus under Belgian law, the seller of movables as well as
immovables has a statutory privilege (lien) even in the absence of a reservation of title. The
presumption of immediate conveyance (which implies that a reservation of title is not
presumed) leaves the seller still in possession of a non-possessory lien, which is comparable
to a non-possessory right of pledge. To such right, he's automatically entitled as long as the
price is not fully paid (art. 20, 4 Statute on Privileges and Hypothecs). Under French law,
reservation of title is presumed. These systems have thus in fact returned to the default rule
that title passes with payment (instead of by mere consensus). In South-African law, passing
of title is by law suspended until payment unless the seller has granted credit (term of
payment) to the buyer. In Dutch sales law, there is a right to reclaim possession, limited in
time (recht van reclame).
As said, payment is required for conveyance whenever reservation of title is validly
stipulated or implied by law.
Although reservation of title until payment (if validly stipulated) in principle prevents title
from passing before payment, in most jurisdictions the position of the buyer under
reservation of title is protected in some way under property law. Some jurisdictions have
recognised a specific property interest in the form of an anticipatory interest (e.g. the
German Anwartschaftsrecht); the title remaining with the seller is thus not full ownership
94
in all respects and functionally equivalent to a right of pledge. The situation is not too
different from the case (found in some other jurisdictions, such as Belgian law) where title
passes before payment, but the seller still maintains a sellers privilege. Even in those
systems where no such privilege exists, similar effects can be reached if termination of the
underlying contract has a real effect or if non-payment can be a resolutive condition (this
only applies to causal systems).
Reservation of title is generally possible; only in exceptional cases, such a condition is
invalid135. In some jurisdictions there are requirements of form, such as writing136, or
keeping of a register137. Registration in public registers will be necessary where the goods
are not treated as movables but generally subject to registration138. In most jurisdictions, the
reservation of title does not exclude that the seller may grant the buyer permission to resell
the goods. In some jurisdictions, however, esp. Swedish and Finnish law, the clause will lose
its effect in some jurisdictions as soon as the buyer obtains the permission to resell the
goods.
A specific set of rules to guarantee delivery against payment is found in the law on
securities settlement systems (esp. Directive 98/26/EC on settlement finality in payment and
securities settlement systems).
2 Payment of other debts (all moneys clause).
108d. Further, the question arises whether title to the goods may also be reserved to secure
payment of other debts of the buyer towards the seller (esp. other goods delivered by the
same seller) (clause of erweiterter Eigentumsvorbehalt or all moneys clause). Unless there
is a sufficient link between the different goods, such an extension of reservation of title will
be considered to constitute a different security interest, subject to the normal conditions for
security rights (cfr. supra).
NB. As to the possibility that in case of resale of the assets under reservation of title, the
original seller is entitled to the price claim, see supra on real subrogation.
b) Immovables (and other goods subject to registration).
1 Requirements (formalities); presumption of conveyance.
109. Most legal systems do not accept transfer of immovables (and constitution of
immovable property rights) by mere agreement between the parties. They prescribe some
95
type of formal act and registration of it in the land register or a similar register139; these
requirements are constitutive requirements for transfer. In English law, similar rules apply,
at least for legal ownership and under the Land Registration Act (1927).
However, like an unregistered transfer create an equitable interest for the buyer in English
law, buyers in other jurisdictions requiring registration may already acquire some protected
interest before registration, too usually through a preliminary registration (Vormerkung),
see infra.
109b. On the contrary, it is typical for French, Italian, Portuguese and Belgian law that the
rules described above for movables are also applied to immovables. Between the parties, and
as long as there are no conflicting property rights of third parties, transfer can take place by
mere agreement. There is:
- as well a presumption that the real agreement is included in the obligatory contract
(presumption which does not apply where the obligation does not arise form a contract),
- as a presumption that parties have conveyed the goods constituto possessorio (art. 1138
French and Belgian CC, 408 Portuguese CC).
The first presumption is mandatory in donations (this does not exclude that the conveyance
takes place under a suspensive term or condition). According to the dominant view in Italian
law, it is also mandatory in sales (art. 1376 C.C.)140, however, parties may derogate from the
rule by calling their agreement a preliminary contract instead of a sale. Under French and
Belgian law (apart from donations), parties may postpone the real agreement, e.g. by
stipulating that it will only be implied in a notarial deed.
The main exception again concerns security rights, namely the constitution of a right of
mortgage. Traditionally a formal act (notarial deed) is required, although this could again be
understood as a requirement for the opposability against third parties only. Registration in
the land register, on the other hand, is not a constitutive requirement for a mortgage.
Again, the presumption of immediate conveyance (which implies that a reservation of title is
not presumed) does not deprive the unpaid seller from all rights in the land. Despite the
passing of title, the seller retains - by operation of law - a security interest in the land (called
privilege, and very comparable to a mortgage), unless he waivers it by registering the sale
without registering at the same time this privilege.
139 E.g., German BGB 873 I and II and 925 (873 I requires registration in the Grundbuch; 873 II requires a
formal act before a public notary or in front of the public Registrar); Dutch NBW 3:89 (notarial deed and
inscription in the registers is constitutive); Swiss ZGB Art. 656 I (registration) and 657 (formal deed, except
in case of acquisition by death; for easements a simple writing is sufficient, ZGB 732); Austrian ABGB
431 and 432 ( 431: Eintragung or Intabulation; 432 : public deed or judgement (436)); South African law;
Scottish law (delivery of disposition nd registration of the disposition in the Register of Saisines or in the
Land register). There may be some limited exceptions, such as certain types of easements which are public
because they are visible, e.g. Art. 676 III ZGB.
140 For convincing criticism, see CHIANALE, p. 48 and passim.
96
Registration and similar formalities are known in Belgian and French law, too, but do not
have the same significance, precisely because theyre normally not necessary for the transfer
of property. The difference will be put in perspective below.
109c. On the other hand, some of the effects which the transfer of property has in the
consensual systems, are reached by other institutions in other jurisdictions:
- in common law systems by recognising an equitable interest of the acquirer as soon as the
sale is perfected;
- in continental systems by the institution of Vormerkung or Prnotation, a provisional
inscription in the registers granting an anticipatory right (see supra). The conditions and
effects vary in different jurisdictions141:
-- in some jurisdictions, a preliminary inscription can be based on a written contract which
does not need to be a public deed (e.g. Italy, Swiss law in case of a pre-emption right - ZGB
681), in others, a notarial deed or judgement (incl. an injunction) is necessary (German law).
-- the period during which it is valid may also vary, from very short (in Austria, the buyer
must start an action for delivery in court within 14 days) to long periods (10 years in
Switzerland, virtually without limitation in Germany).
2 Time of conveyance - anticipatory conveyance.
109d. In the French-Italian-Belgian tradition, again the same rules apply as for movables :
passing of title may be suspended by a suspensive period of time, where the underlying
obligation allows this (exception : some consumer contracts - e.g. for the acquisition of a
house or of an apartment, which is not yet finished), or by a suspensive condition142; even
the real agreement itself may be postponed (cfr. above).
109d. Continental jurisdictions requiring a formal act and registration as constitutive for
transfer usually provide that such a (real) agreement cannot contain a (suspensive or
resolutive) term or a (suspensive) condition143. A resolutive condition remains possible
under Dutch law. Further, transfer of immovables cannot take place when the goods are not
yet ascertained or do not yet exist. Where the real agreement cannot be concluded because
the claim is future or conditional, a Vormerkung is possible under German law (see BGB
873 I). Under Dutch law, a preliminary registration is possible in case of leasing (huurkoop).
In Anglo-American law, transfer of legal title cannot be subject to suspensive or resolutive
term, but this can be solved by granting equitable rights.
c) Choses in action.
97
1 Requirements.
110. Again, it is typical for French, Italian, Portuguese and Belgian law that the rules
described above for movables are also applied to choses in action. As to such assets, a
similar system is found in Nordic countries (Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark) and
Greece.
In many European countries, mere agreement is sufficient as between the parties. Notice to
the debtor is not a constitutive requirement (but it may play a role for protection of bona fide
acquirers and/or in order to be protected against the creditors of the assignor, see further).
This is even so for security interests in claims (where as for security interest in tangible
movables or in immovables, publicity is in most cases constitutive). The same rule is found
in the PECL144. Sometimes, writing is required145.
Some systems (not Belgian law) have stricter rules for nominative shares in companies and
require registration of the transfer of shares in the share register of the company.
110b. Other systems, e.g. Dutch and Scots law, consider the formalities, such as
communication to the debitor cessus (NBW 3:94, also requiring a written document), as
constitutive for the transfer. Remarkably enough, Dutch law is less formal for security
rights (i.e. pledge), by recognising the silent pledge on claims.
In English & Irish law, a similar rule is found for legal ownership (i.e. statutory
assignment); rather strict formalities apply (for transfer of nominative share a registration in
the share register), but the rule does not apply to a mere equitable assignment (giving rise to
an equitable interest in the claim), which will arise as soon as there is agreement between the
parties (comp. supra for immovables).
110d. This time, German law has chosen the opposite rule, and even more radically than in
the French etc. tradition. Creditors rights can be transferred by mere agreement between
assignor and assignee; the communication to the debtor plays no role as to the property of
the right (strangely enough, notice is constitutive in order to charge the claim with a right of
pledge); this is, however, circumvented by fiduciary assignment of the claim)146.
A similar approach is found in Austrian and Spanish law (although some formality to certify
144 Article 12:104 PECL. Form of Assignment: An assignment need not be in writing or in any other form.
From the Comments, it is clear that the article deals with the formalities for assignment as transfer of property.
145 E.g. Art. 165 II Swiss ZGB.
146 This odd position of German law may be due to the fact that the transfer of creditors rights is
traditionally (including in the BGB) dealt with in the law of obligations (pledging these rights is however
seen as a matter of property law). This is remarkably incoherent, as transfer in general is seen as a matter for
property law (in the French CC, assignment is also found in the law of obligations, but there is less
incoherence as transfer in general is treated in that context). See on this question H. WESTERMANN,
Sachenrecht 5th ed. (1966), 2 II 2, S. 9.
98
the date is required at least in certain cases), and to a certain extent in Swiss law147.
2 Time of conveyance.
110d. As to suspensive terms and conditions, generally the same rules apply as for movable
tangibles. The PECL shows the same flexibility as French-Belgian law148.
d) Intellectual property.
110e. Similar conceptions are found in the field of intellectual property rights
3. The French-Belgian-Italian rule put in perspective.
a) The role of formalities in cases they are not constitutive.
111. The formalities which are prescribed in most countries for the transfer itself (as it is
usually the case for immovables and choses in action), certainly play an important role in
French-Belgian-Italian law and in Nordic laws, too:
- first of all, the same or similar formalities will normally constitute one of the conditions for
protection as an acquirer a non domino, i.e. each time the alienator has exceeded authority
to dispose of the things by infringing an older property right (discussed under D. and E.), in
other words: in case of conflict between property rights (incl. the collective right of pledge of
the concurrent creditors)149. But this type of publicity is normally not required in order to be
able to rely on your acquisition against other types of third parties (there may be a different
type of publicity).
- secondly and this is esp. relevant the case for double sale and similar cases -, the acquirer
will not have the same security as long as he has not fulfilled these formalities, precisely
because the possibility for third parties acquiring the thing later on to be protected against his
older right is much wider if the first acquirer has not fulfilled these requirements. The same
may be true for the possibility of seizure of the goods by the creditors of the alienator and
147 Writing is required (art. 900 I ZGB, but notice is not constitutive (art. 900 II ZGB).
148 Article 12:202 PECL. When Assignment Takes Effect
(1) An assignment of an existing claim takes effect at the time of the agreement to assign or such later time
as the assignor and assignee agree.
(2) An assignment of a future claim is dependent upon the assigned claim coming into existence but
thereupon takes effect from the time of the agreement to assign or such later time as the assignor and
assignee agree.
149 Infra, it will be explained that these formalities are normally not a sufficient condition. This is especially
the case as to immovables. Only in a Torrens system are such formalities sufficient. Theyre certainly not a
sufficient condition in a negative system of publicity as the French-Belgian one; theyre neither sufficient in a
public faith system like the German and Austrian (and to a large extent the Dutch) one; but in the latter
systems, they create public faith, whereas they play a merely negative role in the French-Belgian system
(certifying the absence of certain types of transmission only).
99
ff) 686.
100
112. Still, there is a difference in the field of immovables (and sometimes for creditors
rights). In the French-Belgian-Italian system, the alienator loses his authority to dispose of
the goods (title in the English sense) and the acquirer acquires this precisely by the mere
agreement between the parties. In other systems, the formalities are constitutive.
Let us illustrate the possible difference with respect to immovables.
a) In the French-Belgian system, other parties who have acquired later on, but fulfil the
publicity requirements first, will often not become owner if theyre in bad faith, whereas
they become owner in the other systems (including the Italian one). There is, however, no
unitary rule under French-Belgian law (sometimes the acquirer in bad faith nevertheless
becomes owner - there are cases where the party who did not publish his titulus cannot
invoke it even against parties who knew of the older right; this is the rule under Italian law).
Certainly, in these other systems, the first buyer is not without protection either.
- In Italian, Dutch and German law e.g., the behaviour of the second buyer acquiring in bad
faith can be a tort (comp. inducement of breach of contract), although some jurisdictions
accept this more readily than others (e.g. under Italian law, it is normally only accepted in
case of fraud of the third party, mere knowledge being insufficient151).
- Further, there are some possibilities for the first buyer to secure his priority (e.g. beslag tot
levering in Dutch law, NBW 3:298; in German, Austrian, Swiss and Italian law on
immovables (and proposed in Dutch law) the Vormerkung (prenotation) and the registration
of an opposition to alienation (under BGB 136). In English law, the first buyer obtains (if
the contract is specifically enforceable) an equitable interest in the goods leaving only the
legal title to the second buyer (who thus becomes a trustee for the first). Where the
prenotation exists, it gives the (first) buyer a better protection than the protection he enjoys
under French and Belgian law on the basis of the sales contract alone, even if the prenotation
does not grant ownership. But in practice, this only helps in countries where such prenotation
can be made on the basis of an informal contract of sale (which is not the case under German
law).
Still, in all these systems, it is more difficult for the first buyer to protect himself against an
actual or possible second buyer (and thus against fraud by the seller) otherwise than by
fulfilling the publicity requirements for transfer of title or at least for a prenotation
(Vormerkung).
b) Also, the formless transfer the parties is binding upon any other third party, except those
who enjoy a special protection - which is basically only the case for older property rights and
for concurring creditors in case of seizure or bankruptcy (see further). No special protection
is given by publicity rules to e.g.:
- the tenant of a house sold and transferred (he is, however, protected by the law of
obligations, due to the qualitative character of the obligation of the landlord under certain
conditions);
151 Cass. it. 17-2-1976, Giust.civ., Mass. 1976.
101
- the debitor cessus in case of assignment (also protected by some rules in the law of
obligations, and even by a very similar rule, namely notice to the debitor cessus), etc.
In many jurisdictions, such third parties can, however, refuse to recognise the date of the
transaction until it is in some way or another officialised (notarial deed, date registration,
etc.) (France and Belgium in non-commercial transactions - art. 1328 C.C. -, Austria and the
Netherlands as to security transactions; Spain, etc.).
c) On the other hand, the fulfillment of publicity for immovables in the French-Belgian
system does not give the acquirer the same protection as in the German or Dutch system. In a
certain sense, it only gives the protection given by a prenotation in the German system; the
full registration as found in German law (with the effects explained infra), is functionally
missing.
102
formality
mere
agreement
(notarial) deed
uncontrolled
registration
controlled
registration
- contract of sale is
effective (binding)
- title passes (between
parties) (but unpaid
seller
maintains
security interest)
- effect vis--vis 3rd
parties
without
property rights
- priority over third
parties in bad faith
no additional effect in
property law (condition
for registration)
(= transcriptio)
- priority of the buyer
in case of conflict
- if seller does not
register
security
interest : priority of
creditors of buyer over
the seller
no
effect
(condition for
contract of sale)
- title passes,
- public faith
effect
- unpaid seller
loses security
(unless registered)
contract (sale) is
effective
(obligations only)
(= Vormerkung)
- priority of the
buyer in case of
conflict
- unpaid seller still
preferred
to
creditors of the
buyer
effect in Engl.law
equitable interest
of the buyer
- legal ownership
(title) passes
c) movable things.
112b. The so-called relativity of transfer under French-Belgian law and Nordic law gives rise
to the paradoxical situation that in the field of movables publicity (factual possession) is
finally even more decisive than in e.g. Dutch or German law. The publicity rules will
sometimes protect even the concurring creditors of the parties (against the other party),
which is not the case under e.g. BGB 933 and NBW 3:90. See infra no. 159 ff.
103
104
at actual delivery, the alienator also immediately loses its authority and in case of a second
sale, there will be a conflict of property rights. Where the first buyer did not yet become
owner, there is no property conflict in case of a second sale by the same seller, but only
breach of contract.
2. Although from a dogmatic point of view, an alienator either has authority for a specific
disposition or not, from a more relativistic point or practical of view, one could distinguish
more situations, such as:
- authority to dispose s.s. (possibly despite obligatory rights of third parties);
- no authority to dispose, but factual power to dispose in favour of bona fide acquirers (eg a
party able to procure actual possession, a party erroneously registered as land owner,
property charged with merely equitable rights, etc.)
- authority to dispose limited by an anticipatory right (eg protected by a preliminary
registration)
- no authority nor power to dispose
115. The owner further loses the authority to dispose of goods when they are seized
(conservatory seizure, enforcement, include. bankruptcy, dissolution of a company, etc.). In
such cases, only the administrator (curator, trustee, etc...) has the authority to dispose of the
goods - according to the procedures imposed by law - and to distribute the net product to the
creditors.
Under French & Belgian law, seized goods are only exceptionally administered by the
creditor himself. Normally a public official or a party appointed by Court (bailiff, notary
public appointed by court, etc.) will administer them. In some cases, the goods are
administered by the debtor (e.g. normally in case of beneficiary acceptance of an
inheritance).
As to the effect of seizure for the rights of the creditor who took the initiative, see further
infra.
116. The authority to dispose of ones property is not limited by mere general privileges, as
long as they are not realised through seizure, organised insolvency (bankruptcy etc.) or
similar measures.
Equally, the English and Scottish floating charge does not restrict the authority to dispose
as long as it is not fixed (by appointment of a receiver). This is also the rule in case of
some other comparable security rights, which do not deprive the owner of the right to
transfer the goods cancelling these security rights154.
117. The authority to dispose of ones property is further limited in case of joint property
(Gesamthand, proprit en main commune), where the object of ones property is a share in
154 Eg art. 19 BERD Model law on securities
105
155 This is not stated as such in Belgian law, but follows from the so-called retro-active effect of partition (see
supra). A judgement from the Cour de cassation (Cass. 9-9-1994, Molenaers) is very ambiguous on this
question in the case of an inheritance : every heir would be free to dispose of its share in each of the goods, but
this disposition cannot be opposed against the other heirs.
156 This possibility exits where the community is not (or no longer) personally bound (intuitu personae), e.g.
investment funds, dissolved partnerships, undivided inheritance. Where it exists, the law may still grant the
other co-owners of the estate a right of pre-emption or similar right.
157 According to HL 4 May 1995, Sharp v Thomson, SLT 1995, 837 ff., this also applies under Scottish law,
although the real effect of fiduciary duties is much more limited under Scottish law. The judgement was
heavily criticised in Scotland.
158 See i.a. BGB 2113 for dispositions voer immovables.
159 BGB 2211 : no authority to dispose for the heirs.
106
118b. The authority to dispose may be restricted by specific prohibitions to dispose for the
protection of specific third parties, treated as absence of authority to dispose, although they
do not correspond to a property interest of the third party. E.g., as a general rule: BGB 135136.
Apart from this, it is more generally in continental property law not possible to limit the
authority to dispose of the proprietor by contract, otherwise as by creating the legally
recognised property rights (numerus clausus principle).
119. Some other requirements for a valid transfer are in Belgian law technically spoken no
limitations of the authority to dispose, e.g. the invalidities protecting the "family" (spouse
and children) against dispositions by one spouse threatening the stability of the family. Some
others (e.g. pre-emption rights with external effect) may be constructed as well as property
rights limiting the authority to dispose (or another type of rights limiting the authority to
dispose) or as rights invalidating a titulus in violation of it. Such restrictions, as well as those
limiting gifts and bequests (in the presence of legitimate heirs) or protecting the creditors
against fraus creditorum, can all be qualified as restrictions on the authority to dispose in a
larger (non-technical) sense of the word. A party acquiring in violation of such restrictions to
dispose may be protected under conditions similar to the conditions for the protection of a
bona fide acquirer against absence of authority to dispose in the strict sense
2. Authority of other persons than the proprietor (or person whose property right is violated).
119. On the other hand, persons other than the owner (or holder of the property right
concerned) can have the authority to dispose of goods in certain cases.
In common law jurisdictions, the opposite structure is more frequent : "title" will be granted
to the administrator (eg a trustee), and merely equitable rights to the beneficiaries.
Continental law tends to attribute title - i.e. ownership - to the beneficiaries and grant the
administrator authority in another form than title. This is basically the case in two types of
situations :
a)
119b. The first type concerns liquidation (forced sale) of the assets by one or more creditors
enforcing their right, whether on the basis of a specific right of mortgage or pledge or on the
basis of their general right (already described as a kind of collective pledge) on the assets of
their debtor. Creditors are in most cases obliged to leave the exercise of this right to a public
official (notary public, bailiff) or an administrator appointed by the court (e.g. trustee in
bankruptcy). Companies who are being dissolved may appoint liquidators themselves. And a
heir accepting the inheritance only intra vires (beneficiary acceptance) can normally
liquidate the estate himself. Such administrators are acting in their own name, but qualitate
qua (not personally) and for the account of the creditors.
107
Similar rules apply in all other cases where a patrimony or estate is liquidated: liquidation of
a company, of a succession (in the French-Belgian system however only in case of
beneficiary acceptance, in case of simple acceptance, there is no liquidator, but a joint
property of the heirs), etc.
b)
120. The second type concerns cases where a person is acting in his own name for the
account of the owner himself (so-called immediate representation).
Authority to do so can be given to him contractually by the owner himself (undisclosed
agency, e.g. so-called commission agents) or by law
1 The law provides for administration of the goods of persons incapable of administering
them themselves (minors, mentally ill, etc.). The law also provides rules for the
administration of communities (common property) - such as partnerships, marital
community, etc (authority may be separate for each co-owner of only joint). Certain
important dispositions will often require specific procedures.
2 In case of undisclosed agency, Belgian law accepts that the transfer of property (of
specific goods) can take place directly between the principal and the third party or vice-versa
(German law e.g. does normally not accept this and constructs a double transfer, except in
case of Geheierwerb) (thus the agent must become owner himself in order to have the
authority to dispose). An important case of a similar nature (also frequent in German law) is
the case where the buyer under reservation of title has the authority to resell the goods160.
Where the administrator does not merely receive an authority to act as an undisclosed agent,
but a (fiduciary) title to the goods, as in classical trusts, the trustee has the authority to
dispose of the goods, but the extent of this authority can vary. Normally, it implies the
authority to dispose of the assets for consideration, in the normal course of business, not the
authority to act gratuitously (by gift etc.) (NB. Charitable trusts are atypical in this respect).
E. Conditions for acquisition of property by transfer where the transfer infringes older
property rights c.q. the alienator does not have the authority to dispose.
121. Where the alienator does not have the necessary authority to dispose161, transfer of
property will only take place when additional conditions are fulfilled. In most cases, good
faith of the acquirer is one of these conditions, therefore the question is usually dealt with as
the protection of bona fide acquirers.
160 As mentioned supra, a reservation of title is ineffective in Swedish and Finnish law when the buyer has
According to the traditional perspective in French and Belgian law, this question only
concerns the relationship between the acquirer and the third party with an older right, and not
the relationship with the alienator. It is however, questionable whether it makes sense to
speak about a property right valid against the acquirer, when it cannot be opposed against the
party with an older right because the conditions for bona fide acquisition are not fulfilled.
121b. Apart from good faith, which is in most cases required, acquisition despite a lack of
authority of the alienator will require the fulfillment of a number of conditions, among which
publicity plays an important role. Some of these publicity requirements will already be
required for transfer in title in general in some jurisdictions (e.g. registration in the land
register); in those legal systems where these publicity requirements are not yet necessary for
the transfer of property in general (like the French-Belgian systems for all property, etc.),
they will certainly be necessary for the protection of acquirers in case of lack of authority (In
the German system for assignment of choses in action, where there is no publicity, there is in
principle no protection either).
Depending of the type of goods, additional requirements must be fulfilled.
1. Protection of acquirers of movable things (not subject to registration)
122. For the protection of an acquirer of movable things (or property rights in movable
things162), most legal systems have two types of rules:
- on the one hand, strict rules for cases where the owner is considered to be worthy of more
protection, e.g. in case of lost or stolen goods;
- more flexible rules for all other cases.
We will first discuss the conditions for the protection of acquirers in these other cases, and
then deal with the stricter rule.
a) General rule.
123. Apart from voluntary dispossession of the owner, three types of requirement can be
found for the protection of the acquirer. In French-Belgian and German law, there are
basically only 2 requirements: actual possession (direct possession) and good faith. This
follows from art. 1141 and 2279 C.C. In some systems, the rules on the first requirement
(possession) are much more complex. In some other systems, a valid titulus is required, too.
1 Factual possession.
124. In most continental legal systems, the acquirer will only be protected when he comes
into factual possession of the thing. This supposes that it is no longer in possession of the
162 For the acquisition of limited property rights in movables, basically the same rules apply (explicitly BGB
936), apart from stricter rules for some security rights in some jurisdictions.
109
person entitled to the older right or somebody detaining for that person. If possession is in
the hands of a third person, it is sufficient if the third person holds the thing for the acquirer
(or is bound to do so on the basis of his contractual obligations). As long as the possession is
ambiguous, the acquirer is not protected.
Although the precise form of the rule may be different, the basic requirement of factual
possession can be found in most continental systems, e.g.:
- possession relle in art. 1141 and 2279 French and Belgian C.C and 1153 Italian CC.
This can be the result of a direct material delivery, a symbolic (constructive) delivery (keys
etc.), a traditio brevi manu, but not of a constitutum possessorium (comp. supra n 50);
whether communication to the third party detaining the goods is sufficient is disputed (see
supra). As described supra, strong possession can at least be transferred by delivery of
documents representing the goods (but only insofar as the isuing party is in possession of the
goods; good faith possession of the goods has priority over good faith possession of the
documents);163
- Dutch NBW art. 3:90, 2: delivery constituto possessorio by a mere detentor is not possible.
No protection against older rights as long as the things are in the hands of a party who has to
detain them for another party than the acquirer (whether in ownership or in a more limited
way); a constitutum possessorium is not sufficient.
- Similar rules in German and Greek law : BGB 933.
NB. German law is stricter on the question whether there also has been an agreement
(Einigung) to transfer possession and thus property164; whereas in French-Belgian law this is
not necessary or at least presumed to be inherent in the voluntary transfer of possession (and
thus not a separate requirement).
Under Austrian law, this requirement is not explicitly mentioned in ABGB 367, providing
that the buyer of a thing becomes owner if the true owner handed it over to the seller (not
necessarily for the purpose of selling it). It is disputed whether a constructive delivery
(constitutum possessorium) is sufficient (comp. infra English law). In 430, factual delivery
is clearly required for the protection of a second buyer.
124b. Solutions diverge as to the situation where the goods are not in the hands of the
alienator himself, but in the hands of a third party detaining them for the alienator:
- in most jurisdictions : as long as the third party is detaining them for the alienator,
possession is still mediated by the alienator, and there is no sufficient (strong) possession
by the acquirer. The question from which moment on possession is no longer mediated by
the alienator, and thus becomes a strong form of possession, has been studied earlier (e.g.
under Dutch law, the acquirer has no possession as long as the third party is not informed art. 3:115 NBW).
- under German law, in case of assignment by the alienator (to the acquirer) of his right
against the detentor (Abtretung des Herausgabeanspruch) (BGB 934), possession of the
163 See eg ZGB art. 925 II.
164 A more flexible position is found in BGH, 36. BGHZ, 30 v. (Hemden-Fall), criticised by WILHELM,
Sachenrecht n 424-425.
110
111
goods, but also in case of abuse of confidence of goods entrusted to somebody (deposited
etc.) (for Spain, see art. 463 Spanish C.C, as interpreted by Tribunal Supremo 19-6-1945;
part of the doctrine rejects this position).
2 Good faith.
* Concept.
126. Good faith is another requirement, which can be found in all systems. The concept itself
is almost the same: good faith is not only absent when the acquirer knew of the older right
(of the fact that the alienator had no sufficient authority to dispose of the goods) but also
when he should have known it167.
Most systems have a doctrine of constructive notice, excluding bona fide acquisition, in case
of registration of charges, pledges, mortgages etc. in public registers (where such registers
exist and registration is possible). As a result, the asset can be traced against the third party
acquirer. But not all forms of registration constitute constructive notice of acquirers of
movables168.
Apart from constructive notice by registration, the evaluation of good faith is slightly
different from country to country. Some countries accept a duty to examine more readily
than others. Under Belgian law, an acquirer can normally trust that an alienator in possession
of the thing also has authority to dispose of it. Under certain circumstances, however, the
acquirer has a duty to examine this, e.g. a professional buyer of second hand cars must
examine documents which can prove the ownership of the seller. The impossibility to inquire
after the facts is no defence if there were good grounds for reasonable doubt (Dutch BW
3:11). Other systems are sometimes less strict for the buyer. The BGB 932 and Greek CC
1037 define absence of good faith as knowledge or grossly negligent ignorance. Under the
Austrian ABGB 367, good faith is also absent if based on slight negligence. English law has
a tendency to restrict bad faith to evident cases, e.g. if the acquirer sees a "sold" notice on the
goods.
* Exceptions
126b. Good faith is not required in those cases where registration of the older right is
constitutive or at least required in order to assert it against third parties in general; this is
often the case for security rights; in most jurisdictions, they cannot be asserted against an
acquirer of the goods if publicity is not met (classical examples: dispossession or registration
for pledges or charges). Even if the acquirer had actual knowledge of the older security
agreement, he overrides it. It is on the other hand not excluded that his behaviour may
constitute a tort (inducement of breach of contract e.g.).
167 Comp. art. 3:11 Dutch NBW, ABGB 326 and 328, etc.
168 Thus, registration of a reservation of title does not always exclude bona fide acquisition, eg in Swiss law.
112
Under Swiss law, more generally the knowledge of the overriden older right by the acquirer
does not prevent him form acquiring in case the overriden older right was intended to
deceive third parties (Art. 717 ZGB).
* Less far-reaching in abstract systems
126c. Because in abstract systems acquisition is normally not dependent upon the validity of
an underlying contract, the knowledge or ignorance of its invalidity becomes irrelevant for
the good faith of a subsequent acquirer. He only has to ask for himself whether the alienator
was owner, not whether he has acquired on the basis of a valid title.
The abstraction principle has been introduced in all EC countries as to the transfer of
securities held in securities clearing systems (the abovementioned Directive 98/26/). As the
buyer acquires from the 'central counterparty`, who has acquired abstractly from the seller,
there is virtually no case where the acquirer would not be in good faith.
* Object
126d. There may be some discussion as to the object of good faith.
E.g. in German law, good faith must relate to the right of the alienator (his property right); it
is not sufficient that the acquirer believed that the alienator was not the owner, but has the
authority to dispose of the goods (e.g. as an undisclosed agent)169. This is also the dominant
opinion in Austrian law (disputed). Both systems make an exception when the seller is a
businessman (German and Austrian HGB 366). This doctrine is related to the fact that, in
these systems, an undisclosed agent has to become owner himself in order to have authority
to dispose (double transfer, see supra). Most other systems are rather unclear on this point.
In English and Swiss law, good faith normally relates to the authority of the alienator.
Under Dutch law, as long as the first seller can exercise his recht van reclame, the third
party is only protected against it if he did not have to expect that the right would be
exercised."
In case of reservation of title, the buyer is normally in good faith, even if he knows (or
should know) of the reservation of title, as long as he could and did believe that
1 A was entitled to sell if the money would go to the owner, and
2 that this would effectively be the case (Dutch, Austrian, German ... law).
The rule does only apply in case of goods handed over to the first buyer for the purpose of a
resale and not to goods which are part of the permanent capital of the second seller (Austria).
The belief that A was entitled to sell is, according to German case law, not accepted when
the (sub-purchaser) includes stipulates a prohibition of assignment, because an entitlement to
169 On the other hand, where the problem does not concern the authority granted to the agent by its principal,
but the absence of authority of the principal (authority as agent granted by a non-owner), good faith relates to
the title of the principal.
113
sell is normally always coupled with an anticipatory assignment of the claim against the
(sub-)purchaser.
* Moment of time
126f. There is discussion whether it is sufficient to be in good faith when acquiring the thing,
or whether good faith must still be present when coming into factual possession of it. The
last solution is clearly found in BGB 933 and is the dominant opinion in French-BelgianItalian law170, too, and also in Dutch law (concerning Art. 3:90, 2 NBW).
3 Titulus?
127. Clear differences can be found as to the titulus requirement. We have to deal with two
questions: the validity of the titulus and the onerous or gratuitous character.
Under French-Belgian and German law, the validity of the titulus is basically irrelevant. In
German law, this normally follows from the abstraction principle (see supra).
128. French and Belgian law are, however, not abstract but causal. Still, in this respect, they
come close to abstract systems. Some differentiation is, however, necessary. It is correct that
under Belgian law, the real owner cannot revindicate the goods directly from the acquirer,
where the acquirer has acquired on the basis of an invalid contract. But the real owner will
normally also be a creditor of the alienator, who on his turn could claim the goods back if the
contract between him and the acquirer is invalid. The real owner can, on the basis of art.
1166 C.C., indirectly exercise the claim of his debtor against the acquirer (debitor
debitoris) if the debtor doesnt do so himself (so-called indirect action). However, he will
meet the defences which the acquirer (debitor debitoris) has against the alienator (e.g. a right
of suspending the restitution of the goods until the price paid is restituted, too). The acquirer
thus often enjoys protection at least for the negative interest.
In other causal systems, a valid titulus is necessary171, and an acquirer without valid titulus is
not protected against revindication (except in case of abstract transfer of securities). It is,
however, not excluded that the acquirer in good faith can claim compensation from the real
owner on the basis of tort.
129. The onerous or gratuitous character of the transaction (titulus) is also irrelevant in
French-Belgian law - except that the possibility - for the old owner - to use the actio
Pauliana is larger (fraud on the side of the alienator is sufficient, fraud on the side of the
acquirer is not necessary).
For Germany, see BGB 929 a contrario (no titulus required; the bona fide acquirer
becomes owner even if he acquired gratuitously, but in the last case, he has an obligation to
170 For Italy, see Cass.(It.) 24 June 1995 no. 7202 and Cass. (It.) 12 June 1976, no. 2178.
171 Italian CC art. 1153 (titolo idoneo); Dutch NBW 3:86 juncto 3:84, Swiss ZGB 714 II and 933, etc.
114
transfer the things back on the basis of unjust enrichment - BGB 816, I, 2 -).
In many other legal systems, only acquirers for value are protected (e.g. Dutch BW 3:86,
Austrian ABGB 367; English Sale of Goods Act S. 25 - the protection is basically one of
buyers only; see also infra on Spain).
129b. In some jurisdictions finally, the protection of an acquirer is seriously limited by a
redemption right of the dispossessed owner (right to claim back the goods against
compensation of the price paid by the acquirer), e.g. in Finland.
Such a redemption right of the older owner is on the other hand generally found in case of
security rights (they are be purged by paying the outstanding debt); but this is even the case
when the security was given with full authority.
130. NB. In certain cases, the acquirer becomes owner anyway due to accession, confusion,
etc. but reservation made for a possible obligation of restitution or compensation. E.g.
money or most other generic goods.
b) Stricter rules.
1 Lost or stolen goods, or more generally "involuntary dispossession"
131. In most jurisdictions, the above mentioned rules on the protection of a bona fide
acquirer are excluded in all or some cases of involuntary dispossession. The precise rules
vary a lot. Further, to understand their role, one also has to take into account the possibility
of acquisitive prescription and/or prescription of the revindication (dealt with supra). We
indicate them, staring from the most restrictive systems
131a. First, there are some legal systems offering no protection at all (at least not before
prescription) for the acquirer of lost or stolen goods, except for buyers at an auction. This is
the rule in e.g. German (BGB 935) and Polish (CC art. 169 2) law :
a) The acquirer is only protected when he acquired at a public auction; in other cases, there
is no protection, not even for the negative interest (no market overt rule).
b) In German law, lost or stolen is understood rather widely, e.g. picking fruits after having
obtained permission from someone presenting himself wrongly as the owner of the
orchard. The rule on lost and stolen goods is further traditionally applied also in case of
abuse of confidence of a Besitzdiener (possession servant) and dispossession (even
voluntary) by a person without legal capacity (minors etc.).
In England and Scotland too, the market overt rule (protection of buyers in normal business)
in the SGA has been abolished in 1994 (repeal of S. 22(1) SGA). On the other hand, the
acquirer (for value) is protected where the older property right was not a legal, but only an
equitable interest.
115
131b. Secondly, a number of legal systems offer a limited protection to buyers in normal
business, including auctions and markets (market overt rule).
In French-Belgian and Swiss law (Art. 2279-2280 CC and Swiss ZGB 934) the protection of
the acquirer in good faith of lost or stolen goods is:
a) limited to the negative interest in case the goods were acquired in normal business or
market overt. This means that, if the acquirer has acquired the goods in good faith in regular
trade or on a market or auction, the revindicating owner must restitute the price paid by the
acquirer.
b) absent in other cases.
As said supra, the revindication prescribes after 3 years (5 years in Swiss law) from the
moment the goods were lost or stolen.
In Spanish & Portuguese law, the protection of the acquirer in good faith (before
prescription) is equally limited to the negative interest in case the goods were acquired in
auction or normal business (incl. markets) - i.e. the real owner can only recover the thing
from the buyer if he reimburses him of its price) and absent in other cases. See art. 466
Spanish CC and art. 1301 Portuguese CC. Further, this restrictive rule applies much more
extensively: not only to lost or stolen goods, but also in case of abuse of confidence of goods
entrusted to somebody (deposited etc.) (see supra).
131c. Thirdly, a number of legal systems offer a full protection to buyers in normal business
(market overt rule).
In Austria, in cases of involuntary dispossession, the protection of the acquirer is good faith :
- is positive if the buyer purchased it in good faith in a public auction or if the seller is a
businessman in whose business such objects are sold (acquirer becomes owner), and
- excluded in other cases (apart from prescription after 3 years of possession, see supra).
131 d. Fourthly, a number of legal systems offer a full protection to buyers of stolen goods in
normal business and to buyers of lost goods.
In Dutch law, the abovementioned protection does fully apply to lost goods. It does not
apply to stolen goods, except if acquired in normally established business (thus excluding
protection for goods bought on an auction or a market) (3:86, al 2 NBW). The acquirer is
under a duty to inform the older owner how he obtained the goods.
In Finland, the additional requirement applies only when the real owner has been deprived of
a movable object owing to petty theft, theft, robbery or extortion. In other cases the normal
protection applies.
131e. Finally, Italian law applies the abovementioned protection of bona fide acquirers to all
cases, except where the acquirer knew about the illegal origin of the goods (Art. 1154 Italian
CC).
116
117
Only abstract systems, like the German, have a different rule. Still, on the basis of specific
provisions, the acquirer is not protected if he acquired by donation (more exactly: in case the
acquisition by the donator is annulled, the acquirer is owner, but has to give the thing back
ex BGB 822).
b) Good faith.
137. Secondly, the acquirer must in principle be in good faith. To be considered in good
faith, it is normally not necessary to make further enquiries when consultation of the land
registers doesnt reveal any problem (explicit rule in German law). As to immovables, it is
clearly established in Belgian case law (differing in this respect from movable things) that
good faith must only be present at the moment the goods were acquired inter partes (i.e.
normally the date of the sales contract). Mala fides superveniens non nocet: later knowledge
cannot harm the acquirer anymore. The same applies in most jurisdictions, but as indicates
supra, acquisition of immovables will often require a formal act and/or registration173.
However, to see the practical importance of this requirement, one has to keep in mind that in
many systems, registration is considered a constitutive requirement for transfer of
immovables (see supra) and good faith is thus not required if the older pretender has not
registered his titulus (deed).
Under Italian law, the result is similar, although publicity is not constitutive between the
parties. Italian law has a "race" system : when the second acquirer registers first, he wins,
even if he had notice of the prior sale (and transfer).
Under Belgian and French law, such a rule does only apply to certain property rights like
mortgages, certain types of acquisition of property like substitutions, and some other cases,
like property reverting to the older alienator due to termination of the earlier titulus. In all
other cases, good faith is required, even if the party with the older right has not published
(registered) it. Belgian and French law thus have a "notice" system: the subsequent purchaser
can only be protected if he is without notice of the prior transfer. More correctly, Belgium
has a "race-notice" statute : the subsequent purchase will only be protected against prior
unregistered instruments if he registers before the prior instrument is registered (see infra).
The good faith requirement is absent in fully positive systems of registration, such as the
Torrens Act (infra), because registration as such confers ownership. However, acquisition in
bad faith will normally give rise to an obligation to compensate the former owner.
c) Publicity / registration.
138. Publicity, i.e. registration, is the third requirement for protection of the acquirer of
immovables. However, there is a large variety as to the precise role of publicity and its
effects. We can roughly distinguish three types of systems:
1 Registration of title - Torrens system.
173 For the moment at which good faith must be present, see i.a. BGB 892 II (request for registration).
118
139. The most far-reaching system is found in the Australian Torrens System, which has
been copied in various continents (including by colonisers in their colonies, even where they
didnt succeed in reforming their domestic law; e.g. the Belgians in Rwanda, the French in
some other African countries; further examples include a number of American states and
Canadian provinces, Malaysia, Jamaica, etc.). Not the transaction is registered, but the right
of property itself, at least in the most radical version of the Torrens system. The person who
is registered as the owner is automatically the owner; where the titulus of his acquisition was
invalid or the alienator had no authority to dispose of the land, the acquirer will only have an
obligation to transfer it back. In some jurisdictions with a Torrens system, acquisition by
prescription based on adverse possession remains possible.
Evidently, such a system requires a tight control of registration: registration of a new owner
is only possible on the basis of a document emanating from the party who was registered as
the (former) owner. Further, registration is constitutive of the property right: for those parts
of the land falling under the register, no property rights are possible without registration (in
many countries, large parts of the land are not registered; property rights on such land will
not have the same character and are usually merely equitable rights or limited property
rights).
2 Public faith system.
140. An intermediate position can be found in those countries where the fact of obtaining a
registration as owner is in itself not sufficient, but the land register has public faith
(ffentlicher Glauben)174. This means that a party acquiring in good faith from an alienator
who was registered as entitled in the land register (and not restricted by a prenotation
(Vormerkung) nor contradicted by an opposition (Widerspruch) or "caveat", is always
protected.
Such a system can be found in Germany (BGB 892), and to a large extent in Austria,
Switzerland (art. 973 Swiss ZGB), Greece and the Netherlands (NBW art. 3:24 to 3/26 j
3:17, with a number of exceptions: the bona fide acquirer is in principle protected against
any fact which could have been registered, but was not) (as to art. 3:88 NBW, another
protective rule, it is discussed infra in comparison with French and Belgian law). The same
principles apply to registered land in England and Scotland175 (in both countries, not all land
is registered in the Land Register; unregistered land is governed by the old merely negative
system of registration of deed, as infra; such a situation is also found in a number of
countries outside Europe).
Registration in such a system is not registration of the title, i.e. the property right itself, but
registration of the deed (contract, titulus) or other fact giving rise to the property right. At
174 The public faith may have a wider function than protecting acquirers in good faith. see e.g.w BGB 893
119
least for transfer of property s.s., such registration is constitutive. In some jurisdictions, a
prenotation (Vormerkung, provisional registration - see e.g. BGB 883) is possible, giving
rise to some of the effects of registration already (esp. constructive notice of third parties).
Comparable techniques are used in some negative systems (see infra).
Depending on the extent to which a system of public faith is applied, there will be a duty of
the keeper of the registers to control the authority of the alienator. Thus, under German and
Swiss law176, registration is impossible without the permission of the person who is actually
registered as owner.
NB. In such systems, there are some possibilities to register forms of opposition if one
doesnt agree with the indications in the register (e.g. Widerspruch (opposition) in the
German register - BGB 894 ff. and 899, etc.). Such possibilities also exist in merely
negative systems as the Belgian one (e.g. marginal inscription (kantmelding) of a
summons to obtain termination or avoidance of an earlier transaction).
To make the comparison more complete, one should also take into the possibility of
prenotation (Vormerkung) in some jurisdictions, esp. German law (and projected in Dutch
law). When completed in this way, the picture changes. The difference between the merely
negative French system and the German public faith system becomes clearer; indeed, the
Vormerkung procures nearly the same protection in the latter as registration in the former;
but the latter is characterised by an additional stage in which the lack of authority to dispose
of the alienator is purged. This comparison of effects is more relevant than a comparison of
the mere rule on transfer of property in itself, which may hide big differences as to the real
meaning of transfer of property.
3 Merely negative systems of registration of deeds.
141. The Belgian-French-Italian system is a merely negative system of registration of
deeds177. There is no general protection of an acquirer in good faith; protection is only given
in specific types of situations. There is no registration on a sectional (territorial) basis,
registration is "personal" (you must search on the basis of the name of a person).
Registration of the deed is not constitutive of transfer, but plays a certain role in order to
protect the acquirer in certain cases. Apart from some specific exceptions (at least in France,
where publicity does not seem to be required in case of short prescription (10 or 20 years,
as opposed to the long prescription of 30 years)), registration of ones own deed will always
be a necessary requirement for protection, but not a sufficient one. Such registration consists
of the transcription of a notarial deed of transfer (or mere inscription in certain cases like
mortgages) in the land register (called mortgage register). According to the letter of the
176 Swiss ZGB art. 656 II.
177 There are other jurisdictions with a negative system which is quite different. E.g. in South African law
(Deeds registries Acts of 1913 and 1937), registers are kept on a sectional base (and not on the basis of the
name of the person) and the registrar has a duty to check a number of factors; but the registers do not have
the same public faith as in Dutch or German law.
120
Belgian statute (art. 1 Mortgages Act), this publicity is only seen as a means of organising
the bad faith of subsequent acquirers. Nevertheless, case law has constructed this publicity
also as a necessary requirement for an acquirer in order to be protected against older
property claims (Cass. 11-2-1915), and even against third parties who acquired competing
property rights subsequently, but before the publicity is fulfilled (case of a double sale of the
same land).
142. In most causal systems, it is, in case of conflict with older property rights (or property
rights in the meantime acquired), not only necessary that the titulus of the acquirer itself (the
deed) is transcribed (except in case of 30 year prescription), but also all the preceding deeds
(tituli) up to the person from whom the other party derives his right (thus up to the moment
where the conflict originates). It is, however, unnecessary to go back more than the period
necessary for prescription. This search is superfluous in abstract systems and other systems
where the registers have public faith (the acquirer doesnt have to look at the predecessor
of the alienator) - see e.g. BGB 892.
In the French-Belgian system, publicity is only imposed in case of transfer (or constitution)
inter vivos, between living people, and not in case of transfer mortis causa, by last will etc.
143. Examples (all in the hypothesis of parties in good faith):
- A sells to B, who sells to C or gives a right of mortgage to C. Meanwhile A sells again to
D. Even if the sale B-C (or the constitution of mortgage B-C) is already transcribed, D will
get priority if he transcribes his titulus before the transcription of the sale or mortgage
between A and B.
- A sells to B, who gives a right of mortgage to bank C. Before the sale was transcribed, D a creditor of B - seizes the land. If the mortgage was not registered before the seizure, C will
not get priority over B, and the product of a forced sale of the land will be distributed
proportionally between B and C.
- A sells to B, who gives a right of mortgage to bank C. Before the sale was transcribed, D a creditor of A - seizes the land. Even if the mortgage was already registered before the
seizure, D will obtain priority over C and be paid first.
144. As said, registration is not a sufficient condition for protection of a bona fide acquirer.
Under Belgian law, such an acquirer is only protected in a limited number of cases, namely:
- when the other party has not fulfilled the publicity requirements relating his own
acquisition (where they are prescribed by law) (art. 1 Statute on Privileges and Hypothecs);
the typical case is the double sale.
- when the other party has not fulfilled the publicity requirements to preserve his right to
terminate or revoke the contract by which the goods where transferred to the alienator (A
sells to B; B sells to C; afterwards, the sale A-B is terminated by A, e.g. because of breach of
contract of B. A has, however, not taken care of entering his rights in the act of sale as it has
been transcribed in the land register) (art. 28 Statute on Privileges and Hypothecs). This rule
does not apply when the right of the older owner is not a right to terminate but to avoid the
earlier contract (nullity).
121
rule in most other jurisdictions, such as in Nordic countries (Finland, Sweden, Norway,
Denmark), in Greek, Dutch (art. 3:94 NBW: written act and notice), Scots, and English and
Irish (written act and notice) law and is also found in the Draft PECL (art. 12:401 : notice178;
from art. 12:303 it follows that notice must be in writing).
In the French-Italian-Belgian-Portuguese system and in the PECL, publicity is again only
necessary for protection against older rights (see supra); in Dutch and Scots law, it is
constitutive for transfer itself (but a silent pledge is possible without notice to the debitor
cessus). In English law, a non-communicated assignment gives only rise to an equitable
right, not to legal ownership.
In German law, there is no publicity required for an assignment (Abtretung). But there is also
no protection of the second acquirer in case of double assignment, etc. A similar approach is
found in Austrian and Spanish law (although some formality to certify the date is required at
least in certain cases).
b) Titulus.
148. Except where the system is abstract, the titulus must be valid, but it is not necessary for
the protection of the acquirer that the right was acquired for value (comp. the rules on
immovables).
In German law, the titulus plays no role anyway (see movable things and immovables); as to
the assignment of creditors rights, there is in addition the idea that there is only one
agreement (instead of an obligatory and a real agreement), the Abtretrungsvertrag.
c) Good faith.
149. The acquirer must have acquired in good faith. The dominant doctrine in Belgium
considers that good faith must still be present at the moment at which the debtor is informed;
this is contested by some authors. Under the PECL (art. 12:401), it is sufficient that the
assignee is in good faith at the time of assignment (inter partes).
d) Cases of protection.
150. Belgian law as well as the PECL only deal with competing transfers (double
assignment, or competing assignment and pledge, etc.). It could be said that more generally,
the acquirer of a claim will be protected when the older pretender has not fulfilled himself
the legal publicity. It is not clear whether an acquirer who fulfils the three above mentioned
requirements is protected against older property rights in other cases; in some of them
protection will be given on the basis of the doctrine of the apparent creditor (art. 1240
178 Article 12:401 PECL - Priorities (1)Where there are successive assignments of the same claim, the assignee
whose assignment is first notified to the debtor has priority over any earlier assignee of whose assignment he
neither knew nor ought to have known at the time of the assignment to him.
123
C.C.), which, however, as such only governs the internal relationship between creditor and
debtor.
4. Protection of the acquirer of intellectual property rights.
151. The rules concerning intellectual property rights are, again, often similar, to those for
immovables, exception made for copyrights. All other intellectual rights are subjected to
publicity in the form of a register (patent register, Benelux trademark register, Benelux
models and design register, European trademark register, European Patent Office, etc.).
In some countries, bona fide acquisition is excluded in this field (e.g. Sweden).
124
179 Including a judgement from another EU country, see Art. 39 E.Ex. (European Judgements Convention).
180 The rules have been simplified in the framework of the EU - cfr. the Brussels/San Sebastian Convention
(now an EC regulation) and the Lugano Judgements Convention - or on the basis of other treaties. But there
is no European executory title, only national ones.
125
Monetary debts are enforced by recourse on the assets of the debtor (forced sale) - see B.
Non-monetary condemnations can be enforced in different ways. Common to them is the
possibility of an astreinte, i.e. a penalty imposed by the judge in case of non-compliance
with his decision. When the astreinte is forfeited, it is the other party (and not the state, as in
Germany or the U.K.) who is entitled to the money.
Different possibilities:
- condemnation based on a property right: normally capable of direct enforcement (seizure of
the goods, expulsion of an ex-tenant, etc.), where necessary with (police) force;
- condemnation to do something: indirect enforcement by entrusting the act to a third party
and recovering the costs from the debtor;
- obligation not to do: re-establishment of the former situation, where necessary with (police)
force;
- obligation to give: the judgement itself can take the place of the necessary deed. In case of
sale of land e.g., the judge can provide that the judgement itself can be transcribed in the
land register.
B. Enforcement s.s. by seizure and forced sale or in the framework of insolvency
proceedings.
1. Bankruptcy and similar collective insolvency proceedings or liquidation.
155. This applies in case of organised collective insolvency proceedings, such as bankruptcy
or collective debt liquidation (collectieve schuldenregeling, rglement collective de dettes in those countries where bankruptcy only applies to merchants, such as France and
Belgium).
The assets will be realised (sold) by an insolvency administrator (appointed by court) and the
product will be distributed to the creditors according to the legal order of privileges, and,
when all privileged debts are paid, proportionately. More precisely, one could indicate the
following order:
a) separatists, i.e. creditors with a real right (pledge or mortgage), who can pursue the
forced sale themselves, even in case of bankruptcy. Most creditors with a specific
privilege belong also to this category. Even if such is not the case, they get priority over
the concurring creditors (c and d), but not over b. There is a tendency in modern
legislation to restrict this separatism, and to subject all creditors, including pledgees and
sellers with reservation of title, to the insolvency administration. This can be seen e.g. in
the new Belgian bankruptcy Act 1997, and the new German Insolvency Act (distinction
between Aussonderung and Absonderung)
E.g. expenses made for the conservation of goods of the debtor (art. 20, 4 Belgian Statute
on Privileges and Hypothecs).
126
comparative perspective, in Liber amicorum Kurt Siehr, TMC Asser Press 2000, 311 ff.
127
128
and similar collective measures, they are also protected sometimes against silent property
rights of third parties, i.e. property rights not made public in due form.
The extent to which this idea is present in legal systems varies enormously.
1. Immovables
160. As to immovables, creditors can seize them as long as they are registered in the name of
their debtor. Older property rights cannot be opposed to them if they are not registered (land
register) before the seizure or bankruptcy. Normally, this question can only arise when
registration is not constitutive (see, however, the role of prenotation (Vormerkung)). It is
quite striking that the content of the registers is crucial in nearly all legal systems for the
conflict with the creditors of one of the parties, although the meaning of registration for the
relationship between the parties and for bona fide acquisition varies a lot. It must be
specified also that under German law, the buyer is protected against the creditors of the seller
from the prenotation (Vormerkung) on, although hes not yet the owner of the land (BGB
883 II). Inversely, under Belgian law e.g. the seller is protected against the creditors of the
buyer as long as the transfer is not entered into the registers, even if the seller is no longer
the owner (after registration, hes still protected if a charge or mortgage is registered). The
answer to the question who is the owner has thus only a limited value in this respect.
2. Creditors rights
160bis. As to creditors rights apparently belonging to the debtor, most jurisdictions apply a
comparable system (Scotland, Nordic countries, Portugal, Greece, France, Italy), with a
number of exceptions (infra). This is evident where notification is constitutive (e.g. Scots
law), but applies also in most countries where it is not constitutive, but nevertheless
determines the priority in case of conflicting property rights (see supra).
This does evidently not apply in those jurisdictions where, as a matter of principle, publicity
plays no role in the field of creditors rights, such as German, Austrian and Spanish law
(Austrian and Spanish law, however, basically require some other formality, data certa
(fixed date) in Spanish law, entry in the books of the assignor under Austrian law).
It does not apply either under Dutch law, as far as the requirements for a silent pledge are
met, under the French loi-Dailly, the Italian and the Belgian Factoring Acts, and in English
law (in the last one, the assignee merely acquires an equitable interest, but with priority over
the creditors of the assignor) and South African law, and under the PECL183.
183 Draft PECL 12:401 (3) In the event of the assignor's bankruptcy, the assignee's interest in the assigned claims
has priority over the interest of the assignor's insolvency administrator and creditors, subject to:
(a)
conformity with any publicity requirements prescribed by the law of the bankruptcy, or by any law
determined as applicable by the law of the bankruptcy, as a condition of such priority; and
(b)
any special rules of bankruptcy law relating to the subordination of claims or the avoidance of
transactions.
129
Under Belgian law, the majority doctrine rejects a similar protection of the general creditors
on the basis of art. 1690 CC (as modified 1994). Some authors, however, take a different
stand, claiming that such creditors are equally protected against assignments, pledges etc.
which have not been communicated to the debtor of their debtor.
For nomintaive shares in companies, some jurisdictions have stricter rules than for claims in
general, and require registration in the share register.
3. Movables
160ter. As to movables, the doctrine of apparent or reputed ownership (based on factual
possession), is much less widely applied. However, it survives in different jurisdictions in
different degrees.
d) security interests
The most radical system is the German one : creditors do not enjoy any protection on this
basis. Except in case of fraud (sanctioned by the Actio pauliana etc.), they are bound by any
transfer effected by their debtor, whether the transaction is a true sale or a security agreement
(in theory, they are protected against silent pledge by the requirement of dispossession for
pledge, but this is circumvented by the recognition of fiduciary transfers). The only other EU
jurisdiction going nearly as far is the Dutch one, with this notable difference that fiduciary
transfers are in principle forbidden since 1992 (New CC) and replaced by silent pledges.
In German and Dutch law, it is basically absent, and creditors are only protected with the
specific remedies of fraus creditorum.
160quater. Most other countries do not recognise in general security interests granted
without dispossession, but most of them do :
- recognise security interest for purchase money (i.e. in favour of the seller) mostly without
any publicity - this is esp. the case for reservation of title clauses, now generally recognised
in the EU (in Belgium since the 1997 Bankruptcy Act)184;
c) recognise specific types of security interests or security interests in specific types of
goods, but basically only where other publicity requirements - such as registration - are
fulfilled. These security interests can be fixed charges185 or floating charges186.
184 In some countries, registration is required in an number of cases, e.g. Spain.
185 E.g. in Sweden (mortgage on ships and boats); Scotland (ship or aircraft mortgage (hypothec));
Belgium (pledge over business undertaking fonds de commerce; agricultural privilege); France (pledge over
business undertaking fonds de commerce; pledge over cinema films; guarantee over agricultural goods;
guarantee over hotel equipment material); Italy (different specific forms); chattel mortgage in Denmark; some
specific forms of pledge in Austria; Greece (pledge on enterprise; on the content of a storehouse; on
agricultural inventory; on tobacco; on movie films machinery and rights arising out of the films exploitation;
on cars and machinery Portugal (cars); England (fixed charges, to be registered in order to be effective against
creditors); Germany (specific registered pledges on airplanes, ships, agricultural inventory (Pachtkredit) and
cables lying in the high sea (Kabelpfand)).
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Further, even when recognised, the security character of the interest always entails some
restrictions compared to (full) ownership. The interest is accessory to the secured debt. This
often means that the creditors can claim the asset (in order to realise it) by paying the
secured debt. Bankruptcy laws tend to give them this right even when they pay only the main
debt (e.g. art. 107 Belgian bankruptcy Act on reservation of title unless notice of
termination of the sale was given before bankruptcy).
b) True sales
160quinquies. On the other hand, the doctrine of apparent or reputed ownership has lost a lot
of ground when applied to other transactions than security transactions, i.e. true sales.
Whereas in most countries the acquirer of a security interest is not protected against the other
creditors of the debtor, unless publicity requirements are fulfilled (see supra, exceptions are
esp. Germany and the Netherlands), a buyer usually is. Some systems, however, do not put
the buyer in a better position.
Most systems start from the principle that the creditors have no recourse against goods
bought by third parties once title has passed, even if the seller has not factually delivered
them (Finland, Denmark, Netherlands (3:90 does not protect the concurrent creditors),
Portugal, Italy (except for goods which have to be registered), South Africa etc.). In English
law, the doctrine of apparent or reputed ownership, found in the old Bankruptcy Act of 1914
(and before since 1623) is virtually absent from the new Insolvency Act 1986187. Before, it
did apply in case of bankruptcy of individual merchants (not companies), unless the creditors
had to know (on the basis of a usage e.g.) that the goods were not the property of the
bankrupt party in factual possession.
A more complex answer must be given in some other countries, where the creditors enjoy
some protection against silent alienations by their debtor even if fraud is not established.
Thus, in Austrian law, the buyer is only protected when he has paid the price already (this
follows from 21 (1) of the Bankruptcy Code). Belgian case law arrives at the same result,
by presuming that the goods are not paid yet as long as theyre in possession of the seller,
unless fraud is totally excluded. Comp. also Art. 621 Italian code of civil procedure188.
The doctrine of reputed ownership is widely applied in Sweden, thus granting the creditors
of the seller a stronger protection. The buyer who is not in possession of the goods is
186 Registered floating charges are found i.a. in Sweden, Finland, England, Scotland, Norway (chattel
mortgages on certain types of universitas rerum belonging to a business or farm); Belgium (in the form of a
pledge on the stocks and receivables of the commercial fund.; or agricultural privilege);
187 See W. ZWALVE, Uit de geschiedenis van het handelsrecht III ; reputed ownership, in Societas
Juridica Grotius, Beheering : Goederenrechtelijke beschouwingen, p. 171 ff.
188 The person who opposes seizure of the goods that are located in the house of the debtor or in his place of
business cannot give witness evidence [nor invoke presumptions] (and thus only proof his property by a
written document with a data certa) that he is owner of them unless the existence of his right is likely, having
considered his profession or trade, or the profession or trade carried on by the debtor.
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basically protected only when he has registered his purchase at the local court and 30 days
have elapsed after an announcement in local papers (Act from 1845 on Purchase of
movables; there are a number of exceptions, such as e.g. banks or other financial institutions
who sold negotiable instruments or stocks but continue to hold them for the buyer). Sweden
is thus one of the rare countries where the distinction between true sales and security
assignments is rarely relevant.
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