Fr. 135.00

The Draft Common Frame of Reference as a "Toolbox" for Domestic Courts - A Solution to the Pure Economic Loss Problem from a Comparative Perspective

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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This book investigates whether national courts could and should import innovative solutions from abroad in the adjudication of complex legal disputes. Special attention is paid to the concept of "legally relevant damage" and its importance in overcoming the deadlock created by the category of "pure economic loss" in the Portuguese and German tort law systems. These systems are essentially based on the concept of unlawfulness ("Rechtswidrigkeit"), which limits the compensation for pure economic loss to where a protective rule is infringed. These losses have nevertheless been compensated for through the extensive interpretation of rules and the appeal to near-contractual devices, which has been detrimental to legal certainty, the equality before the law, and subjects' freedom of action. This book explains why courts can and should take a proactive role and apply DCFR-based solutions in order to compensate for every loss that is worthy of legal protection.

List of contents

Part I - The Portuguese Civil Code Through the Prism of the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR): Portuguese Codified Law and its Broad-minded Attitude Towards Comparative Law and Jurisprudence from a Historical Perspective.- Judges as Key Players in the Development of European Private Law.- A Role for the DCFR in Domestic Adjudication.- Part II - A Plea for the Informal Acceptance of the Concept of "Legally Relevant Damage" as a Way to Break the Stalemate Created by the Category "Pure Economic Losses": General Remarks on the Non-contractual Liability Regime Arising out of Damage Caused to Another in the Portuguese Civil Code.- Drawbacks of Unlawfulness and Compensation of Pure Economic Loss.- General Remarks on the Non-contractual Liability Regime Arising out of Damage Caused to Another in the Draft Common Frame of Reference (PEL. Liab. Dam.).- Reception of the DCFR's Concept of "Legally Relevant Damage" and its Potential for the Protection of Pure Economic Interests.- Part III - Critical Remarks: Cutting the Gordian Knot with the DCFR: The Deadlock of Pure Economic Loss and the Quest for a Solution.- Could Portuguese Courts Use the DCFR over National Sources of Law?.- Should the Portuguese Courts Use the DCFR Concept of "Legally Relevant Damage"?.

Summary

This book investigates whether national courts could and should import innovative solutions from abroad in the adjudication of complex legal disputes. Special attention is paid to the concept of “legally relevant damage” and its importance in overcoming the deadlock created by the category of “pure economic loss” in the Portuguese and German tort law systems. These systems are essentially based on the concept of unlawfulness (“Rechtswidrigkeit”), which limits the compensation for pure economic loss to where a protective rule is infringed. These losses have nevertheless been compensated for through the extensive interpretation of rules and the appeal to near-contractual devices, which has been detrimental to legal certainty, the equality before the law, and subjects’ freedom of action. This book explains why courts can and should take a proactive role and apply DCFR-based solutions in order to compensate for every loss that is worthy of legal protection.

Product details

Authors Marta Santos Silva
Publisher Springer, Berlin
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9783319850160
ISBN 978-3-31-985016-0
No. of pages 275
Dimensions 154 mm x 13 mm x 236 mm
Weight 474 g
Illustrations XXXI, 275 p.
Subjects Social sciences, law, business > Law > International law, foreign law

B, Law, Rechtsvergleichung, Rechtsmethodik, Rechtstheorie und Rechtsphilosophie, International Law, Private International Law, Law and Criminology, European law, Conflict of Laws, comparative law, Law—Philosophy, Methods, theory & philosophy of law, Theories of Law, Philosophy of Law, Legal History, Law—Europe, European private law

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