scholarly journals GOOD FAITH IN CIVIL LAW SYSTEMS: A LEGAL-ECONOMIC ANALYSIS

Author(s):  
Ejan Mackaay
Jurnal Akta ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 441
Author(s):  
Indah Esti Cahyani ◽  
Aryani Witasari

Nominee agreement is an agreement made between someone who by law can not be the subject of rights to certain lands (property rights), in this case that foreigners (WNA) and Indonesian Citizen (citizen), with the intention that the foreigners can master land de facto property rights, but legal-formal (de jure) land property rights are assigned to his Indonesian citizen. The purpose of this paper isto assess the position of the nominee agreement in Indonesia's legal system and the legal consequences arising in terms of the draft Civil Code and the Law on Agrarian. Agreement is an agreement unnamed nominee made based on the principle of freedom of contract and good faith of the parties. However, it should be noted that the law prohibits foreigners make agreements / related statement stock wealth / property (land) for and on behalf of others, sehingga the legal consequences of the agreement is the nominee of the agreement is not legally enforceable because the agreement was made on a false causa.Keywords: Nominee Agreement; Property Rights; Foreigners.


10.12737/4461 ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (6) ◽  
pp. 133-140
Author(s):  
Aleksey Ulyanov
Keyword(s):  

Pravovedenie ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 64 (3) ◽  
pp. 312-325
Author(s):  
Jan Halberda ◽  

Given that continental civil law scholarship applies the concept of good faith in either a subjective (honesty in fact) or objective sense (good faith and fair dealing), the present article focuses on the latter one. The traditional view in England and Wales discards the recognition of a general principle of good faith and fair dealing in English law. English courts have adopted a piecemeal solutions approach (as shown by the judicial decisions issued in Interfoto Picture Library (1987) and Walford v. Miles (1992)). Meanwhile, the principle in question, along with the concept of the freedom of contract, is one of the most important principles of the continental civil law tradition (cf. art. 1104 of the French Civil Code, § 157, § 242 of the German Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch, art. 2 (1) of the Swiss Zivilgesetzbuch, art. 6:2 Burgerlijk Wetboek, art. 5 of the Polish Civil Code, art. 2 (1) Common European Sales Law, art. 1:201 Principles of European Contract Law, art. III1:103 Draft Common Frame of Reference). The current work analyzes recent English case law (in particular Yam Seng (2013)), which seems to acknowledge the principle of good faith and fair dealing while rejecting the traditional view mentioned above. The comparative approach — references to American, and Commonwealth law, as well as to that of particular European states — is taken into account. The author claims that hostility to the concept of good faith in an objective sense in English law is superficial. One may expect that in the near future courts in England and Wales will follow the path taken by courts in the United States (§ 205 of the Restatement (Second) of Contracts (1981)), Australia (Renard Constructions (1992)) and Canada (Bhasin v. Hrynew (2014)), and they will finally recognize good faith as an underlying principle.


Author(s):  
Kaspars Balodis ◽  

According to the Civil Law of Latvia, Article 1587, a contract imposes on a party a duty to perform the promise, and neither the exceptional difficulty of the transaction, nor difficulties in performance arising later, shall give the right to one party to withdraw from the contract, even if the other party is compensated for losses. The Civil Law does not recognise a fundamental change in circumstances as a ground for adjustment or cancellation of a contract, although the doctrine is well known in the country. In many cases, Covid-19 restrictions have been damaging to parties’ ability to perform their contractual obligations. Under certain conditions, the principle of good faith (Article 1 of the Civil Law) could be applied to adjust contracts to the changed circumstances.


Author(s):  
Федор Федорович Жуков

В статье показываются изменения Федерального закона от 05.04.2013 № 44-ФЗ «О контрактной системе в сфере закупок товаров, работ, услуг для обеспечения государственных и муниципальных нужд», вступающие в силу 01.07.2021. Доказывается, что наименование реестра недобросовестных поставщиков и его фактическое содержание не совпадают. Оспаривается критерий включения исполнителей в публичный реестр на основании их недобросовестности. Приводятся предложения по совершенствованию действующего законодательства. The article shows the changes in the Federal Law of 05.04.2013 No. 44-FZ «On the contract system in the field of procurement of goods, works, services to meet state and municipal needs», which enter into force on 01.07.2021. It is proved that the name of the register of bad-faith suppliers and its actual content do not coincide. The criterion for including contractors in the public register on the basis of their bad faith is contested. The suggestions for improving the current legislation are provided.


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