MICHOUD (Léon) – THE THEORY OF LEGAL PERSONALITY and its application to French law, Part One: Notion of legal personality, classification and creation of legal persons; Part Two: The Life of legal persons, their dissolution
MICHOUD (Léon) – THE THEORY OF LEGAL PERSONALITY and its application to French law, Part One: Notion of legal personality, classification and creation of legal persons; Part Two: The Life of legal persons, their dissolution
MICHOUD (Léon) – THE THEORY OF LEGAL PERSONALITY and its application to French law, Part One: Notion of legal personality, classification and creation of legal persons; Part Two: The Life of legal persons, their dissolution
MICHOUD (Léon) – THE THEORY OF LEGAL PERSONALITY and its application to French law, Part One: Notion of legal personality, classification and creation of legal persons; Part Two: The Life of legal persons, their dissolution
    MICHOUD (Léon)
    THE THEORY OF LEGAL PERSONALITY and its application to French law, Part One: The concept of legal personality, classification and creation of legal persons; Part Two: The life of legal persons, their dissolution and its consequences
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    1906 / 1909
    2 vols. in-8, full garnet coated cloth, gilt titles & volumes on smooth spines, uncut, covers preserved, stamped and handwritten bookplate, INVOICE FROM THE AUTHOR TO PROFESSOR LOUIS DUGUIT, (some annotations in ink and pencil), very good condition, [this book comes from the personal library of Léon DUGUIT], IV-484 / 548 p.
    The renown of this text is well established. However, we should note the remarks of Jean-Louis Halpérin: “Taking up Gierke’s criticisms of the fiction theory, he defends the reality of legal persons and the usefulness of this legal concept, particularly against Duguit’s thesis, which he describes as ‘purely anarchic.’ Michoud nevertheless refuses to align himself with organicism or Hauriou’s institutional conceptions: under the influence of Jellinek, he places himself in the camp of those who support the reality of legal persons in ‘the legal world,’ distinct from the physical world. Similarly, he borrows from Jhering the idea of ​​protected interest to establish subjective rights without entirely eliminating the will. He limits the State’s right to define protected interests through a profession of natural law principles that separates the idea of ​​law from the action of the State.” (Historical Dictionary of French Jurists, p. 565).

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Mots-clés : History of ideas