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Property in Goods and the CISG (2024), S. 240 
I. Different approaches regarding … 
Till Maier-Lohmann 

I. Different approaches regarding claims based on property under national law

534

National laws equip owners of goods to a diverging degree with specific claims based on property. Many continental European legal systems follow the approach of Roman law and provide the owner with a claim to vindicate the goods from the unlawful possessor.1108 This kind of claim is aimed at (re) gaining possession of the goods. Swiss law may serve as an example. Article 641(2) of the Swiss Civil Code reads:

“[Der Eigentümer] hat das Recht, sie von jedem, der sie ihm vorenthält, herauszuverlangen und jede ungerechtfertigte Einwirkung abzuwehren.1109

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In contrast, English law and the law of common law jurisdictions following a similar approach, favor protecting the owner with remedies in tort law rather than allowing for specific property claims.1110 These remedies, however, are generally not aimed at reallocating possession, but rather seek to compensate the owner financially through damages.1111 Pollock wrote in his famous essay on possession in the common law that “the Common law nev 240 er had [...] any adequate process at all in the case of goods, for the vindication of property pure and simple.1112

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In Nordic laws, there are no specific remedies in statutory property law to protect property, mirroring the general (adverse) stance toward a uniform concept of property.1113 It goes without saying that an owner of goods is not without protection in these legal systems. Under Norwegian law, for example, the idea that the owner of a good can claim possession is so self-evident that it is not even spelt out in the written law.1114

1108 See the overview of this type of claim under German, Greek, Austrian, Swiss, Dutch, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, French, and Belgian law, von Bar/Clive, pp. 5175–5187 paras. 1–11.
1109He or she [the owner] has the right to reclaim it [the object] from anyone withholding it from him or her and to protect it against any unwarranted interference.” This is the non-binding English translation of the Swiss Civil Code provided by the State administration in Switzerland, which is available on the Swiss government’s website.
1110 Birks, 11 King’s College Law Journal (2000), 1, 6–12. For English, Welsh, and Irish law, von Bar/Clive, p. 5188 para. 13.
1111 Tettenborn, Conversion, Tort and Restitution, p. 825; von Bar/Clive, p. 5188 para. 13.
1112 Pollock/Wright, p. 5.
1113 von Bar/Clive, pp. 5188–5189 paras. 14–16. For the general approach to property matters in these laws, see above paras. 51 et seq.
1114 von Bar/Clive, p. 5188 para. 14.
 
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