Italian civil code
The Italian Civil Code (Italian: Codice civile) is the civil code of Italy, a collection of norms regulating private law.[1] It was enacted by Royal decree no. 262 of 16 March 1942. It predates the current Constitution of Italy, and it was amended in the postwar period.[1] The 1942 civil code replaced an earlier civil code which was in force since 1865, and was based on an Italian translation of the Code Napoleon.[1]
Contents
- Preliminary provisions: 16 provisions applying to all books of the civil code.
- Book 1 - family law, marriage, adoption.
- Book 2 - inheritance law, testament.
- Book 3 - property: movable items, real estate, property rights and limits.
- Book 4 - bonds, purchase and sale contracts, mortgages.
- Book 5 - commerce law and labor law.
- Book 6 - liability, transcription, credit law, rules of evidence.
gollark: Military-industrial complex, I think.
gollark: No, it's funnier not to.
gollark: My friend has one indirectly because of the "usage in terrorism" section.
gollark: I don't know spiders at all, unfortunately.
gollark: "yes, I will deliberately pay a moderate amount in expectation to constrain the actions of my friends" - definitely nice people.
References
- Perlingieri, Pietro (2017). Manuale di diritto civile (8 ed.). Napoli: Edizioni scientifiche italiane. ISBN 884953261X.
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