Nominate contract

In civil law jurisdictions, a nominate contract is a standardized contractual relationship that has a special designation attached to it (e.g., purchase and sale, lease, loan, insurance), as opposed to innominate contracts (which are not standardized and therefore have no set name).[1] The obligor and obligee have rights and obligations specially prescribed by law. Nominate contracts are usually statutorily required to include certain express terms (essentialia)—depending on their kind—and are construed to include terms implied in law.

Examples in law

In Quebec, Book V of the Civil Code deals with Obligations, Title II deals with nominate contracts. It is further subdivided into various chapters, dealing with several types of nominate contracts (sale, gift, lease, insurance).[2]

gollark: I end my sentences with periods. Because I use collect grammar.
gollark: He *is* explicitly saying he's not going to tell me, which is... problematic.
gollark: Great, so you're basically mildly evil.
gollark: I mean, I figure that with significant work people probably could uniquely identify me and/or get my location. If someone does that, they should NOTIFY ME OF IT and PROVIDE STEPS TO STOP THAT, not just sort of boast about it.
gollark: He is edgy™ and apparently does not listen to others' moral standards™.

References

  1. "NOMINATE CONTRACT, civil law". law dictionary, a free online law dictionary search engine for definitions of law terminology & legal terms. law-dictionary.org. Retrieved 14 January 2012.
  2. "Annotated Civil Code of Quebec -English". Lexum. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
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