02813oam 2200469I 450 991015502810332120230808200730.01-138-25471-11-315-25482-410.4324/9781315254821 (CKB)3710000000965799(MiAaPQ)EBC4758838(OCoLC)973040060(EXLCZ)99371000000096579920180706e20162001 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierFundamental legal conceptions as applied in judicial reasoning /by Wesley Newcomb Hohfeld ; edited by David Campbell and Philip Thomas ; with an introduction by Nigel E. SimmondsAbingdon, Oxon :Routledge,2016.1 online resource (144 pages)Classical jurisprudence seriesFirst published 2001 by Ashgate Publishing.1-85521-668-X 1-351-93521-6 section 1: Legal conceptions contrasted with non-legal conceptions. Operative facts contrasted with evidential facts. Fundamental jural relations contrasted with one another -- section 2: (a) A right in rem is not a right 'against a thing'. (b) A multital right or claim (right in rem), is not always one relating to a thing, i.e. a tangible object. (c) A single multilateral right, or claim (right in rem), correlates with a duty resting on one person alone, not with many duties (or one duty) resting upon all the members of a very large and indefinite class of persons. (d) A multital right, or claim (right in rem), should not be confused with any co-exisitng privileges of other jural relations that the holder of the multital right or rights may have in respect to the same subject-matter. (e) A multital primary right, or claim (right in rem), should, regarding its character as such, be carefully derentiated from the paucital secondary right, or claim (right in personam), arising from a violation of the former. (f) A multital primary right, or claim (right in rem), should not, regarding its character as such, be confused with, or thought dependent on, the character of the proceedings by which it and the secondary right arising from its violation may be vindicated.Classical jurisprudence series.LawMethodologyLawMethodology.340.01Hohfeld Wesley Newcomb1879-1918.,232806Campbell David1958-291673Thomas Philip A(Philip Aneurin)929901MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910155028103321Fundamental legal conceptions as applied in judicial reasoning2091101UNINA