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4 - Allocating property rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Alison Clarke
Affiliation:
University College London
Paul Kohler
Affiliation:
New College, Oxford
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Summary

Introduction

In Chapter 3 we dealt with the question of whether it is justifiable to have exclusionary property rights at all. If we accept that the answer is yes, it then becomes necessary to consider who should have such rights, which amounts to Lawrence Becker's question of specific justification outlined in section 3.2 above: ‘What sorts of people should own what sorts of things and under what sorts of conditions?’ This is the subject of this chapter.

Just as when considering the general justification for property rights, it is helpful to start with original acquisition. Most legal systems adopt the first occupancy or first taker rule, i.e. that the law will protect the first taker of a thing. In the case of tangible things, this usually means taking physical control of the thing (technically, possession). Intangible things can also be allocated by a first taking rule, however. For example, an inventor of a process gets exclusive rights to exploit it for a limited period by being the first person to patent it. The patent system is essentially a notice filing system, and such systems can also be used to allocate property to the first taker of tangible assets, where the taking of physical control is not feasible, or disproportionately expensive or exclusionary. Mining rights in the developing American West, for example, were sometimes allocated to the first person to file a claim rather than to the first person to enclose the land containing the mine.

Type
Chapter
Information
Property Law
Commentary and Materials
, pp. 107 - 152
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2005

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