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Article contents
The Assignability of Existing and Future Claims
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 May 2009
Abstract
- Type
- Netherlands Judicial Decisions Involving Questions of Private International Law
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © T.M.C. Asser Press 1995
References
1. Arts. 94(1) and 97(1), Book 3 NCC (in the translation of Haanappel, and Mackaay, , New Netherlands Civil Code (1990)):Google Scholar
Article 94(1): ‘In cases other than those provided for in the proceeding article, rights to be exercised against one or more specifically determined persons are delivered by means of a deed intended for that purpose and notice thereof given by the alienator or acquirer to those persons’.
Article 97(1): ‘With the exception of registered property and property which cannot be the subject matter of a contract, future property may be delivered in advance’.
2. See, among others, van Rooy, R. and Polak, M.V., Private International Law in the Netherlands (1987) pp. 148–150;Google ScholarStrikwerda, L., Inleiding tot het Nederlandse Internationaal Privaatrecht (1992) pp. 204–208;Google Scholar J.H. Dalhuisen, ‘The Assignment of Claims in Dutch Private International Law’, in Boele-Woelki, K. et al. , eds., Comparability and Evaluation, Essays on Comparative Law, Private International Law and International Commercial Arbitration in Honour of Dimitra Kokkini-Iatridou (1994) pp. 183–199.Google Scholar
3. See de Boer, Th.M., ‘Intenationaal Privaatrecht; Overgang van vorderingen (1979–1986), Overzicht der Nederlandse rechtspraak’ , WPNR 5833 (1987) pp. 346–350.Google Scholar