2018
Specific features of legal acts taken (not only by juristic persons) in procedural law.
DVOŘÁK, BohumilZákladní údaje
Originální název
Specific features of legal acts taken (not only by juristic persons) in procedural law.
Název anglicky
Specific features of legal acts taken (not only by juristic persons) in procedural law.
Autoři
Vydání
Praha, Varšava, Bratislava, Budapešť, Artificial legal entities : essays on legal agency and liability, od s. 93-113, 20 s. 2018
Nakladatel
Wolters Kluwer
Další údaje
Typ výsledku
Kapitola resp. kapitoly v odborné knize
Utajení
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
Forma vydání
tištěná verze "print"
Odkazy
ISBN
978-80-7598-082-3
Klíčová slova česky
právní jednání, právnické osoby, právní odpovědnost
Klíčová slova anglicky
juristic person, artificial legal entity, legal agency, liability, legal act, legal conduct, representatives of a juristic person, fault-based liability, no-fault liability
Příznaky
Mezinárodní význam, Recenzováno
Změněno: 29. 5. 2024 17:20, JUDr. Bohumil Dvořák, Ph.D., LL.M.
V originále
The monograph entitled "Artificial Legal Entities: Essays on Legal Agency and Liability" aims to answer the question of how juristic persons can perform legal acts (i.e. engage in legal conduct) and in what way they can potentially become legally liable (not only for their conduct). This is reflected in the structure of the monograph. Attention is first turned to the concept of a juristic person and the legal acts it makes from the viewpoint of the general legal doctrine, which then informs the view under constitutional law. Only then are legal acts analysed in terms of the law currently applicable in the Czech Republic, which conceives the bodies of a juristic person as its representatives. However, legal conduct comprises not only substantive, but also procedural acts within civil court proceedings, where the latter show significant deviations from the former and thus require separate considerations. The last group of issues pertain to liability (or responsibility) of a juristic person. Once a general explanation has been provided in terms of the juristic persons' capacity to bear liability, an answer can be sought to the question of what can be imputed to such persons on the grounds of "no-fault" and "fault-based" liability. Following the traditional concept of private-law liability of juristic persons, the monograph also introduces an alternative approach to legal liability (responsibility) of juristic persons based on the notion of "vicarious liability". The section dealing with liability then concludes with a chapter on juristic persons' liability for administrative offences. This structure and scheme of individual chapters is also reflected in their contents.
Anglicky
The monograph entitled "Artificial Legal Entities: Essays on Legal Agency and Liability" aims to answer the question of how juristic persons can perform legal acts (i.e. engage in legal conduct) and in what way they can potentially become legally liable (not only for their conduct). This is reflected in the structure of the monograph. Attention is first turned to the concept of a juristic person and the legal acts it makes from the viewpoint of the general legal doctrine, which then informs the view under constitutional law. Only then are legal acts analysed in terms of the law currently applicable in the Czech Republic, which conceives the bodies of a juristic person as its representatives. However, legal conduct comprises not only substantive, but also procedural acts within civil court proceedings, where the latter show significant deviations from the former and thus require separate considerations. The last group of issues pertain to liability (or responsibility) of a juristic person. Once a general explanation has been provided in terms of the juristic persons' capacity to bear liability, an answer can be sought to the question of what can be imputed to such persons on the grounds of "no-fault" and "fault-based" liability. Following the traditional concept of private-law liability of juristic persons, the monograph also introduces an alternative approach to legal liability (responsibility) of juristic persons based on the notion of "vicarious liability". The section dealing with liability then concludes with a chapter on juristic persons' liability for administrative offences. This structure and scheme of individual chapters is also reflected in their contents.