Identifying the Parties to an Art Transaction (Report)
Art Antiquity&Law 2011, July, 16, 2
-
- 2,99 €
-
- 2,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
INTRODUCTION Mainline Private Hire Ltd v. Nolan (1) is one of a clutch of recent cases where the principal issue was the identity of the parties to a chattel-related transaction. The transaction at issue was an alleged bailment and the defence of the alleged possessor was that he was not in possession at the material time. We saw that a similar defence succeeded in Hardy v. Washington Green. (2) In Mainline v. Nolan the defence failed.
Plus de livres similaires
The Case of the Vanishing Lovers: Bailment and the Burden of Proof.
2011
Intellectual Property: Legal Assistance Needed For Everyone
2021
Intellectual Property Rights: A Strong Basis Of Understanding Situations Requiring Legal Assistance
2021
Intellectual Protection: Background Knowledge Of Legal Assistance For Your Intellectual Works
2021
Theatrical Custom Versus Rights: The Performers' Dispute with the Proprietors of Covent Garden in 1800.
2009
First Amendment Under Fire
2017
Plus de livres par Art Antiquity&Law
Claim by Museums of Public Trusteeship and Their Response to Restitution Claims: A Self-Serving Attempt to Keep Holocaust-Looted Art.
2011
Thinking the Unthinkable: Constructive Pessimism and the Orchestration of Claims.
2011
Fast Food and Slow Payers: Sadcas V. Professional Finance (Company Overview)
2011
Tackling 'Heritage Crime': The Heritage Crime Strategic Tasking and Co-Ordination Group and the Alliance to Reduce Crime Against Heritage (ARCH).
2011
Legal Aspects of the Mystification and Demystification of Cultural Property.
2011
How Differing Notions of Ownership Have an Impact on Loans (Viewpoint Essay)
2011