PELLEGRIN (André) – ON THE LEGAL NATURE OF THE DIVISION OF AN ANCESTOR'S ESTATE, Preface by Pierre Hébraud, Bibl. de droit privé, t. XXXI
PELLEGRIN (André) – ON THE LEGAL NATURE OF THE DIVISION OF AN ANCESTOR'S ESTATE, Preface by Pierre Hébraud, Bibl. de droit privé, t. XXXI
PELLEGRIN (André) – ON THE LEGAL NATURE OF THE DIVISION OF AN ANCESTOR'S ESTATE, Preface by Pierre Hébraud, Bibl. de droit privé, t. XXXI
    PELLEGRIN (André)
    ON THE LEGAL NATURE OF THE DIVISION OF AN ANCESTOR'S ESTATE, Preface by Pierre Hébraud, Private Law Library, vol. XXXI
Édition :
    Paris
Date :
    1961
    in-8, half green calf (slightly sunned) with corners, author and title gilt on spine with 5 raised bands, top edges gilt, covers preserved, very good condition except for a few rare scuffs, joints slightly marked and edges rubbed, [this thesis comes from the personal library of Henry Solus with an AUTHOR'S INSCRIPTION TO HENRY SOLUS], VIII-346 p.
    Mr. L. Engelhard-Grosjean's note, published in the 1963 issue of the RIDC, summarizes the thesis as follows: "In this meticulously researched and well-researched book, the author has set out to study the precise nature of the division of an ancestor's estate, taking into account the modifications introduced by the 1938 law, the interpretations of case law, and the evolution of legal and social norms. One by one, the highly complex aspects of the legal nature of this institution emerge, an institution that is integrated into inheritance law but also shifts towards the law of gifts. In its current state, the division of an ancestor's estate is not without its drawbacks. Reforms are once again desirable. However, a significant shift in meaning and scope is evident in the concepts of succession, patrimony, and inheritance. Would it not be more realistic to revise the general law rather than the specific issue of the division of an ancestor's estate?" But this is merely the author's wish, who concludes by noting that, in practice, notaries know how to advise families on clauses that remedy the shortcomings of the laws, which only our unstable era corrupts. We deduce from the "cut" pages that these are the passages that attracted J. Carbonnier's attention: endpaper to page 9; 17 to 40; 81 to 88; 121 to 144; 217 to 232; 321 to the end.

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