As
criminal law, civil law concepts will take a great deal of importance for the Commerce Arc and when the Economy is reestablished. The existence of residents makes necessary the modeling of personal status, the presence of trade companies makes necessary the definition of contracts and corporations, and boats might require the definition of the responsability of a ship-owner in regard to the cargo and the passengers.
Civil law is traditionally divided in three parts: personal law, property law and obligation law. In my criminal law post, I mostly used ideas from common law, because I thought it would fit better the DF universe; here, I will take some concepts from continental law because I think they might be easier to simulate.
I hope this post will not be too long nor too difficult to understand; maybe re-reading this post after a first reading might be easier. Likewise, I hope I didn't make too much vocabulary errors.
LEGAL PERSONHOOD AND LEGAL CAPACITYLegal persons will be the persons able to have rights and duties in civil law, such as owning property, having debts and an identity. In short, they are able to
be in civil law.
Legal capacity shall refers to the ability to alter these rights and duties by using some, or all, of the legal instruments, such as suing in court, disposing of property and agreeing for contracts. In short, it is the capacity of being actor (as opposed to subject) in the civil law, being able to
act.
Each legal person has an
estate, which is the sum of his claims and obligations.
These legal persons shall be further divided in two categories:
natural persons and
moral persons.
Natural personsThey are, using the terms in the game, living sentient creatures (tokens CAN_LEARN and CAN_SPEAK).
Their legal personhood starts at birth (although inheritance might start before for unborn children in some legal systems) and ends at death (some civilizations might enact civil death and outlawry for some criminals and "abominations" such as vampires and werecreatures, while resurrection as a sentient being might allow these previously dead to regain their former legal personhood, thereby excluding undeads).
Legal differenciation and legal castesThe pre-1400 times featured what I could call
heteronomy, or the contrary of isonomy, meaning some classes of persons could have different rights from each other because of their different legal statuses, and live under different laws (the term of "
estate" might lend to confusion with property law, so legal status will do the trick).
Putting this part in the "Going further" part, as I did in my post about criminal law, was something I first envisaged, but since such distinctions already existed in the game (visitors aren't considered as fortress members but can petition for admittance, nobles have specific priviledges and there are POWs), I thought my ideas would be easier to implement than if I spoke about proposals about which no stubs are present in the game.
Such
legal castes, defined in the raws, could have the following dividing factors among others: free or not? Belonging to the site or not? Belonging to the entity or not? Citizen or not? From a specified civilization or not? In short, they would be defined by status, race, culture and wealth among others.
Exemples of castes already present in a fortress: commoners, nobles, residents and POWs. Moreover, it seems entity citizenship is separate from site citizenship, as can show
loyalty cascades involving separatists loyal to the fort and not the civilization, loyalists who are the reverse, citizens loyal to both and renegades enemy of both.
In game, they could have different
personal statuses, with separated juridical capacities in each civilization (for exemple, in civilization A, slaves could have recognized property rights over chattel while in civilization B, slaves could own nothing, all their goods being their masters'). Rights might be defined in the raws, so that we might have flexibility. We could also have branching, so that, for exemple, property rights on land are separated of property rights on chattel.
- Legal privileges shall mean, in this part, additional rights for a caste and differences from the baseline. For exemple, owning land in a civilization would be open only to the citizens while nobles would have the right to entail their lands.
- In the opposite side, legal disabilities would be things a natural person would be unable to do compared to the baseline (for exemple, a slave could be unable to own real property).
The baseline shall be defined to be a citizen of the entity (other baselines might be chosen in a legal system, so as to have civilizations where only citizens would have full capacity; really oppressive ones would have the baseline to be the nobles).
Each legal caste could have differences relating to the extant of their juridical capacity and eventual privileges and disabilities; personnal law shall vary also, for exemple priests could be reqired to transmit all or part of their property to their temple after their death while nobles could be able to give all their property to one heir, as opposed to commoners, who would have to divide theirs equally between their children.
The different ways to move between these legal castes should be defined in the raws, and a legal system could chose, by procedural generation (see infra) which classes and which ways to move. Maybe Legal Stratification, Inclusivity and Social Mobility should be variables for an entity.
Rights such as "Owning real estate" should be listed under caste with the settings YES (this caste will always have this right in every law system), MAYBE (this caste may or may not have this right) and NO (this caste will never have this right).
It would be desirable to ensure each class is defined as being included in a larger class, so that the selection and the generation of the relevant laws are facilitated and the "birth" and "death" of a class during WorldGen will be made easier by ensuring it would just involve starting from an existing class by branching (nobles splittling from freemen and, further, royalty splitting from nobility as a subcategory or, conversely, craftsmen and merchants fusing in one same class). Moreover, they might inherit from the settings from the larger caste: for exemple, if CAN_OWN_REAL_PROPERTY for bondspersons is set to NO then it will be equally, by default, set at NO for slaves, serfs and other castes inheriting from bondspersons excepted if, for exemple, it is set to MAYBE for indentured servants.
For exemple, a society might just have freemen, and then they will have to deal with the captured enemies who attacked them by giving them the status of POW. Given this society admits slavery, most of these POWs who weren't sent back would be enslaved. In the meantime, a nobility might develop among the freemen.
The attribution of a given legal caste to a natural person shall be viewed below.
Rough exemple of a class, here, slave:
[SOCIAL_CLASS:SLAVE]
[DESCRIPTION:A slave is a sentient being considered as a property]
[NAME:slave:slaves:slave]
[IS_SLAVE:YES] Enable modifiers linked to the ethics for slavery to apply
Moral personsMoral persons shall be associations with legal personnality and juridical capacity. Their juridical capacity shall start at creation and end at dissolution.
CategoriesThe different kinds of such persons shall include organizations such as temple management associations, workers unions, warrior lodges, hunting clubs, artist bands, monastic orders and trade guilds.
Administrative and governmental bodies might be described in a future post about public law.
RegulationsLaw shall define the membership and the leadership, and could limit which property and which actions they can do, for exemple forbidding traders' associations from owning rural real property, or making the owning of temples a monopoly of temple associations.
Criminal organisations such as robbers' bands, pirates and illegal cults might have special rules (
i.e. banned apart if the ethics allow it - I don't see goblins having issues with robbers and pirates, since theft, assault and murder are "personal matters" to them, and cults which would be criminal in one site might be the ruling organisation in another). Front organizations might be possible, and are indeed present in DevDiaries, with shadow orgs infiltrating governments: we could have a charity masking a local demon cult or an political opposition movement.
Governments, both national and local, along with administrations, shall have special regulations, part of public law.
Creation of a moral personTheir creation, or
incorporation, shall be the decision of at least three natural persons with juridical capacity.
The act, or
Charter, would have to be registered to the local authorities and would set the basic rules of the corporation. Some societies would ask for further conditions, such as approval from a leader, whether local or from the entire civilization, some, or all, of the founders having a skill or being of a specific category, or the payment of a sum. Conditions on the founders might also be imposed, such as being priests to create a temple association.
Some societies could admit the creation of corporation by oral testimony, or witnesses to the creation by the founders of a corporation. It could cause the birth of corporations "from immemorial time." In this case, the Charter might be uncodified or even unwritten, consisting from separate documents and customs (a set of practices developed during the ages). In other cases such as family clans (see below about personal law), no Charter shall be needed.
Structure and governance of a corporationA corporation shall have a
Governing Body, initially staffed by the founders, among who the first
Directors will be named; one of them will be selected to become the
Head Director. Of course, these names could be redefined in the rows for each corporation.
The governing body as a whole shall exerce the corporation's legal capacity in its name, and pass the
bylaws needed by the organisation.
Below this governing body shall be
Officers, individuals tasked with administring the corporation under the Governing Body. For exemple, the directors of a trade company, members of the Governing Body, could nominate adjunct merchants to administrate their markets and their posts; another exemple would be a treasurer or a bookkeeper. Their definition in the rows could follow how noble positions are written.
Some corporations, such as guilds, monastic orders or mercenary bands, could have
members. They could have various rights and duties: for exemple, the trader or the worker member of a guild might be asked to cover for the costs and, conversely, could receive part of the profits. The number of such members could be limited or not, and if the former, such memberships could be sold (trade houses). Conditions, such as culture, skills and residence, could be set by the Charter or by bylaws. Several categories of memberships could eventually be defined, to separate, for exemple, apprentices and masters in guilds. Corporations might be able to discipline their members and officers, whether by fines, suspension or expulsion.
Nomination to the Governing Body could be by cooptation by surviving Directors, hereditary transmission, sortition among all or some Members and election by Members among others.
All these previous points shall be set up in the Charter, which could be modified either by the unanimity of the Governing Body or by a vote from the members, among other methods spelled in the Charter or by law.
Bylaws will be expanding on the Charter and being voted at the majority of the Governing Body: for exemple, while the position of Treasurer might be established by the Charter, the wages might be set by a bylaw; another exemple might be the fares for the patients of an hospital or the admission of pupils into a school. Still another exemple would be the conditions of admittance to a library: if the Charter has dispositions concerning them then the bylaws cannot go against them (a disposition banning racial discrimination ban the Governong Body from banning any elve or setting a Dwarf-only policy), else the Governing Body has complete liberty, excepted if the laws disposes (for exemple, a law banning race discrimination would prevent any bylaw from enacting discrimination, and some Charters, depending fom the origin, might be concerned by such bans).
Below is an rough exemple of corporation (a guild of miners and owned by them; a separate corporation could be defined for mining companies whose members are shareholders and which would hire miners); of course, a real raw entry would have been more complex:
[CORPORATION:MINING_GUILD]
[NAME:mining guild:mining guilds]
[DESCRIPTION:a guild of miners bearing the benefits or the risks of a mining venture in proportion of their investment]
[ACTIVITY:MINING] It means the governing body will take decisions to further this goal of mining i.e. buying picks, renting mining rights and selling the minerals. Also, the name will be generated to points to mining as its activity i.e. "Boatmurdered Mining Guild"
[GOVERNING_BODY:miners' council]
[NOMINATED_HOW:ELECTION:MEMBERS] This body shall be elected by the members
[DIRECTORS:deputy head miner:deputy head miners]
[SKILL:MINING:m] The minimum skill at mining to even apply as director. This minimum might be set by the Charter or a bylaw
[HEAD_DIRECTORS:head miner:head miners]
[MEMBER:fellow miner:fellow miners]
[SKILL:MINING:m] The minimum skill at mining to even apply as member. This minimum might be set by the Charter or a bylaw
[PERSONAL_APPORT:YES] The miner must invest money or tools in the venture. Specific details provided by the Charter or a bylaw
Dissolution of a corporationA corporation could be dissolved when its members or, when it isn't any, governing board elect, in the former, to the 2/3 of the total votes, and in the latter, in the unanimity. Other methods to dissolve a corporation shall also exist, such as completion of the goal, mootness (there's no use to have a mining corporation for a place where there's no more ores) and bankruptcy.
If the corporation totally ceases to function for a determined time (seven years for exemple) then the local authority could notice this, issue an ultimate warning enabling any interested persons able to take this organisation and, if it isn't headed, dissolve the corporation.
When a corporation is dissolved, the local leader shall liquidate the estate and distribute the proceeds to either the members or, when it isn't, it shall go to the state. Specific regulations shall exist for some goods such as temples.
This will prevent the existence of "ghost" corporations, such as a temple authority whose temple was destroyed by goblins 50 years ago and whose priests are all dead.
Subsidiary corporationA corporation might create a
subsidiary corporation, whose governing body shall be his father's, represented by an Officer, or be otherwise submitted. For exemple, a temple might create an hospital or have a monastic order.
It might be more used in public law.
PERSONAL LAWPersonal law defines the law related to natural persons and their relations.
It mainly deals with filiation and marriage; here, filiation whall refers to how someone is related to another person and how families are delimited.
Filiation and namingFiliation shall either be matrilineal or patrilineal, depending of the gender conventions of the civilization. Dispositions on adoption shall vary from totally prohibited to fully allowed and include restrictions on factors such as the age or the race of the adoptee.
As for the naming, legislations would have, as a minimum, given names; others might provide for patronyms and/or matronyms, family names or clan names, to be determined following the filliation.
Maybe legitimity should be provided for, to describe children born out of wetlock.
Some legal systems might provide for family emblems and blasons.
Marriage and familyMarriage shall be monogamic or polygamic, and in the latter it shall be polygynic, polyandric or group marriage.
Divorce shall be regulated, if allowed, and its consequences shall be defined; some laws might allow for
unilateral repudiation. Maybe temporary marriages could be defined in some laws. The set of natural persons, or
spouses, united by a same marriage shall be named
couple.
Some laws might allow for
concubinage, or a consort of lower status. This consort would have less rights than a full spouse (no heritage, for exemple, apart from a sum fixed in the contract), and the offspring might be deemed illegitimate.
A family unit, or
household, shall be constitued of a
couple and its
minor children. One member of the couple might be the
head of household and might be determinated by gender, age or any other factor.
Depending from the laws, the property in a couple might be possessed in common or each spouse might retain his own goods. If this isn't too complex, we could see a mix of both systems, such as each spouse keeping his own property but any property gained during the marriage, or
marital property, might be owned by the couple; details might be regulated by a
contract of marriage, which could additionally set up other things such as the place of residence or the religion followed, depending of whether laws allow it. The minor children's property will be managed by the couple (see below for "Relation with legal capacity").
Some legal systems might provide for
clans, or a set of households descending from a founding household. Such clans might have communal property and a
clan leader.
Both
clan leaders and
heads of household might have public law powers and duties, whether on taxation or even criminal law. I could imagine some clan leaders being judges for small claims between clan members.
Entering and leaving a legal casteAs seen above, natural persons might be divided in several castes holding different laws, rights and duties.
A legal person can be only in one caste at once in any legal system; private international law might be discussed in an entry on public law but we could say that a noble dwarf caught and enslaved by goblin invaders doesn't lose his status in his home civilization and, if he escapes, he will still be a noble back home. States might make agreements about returning their bondspersons or, if culturally related, mutually recognize each other's nobility.
Entering and leaving a caste might involve filiation, and the notion of legitimacy might come at play: for exemple, being born from nobles might confer nobility to the
legitimate offspring. Moreover, volunteer acts might be involved, such as pledging loyalty to the local leader to be able to gain the citizenship. Laws enacted by the authority might play too in this regard.
Relation with legal competencyIn some cases, a natural person might be unable to exercise the totality legal capacity by lacking
legal competency, for exemple, in minority (the age could vary around the year of the end of the childhood), insanity or absence; in some legal systems, werecreatures might be deemed incapables during their period of lunacy.
A
legal guardian will have to be named to help incapables to use their legal capacity, and sometimes, this guardian will already be determinated by operation of law: for exemple, minor children might have their parents, or the head of household, as their guardian.
In some cases, it might be a partial incapacity: for exemple some legislations which would allow a slave to own property might have his master manage any legal action involving it; in others, foreigners might be required to have a patron.
SuccessionsWhen a physical person dies, his estate shall be divided among the heirs.
Laws shall stipulate the amount of freedom in how can someone dishes out his properties, whether outside the family (in some places, no piece of family property shall be passed to non-relatives) and how much inside the family (which relatives can be alowed to get property). Egality between heirs shall also be regulated (in some places, heirship shares shall vary according to gender or birth rank, going from a slight bonus to the attribution of the whole succession to an heir (primogeniture, ultimogeniture)).
Persons shall be able to create
wills to say how they would like to have their estate divided, while keeping with the law, by listing their gifts to various persons, for exemple "I gift to my son {{?}} the sum of 500¤ and my horse {{?}}". In some places, the law might require the property of a person to be passed to his children but the will will specify how the division shall be done, awarding such good to such heir.
Conditional gifts might be provided for in some legislations, for exemple a will might require an heir to take care of someone to get a good, along with
alternates, in cases where the conditions aren't there for the gift, such as "I gift to my son {{?}} the sum of 500¤ and my horse {{?}} if {{?}}, else {{?}}".
There should be rules for
intestate successions, along with
escheat to the authorities for heirless and intestate successions.
If the deceased resurrects, even as a sentient being, or otherwise recover his legal personhood previously lost by death then his heirs will not be forced to return his property.
Mandate and delegationRelated to legal capacity, a person, whether natural or legal, named
grantor shall be able to delegate the exercise of some of his rights to someone named
agent by a
contract of mandate. For exemple, a trade company could delegate to one of its officers the right to buy ivory in one place. Such mandate could be revoked at will by either the grantee or the agent.
This could be related to guardianship, seen above.
PROPERTY LAWProperty is divided in
real property and
chattel. The manners of conveying it will also be studied there, along with the seveal limitations one could put on a property. Some chattel might be
res nullius, such as the fish in a river; likewise, some land might be
terra nullius, such as deserted land outside any public control (some legislations could make State property any land not owned by anyone); whoever take them shall become their owner.
Property rights shall include
usus (the right of
use the good),
fructus (the right to
enjoy the fruits from it) and
abusus (the right to sell it or otherwise
to dispose of it); subrights might be linked to each of these categories, such as selling, destroying and leasing. We might have
usufruct (the union of
usus and
fructus) and
naked property (
abusus).
CategoriesProperties are divided in two kinds:
- Real property shall be land and buildings; an owner should own the surface, the depths below and one cube of the sky above his land, or his building. We could see several subunits such as mining rights, grazing rights and logging rights, enabling owners to rent these subunits to others. In addition, property attached to real property shall be real property, such as a millstone bound to a farm, along with some rights on real property, such as mortgage.
- Chattel shall be moveable goods such as items, pets and slaves, and the rights about such items. In addition, some goods produced by real property, such as harvests, shall be chattel. Rights such as some debts, along with torts, might be treated, in some jurisdictions, as property.
Laws and procedures about real property shall be stricter and more complex than the ones about chattel. Should artifacts be real property or a priviledgied class of chattel? This determination will be done after testing the better way to simulate it.
The valuation of a property might be the sum of the values of each ot its rights: for exemple the value of a piece of real estate will be the sum of the values of the rights to mine, log and farm, along with other rights. How will these rights be defined? For exemple, mining rights might be defined by the value of the ores gathered during ten years of mining. Other might be more difficult, such as the housing rights in a house. Appraiser might become a more valuated skill in some societies.
ConveyanceProperty shall be conveyed by selling, gifting, accession and inheritance.
- Convention and agreement will be studied below in the Contracts part.
- Gifting shall be when a party gift a property, whether real or chattel, to another party.
- Accession shall be when the product of a property shall become the property of the owner. For exemple, the ovner of a tree is the owner of the fruits of this tree. Special rules might apply when the property is a living being (animals, slaves).
- Succession shall deal with the conveyance of property after the death of a physical person or the dissolution of a moral one.
Trusts and suretiesSome law systems would provide for some forms of property the owner shouldn't be able to alienate: it would be, for exemple, fee tails (real property whose owner would plan the carrying for the following generations), benefices (property whose fruits would be the wages of the holder of a position),
dowry (transfer of parental property, gifts or money at the marriage of a child),
dower (property from a spouse to another to protect him in cases of widowhood), tribal lands (land granted to a tribe by a government).
All will be modelised as
trusts and shall be defined in the raws with tags indicating the
trustor, who create the trust from his own estate, the
trustee who manages it and the
beneficiary who receives the benefits, along with some of their characteristics (
i.e. only a spouse can receive a dower from his parents).
The mechanics could be the following: the
trustor keep the naked property and transfer the usufruct to the
trustee, who manages it on behalf of the
beneficaries.
The trustee could also be a position, or office, meaning the beneficiary shall be the holder of the position. It shall be especially useful for temple, along with public law.
They might be used to prevent some corporations to dispose of property related to their main goal: if a mining corporation shall be enabled to sell less interesting spots, a temple authority shall be prevented to sell its temple or its worship tools, but not sell parts of its fields.
Related items,
sureties, whether using real or chattel property, could be established in order to guarantee an obligation; they will depend of if the original owner is able to use it or if it is under the guard of the other signatory or an independent party. For exemple, an adventurer might ask someone to pay, in a trust, the wages of a worker he hired in order to raid a tomb, so that the worker's family is guaranteed to not be cheated of their parent's rightful money. Another exemple would be of a debt by a fortress to traders guaranteed by an artifact.
Composite propertyIn order to streamline the management of property, the game shall allow for composite property, or a larger good formed from other pieces of property.
For exemple, one could define in the raws a tavern, composed of a minimum number of rooms, a kitchen and a eating room with, optionally, a brewery, and a workshop from a workplace, storage space and a room.
Workshops are set to be eventually defined in zones, including, on a space, the needed tools and storage; the whole could be defined as a property, so instead of selling the tools, the storage and the space, one could sell or buy the whole thing at once.
Of course, the value of such goods shall be the total value of each of the components.
The creator of this composite property might give its name; we could have farms, landed estates and houses with unique names.
OBLIGATIONS LAWObligations shall be
contractual and
extra-contractual. Some would be things persons would have agreed upon while others whould involve a person having to do something for an action or an omission he did.
ContractsContracts are willing agreements made legally enforceable.
Some might have to be written and conserved in the court's library by local
Statutes of fraud but, in some legal systems, using witnesses for an oral contract shall also be acceptable, while risked.
Exemples of contracts:
- Sale: a party shall agree to sell to another party a property; while the basic contracts of buying chattel goods and paying them straight away will not present any difficulty, sales on credit or of real property might have to be written down.
- Leasing: a party shall rent to another a property, whether chattel (for exemple, the rental of an horse) or real property (for exemple a room); it shall have the amount of the rent and a term (daily, monthly, quaterly or yearly). They might have to be written, for those of longer term. Local laws could regulate such rents. Rents could be fixed or depending of another factur such as the products of the property (i.e. crops of a field)
- Hiring: a party shall hire for a time factor (day, month, trimester or year) and eventually a maximum time, a physical person, for wages, either in cash or in goods, depending from the skills and eventual regulations. Additionally, bounties (for exemple, a part of the treasure) might be provided for.
- Loaning: a party shall loan to another a sum of money and interests can be aplied to the loaned capital, on a basis of daily, monthly, trimesterly or yearly terms. The rate should be depending of the trustworthy nature of the debtor, the existence of a collateral or personal caution and eventual regulations on maximum rates (in some places, no interest might be allowed). It shall also says whether the interests shall be simple or compounded.
- Pact of trade association: A number of persons might poll their funds and invest it in ventures such as a trade expedition. Each associate receive a share of the benefits or the debts proportional to the share of his investment in the venture.
- Commission: A party ask another to fulfull a task in exchange of something. For exemple, someone might ask a smith a sword in exchange of money. In some cases, the client might be able to furnish the needed material (for exemple, giving gold and diamonds to a jeweler) and in other cases, he might be paid on the products (for exemple a butcher might be able to keep a bit of meat for himself).
- Mandate: A contract about a grantor asking an agent to exercise some of his rights on his behalf.
- Marriage: A contract describing the management of property inside a couple. Other matter, such as religion or residence, might be described.
Of course, such contracts could be combined, for exemple a contract over the making and the selling of an artifact whose funding would be done by a loan, said artifact being afterwards part of a caravan.
Contracts might be deemed null and void if one of the parties didn't consent freely or if the contract itself was unlawful (a contract of sales on slaves might be void in an abolitionist civilization). Additionally,
force majeure might impede the execution of contract, such as the renting of a farm being ended by a dragon rampaging, or a caravan attacked by a goblin band.
EnforcementWhile, in the majority of the cases, each party will try to keep his part of the bargain, in a minority of cases, one (or all!) of the parties will not respect the contract; in these cases, the aggreviated party shall go to court to make the other party keep his word.
After the complainant has proved the existence of the contract (easy when a written trace exist in an official building, difficult when in oral form) and if the violation is proven to be true, the judge shall order the other party to act on his obligations and then, if not done, order coercitive measures adapted to the nature of the obligation.
For exemple, seizure might be used for obligations involving money while other methods such as jailing might be available. Sureties shall be used. In addition, it shall constitute the tort of contract violation (see below).
Further measures, such as jailing or deprivation of rights, might be used.
Finally, in addition to the sureties seen above, we could have
personal guarantees, where someone promises to accept to undertake the contractual responsability of someone else, such as someone guaranteeing a debtor will pay his debt; he might done so for a fee.
Torts and extra-contractual obligationsAny action or inaction from a legal subject harming another legal subject shall submit the former to the obligation to indemnify the latter.
Torts, being essentially the civil equivalent to crime, shall be defined by the same manner than the one I used to define crimes. It might actually be simpler, since tort law only consider the damage caused and the existence of responsability; moreover, the only "punishment" available shall be to pay a sum of money to the aggreviated party or to make otherwise the other part whole: for exemple restituing a stolen item or, in some universes, revivifing a murdered person.
Torts shall cover damages against the life, the bodily integrity, the property and the honor of a person, and shall be related to the ethics and the values of a civilization. A civilisation accepting murder might no see any wrong to make whole in a killing.
Other forms of respnsability might be envisioned: vicarious responsability for workers and dependents, responsability of the guardian of an item (for exemple the owner of a dog is responsible for injuries caused by it).
Defenses might include legality (a soldier shouldn't be sued by an enemy fighter), consent (two brawlers shouldn't get to sue each other), self-defense, and some might be universal or specific.
The wounded interests, defined in the rows for each tort, might be corporeal (wounds, infirmity), material (destruction) or moral (loss of face and dignity), and would define the value of each tort: for exemple the tort of trespass in goods might be defined as material, meaning that damages awarded to the victim will depend of the value of the item, while slender might be defined as moral and the damages being defined on a factor depending of the value of a reputation defined by the legal system. Here again, Appraisal might be an useful skill to determine the value of a tort.
If the judge found against the defendant, he shall create a simili-contract between the victim and the culprit entitling the former to reparations from the latter, to be enforced as seen above.
Exemple of tort, here, assault:
[TORT:ASSAULT]
[DEFINITION:The act of inflicting physical harm or unwanted physical contact upon a person]
[NAME:assault]
[ACTION:ASSAULT] Describes the action done by the tortfeasor
Additionally, in some legal systems, such claims might outright be bought and sold as chattel, enabling some to earn money by suing in courts; other jurisdictions might ban it, and some might even have laws against champerty.
BankruptcyWhen the estate of someone is not sufficient to ensure the fulfilment of his duties and obligations (in laymen's terms, when someone hasn't enough money to pay his debts), he shall be in
bankruptcy.
There, various events might happen:
- The debtor's estate shall be liquidated and the proceeds handed down to the creditors in prorata of their claims on it.
- The debtor is indentured to his creditors to work his debt.
- The debtor is enslaved.
When a corporation is in this case, the governing body might, in some cases (illegalities commited) and/or in some legal systems, be found responsible and might have to pay the part of the debt not covered by the corporation's estate. The corporation itself ceases to exist.
[PART 1/2]