Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Diagrams
- Table of cases
- Table of legislation
- Preface
- 1 What is vicarious liability?
- 2 Establishing a general framework for liability
- 3 The employer/employee relationship: identifying the contract of employment
- 4 Special difficulties: borrowed employees and temporary workers
- 5 Other relationships giving rise to liability
- 6 Acting in the course of one's employment/functions/assigned tasks: determining the scope of vicarious liability
- 7 Parental liability for the torts of their children: a new form of vicarious liability?
- 8 Understanding vicarious liability: reconciling policy and principle
- 9 A postscript: a harmonised European law of vicarious liability?
- Appendix: Key provisions of the French and German Civil Codes
- Index
- Titles in the series
Appendix: Key provisions of the French and German Civil Codes
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Diagrams
- Table of cases
- Table of legislation
- Preface
- 1 What is vicarious liability?
- 2 Establishing a general framework for liability
- 3 The employer/employee relationship: identifying the contract of employment
- 4 Special difficulties: borrowed employees and temporary workers
- 5 Other relationships giving rise to liability
- 6 Acting in the course of one's employment/functions/assigned tasks: determining the scope of vicarious liability
- 7 Parental liability for the torts of their children: a new form of vicarious liability?
- 8 Understanding vicarious liability: reconciling policy and principle
- 9 A postscript: a harmonised European law of vicarious liability?
- Appendix: Key provisions of the French and German Civil Codes
- Index
- Titles in the series
Summary
In this annexe, to assist the reader unfamiliar with French and German law, I list the key provisions of the French and German Civil Codes referred to in this book. The translations of the French Civil Code are taken from Légifrance: www.legifrance.gouv.fr and the translations of the German Civil Code and Basic Law are taken from the German Ministry of Justice site: www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_bgb/englisch_bgb.html.
France: French Civil Code/Code civil (C civ)
Article 371–1
(Act No 2002–305 of 4 March 2002)
Parental authority is a set of rights and duties whose finality is the welfare of the child.
It is vested in the father and mother until the majority or emancipation of the child in order to protect him in his security, health and morality, to ensure his education and allow his development, showing regard to his person.
Parents shall make a child a party to judgments relating to him, according to his age and degree of maturity.
Article 372
(Act No 2002–305 of 4 March 2002)
The father and mother shall exercise in common parental authority.
Where, however, parentage is established with regard to one of them more than one year after the birth of a child whose parentage is already established with regard to the other, the latter alone remains vested with the exercise of parental authority. It shall be likewise where parentage is judicially declared with regard to the second parent of the child.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Vicarious Liability in TortA Comparative Perspective, pp. 267 - 272Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010