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The Civil Code of the Russian Federation (Russian: Гражданский кодекс Российской Федерации, frequently abbreviated 'ГК РФ') is the prime source of civil law for the Russian Federation. The Russian Civil Law system descended from Roman Law through Byzantine tradition. It was heavily influenced by German ...
Influenced by the Napoleonic Code and later by the German civil law Romania: Civil Code came into force in 2011. Based on the Civil Code of Quebec, but also influenced by the Napoleonic Code and other French-inspired codes (such as those of Italy, Spain and Switzerland) [21] Russia: Civil Law system descendant from Roman Law through Byzantine ...
The Civil Code of Russia is the "constitution" of the market economy, and is special in the hierarchy of codes, since it will supplant contradictory text in other codes. New codes and laws supersede old ones, unless a statute expressly preserves the old law. The Criminal Code of Russia (UGKRF, 63-ФЗ) is the penal statute. It lays out conduct ...
The Digest of Laws of the Russian Empire (Russian: Свод законов Российской империи, pre-1917 Russian: Сводъ законовъ Россійской имперіи) was the code of penal and civil law in the Russian Empire starting on January 1, 1835.
Cuban civil code; D. Digest of Laws of the Russian Empire; Diritto Municipale; Draconian constitution; E. Egyptian Civil Code; European civil code; G.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Civil_Code_of_the_Russian_Federation&oldid=117850193"
In these courts the ordinary written law had little to say; the decisions of the volost courts were based on the local customary law. The justice administered in them was patriarchal and rough, but not ineffective. All civil cases involving less than 100 roubles value were within their competence, and more important cases by consent of the parties.
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