That is how it works. If you want to find out the right and wrongs of these matters, my method is the one to be adopted - that is, one thinks about relevantly analogous cases about which parties are not heavily politically or financially invested. — Bartricks
If, however, you do not diminish its value or do anything at all with or to it, then you are obliged to return it.
By contrast, if you add value to it by incorporating it into something else or transform it in a value adding way, then you owe the original owner the value of the original, but no more than that. — Bartricks
...good faith in his acquisition. — Benkei
Then please explain why Dutch law protects the buyer of stolen goods if he acted in good faith (barring goods registered in public register). Good faith would be he wasn't aware and was, given the circumstances, not required to be aware the goods were stolen. — Benkei
And legality and ethics aren't as related as you make it out to be. Laws are about economics more than about ethics. — Benkei
No arguments - we just wait for James's pronouncements. — Bartricks
It could be that the Dutch, like Bartricks, are wrong. It sounds like the old legal principle "finders keepers, losers weepers" that we use in America on the kindergarten playground. I wonder what, if anything, the Dutch do to make the victim whole? Maybe it's a hold-over from Dutch Colonialism? Not sure. — James Riley
It's not just the Netherlands, it's continental Europe. Definitely since the code civil and possibly since the Codex Justinianus depending on how old caveat emptor is exactly. — Benkei
In any case, I don't recognise anything of what I explained in your childish simplification except an idiotic arrogance that the system you grew up with is the only sensible one. — Benkei
All kinds of problems with this.He acquired ownership as long as he can demonstrate good faith in his acquisition. The original owner is left with a claim on the thief. — Benkei
How worse the state that backs the hand of a thief, or backs the buyer who benefits from theft? That buyer bought on the street because it was cheaper than going into a store and buying legit. — James Riley
Ownership here means it's mine, and only I can transfer any rights in it or to it. Apparently according to you the thief acquires a right that he can transfer - either that or the ownership is created out of mere innocent possession. And how does that work with children? They're always innocent possessors, yes? And so forth. — tim wood
o back and read again what I wrote about good faith, because this is again a blatant misrepresentation of what I said. I would think as a trained lawyer you'd actually be interested in realising there are different approaches possible — Benkei
Children cannot enter in valid contracts because they do not have the necessary will for offer and acceptance. — Benkei
You not only need offer and acceptance; you need consideration. — James Riley
Based on your preconceptions of justice. In the real world it works perfectly well and answers to people's idea of justice perfectly fine. You're just to stuck in what you know which means you have trouble wrapping your mind around it. The original owner is usually left with more than just owning the original as he gets whatever amount he needs to replace it. Replacement value is usually higher than the actual value. Where it concerns unique items, the likelihood that the duty of care on the buyer is met decreases significantly. — Benkei
Just no. That's a purely Anglo-Saxon thing, which everybody in the rest of the world scoffs at. — Benkei
The thief doesn't have that right but it doesn't necessarily mean ownership isn't vested by the new buyer as long as he can demonstrate good faith and it doesn't concern a registered good.
Children cannot enter in valid contracts because they do not have the necessary will for offer and acceptance.
And there's no problem, it's been working fine for at least two centuries. — Benkei
But how does it work? Presumably I own my own stuff. If it's stolen, when or by operation of what do I cease to own it? It ends up in the hands of an innocent possessor. Does he now own it? With some obvious exceptions and qualifications, here ownership is absolute and cannot ordinarily be alienated except by express act of the owner. In The Netherlands you make it appear that ownership can be alienated by any stranger. — tim wood
And do you mean that children cannot be owners of anything? They can certainly be possessors, and by definition (I should think) innocent possessors. — tim wood
Yes. Everywhere in Europe actually.In the Netherlands you can enforce a promise? — tim wood
In the Netherlands you can enforce a promise?
— tim wood
Yes. Everywhere in Europe actually. — Benkei
Being a good neighbor, you lend me - I borrow - your riding mower to mow my lawn. Fellow comes by in pick-up truck, stops and admires the mower, and says, "Nice mower, how much you want for it?" I say, "Well, new it was about $1500. It's three years old. How about $1100?" And we negotiate and I get a fair price. Into the truck and gone. (And maybe I know the guy and maybe I don't.)If you buy something that wasn't stolen (someone legally borrowed it and sold it on) the good faith works as explained. — Benkei
We don't, never have and never will. — Benkei
You only have equitable remedies. I don't think the US has equitable courts though so how does that work? Or can you go to civil court to get an equitable remedy? — Benkei
you likely bought the stuff from a store and had no reasonable grounds to believe any untoward act had occurred in the making of said items. — Book273
Seems rather ridiculous to me. The claim is on the thief, or initial criminal, not the rest of the honest, good-faith, individuals farther down the food chain. — Book273
Okay, so the Dutch don't contract. Got it. Hmmm. Give me an example. "I offer to do something for nothing." And "I accept your offer to do something for nothing." We're good. :roll: — James Riley
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