Civil Law
Civil law is the branch of private law that regulates the main civil relations of people, everyday life. Civil law is divided into several branches:
- In the first place, the right of people, which regulates the beginning and end of the existence of natural persons, legal capacity, personality attributes, in other words, the elements that determine the conditions of each individual in their legal relationship with others, such as, for example, marital status, domicile or nationality, and the most personal or personality rights, intimately linked to the human being from birth.
- Family law that regulates the legal results of family relationships, stemming from marriage and kinship. Without prejudice, which part of the doctrine considers it an autonomous branch of law.
- The right of things or goods, which regulates what is known as real rights and, in general, the legal relationships of individuals with objects or things, such as property, the ways of acquiring it, possession and mere tenure.
- The law of succession or succession, which regulates the legal consequences that are determined by the death of a natural person in relation to the transfer of their assets and rights to third parties.
- The law of obligations and contracts, which regulates legal events, acts and deals, and their consequences and binding effects.
- The law of civil liability, which deals with compensation for damages caused to others.
- Finally, it also covers generic rules applicable to all branches of law, such as application and interpretation and legal rules. For this last reason, civil law receives its name “common law.”
This firm has extensive experience assisting and advising people in their day-to-day lives. In particular, he is a specialist in property rights, family relations, applications for residence and nationality, and inheritance and inheritance rights, with extensive experience and staff specially trained in the matter.