Hermann Struckmann

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Hermann Carl Sigismund Struckmann (born July 27, 1839 in Osnabrück , † December 20, 1922 in Berlin ) was a German lawyer.

Life

Hermann Struckmann was born as the son of the Justice Council Gustav Wilhelm Struckmann . He had three other siblings:

He married Marie Babette Bertha von Gülich on May 24, 1870; they had five children together.

Hermann Struckmann received his Abitur at the Ratsgymnasium Osnabrück at Easter 1858 and began training as a farmer, until he followed the example of his brothers in 1860 and studied law at the University of Heidelberg , the University of Berlin and the University of Göttingen .

In June 1862 he passed the first and on August 15, 1866 the second state law examination with the rating "excellent". He then became an assistant judge at the Hanover Higher Court . From there he went to the Osnabrück District Court . On April 1, 1868 he became a local court assessor at the district court of Emden and went to Göttingen on April 1, 1872 as acting representative of the public prosecutor's office, where he became a senior court assessor and regular member of the Göttingen higher court on May 27 . In 1877 he was appointed senior judge and in 1879 district judge . In 1884 he became a higher regional judge in Kiel and in July 1890 he became a secret councilor and lecturer at the Reich Justice Office , to which he belonged until his retirement in 1907.

Participation in the deliberations on the civil code

Hermann Struckmann was only Gottlieb Planck's unskilled worker in the first commission to advise on the civil code . After completing the first draft, he compiled the criticisms of this draft for the Reich Justice Office. At the request of the Prussian Ministry of Agriculture, the State Secretary of the Reich Justice Office called him in to the negotiations of the Prussian State Economics College on the first draft. He took part in the deliberations of the 2nd Commission initially as Reich Commissioner and from 1895 as a permanent member. He worked on the memorandum on the civil code and represented it in the negotiations in the Reichstag . In the period that followed, he worked on the implementation law for the Civil Code and on other laws such as publishing law and insurance law prepared in the Reich Justice Office .

He was friends with the commission members Gottlieb Planck, Gustav von Mandry (1832–1902), Alexander Achilles , Reinhold Johow , Anton von Weber (1879–1888) and Bernhard Danckelmann .

Honors

In 1896 he was awarded a Dr. appointed hc.

Fonts (selection)

  • Regarding the legal validity of the sale of entire Meierhöfe, which took place without a manorial consensus according to the older regulations as absolutely void on the basis of § 6 of the ordinance v. 11/10/1831. A contribution to the Hanoverian provincial rights. Hanover 1872.
  • II. Legislative question concerning the content of the evidence disposition in civil proceedings . Negotiations 6th German Jurists Conference, p. 209 ff.
  • Is it appropriate that the subhastation should make all mortgages on the subhasted property due? Negotiations 10th German Legal Conference, p. 63 ff.
  • Contribution to the doctrine of payment . Jh. JB Vol. 15, 1877, pp. 251-267.
  • About the contestability of the datio in solutum by means of the actio Pauliana . Jh. JB Vol. 12, 1873, pp. 313-398.
  • About the existing legal relationship between the seller and buyer of goods with regard to the packaging . Gruchot Vol. 16, 1872, pp. 803 ff.
  • Overview of the negotiations of the Reich Justice Commission on the Civil Procedure Code. JW 1875, p. 153 ff.
  • History of the Struckmann family from Osnabrück. Berlin: North German printing and publishing company, 1909.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Köbler Gerhard, Who is who in German law. Retrieved March 21, 2018 .
  2. Tanja-Carina Riedel: Equal rights for women and men: the bourgeois women's movement and the emergence of the BGB, p. 235 . Böhlau Verlag Köln Weimar, 2008, ISBN 978-3-412-20080-0 ( google.de [accessed on March 22, 2018]).
  3. ^ Reinhard Zimmermann, Rolf Knütel, Jens Peter Meincke: Rechtsgeschichte und Privatrechtsdogmatik, p. 539 . CF Müller GmbH, 1999, ISBN 978-3-8114-9915-7 ( google.de [accessed on March 22, 2018]).
  4. Werner Schubert: Materials on the history of the development of the BGB: Einf., Biographien, materials, p. 108 . Walter de Gruyter, 1978, ISBN 978-3-11-007496-3 ( google.de [accessed on March 22, 2018]).