Karl Blomeyer

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Karl Eduard Ferdinand Heinrich Blomeyer (born March 31, 1885 in Jena , † December 23, 1953 in Freiburg im Breisgau ) was a German law scholar and university professor.

life and work

Blomeyer, son of the later Jena Higher Regional Court President Carl Blomeyer , studied law at the Universities of Lausanne , Halle , Munich and Jena . In 1908 he passed his first state examination in law in Jena and then went on to study in England. After returning to Germany, he devoted himself to an apprenticeship in banking and at the same time did his legal clerkship in Jena. There he passed his second state examination in 1913. In the same year he was awarded a doctorate by the University of Jena with a thesis on assumption of debt according to § 419 BGB old version. iur. PhD. He then worked as the syndic of a Hamburg shipping company and later in the legal department of a major bank, before becoming a district judge for a short time.

From the beginning he fought as a soldier in the First World War , but was already so badly wounded in the first days of the war in Belgium that he had to stay in hospital for the next two years. After his official discharge, Blomeyer became a clerk in the Reich Treasury , and after its dissolution in the Reich Ministry of Finance . In 1920 he became financial advisor to the German embassy in Stockholm . He later returned to his hometown of Jena, where he became a higher regional judge, and from 1923 he also held a teaching position for civil procedural law at the university there. In 1926 he decided against an appeal to the Imperial Court and for a full professorship at the University of Jena, where he subsequently took over the full professorship for civil law, civil procedural law and commercial law. In 1938 he moved to the University of Munich, where he also held a chair in civil litigation. Because of his negative attitude towards the ruling National Socialists, there were repeated conflicts with the student body.

Blomeyer's research focus was primarily on land law and mortgage law, as well as civil finance law. He also carried out research on civil procedural law, especially in comparison to the regulatory regimes of other countries, especially that of England, Austria and Switzerland. He died on December 23, 1953 in Freiburg im Breisgau.

Fonts (selection)

  • Re § 311 and § 419 BGB: The legal consequences of § 419 BGB apply. even if the form of the contract aimed at the transfer of assets is inadequate? Universitätsverlag, Jena 1914 (dissertation).
  • Law and court in England and Germany . Roßberg'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig 1930.
  • Comments on recent writings on civil procedural law and reform of civil procedural law . Roßberg'sche Verlagbuchhandlung, Leipzig 1931.
  • The future of German civil justice . Roßberg'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, Leipzig 1932.
  • Foreclosure Law: A Textbook . De Gruyter, Berlin 1933.
  • German peasant law . Weidemann, Berlin 1936.
  • The law of obligations and business . Industrieverlag Spaeth & Linde, Berlin 1938.
  • Mortgages and basic security . Knapp, Frankfurt am Main 1980 (reprint).

literature

Individual evidence

  1. Christian Weißhuhn: Alfred Hueck 1889-1975: his life, his work, his time . Peter Lang, Frankfurt am Main 2009, ISBN 978-3-631-58428-6 , pp. 104 .