Rudolf Müller-Erzbach

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Rudolf Müller-Erzbach (born March 23, 1874 in Perleberg , Brandenburg , † August 4, 1959 in Munich ) was a German lawyer and professor of civil law , commercial law and legal research.

biography

Rudolf Müller-Erzbach was born in Perleberg in 1874 as the son of Wilhelm Müller-Erzbach . He studied law at the universities in Leipzig, Freiburg im Breisgau and Berlin. After his doctorate as Dr. jur. he worked as a trainee lawyer at the Higher Regional Court of Celle . In 1903 he qualified as a private lecturer in law at the University of Bonn . He also worked as an unskilled worker in the Bonn Mining Authority. In 1916 he published the extensive monograph "The mining law of Prussia and the wider Germany" on the legal basis of the Prussian mining authorities.

In 1911 he received an extraordinary professorship in Königsberg and in 1918 a chair for civil law, commercial law and legal research at the University of Göttingen . In 1925 he became Karl von Amira's successor at the University of Munich, holding the chair for German legal history, German private law, civil law, commercial and exchange law, as well as industrial and commercial law.

In 1933 he was one of the founding members of the National Socialist Academy for German Law by Hans Franks .

In 1939 Müller-Erzbach retired at the age of 65. From December 1945 to October 1946 he returned to the university as dean of the law faculty.

In 1954 a commemorative publication was published for his 80th birthday under the title “Studies on causal legal thinking” by Filser publishing house in Munich- Pasing , which was edited by Roland Löhlein. Emilio Betti (legal philosopher at La Sapienza University in Rome), Demetrius Gogos , Roland Löhlein , Lorenzo Mossa, Erwin Seidl and Hans Würdinger wrote the contributions of friends and students.

Fonts (selection)

  • The principles of indirect representation developed from interests . Berlin: Good Day 1905
  • Strict liability and risk assumption , (311 pages). Tübingen: Mohr 1912
  • The mining law of Prussia and the rest of Germany , (302 pages). Stuttgart: Enke 1916
  • German Commercial Law , Volume 2 (pp. 403–880). Tübingen: Mohr 1924
  • The degeneration of the German stock corporation since the inflationary era (series: Law and State in Past and Present; Volume 42, 28 pages). Tübingen: Mohr 1926
  • Where does interest jurisprudence lead? The legal political movement in the service of legal certainty and the development of jurisprudence , (134 pages). Tübingen: Mohr 1932
  • Can law and legal life be grasped more deeply and securely? Two main aspects of law and life penetration , (147 pages). Munich and Leipzig: Duncker & Humblot 1934
  • The turning of jurisprudence to life and what inhibits it (series: Law and State in Past and Present; Volume 125, 39 pages). Tübingen: Mohr 1939
  • The private right of membership as the touchstone of a causal legal thought (416 pages). Weimar: Böhlau 1948
  • The struggle for personality (73 pages). Tübingen: Laupp 1949
  • Law under construction. Your advance to the determining elements of living together (135 pages). Munich: Hueber 1950

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.munzinger.de/document/00000003872
  2. ^ Vortmann, Jürgen, "Müller-Erzbach, Rudolf" in: Neue Deutsche Biographie 18 (1997), pp. 494–495 [online version]; URL: https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/gnd118737651.html#ndbcontent
  3. ^ Yearbook of the Academy for German Law, 1st year 1933/34. Edited by Hans Frank. (Munich, Berlin, Leipzig: Schweitzer Verlag), p. 255
  4. ^ Vortmann, Jürgen, "Müller-Erzbach, Rudolf" in: Neue Deutsche Biographie 18 (1997), pp. 494–495 [online version]; URL: https://www.deutsche-biographie.de/gnd118737651.html#ndbcontent
  5. http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz006705154inh.htm

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