Collecting wealth

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The collective assets ( fr. : Fund / Estate recueillis, it. : Beni raccolti) of Swiss law is the epitome of together have come into a public collection assets ( donations ).

The concept of collective assets has not yet appeared in written federal law. In Article 393 (4) of the Swiss Civil Code of December 10, 1907 (ZGB, SR 210) , a provision was made with regard to collective assets in the event of insufficient administration. In some cases, cantonal law refers to collective assets. The revision of the Civil Code of December 19, 2008 (in force from 2013) formally incorporated the concept of collective assets into federal law.

The scope of Article 89b f. rev ZGB will be limited to collective assets that represent a dependent foundation .

In addition to cash benefits , other assets can also form the subject of collective assets.

From an international private law perspective , collective assets are primarily to be classified as a company or trust .

swell

  1. ↑ In some cases, the term "collective assets" is also used to denote investment funds .
  2. Pellascio / Truniger, Anwaltsrevue 2009, p. 291.
  3. (newly created) third title of personal law, Article 89b paragraph 1 f., 89c paragraph 1 rev ZGB
  4. Pellascio / Truniger, Anwaltsrevue 2009, pp. 293, 296.
  5. Pellascio / Truniger, Anwaltsrevue 2009, pp. 292, 296.
  6. Pellascio / Truniger, Anwaltsrevue 2009, p. 296.

Web links

Civil Code