Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Corporeal & incorporeal Ownership in jurisprudence

Ahsan Qadeer,,,Mian Ashad Ali Azhar
LL.B Part 1
Quaid-e-azam Law college

Corporeal & Incorporeal Ownership


Although I have consulted the following books:
(i)                V.D   Mahajan
(ii)                50 lectures
(iii)               And many other books
My very humble point of view is that this difference and distinction is not correct because all the jurists say that ownership is a legal right so to me a right is always incorporeal because the definition of legal right given by Prof Salmond (3 December 1862-19 september 1924) is “A right is an interest recognized as well as protected by rule of right“
To me ownership in all the cases has to be incorporeal. Then question arises that what is this classification of incorporeal and incorporeal. To me the answer is that it is the subject matter of the ownership which may be corporeal or incorporeal. 

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