French law. Expatrimonial rights

Extrapatrimonial rights differ from patrimonial rights in that they they are not susceptible of a pecuniary evaluation: they are not part of the patrimony of the patrimony.

→ I. Economic rights

A. The legal regime of extra patrimonial rights

Extra patrimonial rights are

non-transferable, i.e. they are extinguished with the person and do not go to the heirs,

unseizable, no creditor can use them,

imprescriptible, i.e. the passage of time or the non-use of these rights does not cause them to be extinguished

B. The different types of extra patrimonial rights

1. Public rights or human rights

Human rights are fundamental rights inherent to every human being and inherent to every human being and are inalienable. Public rights precisely concern the relations between man and the State. They are recalled by the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789, the Constitution of 1958, and the European Convention on Human Rights of 1950.

  • Political rights: the right to vote, the right to stand for election of eligibility, and the right to equality.
  • Economic rights: the right to strike, freedom of
    trade.
  • Social rights: freedom of association, freedom of freedom of association, freedom of trade unions, freedom of assembly.

2. Private extra patrimonial rights

Private rights are diverse. In particular:

  • Right of personality: it protects the physical persons and the respect of their and the respect of their person; right to physical integrity,
    right to life, right to privacy, right to honor, presumption of innocence, etc.
  • Family rights: they result from marriage and family organization of the family; rights of marriage, right of the family
  • Moral rights of the author: they apply to an intellectual work; right to have the authorship recognized, right to respect of the work, right of disclosure, etc.

→ III. Mixed rights

→ 50 introductory law sheets