Abuse of rights explained

In civil law jurisdictions, abuse of rights (also known as Prohibition of Chicane) is the exercise of a legal right only to cause annoyance, harm, or injury to another. The abuser is liable for the harm caused by their actions. Some examples of this are abuse of power, barratry, frivolous or vexatious litigation, a spite fence or house, forum shopping, abuse of process, malicious prosecution, tax avoidance (vs. anti-avoidance rules, step transaction doctrine, economic substance), etc. The principle is a creature of case law and was expanded from the neighborhood law doctrine of aemulatio vicini under the jus commune. This principle departs from the classical theory that "he who uses a right injures no one" (= neminem laedit qui suo iure utitur), instead embracing the maxim “a right ends where abuse begins” (= le droit cesse où l'abus commence).[1]

Foundation

The abuse of rights principle is laid out in German law by the so-called Schikaneverbot ‘ban on vexatiousness’ (BGB §226). It reads as follows:

Article 2 of the Einleitung to the Swiss Civil Code[2] states:

Articles 19, 20 and 21 of the Civil Code of the Philippines state that:

Conditions

At least one of four conditions is required to invoke the doctrine:[3]

The principle does not exist in common law jurisdictions.

In Scots law (which is mixed civil/common law jurisdiction), a much more limited doctrine known as aemulatio vicini serves the same purpose.[4]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. [Marcel Planiol]
  2. Web site: Fedlex.
  3. Web site: Abuse of Rights. uslegal.com.
  4. Book: Strange Gods in the Twenty-First Century: the Doctrine of Aemulatio Vicini. Elspeth Reid. 2005. 10.3366/edinburgh/9780748623358.001.0001. 9780748623358.