Building on a plot of land is a fixture that is considered part of real property, similarly things that are fixed with the real property and can not be removed without damage can be considered part of real property. In case of sale of real property, it is appropriate to define the items of personal property that will be included with the real property and which will not be included.
The law does not recognize ownership achieved by deceitful means such as theft, fraud or force. Property may be acquired through:
Exchange: In exchange for money or other property
Possession: Being the first owner of previously un-owned property
Confusion: When ones property is mixed with someone else's property by mistake or confusion the partial owner acquires proportional share
Accession: If owner upgrades his property to something new he remains the owner of the new property.
Gift: When someone acquires property from someone else without exchange of resources but with acknowledged transfer of ownership such as by will, or by physical transfer to the person receiving the gift.
Type of ownership of property can be freehold (free to own, sell, and transfer; in effect having all rights), leasehold, life estate (for persons life time use only), joint ownership or joint tenancy. The owner obtains a 'title' of ownership which can be used or transferred according to the type of ownership [Reed et al., 2005]. Owners can use their property in any way they like as long as it does not interfere with common good, cause nuisance to others or is against the zoning regulation which regulate the type of use a property in a zone can be used for, for example a property in residential zone can not be used for industrial purposes.
Another legal right "Eminent Right" allows the government to acquire property with due compensation for use for common public good such as for building roads etc.
Intangible Property Rights
Intellectual property, patents, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets and manufacturing processes are considered intangible property and are covered under the legal protection applicable to them. The law allows exclusive use of these intangible properties for varying periods as permitted under the law.
Impact of Tort and Criminal Law on Business operations
Tort Law protects and compensates owners through civil lawsuits when their resources including those they have in themselves are wrongly harmed by the action of others. The laws of Torts include protection against assault and battery, slander and libel, invasion of privacy, interference with contracts, negligence and product liability. The punitive damages for violating the laws of Torts include [Reed et al., 2005]:
Persons and businesses convicted of criminal conduct may be fined, imprisoned, or both.
A party that breaches a contract may be required to pay as compensatory damages to the other party the sum of money required to make the victim whole. In addition, special circumstances may justify consequential damages.
A tort victim is entitled to collect as damages the amount of money necessary to compensate the injured party for the total harm caused by the intentional or negligent conduct of the wrongdoer.
Punitive damages may be awarded in the case of intentional torts.
Statutes and regulations issued by government agencies often authorize sanctions similar to those used in the criminal law, contracts, and torts. They usually go further by using a multiplier for damages and award attorney's fees as well.
The criminal law applications cover both protecting businesses from criminal interference and protecting general public by crimes committed by businesses. Crimes against businesses include violent crimes such as arson, burglary, robbery, terrorism, sabotage and non-violent crimes such as white collar crimes.
The businesses also commit crimes to benefit their business and harm others, promoting corruption and bribery to win business, obtain favors from other organizations, all types of fraud such as embezzlement, false invoicing, criminal negligence in environmental matters, violation of constitutional rights of employees and customers, endangering workers are all punishable under criminal laws.
EMPLOYMENT REGULATION AND AGENCY
The Employment-at-will Doctrine and Exceptions
The employment-at-will concept reflected that people were free to enter employment contracts and free to leave...
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