Foreclosure of certain types of property: general statements through the prism of the principle of inviolability of private property
https://doi.org/10.30729/2541-8823-2024-9-4-213-217
Abstract
The article reviews the principle of inviolability of private property in the context of Russian legislation, starting from its enshrinement in the Fundamental State Laws of 1906 and up to the modern Constitution of the Russian Federation. The author analyzes the evolution of this principle, its theoretical understanding, as well as the legal positions of the Constitutional Court of the Russian Federation. Two key aspects of inviolability are considered: the right to inviolability as the ability to be protected from encroachments and actual inviolability as the state of property protected by the state. Special attention is paid to various interpretations and legal approaches to the limitation of this principle, including the obligations of the state to protect the rights of owners and the balance of interests of private and public parties. The article discusses practical mechanisms for the protection of private property, including exclusion from the enforcement of court decisions as well as compensation when property is confiscated for state needs.
About the Author
I. M GruzdevRussian Federation
Ilya Gruzdev — Second-year Candidate student of the Department of Environmental, Labor Law and Civil Procedure, Faculty of Law
(18, Kremlin St., Kazan, 420008)
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Review
For citations:
Gruzdev I.M. Foreclosure of certain types of property: general statements through the prism of the principle of inviolability of private property. Kazan University Law Review. 2024;9(4):213-217. https://doi.org/10.30729/2541-8823-2024-9-4-213-217