European Succession Regulation: And then there were three

Alessia Paoletto outlines the implications of the latest ECJ judgment ‘The ECJ’s judgment in Oberle follows on the footsteps set by Mahnkopf. However, it is set to have much further reaching effects than its predecessor, in that it does not deal exclusively with a question concerning an individual provision of national law, but rather, with …
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EU succession law: An objective view

Alessia Paoletto reports on two recent cases which put European succession requirements into context ‘The Regulation must be interpreted as precluding refusal to recognise the material effects of a legacy by vindication provided for in the law applicable to the succession, where such refusal is based on the fact that the legacy created a right …
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