La garantía patrimonial ante actos normativos lícitos en Derecho comunitario: entre la responsabilidad patrimonial objetiva y el derecho de propiedad

The European Union Law recognizes and protects the right to private property. The European Court of Justice distinguishes between two different interventions on the right: the delimitation of its content and the expropriation. Nevertheless, there exist some european measures that, affecting the righ...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Utrilla Fernández-Bermejo, Dolores
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Centro de Estudios Políticos y Constitucionales 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/oaiart?codigo=3205705
Source:Revista de administración pública, ISSN 0034-7639, Nº 181, 2010, pags. 219-235
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags: Be the first to tag this record
Summary: The European Union Law recognizes and protects the right to private property. The European Court of Justice distinguishes between two different interventions on the right: the delimitation of its content and the expropriation. Nevertheless, there exist some european measures that, affecting the right to property, can not be qualified as none of the measures mentioned above. This is specially important concerning those european undertakings whose legality can not be controlled by the European Court of Justice. Two possible solutions have been examined: the one coming from French Law (the liability without unlawfullness) and the one derived from German Law (the cuasi-expropiatory measures over property). Here we review the judicial treatment of this question, paying special attention to the FIAMM case (2008), the last one on this topic from the European Court of Justice, that seems to open new alternatives.