Explorando por Autor "Sánchez Hernández, Luis Carlos"
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Ítem Texto completo enlazado Aproximación a la categoría del «cuasidelito» del Código de Andrés Bello a partir de las obligationes quasi ex delicto del derecho romano clásico(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú. Fondo Editorial, 2019-11-29) Sánchez Hernández, Luis CarlosThe Civil Code of Andrés Bello, influenced by the French Civil Code, and unlike other European and Latin American codes, included the category of quasi-delict as a source of obligations. However, this notion hasbeen difficult to understand, and has been often branded as merely formal, difficult to define and devoid of any practical utility. For this reason, this paper proposes an analysis of the category of «quasi-delicts» on the basis of the socalled obligations quasi ex delicto in classical Roman law. Such obligations were very useful for the formulation of a perfect and comprehensive division of the sources of obligations. After studying the reception of the quasi-delict in Andres Bello’s Code, both in Chile and in Colombia, this paper proposes some ideas that could contribute to a new understanding of the category and, with it, to the renewal of its systematic and practical utility. The aim of this paper is to highlight the most important aspects of this category that allow for a re-reading of the modern category of quasi-delict in the light of classical Roman categories. For this reason, it would exceed the scope of the present work to carry out an exhaustive exegetical analysis of the entire collection of Roman sources that refer to this matter.Ítem Texto completo enlazado La lex aquilia: la estructura del damnum iniuria datum y su evolución a través de la interpretatio prudentium y la actividad pretoria(Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú, 2018-07-03) Sánchez Hernández, Luis CarlosThe Lex Aquilia, a third-century approved plebiscite, is the origin of the modern tortious liability on those legal systems descending from the roman system. Therefore, its study constitutes a necessity, because it allows us solid understanding of the previsions of the current civil codes, both in Europe as in Latin America.This article analyses the content of the three chapters in the plebiscite and the possible procedural clauses that followed; then, we will examine the structural element of the damnun injuria datum, crime regulated by chapters first and third of this law, and the evolution that each of these elements has experienced through jurisprudential interpretation, as well. Also, we will discuss how the Praetor extended the scope of application of the Lex Aquila through praetor acts; and, finally, the author will present, synthetically, the state of aff airs on Justinian codification.