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Good faith purchasers of stolen goods fare differently in Western legal systems. American rules favor the owner, while the civil law world protects the good faith purchaser. Oddly, this striking difference is misunderstood or denied or both by American scholars. American lawyer-economists who have considered which is the better rule differ in their perceptions and conclusions, as do the positions taken by non-economists. A related difference exists in the application of statutes of limitation in good faith purchaser cases. Proposals that it would be fairer to split the loss seem bound to fail. A solution involving the Art Loss Register and the New York courts' use of the laches doctrine is more promising.
Other publications by this author
- Thinking About the Sevso Treasure
- Law, Ethics and the Visual Arts
- The Civil Law Tradition: An Introduction to the Legal Systems of Europe and Latin America
- Museum Ethics
- A Clash Over Antiquities
- Whither the Elgin Marbles?
- Imperialism, Art and Restitution
- Introduction In Imperialism, Art And Restitution
- Cultural Property Internationalism
- A Licit International Trade in Cultural Objects in WHO OWNS THE PAST? : CULTURAL POLICY, CULTURAL PROPERTY, AND THE LAW
Author
- John Henry Merryman
- Stanford Law School
- merry@stanford.edu
- 650 723.2473