RECORDING OF AN EXTRAORDINARY REMEDY IN THE LAND REGISTRY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.30925/zpfsr.43.3.7Keywords:
recording of a dispute, recording of proceedings, recording of outstanding remedy, constitutional suit, application to the European Court of Human Rights.Abstract
The 2019 Land Registry Act introduces a new record, namely the recording of an extraordinary remedy, modelled on the Slovenian Land Registry Act. This paper deals with the aforementioned record and provides an overview of the (UN) possibility of recording disputes in the land register, which are, on the occasion of book rights, held before the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Croatia and the requests before the European Court of Human Rights. The paper raises doubts as to the justification for introducing such a record, showing the recording of the dispute and the recording of the proceedings.
Additional Files
Published
Versions
- 2023-12-14 (3)
- 2022-12-30 (2)
- 2022-12-30 (1)
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2022 Jakob Nakić
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Collected Papers is an open access journal. Journal does not charge article processing charges (APC) to authors. It is licensed under CC BY-NC licence 4.0.
Collected Papers of the Law Faculty of the University of Rijeka" is an Open Access journal. Users are allowed to read, download, copy, redistribute, print, search and link to material, and alter, transform, or build upon the material, or use them for any other lawful purpose as long as they attribute the source in an appropriate manner according to the CC BY licence.
The papers published in "Collected Papers of the Law Faculty of the University of Rijeka" can be deposited and self-archived in the institutional and thematic repositories providing the link to the journal's web pages and HRČAK.
Upon acceptance of the manuscript for publication by this journal, the author can publish same manuscript in other journals only with the permission of the Editorial Board (secondary publication). A repeated publication should contain a notice as to where the manuscript was originally published.