Seybold Report ISSN: 1533-9211

Abstract

THE PROVISIONS OF CURIOSITY AS ONE OF THE APPLICATIONS OF THE BENEFICIAL ACT (ENRICHMENT WITHOUT A REASON) IN THE JORDANIAN CIVIL LAW


Dr. Talal Hussein Mohammad Abumalik, Dr. Enad Atieh Oqla Al saidat., Dr. Abedullah Mohamad Awdah Al-Shudaifat


Vol 18, No 1 ( 2023 )   |  Licensing: CC 4.0   |   Pg no: 261-272   |   Published on: 16-03-2023



Abstract
Curiosity is that a person called inquisitive performs a beneficial act that necessity necessitates intentionally and without being obligated to do so for the account of another person called the business owner without an order from the latter. Virtue is achieved even if the curious, while assuming a matter for himself, has assumed a different matter, because the two matters are connected with him, and it is not possible to do one of them separately from the other. The Curiosity is considered as one of the applications of the beneficial act (enrichment without a reason), as the Jordanian legislator was keen to organize the virtue and stipulated it in the civil law, where he began by defining the principle of earning without a reason as an application of the beneficial act, and then receiving an unworthy one, then the extravagance, and that is in the articles of (301- 308) The Jordanian Civil Code highlighted the virtue entity as one of the important and necessary applications of the beneficial act. Thus, the virtue was prepared as a general source of personal right (obligation) that falls under the beneficial act (enrichment without reason).


Keywords:
inquisitive, employer, eligibility, agency, Curiosity rules



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