Entrepreneurs' Rights and Obligations in Law of Economic Aspects
In Article 124 paragraph (1) of the UUK it is stated that the Collective Labor Agreement contains at least:
Entrepreneurs' rights and obligations;
Rights and obligations of trade / labor unions and workers / laborers;
The period and date when the collective labor agreement will take effect;
The signatures of the parties working together.
Work agreements made by employers and workers / laborers must not conflict with the Collective Labor Agreement (Article 127 paragraph (1) UUK). In the event that the provisions in the Work Agreement are contrary to the Collective Labor Agreement, the provisions in the Work Agreement are null and void and the applicable provisions are those in the Collective Labor Agreement (Article 127 paragraph (2) UUK). Likewise, if the Work Agreement does not contain the rules stipulated in the Collective Labor Agreement, the rules in the Collective Labor Agreement (Article 128 UUK) apply.
Law of Economic Aspects
Law according to article 499 of the Criminal Code, namely objects. Objects are all things that are useful for legal subjects or everything that is the main problem and interest for legal subjects. The law of objects is the law that governs the relationship between legal subjects and legal objects. The objects in question are movable and immovable objects which are divided based on the nature and purpose of their use and the provisions of the laws that govern them.
The difference between movable and immovable objects in the sense of judicial relates to:
Bezit
Levering
Expired
Loading
Within the framework of the National Objects Bill, objects can be divided into:
Land and not land
Tangible and intangible
registered and unregistered
Move and stay
1. Movable objects, according to their nature in article 509 of the Criminal Code are objects that are moved, for example tables, chairs, livestock and so on. Movable objects according to the law, article 511 of the Criminal Code is the rights to movable objects such as the right to collect the results of movable objects, and so on.
2. Immovable objects, because of its nature ie the soil and everything attached to it, for example trees, statues, statues. Objects move because of their purpose, namely machine tools used in factories. Immovable property because of the provisions of the law, this is in the form of rights over immovable objects, for example the use rights on immovable objects, mortgages and so on.
Moving and not moving objects relate to 4 things:
Ownership (bezit), i.e. in the case of movable objects, the principles listed in article 1977 of the Criminal Code mean that bezitters from movable objects are eigenaar (owners) of the goods, whereas for immovable objects this is not the case.
Submission (levering), i.e. to moving objects can be surrendered in real (hand by hand) or from hand to hand, whereas for immovable objects is carried out behind the name.
Expiry (verjaring), i.e. for objects not knowing expiration, because bezite here is the same as eigendom (ownership) of the movable object, whereas for immovable objects recognize the existence of expiration.
Charging (bezwaring), ie for movable objects is carried out with a pand (pawn), while for immovable objects with mortgages is a mortgage right to land as well as objects other than land using fiduciary.
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