Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)

The article exposes codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia. That process took place between 1849 and 1860. Its first phase, lasting from 1849 to 1853, commenced on Ministry of Finance's initiative. The comittee consisting of state officials and Belgrade merchants drew up a...

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Main Authors: Drakić Gordana M., Stanković Uroš N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Law 2018-01-01
Series:Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2018/0550-21791804577D.pdf
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spelling doaj-21a20bd435cb44cdbb53159541d6d0282020-11-25T01:34:38ZengUniversity of Novi Sad, Faculty of LawZbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu0550-21792406-12552018-01-01524157715940550-21791804577DCodification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)Drakić Gordana M.0Stanković Uroš N.1Univerzitet u Novom Sadu, Pravni fakultetUniverzitet u Novom Sadu, Pravni fakultetThe article exposes codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia. That process took place between 1849 and 1860. Its first phase, lasting from 1849 to 1853, commenced on Ministry of Finance's initiative. The comittee consisting of state officials and Belgrade merchants drew up a draft commercial code in 1851. Although the legislative body, State Council, primarily approved of codification, in 1853 it rejected the draft with motivation that the text had not contained the matter of commercial courts, that Serbian people as poorly educated would not be able to understand commercial code's complicated notions and that Serbian merchants were immature for codified commercial law. Commercial Comittee, the organization founded in January 1856 with the goal of proposing measures aimed to enchance trade in Serbia, requseted for introduction of commercial code the very same year. In the beginning of 1857 the Council formed the comittee tasked with revising the draft from 1851 and preparing drafts on organization of commercial courts and court procedure in commercial matters; all three texts were meant to become parts of commercial code. The composed draft had been sent to Commercial Comittee on 14 February 1859, which sent it back to the Ministry with its remarks on 8 October the same year. After the three-member committee formed by the Ministry of Justice on 24 November 1859 had somewhat altered the draft, the corrected version was consigned to the Prince. Commercial code had received the Prince's sanction on 22 December 1859 and entered into force on 26 January 1860, thus making Serbia one of the countries with codified commercial law. The cause for the codification doubtlessly lies in the trade between merchants of Belgrade and those from Austria that intensified subsequent to Revolution 1848. In these business relations Austrian merchants were using bills of exchange as security, which meant that their Belgrade partners were to be most punctual in fullfiling their contractual obligations. However, due to lack of commercial regulations and long-lasting civil procedure before Serbian courts, the merchants from the capital could not realize their own claims towards the debtors from the province and were consequently unable to collect money to settle their own debts. For that reason, from 1852 onwards Belgrade merchant were filing petition for enactment of Commercial code. Their petitions had ever more undersigneds, which may indicate that the problem was constantly becoming more serious. Nevertheless, only in the end of 1850s, when the lack of commercial code showed its palpable effects in province, was the code introduced.https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2018/0550-21791804577D.pdfcommercial codeTurkish commercial code (1850)commercial courtscommercial committeeJevrem GrujićDimitrije Crnobarac
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Drakić Gordana M.
Stanković Uroš N.
spellingShingle Drakić Gordana M.
Stanković Uroš N.
Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
commercial code
Turkish commercial code (1850)
commercial courts
commercial committee
Jevrem Grujić
Dimitrije Crnobarac
author_facet Drakić Gordana M.
Stanković Uroš N.
author_sort Drakić Gordana M.
title Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
title_short Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
title_full Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
title_fullStr Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
title_full_unstemmed Codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia (1849-1860)
title_sort codification of commercial law in the principality of serbia (1849-1860)
publisher University of Novi Sad, Faculty of Law
series Zbornik Radova: Pravni Fakultet u Novom Sadu
issn 0550-2179
2406-1255
publishDate 2018-01-01
description The article exposes codification of commercial law in the Principality of Serbia. That process took place between 1849 and 1860. Its first phase, lasting from 1849 to 1853, commenced on Ministry of Finance's initiative. The comittee consisting of state officials and Belgrade merchants drew up a draft commercial code in 1851. Although the legislative body, State Council, primarily approved of codification, in 1853 it rejected the draft with motivation that the text had not contained the matter of commercial courts, that Serbian people as poorly educated would not be able to understand commercial code's complicated notions and that Serbian merchants were immature for codified commercial law. Commercial Comittee, the organization founded in January 1856 with the goal of proposing measures aimed to enchance trade in Serbia, requseted for introduction of commercial code the very same year. In the beginning of 1857 the Council formed the comittee tasked with revising the draft from 1851 and preparing drafts on organization of commercial courts and court procedure in commercial matters; all three texts were meant to become parts of commercial code. The composed draft had been sent to Commercial Comittee on 14 February 1859, which sent it back to the Ministry with its remarks on 8 October the same year. After the three-member committee formed by the Ministry of Justice on 24 November 1859 had somewhat altered the draft, the corrected version was consigned to the Prince. Commercial code had received the Prince's sanction on 22 December 1859 and entered into force on 26 January 1860, thus making Serbia one of the countries with codified commercial law. The cause for the codification doubtlessly lies in the trade between merchants of Belgrade and those from Austria that intensified subsequent to Revolution 1848. In these business relations Austrian merchants were using bills of exchange as security, which meant that their Belgrade partners were to be most punctual in fullfiling their contractual obligations. However, due to lack of commercial regulations and long-lasting civil procedure before Serbian courts, the merchants from the capital could not realize their own claims towards the debtors from the province and were consequently unable to collect money to settle their own debts. For that reason, from 1852 onwards Belgrade merchant were filing petition for enactment of Commercial code. Their petitions had ever more undersigneds, which may indicate that the problem was constantly becoming more serious. Nevertheless, only in the end of 1850s, when the lack of commercial code showed its palpable effects in province, was the code introduced.
topic commercial code
Turkish commercial code (1850)
commercial courts
commercial committee
Jevrem Grujić
Dimitrije Crnobarac
url https://scindeks-clanci.ceon.rs/data/pdf/0550-2179/2018/0550-21791804577D.pdf
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