Explication De Tit, IX, LIV, III Du Code Napoleon by Paul Pont presents a rigorous analysis of the contract of partnership (société) under the Napoleonic Code, showing how it sits at the intersection of civil and commercial law and how its core principles relate to general contract doctrine. The work defines a société as a contract by which two or more persons place something in common to share profits, provided the object is lawful and each partner contributes money, property, or industry. Pont outlines a four-part commentary: the nature and essential elements; the application of général rules to formation, administration, and mutual/third-party obligations; dissolution and its aftermath; and special rules derogating from the general law for commercial partnerships. Key features include its consensual, bilateral, and onerous character, with profit sharing as the objective and losses inherently implicated. The text examines consent, capacity, object and cause, various forms of apport, delivery, third-party effects, eviction, and liability, distinguishing sociétés from simple communautés, grounded in Napoléon Code articles 1832-1833, Roman law, and jurisprudence. The voice is dense and normative, aimed at lawyers and judges.
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