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- Q6927847 subject Q6584129.
- Q6927847 subject Q6996184.
- Q6927847 subject Q8121247.
- Q6927847 subject Q8121276.
- Q6927847 subject Q8313377.
- Q6927847 subject Q8394245.
- Q6927847 subject Q8409232.
- Q6927847 abstract "Template:Infobox court caseThe Moçambique rule, or (to adopt an anglicised form of spelling) Mozambique rule, is a common law rule in private international law. The rule renders actions relating to title in foreign land, the right to possession of foreign land, and trespass to foreign land non-justiciable in common law jurisdictions. It was established in 1893 by the House of Lords decision in British South Africa Co v. Companhia de Moçambique [1893] AC 602.Essentially, it is a self-imposed rule to limit jurisdiction in respect of actions relating to: Title to Foreign Land Possession to Foreign Land Damages of Trespass to Foreign LandIn Hesperides Hotels v Muftizade [1979] AC 508, Lord Wilberforce referred to the ruling in Mozambique in the following terms:"Subject to exceptions hereafter mentioned, the court has no jurisdiction to entertain an action for (1) the determination of title to, or the right to the possession of, any immovable situate out of England (foreign land); or (2) the recovery of damages for trespass to such immovable."Although, under section 30(1) of the Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments Act 1982 "the jurisdiction of any court in England and Wales or Northern Ireland to entertain proceedings for trespass to, or any other tort affecting, immovable property shall extend to cases in which the property in question is situated outside that part of the United Kingdom unless the proceedings are principally concerned with a question of the title to, or the right to possession of, that property." This rule was subject to much criticism and later became abolished by the above section (section 30(1) of the 1893 Act)".
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1058404.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q11007.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q11775984.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1590405.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1726897.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q1733207.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q196939.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q222249.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q2903118.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q30216.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q3153728.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q334020.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q471855.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q4959031.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q5343019.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q540885.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q5436283.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q610320.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6302834.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6302837.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6584129.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6696377.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q6996184.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q7235294.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8121247.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8121276.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8313377.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8394245.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409232.
- Q6927847 wikiPageWikiLink Q908639.
- Q6927847 comment "Template:Infobox court caseThe Moçambique rule, or (to adopt an anglicised form of spelling) Mozambique rule, is a common law rule in private international law. The rule renders actions relating to title in foreign land, the right to possession of foreign land, and trespass to foreign land non-justiciable in common law jurisdictions. It was established in 1893 by the House of Lords decision in British South Africa Co v.".
- Q6927847 label "Mozambique rule".