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Chapter One: Measures to Safeguard Succession

Art. 551  

A. In gen­er­al

 

1 The com­pet­ent au­thor­ity must of its own ac­cord take all meas­ures ne­ces­sary to en­sure prop­er suc­ces­sion.490

2 In the cases en­vis­aged by law, in par­tic­u­lar, such meas­ures in­clude seal­ing the es­tate, draw­ing up the in­vent­ory, ap­point­ing the es­tate ad­min­is­trat­ors and read­ing out the wills of the de­ceased.

3 ...491

490 Amended by An­nex No 2 of the Civil Jur­is­dic­tion Act of 24 March 2000, in force since 1 Jan. 2001 (AS 2000 2355; BBl 1999 2829).

491 Re­pealed by An­nex No 2 of the Civil Jur­is­dic­tion Act of 24 March 2000, with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 2001 (AS 2000 2355; BBl 1999 2829).

Art. 552  

B. Seal­ing the es­tate

 

The or­der to seal the es­tate is giv­en whenev­er provided for by can­ton­al law.

Art. 553  

C. In­vent­ory

 

1 The or­der to draw up an in­vent­ory is giv­en:

1.
where an heir is un­der guard­i­an­ship or is to be made a ward of court;
2.
where an heir is per­man­ently ab­sent and without rep­res­ent­a­tion;
3.
at the re­quest of one of the heirs;
4.
where an adult heir is or is to be made sub­ject to a gen­er­al deputy­ship.492

2 The in­vent­ory is drawn up in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions of can­ton­al law and nor­mally must be com­pleted with­in two months of the death of the de­ceased.

3 Can­ton­al le­gis­la­tion may re­quire that an in­vent­ory be drawn up in oth­er cases.

492 Amended by No I 2 of the FA of 19 Dec. 2008 (Adult Pro­tec­tion Law, Law of Per­sons and Law of Chil­dren), in force since 1 Jan. 2013 (AS 2011 725; BBl 20067001).

Art. 554  

D. Es­tate ad­min­is­trat­ors

I. In gen­er­al

 

1 Es­tate ad­min­is­trat­ors are ap­poin­ted:

1.
where such an ap­point­ment is in the best in­terests of an heir who is per­man­ently ab­sent and without rep­res­ent­a­tion;
2.
where none of the claimants may ad­equately es­tab­lish his or her suc­ces­sion rights or the ex­ist­ence of an heir is un­cer­tain;
3.
where not all heirs are known;
4.
in spe­cial cases provided for by law.

2 Where the de­ceased had named an ex­ecut­or, ad­min­is­tra­tion of the es­tate is en­trus­ted to him or her.

3 Where the de­ceased was sub­ject to a deputy­ship that cov­ers as­set man­age­ment, the deputy is re­spons­ible for ad­min­is­ter­ing the es­tate un­less oth­er in­struc­tions ap­ply.493

493 Amended by No I 2 of the FA of 19 Dec. 2008 (Adult Pro­tec­tion Law, Law of Per­sons and Law of Chil­dren), in force since 1 Jan. 2013 (AS 2011 725; BBl 20067001).

Art. 555  

II. In the case of un­known heirs

 

1 If the au­thor­ity is un­cer­tain as to wheth­er the de­ceased is sur­vived by heirs or wheth­er it is aware of all the heirs, the au­thor­ity must by ap­pro­pri­ate pub­lic means call on all per­sons with suc­ces­sion rights to come for­ward and claim them with­in one year.

2 If no such per­son comes for­ward dur­ing this time and if no heirs are known to the au­thor­ity, the es­tate passes to the state au­thor­ity with right to suc­ceed, sub­ject to any ac­tion for re­cov­ery of in­her­it­ance.

Art. 556  

E. Pro­bate pro­ceed­ings

I. Duty to sub­mit the will

 

1 If the de­ceased left a will, this must be sub­mit­ted to the au­thor­ity without delay even if it ap­pears to be in­val­id.

2 The pub­lic of­fi­cial by whom the will was re­cor­ded or with whom it was de­pos­ited or any oth­er per­son who had cus­tody of the will or found it among the per­son­al ef­fects of the de­ceased is per­son­ally re­spons­ible on learn­ing of the test­at­or’s death for en­sur­ing that the will is sub­mit­ted to the au­thor­ity.

3 Once the will has been sub­mit­ted, the au­thor­ity must, where feas­ible after hear­ing all in­ter­ested parties, either re­lease the es­tate to the stat­utory heirs on a pro­vi­sion­al basis or ap­point es­tate ad­min­is­trat­ors.

Art. 557  

II. Read­ing the will

 

1 The test­at­or’s will must be opened and read out by the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity with­in one month of its sub­mis­sion.

2 All heirs known to the au­thor­ity are summoned to at­tend the read­ing.

3 If the test­at­or left more than one will, all are to be sub­mit­ted to the au­thor­ity and opened and read out by it.

Art. 558  

III. No­ti­fic­a­tion of in­ter­ested parties

 

1 At the es­tate’s ex­pense, all in­ter­ested parties re­ceive a copy of the pro­vi­sions of the will as re­late to them.

2 Leg­atees of un­known where­abouts are in­formed by ap­pro­pri­ate pub­lic no­tice.

Art. 559  

IV. Re­lease of the es­tate

 

1 One month after no­ti­fic­a­tion of the in­ter­ested parties, at the re­quest of the named heirs the pro­bate au­thor­ity is­sues such per­sons with a cer­ti­fic­ate con­firm­ing them as heirs, sub­ject to ac­tion of de­clar­a­tion of in­valid­ity and for re­cov­ery of in­her­it­ance, provid­ing their en­ti­tle­ment has not ex­pressly been chal­lenged by the stat­utory heirs or the leg­atees of an earli­er will.

2 At the same time the es­tate ad­min­is­trat­or will be in­struc­ted, where ap­plic­able, to re­lease the es­tate in­to their pos­ses­sion.

Chapter Two: Vesting of the Estate

Art. 560  

A. Vest­ing

I. Heirs

 

1 On the death of the de­ceased, the es­tate in its en­tirety vests by op­er­a­tion of law in the heirs.

2 Sub­ject to the stat­utory ex­cep­tions, the de­ceased’s claims, rights of own­er­ship, lim­ited rights in rem and rights of pos­ses­sion auto­mat­ic­ally pass to the heirs and the debts of the de­ceased be­come the per­son­al debts of the heirs.

3 Vest­ing in the named heirs takes ef­fect ret­ro­act­ively from the date on which the suc­ces­sion pro­cess com­menced and the stat­utory heirs must re­lin­quish the es­tate to them ac­cord­ing to the rules gov­ern­ing pos­ses­sion.

Art. 561494  

II. ...

 

494Re­pealed by No I 2 of the FA of 5 Oct. 1984, with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 1988 (AS 1986 122153Art. 1; BBl 1979 II 1191).

Art. 562  

III. Leg­atees

1. Vest­ing

 

1 The leg­atees have a per­son­al claim against the ob­lig­ors of their legacies or, where no-one is spe­cific­ally named as such, against the leg­al or named heirs.

2 Un­less oth­er­wise provided by test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion, the claim be­comes due once the ob­lig­or has ac­cep­ted the in­her­it­ance or is no longer able to dis­claim it.

3 If the heirs fail to ful­fil their ob­lig­a­tion, they may be sued for re­lease of the be­queathed prop­erty or, where the leg­acy per­tains to per­form­ance of some ac­tion, for dam­ages.

Art. 563  

2. Ob­ject

 

1 Where the be­quest to the leg­atee is a usu­fruct or an­nu­ity or oth­er re­cur­ring be­ne­fit, un­less oth­er­wise stip­u­lated, his or her claim is de­term­ined ac­cord­ing to the pro­vi­sions of prop­erty law and the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions.

2 If the leg­acy is a life as­sur­ance claim matur­ing on the death of the test­at­or, the leg­atee is en­titled to as­sert that claim dir­ectly.

Art. 564  

3. Re­la­tion­ship between cred­it­ors and leg­atees

 

1 The claims of the test­at­or’s cred­it­ors pre­cede those of leg­atees.

2 The claims of the heir’s cred­it­ors rank equally with those of the test­at­or’s cred­it­ors, provided the heir ac­quired the in­her­it­ance without re­ser­va­tion.

Art. 565  

4. Abate­ment

 

1 If, after the legacies have been dis­trib­uted, the heirs pay debts of the es­tate that were pre­vi­ously un­known to them, they are en­titled to re­im­burse­ment from the leg­atees of an amount cor­res­pond­ing to the pro­por­tion­ate abate­ment of such legacies that the heirs could have claimed.

2 However, the leg­atees may be held li­able only in the amount by which they are en­riched at the time such re­im­burse­ment is de­man­ded.

Art. 566  

B. Dis­claim­er

I. De­clar­a­tion

1. Right to re­nounce

 

1 The leg­al and named heirs are en­titled to dis­claim the in­her­it­ance passing to them.

2 There is a pre­sump­tion of a dis­claim­er if at the time of his or her death the de­ceased had been of­fi­cially de­clared in­solv­ent or was mani­festly in­solv­ent.

Art. 567  

2. Time lim­it

a. In gen­er­al

 

1 The time lim­it for a dis­claim­er is three months.

2 For stat­utory heirs, this lim­it be­gins on the date on which they learned of the death, un­less they can show that they did not learn of their suc­ces­sion rights un­til later, and for named heirs it be­gins on the date on which they re­ceived of­fi­cial no­ti­fic­a­tion of the test­at­or’s dis­pos­i­tion.

Art. 568  

b. In the case of an in­vent­ory

 

If an in­vent­ory has been drawn up as a pre­cau­tion­ary meas­ure, the dis­claim­er time lim­it for all heirs be­gins on the date on which the au­thor­ity no­ti­fied them that the in­vent­ory was com­plete.

Art. 569  

3. Passing of right to dis­claim

 

1 If an heir dies be­fore dis­claim­ing or ac­cept­ing an in­her­it­ance, the right to dis­claim passes to his or her heirs.

2 For such heirs, the dis­claim­er time lim­it be­gins on the date on which they learned that the in­her­it­ance passed to the de­ceased heir and ends no soon­er than the date on which the time lim­it for dis­claim­ing the in­her­it­ance from the de­ceased heir ex­pires.

3 Where such heirs dis­claim the in­her­it­ance and it passes to oth­er heirs who pre­vi­ously had no suc­ces­sion rights, the dis­claim­er time lim­it for the lat­ter be­gins on the date on which they learned of the dis­claim­er.

Art. 570  

4. Form

 

1 An heir must de­clare his or her dis­claim­er or­ally or in writ­ing to the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity.

2 It must be un­con­di­tion­al and without re­ser­va­tion.

3 The au­thor­ity keeps an of­fi­cial re­cord of dis­claim­ers.

Art. 571  

II. For­feit­ure of right to dis­claim

 

1 If the heir fails to de­clare that he or she dis­claims the in­her­it­ance with­in the rel­ev­ant time lim­it, he or she ac­quires it without re­ser­va­tion.

2 Where an heir has in­terfered in the af­fairs of the es­tate be­fore ex­piry of the dis­claim­er time lim­it or has ac­ted in a man­ner not con­du­cive to ad­min­is­ter­ing the es­tate or main­tain­ing the de­ceased’s busi­ness activ­it­ies, or where he or she has ap­pro­pri­ated or con­cealed ob­jects be­long­ing to the es­tate, he or she is no longer en­titled to dis­claim the in­her­it­ance.

Art. 572  

III. Dis­claim­er by one co-heir

 

1 Where the de­ceased has not made a test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion and one of two or more heirs dis­claims the in­her­it­ance, his or her share of the es­tate passes to the oth­er heirs as if he or she had pre­de­ceased.

2 Where the de­ceased has made test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion, any share of the es­tate dis­claimed by a named heir passes to the test­at­or’s nearest stat­utory heirs, un­less oth­er in­ten­tions on the part of the test­at­or are evid­ent from the dis­pos­i­tion.

Art. 573  

IV. Dis­claim­er by all the nearest heirs

1. In gen­er­al

 

1 Where the in­her­it­ance is dis­claimed by all the nearest heirs, the es­tate is li­quid­ated by the bank­ruptcy of­fice.

2 If li­quid­a­tion pro­duces a sur­plus after pay­ment of debts, this passes to those en­titled to in­her­it as if they had not dis­claimed it.

Art. 574  

2. En­ti­tle­ment of sur­viv­ing spouse

 

If the de­ceased’s is­sue have dis­claimed the in­her­it­ance, the au­thor­ity no­ti­fies the dis­claim­er to the sur­viv­ing spouse, who is en­titled to de­clare ac­cept­ance with­in one month.

Art. 575  

3. Dis­claim­er in fa­vour of sub­sequent heirs

 

1 When dis­claim­ing the in­her­it­ance, the heirs may re­quest that it be offered to their sub­sequent heirs be­fore the es­tate is li­quid­ated.

2 In this event, the au­thor­ity in­forms the sub­sequent heirs that the pre­ced­ing heirs have dis­claimed, and if the former fail to de­clare their ac­cept­ance of the in­her­it­ance with­in one month, they are like­wise deemed to have dis­claimed it.

Art. 576  

V. Ex­ten­sion of time lim­it

 

Where there is good cause, the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity may grant the leg­al and named heirs an ex­ten­sion of the time lim­it or set a new one.

Art. 577  

VI. Dis­claim­er of a leg­acy

 

Where a leg­atee dis­claims a leg­acy, it be­comes void in fa­vour of the ob­lig­or, un­less oth­er in­ten­tions on the part of the test­at­or are evid­ent from his or her dis­pos­i­tion.

Art. 578  

VII. Se­cur­ity for the heir’s cred­it­ors

 

1 Where an over­indebted heir has dis­claimed an in­her­it­ance in or­der to with­hold it from his or her cred­it­ors, the lat­ter or the bank­ruptcy ad­min­is­trat­ors may chal­lenge the dis­claim­er with­in six months un­less their claims are se­cured.

2 If their chal­lenge is up­held, the in­her­it­ance is placed in of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion.

3 Any sur­plus serves first to sat­is­fy the chal­len­ging cred­it­ors and any bal­ance re­main­ing after re­demp­tion of the oth­er debts passes to the heirs in whose fa­vour the dis­claim­er was made.

Art. 579  

VIII. Li­ab­il­ity in the event of dis­claim­er

 

1 Where the de­ceased was in­solv­ent and his or her heirs dis­claim the in­her­it­ance, they re­main li­able to his or her cred­it­ors to the ex­tent that in the five years pri­or to his or her death they re­ceived prop­erty or as­sets from him or her which on di­vi­sion of the es­tate would have been sub­ject to hotch­pot.

2 The en­dow­ment of newly-weds ac­cord­ing to loc­al cus­tom and the costs of rais­ing and edu­cat­ing chil­dren are not af­fected by such li­ab­il­ity.

3 Heirs act­ing in good faith are li­able only to the ex­tent they are still en­riched.

Chapter Three: Public Inventory

Art. 580  

A. Re­quire­ments

 

1 Any heir en­titled to dis­claim his or her in­her­it­ance has the right to re­quest a pub­lic in­vent­ory.

2 The re­quest must be made to the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity with­in one month in the same form as the dis­claim­er.

3 A re­quest made by one heir is also val­id for the oth­ers.

Art. 581  

B. Pro­ced­ure

I. In­vent­ory

 

1 The pub­lic in­vent­ory is drawn up by the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions of can­ton­al law and con­sists of a list of all the as­sets and debts of the es­tate, to­geth­er with an ap­prais­al of the value of each item in the in­vent­ory.

2 Any per­son able to provide in­form­a­tion on the fin­an­cial cir­cum­stances of the de­ceased is per­son­ally ob­liged to give the au­thor­ity all the in­form­a­tion it re­quires.

3 In par­tic­u­lar, the heirs must in­form the au­thor­ity of any debts of the de­ceased that are known to them.

Art. 582  

II. Form­al call to ac­count

 

1 In the course of draw­ing up the in­vent­ory, the au­thor­ity shall make a form­al call to ac­count whereby ap­pro­pri­ate pub­lic no­tices are is­sued call­ing on all cred­it­ors and debt­ors of the de­ceased, in­clud­ing cred­it­ors un­der a surety, to come for­ward and re­gister their claims and debts with­in a spe­cified time lim­it.

2 Such no­tices must alert the cred­it­ors to the con­sequences of any fail­ure to re­gister.

3 The time lim­it for re­gis­ter­ing must not be earli­er than one month from the date of the first pub­lic no­tice.

Art. 583  

III. In­clu­sion ex of­fi­cio

 

1 Claims and debts evid­ent from the pub­lic re­gisters or from the pa­pers of the de­ceased are in­cluded ex of­fi­cio.

2 The debt­ors and cred­it­ors must be no­ti­fied of any such in­clu­sion.

Art. 584  

IV. Res­ult

 

1 On ex­piry of the pub­lished time lim­it, the in­vent­ory is closed and made avail­able for per­us­al by all in­ter­ested parties for at least one month.

2 The costs are borne by the es­tate and, where this is in­suf­fi­cient, by the heirs who re­ques­ted the in­vent­ory.

Art. 585  

C. Situ­ation of the heirs dur­ing the in­vent­ory

I. Ad­min­is­tra­tion

 

1 While the in­vent­ory is be­ing drawn up, only the ne­ces­sary ad­min­is­trat­ive ac­tions may be taken.

2 Where the au­thor­ity au­thor­ises an heir to con­tin­ue the de­ceased’s busi­ness activ­it­ies, the co-heirs may re­quest that se­cur­ity be fur­nished.

Art. 586  

II. Debt en­force­ment, lit­ig­a­tion, pre­scrip­tion

 

1 While the in­vent­ory is be­ing drawn up, no ac­tion may be taken to en­force the debts of the de­ceased.

2 ...495

3 Ex­cept in ur­gent mat­ters, court pro­ceed­ings may neither be com­menced nor con­tin­ued.

495 Re­pealed by An­nex No 3 of the FA of 15 June 2018 (Re­vi­sion of the Law on Pre­scrip­tion), with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 2020 (AS 2018 5343; BBl 2014 235).

Art. 587  

D. Ef­fect

I. Time lim­it for de­clar­a­tion of in­ten­tion

 

1 Once the in­vent­ory is closed, all the heirs are re­ques­ted to de­clare with­in one month their in­ten­tions with re­gard to ac­quir­ing the in­her­it­ance due to them.

2 Where jus­ti­fied in the cir­cum­stances, the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity may set a fur­ther time lim­it for ob­tain­ing ap­prais­als, set­tling dis­puted claims and the like.

Art. 588  

II. De­clar­a­tion of in­ten­tion

 

1 Dur­ing the set time lim­it, an heir may dis­claim his or her in­her­it­ance or re­quest of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion or ac­cept the in­her­it­ance either sub­ject to pub­lic in­vent­ory or without re­ser­va­tion.

2 Where an heir makes no de­clar­a­tion, he or she is deemed to have ac­cep­ted the in­her­it­ance sub­ject to pub­lic in­vent­ory.

Art. 589  

III. Ef­fects of ac­cept­ance sub­ject to pub­lic in­vent­ory

1. Li­ab­il­ity as per in­vent­ory

 

1 Where an heir ac­cepts the in­her­it­ance sub­ject to pub­lic in­vent­ory, the debts of the de­ceased lis­ted in the in­vent­ory and the as­sets pass to him or her.

2 The ac­quis­i­tion of the in­her­it­ance with all at­tend­ant rights and ob­lig­a­tions takes ef­fect ret­ro­act­ively from the date on which the suc­ces­sion pro­cess com­menced.

3 The heir is li­able for debts lis­ted in the in­vent­ory both with the in­her­it­ance and with his or her own as­sets.

Art. 590  

2. Li­ab­il­ity bey­ond the in­vent­ory

 

1 The heirs are not li­able either per­son­ally or with the in­her­it­ance to­wards cred­it­ors of the es­tate whose claims were not in­cluded in the in­vent­ory be­cause the cred­it­ors failed to re­gister them in time.

2 Where such fail­ure to re­gister claims in the in­vent­ory was through no fault of the cred­it­or or his or her claims were not in­cluded in the in­vent­ory des­pite hav­ing been re­gistered, the heir is li­able to the ex­tent he or she is en­riched by the in­her­it­ance.

3 In all cases, cred­it­ors may as­sert claims to the ex­tent these are se­cured by a li­en on the es­tate as­sets.

Art. 591  

E. Li­ab­il­ity for debts sub­ject to a surety

 

Any debts un­der a surety giv­en by the de­ceased are lis­ted sep­ar­ately in the in­vent­ory and may be as­ser­ted against an heir, even where he or she ac­cepts the in­her­it­ance, only in the amount that would be al­loc­ated to the surety debt if all debts of the es­tate were to be re­deemed un­der the rules gov­ern­ing bank­ruptcy.

Art. 592  

F. Ac­quis­i­tion by a state au­thor­ity

 

Where an es­tate passes to a state au­thor­ity, a form­al call to ac­count is made ex of­fi­cio and the state au­thor­ity is li­able for the debts of the es­tate only in the amount of the as­sets it has in­her­ited from the es­tate.

Chapter Four: Official Liquidation

Art. 593  

A. Re­quire­ments

I. At the re­quest of an heir

 

1 Rather than dis­claim the in­her­it­ance or ac­cept it sub­ject to pub­lic in­vent­ory, each heir is en­titled to re­quest of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion.

2 However, such re­quest may not be gran­ted if at least one co-heir ac­cepts the in­her­it­ance.

3 In the event of of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion, the heirs are not li­able for the debts of the es­tate.

Art. 594  

II. At the re­quest of the de­ceased’s cred­it­ors

 

1 Where the de­ceased’s cred­it­ors have good cause to fear that their claims will not be met and such claims are not sat­is­fied or se­cured at their re­quest, with­in three months of the death of the de­ceased or the read­ing of the will they may de­mand the of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion of the es­tate.

2 Sub­ject to the same con­di­tions, leg­atees may re­quest pro­vi­sion­al meas­ures by way of se­cur­ity.

Art. 595  

B. Pro­ced­ure

I. Ad­min­is­tra­tion

 

1 The of­fi­cial li­quid­a­tion is car­ried out by the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity or by one or more es­tate ad­min­is­trat­ors act­ing at the au­thor­ity’s be­hest.

2 It be­gins with the tak­ing of an in­vent­ory and the at­tend­ant form­al call to ac­count.

3 The es­tate ad­min­is­trat­or is un­der the au­thor­ity’s su­per­vi­sion and the heirs may ap­peal to the au­thor­ity against any meas­ures taken or planned by the ad­min­is­trat­or.

Art. 596  

II. Or­din­ary

li­quid­a­tion

 

1 For the pur­pose of li­quid­a­tion, any busi­ness activ­it­ies of the de­ceased still in op­er­a­tion are brought to a close, his or her ob­lig­a­tions are per­formed, his or her claims are called in, his or her legacies are dis­trib­uted where pos­sible, his or her rights and du­ties are de­term­ined at law, where ne­ces­sary, and his or her as­sets are con­ver­ted in­to cash.

2 Land formerly be­long­ing to the de­ceased is sold at pub­lic auc­tion; it may be dis­posed of by private sale only with the con­sent of all the heirs.

3 The heirs are en­titled even dur­ing the li­quid­a­tion pro­cess to re­quest that some or all of the ob­jects and mon­ies that are not re­quired for the li­quid­a­tion be re­leased in­to their pos­ses­sion.

Art. 597  

III. Li­quid­a­tion by the bank­ruptcy of­fice

 

If the es­tate is over­indebted, its li­quid­a­tion is car­ried out by the bank­ruptcy of­fice in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing bank­ruptcy.

Chapter Five: Action for Recovery of Inheritance

Art. 598  

A. Re­quire­ments

 

1 A per­son who be­lieves that, as a leg­al or named heir, he or she has a bet­ter claim than the cur­rent pos­sessor to an es­tate or a part there­of may as­sert his or her claim by bring­ing an ac­tion for re­cov­ery of in­her­it­ance.

2 ...496

496 Re­pealed by An­nex 1 No II 3 of the Civil Pro­ced­ure Code of 19 Dec. 2008, with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 2011 (AS 2010 1739; BBl 2006 7221).

Art. 599  

B. Ef­fect

 

1 If the claim is up­held, the pos­sessor must re­lin­quish the es­tate or the part there­of to the claimant in ac­cord­ance with the rules gov­ern­ing pos­ses­sion.

2 The de­fend­ant can­not in­voke ad­verse pos­ses­sion in re­spect of prop­erty be­long­ing to the es­tate.

Art. 600  

C. Pre­scrip­tion

 

1 The right to bring an ac­tion for re­cov­ery of in­her­it­ance against a de­fend­ant act­ing in good faith pre­scribes one year after the date on which the claimant learned that the prop­erty was pos­sessed by the de­fend­ant and that he or she has a bet­ter claim to it, but in all cases ten years after the death of the de­ceased or the date on which the will was read.

2 The pre­script­ive peri­od for the right to bring an ac­tion against a de­fend­ant act­ing in bad faith is al­ways 30 years.

Art. 601  

D. Ac­tion by a leg­atee

 

The right of a leg­atee to bring an ac­tion pre­scribes ten years after no­ti­fic­a­tion of the test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion or from the sub­sequent date on which the leg­acy be­came due.

Title Seventeen: Division of the Estate

Chapter One: Community of Heirs prior to Division

Art. 602  

A. Ef­fect of suc­ces­sion

I. Com­munity of heirs

 

1 Where sev­er­al heirs in­her­it the es­tate, on suc­ces­sion and un­til such time as it is di­vided they form a com­munity in re­spect of all rights and ob­lig­a­tions of the es­tate.

2 They be­come joint own­ers of the prop­erty be­long­ing to the es­tate and have joint power of dis­pos­al over the rights of the es­tate, sub­ject to con­trac­tu­al or stat­utory powers of rep­res­ent­a­tion and ad­min­is­tra­tion.

3 At the re­quest of one co-heir, the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity may ap­point a rep­res­ent­at­ive of the com­munity of heirs un­til the es­tate is di­vided.

Art. 603  

II. Li­ab­il­ity of the heirs

 

1 The heirs are jointly and sev­er­ally li­able for the debts of the de­ceased.

2 The ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion due to chil­dren or grand­chil­dren for con­tri­bu­tions made to the house­hold they shared with the de­ceased must be ad­ded to the debts of the es­tate un­less this would render the es­tate over­indebted.497

497In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 6 Oct. 1972, in force since 15 Feb. 1973 (AS 1973 93; BBl 1970 I 805, 1971 I 737).

Art. 604  

B. Right to di­vi­sion

 

1 Any heir may at any time re­quest that the es­tate be di­vided un­less he or she is un­der a con­trac­tu­al or stat­utory ob­lig­a­tion to re­main a mem­ber of the com­munity of heirs.

2 On ap­plic­a­tion by an heir, the court may or­der a tem­por­ary de­fer­ral of the di­vi­sion of the es­tate or spe­cif­ic parts there­of where im­me­di­ate di­vi­sion would sub­stan­tially im­pair their value.

3 Where one heir is in­solv­ent, his or her co-heirs may ap­ply for pro­vi­sion­al meas­ures to se­cure their own claims im­me­di­ately upon suc­ces­sion.

Art. 605  

C. De­fer­ral of di­vi­sion

 

1 If on suc­ces­sion the rights of an un­born child need to be taken in­to con­sid­er­a­tion, the di­vi­sion of the es­tate must be de­ferred un­til the child is born.

2 In the in­ter­im, the child’s moth­er is en­titled to en­joy the be­ne­fits of the joint es­tate to the ex­tent re­quired for her main­ten­ance.

Art. 606  

D. Claims of house­hold mem­bers

 

Heirs who were mem­bers of the house­hold of and main­tained by the de­ceased at the time of his or her death may de­mand that they be main­tained for a fur­ther month at the es­tate’s ex­pense.

Chapter Two: Method of Division

Art. 607  

A. In gen­er­al

 

1 Stat­utory heirs must di­vide the es­tate among them­selves and with the named heirs ac­cord­ing to the same prin­ciples.

2 Ex­cept where provided oth­er­wise, they are free to de­cide on the meth­od of di­vi­sion.

3 Co-heirs in pos­ses­sion of es­tate prop­erty or in debt to the de­ceased must provide pre­cise in­form­a­tion re­gard­ing such cir­cum­stances pri­or to the di­vi­sion.

Art. 608  

B. In­struc­tions con­cern­ing the di­vi­sion

I. Test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion

 

1 The test­at­or is en­titled by means of test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion to give his or her heirs in­struc­tions con­cern­ing the di­vi­sion and the form­a­tion of por­tions.

2 Such in­struc­tions are bind­ing on the heirs, sub­ject to meas­ures to bal­ance out the por­tions in the event of an in­equal­ity not in­ten­ded by the test­at­or.

3 Un­less oth­er in­ten­tions on the part of the test­at­or are evid­ent from his or her dis­pos­i­tion, any be­quest of a giv­en part of the es­tate to one par­tic­u­lar heir is deemed to be merely an in­struc­tion con­cern­ing the di­vi­sion rather than a spe­cif­ic leg­acy.

Art. 609  

II. As­sist­ance from the au­thor­it­ies

 

1 At the re­quest of a cred­it­or who has ac­quired or dis­trained an in­her­it­ance that has passed to an heir or who holds un­paid debt cer­ti­fic­ates against him or her, the au­thor­it­ies must as­sist in the di­vi­sion in place of that heir.

2 Can­ton­al law may provide for of­fi­cial in­ter­ven­tion in the di­vi­sion pro­cess in oth­er cases.

Art. 610  

C. Per­form­ing the di­vi­sion

I. Equal rights of heirs

 

1 Ex­cept where oth­er pro­vi­sions ap­ply, all heirs have an equal right to the es­tate prop­erty.

2 They must dis­close to each oth­er all cir­cum­stances con­cern­ing their re­la­tion­ship with the de­ceased in­so­far as these per­tain to the just and equit­able di­vi­sion of the es­tate.

3 Each heir may re­quest that the debts of the de­ceased be re­deemed or se­cured pri­or to di­vi­sion of the es­tate.

Art. 611  

II. Form­a­tion of lots

 

1 The heirs form as many por­tions or lots as there are heirs or stirpes.

2 If they are un­able to reach agree­ment, at the re­quest of one heir the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity must form the lots with due re­gard to loc­al cus­tom and the per­son­al cir­cum­stances and wishes of the ma­jor­ity of the co-heirs.

3 The lots are dis­trib­uted among the heirs either as agreed or by the draw­ing of lots.

Art. 612  

III. Al­loc­a­tion and sale of spe­cif­ic ob­jects

 

1 Where the value of an ob­ject be­long­ing to the es­tate would be sub­stan­tially di­min­ished if such ob­ject were di­vided, it is al­loc­ated in its en­tirety to one of the heirs.

2 Where the heirs are un­able to agree on the di­vi­sion or al­loc­a­tion of an ob­ject, it must be sold and the pro­ceeds di­vided.

3 At the re­quest of an heir, such sale must be car­ried out at auc­tion and, in the ab­sence of agree­ment among the heirs, the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity de­cides wheth­er such auc­tion is to be pub­lic or only among the heirs.

Art. 612a498  

IV. Al­loc­a­tion of the home and house­hold ef­fects to the sur­viv­ing spouse

 

1 Where the house or apart­ment in which the spouses lived or the house­hold ef­fects form part of the es­tate, the sur­viv­ing spouse may re­quest that such prop­erty be al­loc­ated to him or her against his or her por­tion.

2 Where jus­ti­fied in the cir­cum­stances, at the re­quest of the sur­viv­ing spouse or the oth­er stat­utory heirs of the de­ceased, a usu­fruct or right of res­id­ence may be gran­ted rather than own­er­ship of the home.

3 The sur­viv­ing spouse can­not claim such rights in re­spect of premises in which the de­ceased prac­tised a pro­fes­sion or ran a busi­ness and which are re­quired by one of his or her is­sue in or­der to con­tin­ue the pro­fes­sion or busi­ness, sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions of ag­ri­cul­tur­al law of suc­ces­sion.

4 The same pro­vi­sions ap­ply mu­tatis mutandis to re­gistered part­ners.499

498In­ser­ted by No I 2 of the FA of 5 Oct. 1984, in force since 1 Jan. 1988 (AS 1986 122153Art. 1; BBl 1979 II 1191).

499 In­ser­ted by An­nex No 8 of the Same-Sex Part­ner­ship Act of 18 June 2004, in force since 1 Jan. 2007 (AS 20055685; BBl 20031288).

Art. 613  

D. Spe­cial items

I. Items that be­long to­geth­er, fam­ily doc­u­ments

 

1 Items which by their nature be­long to­geth­er must not be sep­ar­ated if one of the heirs ob­jects to such sep­ar­a­tion.

2 Fam­ily doc­u­ments and items of spe­cial sen­ti­ment­al value to the fam­ily must not be sold if any of the heirs ob­jects.

3 If the heirs can­not reach agree­ment, the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity de­cides wheth­er to sell such items or to al­loc­ate them, against the re­cip­i­ent’s por­tion or oth­er­wise, giv­ing due re­gard to loc­al cus­tom and, in the ab­sence of such cus­tom, to the per­son­al cir­cum­stances of the heirs.

Art. 613a500  

I.bis Ag­ri­cul­tur­al in­vent­ory

 

Where the ten­ant of an ag­ri­cul­tur­al en­ter­prise dies and one of his or her heirs con­tin­ues the lease on his or her own, on re­quest he or she may have the en­tire in­vent­ory (live­stock, ma­chinery, sup­plies, etc.) al­loc­ated to him or her and charged to his or her por­tion at its util­ity value.

500In­ser­ted by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

Art. 614  

II. Claims of the de­ceased against his or her heirs

 

Claims of the de­ceased against an heir are charged to the lat­ter’s por­tion.

Art. 615  

III. Pledged es­tate prop­erty

 

If as a res­ult of the di­vi­sion an heir re­ceives es­tate prop­erty that is pledged to se­cure the debts of the de­ceased, the debt to the pledgee is like­wise trans­ferred to him or her.

Art. 616501  
 

501Re­pealed by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

Art. 617502  

IV. Land

1. Meth­od of al­loc­a­tion

a. Im­puted value

 

Land is charged to the heirs’ por­tions at its mar­ket value as at the time of the di­vi­sion.

502Amended by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

Art. 618  

b. Valu­ation pro­ced­ure

 

1 Where the heirs are un­able to agree on the mar­ket value, it is es­tim­ated by an of­fi­cially ap­poin­ted ex­pert.503

2 ...504

503 Amended by An­nex 1 No II 3 of the Civil Pro­ced­ure Code of 19 Dec. 2008, in force since 1 Jan. 2011 (AS 2010 1739; BBl 2006 7221).

504Re­pealed by No I 1 of the FA of 6 Oct. 1972, with ef­fect from 15 Feb. 1994 (AS 1973 93; BBl 1970 I 805, 1971 I 737).

Art. 619505  

V. Ag­ri­cul­tur­al busi­nesses and land

 

The meth­od of in­clud­ing and al­loc­at­ing ag­ri­cul­tur­al en­ter­prises and ag­ri­cul­tur­al land is gov­erned by the Fed­er­al Act of 4 Oc­to­ber 1991506 on Rur­al Land Rights.

505Amended by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

506SR 211.412.11

Art. 620–625507  
 

507Re­pealed by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

Chapter Three: Hotchpot

Art. 626  

A. Hotch­pot duty of the heirs

 

1 The stat­utory heirs are un­der a mu­tu­al ob­lig­a­tion to place in­to hotch­pot any prop­erty re­ceived from the de­ceased dur­ing his or her life­time as ad­vance­ments against their share of the es­tate.

2 Un­less the de­ceased ex­pressly in­struc­ted oth­er­wise, any­thing gif­ted or gran­ted to his or her is­sue by way of dowry, en­dow­ment or as­sign­ment of as­sets, debt re­mis­sion and the like is sub­ject to hotch­pot.

Art. 627  

B. Hotch­pot if heirs cease to be heirs

 

1 If a per­son ceases to be an heir be­fore or after suc­ces­sion, his or her duty of hotch­pot passes to the heirs that re­place him or her.

2 The is­sue of an heir have a duty of hotch­pot in re­spect of ad­vance­ments made in his or her fa­vour even if those ad­vance­ments have not de­volved on them.

Art. 628  

C. Cal­cu­la­tion meth­od

I. In kind or by im­puta­tion of value

 

1 When pla­cing prop­erty in hotch­pot, the heirs may at their dis­cre­tion do so either in kind or by im­put­ing its value, even if the ad­vance­ments made in their fa­vour ex­ceed the value of their share of the es­tate.

2 The above pro­vi­sions are sub­ject to any con­trary in­struc­tions is­sued by the test­at­or and to the co-heirs’ right to abate­ment of the ad­vance­ments.

Art. 629  

II. Cor­rel­a­tion with share of the es­tate

 

1 Where ad­vance­ments to an heir ex­ceed the value of his or her share of the es­tate, sub­ject to claims in abate­ment, the sur­plus is ex­empt from hotch­pot if it may be shown that the de­ceased in­ten­ded to fa­vour said heir by such ad­vance­ments.

2 Ex­emp­tion from hotch­pot is pre­sumed in the case of en­dow­ments in the usu­al or­der of mag­nitude made to the is­sue on their mar­riage.

Art. 630  

III. Hotch­pot value

 

1 Hotch­pot is cal­cu­lated ac­cord­ing to the value of the ad­vance­ments on suc­ces­sion or, where the ad­vanced prop­erty has pre­vi­ously been sold, the sale pro­ceeds ob­tained.

2 Any ex­pendit­ure on and dam­age to the prop­erty and the nat­ur­al pro­duce de­rived there­from must be al­lowed for among the heirs ac­cord­ing to the rules gov­ern­ing pos­ses­sion.

Art. 631  

D. Edu­ca­tion costs

 

1 Un­less it is shown that the de­ceased in­ten­ded oth­er­wise, sums ex­pen­ded by him or her on the up­bring­ing and edu­ca­tion of in­di­vidu­al chil­dren are sub­ject to hotch­pot only in­so­far as they ex­ceed the nor­mal amounts.

2 Chil­dren still in edu­ca­tion or who suf­fer from dis­ab­il­it­ies must be gran­ted ap­pro­pri­ate ad­vance pay­ments on di­vi­sion of the es­tate.508

508Amended by No I 2 of the FA of 5 Oct. 1984, in force since 1 Jan. 1988 (AS 1986 122153Art. 1; BBl 1979 II 1191).

Art. 632  

E. Oc­ca­sion­al gifts

 

Cus­tom­ary oc­ca­sion­al gifts are not sub­ject to hotch­pot.

Art. 633509  
 

509Re­pealed by No I 1 of the FA of 6 Oct. 1972, with ef­fect from 15 Feb. 1994 (AS 1973 93; BBl 1970 I 805, 1971 I 737).

Chapter Four: Completion and Effect of Division

Art. 634  

A. Agree­ment

I. Con­tract of di­vi­sion

 

1 The di­vi­sion of the es­tate be­comes bind­ing on the heirs once the lots have been formed and re­ceived or on con­clu­sion of the con­tract of di­vi­sion.

2 In or­der to be val­id, the con­tract of di­vi­sion must be done in writ­ing.

Art. 635  

II. Con­tracts re­gard­ing shares of the es­tate

 

1 In or­der to be val­id, con­tracts between heirs re­gard­ing as­sign­ment of shares of the es­tate must be done in writ­ing.510

2 If such con­tracts are con­cluded by an heir with third parties, they do not give the lat­ter any right to par­ti­cip­ate in the di­vi­sion of the es­tate, but merely con­fer a claim on the share al­loc­ated to that heir as a res­ult of the di­vi­sion.

510Amended by No I 2 of the FA of 5 Oct. 1984, in force since 1 Jan. 1988 (AS 1986 122153Art. 1; BBl 1979 II 1191).

Art. 636  

III. Con­tracts pri­or to suc­ces­sion

 

1 Con­tracts con­cluded without the in­volve­ment and au­thor­isa­tion of the test­at­or between one heir and an­oth­er or between an heir and a third party re­gard­ing an in­her­it­ance that has not yet de­volved on the heir are not bind­ing.

2 Any per­form­ance rendered un­der such con­tracts may be re­claimed.

Art. 637  

B. Li­ab­il­ity among co-heirs

I. War­ranty

 

1 On com­ple­tion of the di­vi­sion, the co-heirs are mu­tu­ally li­able for the es­tate prop­erty as if they were pur­chasers and vendors.

2 They must mu­tu­ally war­rant the ex­ist­ence of claims al­loc­ated to them in the di­vi­sion and, ex­cept in the case of se­cur­it­ies with a mar­ket price, are mu­tu­ally li­able as simple guar­ant­ors for the debt­or’s solvency in the amount at which such claims were brought in­to ac­count.

3 Claims un­der such war­ranty pre­scribe one year after the di­vi­sion or the sub­sequent date on which the claims fell due.

Art. 638  

II. Chal­len­ging the di­vi­sion

 

A con­tract of di­vi­sion may be chal­lenged in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing chal­lenge of con­tract in gen­er­al.

Art. 639  

C. Li­ab­il­ity to­ward third parties

I. Joint and sev­er­al li­ab­il­ity

 

1 Even after the di­vi­sion of the es­tate, the heirs re­main jointly and sev­er­ally li­able with their en­tire prop­erty for the debts of the test­at­or to his or her cred­it­ors, provid­ing the lat­ter have not ex­pressly or ta­citly agreed to a di­vi­sion or trans­fer of such debts.

2 The joint and sev­er­al li­ab­il­ity of the co-heirs pre­scribes five years after the di­vi­sion or the sub­sequent date on which the debt claim fell due.

Art. 640  

II. Re­course against co-heirs

 

1 If an heir has paid a debt owed by the de­ceased that was not al­loc­ated to him or her in the di­vi­sion, or if he or she has paid more of a debt than he or she has as­sumed, he or she has right of re­course against the co-heirs.

2 Re­course is taken first against the per­son who as­sumed such debt in the di­vi­sion.

3 In all oth­er re­spects, the heirs must bear the debts in pro­por­tion to their shares in the es­tate, un­less oth­er­wise agreed.

Part Four: Property Law

Division One: Ownership

Title Eighteen: General Provisions

Art. 641  

A. Nature of own­er­ship

I. In gen­er­al

 

1 The own­er of an ob­ject is free to dis­pose of it as he or she sees fit with­in the lim­its of the law.

2 He or she has the right to re­claim it from any­one with­hold­ing it from him or her and to pro­tect it against any un­war­ran­ted in­ter­fer­ence.

Art. 641a512  

II. An­im­als

 

1 An­im­als are not ob­jects.

2 Where no spe­cial pro­vi­sions ex­ist for an­im­als, they are sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing ob­jects.

512 In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 2002 (Art­icle of Ba­sic Prin­ciples: An­im­als), in force since 1 April 2003 (AS 2003 463; BBl 2002 41645806).

Art. 642  

B. Scope of own­er­ship

I. Con­stitu­ent parts

 

1 The own­er of an ob­ject also has own­er­ship of all its con­stitu­ent parts.

2 A con­stitu­ent part is any­thing which, ac­cord­ing to loc­al cus­tom, is held to be an es­sen­tial part of an ob­ject and which can­not be de­tached without des­troy­ing, dam­aging or al­ter­ing it.

Art. 643  

II. Nat­ur­al fruits

 

1 The own­er of an ob­ject also has own­er­ship of its nat­ur­al fruits.

2 Nat­ur­al fruits are the peri­od­ic pro­duce and rev­en­ues cus­tom­ar­ily de­rived from an ob­ject used ac­cord­ing to its pur­pose.

3 Pri­or to sep­ar­a­tion, the nat­ur­al fruits are an in­teg­ral part of the ob­ject.

Art. 644  

III. Ac­cessor­ies

1. Defin­i­tion

 

1 Any dis­pos­i­tion af­fect­ing an ob­ject also ap­plies to its ac­cessor­ies, un­less an ex­cep­tion is made.

2 Ac­cessor­ies are those chat­tels which, ac­cord­ing to loc­al cus­tom or the clear will of the main ob­ject's own­er, per­man­ently fa­cil­it­ate the man­age­ment, use or pre­ser­va­tion of the main ob­ject and are aux­il­i­ary thereto by vir­tue of hav­ing been joined to it, ad­ap­ted to it or oth­er­wise con­nec­ted with it.

3 If an ob­ject is an ac­cess­ory, it re­mains so re­gard­less of tem­por­ary sep­ar­a­tion from the main ob­ject.

Art. 645  

2. Ex­clu­sions

 

Chat­tels do not qual­i­fy as ac­cessor­ies if they are in­ten­ded for tem­por­ary use or con­sump­tion by the pos­sessor of the main ob­ject, are not in­trins­ic­ally re­lated to it or are con­nec­ted with it only for stor­age, sale or hire pur­poses.

Art. 646  

C. Col­lect­ive own­er­ship

I. Co-own­er­ship

1. Re­la­tion­ship among co-own­ers

 

1 Co-own­er­ship ex­ists where sev­er­al per­sons own a share in an ob­ject which is phys­ic­ally un­di­vided.

2 Un­less oth­er­wise stip­u­lated, they are co-own­ers in equal meas­ure.

3 Each co-own­er has the rights and ob­lig­a­tions of own­er­ship in re­spect of his or her share in the ob­ject, and said share may be ali­en­ated and pledged by him or her, or dis­trained by his or her cred­it­ors.

Art. 647513  

2. Use and ad­min­is­tra­tion rules

 

1 The co-own­ers may agree rules on use and ad­min­is­tra­tion that de­vi­ate from the stat­utory pro­vi­sions and provide therein that the rules may be amended with the con­sent of the ma­jor­ity of all co-own­ers.514

1bis Any amend­ment to the pro­vi­sions of the use and ad­min­is­tra­tion rules on the al­loc­a­tion of ex­clus­ive rights of use also re­quires the con­sent of the co-own­ers who are dir­ectly af­fected.515

2 Such rules can­not an­nul or re­strict the rights of each co-own­er:

1.
to re­quest such meas­ures as are ne­ces­sary to pre­serve the ob­ject’s value and ser­vice­ab­il­ity and, where re­quired, to have these ordered by a court;
2.
to take, on his or her own ini­ti­at­ive and at the ex­pense of all co-own­ers, such meas­ures as are ur­gently needed to safe­guard the ob­ject against im­min­ent or in­cre­ment­al dam­age.

513Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

514 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

515 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 647a516  

3. Or­din­ary ad­min­is­tra­tion

 

1 Each co-own­er may at­tend to or­din­ary ad­min­is­tra­tion and in par­tic­u­lar carry out re­pairs, sow­ing and har­vest­ing, short-term cus­tody and su­per­vi­sion, may con­clude con­tracts for such pur­poses and may ex­er­cise the powers de­rived from such con­tracts and from rent­al, lease, work and ser­vice agree­ments, in­clud­ing the pay­ment and ac­cept­ance of mon­ies on be­half of all the co-own­ers.

2 With the con­sent of the ma­jor­ity of the co-own­ers, the au­thor­ity to carry out ad­min­is­tra­tion may be sub­mit­ted to a dif­fer­ent re­gime, sub­ject to the stat­utory pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing ne­ces­sary and ur­gent meas­ures.

516In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 647b517  

4. Ma­jor ad­min­is­trat­ive acts

 

1 By the con­sent of a ma­jor­ity of the co-own­ers to­geth­er rep­res­ent­ing a ma­jor­ity share in the ob­ject, ma­jor ad­min­is­trat­ive acts may be car­ried out, not­ably in­clud­ing changes in meth­ods of cul­tiv­a­tion or use, con­clu­sion and ter­min­a­tion of rent­al and lease agree­ments, par­ti­cip­a­tion in land im­prove­ments and the ap­point­ment of an ad­min­is­trat­or whose au­thor­ity ex­tends bey­ond or­din­ary ad­min­is­trat­ive acts.

2 The pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing ne­ces­sary con­struc­tion work are re­served.

517In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 647c518  

5. Con­struc­tion work

a. Ne­ces­sary work

 

Main­ten­ance, re­con­struc­tion and renov­a­tion work ne­ces­sary to pre­serve the ob­ject’s value and ser­vice­ab­il­ity may be car­ried out with the con­sent of the ma­jor­ity of co-own­ers where such work does not fall un­der the au­thor­ity of each in­di­vidu­al co-own­er to take or­din­ary ad­min­is­trat­ive steps.

518In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 647d519  

b. Use­ful work

 

1 Renov­a­tions and re­fur­bish­ments aimed at en­han­cing the value or im­prov­ing the ob­ject’s prof­it­ab­il­ity or ser­vice­ab­il­ity re­quire the ap­prov­al of a ma­jor­ity of the co-own­ers to­geth­er rep­res­ent­ing a ma­jor­ity share in the ob­ject.

2 Al­ter­a­tions which per­man­ently hinder or render un­prof­it­able a co-own­er’s use or ex­ploit­a­tion of the ob­ject for its ex­ist­ing pur­pose may not be car­ried out without the con­sent of that co-own­er.

3 Where an al­ter­a­tion would re­quire a co-own­er to bear un­reas­on­able costs, in par­tic­u­lar be­cause they are dis­pro­por­tion­ate to the value of his or her share, the al­ter­a­tion may be car­ried out without his or her con­sent only if the oth­er co-own­ers as­sume such part of his or her share of the costs as ex­ceeds that which he or she may reas­on­ably be ex­pec­ted to meet.

519In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 647e520  

c. Works to im­prove ap­pear­ance or con­veni­ence

 

1 Build­ing works serving merely to em­bel­lish the ob­ject, im­prove its ap­pear­ance or make its use more com­fort­able or con­veni­ent may only be car­ried out with the con­sent of all the co-own­ers.

2 If such works are com­mis­sioned with the con­sent of the ma­jor­ity of the co-own­ers who also rep­res­ent a ma­jor­ity share in the ob­ject, they may be car­ried out even against the wishes of a dis­sent­ing co-own­er provid­ing they do not per­man­ently im­pair the lat­ter’s right of use and en­joy­ment and the oth­er co-own­ers com­pensate him or her for the merely tem­por­ary impair­ment and as­sume his or her share of the costs.

520In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 648521  

6. Power of dis­pos­al over the ob­ject

 

1 Each co-own­er is en­titled to rep­res­ent, use and ex­ploit the ob­ject in­so­far as is com­pat­ible with the rights of the oth­er co-own­ers.

2 The ali­en­a­tion or en­cum­brance of the ob­ject and the modi­fic­a­tion of its des­ig­nated pur­pose re­quire the con­sent of all co-own­ers, un­less they have un­an­im­ously agreed some oth­er ar­range­ment.

3 Where mort­gage rights or real bur­dens ap­ply to co-own­er­ship shares, the co-own­ers are not per­mit­ted to fur­ther en­cum­ber the ob­ject it­self with such charges.

521Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 649522  

7. Costs and ex­penses

 

1 Ex­cept where oth­er­wise provided, the ad­min­is­trat­ive costs, taxes and oth­er ex­penses arising from co-own­er­ship or in re­la­tion to the ob­ject in co-own­er­ship are borne by the co-own­ers in pro­por­tion to their shares.

2 If a co-own­er has borne more than his or her fair share of such costs, he or she is en­titled to com­pens­a­tion from the oth­ers to an equi­val­ent ex­tent.

522Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 649a524  

8. Bind­ing nature of rules and not­ing in the land re­gister

 

The use and ad­min­is­tra­tion rules agreed by the co-own­ers, their ad­min­is­trat­ive de­cisions and all rel­ev­ant court judg­ments and or­ders are also bind­ing on a co-own­er’s leg­al suc­cessor and on any per­son ac­quir­ing a right in rem to a co-own­er­ship share.

2 They may be noted next to co-own­er­ship shares of im­mov­able prop­erty in the land re­gister.525

524In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

525 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 649b526  

9. Ex­clu­sion from col­lect­ive own­er­ship

a. Co-own­ers

 

1 A co-own­er may be ex­cluded from the com­munity of co-own­ers by court or­der if, as a res­ult of his or her con­duct or that of per­sons to whom he or she gran­ted use of the ob­ject or for whom he or she is re­spons­ible, his or her du­ties to­wards the oth­er co-own­ers in­di­vidu­ally or col­lect­ively are so ser­i­ously vi­ol­ated that con­tinu­ation of the com­munity of co-own­ers be­comes un­reas­on­able.

2 Where the com­munity com­prises only two co-own­ers, each has the right to sue the oth­er; in oth­er cases, un­less oth­er­wise agreed, leg­al ac­tion against one co-own­er must be au­thor­ised by a ma­jor­ity of all the co-own­ers ex­clud­ing the per­son to be sued.

3 If the court rules in fa­vour of ex­clud­ing the de­fend­ant, it shall or­der him or her to ali­en­ate his or her share and, should he or she fail to do so with­in the al­lowed time lim­it, shall or­der it to be sold at pub­lic auc­tion in ac­cord­ance with the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing the forced sale of land to the ex­clu­sion of the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing dis­sol­u­tion of co-own­er­ship.

526In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 649c527  

b. Fur­ther en­titled per­sons

 

The pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing ex­clu­sion of co-own­ers ap­ply mu­tatis mutandis to usu­fructu­ar­ies and to own­ers of oth­er rights in rem or per­son­al rights of use entered un­der pri­or­ity no­tice in the land re­gister in re­spect of co-own­er­ship shares.

527In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 650528  

10. Dis­sol­u­tion

a. Right to re­quest di­vi­sion

 

1 Every co-own­er has the right to re­quest the dis­sol­u­tion of the co-own­er­ship un­less this is ex­cluded by an agree­ment, by di­vi­sion of the ob­ject in­to con­domin­i­um units or by the ded­ic­a­tion of the ob­ject to a per­man­ent pur­pose.

2 Dis­sol­u­tion may be ex­cluded for a max­im­um of 50 years by means of an agree­ment which, where the ob­ject is land, is val­id only if done as a pub­lic deed and which may be entered un­der pri­or­ity no­tice in the land re­gister.529

3 Dis­sol­u­tion may not be re­ques­ted at an in­op­por­tune time.

528Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

529 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 651  

b. Form of par­ti­tion

 

1 Dis­sol­u­tion is ef­fected by means of phys­ic­al di­vi­sion, by private sale or sale at auc­tion and di­vi­sion of the sale pro­ceeds, or by trans­fer of the en­tire ob­ject to one or more co-own­ers who buy out the oth­ers.

2 If the co-own­ers are un­able to agree on the meth­od of dis­sol­u­tion, the court will or­der the phys­ic­al di­vi­sion of the ob­ject or, where this is im­possible without sub­stan­tially di­min­ish­ing its value, its sale at pub­lic auc­tion or private auc­tion among the co-own­ers.

3 Phys­ic­al di­vi­sion giv­ing rise to un­equal shares may en­tail mon­et­ary pay­ments to bal­ance out the shares.

Art. 651a530  

c. An­im­als kept as pets

 

1 In the event of dis­putes over own­er­ship of an­im­als kept as pets rather than for in­vest­ment or com­mer­cial pur­poses, the court will award sole own­er­ship to whichever party of­fers the bet­ter con­di­tions of an­im­al wel­fare in which to keep the an­im­al.

2 The court may or­der the per­son to whom own­er­ship of the an­im­al is awar­ded to provide ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion to the oth­er party; the court de­term­ines the amount at its dis­cre­tion.

3 The court shall take all ne­ces­sary pro­vi­sion­al meas­ures, in par­tic­u­lar in re­la­tion to the an­im­al’s care in the in­ter­im.

530 In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 2002 (Art­icle of Ba­sic Prin­ciples: An­im­als), in force since 1 April 2003 (AS 2003 463; BBl 2002 41645806).

Art. 652  

II. Joint own­er­ship

1. Pre­requis­ites

 

If sev­er­al per­sons bound to­geth­er in­to a com­munity by leg­al pro­vi­sion or con­tract own an ob­ject by vir­tue of that com­munity, they are joint own­ers and the rights of each joint own­er at­tach to the whole ob­ject.

Art. 653  

2. Ef­fect

 

1 The rights and ob­lig­a­tions of the joint own­ers are de­term­ined by the rules gov­ern­ing their leg­al or con­trac­tu­al com­munity.

2 Un­less oth­er­wise provided, the un­an­im­ous de­cision of all the joint own­ers is re­quired in or­der to ex­er­cise own­er­ship rights and in par­tic­u­lar to dis­pose of the ob­ject in any way.

3 For the dur­a­tion of the com­munity, the right to di­vide the ob­ject or make dis­pos­i­tions re­lat­ing to a frac­tion of it is ex­cluded.

Art. 654  

3. Dis­sol­u­tion

 

1 Dis­sol­u­tion oc­curs when the ob­ject is ali­en­ated or the com­munity is ter­min­ated.

2 Un­less oth­er­wise provided, di­vi­sion of the ob­ject is ef­fected ac­cord­ing to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing co-own­er­ship.

Art. 654a531  

III. Joint own­er­ship of ag­ri­cul­tur­al en­ter­prises and land

 

The dis­sol­u­tion of joint own­er­ship of ag­ri­cul­tur­al en­ter­prises and ag­ri­cul­tur­al land is gov­erned by the Fed­er­al Act of 4 Oc­to­ber 1991532 on Rur­al Land Rights.

531In­ser­ted by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

532SR 211.412.11

Title Nineteen: Land Ownership

Chapter One: Object, Acquisition and Loss of Land Ownership

Art. 655534  

A. Sub­ject mat­ter

I. Im­mov­able prop­erty

 

1 The ob­ject of land own­er­ship is all im­mov­able prop­erty.

2 With­in the mean­ing of this Code, im­mov­able prop­erty in­cludes:

1.
par­cels of land and the build­ings there­on;
2.
dis­tinct and per­man­ent rights re­cor­ded in the land re­gister;
3.
mines;
4.
co-own­er­ship shares in im­mov­able prop­erty.

3 An ease­ment re­lat­ing to im­mov­able prop­erty may be re­cor­ded in the land re­gister as an in­de­pend­ent and per­man­ent right if it:

1.
is not cre­ated in fa­vour of a be­nefited prop­erty nor ex­clus­ively for a spe­cif­ic per­son; and
2.
is es­tab­lished for at least 30 years or for an un­lim­ited peri­od.535

534Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

535 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 655a536  

II. De­pend­ent prop­erty

 

1 A par­cel of land may be linked to an­oth­er par­cel of land such that the own­er of the main par­cel of land is also the own­er of the at­tached par­cel of land. The at­tached par­cel shares the same leg­al des­tiny as the main par­cel and may not be ali­en­ated, pledged or en­cumbered sep­ar­ately.

2 If the par­cels are linked for a per­man­ent pur­pose, the stat­utory right of pre-emption of the co-own­ers and the right to de­mand dis­sol­u­tion may not be claimed.

536 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 656  

B. Ac­quis­i­tion

I. Re­gis­tra­tion

 

1 The ac­quis­i­tion of land own­er­ship must be re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

2 In the case of ap­pro­pri­ation, in­her­it­ance, com­puls­ory pur­chase, debt en­force­ment or court judg­ment, the ac­quirer be­comes the own­er even be­fore re­gis­tra­tion in the land re­gister but ob­tains the power of dis­pos­al over the im­mov­able prop­erty only once he or she has been re­cor­ded as the own­er in the land re­gister.

Art. 657  

II. Types of ac­quis­i­tion

1. Trans­fer

 

1 In or­der to be bind­ing, a con­tract to trans­fer land own­er­ship must be ex­ecuted as a pub­lic deed.

2 Test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion and mar­it­al con­tracts re­quire the forms pre­scribed by the law of suc­ces­sion and mar­it­al prop­erty law.

Art. 658  

2. Ap­pro­pri­ation

 

1 Im­mov­able prop­erty re­cor­ded in the land re­gister may be ap­pro­pri­ated only if the re­gister es­tab­lishes that it has no own­er.

2 Ap­pro­pri­ation of land not re­cor­ded in the land re­gister is sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing own­er­less ob­jects.

Art. 659  

3. Form­a­tion of new land

 

1 If new ex­ploit­able land is formed from pre­vi­ously own­er­less land as a res­ult of al­lu­vi­on, filling or ground dis­place­ment, changes in the course or level of pub­lic wa­ters or in some oth­er man­ner, such land be­longs to the can­ton in which it lies.

2 The can­tons are free to al­loc­ate such land to own­ers of ad­join­ing land.

3 If a per­son can show that parts of ground have be­come de­tached from his or her prop­erty, he or she is en­titled to take them back with­in an ap­pro­pri­ate peri­od.

Art. 660  

4. Ground dis­place­ment

a. In gen­er­al

 

1 Ground dis­place­ment from one par­cel of land to an­oth­er does not al­ter the bound­ar­ies of the par­cels.

2 Earth and oth­er ob­jects mov­ing from one par­cel to the oth­er in the pro­cess are sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing driftage or the join­ing and mix­ing of chat­tels.

Art. 660a538  

b. Con­stant ground dis­place­ment

 

1 The gen­er­al prin­ciple whereby ground dis­place­ment does not al­ter land bound­ar­ies does not ap­ply to areas des­ig­nated by the can­tons as be­ing in per­man­ent danger of ground dis­place­ment.

2 When des­ig­nat­ing such areas, due con­sid­er­a­tion shall be giv­en to the char­ac­ter­ist­ics of the land in ques­tion.

3 Where a par­cel of land forms part of such an area, this fact must be no­ti­fied in an ap­pro­pri­ate man­ner to the in­ter­ested parties and re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

538In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 660b539  

c. Re­draw­ing of bound­ar­ies

 

1 If a land bound­ary is rendered im­prac­tic­al by ground dis­place­ment, any af­fected landown­er may re­quest that it be re­drawn.

2 Any loss or gain in value shall be bal­anced out.

539In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 661  

5. Ad­verse pos­ses­sion

a. Or­din­ary ad­verse pos­ses­sion

 

Where a per­son has been wrongly re­cor­ded in the land re­gister as the own­er of im­mov­able prop­erty, his or her own­er­ship may no longer be chal­lenged if he or she has been in pos­ses­sion of it in good faith, un­in­ter­rup­tedly and without chal­lenge for ten years.

Art. 662  

b. Ex­traordin­ary ad­verse pos­ses­sion

 

1 Where a per­son has been in pos­ses­sion of im­mov­able prop­erty not re­cor­ded in the land re­gister un­in­ter­rup­tedly and without chal­lenge for 30 years as if it were his or her prop­erty, he or she has the right to be re­gistered as the own­er.

2 The same right ap­plies on the same con­di­tions to a per­son in pos­ses­sion of im­mov­able prop­erty whose own­er is not evid­ent from the land re­gister or who was de­clared dead or pre­sumed dead at the be­gin­ning of the 30-year ad­verse pos­ses­sion peri­od.

3 However, such re­gis­tra­tion may be made only by court or­der on ex­piry of a pub­licly no­ti­fied peri­od for ob­jec­tions, provided no such ob­jec­tions have been raised or those raised have been dis­missed.

Art. 663  

c. Time lim­its

 

The rules for com­put­ing, in­ter­rupt­ing and sus­pend­ing ad­verse pos­ses­sion time lim­its are de­term­ined mu­tatis mutandis by the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing pre­scrip­tion of debt claims.

Art. 664  

6. Own­er­less and pub­lic ob­jects

 

1 Own­er­less and pub­lic ob­jects are sub­ject to the sov­er­eignty of the can­ton on whose ter­rit­ory they are situ­ated.

2 No rights of private own­er­ship ap­ply to pub­lic wa­ters or to land not suit­able for cul­tiv­a­tion, such as rocks and scree, firn and gla­ciers, or to springs rising there­from, un­less proof to the con­trary is pro­duced.

3 The can­tons shall en­act the pro­vi­sions re­quired to gov­ern the ap­pro­pri­ation of own­er­less land, ex­ploit­a­tion and com­mon use of pub­lic ob­jects such as roads, town and vil­lage squares, wa­ter­ways and ri­ver­beds.

Art. 665  

III. Right to re­gis­tra­tion

 

1 By vir­tue of ac­quis­i­tion, the ac­quirer gains a per­son­al claim against the own­er to be re­cor­ded in the land re­gister and, should the own­er re­fuse, the right to have own­er­ship awar­ded by court or­der.

2 In the case of ap­pro­pri­ation, in­her­it­ance, com­puls­ory pur­chase, debt en­force­ment or court judg­ment, the ac­quirer may ob­tain such re­gis­tra­tion on his or her own ini­ti­at­ive.

3 Changes to land own­er­ship oc­cur­ring by op­er­a­tion of law as a res­ult of mar­it­al com­munity of prop­erty or the dis­sol­u­tion there­of shall be re­cor­ded in the land re­gister at the re­quest of either spouse.540

540Amended by No I 2 of the FA of 5 Oct. 1984, in force since 1 Jan. 1988 (AS 1986 122153Art. 1; BBl 1979 II 1191).

Art. 666  

C. Loss

 

1 Land own­er­ship is ex­tin­guished on de­le­tion of the land re­gister entry and on com­plete loss of the im­mov­able prop­erty.

2 In the case of com­puls­ory pur­chase, the time at which the loss oc­curs is de­term­ined ac­cord­ing to fed­er­al and can­ton­al com­puls­ory pur­chase law.

Art. 666a541  

D. Ju­di­cial meas­ures

I. Where the own­er can­not be found

 
1 If the own­er re­cor­ded in the land re­gister can­not be iden­ti­fied, if his or her ad­dress is un­known or if the name or ad­dress of one or more of his or her heirs is un­known, the court may on ap­plic­a­tion or­der the re­quired meas­ures.
2 The court may in par­tic­u­lar ap­point a rep­res­ent­at­ive. On ap­plic­a­tion, it shall stip­u­late the ex­tent of the powers of rep­res­ent­a­tion. Un­less it stip­u­lates oth­er­wise, such powers shall be lim­ited to meas­ures to main­tain the prop­erty.

3 The fol­low­ing may ap­ply for meas­ures to be ordered:

1.
any per­son with a le­git­im­ate in­terest;
2.
the land re­gister at the loc­a­tion of the im­mov­able prop­erty.

4 The or­der­ing of meas­ures does not in­ter­rupt the peri­od re­quired to ob­tain ex­traordin­ary ad­verse pos­ses­sion.

541 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 666b542  

II. In the ab­sence of the re­quired man­age­ment bod­ies

 

If a leg­al en­tity or oth­er rights hold­er that is re­cor­ded in the land re­gister as the own­er no longer has the re­quired man­age­ment bod­ies, and per­son with a le­git­im­ate in­terest or the land re­gister at the loc­a­tion of the im­mov­able prop­erty may ap­ply to the court for the re­quired meas­ures re­lat­ing to the im­mov­able prop­erty to be ordered.

542 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Chapter Two: Substance and Limitation of Land Ownership

Art. 667  

A. Sub­stance

I. Scope

 

1 Land own­er­ship ex­tends up­wards in­to the air and down­wards in­to the ground to the ex­tent de­term­ined by the own­er’s le­git­im­ate in­terest in ex­er­cising his or her own­er­ship rights.

2 With­in the lim­its pre­scribed by law, it in­cludes all build­ings and plants as well as springs.

Art. 668  

II. Bound­ar­ies

1. Type of bound­ary

 

1 Land bound­ar­ies are es­tab­lished by the land re­gister plans and by bound­ary mark­ings on the land it­self.

2 In the event of dis­crep­ancy between the ex­ist­ing land re­gister plans and the bound­ary mark­ings, the land re­gister plans are pre­sumed cor­rect.

3 The fore­go­ing pre­sump­tion does not ap­ply to areas des­ig­nated by the can­ton as be­ing in per­man­ent danger of ground dis­place­ment.543

543In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 669  

2. Duty to es­tab­lish bound­ar­ies

 

Every landown­er is ob­liged, at the re­quest of his or her neigh­bour, to co-op­er­ate in es­tab­lish­ing the bound­ary where it is un­clear, wheth­er by amend­ment of the land re­gister plans or by af­fix­ing bound­ary mark­ers.

Art. 670  

3. Co-own­er­ship of bound­ary mark­ers

 

Where bound­ar­ies are marked by fea­tures such as walls, hedges and fences, such fea­tures are pre­sumed to be jointly owned by the two neigh­bour­ing landown­ers.

Art. 671  

III. Build­ings on the par­cel of land

1. Land and build­ing ma­ter­i­als

a. Own­er­ship

 

1 Where a per­son uses ma­ter­i­als be­long­ing to an­oth­er in build­ing work on his or her own land or ma­ter­i­als of his or her own on land be­long­ing to an­oth­er, such ma­ter­i­als be­come an in­teg­ral part of the par­cel of land.

2 However, where such ma­ter­i­als are used against the will of their own­er, the lat­ter is en­titled to de­mand that the ma­ter­i­als be re­moved and re­turned to him or her at the landown­er’s ex­pense to the ex­tent this is pos­sible without caus­ing dis­pro­por­tion­ate dam­age.

3 On the same con­di­tion, where the ma­ter­i­als were used against the will of the landown­er, the lat­ter may de­mand that they be re­moved from his or her land at the ex­pense of the build­er.

Art. 672  

b. Com­pens­a­tion

 

1 Where the ma­ter­i­als are not re­moved from the land, the landown­er must provide ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion for the cost of the ma­ter­i­als.

2 Where the landown­er on whose land the build­ing work was car­ried out ac­ted in bad faith, the court may award full dam­ages.

3 Where the own­er of the ma­ter­i­als used in the build­ing work ac­ted in bad faith, the dam­ages awar­ded may not ex­ceed the min­im­um value of the build­ing work to the landown­er.

Art. 673  

c. As­sign­ment of land own­er­ship

 

Where the value of the build­ing plainly ex­ceeds the value of the land, the party act­ing in good faith may re­quest that own­er­ship of both build­ing and land be as­signed to the own­er of the ma­ter­i­als in ex­change for ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion.

Art. 674  

2. En­croach­ing build­ings

 

1 Build­ings and oth­er struc­tures en­croach­ing from one par­cel of land onto an­oth­er re­main part of the par­cel from which they ori­gin­ate, provid­ing their own­er has a right in rem to their ex­ist­ence.

2 The right to en­croach on neigh­bour­ing land may be re­cor­ded as an ease­ment in the land re­gister.

3 If an in­jured party fails to ob­ject in timely man­ner to an un­au­thor­ised en­croach­ment, des­pite be­ing aware of it, where jus­ti­fied in the cir­cum­stances the build­er of the en­croach­ing struc­ture, provided he or she ac­ted in good faith, may be gran­ted own­er­ship of the en­croach­ing part there­of or of the land be­low it in ex­change for ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion.

Art. 675  

3. Build­ing right

 

1 Build­ings and oth­er struc­tures that are dug in­to or built onto land be­long­ing to an­oth­er per­son or oth­er­wise per­man­ently con­nec­ted with that par­cel of land on or be­low its sur­face may have a sep­ar­ate own­er provided their ex­ist­ence is re­cor­ded as an ease­ment in the land re­gister.

2 The cre­ation of rights to build­ings in re­spect of in­di­vidu­al storeys of a build­ing is not per­mit­ted.

Art. 676  

4. Pipes, cables, con­duits

 

1 Pipes, cables and con­duits for wa­ter, gas, elec­tri­city and the like loc­ated out­side the par­cel of land which they serve are, ex­cept where oth­er­wise reg­u­lated, the prop­erty of the util­ity plant from which they come or to which they lead.544

2 Where the pro­vi­sions of the law of neigh­bours do not ap­ply, the en­cum­brance of par­cels of land by rights in rem re­lat­ing to such pipes, cables and con­duits be­long­ing to an­oth­er per­son is es­tab­lished by way of ease­ment.

3 If the pipe, cable or con­duit is vis­ible, the ease­ment is cre­ated when the pipe, cable or con­duit is laid. In oth­er cases, it is cre­ated by entry in the land re­gister.545

544 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

545 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 677  

5. Mov­able struc­tures

 

1 Sheds, huts, shacks, cab­ins and the like re­tain their sep­ar­ate own­er if they are con­struc­ted on land be­long­ing to an­oth­er per­son without the in­ten­tion of be­com­ing a per­man­ent fix­ture.

2 Their ex­ist­ence is not re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

Art. 678  

IV. Plants grown on the par­cel of land

 

1 Where a per­son uses an­oth­er per­son’s plants on his or her own land or his or her own plants on an­oth­er per­son’s land, the same rights and ob­lig­a­tions arise as for the use of build­ing ma­ter­i­als or for mov­able struc­tures.

2 An ease­ment cor­res­pond­ing to a build­ing right may be cre­ated in re­spect of in­di­vidu­al plants and plant­a­tions for a min­im­um of ten and a max­im­um of 100 years.546

3 The ser­vi­ent own­er may re­quest the ter­min­a­tion of the ease­ment be­fore the end of the agreed dur­a­tion in the event of the ter­min­a­tion of a lease agree­ment con­cluded between him or her and the ease­ment be­ne­fi­ciary con­cern­ing the use of the land. The court shall de­term­ine the fin­an­cial con­sequences tak­ing due ac­count of all the cir­cum­stances.547

546Amended by No I of the FA of 20 June 2003, in force since 1 Jan. 2004 (AS 2003 4121; BBl 2002 4721).

547In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 20 June 2003, in force since 1 Jan. 2004 (AS 2003 4121; BBl 2002 4721).

Art. 679  

V. Landown­er’s li­ab­il­ity

1. Acts in ex­cess of own­er­ship rights

 

1 Where a per­son in­curs or is at risk of dam­age be­cause a landown­er acts in ex­cess of his or her own­er­ship rights, he or she may sue for abate­ment of the dam­age or for pro­tec­tion against any im­min­ent dam­age and for dam­ages.

2 Where a build­ing or in­stall­a­tion de­prives a neigh­bour­ing par­cel of land of cer­tain prop­er­ties, the afore­men­tioned rights ap­ply only if the reg­u­la­tions that ap­plied at the time the build­ing or in­stall­a­tion was con­struc­ted were not com­plied with.549

549 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 679a550  

2. Law­ful man­age­ment of the land

 

Where a landown­er tem­por­ar­ily causes ex­cess­ive and un­avoid­able dis­ad­vant­ages to a neigh­bour while man­aging his or her par­cel of land law­fully, in par­tic­u­lar by build­ing and thus causes dam­age, the neigh­bour may only claim dam­ages from the landown­er.

550 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 680  

B. Lim­it­a­tions

I. In gen­er­al

 

1 Stat­utory re­stric­tions on own­er­ship ex­ist ir­re­spect­ive of wheth­er they are re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

2 Any lift­ing or modi­fic­a­tion there­of by agree­ment is in­val­id un­less ex­ecuted in the form of a pub­lic deed and re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

3 Pub­lic law re­stric­tions on own­er­ship may not be re­voked or mod­i­fied.

Art. 681551  

II. Re­stric­tions on ali­en­a­tion; stat­utory right of pre-emption

1. Gen­er­al prin­ciples

 

1 Stat­utory rights of pre-emption may also be ex­er­cised in the case of com­puls­ory sale at auc­tion, but only at the auc­tion it­self and on the con­di­tions that ap­ply to a sale to the highest bid­der; in oth­er re­spects stat­utory rights of pre-emption may be ex­er­cised sub­ject to the con­di­tions that ap­ply to con­trac­tu­al rights of pre-emption.

2 The right of pre-emption be­comes void if the land is sold to a per­son with a right of pre-emption of equal or high­er rank.

3 Stat­utory rights of pre-emption may neither be in­her­ited nor as­signed. They take pre­ced­ence over con­trac­tu­al rights of pre-emption.

551Amended by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 681a552  

2. Ex­er­cise

 

1 Where a pur­chase agree­ment is con­cluded, the vendor must no­ti­fy per­sons with a right of pre-emption of the terms there­of.

2 If a per­son wishes to ex­er­cise his or her right of pre-emption, he or she must as­sert it with­in three months of learn­ing of the con­clu­sion and terms of the pur­chase agree­ment. Such a right may no longer be ex­er­cised once two years have elapsed since the entry of the new own­er in the land re­gister.

3 Dur­ing that time a per­son may ex­er­cise a right of pre-emption against any own­er of the land.

552In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 681b553  

3. Modi­fic­a­tion, waiver

 

1 An agree­ment ex­clud­ing or modi­fy­ing a stat­utory right of pre-emption is val­id only if ex­ecuted in the form of a pub­lic deed. It may be entered un­der pri­or­ity no­tice in the land re­gister provided the right of pre-emption is held by the cur­rent own­er of an­oth­er par­cel of land.

2 The be­ne­fi­ciary may waive his or her stat­utory right of pre-emption in writ­ing once the event that trig­gers it has oc­curred.

553In­ser­ted by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 682555  

4. In re­spect of co-own­er­ship and build­ing rights

 

1 Co-own­ers have a right of pre-emption against any per­son ac­quir­ing a share who is not a co-own­er. If sev­er­al co-own­ers ex­er­cise their right of pre-emption, the share is al­loc­ated to them in pro­por­tion to their ex­ist­ing shares.556

2 The own­er of a par­cel of land en­cumbered with a dis­tinct and per­man­ent build­ing right shall also have a right of pre-emption in re­spect of that right over any­one wish­ing to ac­quire it, and the hold­er of the right has a right of pre-emption in re­spect of the par­cel of land it en­cum­bers, provid­ing the land is used in the ex­er­cise of his or her right.

3...557

555Amended by No I of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

556Amended by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

557Re­pealed by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 682a558  

5. Right of pre-emption of farms and farm­land

 

Rights of pre-emption of ag­ri­cul­tur­al en­ter­prises and ag­ri­cul­tur­al land are also gov­erned by the Fed­er­al Act of 4 Oc­to­ber 1991559 on Rur­al land Rights.

558In­ser­ted by Art. 92 No 1 of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on Rur­al Land Rights, in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 19931410; BBl 1988III 953).

559SR 211.412.11

Art. 683560  
 

560Re­pealed by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), with ef­fect from 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 684  

III. Law of neigh­bours

1. Ex­cess det­ri­ment

 

1 In ex­er­cising their own­er­ship rights, in­clud­ing in par­tic­u­lar the right to run a busi­ness on his or her land, landown­ers are ob­liged to re­frain from any ex­cess det­ri­ment­al to neigh­bour­ing prop­er­ties.

2 In par­tic­u­lar all harm­ful ef­fects that are not jus­ti­fied by the loc­a­tion and char­ac­ter of the land or by loc­al cus­tom such as air pol­lu­tion emis­sions of nox­ious va­pours, noise, vi­bra­tions, ra­di­ation or the depriva­tion of sun­light or day­light are pro­hib­ited.562

562 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 685  

2. Ex­cav­a­tion and con­struc­tion

a. Rule

 

1 When car­ry­ing out ex­cav­a­tion or con­struc­tion work, the own­er is not per­mit­ted to dam­age the ad­join­ing prop­er­ties by caus­ing their ter­rain to shift, ex­pos­ing it to the risk of shift­ing or by weak­en­ing ex­ist­ing struc­tures.

2 Build­ings which con­tra­vene the pro­vi­sions of the law of neigh­bours are sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing en­croach­ing build­ings.

Art. 686  

b. Can­ton­al reg­u­la­tions

 

1 The can­tons may set min­im­um sep­ar­a­tion dis­tances to be ob­served in ex­cav­a­tion and con­struc­tion works.

2 They have the right to is­sue fur­ther build­ing reg­u­la­tions.

Art. 687  

3. Plants

a. Rule

 

1 Over­hanging branches and roots en­croach­ing bey­ond the bound­ary may be severed and kept by the neigh­bour if they are dam­aging his or her prop­erty and have not been re­moved with­in a reas­on­able time fol­low­ing his or her com­plaint in re­la­tion thereto.

2 If a landown­er tol­er­ates branches over­hanging cul­tiv­ated or de­veloped land, he or she is en­titled to the fruit that grows on them.

3 These pro­vi­sions do not ap­ply to ad­join­ing par­cels of wood­land.

Art. 688  

b. Can­ton­al reg­u­la­tions

 

The can­tons are au­thor­ised to set min­im­um sep­ar­a­tion dis­tances for plant­a­tions de­pend­ing on the type of land and plants in­volved or to ob­lige the landown­er to per­mit the over­hanging branches or en­croach­ing roots of fruit trees and to reg­u­late or an­nul his or her right to take the fruit from such branches.

Art. 689  

4. Flow­ing wa­ters

 

1 Every landown­er is ob­liged to re­ceive the wa­ters flow­ing nat­ur­ally from a high­er-ly­ing par­cel of land, such as rain wa­ter, melt­ing snow and wa­ter from un­chan­nelled springs.

2 No per­son may al­ter the nat­ur­al course of flow to his or her neigh­bour’s dam­age.

3 Wa­ter flow­ing to a lower-ly­ing par­cel of land and re­quired by that prop­erty may be with­held only to the ex­tent that such wa­ter is in­dis­pens­able to the high­er-ly­ing par­cel of land.

Art. 690  

5. Drain­age

 

1 Where a high­er-ly­ing par­cel of land is drained, the own­er of lower-ly­ing par­cel of land is ob­liged to re­ceive such wa­ter as pre­vi­ously flowed nat­ur­ally onto his or her land without be­ing en­titled to com­pens­a­tion.

2 If he or she suf­fers dam­age as a res­ult of drain­age chan­nels, he or she may re­quire the own­er of the high­er-ly­ing par­cel of land to con­tin­ue such chan­nels through the lower-ly­ing par­cel of land at the lat­ter’s ex­pense.

Art. 691  

6. Pipes, cables, con­duits

a. Duty to per­mit

 

1 Every landown­er is ob­liged to per­mit wa­ter con­duits, drain­age pipes, gas pipes and the like and sub­ter­ranean or over­head cables to tra­verse his or her land in ex­change for full com­pens­a­tion, to the ex­tent that such works would be im­possible or pro­hib­it­ively ex­pens­ive if they did not tra­verse his or her land.563

2 The right for pipes, cables and con­duits to tra­verse an ad­join­ing par­cel of land may not be claimed on the basis of the law of neigh­bours in cases sub­ject to com­puls­ory pur­chase un­der can­ton­al or fed­er­al law.

3 At the re­quest of the dom­in­ant or the ser­vi­ent own­er, such rights shall be re­cor­ded in the land re­gister as an ease­ment at the ex­pense of the dom­in­ant own­er. The right for pipes, cables and con­duits to tra­verse an ad­join­ing par­cel of land may be cited in op­pos­i­tion to a per­son ac­quir­ing a par­cel of land in good faith, even if it is not re­gistered.564

563 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

564 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 692  

b. Safe­guard­ing the in­terests of the ser­vi­ent landown­er

 

1 The ser­vi­ent own­er is en­titled to just and equit­able con­sid­er­a­tion of his or her own in­terests.

2 Where jus­ti­fied by ex­traordin­ary cir­cum­stances, he or she may re­quest that the piece of the land above which over­head pipes, cables and con­duits are to be routed to­geth­er with a reas­on­able por­tion of the sur­round­ing land be pur­chased from him or her at its full value.

Art. 693  

c. Change of cir­cum­stances

 

1 If cir­cum­stances change, the ser­vi­ent own­er may re­quest that the route of the pipe, cable or con­duit be altered in ac­cord­ance with his or her in­terests.

2 The costs of such re-rout­ing are nor­mally borne by the own­er of the dom­in­ant prop­erty.

3 However, where jus­ti­fied by spe­cial cir­cum­stances, an ap­pro­pri­ate por­tion of the costs may be charged to the ser­vi­ent own­er.

Art. 694  

7. Rights of way

a. Ne­ces­sary right of way

 

1 Where a landown­er does not have ad­equate ac­cess from his or her land to a pub­lic thor­ough­fare, he or she has the right to re­quire his or her neigh­bours to grant him or her the ne­ces­sary right of way in ex­change for full com­pens­a­tion.

2 This right is in the first place ex­er­cised against the neigh­bour who, in the light of ex­ist­ing own­er­ship and ac­cess cir­cum­stances, may most reas­on­ably be ex­pec­ted to grant such right of way, and secondly in re­spect of the neigh­bour for whom it is least dam­aging.

3 When de­term­in­ing the route of a right of way, the in­terests of both parties must be taken in­to con­sid­er­a­tion.

Art. 695  

b. Oth­er rights of way

 

The can­tons re­serve the right to en­act more de­tailed pro­vi­sions which gov­ern the landown­er’s right to enter neigh­bour­ing land for the pur­poses of man­aging his or her own land or car­ry­ing out re­pairs or build­ing works and which reg­u­late rights of way for the pur­pose of till­age, wa­ter­ing cattle, trans­it over fal­low ground or in the dead sea­son, trans­it for tim­ber gath­er­ing, and the like.

Art. 696  

c. Nota­tion in the land re­gister

 

1 Rights of way es­tab­lished dir­ectly by law ex­ist without need for re­gis­tra­tion.

2 However, if per­man­ent they are noted in the land re­gister.

Art. 697  

8. En­clos­ure

 

1 The costs of en­clos­ing a par­cel of land are borne by its own­er, sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing co-own­er­ship of bound­ary mark­ers.

2 Can­ton­al law may en­act pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing the duty to en­close and the man­ner of en­clos­ure.

Art. 698  

9. Duty to main­tain

 

The costs of any struc­tures re­quired for the ex­er­cise of rights un­der the law of neigh­bours are borne by the landown­ers in pro­por­tion to their in­terests.

Art. 699  

IV. Right of ac­cess and to ward off danger

1. Ac­cess

 

1 Any per­son has the right to enter wood­lands and mead­ows and to gath­er wild ber­ries, fungi and the like to the ex­tent per­mit­ted by loc­al cus­tom ex­cept where the com­pet­ent au­thor­ity en­acts spe­cif­ic lim­ited in­junc­tions in the in­terests of con­ser­va­tion.

2 Can­ton­al law may en­act more de­tailed reg­u­la­tions on ac­cess to land owned by oth­ers for the pur­poses of hunt­ing and fish­ing.

Art. 700  

2. Re­triev­al of driftage and the like

 

1 If ob­jects are car­ried onto an­oth­er par­cel of land by wa­ter, wind, ava­lanche or oth­er force of nature or by chance event, or if an­im­als such as live­stock, swarms of bees, poultry and fish stray onto his or her prop­erty, the landown­er must grant the right­ful own­er ac­cess to his or her land to search for and re­trieve them.

2 The landown­er is en­titled to claim dam­ages for any dam­age caused and to that end has a spe­cial li­en as to such ob­jects and an­im­als.

Art. 701  

3. Tres­pass to ward off danger or dam­age

 

1 If a per­son is able to ward off im­min­ent dam­age or present danger from him­self or her­self or oth­ers only by tres­passing on land be­long­ing to an­oth­er, the lat­ter is ob­liged to tol­er­ate such tres­pass to the ex­tent that such danger or dam­age would be con­sid­er­ably great­er than the det­ri­ment caused by the tres­pass.

2 Ap­pro­pri­ate com­pens­a­tion is owed for any res­ult­ant dam­age.

Art. 702  

V. Pub­lic law re­stric­tions on own­er­ship

1. In gen­er­al

 

The Con­fed­er­a­tion, can­tons and com­munes re­serve the right to im­pose re­stric­tions on own­er­ship that are in the pub­lic in­terest, and in par­tic­u­lar that re­late to build­ing, fire and health reg­u­la­tions, forestry and road ser­vices, towpaths, erec­tion of bound­ary mark­ings and tri­an­gu­la­tion pil­lars, land im­prove­ments, frag­ment­a­tion of land­hold­ings, con­sol­id­a­tion of ag­ri­cul­tur­al land and build­ing land, con­ser­va­tion of an­tiquit­ies and nat­ur­al monu­ments, pre­ser­va­tion of areas of nat­ur­al beauty and scen­ic vant­age points and pro­tec­tion of min­er­al springs.

Art. 703565  

2. Land im­prove­ments

 

1 Where it is pos­sible to carry out land im­prove­ments, such as wa­ter­course modi­fic­a­tions, drain­age, ir­rig­a­tion, re­for­est­a­tion, path-build­ing, land con­sol­id­a­tion pro­ced­ures and the like, only by col­lect­ive en­deav­our and such en­deav­our has been ap­proved by the ma­jor­ity of the landown­ers own­ing more than half of the land in­volved, the oth­er landown­ers are ob­liged to par­ti­cip­ate. Landown­ers who choose not to par­ti­cip­ate in the de­cision-mak­ing pro­cess are deemed to con­sent. Par­ti­cip­a­tion is re­cor­ded in the land re­gister.

2 The can­tons reg­u­late the pro­ced­ure. In par­tic­u­lar, they must is­sue de­tailed rules on con­sol­id­a­tion of land­hold­ings.

3 Can­ton­al le­gis­la­tion may fur­ther fa­cil­it­ate the real­isa­tion of such land im­prove­ments and may de­clare that the cor­res­pond­ing pro­vi­sions also ap­ply to build­ing land and to areas des­ig­nated as be­ing in per­man­ent danger of ground dis­place­ment.566

565Amended by Art. 121 of the Ag­ri­cul­ture Act of 3 oct. 1951, in force since 1 Jan. 1954 (AS 1953 1073; BBl 1951I 130).

566Amended by No I of the FA of 4 Oct. 1991 on the Par­tial Re­vi­sion of the Civil Code (Im­mov­able Prop­erty Law) and of the Code of Ob­lig­a­tions (Pur­chase of Land), in force since 1 Jan. 1994 (AS 1993 1404; BBl 1988 III 953).

Art. 704  

C. Rights to springs and wells

I. Spring own­er­ship and spring rights

 

1 Springs are an in­teg­ral part of the land and their own­er­ship may be ac­quired only through own­er­ship of the land from which they rise.

2 Rights to spring wa­ter on land owned by oth­ers are es­tab­lished as ease­ments by entry in the land re­gister.

3 Ground­wa­ter is deemed equi­val­ent to springs.

Art. 705  

II. Di­ver­sion of springs

 

1 Can­ton­al law may reg­u­late, re­strict or pro­hib­it the di­ver­sion of spring wa­ters to safe­guard the pub­lic in­terest.

2 In the event of con­flict between can­tons, the fi­nal de­cision rests with the Fed­er­al Coun­cil.

Art. 706  

III. Cut­ting off springs

1. Dam­ages

 

1 Where springs and wells that en­joy con­sid­er­able use or whose wa­ters are col­lec­ted for fur­ther use are cut off, di­min­ished or con­tam­in­ated by build­ing works, in­stall­a­tions or oth­er meas­ures to the det­ri­ment of their own­ers or right­ful users, such per­sons are en­titled to claim dam­ages.

2 Where the dam­age was done neither in­ten­tion­ally nor through neg­li­gence, or the in­jured parties are them­selves at fault, the court de­term­ines the amount and man­ner of com­pens­a­tion at its dis­cre­tion.

Art. 707  

2. Res­tor­a­tion

 

1 If springs and wells that are in­dis­pens­able for the ex­ploit­a­tion or hab­it­a­tion of a par­cel of land or for the sup­ply of drink­ing wa­ter are cut off or con­tam­in­ated, those af­fected have the right to de­mand that the status quo ante be re­stored where at all pos­sible.

2 In oth­er cases res­tor­a­tion of the status quo ante may be de­man­ded only where this is jus­ti­fied by spe­cial cir­cum­stances.

Art. 708  

IV. Com­munity of spring own­ers

 

1 Where springs loc­ated near to each oth­er and be­long­ing to dif­fer­ent own­ers form a group rising from a com­mon catch­ment basin, each of the own­ers may re­quest that the springs be col­lect­ively cap­tured and chan­nelled to the right­ful users in pro­por­tion to the ex­ist­ing volume of flow.

2 The costs of the com­mon in­stall­a­tions are borne by the right­ful users in pro­por­tion to their re­spect­ive in­terests.

3 If one user op­poses the re­quest, each user has the right to cap­ture and di­vert his or her own spring in the nor­mal man­ner, even if the volume of flow of the oth­er springs is thereby di­min­ished, and is li­able to pay com­pens­a­tion only to the ex­tent that his or her own spring is aug­men­ted by the new works.

Art. 709  

V. Use of springs

 

The can­tons have the right to de­term­ine the ex­tent to which privately owned springs, wells and streams may also be used by neigh­bours and oth­er per­sons for draw­ing wa­ter, wa­ter­ing live­stock and the like.

Art. 710  

VI. Right to use an es­sen­tial wa­ter source

 

1 If a par­cel of land lacks the wa­ter re­quired for do­mest­ic and farm­ing re­quire­ments and if such wa­ter can­not be ob­tained from any­where else ex­cept at an en­tirely dis­pro­por­tion­ate cost and ef­fort, the own­er may re­quest that a neigh­bour able to spare such wa­ter without suf­fer­ing hard­ship al­low him or her a share of the lat­ter’s spring or well to him or her in ex­change for full com­pens­a­tion.

2 When de­term­in­ing which wa­ter source is thus af­fected, the in­terests of the per­son re­quired to sup­ply the wa­ter are the primary con­sid­er­a­tion.

3 Where cir­cum­stances change, a modi­fic­a­tion of the ar­range­ment in place may be re­ques­ted.

Art. 711  

VII. Duty to cede

1. Wa­ter sources

 

1 Where landown­ers make no use of springs, wells or streams, or make very little use there­of in com­par­is­on with their po­ten­tial util­ity, they may be re­quired to cede them in ex­change for full com­pens­a­tion for sup­ply­ing drink­ing wa­ter, fire hy­drants or oth­er uses in the pub­lic in­terest.

2 Such com­pens­a­tion may take the form of wa­ter sup­plied from the new in­stall­a­tion.

Art. 712  

2. Land

 

Own­ers of drink­ing wa­ter util­it­ies have the right to ex­pro­pri­ate the land sur­round­ing their springs to the ex­tent ne­ces­sary to pro­tect them from con­tam­in­a­tion.

Chapter Three: Condominium567

567Inserted by No II of the FA of 19 Dec. 1963, in force since 1 Jan. 1965 (AS 1964 993; BBl 1962 II 1461).

Art. 712a  

A. Defin­i­tion and ob­ject

I. Defin­i­tion

 

1 Con­domin­i­um is a form of co-own­er­ship of im­mov­able prop­erty that gives the co-own­er the ex­clus­ive right to make sole use of spe­cif­ic parts of a build­ing there­on and design the in­teri­or of such parts.

2 Each con­domin­i­um own­er is free to man­age, use and design the struc­ture of his or her own parts of the build­ing as he or she wishes but must not ob­struct any oth­er con­domin­i­um own­ers in the ex­er­cise of their own rights or in any way dam­age the com­mon parts of the build­ing, fit­tings and in­stall­a­tions or im­pair their func­tion­al ef­fect­ive­ness or ap­pear­ance.

3 Each con­domin­i­um own­er is ob­liged to main­tain his or her parts of the build­ing in the man­ner re­quired to pre­serve the sound con­di­tion and good ap­pear­ance of the build­ing as a whole.

Art. 712b  

II. Ob­ject

 

1 The ob­ject of the ex­clus­ive right may be in­di­vidu­al storeys or parts of a storey which must be self-con­tained with their own ac­cess and used either as dwell­ings or as self-con­tained units of rooms used for busi­ness or oth­er pur­poses, al­though sep­ar­ate an­cil­lary rooms are al­lowed.

2 The con­domin­i­um own­er may not be gran­ted an ex­clus­ive right to the fol­low­ing:

1.
the land on which the build­ing stands and the build­ing right by vir­tue of which it is con­struc­ted;
2.
the parts of the build­ing that are vi­tal to the sound­ness, struc­ture and sta­bil­ity of the build­ing as a whole or of the units of oth­er con­domin­i­um own­ers or that de­term­ine the out­ward form and ap­pear­ance of the build­ing;
3.
the fit­tings and in­stall­a­tions that also serve the oth­er con­domin­i­um own­ers in the use of their units.

3 The deed of con­sti­tu­tion or a sub­sequent agree­ment among the con­domin­i­um own­ers ex­ecuted in the same form may stip­u­late that oth­er parts of the build­ing are com­mon prop­erty, fail­ing which they are pre­sumed to be the ob­ject of a ex­clus­ive right.

Art. 712c  

III. Power of dis­pos­al

 

1 Con­domin­i­um own­ers do not by law have first right of re­fus­al in re­spect of a third party ac­quir­ing a share, but such right may be stip­u­lated in the deed of con­sti­tu­tion or by sub­sequent agree­ment and entered un­der pri­or­ity no­tice in the land re­gister.

2 Sim­il­arly, it may be stip­u­lated that the ali­en­a­tion, en­cum­brance with usu­fruct or right of res­id­ence or let­ting of a unit is val­id only if the oth­er co-own­ers do not ob­ject by res­ol­u­tion made with­in 14 days of re­ceiv­ing no­tice of such trans­ac­tion.

3 The ob­jec­tion is in­ef­fect­ive if made without good cause.568

568 Amended by An­nex 1 No II 3 of the Civil Pro­ced­ure Code of 19 Dec. 2008, in force since 1 Jan. 2011 (AS 2010 1739; BBl 2006 7221).

Art. 712d  

B. Cre­ation and ex­tinc­tion

I. Deed of con­sti­tu­tion

 

1 Con­domin­i­um is con­sti­tuted by entry in the land re­gister.

2 Such entry may be re­ques­ted:

1.
on the basis of an agree­ment between the con­domin­i­um own­ers to con­sti­tute their shares as con­domin­i­um;
2.
on the basis of a de­clar­a­tion by the own­er of the prop­erty or the hold­er of a dis­tinct and per­man­ent build­ing right to form shares in co-own­er­ship and to con­sti­tute the same as con­domin­i­um.

3 In or­der to be val­id, the con­sti­tu­tion of con­domin­i­um must be ex­ecuted in the form of a pub­lic deed or, where provided for in a test­a­ment­ary dis­pos­i­tion or in a con­tract of di­vi­sion of es­tate, in the form pre­scribed by the law of suc­ces­sion.

Art. 712e  

II. Lay­out of the con­domin­i­um units and shares in the prop­erty

 

1 The deed of con­sti­tu­tion must spe­cify the man­ner in which the prop­erty is di­vided in­to con­domin­i­um units and define the share that each unit rep­res­ents of the value of the prop­erty or of the build­ing right ex­pressed as frac­tions with a com­mon de­nom­in­at­or.570

2 Al­ter­a­tion of the size of a share re­quires the con­sent of all dir­ectly in­volved parties and the ap­prov­al of the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers; however, each con­domin­i­um own­er is en­titled to seek rec­ti­fic­a­tion if his or her share has been defined in­cor­rectly in er­ror or is no longer ac­cur­ate ow­ing to struc­tur­al modi­fic­a­tions to the build­ing or its sur­round­ings.

570 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 712f  

III. Ex­tinc­tion

 

1 Con­domin­i­um is ex­tin­guished on the loss of the prop­erty or the build­ing right and its de­le­tion from the land re­gister.

2 Such de­le­tion may be re­ques­ted in ac­cord­ance with a ter­min­a­tion agree­ment or by a single con­domin­i­um own­er hold­ing all the shares, but it re­quires the con­sent of all per­sons with rights in rem to the in­di­vidu­al units which can­not be trans­ferred to the prop­erty as a whole without det­ri­ment.

3 Any con­domin­i­um own­er may re­quest ter­min­a­tion of the con­domin­i­um where:

1.
more than half the value of the build­ing has been des­troyed and re­con­struc­tion would im­pose an oner­ous bur­den on him; or
2.
the build­ing has been di­vided in­to con­domin­i­um units for more than 50 years and can no longer be used in ac­cord­ance with the reg­u­la­tions due to its poor struc­tur­al con­di­tion.571

4 Con­domin­i­um own­ers wish­ing to main­tain the con­domin­i­um may pre­vent such ter­min­a­tion by buy­ing out the oth­ers.572

571 Amended by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

572 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 712g  

C. Ad­min­is­tra­tion and use

I. Ap­plic­able pro­vi­sions

 

1 The pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing co-own­er­ship reg­u­late the au­thor­ity to take ad­min­is­trat­ive ac­tion and in­struct con­struc­tion work.

2 Ex­cept where such pro­vi­sions are man­dat­ory, they may be re­placed by oth­ers set out in the deed of con­sti­tu­tion or ad­op­ted by un­an­im­ous res­ol­u­tion of the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers.

3 Moreover, each con­domin­i­um own­er is en­titled to re­quest that a set of rules gov­ern­ing ad­min­is­tra­tion and use be drawn up and noted in the land re­gister, such rules be­ing bind­ing once ac­cep­ted by res­ol­u­tion passed by a ma­jor­ity of the con­domin­i­um own­ers who to­geth­er rep­res­ent more than one-half of the prop­erty and be­ing sub­ject to amend­ment by the same ma­jor­ity even if in­cluded in the deed of con­sti­tu­tion.

4 Any amend­ment to the al­loc­a­tion of ex­clus­ive rights of use in ac­cord­ance with the reg­u­la­tions shall also re­quire the con­sent of the con­domin­i­um own­ers dir­ectly af­fected.573

573 In­ser­ted by No I 1 of the FA of 11 Dec. 2009 (Re­gister Mort­gage Cer­ti­fic­ates and oth­er amend­ments to Prop­erty Law), in force since 1 Jan. 2012 (AS 2011 4637; BBl 2007 5283).

Art. 712h  

II. Com­mun­al charges and costs

1. Defin­i­tion and dis­tri­bu­tion

 

1 The con­domin­i­um own­ers bear the charges in re­la­tion to the com­mun­al parts of the prop­erty and the costs of joint ad­min­is­tra­tion in pro­por­tion to the value of their shares.

2 In par­tic­u­lar, such charges and costs in­clude:

1.
reg­u­lar main­ten­ance, re­pairs and renov­a­tions of the com­mun­al parts of the par­cel of land and the build­ing and shared fit­tings and in­stall­a­tions;
2.
ad­min­is­tra­tion, in­clud­ing re­mu­ner­a­tion of the ad­min­is­trat­or;
3.
pub­lic du­ties and taxes im­posed col­lect­ively on the co-own­ers;
4.
in­terest and cap­it­al re­pay­ments to lenders to whom the prop­erty is pledged or to whom the con­domin­i­um own­ers are jointly and sev­er­ally li­able.

3 Where spe­cif­ic parts of the build­ing, fit­tings or in­stall­a­tions are of little or no be­ne­fit to cer­tain con­domin­i­um own­ers, the al­loc­a­tion of shared costs must take this in­to ac­count.

Art. 712i  

2. Li­ab­il­ity for cost con­tri­bu­tions

a. Stat­utory li­en

 

1 The com­munity of con­domin­i­um own­ers is en­titled to es­tab­lish a li­en on each con­domin­i­um own­er’s unit as se­cur­ity for his or her por­tion of the shared costs over the pre­vi­ous three years.

2 Re­gis­tra­tion of the li­en may be re­ques­ted by the ad­min­is­trat­or or, where no ad­min­is­trat­or has been ap­poin­ted, by any con­domin­i­um own­er so au­thor­ised by ma­jor­ity res­ol­u­tion or court or­der and by any per­son for whom the claim for shared costs has been dis­trained.

3 In oth­er re­spects, the pro­vi­sions gov­ern­ing the es­tab­lish­ment of a build­ing con­tract­or’s li­en ap­ply mu­tatis mutandis.

Art. 712k  

b. Spe­cial li­en

 

The com­munity of con­domin­i­um own­ers has the same spe­cial li­en that a lessor would have on the chat­tels loc­ated in the con­domin­i­um own­er’s unit as se­cur­ity for shared costs over the pre­vi­ous three years.

Art. 712l  

III. Com­munity’s ca­pa­city to act

 

1 The com­munity of con­domin­i­um own­ers ac­quires un­der its own name the rev­en­ue de­rived from its ad­min­is­trat­ive activ­it­ies, in­clud­ing in par­tic­u­lar con­tri­bu­tions from the in­di­vidu­al con­domin­i­um own­ers and the res­ult­ant funds, such as the renov­a­tion fund.

2 The com­munity of con­domin­i­um own­ers may sue and col­lect debts in its own name and may be sued or sub­jec­ted to debt en­force­ment pro­ceed­ings.574

574 Amended by An­nex No 2 of the Civil Jur­is­dic­tion Act of 24 March 2000, in force since 1 Jan. 2001 (AS 2000 2355; BBl 1999 2829).

Art. 712m  

D. Or­gan­isa­tion

I. As­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers

1. Com­pet­ence and leg­al status

 

1 In ad­di­tion to those rights stip­u­lated in oth­er pro­vi­sions, the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers has the fol­low­ing rights in par­tic­u­lar:

1.
to de­cide on all ad­min­is­trat­ive mat­ters out­side the ad­min­is­trat­or’s re­mit;
2.
to ap­point the ad­min­is­trat­or and su­per­vise his or her activ­it­ies;
3.
to elect a com­mit­tee or per­son to whom it may del­eg­ate ad­min­is­trat­ive mat­ters, in­clud­ing in par­tic­u­lar the tasks of ad­vising the ad­min­is­trat­or, su­per­in­tend­ing his or her man­age­ment activ­it­ies, and re­port­ing and mak­ing re­com­mend­a­tions to the as­sembly on such mat­ters;
4.
to ap­prove the budget, ac­counts and di­vi­sion of costs among the con­domin­i­um own­ers each year;
5.
to es­tab­lish a renov­a­tion fund for main­ten­ance and renov­a­tion;
6.
to safe­guard the build­ing against fire and oth­er risks and to take out the cus­tom­ary li­ab­il­ity in­sur­ance and, fur­ther­more, to re­quire any con­domin­i­um own­er who has fit­ted his or her unit out at ex­traordin­ary ex­pense to pay an ad­di­tion­al premi­um un­less he or she has ar­ranged sup­ple­ment­ary in­sur­ance for his or her own ac­count.

2 In the ab­sence of any spe­cif­ic pro­vi­sions in the law, the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers and its del­eg­ates are sub­ject to the pro­vi­sions on gov­ern­ing bod­ies of as­so­ci­ations and chal­lenges to res­ol­u­tions of as­so­ci­ations.

Art. 712n  

2. Con­ven­ing and chair­ing meet­ings

 

1 The as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers is con­vened and chaired by the ad­min­is­trat­or, un­less the as­sembly re­solves oth­er­wise.

2 Minutes are taken of the as­sembly’s res­ol­u­tions and held in safe­keep­ing by the ad­min­is­trat­or or the chair­man of the meet­ing.

Art. 712o  

3. Vot­ing rights

 

1 Where a unit is owned by more than one per­son, these per­sons to­geth­er have only one vote, to be cast by one of their num­ber as their rep­res­ent­at­ive.

2 Sim­il­arly, the own­er and the usu­fructu­ary of a unit must agree on the ex­er­cise of their vot­ing rights, fail­ing which the usu­fructu­ary is deemed to hold the right to vote on all ad­min­is­trat­ive mat­ters with the ex­cep­tion of build­ing work car­ried out for merely use­ful or dec­or­at­ive pur­poses or to en­hance com­fort or con­veni­ence.

Art. 712p  

4. Quor­um

 

1 The as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers is quor­ate if one half of the con­domin­i­um own­ers rep­res­ent­ing one half of the shares in con­domin­i­um, and in any event at least two con­domin­i­um own­ers, are present or rep­res­en­ted.

2 If the as­sembly is not quor­ate, a second meet­ing must be con­vened which may be held no earli­er than ten days after the first.

3 The second meet­ing is quor­ate if one third of the con­domin­i­um own­ers, and in any event at least two con­domin­i­um own­ers, are present or rep­res­en­ted.

Art. 712q  

II. Ad­min­is­trat­or

1. Ap­point­ment

 

1 If the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers fails to ap­point an ad­min­is­trat­or, any con­domin­i­um own­er is en­titled to re­quest the court to ap­point one.

2 Oth­er in­ter­ested parties, such as the pledgee or in­surer, have the same right to re­quest court ap­point­ment of an ad­min­is­trat­or.

Art. 712r  

2. Re­mov­al

 

1 By res­ol­u­tion of the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers, the ad­min­is­trat­or may be re­moved from his or her po­s­i­tion at any time, sub­ject to claims for com­pens­a­tion.

2 If the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers re­fuses to re­move the ad­min­is­trat­or des­pite good cause to do so, any con­domin­i­um own­er may, with­in one month, re­quest the court to re­move him or her.

3 A court-ap­poin­ted ad­min­is­trat­or may not be re­moved pri­or to ex­piry of the peri­od for which he or she was ap­poin­ted.

Art. 712s  

3. Du­ties

a. Im­ple­ment­a­tion of pro­vi­sions and res­ol­u­tions con­cern­ing ad­min­is­tra­tion and use

 

1 The ad­min­is­trat­or shall take all ac­tion re­quired for col­lect­ive ad­min­is­tra­tion in ac­cord­ance with the rel­ev­ant leg­al pro­vi­sions, the rules and res­ol­u­tions passed by the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers and must of his or her own ac­cord take all meas­ures ur­gently needed to pre­vent or rem­edy dam­age to the prop­erty.

2 He or she di­vides the com­mun­al costs and charges among the con­domin­i­um own­ers, makes out the rel­ev­ant in­voices, col­lects con­tri­bu­tions, man­ages the avail­able funds and ap­plies them as re­quired by law.

3 He or she en­sures that the con­domin­i­um own­ers ex­er­cise their ex­clus­ive rights and use the com­mun­al parts of the prop­erty and the com­mun­al fit­tings and in­stall­a­tions in ac­cord­ance with the rel­ev­ant leg­al pro­vi­sions, reg­u­la­tions and house rules.

Art. 712t  

b. Ex­tern­al rep­res­ent­a­tion

 

1 The ad­min­is­trat­or shall rep­res­ent the con­domin­i­um own­ers both as a com­munity and as in­di­vidu­als in all ex­tern­al deal­ings re­lat­ing to com­mun­al ad­min­is­tra­tion with­in the scope of his or her stat­utory du­ties.

2 Ex­cept in sum­mary pro­ceed­ings, the ad­min­is­trat­or must ob­tain the pri­or ap­prov­al of the as­sembly of con­domin­i­um own­ers to act as plaintiff or de­fend­ant in civil pro­ceed­ings un­less the mat­ter is ur­gent, in which case such ap­prov­al may be ob­tained ret­ro­spect­ively.

3 De­clar­a­tions, de­mands, judg­ments and court or­ders ad­dressed to the com­munity of con­domin­i­um own­ers are deemed duly no­ti­fied once they are served on the ad­min­is­trat­or at his or her dom­i­cile or at the place where the prop­erty is situ­ated.

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