2014/2015

Foundations and Space of Action of Nordic Inheritance Law

Strategies, relations and historical development c. 1100 - 2020

Social Sciences

Principal investigators

Lars Ivar Hansen

Professor
UiT The Arctic University of Norway (UiT)
Year at CAS

Abstract

The aim of the project is to undertake a multidisciplinary, comparative study of the development and social effects of inheritance law in the Nordic countries taking a long-term perspective, covering the period from the beginning of the high Middle Ages until the present day. Inheritance law is one of the most basic and comprehensive fields for regulation of society, because it defines how property and resources shall be transferred from one generation to another, and thereby has far-reaching consequences for the overall distribution of resources and means of subsistence for succeeding generations. Thus, it has been closely interconnected with marriage practices and strategies, demographic development, family and household organisation as well as varying forms of cohabitation in general. Through the structures and conditions it establishes, inheritance law also defines a specific 'space of action', where various strategies could be implemented by various actors, following partly coinciding and partly contradicting interests. This applies to the direct descendants of the deceased, the closest relatives on each of the former spouses' sides, as well as the relationship between the direct descendants and the surviving spouse, having basic needs for further provisioning after the death of the partner - not to forget the interests at stake when people remarried. Thus, a major question concerns the degree to which it has been possible for the deceased/testator or the older generation to influence property distribution among later generations by implementing certain measures while still alive: by making wills, bestowing gifts or establishing trusteeships, foundations or entailed complexes of property.

Through the ages, the inheritance and family laws of the Nordic countries display many common features and points of contact, but at the same time clear differences have also been manifested in legislation and court practice. This development will be analysed through a comparative approach, focusing not only on the similarities and variations within Nordic legislation concerning inheritance, but also on wider European and multicultural influences. Contemporary inheritance law is facing challenges that arise from recent societal development. This relates not only to the loosening of kinship ties due to changes in family structure and new patterns of cohabitation, as well as the shift that has occurred with the welfare state's increased responsibility for support and provisioning that originally rested on family ties. The challenges are also connected with the increased diversification of value-orientation in the population, partly due to the increase in international mobility and cross-border relations, leading to a higher degree of co-existence between various groups displaying different legal traditions, and demands for international harmonizing of inheritance procedures. The aim of these investigations will be to present a comparative account of Nordic inheritance law in a long-time perspective, stretching from the high Middle Ages and until the current situation.

The project work will focus on four fields of investigation:

1) Inheritance legislation: First, the interests, premises and mechanisms at work during the process of legislation should be highlighted, including local power structures and needs conceived as imperative from a domestic point of view, as well as the interaction with and reception from other legal systems. This concerns the influence from Roman and Canon law (international ecclesiastical law) during medieval times, the German-Roman law of the 16th and 17th centuries, the German pandect law of the 19th century, as well as the impact of various Common Law traditions in recent times.

2) Wills, probate cases and court practice: Secondly, focus will be directed on how various actors have tried to promote their own purposes in relation to property devolution by the use of wills, marriage contracts and legal disputes. This should be studied in the context of various challenges posed by actual transformations of society, provoked by such factors as population increase, changing social stratification and family structure and the development of new forms of livelihood (e.g. as the result of industrialisation).

3) Property design: In addition, a series of measures has often been applied in order to meet particular requirements of the legators and their partners/families, relating to the desire to keep property or business complexes together and to prevent dispersal by default application of inheritance law. Special concerns for providing support and subsistence for the heirs and other relatives might also have played a role. These measures may be understood as particular cases of 'property design' and comprise such measures as the establishment of foundations, specifically entailed estates (fidei commissum), legacies, and pensions, as well as the ascription of usufructuary rights and rights to draw rent from specific property complexes. The use of trusteeships for minor heirs and the surviving spouse's right to retain undivided possession of conjugal property should also be taken into consideration in this respect. Foundations and legacies are on the one hand a useful device for preserving property complexes, but may also cause problems when they are used for supporting families, because of the requirements of irrevocable separation and independent management. The aim is to study the varying application of such measures over time, and among different social strata. Of particular interest is the institution fidei commissum, which - based on European models - seems to have been introduced in the Nordic countries during the 17th century.

4) Status of persons and acting options: A fourth approach consists of studying the options for actions and possible strategies that might be followed by various actors, according to their status and the roles they are allotted in the process of property devolution; e.g. as married spouse, unmarried, or descendant - born either in or out of wedlock. More broadly, this concerns the individual status ascribed to particular persons: how they are regarded by the other actors, whether they are supposed to follow their own, individual interests, or whether they were conceived as representatives of the wider kinship group, expected to act in the interest of a particular kindred. Of particular interest in this respect is the occurrence of allodial rights (odal right) which was predominant in most Nordic countries - except Iceland - during Medieval and Early Modern times, and which gave certain members of a kin group the right of pre-emption and redemption of landed property that had been owned by members the same kindred for a minimum of time, defined by a specified number of generations or years.

The project group consists of social and legal historians from all Nordic countries (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden)

Fellows

John Asland

Professor
University of Oslo (UiO)
Year at CAS

Marianne Holdgaard

Professor
Aalborg University
Year at CAS

Már Jónsson

Professor
University of Iceland
Year at CAS

Mia Margareta Korpiola

Professor
University of Turku
Year at CAS

Audur Magnusdottir

Assistant Professor
University of Gothenburg
Year at CAS

Bodil Roberts Selmer

Professor
Aarhus University
Year at CAS

Helle Ingrid Møller Sigh

Head of Department
Strandingsmuseum St.George
Year at CAS

Helle Vogt

Professor
University of Copenhagen