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Beijing court hears first case involving new Property Law
BEIJING—Beijing’s first case
concerning China’s landmark Property Law was put before the courts on
Monday, a week after the law came into effect.
A 60-year-old man surnamed Shen filed a lawsuit to the Beijing Changping
Intermediate People’s Court against the Zhongjiaxin auction company for
auctioning off this September six apartments he bought for 1.2 million
yuan in 1998 from a Mr. Yan.
Yan was convicted of taking bribes in 2002 and had his property
confiscated. The Intermediate People’s Court of Shijiazhuang in Hebei
ruled that the houses were owned by Yan and entrusted the Zhongjiaxin
auction company to conduct the sale. Shen said that if he failed to
retrieve his houses, he would sue the Intermediate People’s Court of
Shijiazhuang and ask for compensation from the government. However the
court hearing was deferred because the auction company “didn’t receive
the subpoena”, according to Li Bing, from the auction house. “Shen’s
appeal was in accordance with the fourth and 64th articles of the
Property Law, which ensures an individual’s lawful possession of
property and the inviolability,” said Wang Liming, head of the Law
School of the Renmin University of China and also one of the drafters of
the law.
The law, approved by the national legislature in March after repeated
revisions and an unprecedented eight readings, is aimed to provide equal
protection to both state and private properties The 247-article law
stipulates that no units or individuals may infringe upon the property
of the state, the collective and the individual. The concept of
improving the protection of private property was first brought up at the
16th National Congress of the Communist Party of China held in November
2002. In March 2004, the NPC adopted a major amendment to the
Constitution, stating that people’s lawful private property is
inviolable.—Xinhua |