Fruit
What is a fruit?
In legal terms, the concept of fruit refers to the benefits or returns obtained from something, without losing its own individuality. That is, if you own one thing (a tree, a house, or a share in a company), that thing can give you something else (for example, fruits, money, or dividends). That which gives you the thing is called fruit.
They can be natural, civil or industrial, depending on their origin and relationship with the good that produces them:
- Natural: if you are the owner of agricultural land, the fruits can be the agricultural products that are harvested from that land, such as fruits, vegetables or cereals. They are what the thing gives you without doing anything, just by the passage of time. time or by nature.
- Civil: If you own a rental house, the fruits can be the income obtained from the rental of that property. They are born from an agreement with another person.
- Industrial: if you are the owner of a company, the fruits can be the benefits generated by the commercial activity. They are the ones that the thing gives you because you do something with it (like working on it or taking care of it).
The natural and industrial fruits are part of the property until they are separated from it and belong to the owner or to the person who has the right to it. On the other hand, civil fruits are not part of the property but are rights generated periodically, and only require an expiration or distribution of the rights they generate.
For example, a crop is considered a natural or industrial fruit when it is cut and collected, but a rent is considered a civil fruit when it is paid and collected.
Related concepts
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Contracts
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- Commercial partner agreement
- Convertible participatory loan
- Receipt of delivery of goods and/or services
- Annexation contract of co-founder or employee with equity
- Statutes of a Limited Liability Company without a Defined Administrative Body
- Statutes of a Limited Liability Company with Joint Administrators or co-Administrators
- Statutes of a Limited Liability Company with a Sole Administrator
- Statutes of a Limited Liability Company with a Board of Directors
- Business plan
- Customer Reference Agreement
- Investment agreement
- Distribution contract
- Computer systems maintenance contract
- Trademark use license agreement
- Agency Contract
- Corporate administration contract
- Contract of carriage of goods
- Commercial commission contract
- Contract for the assignment of patents, utility models and industrial designs
- Leasing contract
- Software Assignment Agreement
- Minutes
- Contract for the provision of business management and management services
- Contract for the trade of stakes
- Commercial order letter
- Joint Venture Agreement
- Mutual NDA or Non-Disclosure Agreement
- Unilateral NDA or Non-Disclosure Agreement
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Dudas legales
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- What is the difference between fortuitous event and force majeure?
- How do ADRM differentiate?
- How is the value of a company usually determined?
- What does it mean to be a «partner» in a company?
- What does it mean for a company to have limited liability?
- What happens if the protection of an industrial property right is not renewed?
- Who can enter into a contract?
- Who can enter into a contract?
- When is a jurisdiction and applicable law clause valid?
- What are the differences between a relationship being labor or commercial?
- How can a contract be enforced against a third party?
- Differences between social statutes and shareholders' agreement
- What does it mean that a contract does not produce any legal effect?
- What happens if an essential clause is missing from a contract?
- What are the particularities of public-private contracting?
- Differences between an agency contract and a commission contract
- What are the differences between lease and sale?
- In the field of commercial law, what is the general interest?
- What could I do if I see that one of the parties has breached the provisions of the contract?
- What are the differences between a Limited Company and a Limited Company?
- Joint and joint and several liability, in what do they differ?
- What is the governing body in a company?
- What is the basis of collective agreements at the labor level?
- When is a dismissal considered void?
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- When is a dismissal considered fair?
- What limitations does the principal have on the agent?
- What is a right to repurchase shares or stakes?
- What type of purpose do trademark license assignments usually have?
- What are the modalities of a distribution contract?
- Why is competition important in commercial law?
- What is the difference between a deposit and a guarantee?
- What are the essential aspects of the object of a legal act?
- What is the difference between nullity and annullability?
- What does the expression «not be contrary to the law, morality or public order» mean?
- What are the differences between a real action and a personal action?
- What are the differences between the force majeure clause, rebus sic stantibus and excessive onerousness?
- What differences are there between the concept of force majeure and that of excessive burden?
- Consequences of not including a jurisdiction and applicable law clause in a contract
- Is copyright and intellectual property the same?
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Glossary
- Abuse of power
- Donation
- Company
- Abuse of rights
- Trade union
- Retroactivity
- Usufruct
- Typical contract
- Arrears
- Trade
- Obligations to do and not to do
- Procedural law
- Payment-in-Kind
- «Streamer»
- Nominal value
- Pre- and post-money stake
- Sentence
- MVP (Minimum Viable Product)
- Startup
- Co-founder
- Employee with equity
- Capitalization table («Cap Table»)
- Venture capital
- Pitch
- Equity
- Opinio iuris
- Ombudsman
- Public deed
- Deposit
- Collective bargaining agreement
- Social capital
- Erga omnes efficacy
- Inter partes efficacy
- Negotiation
- General principles of law
- Sources of law
- Legal doctrine
- Custom
- Law (Generic concept)
- Legal relationship
- Good faith
- Protective principle in labor law
- Residual price
- Joint ownership
- SWOT analysis
- Businessperson
- Management board
- Preferential acquisition right
- Guarantee
- Commission
- Sublease
- Property
- Down payment
- Legal good
- Work trial period
- Annullability
- Error
- Intimidation
- Violence
- Vices of consent
- Dispositive norm
- Imperative norm
- Labor law
- Commercial law
- Civil law
- Principle of legality
- Private Law
- Public Law
- Nullity
- Atypical contract
- Legal act
- Personal rights
- Debtor
- Creditor
- Real action
- Personal action
- Fortuitous event
- Excessive hardship
- Fruit
- Force majeure
- Related rights
- Employment notice period
- Bad faith
- Mens rea
- Fault
- Right of first refusal and withdrawal
- Notary
- Arbitration award
- Arbitrator
- Mediator
- Invoice
- Limited Company
- Public Limited Company
- Dividends
- Ordinary shares
- Preferred shares
- Nominees shares
- Bearer shares
- Jurisprudence
- Assignment of rights
- Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA)
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Clauses