Pacta Sunt Servanda

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A Pacta Sunt Servanda is a principle of law that ensures agreements and treaties are to be followed as promised.



References

2023a

2023b

  • (Wikipedia, 2023) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/pacta_sunt_servanda Retrieved:2023-8-21.
    • Pacta sunt servanda, Latin for "agreements must be kept", [1] is a brocard and a fundamental principle of law. According to Hans Wehberg, a professor of international law, "few rules for the ordering of Society have such a deep moral and religious influence" as this principle. [2] In its most common sense, the principle refers to private contracts and prescribes that the provisions, i.e. clauses, of a contract are law between the parties to the contract, and therefore implies that neglect of their respective obligations is a violation of the contract. The first known expression of the brocard is in the writings of the canonist Cardinal Hostiensis from the 13th century AD, which were published in the 16th. [3]
  1. Black's Law Dictionary (8th ed. 2004)
  2. Wehberg, H., 'Pacta Sunt Servanda', The American Journal of International Law 53, no. 4 (1959), accessed 10 February 2022
  3. Hyland, 1994, p. 416