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Article 1049 of the French Civil Code

A liberality thus granted may only take effect in respect of property or rights that are identifiable at the date of transmission and subsist in kind at the death of the encumbered person. Where it relates to transferable securities, the liberality also takes effect, in the event of alienation, in respect of the transferable securities that have been subrogated to it. Where it relates to immovable property, the charge encumbering…

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Article 1050 of the French Civil Code

The rights of the second grantee open on the death of the grantee. However, the grantee may abandon, in favour of the second grantee, the enjoyment of the property or right which is the subject of the liberality. This anticipated abandonment may not prejudice the creditors of the grantee prior to the abandonment, or third parties who have acquired, from the latter, a right to the property or right abandoned.

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Article 1054 of the French Civil Code

If the encumbered person is a reserved heir of the disposing person, the charge may only be imposed on the available portion. The donee may, however, accept, in the deed of gift or subsequently in a deed drawn up under the conditions provided for in Article 930, that the charge encumbers all or part of his reserve. The legatee may, within a period of one year from the day on…

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Article 1055 of the French Civil Code

The author of a gradual donation may revoke it in respect of the second gratified person as long as the latter has not notified the donor of his acceptance in the manner required for donations. By way of derogation from article 932, a gradual gift may be accepted by the second recipient after the donor’s death.

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Article 1056 of the French Civil Code

When the second gratified predeceases the indebted person or renounces the benefit of the gradual liberality, the property or rights that were the subject of it depend on the estate of the indebted person, unless the deed expressly provides that his heirs may receive it or designates another second gratified person.

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Article 1058 of the French Civil Code

A residual gift does not oblige the first beneficiary to keep the property received. It obliges him to pass on the surviving property. Where the property, the subject of the residual liberality, has been alienated by the first gratified, the rights of the second beneficiary are carried over neither to the proceeds of such alienations nor to the new property acquired.

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