Accreditation

By authorizing a third party receives permission to him not otherwise attributable interest or a legal position itself in its own name exercise. Appropriations occur ( eg, as a statutory authorization or empowerment to encroach on fundamental rights ) both in civil law and public law.

The authorization is to be distinguished in the civil law of the assignment and the power of attorney. From the authority of the authorization differs in that the Authorized is not foreign, but in his own name. In the assignment, however, the law is all about to the third party, while the ownership remains with the authorization.

In contract law authorizing physician believes permission and treating insured by the statutory health insurance and to be allowed to settle with the physicians' association, if one is not a contracting physician, such as a hospital doctor. The authorization here is mostly limited to a portion of the subject area that offer little or no knowledge of the established contract doctors.

The disposal authorization is regulated in § 185 paragraph 1 BGB. This allows about an approved third party, a strange thing in its own name to assign them, without it being necessary to Gutglaubensvorschriften.

The collection authorization allows a third party to provide a foreign debt in their own name. The call is not transferred to the third party. A well-known example of empowerment is also the direct debit authorization, ie the authorization to collect money from a foreign account.

In criminal law are separate offenses traceable only with the authorization of certain persons ( § 77e Case 1 of the Criminal Code ). These include the "defamation of the President ," § 90 para 4 of the Criminal Code - see also criminal complaint.

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