Libros De Derecho Argentina Official
She did. Inside, in tight, furious handwriting, were notes in the margins. Objections. Counter-arguments. A heated dialogue between the author and a previous owner—someone who had clearly been a lawyer in the ’50s, during Perón’s first term.
He pulled down a slim, unassuming volume: Tratado de la Obligación , by unworthy author, printed in 1942. “Open it,” he said. libros de derecho argentina
Lucía felt a chill. She had studied that article for her torts exam last semester. She had passed with a 9 (sobresaliente). But she had never felt it. She did
He opened it. On page 47, next to Article 1112 of the old Civil Code (duty not to cause damage to another), she had written: “Here is where we begin again. The law doesn’t speak. We make it speak.” Counter-arguments