Ernst Rabel

Ernst Rabel
Born (1874-01-28)January 28, 1874
Vienna, Austria-Hungary
Died September 7, 1955(1955-09-07) (aged 81)
Zurich, Switzerland
Nationality Austrian
Alma mater University of Vienna
Occupation Jurist

Ernst Rabel (January 28, 1874 – September 7, 1955) was an Austrian-born American scholar of Roman law, German private law, and comparative law, who, as the founding director of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Foreign and International Private Law, in Berlin, achieved international recognition in the period between the World Wars,[1][2] before being forced into retirement under the Nazi regime, and emigrating to the United States, in 1939. In the field of comparative law his methodological perspectives, particularly as articulated and disseminated by his students, including Ernst von Caemmerer, Gerhard Kegel, and Max Rheinstein, were influential in the development of the "functional" or "function/context" methodology that became standard in Europe, the United States, and elsewhere in the world, in the post-World War II era.[3][4] His work in Germany in the 1930s in the area of the law of the sale of goods provided a model for later postwar efforts to develop a uniform world-wide sales law.[5][6]

Biography

Ernst Rabel was born in Vienna, as the son of Albert Rabel and Bertha Rabel (née Ettinger). His father was a distinguished Austrian attorney in the era of the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

Rabel studied law at the University of Vienna, and received his Ph.D. there in December 1895.[7] His dissertation, written under Ludwig Mitteis, was entitled "Die Übertragbarkeit des Urheberrechts nach dem österreichischen Gesetzes vom 26. December 1895" (The transferability of copyright under the Austrian act of December 26, 1895; published 1899).[8] Rabel initially entered law practice with his father, in Vienna, but when his mentor Mitteis moved to the University of Leipzig in 1899, Rabel followed, and continued his studies there. Upon completion of his Habilitation, in 1902, with his work "Die Haftung des Verkäufers wegen Mangels im Rechte" (The seller's liability for failure to deliver conforming goods),[9] he began teaching law at Leipzig as a junior faculty member (Privatdozent), and in 1904 was appointed professor (extraordinarius) of Roman law and German private law.[10]

In 1906 Rabel took up a post as a full professor (ordinarius) at the University of Basel.[11] After a few years he returned to Germany, joining the law faculty in Kiel in 1910, then Göttingen in 1911.[10] It was at the University of Munich, where he was appointed in 1916, that he shifted his focus from legal history to comparative law.[12] He co-founded, with Karl Neumeyer, Munich's Institute for Comparative Law (Institut für Rechtsvergleichung), which was the first of its kind in Germany and served as a model for similar institutes later founded in Heidelberg, Frankfurt, and Hamburg.[13][14] Most famously, his expertise in the field of comparative law led to his appointment, in 1926, as director of the newly created Kaiser Wilhelm Institute for Foreign and International Private Law (Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht), in Berlin, one of the several independent research institutes founded by the Kaiser Wilhelm Society.[12] In the postwar period it became the Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law (located in Hamburg beginning in 1956).[15]

Rabel was also called upon to serve as a judge on several international judicial bodies during the interwar period. From 1921 to 1927 he was a judge for the German-Italian Mixed Arbitral Tribunal, which had jurisdiction over reparation claims against the German Empire, as well as controversies among private parties arising from contracts interrupted by wartime conditions; and from 1925 to 1928, he was an ad hoc judge on the Permanent Court of International Justice, serving in the Chorzów cases, among others.[11][16] Later he served on the Permanent German-Italian (1928-1935) and German-Norwegian (1929-1936) Arbitral Commissions.[11]

As a member of the governing council of the International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT), from 1928 to 1933, Rabel initiated discussions concerning unification of rules of law for international sales transactions, which culminated in a report to the League of Nations in 1934.[17] These efforts, as well as his own scholarly work on the law of the sale of goods (Das Recht des Warenkaufs, 1936), were a precursor to what became the proposed convention relating to a "Uniform Law on International Sales," adopted at a diplomatic conference in The Hague in 1964.[5]

After the Nazis came to power in Germany, Rabel, though a lifelong Catholic, was eventually forced to resign his professorship in Berlin because of his Jewish heritage (his grandparents on both the maternal and paternal side were Jewish; his parents had converted to Catholicism[18]). Having been employed in the German civil service since before the First World War (since his position in Leipzig in 1904), he initially fell under one of the exceptions in the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service of 1933, which forced many other Jews from their positions; however, his resignation was compelled under the terms of the Law of the Reich Citizen (Reichsbürgergesetz), part of the Nuremberg Laws, passed in 1935, which deprived Jews of German citizenship and eliminated once and for all the possibility of Jews serving in public office, or the civil service.[19] In February 1937 he resigned as director of the Institute he had founded.[20] He finally emigrated with his family via Belgium, to the United States, arriving in New York City in September 1939.[21]

In the United States, he continued his work and supported himself through research grants that he received from the American Law Institute (ALI), the University of Michigan Law School, Ann Arbor, and Harvard Law School.[22][23] In 1942 Rabel and German émigré colleague Karl Loewenstein were among those invited by the ALI to join an international experts' committee charged with preparing a global restatement of 'essential human rights.'[24] The document that the ALI committee formulated[25] later was an important point of reference in the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights by the United Nations.[26]

After the war, while resident in the United States, Rabel completed what is considered to be his magnum opus, The Conflict of Laws: A Comparative Study, a four-volume work.[10][27] At some point during this period he became an American citizen.[21] He also spent time in Germany, both in Tübingen (where his old Institute had moved during the war), and in Berlin, where he taught at the Free University (Freie Universität).[28]

While abroad, he died in a hospital in Zurich, Switzerland, on September 7, 1955.[21][29]

Personal life

Rabel's father, Albert Rabel, was originally from Austerlitz, Moravia (today, Slavkov u Brna, in the Czech Republic).[30]

In 1912 Ernst Rabel married Anni Weber (1889-1979) in Göttingen. The couple had two children: a son, Friedrich Karl (born 1914), who, like his parents, emigrated to the United States via Belgium in 1939; and a daughter, Elisabeth ("Lilli"; 1913-1985), who followed the rest of the family to the United States in 1940.[30]

Selected works

In German

In English

References

  1. Stolleis, Michael (2004). Vorwort [Preface]. In: Rolf Ulrich Kunze, Ernst Rabel und das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht 1926-1945. Göttingen: Wallstein. p. 9.
  2. Rensmann, Thilo (2011). "Munich Alumni and the Evolution of International Human Rights Law." European Journal of International Law, 22(4), p. 973-991; here, p. 978, 981.
  3. Gerber, David J. (2001). "Sculpting the Agenda of Comparative Law: Ernst Rabel and the Facade of Language" (pp. 190-208). In: Annelise Riles (Ed.), Rethinking the Masters of Comparative Law. Oxford: Hart Publishing. p. 190, 199, 203. Gerber's chapter is also available as a PDF file from his home page on the scholarly commons of the Kent Law School, University of Chicago; retrieved 2015-09-15.
  4. Michaels, Ralf (2006). "The Functional Method of Comparative Law." In: Konrad Zimmermann and Mathias Reimann, The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law (pp. 339-382). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 362. Available as a PDF file from the Duke Law School Scholarship Repository; retrieved 2015-09-15.
  5. 1 2 van der Velden, F. J. A. (1983). "The Law of International Sales: The Hague Conventions 1964 and the Uncitral Uniform Sales Code 1980 – Some main items compared" (pp. 47-69). In: C. C. A. Voskuil and J. A. Wade (Eds.), T.M.C. Asser Instituut, Hague-Zagreb Essays on the Law of International Trade. Volume 4. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. p. 48.
  6. "Prof. Dr. Ernst Rabel: Curriculum Vitae." In: CISG-online.ch, a database on case law related to the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG). Hosted at Global Sales Law website, University of Basel. Retrieved 2015-09-15.
  7. Kegel, Gerhard (1990). "Ernst Rabel – Werk und Person." Rabels Zeitschrift für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht / The Rabel Journal of Comparative and International Private Law. 54(1), p. 1-23; here: p. 19.
  8. Kegel (1990), p. 2.
  9. Kegel, Gerhard (2007). "Ernst Rabel (1874-1955)." In: Stefan Grundmann und Karl Riesenhuber (Eds.): Deutschsprachige Zivilrechtslehrer des 20. Jahrhunderts in Berichten ihrer Schüler. Volume 1. Berlin: de Gruyter Recht, 2007. p. 16-29; here: p. 18-19.
  10. 1 2 3 Rheinstein, Max (1956). "In Memory of Ernst Rabel." The American Journal of Comparative Law, 5(2), p. 185-196; here: p. 195.
  11. 1 2 3 Clark, David S. (1993). "The Influence of Ernst Rabel on American Law" (pp. 107-126). In: Marcus Lutter, Ernst C. Stiefel, and Michael H. Hoeflich (Eds.), Der Einfluss deutscher Emigranten auf die Rechtsentwicklung in den USA und in Deutschland. Tübingen: Mohr. p. 108.
  12. 1 2 Gerber (2001), p. 195.
  13. Kunze, Rolf Ulrich (2004). Ernst Rabel und das Kaiser-Wilhelm-Institut für ausländisches und internationales Privatrecht 1926-1945. Göttingen: Wallstein. p. 34
  14. Rensmann (2011), p. 977.
  15. "Academic History." Max Planck Institute for Comparative and International Private Law. Retrieved 2015-09-15. The institute relocated from Berlin to Tübingen in 1944, became part of the Max Planck Society in 1949, and moved to Hamburg in 1956.
  16. Gerber (2001), p. 195-196.
  17. Peters, Lena (2011). International Institute for the Unification of Private Law (UNIDROIT). Alphen aan den Rijn, The Netherlands: Kluwer Law International. p. 20, 30.
  18. Kunze (2004), p. 31.
  19. Kunze (2004), p. 63-64.
  20. Kunze (2004), p. 13.
  21. 1 2 3 Rheinstein, Max (1956). "In Memory of Ernst Rabel." The American Journal of Comparative Law, 5(2), p. 185-196; here, p. 185.
  22. Rheinstein (1956), p. 195-196.
  23. Kegel (1990), p. 21.
  24. Rensmann (2011), p. 981-984.
  25. Lewis, William Draper (1945). "The Statement of Essential Human Rights by Representatives of the Principal Cultures of the World." Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 89(3), p. 489-494.
  26. Rensmann (2011), p. 990.
  27. Rensmann (2011), p. 981.
  28. Rheinstein (1956), p. 196.
  29. Kegel (2007), p. 18. Kegel misstates the day of death as September 17; according to multiple other sources it was September 7.
  30. 1 2 Hofer, Sibylle (2003). "Rabel, Ernst," in: Neue Deutsche Biographie, vol. 21, p. 64-65. Online version retrieved 2015-09-15 from www.deutsche-biographie.de
  31. Rabel, Ernst (1945). The Conflict of Laws, A Comparative Study, Foreword by William Draper Lewis and Hessel E. Yntema. I, Introduction: Family Law (1 ed.). Ann Arbor and Chicago: The University of Michigan Press; Callaghan & Company. Retrieved 15 May 2016 via University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository.
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