IX   Table of contents 
 - Preface
 - Overview
 - Abbreviations
 - § 1: Introduction
 - § 2: Groundwork
 -   § 3: Obligation to transfer the property and third party rights or claims  
- I. Distinguishing different obligations to transfer the property
 -  II. Historical roots and comparative law 
- 1. Roman law
 -  2. National laws 
- a) French law
 -  b) Swiss law 
- aa) Articles 184 and 192 et seq. of the Swiss Code of Obligations
 - bb) Opinions by the Swiss courts and scholars
 - cc) Position of the Swiss Supreme Court
 - dd) Discussion
 - ee) Summary regarding the obligation to transfer the property
 - ff) Nullity due to impossibility and Article 20 of the Swiss Code of Obligations
 
 - c) English law
 
 - 3. The breakthrough of German law?
 - 4. Summary
 
 -  III. Current interpretations of Articles 30 and 41 of the CISG 
- 1. Approach 1: Buyer has to become owner of the goods under Article 30 of the CISG
 - 2. Approach 2: Article 30 of the CISG obliges the seller to fulfill the necessary acts under national law to effect a transfer of property
 - 3. Approach 3: Article 30 of the CISG is merely an overview elaborated by Article 41 of the CISG and contains no independent obligation
 
 -  IV. A novel approach: Defining “property” under Article 30 of the CISG and applying Article 41 of the CISG with regard to third parties only 
- 1. Defining “property” under Article 30 of the CISG
 -  2. Advantages of this approach 
- a) The wording of Article 41 of the CISG and third parties
 - b) Uniformity and Article 7(1) of the CISG
 - c) Improved delineation of Articles 30 and 41 of the CISG
 - d) Summary
 
 - 3. Consequences for the type of obligation found in Article 30 of the CISG
 -  4. Obligation to transfer unencumbered property under Article 41 of the CISG 
-  a) Wording and the additional protection from claims of third parties 
- aa) Can there be a breach of contract by a right that is not at the same time a claim?
 - bb) Are there buyers’ remedies for claims of third parties more limited than the remedies for rights of third parties?
 - cc) Summary
 
 - b) Purpose of Article 41 of the CISG
 - c) Travaux préparatoires
 - d) Summary
 
 -  a) Wording and the additional protection from claims of third parties 
 - 5. Broader protection for buyers under the CISG than a mere obligation to transfer unencumbered property
 - 6. Preemption of remedies under national law regarding the non-transfer of property
 - 7. Applying the novel approach in direct comparison to approaches 1–3
 - 8. Summary
 
 - V. Outlook on unifications of law and specifically European law
 
 -  § 4: Property and the characterization of a sales contract under the CISG 
- I. Status quo and general opinion under the CISG
 - II. Transfer of property as understood under national laws is no necessary element of characterization of sales contracts under the CISG
 - III. Transfer of property under Article 30 of the CISG is no necessary element of characterization of sales contracts under the CISG
 - IV. Proposed characterization of a sales contract under Article 1(1) of the CISG
 - V. Conclusion
 - VI. Outlook on unifications of law and specifically European law
 
 -   § 5: Property and the claim for the purchase price  
- I. Property in the goods and action for the price in the common law
 - II. Continental European laws’ approach exemplified by German law
 - III. Summary of national concepts
 -  IV. Claiming the price under the CISG 
-  1. Article 62 of the CISG 
- a) Notable widening of scope of Article 62 of the CISG compared to Article 61(2) of the ULIS
 - b) No limitation of the claim for the price under Article 77 of the CISG
 - c) No limitation of the claim for the price under Articles 85, 87 of the CISG
 - d) No limitation of the claim for the price under Article 88 of the CISG
 - e) Possible limitation of the claim for the price under Article 9(2) of the CISG
 - f) Limitation of the claim for the price under Article 58 of the CISG
 - g) Limitation of the claim for the price under Article 7(1) of the CISG
 - h) Summary
 
 -  2. Damages claim instead of the claim for the price 
- a) Article 77 of the CISG after extinction of performance claim
 - b) Article 77 of the CISG while claim for performance still exists and is due
 - c) Summary
 
 -  3. Article 28 of the CISG and the claim for the price under Article 62 of the CISG 
-  a) Applicability of Article 28 of the CISG to the claim for the price under Article 62 of the CISG 
- aa) Potential consequences if Article 28 of the CISG were applicable to the claim for the price under Article 62 of the CISG
 - bb) Arguments for and against the application of Article 28 of the CISG to the claim for the price
 
 - b) Application of its “own” law with regard to the claim for the purchase price
 - c) Summary
 
 -  a) Applicability of Article 28 of the CISG to the claim for the price under Article 62 of the CISG 
 
 -  1. Article 62 of the CISG 
 - V. Conclusion
 
 -   § 6: Exclusion under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG  
- I. Effect on “property” under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
 -  II. Retention of property clauses 
- 1. Effects on property in the goods excluded under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
 - 2. Effects on contractual rights and obligations not excluded under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
 - 3. Consent regarding the retention of property clause under Articles 14–24 of the CISG or under national law?
 - 4. Summary
 
 - III. The CISG’s position on parties’ agreements to regulate the transfer of property
 - IV. No contradiction between Article 4, sentence 2(b) CISG and Articles 30, 41 of the CISG
 - V. Suitability of the exclusion under Article 4, sentence 2(b) of the CISG
 - VI. Conclusion
 
 - § 7: Remedies based on (national) property law
 -   § 8: Insolvency and property in the goods  
- I. Elevated relevance of property in insolvency cases
 - II. The CISG does not supersede national insolvency law on the available assets for distribution and priorities
 -  III. (No) indirect influence on seller’s property after avoidance of contract by the CISG 
- 1. Schlechtriem and the causa surviving contract avoidance
 - 2. Landfermann, Hornung, Krebs, Claude Witz arguing for the irrelevance of the CISG
 - 3. Discussion
 - 4. Summary
 
 - IV. Conclusion
 
 - § 9: Conclusions and theses
 - Index of authorities
 - Index of further material
 - Index of cases
 
