The capacity of both
natural and
artificial persons determines whether they may make binding amendments to their
rights,
duties and
obligations, such as getting
married or
merging, entering into
contracts, making
gifts, or writing a valid
will. Capacity is an aspect of
status and both are defined by a person's personal law:for natural persons, the law of
domicile or
lex domicilii in
common law states, and either the law of
nationality or
lex patriae, or of
habitual residence in
civil law states;for artificial persons, the law of the place of
incorporation, the
lex incorporationis for
companies while other forms of business entity derive their capacity either from the law of the place in which they were formed or the laws of the states in which they establish a presence for trading purposes depending on the nature of the entity and the transactions entered into. When the
law limits or bars a person from engaging in specified activities, any
agreements or
contracts to do so are either voidable or void for incapacity. Sometimes such legal incapacity is referred to as incompetence. For comparison, see
Competence (law).
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