What are the basic principles of property law?

Basic principles of property law:

1, legal principle of real right. Article 5 of the Property Law stipulates that "the types and contents of property rights shall be prescribed by law", which is the embodiment of this principle. This principle requires that the types of real rights, the contents and effects of various real rights, and the way of setting them should be directly stipulated by the law, and should not be arbitrarily set by the parties.

2. The principle of openness and public trust. Publicity means that the establishment and transfer of real rights must be open and transparent.

The principle of equal protection of property rights. "State, collective and private property rights and the property rights of other obligees are protected by law, and no unit or individual may infringe upon them".

4. Maintain an appropriate balance between public interests and property rights. The exercise of rights has boundaries and cannot be crossed, otherwise it will inevitably infringe on the rights of others and cause tort liability.

5. The principle of one thing and one right. A thing refers to a complete and independent thing, not a part of it. A right is that there can only be one ownership on this thing, that is, a thing cannot have two owners.

6. Principle of priority of lex specialis.