{"schemaVersion":1,"recordType":"legal-article","id":"law:eri:code:civil:2015:article:22","workId":"law:eri:code:civil:2015","expressionId":"law:eri:code:civil:2015:en","title":"Refusal to Accept Examination","number":"22","language":"en","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-code-2015/article/22/","hierarchy":{"book":"BOOK I - PERSONS","title":"TITLE I - NATURAL PERSONS","chapter":"Chapter 1. - Personality and the Rights Inherent to Personality","section":"Section 2. - Rights of Personality","paragraph":"B. - Medical Examinations"},"paragraphs":[{"id":"lead","number":"","text":"Where a person refuses to submit himself to a medical examination not involving any serious danger to the human body, the Court may consider as established the facts which the examination has the object of ascertaining.","canonicalUrl":"https://eriatlas.com/law/civil-code-2015/article/22/#lead","sourceTargets":[{"sourceId":"civil-code-2015-en","pdfPage":23,"url":"https://eriatlas.com/sources/civil-code-2015/page/23/?article=22&paragraph=lead#article-22-lead"}]}],"caution":"This is the 2015 English-language edition attributed in its front matter to the Ministry of Justice. Eri Atlas has not independently verified the translation, later changes, or whether the text is currently in force. Nine passages are incomplete in the available scan and are identified where they occur."}