“PROPOSAL FOR A REGULATION ON A COMMON EUROPEAN SALES LAW (CESL)”

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Remedies for buyers in B2C contracts: General aspects Brussels 19 June 2012 Prof. Dr. Hans Schulte-Nölke European Legal Studies Institute Osnabrück.
Advertisements

CRO(ss) B(order) E(lectronic) CO(nveyancing). ELRA develops draft of a Common Conveyancing Reference Framework for crossborder electronic conveyancing.
Communication from the Commission COM(2010) 171 final Action Plan Implementing the Stockholm Programme Delivering an area of freedom, security and justice.
European payment order Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2006 creating a European order for payment.
CLAIMS SETTLING WITHIN AND OUTSIDE THE EUROPEAN UNION.
Constitution 20 Private Law I The CESL Proposal: an overview Hugh Beale.
Kåre Lilleholt Comparative Private Law A Common European Sales Law? Proposal for regulation: COM(2011) 635 final An optional 2 nd regime for cross-border.
The Young and the Restless: CESL and (the rest of) national law Matthias E. Storme Full professor KU Leuven, Instituut commercial and insolvency law Symposium.
EU secondary law Regulation 593/2008 on the law applicable to contractual obligations (Rome I) Regulation No 864/2007 on the law applicable to non- contractual.
Private International Law Tourism Electronic Contracts Dra. Silvia Feliu Álvarez de Sotomayor Private International Law Tourism Electronic Contracts Dra.
INTRODUCTION INTO PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE EUROPEAN UNION Marko Jovanovic, LL.M. MASTER IN EUROPEAN INTEGRATION Private International Law in the.
Rome I regulation Discussion topics
 The Rome Regulations can be seen as a single set of uniform rules which apply directly to European Member States and replace their domestic law.  The.
International Treaty in EU PIL
EU: Bilateral Agreements of Member States
Rome II Regulation Conflict rules for torts. Rome II Regulation The Regulation defines: the conflict-of-law rules applicable to non- contractual obligations.
EU: Bilateral Agreements of Member States. Formerly concluded international agreements of Member States with third countries Article 351 TFEU The rights.
Hugh Beale (Universities of Warwick, Oxford & Amsterdam) Drafting a CFR: the aims and approach of the Expert Group.
CROSS BORDER COOPERATION WITH LAND REGISTRIES
Cases of international contracts
Model Rules on EU Administrative Procedures Book IV – Contracts Presentation for the ReNEUAL Conference 2014 EU Administrative Procedures – European Ombudsman.
European payment order Regulation (EC) No 1896/2006 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2006 creating a European order for payment.
Towards an €-maritime (contract) law? Pablo Constenla Acuña.
INTERNATIONAL LAW PARMA UNIVERSITY International Business and Development International Market and Organization Laws Prof. Gabriele Catalini.
Contracts in EPIL Klára Drličková. Structure of seminar Alternative jurisdiction – Article 5(1) of Brussels I Regulation Rome I Regulation – law applicable.
An Optional European Contract Law – Chances and Risks Prof. Dr. Carsten Herresthal, LL.M., University of Regensburg.
Common Frame of Reference (CFR) and Common European Sales Law (CESL): Content and Practical Meaning (Introduction) Paul Varul Partner, Law Firm VARUL (Estonia)
Dr hab. Fryderyk Zoll, Professor at the JU and ALK Draft Common Frame of Reference Structure of the Draft – an Introduction.
European Enforcement Order for uncontested claims JUDr. Radka Chlebcová.
Introduction to EU Civil Judicial Cooperation Dr. Francesco Pesce Assistant Professor in International Law Università degli Studi di Genova (IT)
Dr. Christian Schmies 28. June 2013 The Common European Sales Law - Some Policy Questions -
Johann Ruben Leiss, MLE, LL.M. (EUI) - PhD Research Fellow, Stipendiat - The CESL and the Initiative on Contract Rules for Online Purchases from a Comparative.
Johann Ruben Leiss, MLE, LL.M. (EUI) - PhD Research Fellow, Stipendiat - The CESL and the Initiative on Contract Rules for Online Purchases from a Comparative.
DR MAREK PORZYCKI JAGIELLONIAN UNIVERSITY Reorganisation and winding-up of credit institutions in the EU.
The Fragmentation of EU Contract Law Provisions 22/06/2012 Tamas Dezso Czigler Institute For Legal Studies SSC, Hungarian Academy of Sciences
European Model(s) of Protective Measures in Cross-Border Maintenance Debt Recovery Mirela Župan Professor at Faculty of Law University of Osijek Croatia.
Fabio Bortolotti The Common European Sales Law A useful tool for business or a useless additional set of rules? 2012 IDI Conference - Venice.
Court jurisdiction and applicable laws consumer-protection-joined-cases-c and-c html.
Scope of UNCISG When is contract governed by the CISG?
European enforcement order for uncontested claims Regulation n. 805/2004 of the European Parliament and of the Council of April
INTERNATIONAL CONTRACT LAW Prof. Tommaso Febbrajo Prof. Tommaso Febbrajo.
COMMERCIAL LAW 1 Purchase contract Definition Seller undertakes to deliver to purchaser a thing and to allow the purchaser to acquire the ownership title.
COMMERCIAL LAW 1 Purchase contract Definition Seller undertakes to deliver to purchaser a movable thing specified individually or at least in kind and.
Class Unification of Law - Uniform Law (Rechtsvereinheitlichung) Summer term 2015.
“INTERNATIONAL FAMILIES” UNDER EU PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW
Cross-border merger and final losses (C-123/11 A Oy, KHO 2013:155)
Private International Law Sciences Po Paris Spring 2017
The Draft Common Frame of Reference – background and contents
ABSTRACT SECOLA Tartu, June 2016
Private International Law Sciences Po Paris Spring 2017
Private International Law Sciences Po Paris Spring 2017
European Union Law Week 10.
International Contracts Slide Set 5
Private International law Sciences Po Paris Spring 2017
▸ Agustín Reyna Conference dedicated to European Consumer Day Vilnius
PRESENTATION OF MONTENEGRO
Support of the foreign language profile of law tuition at the Faculty of Law in Olomouc CZ.1.07/2.2.00/
DIRECTORATE GENERAL FOR INTERNAL POLICIES
Commission proposal for a Directive on
INTRODUCTION INTO PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF THE EUROPEAN UNION
Investor protection and MIFID
CISG United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods 1980 Satu Pitkänen 2015.
Paul Varul Partner, Law Firm VARUL (Estonia)
Avv. Roberto Panetta LL.M. Ph.D. ISCL Secretary General
EUROPEAN PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW
Outline Background: development of the Commission’s position
FORUM AND LAW Satu Pitkänen 2015
FORUM AND LAW.
FORUM AND LAW.
THE EU LEGAL FRAMEWORK ON EMPLOYEE INVOLVEMENT
Presentation transcript:

“PROPOSAL FOR A REGULATION ON A COMMON EUROPEAN SALES LAW (CESL)”   ELRA, XIV GENERAL ASSEMBLY TALLINN, 2 DECEMBER 2011 Prof. Dr. Guillermo Palao Moreno University of Valencia

CONTENTS:   1. LEGAL CONTEXT 2. OBJECTIVES AND LEGAL BASIS 3. MAIN ELEMENTS OF THE PROPOSAL 4. ASSESMENT 5. CURRENT SELF-REGULATING RELATED EXPERIENCES: THE CROBECO PROJECT

1. LEGAL CONTEXT   The long way towards a European Contract Law and the CESL DCFR 2009 Green paper 2010 (policy options) Resolution of the European Parliament, 8 June 2011 Communication “Europe 2020” Digital Agenda for Europe 2010 Communication 2011: a Common European Sales Law to facilitate cross-border transactions in the single market The CESL as the first step towards a European Contract Law? Private international law initiatives: Regulation Rome I

2. OBJECTIVES AND LEGAL BASIS   Art. 1: objective and subject matter “1. The purpose of this Regulation is to improve the conditions for the establishment and the functioning of the internal market by making available a uniform set of contract law rules as set out in Annex I ('the Common European Sales Law'). These rules can be used for cross-border transactions for the sale of goods, for the supply of digital content and for related services where the parties to a contract agree to do so. 2. This Regulation enables traders to rely on a common set of rules and use the same contract terms for all their cross-border transactions thereby reducing unnecessary costs while providing a high degree of legal certainty” Legal basis: Art. 114 TFEU “…measures for the approximation of the provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action in Member States which have as their object the establishment and functioning of the internal market”

3. MAIN ELEMENTS OF THE PROPOSAL   16 Articles, 37 Recitals, 2 Annexes a) MATERIAL SCOPE OF APPLICATION b) OPTIONAL NATURE OF THE CESL c) SUBSTANTIVE CHOICE, NON AFFECTING PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW d) CROSS-BORDER CONTRACTS

a) MATERIAL SCOPE OF APPLICATION: Definitions: Art. 2  (k) ‘sales contract’ means any contract under which the trader ('the seller') transfers or undertakes to transfer the ownership of the goods to another person ('the buyer'), and the buyer pays or undertakes to pay the price thereof; it includes a contract for the supply of goods to be manufactured or produced and excludes contracts for sale on execution or otherwise involving the exercise of public authority; (h) ‘goods’ means any tangible movable items; it excludes: (i) electricity and natural gas; and (ii) water and other types of gas unless they are put up for sale in a limited volume or set quantity;   Recital 16: “…in particular for the sale of movable goods,” The necessity of an autonomous interpretation: Recital 29 Contracts covered: Sales (also of immovable goods?); Supply of digital content; Related services contracts; Exclusions of mixed-purpose contracts Issues covered: Contract Law (Recital 28) Issues excluded: Recital 27 “…legal personality, the invalidity of a contract arising from lack of capacity, illegality or immorality, the determination of the language of the contract, matters of non-discrimination, representation, plurality of debtors and creditors, change of parties including assignment, set-off and merger, property law including the transfer of ownership, intellectual property law and the law of torts. Furthermore, the issue of whether concurrent contractual and non-contractual liability claims can be pursued together falls outside the scope of the Common European Sales Law”

b) OPTIONAL NATURE OF THE CESL: Art. 3 (also Arts. 8 and 9)   An agreement of the parties to that effect Explicit and separate from the agreement to conclude the contract for B2C contracts Choice of the CESL “as a whole”: Recital 24 The CESL as a “second (common) system” within a national law The CESL versus the CISG (Recital 25) “Where the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods would otherwise apply to the contract in question, the choice of the Common European Sales Law should imply an agreement of the contractual parties to exclude that Convention”

c) SUBSTANTIVE CHOICE, NON AFFECTING PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW: A DOUBLE CHOICE (Recital 10)   “The agreement to use the Common European Sales Law should be a choice exercised within the scope of the respective national law which is applicable pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 593/2008 or, in relation to pre-contractual information duties, pursuant to Regulation (EC) No 864/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 July 2007 on the law applicable to non-contractual obligations (Regulation (EC) No 864/2007)20, or any other relevant conflict of law rule. The agreement to use the Common European Sales Law should therefore not amount to, and not be confused with, a choice of the applicable law within the meaning of the conflict-of-law rules and should be without prejudice to them. This Regulation will therefore not affect any of the existing conflict of law rules” An option compatible with Regulation Rome I (Art. 3, Recital 14) “Should the Community adopt, in an appropriate legal instrument, rules of substantive contract law, including standard terms and conditions, such instrument may provide that the parties may choose to apply those rules”

d) CROSS-BORDER CONTRACTS: Art. 4   B2B: parties habitual resident in different countries and at least one of them in a member state (intra- and extra- EU relationships) B2C: some elements outside the country of the trader and at least one of those countries is a member state The availability of the CESL for “internal” contracts (Art. 13)

ANNEXES: ANNEX I: The CESL Part I: Introductory provisions   Part I: Introductory provisions Chapter 1: General principles and application Chapter 2: Pre-contractual information Chapter 3: Conclusion of contract Chapter 4: Right to withdraw in distance and off-premises contracts between traders and Consumers Chapter 5: Defects in consent Part III: Assessing what is in the contract Chapter 6: Interpretation Chapter 7: Contents and effects Chapter 8: Unfair contract terms Part IV: Obligations and remedies of the parties to a sales contract or a contract for the supply of digital content Chapter 9: General provision Chapter 10: The seller's obligations Chapter 11: The buyer’s remedies Chapter 12: The buyer's obligations Chapter 13: The seller’s remedies Chapter 14: Passing of risk Part V: Obligations and remedies of the parties to a related service contract Chapter 15: Obligations and remedies of the parties Part VI: Damages and interest Chapter 16: Damages and interest Part VII: Restitution Chapter 17: Restitution Part VIII: Prescription Chapter 18: Prescription APPENDIX I: model instructions on withdrawal APPENDIX II: model withdrawal form ANNEX II: standard information notice

4. ASSESMENT BENEFITS OF THE CESL:   BENEFITS OF THE CESL: The CESL is a better option than the existing situation for the single market (SMEs and consumers): improves legal certainty and reduces transaction cost The benefits of the Annexes I (CESL) and II for the single market The importance of a quick communication of judgments applying the CESL by member states: Art. 14 (Recital 34) The necessity to promote the use of the CESL

OPEN ISSUES: The CESL: a first step towards a European CFR?   The CESL: a first step towards a European CFR? Competition between legal orders, the CESL versus national sales law: towards a soft harmonization of national contract law Interpretation of the CESL: autonomous (Recital 29) or national (Recital 34)? Doubts about its material scope of application: does the CESL also cover sales of immovable goods? Material scope of the CESL and future instruments: CES(ervices)C(contracts)L, CEA(gency)C(contracts)L…? The CESL and the choice of the law of a third country: a “second system” within a non EU member state? Issues excluded from the CESL: still the application of foreign law The CESL versus the CISG: can the CESL succeed over an already tested system for B2B transactions in many member states?

5. CURRENT SELF-REGULATING RELATED EXPERIENCES: THE CROBECO PROJECT   CROBECO: common conveyancing reference framework OBJECTIVES: - Electronic cross-border conveyancing pilot project between member states - To facilitate cross-border transactions and access to national land registries - To enhance legal certainty and confidence: benefits for the internal market - The respect of existing legal systems FUNCTIONING: - Identification of the steps of the conveyance process in each member state - Definition of the services provided by the Land Registers in each step - Providing legal information to the parties Strengthening of the cooperation instruments between land registers

THE CROBECO PROJECT AND PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW:   - The consistence of the CROBECO model contract with existing European Private international law: Regulation Brussels I: Arts. 22.1, 23.1, 5.1 Regulation Rome I: Arts. 3.1, 4.1, c), 10, 11 and 13 Regulation Rome II: Arts. 14 and 4.3 The respect of current transfer of property systems within the EU

THANK YOU! guillermo.palao@uv.es