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RECOGNITION and ENFORCEMENT in CIVIL and COMMERCIAL MATTERS A.A.H. van Hoek 2003
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OUTLINE Background and content of the Brussels I Regulation Conditions for recognition and enforcement Effects of and problems with of recognition and enforcement
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REGULATION 44/2001 IN CONTEXT
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The Way to Brussels I Article 220 EEC-Treaty (293 ECT) The member states shall, so far as necessary, enter into negotiations with each other with a view to securing for the benefit of their nationals.…. The simplification of formalities governing the reciprocal recognition and enforcement of judgments of courts or tribunals and of arbitral awards.
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The Brussels Convention 1968: Belgium; France; Germany; Italy; Luxembourg; The Netherlands 1978: Denmark, Ireland, UK 1982: Greece 1989: Portugal, Spain
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The Lugano Convention 1988: EC Member States + EFTA Member States: Austria, Norway, Sweden, Finland, Iceland, Switzerland 1997: Austria, Sweden, Finland accede to Brussels I 2002: Poland accedes to Lugano
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The Brussels I Regulation Based on Article 65 EC-Treaty Community instrument Reservation of Denmark: recital 21 Special status of overseas territories: Article 68 Reg. jo Article 299 EC-Treaty
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Conflicts of Treaties 1 Application ratione materiae: Article 1 Territorial application: –Jurisdiction –Lis pendens alibi –Recognition and enforcement
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Jurisdiction Domicile of defendant: –Article 2, 3 and 4 –Additional jurisdiction: Articles 5, 6 Exclusive jurisdiction: Article 22 (16) Choice of forum: Article 23 (17)
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domicile of defendant exclusive ground choice of forum M-S (-DK) DK EEA + Poland 3 INSTRUMENTS Regulation/Brussels/Lugano OT
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Other Inter- and Supranational Instruments Bilateral treaties between member states of the conventions/regulation Multilateral conventions on specific subject matters: transportation, maintenance Bilateral conventions with third countries Secundary community legislation: directive on the posting of workers
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Conflicts of Treaties 2 Priority of EC-law: Article 67 Bilateral treaties between member states: Article 69/70: application ratione materiae Specific Conventions: Article 71 Third Countries: Article 72
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Article 1 Civil and commercial matters: C-271/00, C- 266/01 Family law issues: case 143/78, C-220/95 Bankruptcy Social security: C-271/00 Arbitration: C-190/89, C-391/95
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CONDITIONS of RECOGNITION and ENFORCEMENT
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Elements of a Judgment Facts: procedure to establish the facts, rules on evidence Law: acceptance of equivalence of norm(s) applied Conclusion: legal reasoning, fair hearing Sanction/remedy
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Conditions of Recognition and/or Enforcement Jurisdiction Notice Fair trial (procedural public policy) Substantive public policy Conflicting judgments (Finality of the judgment/executory force)
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Procedure for Recognition and Enforcement Automatic recognition: Article 33 Exequatur: –Ex parte initial procedure: Article 41 –Appeal: Article 43 ff No ex officio refusal of exequatur!
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Jurisdiction: Article 35 No test of jurisdiction by recognizing court Exceptions: –Consumers and insurance –Exclusive jurisdiction –‘Article 4’ conventions Jurisdiction is not part of public policy –Krombach v Bamberski
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Notification: Article 34 sub 2 Default judgment: autonomous –C-172/91, C-78/95 In due form: court of origin/international instruments –Case 166/80, case 305/88 Timely: recognizing court –Case 166/80, case 49/84 ‘Local remedies’
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Public Policy Substantive –Declaratory part – remedy –Natural justice – public interest rules Procedural: Article 6 ECHR
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Public Policy (Cont.) Manifest breach Result in the particular case Member state – European Court of Justice
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Articles 81/82 EC-Treaty Eco Swiss v Benetton C-126/97: Article 81/82 are part of community public policy Renault v Maxicar C-38/98: no public policy for the application of Article 34 sub 1 –Restrictive interpretation? –Harmonized rule of law –Common system of adjudication/ interpretation
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Article 6 ECHR ECtHR: Pellegrini v Italy ECJ: Krombach v Bamberski Dutch Supreme Court: local remedies
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Irreconcilable judgments Relationship with lis pendens alibi and related actions (Articles 27, 28) Relationship with res iudicata Judgments between Same parties Entailing legal consequences which are mutually exclusive
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EFFECTS of RECOGNITION
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Effects of a Judgment Res iudicata effect: the relationship between parties is determined by the judgment Ne bis in idem: parties are estopped to retry the same issue Title for enforcement
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Types of Judgments Declaratory judgments: facts, law, appreciation of facts e.g. dismissal of a claim Constitutive judgments: change/create a legal situation e.g. annullment of a patent Condemnatory judgments: contain a sanction/remedy e.g. damages/restraining order
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Recognition Models Assimilation / equal treatment Home country control Reciprocity / cumulation / public policy exception
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Conflict Rules for Recognition and Enforcement Effects of the judgment = country of origin –Hofmann v. Krieg, case 145/86 Enforcement = recognizing country –Article 22 sub 5 –Article 40
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Binding Effect Parties: who Cause of action: what –Law + facts –Collateral estoppel
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Enforcement Exclusive jurisdiction of court of country of enforcement Article 22 sub 5 Payment and other intervening circumstances: case 145/86, C-267/97 Remedies: Contempt of court, fines etc Time limits
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Exequatur Parties Full or partial exequatur Legal representation Time limits Costs Formalities Review
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