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Choice of law, Consumer Contracts and Law of Consumer

A recent trawl of some questions posed by the European Parliament to the Commission revealed this interesting question and answer about the applicability and scope of the law of the state of the consumer in cross border transactions.

Look at Written Question E-1751/07 by Georgios Papastamkos. He asks basically what the Commission has done to render the law of the domicile of the consumer applicable in cross border transactions instead of the law of the domicile of the vendor, especially in internet sales, and whether the imposition of such a mandatory law complies with the principle of freedom of contract.

You can find the Commission's response here. It refers in particular to the "Rome I" proposal that is wonderfully chronicled by our friends over at the excellent Conflict of Laws Blog.

Jacco Bomhoff on Case C-98/06 Freeport

Jacco Bomhoff over at the Comparative Law Blog - that we admire and recommend - has written a really interesting and thought provoking post on the Court of Justice's recent judgment in Case C-98/06 Freeport. We noted it briefly here.

You can read that post here. Scroll down until you find the post of Wednesday, October 17th 2007.

Broad interpretation of Art. 6 §1 of Reg. 44/2001: Case C-98/06

The Court of Justice has given a fairly broad interpretation of Article 6 § 1 of Regulation 44/2001 on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters in Case C-98/06 Freeport.

Article 6 § 1 of regulation 44/2001 provides :

"A person domiciled in a Member State may also be sued:
1. where he is one of a number of defendants, in the courts for the place where any one of them is domiciled, provided the claims are so closely connected that it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings;"

The question arose whether a defendant "A" can be sued in the court in which defendant "B" is being sued when the action against "A" is contractual but the action against "B" is tortious, there being no contractual relationship between the plaintiff and "B".

The Court of Justice held that Article 6 § 1 could be applied even though the claims brought against a number of defendants have different legal bases.

The Court also held that Article 6 § 1 applies where claims brought against different defendants are connected when the proceedings are instituted, that is to say, where it is expedient to hear and determine them together to avoid the risk of irreconcilable judgments resulting from separate proceedings, without there being any further need to establish separately that the claims were not brought with the sole object of ousting the jurisdiction of the courts of the member State where one of the defendants is domiciled.

Let's hope that the folks over at the wonderful Conflict of Laws blog will analyze the judgment too.

Rome II Regulation published

Our friends over at the Conflict of Laws blog draw attention to the fact that the Rome II Regulation has been published.

Their post is here. The Rome II Regulation sets out conflict of laws rules for non-contractual obligations (tort and quasi delict, in other words). It applies from January 11th, 2009.

That Regulation has an interesting and rather turbulent history, expertly chronicled of recent times in a special section of the Conflict of Laws blog.

What more can we say ?

EC now member of Hague Conference on Private International Law

The EC has formally become a member of the Hague Conference on Private International Law on April 3rd 2007.

The Commission has issued a press release giving a few more details. In particular it states:

"The European Commission successfully negotiated the conditions and modalities of Community accession to the Hague Conference in accordance with the negotiating directives adopted by the Council in 2002. In April 2004, a Special Commission on General Affairs and Policy of the organisation took the in-principle decision to admit the European Community as a member. Since the Statute of the Hague Conference contemplates only membership of States, not of international organisations, Community accession required amendments to the Statute. The negotiations of these amendments have been successfully concluded in July 2005. Subsequently, the new text had to be approved by a two-thirds majority of the members of the Hague Conference. This process was completed by the end of 2006 and the new statute entered into force in January 2007."

New Lugano Convention concluded

The negotiations on a new Lugano Convention have been concluded. You can see the new version here.

According to the Swiss Federal Ministry of Justice:

The revision of the substantive part of the Convention focussed on the regulations on the court of jurisdiction and jurisdiction over consumer contracts. Other important changes were made in the following areas: special jurisdiction in company law, lis pendens and the consolidation of related actions, and in matters regarding exequatur proceedings. Other less significant changes were made in the areas: agreement conferring jurisdiction, employment contracts, jurisdiction relating to torts, the passive joinder of proceedings, action on a warranty or guarantee, action for breach of warranty, action in opposition to the execution of a judgement , insurance matters, exclusive jurisdiction regarding immovable property and intellectual property litigation, as well as defence on the substance of an action. The revised Lugano Convention largely assumes the numbering of the articles of the Brussels I Regulation.

This new version will replace the version currently in force dating from 1988 when t is signed in June 2007 and ratified later, most likely in 2009.

You will doubtless recall that as a consequence of the Court of Justice's Opinion 1/03 we noted here the conclusion of the new Convention is a matter of exclusive competence for the EC and not its member States.

There is a good write up on the highly recommended Conflict of Laws Blog.

House of Lords, arbitration, anti-suit injunctions and Regulation 44/2001

Now here's a fascinating case making its way to the European Court of Justice !

The United Kingdom House of Lords has decided to refer the case of West Tankers Inc v. RAS Riunione Adriatica di Sicurta SpA & Others to the European Court of Justice. The question raised is whether Regulation 44/2001 permits anti-suit injunctions to protect an arbitration agreement. The case arose out of a collision of a ship with a jetty. The charterparty contained a clause providing for arbitration in London. But the insurers of the jetty sued the shipowners in a court in Syracuse, Sicily, the place where the damage occurred and thus the court of jurisdiction under Article 5 §3 of Regulation 44/2001. Then the shipowners got an anti-suit injunction in England restraining the insurers from pursuing their claim in the Italian courts in breach of the arbitration clause in the chrterparty.

The matter went up to the House of Lords which then asked itself whether Regulation 44/2001 allows that. Good question. The Court of Justice has tended to be pretty hostile to anti-suit injunctions, as Case C-159/02 Turner v. Grovit shows.

We'll keep you posted.

Compensation for war crimes and the Brussels Convention: Case C-292/05

The Court of Justice has handed down its judgment in Case C-292/05 Irini Lechouritou and Others v. Germany. We had noted the Advocate General's Opinion back in November 2006.

The issue was whether claims for compensation brought by a number of Greek citizens against a Contracting State (Germany) as being liable under civil law for acts or omissions of its armed forces fall within the scope ratione materiae of the Brussels Convention in accordance with its Article 1 when those acts or omissions occurred during a military occupation of Greece, the plaintiffs' State of domicile, following a war of aggression on the part of the defendant, are manifestly contrary to the law of war and may also be considered to be crimes against humanity.

The Court decided in its judgment that the action brought by the plaintiffs was outside the scope of the Brussels Convention. The plaintiffs, it held, sought compensation for acts which not civil or commercial but were operations conducted by the German armed forces and were thus a characteristic emanation of State sovereignty.

The horrific story was the following. The German armed forces massacred civilians on December 13th, 1943 and of which 676 inhabitants of the municipality of Kalavrita (Greece) were victims. In 1995 Ms Lechouritou and other descendants of the victims brought an action before the Greek courts for compensation from the German State in respect of the financial loss, non-material damage and mental anguish caused to them by the acts perpetrated by the German armed forces.

The Greek courts at first instance dismissed the action, stating that they lacked jurisdiction to hear it because the defendant country, a sovereign State, enjoyed the privilege of immunity.

The plaintiffs in the main proceedings appealed against that judgment to the Efetio Patron (Court of Appeal, Patras) (Greece) which stayed proceedings until the Anotato Idiko Dikastirio (Superior Special Court) (Greece) had ruled, in a parallel case, on the interpretation of the rules of international law concerning immunity of sovereign States from legal proceedings and on their categorization as rules generally recognized by the international community. More specifically, that case concerned, first, whether Article 11 of the European Convention on State Immunity – signed at Basle on May 16th, 1972, but to which Greece is not a party – according to which ‘a Contracting State cannot claim immunity from the jurisdiction of a court of another Contracting State in proceedings which relate to redress for injury to the person or damage to tangible property, if the facts which occasioned the injury or damage occurred in the territory of the State of the forum, and if the author of the injury or damage was present in that territory at the time when those facts occurred’, is to be regarded as a generally recognized rule of international law. Second, the further question was raised as to whether this exception to the immunity of the Contracting States covers, in accordance with international custom, claims for compensation in respect of wrongful acts which, while committed at the time of an armed conflict, adversely affected persons in a specific group or a particular place who had no connection with the armed clashes and did not participate in the military operations.

In 2002 the Anotato Idiko Dikastirio held in the case brought before it that, ‘as international law currently stands, a generally recognised rule of international law continues to exist, according to which it is not permitted that a State be sued in a court of another State for compensation in respect of a tort or delict of any kind which took place in the territory of the forum and in which armed forces of the State being sued are involved in any way, whether in wartime or peacetime’, so that the State being sued enjoys immunity in that instance.

The matter was referred to the Court of Justice because the plaintiffs claimed that the Brussels Convention, in particular Article 5(3) and (4), abolished States’ right of immunity in all cases of torts and delicts committed in the State of the court seised. Thus, the referring court had doubts, however, as to whether the proceedings brought before it fell within the scope of that Convention, observing in this regard that the question whether the defendant State enjoyed immunity and, consequently, the Greek courts lacked jurisdiction to hear the case before it turned on the answer to disputed questions of law.

In reaching its conclusion that the action was outside the scope of the Brussels Convention, the Court recalled that it has held that the concept of ‘civil and commercial matters’ within the meaning of the first sentence of the first paragraph of the Brussels Convention does not include an action brought by the State as agent responsible for administering public waterways against a person having liability in law in order to recover the costs incurred in the removal of a wreck, in performance of an international obligation, carried out by or at the instigation of that administering agent in the exercise of its public authority (Case 814/79 Rüffer, paragraphs 9 and 16). Disputes of that nature are the consequence of the exercise of public powers by one of the parties to the case, as it exercises powers falling outside the scope of the ordinary legal rules applicable to relationships between private individuals (see, to this effect, Case C-172/91 Sonntag, paragraph 22; Case C-167/00 Henkel, paragraph 30; Case C-266/01 Préservatrice foncière TIARD, paragraph 30; and Case C-265/02 Frahuil).

The Court specifically rejected the argument that it is the action for compensation which must be characterized as being of a civil nature and thus covered by Article 5(3) and (4) of the Brusssels Convention and not the act causing the loss and damage which must be characterized under the Convention. It held that the fact that the proceedings brought before the referring court are presented as being of a civil nature in so far as they seek financial compensation for the material loss and non-material damage caused to the plaintiffs in the main proceedings is consequently entirely irrelevant. The Court also stated that the reference made to the rules governing jurisdiction specifically set out in Article 5(3) and (4) of the Brussels Convention is immaterial: The question whether the Convention applies to the main proceedings logically constitutes a prior question which, if answered in the negative as here, entirely relieves the court before which the case has been brought of the need to examine the substantive rules laid down by the Convention.

An interesting point of procedure also came up. The plaintiffs in the main action wrote to the Court and made observations on the Opinion of the Advocate General. They also requested the Court to ‘decide that the present case “is of exceptional importance” and to refer it to the full Court or a Grand Chamber, in accordance with Article 16 of the Statute of the Court of Justice’. The Court refused. It noted that the third paragraph of Article 16 makes clear that individuals do not have standing to make such a request because only a Member State or an institution of the Communities that is party to the proceedings can make such a request. In addition, apart from the cases listed in the fourth paragraph of Article 16, it is the Court alone which, pursuant to the fifth paragraph, has the power to decide, after hearing the Advocate General, to refer a case to the full Court, where it considers that case to be of exceptional importance. Nor did the Court consider that there were grounds to reopen the oral procedure of its own motion, on a proposal from the Advocate General or at the request of the parties under Article 61 of its Rules of Procedure, if it considers that it lacks sufficient information or that the case must be dealt with on the basis of an argument which has not been debated between the parties (see, inter alia Case C-309/99 Wouters and Others, paragraph 42; Case C-309/02 Radlberger Getränkegesellschaft and S. Spitz, paragraph 22; and Case C‑308/04 P SGL Carbon v Commission, paragraph 15).

Protest of French law professors, and counter protest

Something of a storm has broken out in the French legal academy.

Thanks to our friends at both the Comparative law blog and the Conflict of laws blog, our attention is drawn to an open letter written by about 40 French law professors to French President Chirac stating that legislation passed by the EU institutions lacks legitimacy. The implication is that there is no need therefore to obey them. Many of those professors, but certainly not all, teach at the University of Paris II which is reputedly very conservative.

The occasion for this outburst is, rather incongruously, a disagreement on the extent to which mandatory provisions of the forum should interfere with the free choice of law of a contract in the proposal for a regulation to replace the 1980 Rome Convention on the law applicable to contracts. Those 40 or so professors consider that too much freedom is given to the parties.

A counter letter by 80 or so other professors has been organized too which seems to question the accuracy and validity of the claims of the protesters.

The original blog post is on the French blog, Les Coulisses de l'Europe. There are some really interesting comments following the original. That blog is worth looking at for general, political comment on EU affairs for those who read French.

European order for payment procedure: Regulation 1896/2006

Here's a further development of European civil procedure and conflicts of law.

Regulation 1896/2006 creating a European order for payment procedure has been adopted by the European Parliament and the Council.

The basic idea of Regulation 1896/2006 is to set up a simplified system for collecting uncontested debts between member States. The Regulation lays down a standard form of order to be issued by the court having jurisdiction according to Regulation 44/2001 at the request of the creditor. That order is then to be served on the defendant debtor. The defendant has the opportunity to oppose the claim. If the defendant opposes the claim, the proceedings will continue before the court that issued the order as normal civil or commercial litigation. If the defendant does not oppose the claim, the order becomes enforceable and no further exequatur is necessary.

Regulation 1896/2006 will apply from December 12th, 2008. It will apply in the United Kingdom and Ireland, which opted in under Article 3 of the Protocol on the position of the United Kingdom and Ireland annexed to the EU Treaty. It will not apply to Denmark in accordance Articles 1 and 2 of the Protocol on the position of Denmark annexed to the EU Treaty.