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Summary on all Lectures & Tutorials - Conflict of Laws

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This document contains notes on all lectures, tutorials and other important materials for the course Conflict of Laws!

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Notes – Conflict of Laws
Maud van Deijne – Semester 2 Year 2

Week 1
Lecture 1 – 31/1
Structure of the Course




Assessment
 Assignment – Moot trial submissions: 30% of final grade
- Groups of 3
- Submit a statement of claim or of defence (no oral session) to a practical
case dealing with Blocks 1-3. For COL , your submission (statement of
claim or statement of defence) will be evaluated on your private
international law argumentation
 Written Exam – 70% of final grade (minimum of 5.5)
- TestVision
- If you don’t get a 5.5, you have to resit (this resit is then 100% of the
course)
- Include matters from all blocks: jurisdiction, tortious liability, contractual
liability, recognition and enforcement

Introduction to Procedural Law
 Focuses on technical aspects: “designed to define, assign and enforce rights
in the domestic courtroom” (Zekoll, 2019)
 A domestic court always applies its own procedural rules (the way the court
functions, the way the parties have to submit documents, the rights that they
have, etc.) different to substantive law, as this can be dependent on a lot of
factors  the procedural law a court applies always stays the same
 Factors relevant for procedural law
- Parties rights & duties
- Division & competence of courts
- Pre-trial
- Role of actors
- Appeal
- Timeframe

, - Service of documents
- Procedural steps
- Enforcement
- Evidence

Outline
 Different approaches (inquisitorial or adversarial) but some common shared
values/principles: public trials, the independence and impartiality of courts, the
procedural equality of the parties, the right to be heard
 Courts always apply their own national procedural law  matter of sovereignty
 Guarantee to protect & enforce substantive rights
 Harmonisation of some of the procedural rules in cross-border disputes in
Europe  art. 81 TFEU

What is Private International Law (PIL/Conflict of Laws/Internatioaal Proces Recht)?
 Also known as Conflict of Laws (especially in common law countries)
 Regulates private law relations or disputes with an international element
 Private: family, civil & commercial law cases (natural, legal persons or state
authority acting as private person)
 International: international element, eg
- Parties domiciled/habitually resident in different countries
- Relevant legal act in another country (marriage, divorce, tort, contract
performance)
- Service of documents, taking of evidence, enforcement of judgment in
another country
 Law: national law – conventions – EU-regulations

Example: Questions of PIL
 Jurisdiction
- Dutch feynoord football supporters went to Rome and damaged a lot of the
city centre
- Public International Law  public place/good such as historical fountain
- Private International Law  shops damaged in the area
 Example 2
- Not functioning good – purchaser from France wants to return it, but Dutch
company doesn’t want to take it back
- Private International Law  what is the applicable law?
 Recognition and enforcement
- Decision of Spanish court enforced in Poland

Main questions of PIL – Course
 Jurisdiction/competence of the court
 Applicable law/choice of law
 Recognition and enforcement
 Additional questions:
- Service of documents
- Taking of Evidence
- European uniform procedures (European Enforcement Order, European
Order for Payment, European Small Claims Procedure, European Account
Preservation Order)

, - Legal Aid
- Administrative Cooperation

Part II – Terminology
 Jurisdiction: ‘forum’
- Forum delicti (tort)
- Forum rei sitae (property)
- choice of court clause
 Applicable law: ‘lex’
- Lex loci delicti
- Lex rei sitae
- Choice of law clause

Sources of PIL
PIL: the I(nternational) element & National Law!
 all countries have these elements:
 Jurisdiction
 Applicable law
 Recognition and enforcement
 Additional questions

Other sources of PIL
1. EU instruments (mostly Regulations)
2. International instruments (mostly conventions)
- Hague Conference of Private International Law
- Regional: Mercosur, OAS
- Bilateral
3. National sources
- Statutes (eg Book 10 Dutch Civil Code)
- Unwritten law
- Principles and custom (eg restatement)
 in this order: first look for EU instruments, if not applicable/existent then
international instruments, and if those are not applicable/existent then you look for
national sources

Sources: Scope of Instruments
 Material/Substantive Scope
- Scope in subject
 Formal/Geographical Scope
- Scope in space
 Temporal Scope
- Scope in time

What if multiple instruments apply?
 if multiple international instruments are applicable, then a problem of concurrence
occurs
 International vs national  national rules, eg art 93/94 Dutch Constitution
 Convention vs EU Regulation  in instrument itself
 Convention vs Convention  Vienna Convention of Conventions 1969

, Methodology
1. International facts
2. Characterisation
3. PIL Question
4. Sources
5. Scope
6. Concurrence (more than one piece of legislation is potentially applicable,
because multiple scopes are satisfied)
7. Application
 can use this methodology when drafting answers, as it can help you come to a
conclusion step by step

IN CLASS - GENERAL
We have to use the 8 step methodology
 Step 1 – Do you have international facts?
o Indicate whether or not there are facts that make this scenario an international
issue
 Step 2 – Characterisation
o Whether they already had a contract or was it non-contractual?
 Step 3 – the PIL question
o With which question are we concerned with
o 3 main ones
 Jurisdiction
 Applicable law
 Recognition and enforcement
 Step 4 – sources
o The sources have to be identified
o Brussels I regulation
o Hague Convention
o Rome I or II
o National/ domestic law
 Step 5 – scope
o Elements that make up scope
 Substantive/ Material
 Territorial
 Temporal
 Step 6 – concurrence
o When we have two instruments that potentially apply
 Step 7 – application
o It is the most IMPORTANT
o Here there should be the most analysis
o Which of the rules within the regulation we have to look at?
 Step 8 – conclusion
o Answer the question that was asked based on the analysis you did




Week 2
Lecture 2: International Jurisdiction: Exclusive Jurisdiction & Choice of Court – 7/2

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