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19/2021 : 24 février 2021 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-95/19

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 02/24/2021 - 11:38
Silcompa
Rapprochement des législations
Lorsqu’un produit soumis à accise, tel que l’alcool, est exporté irrégulièrement au sein de l’Union, les décisions des autorités des États membres concernés ne peuvent pas aboutir à un double recouvrement des droits correspondants

Categories: Flux européens

Szabados on Constitutional identity and Private International Law

EAPIL blog - Wed, 02/24/2021 - 08:00

Tamás Szabados (Eötvös Loránd University) published Constitutional identity and judicial cooperation in civil matters in the European Union – An ace up the sleeve?, in the Common Market Law Review (vol. 58, February 2021).

The paper discusses the constitutional identity-based arguments in the field of private international law.

He has kindly provided us with an extended abstract :

Constitutional identity has become a fashionable concept that is used by politicians and courts alike. But how does constitutional identity affect private international law?

The use of constitutional identity-based arguments has been primarily examined in the context of EU and domestic constitutional law. Constitutional law discourse has mainly centred around the interpretation of Article 4(2) of the TEU. However, less attention has been devoted to the role and impact of arguments related to constitutional identity on the development of EU private international law. This is notwithstanding the fact that constitutional identity seems to shape the application and creation of private international law rules.

Constitutional identity has a twofold effect on private international law. First, peculiar constitutional norms and values belonging to constitutional identity can be safeguarded through the public policy exception. This opens the door for courts to disregard the otherwise applicable foreign law or to reject the recognition of a foreign situation on the ground that it violates the constitutional identity of the forum state.

Second, arguments based on constitutional identity may be relied on to stay outside the enactment of new private international legislation by the EU. In particular, due to the unanimity requirement laid down by Article 81(3) TFEU, Member States have a strong bargaining power in the area of international family law. This can be well illustrated by the recent adoption of Matrimonial Property Regulation and the Regulation on the Property Regimes of Registered Partners where the opposition of some Member States led to the enactment of these regulations in enhanced cooperation procedure. Staying outside from the adoption of these regulations has been motivated by protecting the domestic concept of family as part of national or constitutional identity. In this way, constitutional identity undoubtedly contributes to the fragmentation of EU private international law.

Nevertheless, constitutional identity can be rarely used as a trump by the Member States in the area of the judicial cooperation in civil matters. There are at least two limits concerning the application of the autonomous private international law rules of the Member States. First, as long as an international legal dispute demonstrates some connection to EU law, Member States must respect the fundamental principles of EU law, in particular the principles of free movement and non-discrimination. Second, even if no such connection exists, the limits stemming from international conventions, such as the ECHR, cannot be ignored.     

The details of the article are available through the journal website here.

Premier Cruises v DLA Piper Russia and UK. Textbook ‘arbitration’ exception under Brussels Ia.

GAVC - Wed, 02/24/2021 - 01:01

Premier Cruises Ltd v DLA Piper Rus Ltd & Anor [2021] EWHC 151 (Comm) is a textbook case for the relationship between arbitration and the Brussels Ia regulation, as well as relevance of lex arbitri on what is within the scope of an arbitration agreement.

Claimant is Premier Cruises Limited (“PCL”), a company originally domiciled in the British Virgin Islands and now domiciled in the Seychelles, which owns or operates two vessels. Defendants are entities within the DLA Piper Group of legal practices. The First Defendant is DLA Piper Rus Limited (“DLA Russia”), an English company with operations in Russia. The Second Defendant is DLA Piper UK LLP (“DLA UK”), an English LLP.  On 29 January 2020 (within the scope of Brussels Ia, therefore, at least as against DLA UK), PCL commenced proceedings against DLA in the Commercial Court claiming damages in contract and/or in tort for professional negligence.

DLA Russia argues the claim is within the scope of its arbitration agreement included in the engagement letter (International Commercial Arbitration Court at the Chamber of Commerce and Industry of the Russian Federation). DLA UK accepted it was not included in that agreement and applied for a case-management stay.

PCL argue its action against DLA Russia is in respect of advice allegedly given and work allegedly carried out by DLA Russia prior to 26 May 2015 when the Engagement Letter came into force.

At 52, Edward J identified Russian law as both lex contractus and lex arbitri, and held at 138 after hearing the Russian law experts, that upon contractual construction, PCL’s claim was not included in the clause for it was not meant to apply retroactively.

At 147 ff he agreed with PCL that a case-management stay for the claim against DLA UK is not possible given, with reference to Recital 12 BIa, that the arbitration exception is not engaged: ‘The claim made against DLA UK in this action is not one in respect of which PCL and DLA UK have entered into an arbitration agreement [161]; Arbitration is not the principal focus of the English proceedings against DLA UK; the essential subject matter of the claim made against DLA UK does not concern arbitration; and the relief sought in the proceedings is not ancillary to or an integral part of any arbitration process [163] (reference is made to The Prestige].

The claim being within BIa, Owusu rules out a case management stay. The judge should have outright rejected the additional suggestion ([158 juncto [164]) of a temporary stay being within the Owusu confines.

Geert.

EU Private International Law, 3rd ed. 2021, Heading 2.2.3.4, para 2.110 ff.

 

Application for stay in favour of #arbitration proceedings dismissed.
Viz the Rus party, on basis of Russian law principles of construction applicable to arbitration agreements.
Viz the UK party given CJEU Owusu, in casu not displaced by Brussels Ia arbitration exemption. https://t.co/JzqRyVQ6Px

— Geert Van Calster (@GAVClaw) February 9, 2021

Recommendation in The Netherlands to suspend intercountry adoptions

Conflictoflaws - Tue, 02/23/2021 - 19:21

The Committee Investigating Intercountry Adoption, has recommended that The Netherlands suspend intercountry adoptions. The interdisciplinary committee considered the history and legal evolution, and did an in-depth investigation into adoptions from five selected countries (Bangladesh, Brazil, Colombia, Indonesia and Sri Lanka). It looked into the consequences for the people involved (adoptees, birth families and adoptive families), the perception in society, the best interests of the child and the right to know one’s origins and identity. It came to the conclusion that there have been too many abuses and that the current system is still open to fraud and abuses. It further stated that the lessons learned should be applied to new methods of family formation such as surrogacy.

For those who do not read Dutch, the Commission issued a press release in English and published an English summary of the report.

The Committee, established by the Minister for Legal Protection, Mr. Sander Dekker, was chaired by Mr. Tjibbe Joustra and further composed of Prof. Dr. Beatrice de Graaf and Mr. Bert-Jan Houtzagers.

Conference: Protection of Abducting Mothers in Return Proceedings, 26 March 2021

Conflictoflaws - Tue, 02/23/2021 - 18:47

POAM (Protection of Abducting Mothers in Return Proceedings) is a research project co-funded by the European Commission. It explores the intersection between domestic violence and international parental child abduction within the European Union. The project is concerned with the protection of abducting mothers who have been involved in return proceedings under the 1980 Hague Abduction Convention and the Brussels IIa Regulation, in circumstances where the child abduction had been motivated by acts of domestic violence from the left-behind father.  POAM examines the usefulness of the Protection Measures Regulation and the European Protection Order Directive in the context of such return proceedings.

The POAM Conference will take place online via Zoom – due to the current global circumstances and, unfortunately, not as initially planned in Munich – on Friday, the 26th March 2021 from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. (CET).

In the Conference, the POAM research team will present the results of the project and their best practice guide, and invite discussions moderated by external speakers and a panel to engage the participants. Please see the attached POAM Conference Programme for more details.

REGISTRATION: If you are interested in attending the online Conference, please register by email to tatjana.tertsch@jura.uni-muenchen.de

Please also indicate in the email whether you would require a confirmation of participation after attendance. We will provide you with the necessary link for the Zoom Conference a week before the event.

Opinion on Case C-800/19: AG Bobek Proposes Foreseeability Test for ‘Centre of Interests’ Jurisdiction

Conflictoflaws - Tue, 02/23/2021 - 17:52

The CJEU’s interpretation of Article 7(2) Brussels Ia with regard to online defamation has long been criticized (including on this blog) for its lack of predictability, especially from the defendant’s point of view. While these concerns could, in many cases, be dismissed as purely academic, Case C-800/19 Mittelbayerischer Verlag seems to put them back on the agenda in a politically somewhat delicate context. AG Bobek’s Opinion on the case has been published today.

As a reminder, the legal framework emerging from the Court’s decisions in Shevill, eDate and Bolagsupplysningen can be summarised as follows: the victim of an alleged violation of personality rights can

  • either seize the courts of their centre of interests (which regularly coincides with their domicile) and seek compensation of the entire damage as well as all other remedies,
  • or seize the courts of each other Member State in which the content in question has been made available, with compensation being limited to the damage caused through publication in that Member State and ‘indivisible’ remedies such injunctions to rectify or delete not being available (the so-called ‘mosaic’ approach).

The case in Mittelbayerischer Verlag concerns the claim of a Polish holocaust survivor living in Poland, who is suing a German local newspaper who published an article on the internet that referred to a Nazi concentration camp in then-occupied Poland, using the phrase ‘Polish extermination camp’. As some readers might remember from a similar affair involving a German public broadcoaster and resulting in the refusal to enforce a Polish judgment by the German Bundesgerichtshof, Polish substantive law considers the use of the term ‘Polish extermination camp’ as an infringement of the personality rights of any Polish survivor of Nazi concentration camps because it could create the impression that those who have been prisoners in these camps may have played a role in their creation or operation.

Unlike the Court of Appeal of Kraków in the 2016 case, the Court of Appeal of Warsaw had doubts as to its international jurisdiction based on Article 7(2) Brussels Ia. While Warsaw clearly constituted the claimant’s centre of interest, the Court wondered if this was sufficient to render it competent for the entire range of remedies sought by the claimant (damages; prohibition to use the term in the future; public apology) given the circumstances of the case. In particular, the Warsaw court pointed out that the claimant did not claim to have personally accessed, let alone understood the article, which had only been online for a few hours; the claimant had also not been personally identified in the article in any way; the defendant, on the other hand, had not directed their article, or any other part of their online presence, to an audience in Poland.

The Warsaw Court of Appeal thus referred the following questions to the CJEU:

  1. Should Article 7(2) [Brussels Ia] be interpreted as meaning that jurisdiction based on the centre-of-interests connecting factor is applicable to an action brought by a natural person for the protection of his personality rights in a case where the online publication cited as infringing those rights does not contain information relating directly or indirectly to that particular natural person, but contains, rather, information or statements suggesting reprehensible actions by the community to which the applicant belongs (in the circumstances of the case at hand: his nation), which the applicant regards as amounting to an infringement of his personality rights?
  2. In a case concerning the protection of material and non-material personality rights against online infringement, is it necessary, when assessing the grounds of jurisdiction set out in Article 7(2) [Brussels Ia], that is to say, when assessing whether a national court is the court for the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur, to take account of circumstances such as:
    – the public to whom the website on which the infringement occurred is principally addressed;
    – the language of the website and in which the publication in question is written;
    – the period during which the online information in question remained accessible to the public;
    – the individual circumstances of the applicant, such as the applicant’s wartime experiences and his current social activism, which are invoked in the present case as justification for the applicant’s special right to oppose, by way of judicial proceedings, the dissemination of allegations made against the community to which the applicant belongs?’

In his Opinion, Advocate General Bobek (who had also rendered the AG Opinion in Bolagsupplysningen, calling for the abolition of ‘mosaic’ jurisdiction in cases of violations of personality rights) leaves no doubt that he still believes the current approach to Article 7(2) Brussels Ia to be imperfect (paras. 39–44). Yet, he argues that the present case is not the right place for its reconsideration because ‘the sticky issue in this case does not concern international jurisdiction, but rather the substance of the claim’ (para. 43). Thus, he proposes to adopt ‘a narrow and minimalist approach’ (para. 44).

He develops this approach through two steps. First, he explains why he does not believe that the question of whether or not the claimant has been named (or otherwise personally identified) in the publication in question provides a helpful criterion for the establishment of centre-of-interests jurisdiction (paras. 45–57) as there is ‘no visible line in the sand’ (para. 51) but rather

[55] … a fluid, continuum of possible ‘degrees of individualisation’ to be assessed in the light of the infinite factual variety of cases, when looking at a given statement assessed in its context with regard to a particular claimant.

In a second step, AG Bobek then explains that centre-of-interests jurisdiction as established in eDate nonetheless requires a certain degree of foreseeability to be reconciliable with the aims of foreseeability and sound administration of justice as required by Recitals (15) and (16) of the Regulation. He believes that such foreseeability does not depend on the subjective intent of the publisher but rather requires an objective centre-of-gravity analysis (along the lines suggested by AG Cruz Villalón in his Opinion on eDate):

[69] I would also caution against introducing, in essence, ‘a criterion of intent’ to online torts. The subjective intent of the publisher at the time of publication, if indeed discernable, may be used as an indication only. It is, however, not conclusive. Instead, what matters is whether, as deduced from a range of objective ‘items of evidence’, it could reasonably have been foreseen that the information published online would be ‘newsworthy’ in a specific territory, thereby encouraging readers in that territory to access it. Such criteria could include matters such as the subject matter of the publication, the top-level domain of the website, its language, the section in which the content was published, the keywords supplied to search engines, or the website access log.

[70] However, since those considerations apply to the impact side of Bier, that is to say, where the damage occurred, it is indeed logical that they focus on the objective, subsequent impact of a given publication from the point of view of the public, rather than being primarily concerned with the original and rather subjective intentions of a publisher. It is from this perspective that, in line with recital 16 of Regulation No 1215/2012, a clear objective connection between the action and the forum ought to be assessed, which then justifies the seising of jurisdiction, as a counterweight to the virtually unlimited geographical reach of online content.

This culminates in the following proposition:

[73] … [A]t the level of international jurisdiction, the issue of foreseeability ought to be properly characterised as enquiring as to whether a particular statement, in view of its nature, context and scope, could have caused harm to a given claimant within the given territory. It thus relates clearly to foreseeability and predictability of the given forum. It should not be reduced to the question of whether a particular publisher knew or could have known the domicile of a possible victim at the time the material was uploaded online.

Applied to the case at hand

[74] … it is indeed difficult to suggest that it would have been wholly unforeseeable to a publisher in Germany, posting online the phrase ‘the Polish extermination camp of Treblinka’, that somebody in Poland could take issues with such a statement. It was thus perhaps not inconceivable that ‘the place where the damage occurred’ as a result of that statement could be located within that territory, especially in view of the fact that that statement was published in a language that is widely understood beyond its national territory. Within that logic, while it is ultimately for the national court to examine all those issues, it is difficult to see how jurisdiction under Article 7(2) of Regulation No 1215/2012 could be axiomatically excluded.

Although unlike eDate and Bolagsupplysningen, the case has not been assigned to the Grand Chamber, making any proper reconsideration of the two former decisions unlikely, it certainly provides another opportunity for incremental adjustments. The AG’s proposition may just fit that bill.

Liber amicorum in honour of Professor Iacyr de Aguilar Vieira

Conflictoflaws - Tue, 02/23/2021 - 10:15

The Société de législation comparée has published a liber amicorum in honour of Professor Iacyr de Aguilar Vieira entitled (in French): Études en l’honneur du Professeur Iacyr de Aguilar Vieira. This book has been coordinated/compiled by Gustavo Cerqueira and Gustavo Tepedino. More information is available here.

This book may be purchased by clicking here (and here). A more favorable price is available until 8 April 2021. Those who acquire the book now (by way of a “souscription”) may consent to having their name appear at the end of the book.

Contributions are written in French, English, Italian and Spanish and range from commercial law to private international law to law and literature. Please find below the details as announced:

Droit civil, droit des affaires, droit international privé, droit privé comparé, droit du commerce international, littérature et droit, constituent autant de champs d’étude que des passions pour Iacyr de Aguilar Vieira durant son intense et fructueuse activité de recherche et d’enseignement au Brésil comme en Europe.

C’est dans ces domaines que ses élèves, collègues et amis, européens et sud-américains, rendent aujourd’hui un hommage amical à cette universitaire empreinte de liberté.

Arnoldo Wald, Lettre-préface en hommage au Professeur Iacyr de Aguilar Vieira

Danièle Alexandre, Témoignage d’une amitié franco-brésilienne

 

I – Droit civil et droit des affaires

Guido Alpa, L’applicazione diretta dei diritti fondamentali ai rapporti fra privati

Margarida Azevedo, The evolution of the concept of contractual justice

Rodrigo Octávio Broglia Mendes, Notes on the concept of “economy of the contract”

Geoffray Brunaux, Efficacité et effectivité de la réglementation des activités du commerce électronique

Diogo Leite de Campos, Mónica Martinez de Campos, Le logement familial : (in)saisissable ?

Estelle Fragu, Fernanda Sabrinni, L’imprévu dans le contrat

Laurent Gamet, Les avocats et l’intelligence artificielle. Des outils et des hommes

Nicolas Kilgus, Le droit réel sui generis : entre perspectives et interrogations

Giovanni Lobrano, Dai “mezzi per difendere la libertà” ai modi di costituirla. Per “sbloccare” la dottrina giuridica

Kevin Magnier-Merran, Observations sur la délimitation des usages

Marc Mignot, Le corpus jurisprudentiel issu de l’ordonnance n° 45-770 du 21 avril 1945 sur la nullité des actes de spoliation accomplis par l’ennemi ou sous son contrôle et édictant la restitution aux victimes

Pierre Mousseron, Bernard Laurent-Bellue, Pour un Droit coutumier des sociétés

Cyril Noblot, Clause compromissoire et clause de conciliation préalable obligatoire : exercice de droit comparé interne français

Fabrice Rosa, Le pouvoir de réglementation des personnes privées dans la théorie générale des obligations en droit français

Antonio Saccoccio, Mutuo real, acuerdo de mutuo y promesa de mutuo en derecho romano

Anderson Schreiber, Pour le dépassement de la théorie de l’imprévision (en faveur de l’équilibre contractuel in concreto)

Michel Storck, Les agences de conseil en vote : à la recherche d’une régulation

Gustavo Tepedino, L’efficacia dei diritti fondamentali nelle associazioni: la costituzionalità dei criteri di ammissione differenziati nell’esperienza brasiliana

 

II – Droit international

Renaud Alméras, Réflexion sur le contrôle par le juge français des décisions étrangères de saisie pénale

Andrea Bonomi, Recognition of foreign judgments in Brazil: some comparative law remarks also in light of the 2019 Hague Judgment Convention

Jamile Bergamachine Mata Diz, Pedro Campos Araújo Corgozinho, La qualification et le caractère dynamique des biens en droit international privé brésilien

Gustavo Ferraz de Campos Monaco, Mobilité de personnes et droit international privé : un regard brésilien

Claudia Lima Marques, Pablo Marcello Baquero, Gouvernance mondiale et droit de la consommation

Fernanda Munschy, Autonomie de la volonté en Amérique Latine : 27 ans après l’adoption de la Convention de Mexico sur la loi applicable aux contrats internationaux

Nicolas Nord, La reconstruction des règles de conflit relatives au contrat de travail international. Etude du droit européen à l’aune des incohérences jurisprudentielles

Naiara Posenato, On the formation of the electio iuris agreement: some comparative insights

Camille Reitzer, Qualification et méthode de la reconnaissance

Carmen Tiburcio, Choice of court agreements : a comparative analysis

Alan Wruck Garcia Rangel, Échanges épistolaires en droit international privé : les consultations juridiques de José Carlos de Almeida Arêas dans les dernières décennies du XIXe siècle

 

III – Droit privé comparé et droit du commerce international 

Olivier Cachard, La méthode comparatiste et l’hybridation des droits. L’exemple de la lex Schuman lors du recouvrement de l’Alsace et de la Moselle.

Andreia Costa Vieira, Sustainable foreign direct investments for emerging and developing countries

Milena Donato Oliva, Pablo Renteria, Filipe Medon, La protection des données personnelles au Brésil et en Europe

José Angelo Estrella Faria, Competition among legal systems: the influence of rankings in stimulating commercial law reform

Franco Ferrari, Friedrich Rosenfeld, Les limites à l’autonomie des parties en matière d’arbitrage international

Ana Gerdau de Borja Mercereau, Responsabilité sociale de l’entreprise et l’arbitrage d’investissement

Anne Gilson-Maes, La famille et le contrat en droit français – Analyse à la lumière du droit comparé

Carlos Nelson Konder, Tramonto o revirement della causa del contratto: Influenze europee sul diritto brasiliano

Sabrina Lanni, Imprevisión contrattuale: esperienze latinoamericane e armonizzazione del diritto

Andrea Marighetto, La clausola della buona fede nel commercio internazionale. Natura giuridica e profili comparatistici occidentali

José Antonio Moreno Rodrígues, International Sales Law and Arbitration

Magalie Nord-Wagner, Le droit et la quête du bonheur en droit comparé

Francisco Pignatta, La nouvelle loi de protection des données au Brésil : le RGPD comme référence et les difficultés de sa mise en œuvre

Marilda Rosado de Sá Ribeiro, Fernanda Torres Volpon, Ely Caetano Xavier Junior, Contrats internationaux complexes et la responsabilité civile précontractuelle dans une perspective comparative

Claude Witz, Influences de la Convention de Vienne sur le législateur français

 

IV – Droit et littérature

Luiz Felipe Araújo, The Lost Pathos of Rhetoric: human being, power and affections on Law in Friedrich Nietzsche

Gustavo Cerqueira, Pour un dictionnaire juridique de notions et de phénomènes contemporains

Arnaud Coutant, Aux origines du mouvement droit et littérature, le Professeur John Henry Wigmore

Thibault de Ravel d’Esclapon, Molière et le droit. À propos de Scapin, de ses fourberies et de la justice

Emilien Rhinn, La littérature au service d’un idéal politique : nationalisme français et femmes alsaciennes-lorraines (1871-1918)

Nunziata Valenza Paiva, Il diritto nei confronti delle favole : il contributo della letteratura nella costruzione della base morale, civica e giuridica dei bambini

 

 

 

18/2021 : 18 février 2021 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-603/20 PPU

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Tue, 02/23/2021 - 09:55
MCP
Espace de liberté, sécurité et justice
Selon l’avocat général Rantos, les juridictions d’un État membre sont compétentes pour statuer dans un litige parental quand un enfant, qui avait sa résidence habituelle dans cet État membre, est déplacé illicitement dans un État tiers où il acquiert sa résidence habituelle

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