1 / 23

CROBECO

CROBECO. Different Perspectives. Different Perspectives. I. Introduction Different perspectives Technical (land registrars) Formal (notaries, solicitors) Economic (EU services market) Blurring of functions From form to substance. Different Perspectives.

joshuas
Download Presentation

CROBECO

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CROBECO Different Perspectives

  2. Different Perspectives • I. Introduction • Different perspectives • Technical (land registrars) • Formal (notaries, solicitors) • Economic (EU services market) • Blurring of functions • From form to substance

  3. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (1) • Traditionally: Focus on local (national) law • Land (physical property) as a person’s most valuable asset • Private international law: Lexreisitae

  4. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (2) • Four important developments (a): • De-physicalisation of property • Contractualisation of property law • Example: securitisation

  5. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (3) • Four important developments (b): • The rise of Information Technology (Internet) • Economic integration and the resulting • Mobilisation of persons, services, goods and capital • Legal integration (positive and negative)

  6. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (4) • The rise of Internet (1) • EULIS (www.eulis.eu) • Intensifying cooperation through ELRA (www.elra.eu) • E-Justice Portal (e-justice.europa.eu) • Cooperation with European notariats: www.successions-europe.eu

  7. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (5) • The rise of Internet (2) • Access to data creates a desire to make these data productive, particularly in light of the growing mobility • More freely available general information will result in a decreasing need to obtain information from specialists

  8. Different Perspectives • II. Land registration – From national to international (6) • The rise of Internet (3) • Risk: Too much information available or incapable of evaluating specific needs • Specialists (notaries, solicitors and land registrars) are still necessary, not because of a specific formal role, but because of their expert knowledge and experience

  9. Different Perspectives • III. Economic integration (1) • EU, EEA and EFTA • The “economic constitution” of the EU • Classical liberal freedoms (contract, property, profession and education, business type) • The “four freedoms” of the internal market: persons, services, goods and capital

  10. Different Perspectives • III. Economicintegration (2) • Freedom of establishment results in freedom of services andcapital • The existence of the Euro-zonereinforcesthisprocess • European economicintegration: anautonomousprocess?

  11. Different Perspectives • III. Economic integration (3) • Freedom to provide services • Who is a service provider? • Notaries • Solicitors • Land registrars

  12. Different Perspectives • III. Economic integration (4) • Freedom of capital • Role of capital providers (especially banks) • Euro-mortgage (eurobonds?)

  13. Different Perspectives • IV. The EU legal map (1) • Major legal traditions • Continental law (various subtraditions) • Common law • Mixed legal systems • Conveyancing experts • Notaries, solicitors, land registrars

  14. Different Perspectives • IV. The EU legal map (2) • Although legal diversity exists, still a common framework: • Leading principles and ground rules • Coveyancing experts act in the interest of parties and the general public (preserving the correctness of the land registry)

  15. Different Perspectives • IV. The EU legal map (3) • (Draft) Common Frame of Reference (now: Draft EU Sales Law) • EU mortgage law • EU private international law (sales law, matrimonial property, succession) • Full faith and credit of deeds?

  16. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (1) • Purpose: promote cross border transfer of land and cross border creation of mortgages • Developing protocols, checklists, multilingual deeds, standard clauses; promoting secure electronic deeds traffic • Perhaps: add databases with relevant local information?

  17. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (2) • Project is of a technical nature and is not aimed at changing national law or the role of conveyancing experts, but intends to • Make the available information accessible and usable for cross-border transfers • Is the result of the combined impact of IT and economic integration

  18. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (3) • Deed must be valid in all relevant jurisdictions • Taking into account differences in • Transfer systems (consensual/”traditio”, causal/abstract) • Land registration sytems

  19. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (4): • Different laws may apply to the conveyancing process (a) • Sale • Choice of law (Rome I) • Culpa in contrahendo (Rome II) • Jurisdictionandenforcement (Brussels I)

  20. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (5) • Different laws may apply to the conveyancing process (b) • Transfer/Mortgage: • Lex rei sitae • Culpa in contrahendo • Jurisdiction and enforcement

  21. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (6) • Different laws may apply to the conveyancing process (c) • Lex rei sitae as “loi d’application universelle”? • Does the lex rei sitae discard the freedom of parties to choose the applicable law? • Does the lex rei sitae thus violate EU law?

  22. Different Perspectives • V. CROBECO (7) • Different laws may apply to the transfer process (d) • Role of conveyancing experts • Responsibility (deontology) • Liability regimes

  23. Different Perspectives • VI. Concluding remarks • Information technology and economic integration result in a changing view on the role of conveyancing experts • Formal roles become less important: Relevant are knowledge and experience • Continuing cooperation between the various conceyancing experts is therefore a conditio sine qua non in the interests of parties and the public at large • Knowledge of national law is still of enormous importance, but also a basic understanding of EU law, p.i.l. and of (neighbouring) legal systems

More Related