1 / 15

THE APPLICABLE LAW

THE APPLICABLE LAW. International Business Law. I- The Rome Convention. A- Presentation of the Rome convention B- Who must apply it ?. B- Which relations does it regulate ? 1) Contract 2) International. II- The choice of the applicable law. A- The autonomy principle Free choice.

Download Presentation

THE APPLICABLE LAW

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. THE APPLICABLE LAW International Business Law

  2. I- The Rome Convention • A- Presentation of the Rome convention • B- Who must apply it ?

  3. B- Which relations does it regulate ?1) Contract • 2) International

  4. II- The choice of the applicable law • A- The autonomy principle • Free choice

  5. 3) Advantages et inconvenient • - Advantages • Parties’ will • Efficiency • Inconvenient • Fraud • Absence of choice

  6. B- The Rome Convention • 1) Form of the choice • No needed formality • Separate contract or contract term • 2) Moment of the choice • Any moment • 3) Law chosen • - Need to chose a law ? Only one ? • - Link with the contract ?

  7. C- Limits to the power to chose • 1) International contract • 2) Fraud • Example : Contract for the sale of cannabis applying Columbian law. • 3) Public order • Example : Surrogate mother contract between two English people living in France.

  8. III- Absence of choice • Rome Convention Art 4 • A) Close connection

  9. B) Presumption : Characteristic performance • Definition : What a party receives in exchange of a payment • Example : A sells 10 computers to B for 10.000 Euros

  10. C) Exceptions • - Immovable Property • - Carriage of goods • - Closer connection • Example : A Belgian company, settled in France, sells computers produced in Belgium to a Belgian client settled in Belgium. The computers are delivered in Belgium and paid on the seller’s Belgian bank account.

  11. IV- Competing principles • Definition

  12. A- Rules of protection • 1) Labour contract • - Absence of choice • Art 6 : habitual place of performance • If not single, place through which the employee was hired • Example : German employee hired by the French factory of a Japanese company’s French factory as a commercial agent for the Belgium and Luxemburg markets. • - Choice of the parties • Example: The parties chose American law in the contract

  13. 2) Consumer contracts • - Absence of choice • Example : A French Company sends an offer to a Greek consumer to sell him a MP3 player for 50 euros. The Greek consumer claims that the MP3 player is defective. • - Choice of the parties • Example : The contract applies French law. French law imposes to have a lawyer to go to court (what Greek law does not) and gives the consumer 2 years to claim for hidden defects (whereas Greek law gives only 1 year to do this).

  14. B- Public policy rules • 1) Rationale

  15. 2) Public policy rules • - Applicable law public policy rules • Example : A Belgian seller sells cigarettes to a French buyer. The parties chose to apply French law. (allowed in Belgian law but illegal in French law) • - Forum (judge) public policy rules (art 16) • Example : A Belgian seller sells cigarettes to a French buyer. The parties chose Belgian law (or the contract is silent). The Buyer does not pay • - Other public policy rules • Example : A French seller sells cigarettes to a Belgian buyer. The parties chose Belgian law and the seller does not deliver.

More Related