Tetley (2002) introduction to conflict of laws 5


INTRODUCTION TO CONFLICT OF LAWS



Download 0.88 Mb.
Page2/29
Date11.02.2018
Size0.88 Mb.
#41141
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   29

INTRODUCTION TO CONFLICT OF LAWS


Conflict of laws has been the subject of theories since the very beginnings of its considerations. Most texts on private international law commence with or at least contain an historical analysis of conflicts theory. Tetley prefers to establish a “methodology” as opposed to the historical approach.

    1. Four Classic Approaches to Solving Conflict of Laws

      1. The First Approach - Single Concepts or Principles


Up to the present, conflict of law theories fall into the first category or approach where the solution to conflicts is found in one or a very few concepts or principles.
The Statutists

  • Between the 13th and 18th centuries, the Statutists sought solutions to conflicting state laws by applying simplistic theories ("uncomplicated times"). Statutes were either real, personal or mixed according to their object and each followed different rules of conflict.


Napoleon, Mancini and the Law of the Citizen

  • The laws concerning the status and capacity of persons governed French citizens, even those residing in foreign countries. Napoleon felt that the French Civil Code was so superior that all French citizens should benefit from it wherever they were.

  • Mancini made further advances to the lex patriae theory.

  • The law of the ship's flag is similar to this concept of the law of the citizen.


Savigny and legal relations

  • Savigny broke with the Statutists and suggested that there could be a common theory of conflicts for all nations thus promoting uniformity and preventing forum shopping. It was necessary to classify legal relationships, not laws, and not by their object but rather according to their seat/place.

  • Four key factors/contacts determined the seat: (i) domicile of the parties; (ii) geographic location of the object or thing in dispute; (iii) place of performance of the juridical act; (iv) the forum

  • Savigny is the father of the multilateralists who hold that once can have a common body of conflict of law rules applicable to legal transactions in all jurisdictions


Story - Territoriality, Vested Rights & Comity

  • Story's theory is based on comity, the principle that one state should recognize the legitimate laws of another so that the laws of the first state will be recognized when appropriate (typically based on territory). Law of the flag can be described as an offshoot of this theory.


Cook & Ehrenzweig – Lex fori

  • Concluded that no other theory is viable and that the lex fori provides virtually the only justice in conflicts cases – law of the forum.


Morris and Cheshire - the Proper Law (Closest and Most Real Connection)

  • Westlake – “proper law of the contract” = defined as the law of the country with which the contract has its most real connection.

  • The closest and most real connection is the basic concept today of most conflict of law legislation, national or international. As per Tetley, this is the “greatest single contribution ever to the theory and practice of conflict law.”

  • Boissevain v. Weil (1972, UK – Denning): “depends on the proper law of the contract… the place with which it has the most substantial connection.”

  • also discussed the proper law of tort, which also brought in the most significant connection with the chain of acts and consequences in the situation before us

  • Excerpt from s. 188 of the Restatement Second: "The rights and duties of the parties with respect to an issue in contract are determined by the local law of the state which, with respect to that issue, has the most significant relationship to the transaction and the parties..."


The American Conflicts Revolution (Interest Analysis – an important international effect)

Important to understand that American courts do not particularly follow any contemporary conflicts theory but often just apply one theory on one occasion and another on another occasion, when it is most convenient to them.


Governmental Interest Analysis Pioneered by Brainerd Currie, this approach rejects the classic choice of law rules as overly mechanical and artificial, advocating rather the law of the forum (lex fori). Currie assumed that every state has a legitimate interest in having its own "social, economic, or administrative policy" applied to the resolution of true conflicts (where both states have a genuine interest). Currie supported the application of lex fori in all cases where both governments had a legitimate interest (true conflicts) or where none had a legitimate interest, refusing to weigh the competing interests and policies of the competing states in order to choose the applicable law. These policies were to be ascertained through the above mentioned analysis. Problematic because overlooked private interests and equity.
The Most Significant Relationship – Reese adapted the closest and most real connection test into a series of rules to determine which law is the law with the most significant relationship (reflecting the tort and contract sections of the Restatement Second). However, the Restatement Second also mentions interest and policies as important considerations in conflicts analysis. This indicates that both interest analysis and the most significant relationship are inextricably linked in the Restatement Second.
Functional Interest Analysis – weighing of interests or policies of competing states to choose applicable law. Von Mehren and Trautman introduced a system of weighing the strengths and weaknesses.
Comparative Impairment – Baxter refined the weighing of interests and called upon the court to decide which state’s interests is the least impaired. It has some influence in California and reflected in some provisions in the Louisiana Civil Code.
Weintraub – abbreviated rules of contracts and torts – in contracts it is the settled place of business or residence of the party wishing to enforce the contract unless the settled place of business or residence of the other party has an invalidating rule designed to protect against contracts of adhesion. In tort, the rule should be the law of the state of the plaintiff’s habitual residence
Leflar – the “better rule of law” – Replaced evaluating each government’s interest with five “choice influencing considerations”: (1) predictability of results; (2) maintenance of interstate and international order; (3) simplification of the judicial task; (4) advancement of the forum’s governmental interests; (5) application of the better rule of law. Equal emphasis on all five considerations – have been deemed teleological or substantive recently.
MacDougal III – “best rule of law” – must identify all the interests asserted by the decision makers of all the significantly affected states. Have recently become considered ius gentium (development and application of transnational laws)
Juenger – substantive or teleological approach – debunked classical conflicts of law (multilateralists and universalists) to arrive at his own teleological or substantive approach: that the proper law be chosen by result-oriented conflict rules, thus attaining a just solution of stability and fairness (a call for a new ius commune). Argues that courts are in fact already applying this approach.
Evaluation of the American Conflicts Revolution

i) Strengths and Achievements – This US revolution has led the world in development of choice of law rules in both contract and tort - notably by the Restatement Second of 1969. Has had important international effects. US conflicts theory remains open to transformation, exemplified by Rule 5 of Restatement Second which adds that conflict rules "are as open to reexamination as any other common law rules."


ii) Weaknesses – Although US conflicts theory is advanced, it is primarily national in character (theory & practice – between American states or Federal gov’t and citizens). It for the most part ignores international theories of conflicts. Theorists hardly ever study a wholly international problem.

  • A conflicts analysis which balances the policies and interests of 'competing' governments presents a difficult if not impracticable standard – is it even a proper/possible criterion for deciding questions relating to conflicts of law problems?

  • Interest analysis applies equity and although equity is an important part of all law, there is a question as to whether it should be a major criterion of choice of laws or choice of jurisdiction (given, for example an air crash, where different people have signed contracts in different places – why should they get equal protection?).

  • Equity may be necessary, though, because the American legal system is often unfair and expensive (UK P & I Club example). The problems of American tort/personal injury law are long and complicated as compared with countries like England/Canada.

  • The United States uses corrective justice in its tort system to correct each case individually, which is in the end paid by private insurance. Other countries, on the other hand, settle claims by distributive justice applied equally to all of society. Large disasters, as a result, are often handled more fairly through the latter programs.

iii) Conclusion – While this system is very advanced, it is also very peculiar to the United States.



  • The social and legal system in the US, in particular, is corrective rather than distributive in approach. Its private insurance industry which is expected to provide the benefits to society after suit, rather than government, which in most other industrialized nations provides social services to the whole population without suit through social programs. It favors litigation, and inequalities in compensation are thus generated by the system. Because of these inequalities, many of the various forms of US conflict of law theory look to equity to solve conflict problems rather than seeking the properly applicable law.



      1. The Second Approach - Multiple Numbered Rules (Private Conflict Codes)


This approach considers multiple conflict rules, one for almost every possible legal relationship.
Dicey & Morris

  • Their text, Conflict of Laws, is the most authoritative source of English conflicts law today and carries strong international reputation and influence. Presents some rules from cases as well as alternatives. 210 rules.


McLeod

  • James McLeod is the Canadian conflicts authority. Generalities and jurisdiction as well as specific rules for particular questions. He accepts that issues such as domicile, residence and situs are really only connecting factors. Proposes 205 rules.


The Restatements (First 1934, Second 1969)

  • The Restatement First provides 625 rules – Beale – principle of vested rights.

  • The Restatement Second provides the most authoritative solutions to conflict of laws in the US. Largely the work of Willis Reese, this text incorporates governmental interest analysis – 423 rules. Similar to Savigny’s legal relationship, but the relationship is the state’s who interests are such that the law of that state should apply. Theory says that court will choose the law that best reflects the needs, policies and interests of the states in question providing the law so chosen also reflects principles of certainty, predictability and uniformity, as well as providing ease of determination and application. Not the authority of law but very persuasive – referred to in Lauritzen. Done by professors.

  • Trying to do a third


Symonedes – trying to redo it now

      1. The Third Approach - General Texts


Found in the commentaries, general texts and essays, but without the all-embracing numbered rules in the Dicey & Morris style or a single concept in the style of the Statutists or Story’s comity and territoriality.
Example of Authors: Scoles & Hay (US), Cheshire & North (UK), Caste (Canada), Groffier (Quebec), Sykes & Pryles (Australia), Batiffol & Lagarde (France).

      1. The Fourth Approach - National Legislation/International Conventions


The reliance on theories and treatises to resolve conflicts problems has largely given way to legislation and international conventions. Two distinct themes have been created: what the courts say and what the authors believe – this has made the law of conflicts quite unclear (example of double actionability rule, etc.). Consequently, new doctrines have emerged dealing with these state initiatives. Only legislation and gov’t bodies have been able to clear up the confusion:

  1. Louisiana, 1991 arts. 3515-3549 (USA – Civil Law)

  2. Quebec, 1991 arts. 3076-3168 (Canada – Civil Law) – p.1-16 CB

  3. Switzerland, 1987, Germany, 1986, Austria, 1978 (Europe – Civil Law)

  4. Maritime Law Conflict Codes – Netherlands, 1993; China, 1993


Rome Convention 1980 (EU Convention/Hague Conventions) – p.16-21 CB

The Rome Convention on Contractual Obligations is one of the most important single developments in the history of private international law in Europe or elsewhere. In particular the Convention:



  • applies uniform choice-of-law rules to contracts with very few exceptions

  • applies to contract conflicts in twelve states and overrides their domestic laws

  • applies to conflicts between different legal systems in a single state (ex: England and Scotland)

  • applies to conflicts involving the laws of states not party to the Convention - thus it will apply to Canadian or US contracts when they come before the courts of the signatories of the Rome Convention

  • applies to commercial as well as to consumer and employment contracts and contracts between non-merchants.

  • Art. 18 reinforces the international character of the rules and desirability of achieving uniformity in their interpretation and application, entrusting the interpretation to the Court of Justice of the E.C.

  • has effect outside the border of the European Union and any European nation may adopt it as well

Despite all the authority of the United Nations and other international bodies regulating conflict of laws, the EU has the advantage of being a political entity composed of member states who are motivated, if not bound, to ratify the conventions it prepares. The EU also has the benefit of its Court of Justice (ECJ) for purposes of interpreting conventions.


In Conclusion: National conflict laws, codes and international conflict conventions, as developed by the law commissions, The Hague Conventions and the EU, are now in the forefront, replacing the courts and authorities (because of their heavy workloads advances and solutions rarely come from judges), the Statutists, and their modern heirs (who are relegated to analyzing these laws and not creating methodology – the role of professors and commentators).
Others: Maritime Conflict Codes, UK Contracts Act 1990, Rome II (p.21 CB), UK Private International Law Act 1995 (tort – p.43 CB).



  1. Download 0.88 Mb.

    Share with your friends:
1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   ...   29




The database is protected by copyright ©ininet.org 2024
send message

    Main page