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Business hails Hague jurisdictional treaty draft
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| Where her writ
runs matters to business |
Paris,
29 August 2003 - The International Chamber of Commerce today said
a draft treaty governing jurisdiction in cross-border business contract
disputes was shaping up to give a boost to trade.
Hailing the draft
convention assembled last week by the 64 member governments of the Hague
Conference on Private International Law, ICC Secretary General Maria Livanos
Cattaui said: "The document that is now going forward for final negotiations
is on the right lines."
Business experts support
the decision to focus the convention on basic business-to-business needs
for certainty regarding the choice of national court when a dispute arises
and that national court judgments will be enforced.
A special government
commission is now to negotiate the draft in The Hague in December, and
once that hurdle is crossed, a full-scale negotiation known as a diplomatic
conference is scheduled for next June.
Business has long
maintained that the Convention on Jurisdiction and Recognition and Enforcement
of Foreign Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters would be beneficial
in today's global economy with its proliferation of cross-border contracts.
The importance of
jurisdictional certainty in international contracts was underlined by
an ICC survey of 100 leading companies submitted to the government representatives
negotiating the draft convention in The Hague.
Forty of the companies
consulted said that there had been occasions when a significant business
decision had been determined by jurisdictional uncertainty. Companies
participating in the survey together have more than three million employees.
Michael Hancock of
Salans in Paris, the international business lawyer who presented the survey
findings to the Hague negotiators on behalf of ICC, said: "The draft
now going forward satisfies the principal business expectations that the
Convention will increase the respect given to agreements between businesses
regarding choice of national court and enforceability of judgments."
He added that the
predictability of judgments would be strengthened under the present dra
ft
by limiting the right of the national courts of choice to dismiss proceedings.
For further information
contact Jonas Astrup, ICC Policy Manager, Commission on Commercial Law
and Practice tel + 33 1 49 53 28 26; email: Click here to send a mail
Commission
on Commercial Law and Practice
Commission
on EBITT
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