Modernisation and Harmonisation of C.L.
Modernisation and Harmonisation of C.L.
Modernisation and Harmonisation of C.L.
*
Paper to be delivered at the Congress to Celebrate the 75th Anniversary of
the Founding of the International Institute for the Unification of Private
Law, Rome, 27-28 September 2002, on “Worldwide Harmonisation of Private Law
and Regional Economic Integration.”
**
Procureur-Général at the Supreme Court of the Netherlands; Professor of
Private Law, University of Amsterdam; Member, Governing Council UNIDROIT
1
International uniform law in practice, 1987 (UNIDROIT/Oceana Publications
1988).
2
See www.unidroit.org. The Leasing Convention has entered into force for
nine states, the Factoring Convention for six.
3
See e.g. L. Sevón (p. 134-136), K. Grönfors (p. 398), J. Putzeys (p. 446-
447), J. Ramberg (526) and M. Evans’ closing address (p. 557).
4
Principles of International Commercial Contracts, UNIDROIT, Rome 1994;
Lando/Beale (eds.), Principles of European Contact Law, Parts I and II,
Kluwer Law International 2000.
5
International Uniform Law Conventions, Lex Mercatoria and Unidroit
Principles, Uniform Law Review 2000, at p. 3.
2
What are the reasons for the interest and success which
the Principles have clearly attracted? In my opinion these
reasons are basically the following: on the one hand
international unification of contract law is not really
necessary, but on the other hand there is a widely shared
perception that more harmonisation of law is useful and that
in the light of practical difficulties experienced in the past
new ways have to be explored in order to achieve that result.
I would briefly explain my views on these points and I intend
to touch both on the European and the international situation.
6
See Stephen Swann, A European Civil Code: Legal and Political
Foundations, in Alpa/Buccico (Eds.), La riforma dei codici in Europa e il
progetto di codice civile Europeo, p. 7 ff. at p. 39; Gerhard Wagner, The
3
8
See Michael Bridge, The Future of English Private Transactional Law,
Current Legal Problems 2001, p. PM
9
United Nations Commission on International Trade Law.
5
10
See e.g. Helmut Coing, European Common Law: Historical Foundations, in
Cappelletti (ed.), New Perspectives for a Common Law of Europe, 1978, pp.
31-44, at p. 44; R. Sacco, Droit commun de l'Europe, et Composantes du
Droit, in Cappelletti (1978), p. 95 ff., at p. 108; Hein Kötz,
Gemeineuropäisches Zivilrecht, Festschrift Zweigert 1981, pp. 481-500;
Ost/Van Hoecke, RW 1989-1990, pp. 1001-1002; Helmut Coing, Europäisierung
der Rechtswissenschaft, NJW 1990, pp. 937-941; Axel Flessner,
Rechtsvereinheitlichung durch Rechtswissenschaft und Juristenausbildung,
RabelsZ 56 (1992), pp. 243-260; Hein Kötz, A Common Private Law for Europe:
Perspectives for the Reform of European Legal Education, in De Witte/Forder
(1992), pp. 31-41; Basil S. Markesinis, Why a code is not the best way to
advance the cause of European legal unity, ERPL 1997, p. 519 ff.; Melvin A.
Eisenberg, The Unification of Law, in Mauro Bussani/Ugo Mattei (eds.),
Making European Law. Essays on the ‘common Core’ Project (2000), p. 15 e.v.
11
The phenomenon that legal texts drawn up in the form of draft articles
have a greater persuasive force and tend to exert a stronger influence on
courts and arbitrators than a discussion of legal principles in a text
book, however clear that may be, can also be observed on a national scale.
I refer to the gradual law reform by the Dutch Supreme Court between 1965
and 1992 effected through the so called "anticipatory interpretation", viz.
the interpretation of the existing texts of the old Civil Code on the basis
of the drafts for the new Code. This was first noted by G.J. Scholten,
Anticiperende interpretatie: een nieuwe interpretatiemethode?, WPNR 5031
(1969), p. 111.
6
12
Ole Lando, in Gavin Barrett/Ludovic Bernardeau (eds.), Towards a European
Civil Code. Reflections on the Codification of Civil Law in Europe (2002),
p. 40 ff at p. 43. See also Alan Watson, Legal Transplants and European
Private Law, in Jan Smits (ed.), The Contribution of Mixed Legal Systems to
European Private Law (2001), p. 15 e.v.
13
Clive M. Schmitthoff, Nature and Evolution of the Transnational Law of
Commercial Transactions, in N. Horn/C. Schmitthoff (eds.), The
7
16
Article 1:101 para. 1.
17
See Art. 28 of the 1985 UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial
Arbitration, Art. 42 of the 1965 Convention on the Settlement of Investment
Disputes between States and Nationals of other States (ICSID Convention),
Art. 1496 of the French Code de Proc. Civ. (enacted in 1981) and Art. 1054
of the Dutch Code of Civil Procedure (enacted in 1986). Even in the
absence of an express reference arbitrators authorised to apply such
notions like the general rules of law, equity or the lex mercatoria, may
resort to the Principles to find suitable solutions to the dispute at hand.
See e.g. Ole Lando, The Lex Mercatoria in International Commercial
Arbitration, 34 ICLQ 1985, pp. 752-768; Y. Derains, L'ordre public et le
droit applicable au fond du litige dans l'arbitrage international, Revue de
l'Arbitrage 1986, pp. 375-413; Andreas Spickhoff, Internationales Han-
delsrecht vor Schiedsgerichten und staatlichen Gerichten, RabelsZ 56 (1992),
pp. 116-141. For some examples of decisions of national courts upholding such
an approach by the arbitrators, see Michael Joachim Bonell, Das UNIDROIT-
10
20
Comp. Bonell, The need and possibilities of a codified European contract
law, ERPL 1997, p. 505 ff at p. 516; Communication on European Contract
Law. Joint Response of the Commission on European Contract Law and the
Study Group on a European Civil Code, ERPL 2002, p. 183 e.v., nr. 64.
21
Even if conflicts will not always be avoidable. To mention one example:
it has been suggested that a French court may consider that it is contrary
to public policy to allow a party having committed a deliberate breach to
resort to foreseeability in order to limit its liability. See Denis Tallon,
Damages, Exemption clauses and Penalties, AJCL 1992, p. 675 e.v. at p. 679.
12
is true that they contain some rules to that effect,23 but the
UNIDROIT Principles e.g. do not contain a general rule
permitting to strike out any contract term or at least any
term contained in standard terms on account of its substantive
unfairness. For the reasons mentioned in nr. 2, I think that
such a rule should be applicable to all contracts, not only
consumer contracts.24
22
Thomas Wilhelmsson, Social Contract Law and European Integration
(Dartmouth 1995), p. 16.
23
See for the UNIDROIT Principles M.J.Bonell, An International Restatement
of Contract Law, 2nd ed., Transnational Publishers 1997, p. 150 ff. Mention
may be made of Articles 2.20 (surprising term in standard terms), 3.10
(gross disparity), 6.2.1 – 3 (hardship), 7.1.6 (exemption clauses) and
7.4.13 (agreed payment for non-performance).
24
Comp. art. 4:110 European Principles. The same is true for other
protective provisions, such as the power of the court to mitigate an
obligation to pay damages. Another example is Art. 6:244 of the Dutch Civil
Code. This Article affords some protection to a dealer (retailer) who uses
general provisions which are annulled or prohibited according to the
previous articles of the Code, but which are closely related to (general)
conditions which he himself has been `forced' to accept by his seller (the
seller in the previous link of the distribution chain), e.g., a wholesale
dealer or a producer. The wholesale dealer or producer is not allowed to
invoke his (general) conditions in so far as this would be unreasonable
towards the retailer because of such a connection. A comparable provision in
the law of sales is Art. 7:25. These provisions are intended to prevent the
burdens of consumer protection from falling exclusively on the shoulders of
the retail dealers instead of being divided among the various actors in the
distribution chain.
25
Communication on European Contract Law. Joint Response of the Commission
on European Contract Law and the Study Group on a European Civil Code,
ERPL 2002, p. 183 ff., nr. 91 (stage 3). In a further stage, the
applicability could perhaps be extended to contracts without a cross-border
13
aspect. – The New Dutch Civil Code offers an example of private law being
created by a delegated commission. Art. 6:214) has created the possibility
of ‘standard terms' for specific types of contracts to be drafted by
commissions appointed by the Minister of Justice and composed in a
well-balanced manner of representatives of the trade concerned and –if
consumer transactions are concerned – of consumer organizations. After
approval by government, they apply – unlike general conditions – ipso iure.
Parties may derogate from standard terms, but the terms may prescribe a
certain formality for derogations. The provision has not yet been applied in
practice.
26
Clive M. Schmitthoff, Commercial law in a changing economic climate (2nd
ed. 1981), p. 30; Id., The Codification of the law of International Trade,
Journal of Business law 1985, p. 34-44.
27
Gerold Herrmann, The Role of Uncitral, in Fletcher/ Mistelis/Cremona
(eds.), Foudations and Perspectives of International Trade Law (2001), p.
28 ff at p. 35; Id., The Future of Trade Law Unification, Internationales
Handelsrecht (IHR) 1-2001, p. 6 ff. At p. 12.
28
Michael Joachim Bonell, Do We Need a Global Commercial Code?, Dickinson
Law Review Vol. 106, 2001, p. 87 ff. at p. 98 [also in ULR 2000, p. 469
ff.].
14