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ABLI’s “Where in Asia” series
Written by Catherine Shen, Project Manager, Asian Business Law Institute
- The ConflictofLaws.net previously published a short update on the Asian Principles for the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments (Adeline Chong ed, Asian Business Law Institute, 2020) which was released in September 2020.
- Starting in November 2020, ABLI has been following up that publication with a series of concise handbooks written in no-frills languages called “Where in Asia” to address practical questions such as where in Asia judgments from a particular jurisdiction are entitled to be, have been and cannot be, recognised and enforced in other jurisdictions. The jurisdictions considered are Australia, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Japan, Lao, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand and Vietnam, which corresponds to those discussed in the two flagship ABLI publications on judgments recognition and enforcement: Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Asia (Adeline Chong ed, Asian Business Law Institute, 2017) and the Asian Principles.
- For example, included in this “Where in Asia” series is a Quantitative Analysis of the Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in China (as of December 2020) which is based on a list on China’s cases on recognition of foreign judgments (List) being maintained by China Justice Observer (CJO).
- While CJO’s List looks at both applications to recognise and enforce foreign judgments in China as well as those to recognise and enforce Chinese judgments in foreign jurisdictions, ABLI’s analysis focuses specifically on the former category of applications.
- Based on the List, ABLI identified an uptick in the number of such applications from 2015 to 2020, compared to the previous two decades, with Europe being the region that has exported the most judgments to China.
- Further, there are two routes for the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in China: either pursuant to a bilateral agreement (or “treaty”) between China and the country of the foreign court for the reciprocal enforcement of each other’s judgments, or under China’s domestic Civil Procedure Law (CPL) in the absence of such an agreement or treaty. Through its analysis, ABLI found that almost three in every five applications to enforce foreign judgments in China were unsuccessful, which is hardly surprising considering that more than half of all applications were made under the CPL route where applicants are required to demonstrate reciprocity. Under Chinese law currently, de facto reciprocity is required ie it has to be established that the foreign court whose judgment is before the Chinese court had previously enforced a Chinese judgment.
- Other key insights revealed by the analysis include the percentage of applications that failed due to lack of reciprocity, the percentage of applications that were unsuccessful on procedural grounds, the percentage of applications that came from Belt and Road countries, etc.
- The other handbooks available in the “Where in Asia” series include where in Asia can judgments from Australia, China, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam be enforced in the Asia Pacific. Of particular interest may be the position in relation to Indonesian and Thai judgments. Since these two countries generally do not allow the recognition and enforcement of any foreign judgment, how is this stance affecting the exportation of their own judgments abroad? For example, the Indonesia handbook specifically discusses the case of Paulus Tannos v Heince Tombak Simanjuntak ([2020] SGCA 85, [2020] 2 SLR 1061) where the Singapore Court of Appeal overturned the High Court’s decision last year and refused to recognise Indonesian bankruptcy orders on the ground of breach of natural justice.
- The “Where in Asia” series is available here. ABLI is delighted to offer readers of ConflictofLaws.net an exclusive discount off its entire judgments book collection. Please write to catherine_shen@abli.asia for more information and your unique coupon code.
Virtual Workshop (in English!) on 13 January 2020: AG Maciej Szpunar on Extraterritoriality
Since the summer, the Hamburg Max Planck Institute has hosted monthly virtual workshops on current research in private international law. That series, so far held in German, has proven very successful, with sometimes more than 1oo participants.
Starting in January, the format will be expanded. In order to broaden the scope of potential participants, the series will alternate between English and German presentations. The first English language speaker promises to be a highlight: Attorney-General Maciej Szpunar, author of the opinions in the landmark cases Google v CNIL (C-507/17) and Glawischnig-Pieschzek v Facebook Ireland Limited (C-18/18), as well as numerous other conflict-of-laws cases, most recently X v Kuoni (C-578/19). Szpunar will speak about questions of (extra-)territoriality, a topic of much interest for private international lawyers and EU lawyers since long ago, and of special interest for UK lawyers post-Brexit.
AG Maciej Szpunar
“New challenges to the Territoriality of EU Law”
Wednesday (!), 13 January 2021, 11:00-12:30 (Zoom)
As usual, the presentation will be followed by open discussion. All are welcome.
More information and sign-up here.
If you want to be invited to these events in the future, please write to veranstaltungen@mpipriv.de
The Interaction between Family Law, Succession Law and Private International Law
JM Scherpe and E Bargelli have just published an edited book titled: “The Interaction between Family Law, Succession Law and Private International Law” with Intersentia.
The publisher’s blurb reads as follows:
There can be no doubt that both substantive family and succession law engage in significant interaction with private international law, and, in particular, the European Union instruments in the field. While it is to be expected that substantive law heavily influences private international law instruments, it is increasingly evident that this influence can also be exerted in the reverse direction. Given that the European Union has no legislative competence in the fields of family and succession law beyond cross-border issues, this influence is indirect and, as a consequence of this indirect nature, difficult to trace.
This book brings together a range of views on the reciprocal influences of substantive and private international law in the fields of family and succession law. It outlines some key elements of this interplay in selected jurisdictions and provides a basis for discussion and future work on the reciprocal influences of domestic and European law. It is essential that the choices for and within certain European instruments are made consciously and knowingly. This book therefore aims to raise awareness that these reciprocal influences exist, to stimulate academic debate and to facilitate a more open debate between European Institutions and national stakeholders.
More information can be found here