Supported by
the Luxembourg National Research Fund
Project O19/13946847
Checklist model |
Flexible model |
Procedural guarantees from the criminal prong of the clause are applied in non-criminal cases |
The Complexity of the case or its particular circumstances are used as a factor to determine whether a procedural guarantee is required |
Legal procedure as provided by regulation is the one that is due |
Practical effectiveness is of bigger concern than formal recognition |
Procedural element or dimension is seen as a strict minimum required by the right to a fair trial |
It is considered that there is greater latitude in civil than in criminal cases |
Procedural element or dimension of due process is interpreted as a clear-cut rule |
Less formalistic approach is required |
The entire content of the clause is to be applied to every type of proceeding |
A procedural guarantee is required attending to the nature of the particular proceeding |
Restrictions to due process are analyzed in an all-or-nothing fashion |
Due process clause does not have a strict catalogue of guarantees |
|
Restriction of a procedural guarantee is analyzed through the lens of proportionality |
Source: Lillo Lobos (2022, 78).
1. The national rules of civil or commercial procedures as applied to cross-border relations must take into account the interests of legal protection of all parties and be consistent with their right to fair hearing.
2. In the interest of effective legal protection of parties, States should promote international judicial cooperation. In implementing this cooperation, the requesting State and the requested State must respect the right of private parties to a fair hearing, especially by completing the request within a reasonable time.[20]
fundamental requirement of due process in any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections.[95]
ALI |
American Law Institute |
Art |
Article/Articles |
CIS |
Commonwealth of Independent States |
CEMAC |
Convention on Judicial Cooperation of the Central African Economic and Monetary Unit |
ch |
chapter |
CJEU |
Court of Justice of the European Union |
CPLJ |
Comparative Procedural Law and Justice |
EAPO |
European Account Preservation Order |
ECHR |
European Convention on Human Rights |
ECLI |
European Case Law Identifier |
ECTHR |
European Court of Human Rights |
ed |
editor/editors |
edn |
edition/editions |
EEO |
European Enforcement Order |
eg |
for example |
ELI |
European Law Institute |
EOP |
European Order of Payment |
ESCP |
European Small Claims Procedure |
EU |
European Union |
FRCP |
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure |
HCCH |
Hague Conference on Private International Law |
IACAP |
Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory and Additional Protocol |
ibid |
in the same place |
ie |
that is |
OHADA |
Organization for the Harmonisation of Business Law in Africa |
para |
paragraph |
seq |
sequel |
UK |
United Kingdom |
UNIDROIT |
Institut international pour l'unification du droit privé (International Institute for the Unification of Private Law) |
USCA |
United States Codes Annotated |
Additional Protocol to the Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory 1979.
African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights 1981.
American Convention on Human Rights 1969.
Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union 2000.
Chisinau Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 2002.
Commission Implementing Decision on the specific arrangements for the handover and takeover process of the e-CODEX system, 2022/2520 of 20 December 2022 (EU).
Commission Implementing Decision on the technical specifications and standards for the e-CODEX system, including for security and methods for integrity and authenticity verification, 2022/2519 of 20 December 2022 (EU).
Commission Implementing Regulation laying down the technical specifications, measures and other requirements for the implementation of the decentralised IT system referred to in Regulation (EU) 2020/1784 of the European Parliament and of the Council, 2022/423 of 14 March 2022 (EU).
Convention on Judicial Cooperation of the Central African Economic and Monetary Unit (CEMAC) 2004.
Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters 1965 (Hague Service Convention).
Draft resolution Human Rights and Private International Law 27 January 2021 (Institut de Droit International).
European Convention on Human Rights 1950.
Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory 1975 (IACAP).
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights 1966.
Medellín Treaty on Electronic Transmission of International Legal Cooperation Requests Between Central Authorities 2019.
Minsk Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 1993.
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2021 (ELI/UNIDROIT).
Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure 2004 (ALI/UNIDROIT).
Regulation creating a European Order for Payment Procedure (EOP), 1896/2006 of 12 December 2006 (EU).
Regulation establishing a European Account Preservation Order (EAPO), 655/2014 of 27 June 2014 (EAPO) (EU).
Regulation establishing a European Small Claims Procedure (ESCP), 861/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 July 2007 (EU).
Regulation on a computerised system for the cross-border electronic exchange of data in the area of judicial cooperation in civil and criminal matters (e-CODEX system), 2022/850 of 30 May 2022 (EU).
Regulation on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (recast) (Brussels I Regulation Recast), 1215/2012 of 20 December 2012) (EU).
Regulation on service of documents (recast) (Service Regulation), 2020/1784 of 25 November 2020 (EU), preceded by Regulation on service of documents, 1393/2007 of 13 November 2007 (EU).
Uniform act on the simplified recovery of debts 1998 (OHADA).
***
Certain Provisions on Issues Concerning Service of Judicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Cases Involving Foreign Elements (2006 SPC Provisions) (China).
Civil Procedure Act 1991 (China).
Civil Procedure Act 1998 (Latvia).
Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) 2006 (England & Wales).
Code de Procédure Civile (CPC) 1976 (France).
Code Judiciaire /Gerechtelijk Wetboek (Judicial Code) 1967 (Belgium).
Code of Civil Procedure 2014 (Quebec, Canada).
Código de Processo Civil 2015 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Brazil).
Constitution of the Federative Republic of Brazil 1988.
Constitution of the United States 1787.
Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen of 1789 (France).
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (FRCP) (United States).
Grundgesetz 1949 (Basic Law) (Germany).
Order V of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 (India).
Practice Direction 6B – Service Out of the Jurisdiction 2021 (UK).
Rules of Civil Procedure 1990 (Ontario, Canada).
Zivilprozessordnung (ZPO) (Code of Civil Procedure) 2005 (Germany).
***
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G v Cornelius de Visser, Case C-292/10 (CJEU), Judgment 15 March 2012 [ECLI:EU:C:2012:142].
Krystyna Alder & Ewald Alder v. Sabina Orlowska & Czeslaw Orlowski, Case C-325/11 (CJEU), Judgment 19 December 2012 [ECLI:EU:C:2012:824].
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Karakuş v. Turkey, Case 32438/08 (ECtHR), Judgement of 7 March 2017 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2014:0408DEC002178604].
Schmidt v. Latvia, Case 22493/05 (ECtHR), Judgment 27 April 2017 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2017:0427JUD002249305].
M.T.B. v. Turkey, Case 47081/06 (ECtHR), Judgment 12 June 2018 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:0612JUD004708106].
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Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft v Schlunk (United States, Supreme Court) [486 U.S. 694 (1988)].
Kreimerman v. Casa Veerkamp, S.A. de C.V. (US Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit), Judgment 15 June 1994 [22 3d 634].
Prewtt Enterprises v Org. of Petroleum (US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit) [353 F.3d 916 (2003)].
Marco Benatti v WPP Holdings Italy SRL, WPP 2005 Limited, Berkely Square Holding (EWCA, United Kingdom), Judgment 28 March 2007 [EWCA Civ 263, 2007 WL 880936].
Judgment of Cass 2010 (1st Chamber Court of Cassation, Belgium), Judgement 1 April 2010 [AR C.08.0457.N].
Club Resorts Ltd. v Van Breda (Supreme Court Canada), Judgment 18 April 2012 [2012 SCC 17].
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Advanced Access Content Sys. Licensing Adm’r, LLC v. Shen (United States, District Court for the Southern District of New York), Judgment 30 September 2018 [14-CV-1112 (VSB)].
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Brand RA, ‘Access-to-Justice Analysis on a Due Process Platform Response’ (2012) 112 Columbia Law Review Sidebar 76.
Brown-Blake C, ‘Fair Trial, Language and the Right to Interpretation’ (2006) 13 International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 391.
Cappelletti M, ‘Fundamental Guarantees of the Parties in Civil Litigation: Comparative Constitutional, International, and Social Trends’ (1973) 25 Stanford Law Review 651.
Celis M, ‘A Few Developments on the Modernisation of the Service of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents and the Taking of Evidence in the European Union’ (Conflict of Laws, 22 December 2022) https://conflictoflaws.net/2022/a-few-developments-on-the-modernisation-of-the-service-of-judicial-and-extrajudicial-documents-and-the-taking-of-evidence-in-the-european-union/ accessed 8 August 2023.
Cheng C, ‘Translated Documents and Hague Service Convention Requirements’ (1993) 14 Michigan Journal of International Law 383.
Chiapponi G, ‘Time Limits and Default Judgements in European Cross-Border Civil Litigation; Minimum Standards?’ (2020) 12 Cuadernos de Derecho Transnacional 971.
Coyle JF, Effron RJ and Gardner M, ‘Contracting Around the Hague Service Convention’ (2019) 53 UC Davis Law Review Online 53.
Cuniberti G, ‘Making Cross-Border Enforcement More Effective for Creditors’ in Jan von Hein and Thalia Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021).
Dodge J, ‘The Limits of Procedural Private Ordering’ (2011) 97 Virginia Law Review 723.
Dodge WS, ‘Substituted Service and the Hague Service Convention Substituted Service and the Hague Service Convention’ (2022) 63 William & Mary Law Review 1485.
——, ‘A Primer on Service of Process’ (Transnational Litigation Blog, 30 January 2023) https://tlblog.org/a-primer-on-service-of-process/ accessed 12 June 2023.
Dueñas González R, ‘Fundamentals of Court Interpretation: Theory, Policy and Practice’, Fundamentals of court interpretation theory, policy and practice (2nd ed, Carolina Academic Press 2012).
Düsterhaus D, ‘Constitutionalisation of European Civil Procedure as a Starting Point for Harmonisation?’ in FG Inchausti and B Hess (eds), The Future of the European Law of Civil Procedure (1st edn, Intersentia 2020).
Effron R, ‘The Invisible Circumstances of Notice’ (2021) 99 North Carolina Law Review 1522.
ELI and UNIDROIT (eds), ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil Procedure (Oxford University Press 2021).
Fawcett JJ, Ní Shúilleabháin M and Shah S, Human Rights and Private International Law (First edition, Oxford University Press 2016).
——, ‘3 The Right to a Fair Trial’, Oxford Legal Research Library (Oxford University Press 2016).
——, ‘9 The Prohibition of Discrimination and Private International Law’, Human Rights and Private International Law (Oxford University Press 2016).
Gu W and Tam J, ‘The Global Rise of International Commercial Courts: Typology and Power Dynamics’ (2022) 22 Chicago Journal of International Law 443.
‘Guide on Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights - Right to a Fair Trial (Civil Limb)’.
Hess B, ‘Towards a More Coherent EU Framework for the Cross-Border Enforcement of Civil Claims’ in J von Hein and T Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021).
——, ‘An Evaluation Study of National Procedural Laws and Practices in Terms of Their Impact on the Free Circulation of Judgments and on the Equivalence and Effectiveness of the Procedural Protection of Consumers under EU Consumer Law’ (European Commission 2017) JUST/2014/RCON/PR/CIVI/0082 https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/531ef49a-9768-11e7-b92d-01aa75ed71a1/language-en accessed 24 March 2023.
Inchausti FG, ‘Service of Proceedings on the Defendant as a Safeguard of Fairness in Civil Proceedings: In Search of Minimum Standards from EU Legislation and European Case-Law’ (2017) 13 Journal of Private International Law 475.
——, ‘Ensuring Adequate Protection in Cross-Border Enforcement for Debtors, Especially Consumers’ in Jan von Hein and Thalia Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021).
Kern CA, ‘English as a Court Language in Continental Courts’ (2012) 5 Erasmus Law Review 187.
Kieninger EM and Hau W, ‘Service of Documents’, Encyclopedia of Private International Law (2017) 1628.
Kotuby Jr CT, ‘General Principles of Law, International Due Process, and the Modern Role of Private International Law’ (2013) 23 Duke Journal of Comparative & International Law 411.
Liakopoulos D, ‘Integration and Cooperation of International and European Private Law According Charter of the Fundamental Rights of the European Union’ (2019) 11 Cuadernos de Derecho Transnacional 150.
Lillo Lobos R, Understanding Due Process in Non-Criminal Matters: How to Harmonize Procedural Guarantees with the Right to Access to Justice, vol 97 (Springer International Publishing 2022).
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Pocar F, ‘4e Commission. Droits de l’homme et Droit International Privé: Rapporteur Fausto Pocar’ (2022) N° 4 Revue critique de droit international privé 944.
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***
Felipe de Andrade and Geert Van Calster
[1] Predoctoral researcher funded by the Research Foundation - Flanders (FWO) at the University of Antwerp and KU Leuven.
[2] Full Professor at KU Leuven and member of the Belgian Bar.
[3] See another chapter of this Part of the collection (B Hess ‘History and Evolution (Actors, Factors and Debates)’) for a detailed historical analysis of the developments concerning the rule of law and fair trial in cross-border proceedings.
[4] For a discussion on the role of the CJEU in the constitutionalization of European Civil Procedure in light of the ECHR and CFREU, see D Düsterhaus, ‘Constitutionalisation of European Civil Procedure as a Starting Point for Harmonisation?’ in F G Inchausti and B Hess (eds), The Future of the European Law of Civil Procedure (1st edn, Intersentia 2020) 69.
[5] J J Fawcett, M Ní Shúilleabháin and S Shah, ‘3 The Right to a Fair Trial’, Oxford Legal Research Library (Oxford University Press 2016) para 3.01.
[6] J Basedow, ‘Human Rights and Private International Law: summary of the Report submitted in September 2018’ (Institut de Droit International 2018) para 61.
[7] See Part 4 of the CPLJ project for an extensive discussion on the Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of Civil Procedural Guarantees and Principles, ie, Y Moon ‘Constitutionalization and Fundamentalization of the Design of the Proceedings and the Parties’ and the Judges’ Respective Roles’.
[8] R Michaels, ‘Two Paradigms of Jurisdiction’ (2005) 27 Michigan Journal of International Law 1003, 1012.
[9] R Lillo Lobos, Understanding Due Process in Non-Criminal Matters: How to Harmonize Procedural Guarantees with the Right to Access to Justice, (vol 97, Springer International Publishing 2022) 78.
[10] Ibid 266–276.
[11] Ibid 259–260.
[12] Michaels (n 8) 1055.
[13] R A Brand, ‘Access-to-Justice Analysis on a Due Process Platform Response’ (2012) 112 Columbia Law Review Sidebar 76, 79.
[14] D Liakopoulos, ‘Integration and Cooperation of International and European Private Law According Charter of the Fundamental Rights of the European Union’ (2019) 11 Cuadernos de Derecho Transnacional 150, para 96.
[15] Brand (n 13) 78.
[16] Regulation on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (recast) (Brussels I Regulation Recast), 1215/2012 of 20 December 2012) (EU) Arts 6(1), 18(1), 21(2), 24, 25, 33 and 34. For a discussion on the prohibition of discrimination and private international law under EU and National rules, see J J Fawcett, M Ní Shúilleabháin and S Shah, ‘9 The Prohibition of Discrimination and Private International Law’, Human Rights and Private International Law (Oxford University Press 2016).
[17] Michaels (n 8) 1055.
[18] M Poesen, ‘Civil Litigation Against Third-Country Defendants in the EU: Effective Access to Justice as a Rationale for European Harmonization of the Law of International Jurisdiction’ (2022) 59 Common Market Law Review 1597, 1609–1613.
[19] Draft resolution Human Rights and Private International Law 27 January 2021 (Institut de Droit International), Art 2.
[20] Ibid Art 6.
[21] F Pocar, ‘4e Commission. Droits de l’homme et Droit International Privé : Rapporteur Fausto Pocar’ (2022) N° 4 Revue critique de droit international privé 944, 947.
[22] M Cappelletti, ‘Fundamental Guarantees of the Parties in Civil Litigation: Comparative Constitutional, International, and Social Trends’ (1973) 25 Stanford Law Review 651, 699.
[23] C T Kotuby Jr, ‘General Principles of Law, International Due Process, and the Modern Role of Private International Law’ (2013) 23 Duke Journal of Comparative and International Law 411, 428.
[24] ALI/UNIDROIT Principles of Transnational Civil Procedure (2004) 4 Uniform Law Review, 756-808.
[25] Ibid Principle 3.
[26] Ibid Principle 3.1.
[27] Ibid Principle 3.2.
[28] Ibid Principle 5.
[29] Ibid Principle 5.1.
[30] Ibid Principle 5.2.
[31] Ibid Principle 6.
[32] Ibid Principles 5.4 and 5.5.
[33] ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil Procedure (Oxford University Press 2021).
[34] Ibid Rule 11.
[35] Ibid Part VI sections 1 and 2.
[36] Ibid Rules 82-85.
[37] Ibid Rules 135-140.
[38] D McClean, ‘Chapter 12. Service of Process’ in P Beaumont and J Holliday (eds), A Guide to Global Private International Law (Hart Publishing 2022) 161–163.
[39] Club Resorts Ltd. v Van Breda (Supreme Court, Canada), Judgment 18 April 2012 [2012 SCC 17]; see S Pitel, ‘Six of One, Half a Dozen of the Other? Jurisdiction in Common Law Canada’, (2018) 55(1) Osgoode Hall Law Journal 63.
[40] McClean (n 38) 164.
[41] E M Kieninger and W Hau, ‘Service of Documents’, Encyclopedia of Private International Law (2017) 1628, 1628.
[42] McClean (n 38) 163.
[43] Convention on the Service Abroad of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Matters 1965 (Hague Service Convention 1965), text available at https://assets.hcch.net/docs/f4520725-8cbd-4c71-b402-5aae1994d14c.pdf accessed 1 March 2023.
[44] McClean (n 38) 163–164, number updated to 1 June 2023.
[45] Ibid 163.
[46] E Storskrubb, ‘Due Notice of Proceedings: Present and Future’ (2014) 19 Uniform Law Review 351, 353.
[47] See generally F G Inchausti, ‘Ensuring Adequate Protection in Cross-Border Enforcement for Debtors, Especially Consumers’ in J von Hein and T Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021) 438.
[48] For a detailed analysis of the different forums, forms and techniques for international judicial cooperation, see pt XIV ch 2 (B Hess ‘History and Evolution (actors, factors and debates)’).
[49] G Cuniberti, ‘Making Cross-Border Enforcement More Effective for Creditors’ in J von Hein and T Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021).
[50] For an European perspective on cross-border enforcement and fragmentation of EU procedural law, see B Hess, ‘Towards a More Coherent EU Framework for the Cross-Border Enforcement of Civil Claims’ in J von Hein and T Kruger (eds), Informed Choices in Cross-Border Enforcement (1st edn, Intersentia 2021) 390; Inchausti (n 47) 430.
[51] Storskrubb (n 46) 352.
[52] Hague Service Convention 1965.
[53] Regulation on service of documents (recast) (Service Regulation), 2020/1784 of 25 November 2020 (EU), preceded by Regulation on service of documents, 1393/2007 of 13 November 2007 (EU).
[54] Regulation creating a European Order for Payment Procedure (EOP), 1896/2006 of 12 December 2006 (EU), Art 13-15.
[55] Regulation creating a European Enforcement Order for uncontested claims (EEO), 805/2004 of 21 April 2004 (EU), Art 13-19.
[56] Regulation establishing a European Account Preservation Order (EAPO), 655/2014 of 27 June 2014 (EU), Art 28-29.
[57] Regulation establishing a European Small Claims Procedure (ESCP), 861/2007 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 11 July 2007 (EU), Art 13.
[58] Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory 1975, arts. 4,5, 8 available at https://www.oas.org/juridico/english/treaties/b-36.html accessed 10 April 2023 and Additional Protocol 1979, Art 3-4 available at https://www.oas.org/juridico/english/treaties/b-46.html accessed 10 April 2023.
[59] Minsk Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 1993, Art 10-11 available at https://cis-legislation.com/document.fwx?rgn=26119, https://www.unhcr.org/media/convention-legal-aid-and-legal-relations-civil-family-and-criminal-cases-adopted-minsk-22 accessed 10 April 2023.
[60] Chisinau Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 2002, Art 11-12 available at Convention of the CIS on legal assist https://cis-legislation.com/document.fwx?rgn=4741ance and legal relations on civil, family and criminal cases (cis-legislation.com) accessed 10 April 2023.
[61] Convention on Judicial Cooperation of the Central African Economic and Monetary Unit (CEMAC) 2004, Art 8, available at http://www.droit-afrique.com/upload/doc/cemac/CEMAC-Accord-2004-cooperation-judiciaire.pdf accessed 10 April 2023.
[62] Code Judiciaire /Gerechtelijk Wetboek (Judicial Code) 1967 (Belgium) available at < http://www.ejustice.just.fgov.be/cgi_loi/change_lg.pl?language=frandla=Fandcn=1967101001andtable_name=loi accessed 5 April 2023.
[63] Civil Procedure Act 1991 (China) available at http://www.npc.gov.cn/zgrdw/englishnpc/Law/2007-12/12/content_1383880.htm accessed 5 April 2023.
[64] Certain Provisions on Issues Concerning Service of Judicial Documents in Civil or Commercial Cases Involving Foreign Elements (2006 SPC Provisions) (China).
[65] Civil Procedure Rules 2006 (UK) available at https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/procedure-rules/civil/rules/part06 accessed 11 April 2023.
[66] Practice Direction 6B – Service Out of the Jurisdiction 2021 (UK) available at https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/procedure-rules/civil/rules/part06/pd_part06b accessed 11 April 2023.
[67] Code de Procédure Civile (CPC) 1976 (France), as amended, available at https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/codes/section_lc/LEGITEXT000006070716/LEGISCTA000006149686/#LEGISCTA000006149686 accessed 11 April 2023.
[68] Zivilprozessordnung (ZPO) (Code of Civil Procedure) 2005 (Germany), as amended, available at https://www.gesetze-im-internet.de/englisch_zpo/englisch_zpo.html#p0753 accessed 11 April 2023.
[69] Order V of the Code of Civil Procedure 1908 (India), as amended, available at https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/2191/1/A1908-05.pdf accessed 11 April 2023.
[70] Hague Service Convention 1965, Art 2.
[71] Ibid, Art 9.
[72] Service Regulation (EU), Art 8(1).
[73] Ibid Art 4.
[74] Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory 1975, Art 4.
[75] Ibid Art 6-7; McClean (n 39) 171.
[76] Additional Protocol to the Inter-American Convention on Letters Rogatory 1979, Art 2.
[77] Minsk Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 1993, arts. 10-11; Chisinau Convention on Legal Assistance and Legal Relations in Civil, Family and Criminal Matters 2002, Art 11-12; McClean (n 38) 173.
[78] Art 8.
[79] McClean (n 38 ) 173.
[80] TJ Folkman, ‘Email as a secure means of transmission under the HCCH Service Convention’ (2019) The HCCH Service Convention in the Era of Electronic and Information Technology 7, 7.
[81] HCCH, ‘Conclusion and Recommendations Adopted by the Council’ (2019), para 40 available at https://assets.hcch.net/docs/c4af61a8-d8bf-400e-9deb-afcd87ab4a56.pdf accessed 1 April 2023.
[82] Ibid, para 39.
[83] Folkman (n 80) 12.
[84] KV Ossenova, ‘Use of an electronic platform for communication and transmission between Central Authorities in the operation of the HCCH Service Convention’ (2019) The HCCH Service Convention in the Era of Electronic and Information Technology 14.
[85] E Van Gelder and E Themeli, ‘Reflections on the use of distributed ledger technologies for the purpose of the HCCH Service Convention’ (2019) The HCCH Service Convention in the Era of Electronic and Information Technology 20.
[86] Medellín Treaty on Electronic Transmission of International Legal Cooperation Requests Between Central Authorities 2019.
[87] McClean (n 38) 173.
[88] EU Service Regulation (EU), Art 5(1).
[89] Regulation on a computerized system for the cross-border electronic exchange of data in the area of judicial cooperation in civil and criminal matters (e-CODEX system), 2022/850 of 30 May 2022 (EU), Recital 8.
[90] Ibid.
[91] Commission Implementing Regulation laying down the technical specifications, measures and other requirements for the implementation of the decentralized IT system referred to in Regulation (EU) 2020/1784 of the European Parliament and of the Council, 2022/423 of 14 March 2022 (EU); Commission Implementing Regulation laying down the technical specifications, measures and other requirements for the implementation of the decentralized IT system referred to in Regulation (EU) 2020/1783 of the European Parliament and of the Council, 2022/422 of 14 March 2022 (EU).
[92] Commission Implementing Decision on the technical specifications and standards for the e-CODEX system, including for security and methods for integrity and authenticity verification, 2022/2519 of 20 December 2022 (EU); Commission Implementing Decision on the specific arrangements for the handover and takeover process of the e-CODEX system, 2022/2520 of 20 December 2022 (EU).
[93] M Celis, ‘A Few Developments on the Modernisation of the Service of Judicial and Extrajudicial Documents and the Taking of Evidence in the European Union’ (Conflict of Laws, 22 December 2022) https://conflictoflaws.net/2022/a-few-developments-on-the-modernisation-of-the-service-of-judicial-and-extrajudicial-documents-and-the-taking-of-evidence-in-the-european-union/ accessed 8 August 2023.
[94] Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2021 (ELI/UNIDROIT), Rule 73.
[95] Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank and Tr. Co. (Supreme Court, United States), [339 U.S. 306 (1950)] 314.
[96] Ibid 318.
[97] 28 U.S.C.A. §1332 (2021).
[98] FRCP 4(f) (1).
[99] FRCP 4(f) (2).
[100] FRCP 4(f) (3).
[101] Freedom Watch, Inc. v. Org. of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (US Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit) [766 F.3d 74 (2014)] 84.
[102] FRCP 4 (h) (2).
[103] E Porterfield, ‘Too Much Process, Not Enough Service: International Service of Process under the Hague Service Convention’ (2014) 896 Temple Law Review 331; W S Dodge, ‘A Primer on Service of Process’ (Transnational Litigation Blog, 30 January 2023) https://tlblog.org/a-primer-on-service-of-process/ accessed 12 June 2023.
[104] FRCP 4 (l) (3).
[105] Prewtt Enterprises v Org. of Petroleum (US Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit) [353 F.3d 916 (2003)] 925.
[106] F G Inchausti, ‘Service of Proceedings on the Defendant as a Safeguard of Fairness in Civil Proceedings: In Search of Minimum Standards from EU Legislation and European Case-Law’ (2017) 13 Journal of Private International Law 475, 478.
[107] Dilipak and Karakaya v. Turkey, Case 7942/05 24838/05 (ECtHR), Judgment 4 March 2014 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2014:0304JUD000794205] para 85-88.
[108] Schmidt v. Latvia, Case 22493/05 (ECtHR), Judgment 27 April 2017 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2017: 0427JUD002249305], para 86.
[109] Bogonos v. Russia, Case 68798/01 (ECtHR), Judgment 5 February 2004 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2004:0205DEC006879801].
[110] Gankin and Others v. Russia, Case 2430/06, 1454/08, 11670/10 and 12938/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 31 May 2016 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:0531JUD000243006] para 35.
[111] Aždajić v. Slovenia, Case 71872/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 8 October 2015 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2015: 1008JUD007187212] para 48.
[112] Krystyna Alder and Ewald Alder v. Sabina Orlowska and Czeslaw Orlowski, Case C-325/11 (CJEU), Judgment 19 December 2012 [ECLI:EU:C:2012:824].
[113] Liakopoulos (n 14) para 94.
[114]M.S. v. Finland, Case 46601/99 (ECtHR), judgement 22 March 2005 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2005: 0322JUD004660199] para 35; Karakuş v. Turkey, Case 32438/08 (ECtHR), Judgement of 7 March 2017 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2014:0408DEC002178604] para 45.
[115] Liakopoulos (n 14) para 83.
[116] Alpha Bank Cyprus, Case C-519/13 (CJEU), Judgment 16 September 2015 [ECLI:EU:C:2015:603]; Henderson v. Novo Banco SA, Case C-354/15 (CJEU), Judgment 2 March 2017 [ECLI:EU:C:2017:157] para 58.
[117] R Effron, ‘The Invisible Circumstances of Notice’ (2021) 99 North Carolina Law Review 1522.
[118] Hague Service Convention 1965, Art 1.
[119] Kreimerman v. Casa Veerkamp, S.A. de C.V. (US Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit), Judgment 15 June 1994 [22 3d 634] 647.
[120] Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft v Schlunk (Supreme Court, United States) [486 U.S. 694 (1988)] 704. In this judgment the United States Supreme Court held that the Convention was not engaged because the foreign defendant was validly served in the US in accordance with applicable Illinois law that allowed service on an affiliate deemed to be a ‘foreign corporation's involuntary agent for service’ (p 696). This situation is different from the hypothesis discussed in paragraph 44 of this text, in which agents contract around the Hague Service Convention and appoint a local agent for service.
[121] Service Regulation (EU), Art 1(2).
[122] Ibid Art 7.
[123] Advanced Access Content Sys. Licensing Adm’r, LLC v. Shen (United States, District Court for the Southern District of New York), Judgment 30 September 2018 [14-CV-1112 (VSB)].
[124] G v Cornelius de Visser, Case C-292/10 (CJEU), Judgment of 15 March 2012 [ECLI:EU:C:2012:142].
[125] Judgment of Cass 2010 (1st Chamber Court of Cassation, Belgium), Judgement 1 April 2010 [AR C.08.0457.N].
[126] Kieninger and Hau (n 41) 1632.
[127] W S Dodge, ‘Substituted Service and the Hague Service Convention Substituted Service and the Hague Service Convention’ (2022) 63 William and Mary Law Review 1485, 1496.
[128] B Hess and others, ‘An Evaluation Study of National Procedural Laws and Practices in Terms of Their Impact on the Free Circulation of Judgments and on the Equivalence and Effectiveness of the Procedural Protection of Consumers under EU Consumer Law’ (European Commission 2017) JUST/2014/RCON/PR/CIVI/0082 58 https://op.europa.eu/en/publication-detail/-/publication/531ef49a-9768-11e7-b92d-01aa75ed71a1/language-en accessed 24 March 2023.
[129] Dilipak and Karakaya v. Turkey (n 107) para 106.
[130] J F Coyle, RJ Effron and M Gardner, ‘Contracting Around the Hague Service Convention’ (2019) 53 UC Davis Law Review Online 53, 58–59.
[131] T G Vanderbeek, ‘What’s in the Contract?: Rockefeller, the Hague Service Convention, and Serving Process Abroad’ (2023) 76 Vanderbilt Law Review 643.
[132] Rockefeller Tech. Invs. (Asia) VII v. Changzhou Sino Type Tech. Co, Judgment of 2 April 2020 (US Supreme Court California, United States) [460 P.3d 764 (2020)]. This decision was made in an arbitration context, where an agreement between the parties specified an alternate method of service and constituted a waiver of formal service as specified under Californian statutory law. The Court was specifically stated that its reasons were limited to that context and that its conclusions were narrow.
[133] Service Regulation (EU), Recital 7; Krystyna Alder and Ewald Alder v. Sabina Orlowska and Czeslaw Orlowski (n 112) para 24.
[134] Service Regulation (EU), Recital 6.
[135] Hague Service Convention 1965, Art 5 (3), 7; Astrid Stadler, ‘Practical Obstacles in Cross-Border Litigation and Communication’ (2012) 2012 Erasmus Law Review 151, 160.
[136] Hague Service Convention 1965, Art 5 (2).
[137] Cuniberti (n 49) 420.
[138] VRB Moschen and LN Barbosa, ‘O processo civil internacional no CPC/2015 e os princípios ALI/UNIDROIT no processo civil internacional: uma análise de consonância da harmonização processual’ (2018) 19 Revista Eletrônica de Direito Processual 217–218
[139] ‘Zustellung Nach Art. 11 Abs. 1 EuVwZÜ Erfordert Keine Übersetzung’ (2020) 20 Internationales Handelsrecht 219.
[140] Service Regulation (EU), Art 12 (1).
[141] Alta Realitat S.L. v Erlock Film Aps and Ulrich Thomsen (CJEU), Judgment of 28 April 2016 [ECLI:EU:C:2016:316] para 74.
[142] Service Regulation (EU), Art 9 (1) (2).
[143] Ingenieurbüro Michaekl Weiss und Partner GbR v Industrie- und Handelskammer Berlin, Case C-14/07 (CJEU), Judgment 8 May 2008 [ECLI:EU:C:2008:264].
[144] EAPO Regulation (EU), Art 49 (1).
[145] Brussels I Recast Regulation (EU), Art 43 (2).
[146] Götz Leffler v Berlin Chemie AG, Case C-443/03 (CJEU), Judgment of 8 November 2005 [ECLI:EU:C:2005:665].
[147] C Cheng, ‘Translated Documents and Hague Service Convention Requirements’ (1993) 14 Michigan Journal of International Law 383, 396.
[148] Ibid.
[149] M Velicogna, G Lupo and EA Ontantu, ‘Comparative Perspectives: Simplifying Access to Justice in Cross-Border Litigation: The National Practices and the Limits of the EU Procedures: The Example of the Service of Documents in the Order for Payment Claims’ (2017) 7 International Journal of Procedural Law 93, 120. As pointed out by the authors, the European Commission ‘Practical Guide for the Application of the Regulation on the European Order for Payment’ (2011) only mentions translation requirements at the level of enforcement (p 34) and does not go into detail about language requirements for the service of the European Order for Payment.
[150] Service Regulation (EU), Art 22 (2).
[151] Inchausti (n 106) 517. A similar six-month period is prescribed in the law of Quebec (Art 495 Code of Civil Procedure) whereas Ontario does not prescribe a delay, nor does it set a time limit for challenging an eventual default judgment (Rule 19, Rules of Civil Procedure, RRO 1990, Reg 194).
[152] G Chiapponi, ‘Time Limits and Default Judgements in European Cross-Border Civil Litigation; Minimum Standards?’ (2020) 12 Cuadernos de Derecho Transnacional 971, para 28.
[153] Hess and others (n 129) para 227–229. In comparison, Quebec requires a response from a foreign defendant within 30 days as opposed to 15 days for local parties (Art 490 Code of Civil Procedure). In Ontario, the delay is 40 days if the defendant is served in the United States and 60 days if served elsewhere outside Canada (Rule 18.01, Rules of Civil Procedure, RRO 1990, Reg 194).
[154] Brussels I Regulation Recast (EU), Art 28 (2).
[155] FRCP Art 4 (m).
[156] Brussels I Regulation Recast (EU), Art 3 (1)
[157] J J Fawcett, M Ní Shúilleabháin and S Shah, Human Rights and Private International Law (1st edn, Oxford University Press 2016) para 4.239; Marco Benatti v WPP Holdings Italy SRL, WPP 2005 Limited, Berkely Square Holding (EWCA, United Kingdom), Judgment 28 March 2007 [EWCA Civ 263, 2007 WL 880936] para 67.
[158] Hess and others (n 128) para 234.
[159] Cuniberti (n 49) 420–421.
[160] See examples provided in C Brown-Blake, ‘Fair Trial, Language and the Right to Interpretation’ (2006) 13 International Journal on Minority and Group Rights 391, 404; R Dueñas González, ‘Fundamentals of Court Interpretation: Theory, Policy and Practice’, Fundamentals of court interpretation theory, policy and practice (2nd ed, Carolina Academic Press 2012).
[161] Jaime Dodge, ‘The Limits of Procedural Private Ordering’ (2011) 97 Virginia Law Review 723.
[162] Brown-Blake (n 160).
[163] C A Kern, ‘English as a Court Language in Continental Courts’ (2012) 5 Erasmus Law Review 187, 193.
[164] Hess and others (n 128) para 195.
[165] Ibid para 200.
[166] ‘International Chamber of the Commercial Court of Paris’ https://www.tribunal-de-commerce-de-paris.fr/en/chambre-internationale accessed 18 June 2023.
[167]‘Chamber for International Commercial Disputes of the Landgericht Frankfurt am Main’ https://ordentliche-gerichtsbarkeit.hessen.de/landgerichtsbezirk-frankfurt-am-main/landgericht-frankfurt-am-main/chamber-for-international-commercial-disputes accessed 18 June 2023; ‘Commercial Court Stuttgart and Mannheim’ https://commercial-court.de/en/ accessed 18 June 2023.
[168] ‘The Netherlands Commercial Court’ https://www.rechtspraak.nl/English/NCC/Pages/default.aspx.
[169] ‘Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC) Courts’ https://www.difccourts.ae/ accessed 18 June 2023.
[170] ‘Qatar International Court’ https://www.qicdrc.gov.qa/ accessed 18 June 2023.
[171] ‘Abu Dhabi Commercial Court’ https://www.adjd.gov.ae/en/pages/courts/abu-dhabi-commercial-court.aspx accessed 18 June 2023.
[172] ‘The Kazakhstan Astana Financial Centre Court’ https://court.aifc.kz/en accessed 18 June 2023.
[173]‘China International Commercial Court’ https://cicc.court.gov.cn/html/1/219/193/195/index.html accessed 18 June 2023.
[174] ‘Singapore International Commercial Court’ https://www.judiciary.gov.sg/singapore-international-commercial-court accessed 18 June 2023.
[175] ‘London Commercial Court’ https://www.gov.uk/courts-tribunals/commercial-court accessed 18 June 2023.
[176] 'Commercial Division – NY Supreme Court’ https://ww2.nycourts.gov/courts/comdiv/index.shtml accessed 18 June 2023.
[177] LC Alcolea, ‘The Rise of the International Commercial Court: A Threat to the Rule of Law?’ (2022) 13 Journal of International Dispute Settlement 413, 413. See also X Kramer, J Sorabji (eds), International Business Courts: A European and Global Perspective, The Hague, Eleven, 250 pages; G. Dimitropoulos, S. Brekoulakis (eds), International Commercial Courts: The future of transnational adjudication (Cambridge, CUP 2020) 424.
[178] Kern (n 163) 188.
[179] G van Calster, ‘Brexit, International Commercial Courts, and the Competition for Dispute Resolution: Whither the Rush to English Courts Post Withdrawal?’, in G Dimitropoulos, S Brekoulakis, International Commercial Courts: The Future of Transnational Adjudication (Cambridge, CUP 2022) 501-514.
[180] Kern (n 163) 189.
[181] W Gu and J Tam, ‘The Global Rise of International Commercial Courts: Typology and Power Dynamics’ (2022) 22 Chicago Journal of International Law 443, 453.
[182] Dueñas González (n 160). This book offers a thorough description of language access services in the United States (Chapter 6) and across the globe (Chapter 13).
[183] Hess and others (n 128) para 196–197.
[184] EA Ontanu and E Pannebakker, ‘Tackling Language Obstacles in Cross-Border Litigation: The European Order for Payment and the European Small Claims Procedure Approach’ (2012) 5 Erasmus Law Review 169, 175.
[185] Ibid 180. The idea of having forms or at least commonly agreed protocols has been proven to be useful even for communications between courts speaking the same language on complex insolvency matters, such as in the US as described by Stadler (n 135) 166.
[186] ‘Guide on Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights - Right to a Fair Trial (Civil Limb)’ para 353.
[187] Bacaksiz v. Turkey, Case 24245/09 (ECtHR), Judgment 10 December 2019 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2019:1210JUD002424509], para 56-57, 60.
[188] Sedovic v. Italy [GC], Case 56581/00 (ECtHR), Judgment 1 March 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:0301JUD005658100] para 81-88; M.T.B. v. Turkey, Case 47081/06 (ECtHR), Judgment 12 June 2018 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:0612JUD004708106], para 48-64; Dilipak and Karakaya v. Turkey (n 107) para 80; Aždajić v. Slovenia (n 111) para 53, 71; Gyuleva v. Bulgaria, Case 38840/08 (ECtHR), Judgment 9 June 2016 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2016:0609JUD003884008], para 34-48; Gakharia v. Georgia, Case 30459/13 (ECtHR), Judgment 17 January 2017 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2017:0117JUD003045913] para 35, 49-50; Schmidt v. Latvia (n 108) para 95.
[189] For an extensive comparative analysis of default judgments and payment orders, see another chapter of this collection by F Pantoja and V Richard ‘Default procedures and payment order procedures’ (pt XI ch 2).
[190] Hess and others (n 128) para 410, Civil Procedure Act 1998 (Latvia), Art 208.3.
[191] Service Regulation (EU), Art 22 (2).
[192] V Richard, ‘La Refonte Du Règlement Sur La Notification Des Actes Judiciaires et Extrajudiciaires’ (2021) 2 Revue critique de droit international privé 349, 360.
[193] Service Regulation (EU), Art 22 (4).
[194] Inchausti (n 106) 517.
[195] For more information see: Pantoja and Richard (n 191) para 98-101.
[196] EOP Regulation (EU), Art 16 (2) (3).
[197] Uniform act on the simplified recovery of debts 1998 (OHADA), Art 10.
[198] EOP Regulation (EU), Art 20.
[199] Inchausti (n 47) 444.