1 Introduction
- This chapter examines how a jurisdiction allocates cases based on
case type and amount-in-controversy and the rights protected/threatened by such jurisdictional rules.
The chapter will compare the different criteria across the globe in allocating cases according to the
case type and financial aspect of the case. These allocation criteria could be called ‘objective
criteria’ because they are related to the claim formulated in the process.
- However, in some legal systems, the assignment of jurisdiction by
reason of the subject matter is determined not by the nature of the litigation, but by the particulars
subjective conditions of one of the parties to the proceeding; for example, the mere fact of filing a
lawsuit against a public entity determines that the knowledge of such proceeding is assigned to a
certain judge with a certain specialization. The same would occur if one of the parties is a child or an
indigenous person, for example. In these cases, the assignment of jurisdiction by reason of the subject
matter is determined according to the particularities of the subject matter.
- The objective criteria may be related to qualitative or quantitative
aspects. The qualitative aspects must be related to the legal basis of the claim, and the quantitative
aspects must be related to the economic value of the claim.[2]
- This chapter will identify the common rules that best protect the
rights of the parties.
2 The Objective
Criterion as a Basis for Establishing the Jurisdictional Organization of a State
- The objective criterion for determining jurisdiction, particularly
the nature of the matter (subject matter) is of great importance in the way in which the exercise of
power is structured within a State. From this perspective, this criterion of allocation of jurisdiction
has an undeniable relationship with the model of State established in the Constitution, which in turn,
starts from considering the way in which each State decides to implement the principle of separation of
powers.
- It is therefore particularly complex to study at the
comparative level the objective criterion for determining jurisdictional competence without taking into
consideration the way in which the State, in general, and its justice system are structured. In this
regard, it should be borne in mind that: ‘the judicial organization of a country and the
distribution of competencies among its various organs can only be truly understood as a product, not
always logical or coherent, of the history of that country’.[3]
- These historical incidences are reflected in the constitutions of
the various states, which reflect the consensus reached by each state on how the exercise of power
should be distributed and controlled. For this purpose, the subject matter or the nature of the various
matters is usually taken as the basis for determining the organization of the State and the exercise of
jurisdiction.
- Thus, for example, the decision in certain States as to whether or
not to have a Constitutional Court involves defining what is considered constitutional in order to allocate powers between the Court
and the ordinary judiciary. However, this decision is not uniform in all States either. Indeed, in
Germany[4] and
Peru[5], for example,
the Constitutional Court has jurisdiction, essentially, for the abstract control of the
constitutionality of laws, the incidental or concrete control of constitutionality, the control of
competences between different state organs and the protection of fundamental rights. In Italy, on the
other hand,[6] the Constitutional Court has jurisdiction for the abstract control of the
constitutionality of laws and conflicts of powers.
- The assignment of certain matters to the constitutional courts, in
the States where they exist, will have a direct implication on those matters that remain to be assigned
to the various organs of the judiciary. In some cases, the nature of the matter serves to assign
exclusive jurisdiction to an autonomous jurisdiction over that matter; and in other cases, shared
jurisdiction is assigned, allocating to one autonomous jurisdiction the review of what the other has
decided. This depends on the way in which each State understands the division of jurisdictional power
and the control of its exercise.
- On the other hand, the decision to have an autonomous
body distinct from the judiciary to resolve administrative disputes also requires defining what is
considered ‘administrative’, in order to assign competences between the two bodies. Thus,
if, as is the case in France, the ‘administrative jurisdiction’ is assigned to those
disputes of public law between an administrative body and a public entity,[7] these matters are excluded from the
jurisdiction of the judiciary. Therefore, of the matters that remain to be distributed, those that by
mandate of the Constitution are assigned to this special jurisdiction will be excluded.
- Even within these systems, more specific distinctions can be made.
In the case of England, for example, which has an Administrative Court, certain matters are identified
whose jurisdiction is assigned to another court: Upper Tribunal Immigration and Asylum Chamber, for all
matters relating to immigration.[8]
- Thus, if we wish to compare the assignment of jurisdiction between
States that have an autonomous administrative jurisdiction (because the Constitution so provides, as in
the case of France or Colombia) with States that, in accordance with the organizational design of the
State (as in the case of Spain or Peru), do not have a special administrative jurisdiction, it is
necessary to consider that the starting point for the assignment of judicial jurisdiction is absolutely
different in one or the other State model.
- Normally, the assignment of jurisdiction to the special courts is
determined based on an exhaustive list of matters, while the jurisdiction of the ordinary judiciary is
rather residual, ie, it has jurisdiction over everything that has not been assigned to the special
courts.
- Another difficulty is to consider whether we are dealing with
federal or unitary states. This is because the judicial system of a federal state considers the
objective criterion as the basis for assigning federal or state jurisdiction to the courts. Thus, when
approaching the study of the rules for the allocation of subject-matter jurisdiction at the comparative
level, the form of political organization of the State must also be taken into consideration.
- In the case of Brazil, for example, military,
electoral and labour matters fall under federal jurisdiction.[9] In these cases, a residual rule is usually
established according to which, unless there is a provision that expressly assigns subject-matter
jurisdiction to federal courts, the jurisdiction is state jurisdiction.[10] This is also the case in Canada,
which provides that most state courts have general jurisdiction, while federal courts have rather
limited jurisdiction.[11]
- In Canada, a distinction must also be made for historical reasons
between ‘limited jurisdiction’ and ‘inherent jurisdiction’. Courts of
‘inherent jurisdiction’ are those, such as the Ontario court, that have existed since
British rule, so that their jurisdiction extends to everything that is not excluded by law. Limited
jurisdiction courts, on the other hand, are created by law, so that the matters for which they have
jurisdiction are expressly assigned by law.[12]
- The situation becomes particularly complex if we must review the
combination of the various power-sharing criteria outlined above. That is, it may happen that some
federal States decide to have autonomous jurisdictions, such as a constitutional court or an
administrative jurisdiction. In such cases, the analysis of subject-matter jurisdiction needs to be much
more exhaustive, in order to determine which matter can be heard by a particular court. An example of
this is Germany, which, being a federal state, also has a constitutional court.
- Finally, there is a close link between subject-matter jurisdiction
and the way in which each State decides to organize its own judiciary. This is of utmost relevance for
understanding the system of regulation of subject-matter jurisdiction in the various systems since it is
common for many provisions on subject-matter jurisdiction to be found in constitutional norms. The most
paradigmatic case is that of Brazil,[13] which has a series of provisions on the
assignment of subject-matter jurisdiction in its Constitution, which means that such provisions are
rather scarce in its Code of Civil Procedure.
- Another example is Germany, whose Constitution organizes the Federal
Court through different chambers, divided according to subject matter: the Federal Court of Justice, the
Federal Administrative Court, the Federal Court of Finance, the Federal Labor Court and the Federal
Social Court, and the Federal Patent Court.
- A particular situation is that of the Russian Federation. Its Code
of Civil Procedure[14] is the norm that establishes a series of jurisdictional rules of the Supreme Court of
the Republic, regarding the control of acts of other public bodies, including jurisdictional ones. For
example, the questioning of non-normative acts of the President or the Congress of the Federation; the
questioning of normative acts that affect the rights and freedoms of citizens, the questioning of acts
that seek the suspension of the activities of political parties. As can be seen, these are norms that,
due to the magnitude of the powers assigned, could be constitutional norms, but are contained in the
civil procedural code.
3 The Case Type or
‘Nature of the Case’
- The determination of a judge's venue according to the nature of
the case is a political choice that takes into consideration two aspects: the way in which the judiciary
is organized in a State and the suitability of the judges to resolve a case.
- The assumption is that anyone who has been appointed as a judge is
able to provide legal justification for the decisions he or she makes in a case. However, the division
of competence according to the nature of the case implies admitting that not all judges are able to
legally justify their decisions on all cases with suitability. Therefore, it is necessary that the cases
are assigned to those who are in the best conditions to do so, according to their specialization. To
achieve this, the judiciary must organize the work of judges according to the criterion of
specialization.
- There are legal systems in which judges are assigned a general
competence and exceptionally specialized competence is assigned to some judges. For example, in the
United States, courts are largely generalist courts without subject-matter specializations.[15] However,
subject-specific courts are widespread, especially in state judicial systems, which often include family
courts and other specialized courts. Specialization exists at the federal level as well: bankruptcy
courts, tax courts, and the Federal Circuit are prime examples.[16]
- There are other legal systems in which the starting point is the
specialization of the judges, whereby the case is assigned based on such specialization, with a
subsidiary general rule of assignment of competence that applies when it is not possible to assign the
specific case to a judge.
3.1 How Is the
‘Nature of the Case’ Criterion Determined?
- This criterion according to which jurisdiction is assigned is
established in two different ways: (i) by making a generic reference to a specific legal discipline, for
example, by indicating that matters of ‘family law’, ‘civil law’,
‘minors’, or ‘electoral law’; or, (ii) by making a reference to the remedies or
generic reference to the claims that may be brought before a specific court.
- There are other formulas that can be used to assign jurisdiction
through the criterion under study: referring to a law or set of laws, to chapters or books of certain
laws (eg, contracts, obligations), or the designation of a legal institution (rights in rem, patents),
or to claims relating to a subject or set of subjects, or a combination of all the above criteria. In
any case, it is a matter of taking into consideration what is being discussed (the remedy or the claim)
and its relation to an area of the legal system.
- If the rule has assigned jurisdiction by describing the remedy or
claim to be raised, the determination of jurisdiction involves establishing whether there is a
correspondence between the claim, or claims raised in the process and the one used as a description of
the assumption of assignment of the legal rule. If, on the other hand, the rule has assigned
jurisdiction by making a generic reference to the legal discipline assigned to a judge, it will be
necessary to carry out an interpretation task in order to establish whether the claim falls within said
legal discipline, verifying, in addition, that there is no special rule that excludes the judge who, in
general, is assigned the jurisdiction to hear the general discipline from hearing said claim.
- If we are facing several claims, the analysis must be made with
respect to each one specifically and see if the jurisdiction corresponds or not to the same judge. If it
corresponds to the same judge, there is no problem. On the other hand, if it does not correspond to the
same judge, the question arises as to whether it is possible to join them or not. In some legal
systems,[17] it
is established as a requirement to join claims that they fall under the jurisdiction of the same judge,
in which case each claim must be brought in a separate proceeding under the judge that is competent for
each of them. In other legal systems, the rule is established according to which one of the two judges
would have jurisdiction to hear the two claims, normally the higher order judge, as in the case of
Peru[18] and
Russia[19].
- Thus, the problem of jointly raising claims that fall under the
subject-matter jurisdiction of different judges leads legal systems to choose between two possible
solutions: either to prefer the specialization of the judge and, therefore, the assignment of
subject-matter jurisdiction; or rather, to prefer the joint solution of the conflict, which leads to the
application of one of the rules that assigns jurisdiction to one of the judges. Most legal systems opt
for this second option.
- The latter solution is even favoured in some federal States, where
the preference for joint resolution of disputes results in the assignment of jurisdiction to either a
federal or a state court. A good example of this is what happens in Australia:
- Both state and federal courts can exercise an ‘accrued
jurisdiction’, which enables them to hear all legal issues arising from a single set of facts.
This enables all courts to deal with virtually all issues arising from the facts of a case, provided
that the particular court has jurisdiction to hear the principal cause of action.[20]
- The idea then of ‘accrued jurisdiction’ is to explain
the cases in which, because the jurisdiction corresponds to different judges, according to the nature of
the claim, to hear different claims that can be accumulated in the same process, it is preferred that
the same judge assumes the jurisdiction to hear the claim for which, in principle, he would not have
jurisdiction.
4 The Criteria to
Establish the Nature of the Case and Judge's Specialization
- The ‘nature of the case’ is defined by
the legal justification of the claim and the way in which the legal justification is related with legal
system. Likewise, this criterion is because one of the criteria of the judicial organization of a State
is the specialization of the judges. This relationship between case type and specialization is
recognized expressly in some country's legislation, like Costa Rica[21] and France[22].
- In this way, since there are several judges, and
organized according to their specialization, it is up to determine to which judge should be attributed
the case in attention to the legal justification of the claim. In this way, if there were not this
division of judges based on their specialization, the problem of determining to which judge a case
should be assigned would not arise.[23]
- Thus, it is necessary to know how each country regulates the
specialization of judges to determine the criteria based on which cases will be distributed. The
regulation of the various legislations in this matter is highly varied since it depends on several
factors. First, on the constitutional allocations of judicial authority; second, the mode of
organization of the judiciary; and third, the recurrence of certain types of cases in certain
localities, which justifies assigning such cases to specialized judges.
4.1 The Criteria to
Establish the Venue According to the Nature of the Case and Subsidiary Rule
- The determination of jurisdiction by reason of the subject matter
presents us with the problem of classifying the different controversies that may arise in legal
specialties that, in turn, correspond to the way in which the Court System of a given State is
organized. The downside of this way of determining jurisdiction is that certain matters are not easy to
classify or that for other matters there is no jurisdictional body to which jurisdiction has been
precisely attributed. The risk is that this lack of definition or difficulty in defining a matter in
accordance with the specialties established for the jurisdictional organs of a State may make access to
justice impossible. That is why the various legal systems address this risk by establishing a subsidiary
rule that assigns jurisdiction to a particular court in the absence of a special provision assigning
jurisdiction to another. This technique ensures access to justice for the parties.
- In some legal systems, the rule is that if there is not a law that
establishes which judge is competent it is the civil judge. It happens in Costa Rica[24], France[25], Peru[26], Spain[27]. In other jurisdictions,
residual jurisdiction is assigned to other jurisdictional bodies, such as the district courts in the
case of Russia.[28]
- A formula to be highlighted is the one used in the English Code of
Civil Procedure, which states that ‘Judges, Masters and District Judges may exercise any function
of the court except where an enactment, rule or practice direction provides otherwise’,[29] from which it is
inferred that the courts have jurisdiction to hear the proposed matter, unless a law has expressly
excluded it. This is a different way of stating the residual rule, which guarantees that the citizen has
a judge to turn to.
4.2 The Relations
Between the Nature of the Case and Access to Justice
- Unlike what might happen with other criteria for determining
jurisdiction, subject-matter jurisdiction may not appear to be directly related to access to justice. As
it has been pointed out throughout this chapter, the attribution of subject-matter jurisdiction responds
to the Court System’s organization, or to the way in which the exercise of power is divided in
each State.
- Undeniably, as has been argued throughout this chapter, that the
assignment of subject-matter jurisdiction is directly related to the way in which the judiciary or the
State is organized. However, this in no way means that it is unrelated to the right of access to
justice.
- Precisely, the way in which the competencies of the jurisdictional
organs of a State are organized and the specialization of the jurisdictional organs may be based on the
assurance of certain constitutional principles, such as the independence of the jurisdictional organs,
the suitability of the judges who resolve the processes, as well as efficiency criteria that favour
access to justice.
4.3 The Consequences
of Filing a Lawsuit Before a Judge Who Lacks Subject Matter Jurisdiction
- The general rule is that the judge may ex officio determine his own
lack of jurisdiction. This is what happens in Germany[30], Brazil[31], Spain[32], Italy[33], Japan[34], Peru[35] and Russia[36]. What varies in each State is the
consequence of this declaration of the judge. In some countries the declaration of incompetence
determines the conclusion of the process; while in other jurisdictions, the declaration of lack of
jurisdiction by the matter of the case leads to the referral to the incompetent judge.
- The latter offers two possibilities: The first is that the judge to
whom the case is referred to may reject the case, disagreeing with the decision of the first judge, as
is the case in Brazil[37] and Peru[38] . The second possibility is that the judge to whom the case comes is obliged to abide
by the decision of the first judge even if he does not agree with it, as is the case in
Germany[39],
Russia[40] and
Japan[41]. Moreover,
the Code of Civil Procedure of the Russian Federation has a very emphatic provision in the sense that
cases related to the jurisdiction of the courts of the Federation are inadmissible.
5 The Economic Aspect
of the Claim
5.1 The Criteria to
Establish the Venue According to the Financial Aspect of the Case
- The other component of the objective aspect of determining
jurisdiction is the amount of the claim or the economic value of the matter in dispute. In this case the
assignment of jurisdiction to a court is established by considering the economic value of the subject
matter of the dispute.
- Unlike the other jurisdiction allocation criteria, there is
criticism that the economic value of what is discussed is a criterion for jurisdiction allocation. I
think it all depends on the perspective from which it is viewed. If the criterion of determining the
amount is used to assign jurisdiction to a judge or a proceeding that does not offer the same guarantee
as judges and proceedings in which claims for larger amounts are raised, I can even share the criticism.
If, on the other hand, the distinction implies access to a judge that offers the same guarantees and may
even be easier to access and to a process that meets the needs of protection of rights whose value is
economically low, the criterion not only finds constitutional justification, but is even presented as
necessary for effective judicial protection.
- This criterion is established considering the economic value of the
object of the claim. This economic value is established considering if the object of the claim is an
amount of money or not. If it does not have an amount of money as its object, it is necessary to
establish the mechanisms for valuing the claim.[42]
5.1.1 Allocation for
Cases of Determinate Value
- When the object of the claim is expressed in an amount of money,
there are two ways to determine the venue: (i) with an amount of money indicated in the law[43] or (ii) with a
reference criterion from which the value is determined.[44]
- How to determine the value of the claim? There is a general rule
that stablishes that the value of the claim is determinate based on what was declared by the
plaintiff.[45]
- In the case where more than one claim is formulated
within the same complaint, the amount is determined according to the value of the sum of all the
claim,[46] provided that they have been formulated in such a way that the success of one does not
affect the success of the other. The French Code of Civil Procedure[47] makes an important distinction
on this point, since it allows the accumulation of claims even if they are not related to each other if
they are directed against the same defendant. Therefore, it states that if the claims are not related,
jurisdiction is determined according to the individual value of each claim. On the other hand, if the
claims are related, the amount is determined by adding the value of all of them.
- However, if the claims have been formulated in such a way that one
of them depends on what is decided on the other (in the case, for example, of accessory, alternative or
conditional claims), the generalized solution seems to be rather that:
- If, due to the relationship between the proposed claims, it is not
possible to accept both claims, the determination of jurisdiction is made taking into consideration one
of them, for example in the case of alternative claims.[48] In the Peruvian case it is established that the
claim to be considered is the one with the highest value.[49]
- However, if the relationship between the proposed claims is such
that it is possible that the two or more proposed claims may be accepted, jurisdiction is determined by
the value resulting from the sum of all of them.[50]
5.1.2 Allocation for
Cases of Indeterminate Value
- We are faced with cases of undetermined value, when the claim,
having a clear economic content, does not have the precision of the economic amount demanded, but it is
determinable; and, in those cases in which, due to the nature of the claim, it is not possible to
establish an economic value.
- In cases where the economic value is not determined, but is
determinable during the proceeding, in some jurisdictions,[51] there is a rule according to which it is
understood that the judge before whom the claim was filed has the jurisdiction to hear the claim. This
is because it is understood that the value of what he will decide is within the range of his
jurisdiction. In other jurisdictions, such as the Japanese one, it is established that ‘if it is
impossible or extremely difficult to calculate the value’,[52] the controversy is of a higher amount and
therefore it is assigned to the judge who would be competent to hear such matters.
- A particular case arises when the dispute concerns movable or
immovable property. In cases where movable property is in dispute, the amount is relevant to determine
jurisdiction and is established according to what is declared by the plaintiff. In cases involving real
property, some jurisdictions assign jurisdiction to a specific judge, without the value of the property
being relevant, in other cases the value is determined with reference to rates that serve as the basis
for taxes,[53] and in other cases the market value at the date of filing of the lawsuit.[54]
- In cases where the economic value is indeterminable, legal systems
usually provide a residual rule according to which, in such cases, jurisdiction is assigned to the court
of general jurisdiction. This is the case, for example, in Italy.[55]
5.2 The Critics of
Allocation Based on the Financial Aspect to the Case
- Why the financial aspect to the case is a criterion to establish
venue? Behind this criterion, there is no assessment of the importance of the case, but rather a reason
of efficiency. Consequently, there must be a proportion between the economic value of the case and the
expenditure of energy to resolve it.[56]
- However, several criticisms have been expressed on the
reasonableness of establishing the amount as a criterion for assigning jurisdiction. One of them is
that, unlike the criterion of the subject matter, which can indeed serve as a basis for determining the
suitability of the court, the amount does not seem to be an adequate basis for determining which judge
should hear a case.[57] Added to this is the fact that, as already explained, in many jurisdictions the
criterion of the subject matter is preponderant over the criterion of the amount.
5.3 The Agreement on
Jurisdiction by Reason of the Amount
- Most legal systems establish that it is not possible to agree on
jurisdiction by reason of the amount. However, in the case of Brazil, for example, Article 63 of the
Code of Civil Procedure expressly establishes that the parties may modify jurisdiction by reason of
value.
6 The Relationship
Between Nature of the Case and Economic Criteria
- These two criteria are different from each other, but they operate
in a coordinate way. In fact, the economic aspect of the case operates when there are not rules about
the nature of the case criterion. When there is nature of the case criteria rules, these rules prevail
over those of the economic criteria.[58] This is what happens for example in
Italy[59]. Along the
same lines, for example, the determination of jurisdiction to hear claims relating to the civil
liability of judges does not take into consideration the amount of the claim in Germany[60] and in Peru[61], following the rule
according to which the rules of jurisdiction by reason of the subject matter prevail over the rules of
jurisdiction by reason of the amount.
- Some of the rules that regulate the nature of the case criteria, can
then establish a subsequent distribution based on the value and vice versa.[62]
Abbreviations and Acronyms
ACHPR
|
African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights
|
ALI
|
American Law Institute
|
Art
|
Article/Articles
|
BGH
|
Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of
Justice) [Germany]
|
BID
|
Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo (Inter-American Development Bank)
|
CCP-Costa
|
Code of Civil Procedure (Costa Rica)
|
CEPEJ
|
Conseil de l'Europe Commission européenne pour
l’efficacité de la justice (Council of Europe
European Commission for the efficiency of justice)
|
cf
|
confer (compare)
|
ch
|
chapter
|
CIDH
|
Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos (Interamerican Court of Human Rights)
|
CJEU
|
Court of Justice of the European Union
|
EBRD
|
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
|
ECLI
|
European Case Law Identifier
|
ECtHR
|
European Court of Human Rights
|
ed
|
editor/editors
|
edn
|
edition/editions
|
eg
|
exempli gratia (for example)
|
ELI
|
European Law Institute
|
etc
|
et cetera
|
EU
|
European Union
|
EUR
|
Euro
|
ff
|
following
|
fn
|
footnote (external, ie, in other chapters or in citations)
|
FRCCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure (France)
|
GCCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure (Germany)
|
GDPR
|
General Data Protection Regulation (EU)
|
ibid
|
ibidem (in the same place)
|
ICPR
|
Civil Procedure Regulations (Israel)
|
ICT
|
Information and Communication Technologies
|
ie
|
id est (that is)
|
IIDP
|
Instituto Iberoamericano de Derecho Procesal (Iberoamerican Institute of Procedural Law)
|
JCCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure (Japan)
|
JPY
|
Japanese Yen
|
n
|
footnote (internal, ie, within the same chapter)
|
no
|
number/numbers
|
para
|
paragraph/paragraphs
|
PCCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure (Peru)
|
PD
|
Practice Direction
|
pt
|
part
|
RCCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure (Russia)
|
RSC Order
|
Rules of the Supreme Court (UK)
|
SCC
|
Supreme Court Canada
|
SCCP
|
Civil Procedure Act (Spain)
|
Sec
|
Section/Sections
|
supp
|
supplement/supplements
|
trans/tr
|
translated, translation/translator
|
UK
|
United Kingdom
|
UKCPR
|
Civil Procedure Rules (UK)
|
UNIDROIT
|
Institut international pour l'unification du droit
privé (International Institute for the Unification of
Private Law)
|
US / USA
|
United States of America
|
USD
|
United States Dollar
|
v
|
versus
|
vol
|
volume/volumes
|
Legislation
Basic Laws and Constitutions
Code of Civil Procedure of Costa Rica
French Code of Civil Procedure
Italian Constitution.
Japanese Code of Civil Procedure
Peruvian Code of Civil Procedure
Peruvian Constitution of 1993.
Russian Code of Civil Procedure
Spanish Civil Procedure Law
Governmental sources
Courts and Tribunals Judiciary (UK), Overview of the Administrative Court,
https://www.judiciary.uk/courts-and-tribunals/high-court/administrative-court/overview-of-the-administrative-court/, accessed on 15.05.2024.
Ministry of Justice (UK), Practice Direction 2B – Allocation of Cases to Levels
of Judiciary, https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/procedure-rules/civil/rules/part02/pd_part02b#I, accessed on 15.05.2024.
Superior Court of Justice (Canada), Jurisdiction of the Court, https://www.ontariocourts.ca/scj/about/jurisdiction/, accessed on 15.05.2024.
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[1] Principal professor at Pontificia
Universidad Católica del Perú.
[2] M Ortells Ramos, Derecho procesal civil (16th edn, Aranzadi 2017) 181.
[3] R Beneduzi, Introducción al proceso civil alemán (Zela 2020)
55.
[4] R Beneduzi (n 3) 57 - 58.
[5] Article 202 of the Peruvian
Constitution of 1993.
[6] Article 134 of the Italian
Constitution.
[7] R Perrot, Institutions judiciaires (Montchrestien 1989) 203.
[9] F Didier, Curso di direito processual civil (Podium 2015) 198.
[13] C Zufelato, Comentários ao Código de Processo Civil (Saravia
2017) vol IV, 128.
[14] Article 26 of the Code of Civil
Procedure (Russia) (RCCP).
[16] S Dodson, ‘Accountability and Transparency in U.S. Courts’ in Accountability and Transparency in
Civil Justice (Thomson Reuters 2019) Sec 2.1.
[17] As is the case in Peru, which
establishes this as a general rule in Article 85 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Peru) (PCCP).
[20] A
Marinac, C Hart, R Chisholm, J Nielsen, A Wood, E Evans and S McKibbin, Learning Law (Cambridge University Press 2021) 81.
[21] Article 8.1 of Code of Civil
Procedure (Costa Rica) (CCP-Costa); S Artavia and C Picardo, Curso del proceso
civil (2nd edn, Editorial Jurídica Faro 2018) vol 1, 145.
[22] Article 34 of the Code of Civil
Procedure (France) (FRCCP).
[23] C Mandrioli, Diritto processuale civile (Giappicheli 2009) vol I, 248.
[24] S Artavia and C Picardo (n 21)
145.
[27] Article 45 of the Civil Procedure
Law (Spain) (SCCP).
[30] R Beneduzi (n 3) 71.
[33] E Merlin, Elementi di diritto processuale civile (Pacini Giuridica 2021)
149.
[34] Article 16 of the Code of Civil
Procedure (Japan) (JCCP).
[39] R Beneduzi (n 3) 71.
[41] Article 22 JCCP. This Code
specifies that this occurs if the decision is final.
[42] C Mandrioli (n 23) 252.
[43] Like Italy. See E Merlin,
Elementi di diritto processuale civile, (Pacini Giuridica
2021) 143. The same is true in Japan (see Articles 26 and 33 JCCP) and in Russia (Article 23
RCCP).
[45] Italy (C Mandrioli (n 23) 257);
Peru (Article 10 PCCP), Japan (Article 8 JCCP), Russia (Article 91.1 RCCP).
[46] As in the case of Italy: F Luiso,
Diritto processuale civile (Giappicheli 2011) vol I, 95.
The same occurs in Peru (Article 11 PCCP) and in Japan (Article 9 JCCP).
[48] This is the case in Italy, for
example F Luiso (n 46) 97.
[50] This is the case in Italy, for
example F Luiso (n 46) 90. This is also the case in Peru (Article 11PCCP).
[53] This is the case of Italy: F
Luiso (n 46) 90.
[54] This is the case in Peru, as the
first rule for determining jurisdiction by reason of the amount in respect of immovable property
(Article 12 PCCP) and Russia (Article 91 RCCP).
[56] C Mandrioli (n 23) 252.
[58] C Mandrioli (n 23) 253.
[60] R Beneduzi (n 3) 62.
[61] Articles 509 and following of
PCCP.
[62] C Mandrioli (n 23) 253.