- The Covid-19 pandemic has triggered a broadening of remote or
virtual hearings. Before the public health crisis, one could speak less about remote hearings being
conducted in standard civil cases than occasional remote examinations of witnesses, which were allowed
as a last-resort alternative in exceptional circumstances. As the crisis lengthened, the prospect of an
indefinite adjournment of civil proceedings prompted the courts and the legal communities at large to
take reasonable steps to facilitate and allow for the conduct of remote hearings, as a whole. This
phenomenon triggered a big momentum for a transition towards a new shape of justice, to be completely
delivered online.
- Indeed, the use of IT in court proceedings has been thus far mainly
limited to specific moments or activities: service of documents, filing of submissions, hearing experts
or witnesses online, creating electronic files and accessing them at any moment by the parties are good
examples of this piecemeal approach to digitization of justice.
- But this approach assumed the structure of a (civil) procedure
designed to be managed face to face and by courts located in brick and mortar buildings, which can be
physically visited and where the key part of any process, the trial, should be carried out as the place
and time where the parties meet before the judge/s to formulate their pleadings and take evidence, that
is, as a way of providing the court with the elements on which it will, in turn, have to make its
decision.
- The advent of virtual trials has been completely disruptive, as it
has served to prove how it is possible that the core of proceedings can be fully developed remotely,
without the need for the parties and the court to meet face to face and in the same place. Their
generalization has prompted discussion and concern in regard to specific aspects of their content
– ie, what is done in a virtual manner, especially in regard to the credibility of witnesses or
the quality of judicial immediacy, which could in turn infringe the right to a fair trial. There is a
fear that virtual hearings may have a negative impact on the adequate reconstruction of the facts, that
ensures that quality decisions continue to be handed down. These concerns are of paramount importance
and must be addressed. But we should be even more concerned about the implications of breaking the taboo
of the face-to-face oral trial as a key element of a good administration of justice, of a well-designed
process.
Indeed, once this ‘dam of containment’ has been broken, the way is paved towards
a total dematerialization of proceedings through their complete digitalization. This is the challenge
facing judicial systems for the future. Talking about online courts does not only mean a change in the
way court proceedings are handled; moreover, it has the potential to bring about major changes in the
way justice and the role of the courts are conceived. The very recent emergence of (generative)
artificial intelligence, with increasingly developed applications in the legal field, is contributing to
this, forcing a reconsideration of the role of lawyers, but also of the way in which judicial decisions
are to be reached.
- This chapter is therefore divided into two parts. The first part
analyses the first of the steps described above, ie, the generalization of remote hearings, as a
transition point towards online justice. At this stage, it is possible to make a diagnosis of the
situation and, above all, an analysis of the main challenges posed by virtual trials. In the second
part, the analysis will focus on online courts, understood as those capable of developing entirely
dematerialized proceedings. This is a constantly evolving subject, where projects and initiatives are
continuously emerging. There is no doubt, therefore, that between the time these lines are written and
the time they are read, changes and improvements will have continued to take place. The purpose,
therefore, will focus above all on raising the structural challenges, especially in terms of rights and
safeguards, that this new way of conceiving justice will entail.
Part I
Remote Hearings: The Transition towards a New Shape of
Civil Justice
1 When (Health) Need Meets (Budgetary)
Convenience
- The option for virtual or remote hearings was one of
the most visible measures taken in many countries to react to the COVID-19 health emergency and fostered
a tendency to generalize the digital format for the development of oral proceedings in many national
legal systems.[1] By doing so, it also put back on the table the ‘classical’ debate about the
weight of orality in civil proceedings and, with it, about the meaning of immediacy.
- Indeed, from a rather ‘resilient’ approach, it is often
said that the crisis caused by the pandemic is providing an opportunity to improve Justice, which must
come hand in hand with new technologies, which in turn have become a lifeline in times of restrictions
on mobility and on the gathering of people.[2] The pandemic – it is often said – may
end up serving to promote a digital transformation of the administration of justice which, without the
revulsive of the health crisis, would perhaps still be perceived as a mere wish difficult to
achieve.[3]
- Remote hearings, which have become commonplace in the last four
years,[4] are the
most recognizable part of this transformation and the proof that a sort of ‘new modernity’
is trying to make its way into civil justice. It should not be forgotten, in this regard, that when the
pandemic broke out, civil justice systems in much of the world were immersed in a crisis of identity
and, above all, of efficiency: they were faced with the need to ensure access to justice for large
numbers of cases, but with limited resources and higher quality requirements.
- On the other hand, a good part of the national civil
procedural systems give special value to orality and, with it, to immediacy;[5] and they do so because both are
perceived as tools to place the judge – singularly, the first instance judge – in the best
conditions to give the best possible judgment.[6]
- Civil proceedings are now in crisis; probably they have always been
in crisis – it may be unavoidable, due to their social and political function. The landmark of the
current situation is efficiency: how shall the state manage to provide for dispute resolution in times
of increased needs to access and reduced budgetary availability? In this context, it is common to hear
that orality – at least in its most traditional sense – and efficiency do not necessarily go
hand in hand.[7] The paradigm in this regard seems to be changing: proposals that advocate the
construction of comprehensive systems for the resolution of private disputes based on the notions of
efficiency and proportionality have been predominant for some time now. States must design − and
economically sustain − systems that allow the settlement of disputes seeking a balance between
cost, duration and quality, resolving the tensions between these variables with criteria of
proportionality − to the detriment, if appropriate, of orality and with an almost blind trust in
the digital revolution as a tool to obtain the ‘squaring of the circle’.
- The greater and more effective incorporation of information and
communication technologies into judicial activity is a recurring mantra that cannot be rejected as such,
since it is the result of an obvious observation: certain technological tools significantly improve the
efficiency of the management of complex procedures and activities of all kinds. And, of course, this is
an issue that has been of concern to legislators and public sector managers for quite some time
now.[8] But it is
also important to determine its limits, especially from the perspective of basic procedural safeguards.
The transition from ‘traditional orality’ to ‘digital orality’ can be a good
sample to see how far we are willing to go for the sake of efficiency.
2 The Explosion of Virtual Hearings for Emergency
Health Needs
- When the COVID-19 pandemic broke out, the first
reactions were drastic: in line with the general objective of curbing contagion through strict lockdown,
legislators and national governments suspended and interrupted procedural deadlines – except for
certain cases – with the consequent de facto paralyzation of judicial activity:[9] scheduled hearings and
trials were postponed, without it being easy to determine the new date on which they would be held or
resumed; judicial buildings and offices were closed to the public; and a large number of court staff had
to remain at home, without being able to implement work-from-home tools quickly and easily.
- This paralysis, however, was not sustainable: jurisdictional
activity could not be put on hold, given its constitutional significance and its social function in
times of crisis; from a more pragmatic point of view, neither could the congestion it caused be
tolerated. In a rather ‘artisanal’ way, most courts tried to gradually recover their
activity, on many occasions based on good will and procedural improvisation. In this context, certain
urgent procedural actions requiring oral proceedings began to be carried out by videoconference.
- This opened the way for the use of remote hearings as
an ‘emergency functional equivalent’, which made it possible to reconcile the need for an
operative administration of justice, the protection of health – individual and collective –
and respect for the oral form and immediacy, legally required for the development of certain procedural
acts. The notion of ‘remote presence’ also emerged, referring to participation in the
process through a videoconference platform that allows the simultaneous participation of all the
protagonists by means of an internet connection. This was a generalized trend in the comparative
panorama – from the beginning, in most developed countries and later in others which, trusting in
a shorter duration of the emergency situation, had opted at the beginning of the lockdown to convert
oral proceedings into written ones.[10]
- In a general panorama of health exceptionality, remote hearings
operated as the functional equivalent of many oral acts regulated by procedural legislations in a
‘traditional’/face-to-face manner. Remote hearings were resorted to for reasons of
necessity, as they were considered preferable to the paralysis or to the holding in writing of oral
proceedings − eg, replacing the oral testimony of a witness with written affidavits or statements,
or refraining from cross-examination of experts – and, thus, just reading their reports.
- Both in the toughest periods of lockdown and in more
relaxed moments, a very large number of civil procedural activity was carried out through these
channels, especially preliminary hearings or procedural management hearings, but also trials in simple
and/or repetitive cases. In fact, in a scenario of progressive de-escalation, ‘hybrid’
formats became equally common, with some subjects intervening remotely – some of the parties,
witnesses, experts – and others present with the court in the courtroom.[11]
- However, it is convenient to insist on this notion of functional
equivalence: it is a way of proceeding that produces similar effects to that which it replaces, but
which is not identical to it.
- It is also important to bear in mind that this pandemic recourse to
remote or virtual hearings had to be done hastily, in many cases through exceptional regulatory
solutions, which addressed in a fragmentary and unequal manner a series of particularly relevant
matters, such as (i) the technical availability, as a conditioning factor; (ii) the powers of the judge
and the parties regarding their use; or (iii) the existence of limits or red lines. Their possible
‘standardization’ in the future, however, cannot be done either on the same basis or in the
same terms.
3 Subsistence and Generalization of Virtual Hearings
after the Pandemic for Reasons of Efficiency: Remote Orality and Digital Immediacy
- As the health emergency situation continued, but also as it eased,
what was initially exceptional was normalized and the possibility of remote hearings becoming a regular
feature of judicial proceedings clearly emerged. This is a clear trend in most national civil procedural
systems.[12] In
fact, it is also the European Union’s approach. Before the pandemic, the possibility of
videoconferencing was already envisaged in some instruments of judicial cooperation, both civil and
criminal, but rather as an alternative, somewhat ‘exotic’ option.[13] The post-pandemic approach is
now much more determined and is evident in Regulation 2023/2844 on the digitalization of judicial
cooperation and access to justice in cross-border civil, commercial and criminal matters, which insists
on the standardization of the use of videoconferencing by parties who have to participate in legal
proceedings concerning them and to be held in other Member States.[14]
- It should be borne in mind, in this regard, that all oral acts
− and certainly the most substantial ones − are in the abstract susceptible of being held
remotely: in most cases, therefore, oral proceedings could be imagined, at least in the abstract, in a
face-to-face, virtual or hybrid format.
- In fact, many judges[15] and lawyers assess positively
the virtual format of oral acts during the years of the pandemic and afterwards, especially
preliminary and equivalent hearings, because it allows them to better manage their time: there are still
waits, but there is no feeling of ‘having wasted a morning’ when these waits are endured in
the office itself, working on other matters. The greatest reluctance is, of course, with respect to
procedural acts involving evidentiary activity.[16] It is perceived, although it is difficult to
verbalize the reasons, that oral proceedings in virtual format do not provide the same ‘added
value’ as face-to-face oral acts, especially when it is a question of acts on whose content the
making of relevant decisions for the parties depends.
- The conclusion is thus reached – or, perhaps,
it is just a mere intuition –[17] that the remote holding of a hearing may affect
essential procedural principles associated with the legal option for orality, particularly immediacy and
publicity. But it is also difficult to clearly establish the limits imposed by the need to abide to
these principles. A legislative commitment to generalizing and/or mainstreaming remote hearings −
including virtual trials and main hearings − should not be made without reflecting on these
issues. The use of adjectives to qualify substantives that have hitherto had a clear content is usually
an indication that a change has taken or is taking place to some extent. And this is what happens when,
instead of orality, we speak of ‘remote’ orality; or when, together with immediacy –
pure and simple –, ‘digital immediacy’ appears. Language is not innocent, and it is
therefore legitimate to ask to what extent the changes brought about by online trials (will) affect the
quality of justice and the rights of the parties involved. Even more so when virtual trials are being
the lever for the transition towards a completely digital justice system.
- When they came into use at the beginning of the pandemic, remote
hearings were intended to circumvent the restrictions to the mobility of citizens and legal
professionals during periods of lockdown and, in general, to avoid the concentration of people in closed
places for a prolonged period of time. They were therefore legitimized, at least primarily, on public
health grounds. Obviously, there were underlying reasons of effectiveness and efficiency: they were the
way to avoid a collapse of the administration of justice due to paralysis. The progressive overcoming of
the pandemic and the easing of restrictive measures brought a shift or reversal in the rationale for
remote hearings: the need to preserve health takes second place – and eventually vanishes –
while efficiency is enshrined as an element with sufficient virtuality to legitimize them in a
post-pandemic scenario − and speediness of proceedings should be included as one of the
ingredients of efficiency.
- In addition to efficiency, there is another relevant ground to
justify a generalization of virtual hearings: sustainability and the contribution to the fight against
climate change − ie, compliance with the 2030 agenda for sustainable development. When hearings
are held remotely participants do not have to travel to court and this – especially when trips
with private vehicles are avoided – may certainly lead to a reduction in CO2 emissions.[18]
- In any case, all of them are valid aims: preserving public health is
more than acceptable, but it is also legitimate in the abstract to sustain a procedural change on the
objective of promoting the efficiency of the administration of justice; it has been said before that
this has been, since the beginning of the millennium, the sign of the times in procedural matters. And
the same can be said, without the need for special justifications, with regard to the now added purpose
of contributing to the fight for sustainability and against climate change.[19]
- It is being the lawmaker’s task to establish the criteria or
valid reasons for choosing one or the other modality of holding an oral act. On that legal basis, of
course, the choice of one or the other will correspond in each specific case to the courts, whether the
general rule by default is the face-to-face celebration or the remote one. In times of pandemic, the
most frequent rule has been that the judge’s decision, not necessarily reasoned, could be
sufficient for the virtual format to be appropriate. But, of course, it is questionable whether it is
reasonable for things to be this way when the basis is no longer the protection of public health. For
the future, therefore, the challenge is to determine whether efficiency and sustainability justify a
recourse to remote hearings that is not subject to further limits. To this end, it is necessary to take
into account the other values with which ‘virtual’ orality may collide and which should be
weighed up, both by the lawmaker – at a general level – and by the court in each particular
case.
- It is indeed possible to conclude that remote trials may be
considered of lower quality: and a lower quality of the trial may lead to a lower quality of the
judicial decision − which is what really matters. From an efficiency perspective, however, one
could counter-argue that remote trials, at least for certain categories of litigation, are ‘the
most that the system can offer’ in terms of orality and ‘day-in-court’. In such a
case, one would have to recognize that they would not be of ‘inferior’ or
‘lower’ quality,[20] as there would be no better real alternative to compare them with. This can − and
often is − the reasoning behind proposals to generalize virtual trials, at least for repetitive
litigation of lower intensity. However, before drawing any further conclusions, it is useful to analyse
what are the drawbacks of virtual trials and what, if any, are the ways to correct them.
- The generalization of remote hearings that many jurisdictions are
currently experiencing tends to be justified on grounds of efficiency and, as just noted,
sustainability. Of course, these are not the only arguments for a court to agree, in a specific case, to
hold a virtual hearing or, at least, the remote participation of one of the parties or a person who must
intervene at the proceedings (a witness, an expert). Thus, in some systems, it is possible for persons
who are in prison or even abroad – but prefer not to travel – to participate in this way. In
this type of situation, the legal debate is different, as it is not a question of analysing in the
abstract the advantages and disadvantages of a system of justice based on physical or virtual presence,
but of promoting in the specific case the best option for the person concerned in the light of the
circumstances of the specific case.
- A good example of this is provided by the judgment of
the European Court of Human Rights in Jallow v Norway[21]. It was a case concerning
parental responsibility for a child living in Norway, lodged before Norwegian courts by the
child’s father, a Gambian national living in Gambia, after the mother’s death, and against
the child’s aunt. For reasons of immigration control, the father was not granted a visa to enter
Norway to attend the hearing and the Norwegian court eventually decided that he would participate via
Skype, his lawyer nevertheless being present in the courtroom; the other alternative would have been to
postpone the case for an indefinite period and with no solution in view – the immigration
authority refusal was final. Before the Strasbourg Court, Mr Jallow alleged that he had not had a fair
procedure, since he had not been allowed to appear in person, suffering a clear disadvantage
vis-à-vis the other party and, more generally, by the remote presence itself. From the outset, at
64, the ECtHR recalled its doctrine, according to which ‘the appearances by video-link are as such
not necessarily problematic, as long as this measure in any given case serves a legitimate aim and that
the arrangements are compatible with the requirement for due process’.[22] Assessing the specific
circumstances of the case at hand, the ECtHR considered that there might have been two relevant
obstacles, one regarding the assistance by a lawyer and the other linked to potential technical
difficulties during the videoconference. The Court came eventually to the conclusion that the presence
of the lawyer at the hearing, along with the possibility of the applicant to prepare the case in advance
with the lawyer, had been sufficient; as to the second, no real difficulties had impaired a reasonable
holding of the hearing.
- As can be seen, many of the elements to consider when assessing
whether in a particular case, remote intervention is an admissible functional equivalent are also
relevant when deciding on the generalization of virtual hearings, ie, without the need to take into
account the circumstances of each individual case. Technical difficulties and assistance by a lawyer,
explicitly stressed in Jallow v Norway, are proof of this; they are not, however, the only ones.
4 Technical Constraints, Digital Gap and Access to
Justice
- Technical constraints are among the most visible drawbacks of
virtual trials, from at least three different points of view: a properly functioning technology, duly
equipped courts, and digitally competent participants.
4.1 Properly Functioning Technology
- There is, of course, the more technical dimension of the phenomenon,
which requires a smooth functioning of the system to be really performing, ensuring proper
participation.[23] It is frequent to find criticism of the poor quality of videoconferencing systems as
such, which do not always allow an adequate viewing of the participants. For example, a camera sometimes
focuses statically on the table where the court sits from a distance that is insufficient to really see
the faces of the acting judges.
- On the other hand, unexpected system failures are more common than
desirable. Most readers will probably still have in mind, during the post-Covid-19 restrictions period,
the widespread news of the US-lawyer unable to remove a Zoom-filter and claiming not to be a cat in the
context of a remote hearing before the 394th District Court of Texas.[24] But, aside from
anecdotal situations, it is not unusual for the connection to be lost, for the sound quality to be poor,
for the image to freeze, for the meeting not to have been properly recorded (if it had to be). It is not
easy to say that, in these cases, the hearing is carried out ‘normally’, ie, with full
safeguards for the participants. In this vein, it is interesting to read the findings of the report
carried out in the United Kingdom during and shortly after the pandemic, describing many sorts of
technical issues during remote hearings.[25]
- In principle, as far as a pure technical dimension is concerned,
only improvements and progress can be expected. But failures should not be excluded, and procedural
rules should be introduced that specifically address the consequences of a technically defective conduct
of a virtual hearing – which may include, of course, the need to repeat it, retaking the
evidentiary examination, if necessary.
4.2 Duly Equipped Courts
- The widespread use of virtual hearings is subject to
the availability of the necessary technical means for the courts and the litigants. From the point of
view of the courts, the availability of the appropriate means is a condition in the strict sense of the
term, on which the real possibility of complying with what the legislator may have envisaged depends. In
India, for instance, the criticism was drawn that courts do not have the proper infrastructure to move
online, both on the hardware and the software side,[26] something that has been emphasized by the
Supreme Court.[27] But also more developed countries endure similar concerns: this was, indeed, part of
the discussion in Germany, triggered during the legislative process to approve the Act to Promote the
Use of Video Conferencing Technology in Civil and Specialist Jurisdictions.[28]
- During the pandemic, in fact, the use of remote
hearings, as the visible face of the ‘technological solution’ to the emergency, showed in
most countries to what extent sufficient progress had or had not been made in the digitization of
justice. After all, for this ‘functional emergency equivalent’ to be possible and useful, it
was necessary for the system as a whole to be already operational beforehand with digital schemes. In
this vein, countries like Norway, Finland, England or Australia reported a very fluid transition into
the digital format, thanks to the previous developments.[29] The experience in Denmark was apparently
paradoxical: previous digitization of justice allowed courts to work on an electronic basis almost
immediately, although this did not reach main hearings, which were postponed instead of being held
remotely.[30] Surprisingly, German courts did not experience a clear shift into the use of
ICTs.[31]
- Apart from the dynamics associated with the pandemic,
but still in relation to this aspect of the technological equipment of the courts, two different
approaches can be detected. On the one hand, there are those systems that are committed to incorporating
those technologies that are available at any time and place. An example is provided by the ELI/UNIDROIT
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure, the result of academic and practical efforts to reach a sort of
codification of civil procedure in Europe under a ‘best rule approach’, showing the
architecture of what could be considered fair and efficient proceedings.[32] Rule 18(4), under the heading of
‘Oral and Written Proceeding’ states as follows: ‘In so far as appropriate,
proceedings may be conducted using any available means of information and communication technology’ (emphasis added). As the
official comments to this rule underline, it is considered desirable that ICT means that already exist
should be made available to the courts, so that they can use them in the management of the
proceedings.[33] It is therefore an approach that creates a duty on governments to make available to the
courts the technological means available at any given time, depending on their evolution. Of course, the
Model Rules avoid making explicit financial commitments in procedural laws: what is considered
reasonable – courts should have adequate ICT means – is stated, although it is assumed that,
depending on the place and the period of time, the reality may be different.
- But it is also frequent to find national rules that allude to the
possibility of certain proceedings being carried out remotely ‘provided that the court has the
appropriate means at its disposal’ or similar expressions.[34] These approaches carry the danger of conformism
and wishful thinking: ICTs can be used by those who already have them, but there does not seem to be a
commitment to provide them to those who do not.
- In a different vein, it should be understood that the reference to
‘adequate means’ also covers personal means: judges and other court staff must be in a
position to adequately manage the resources at their service – in what matters to us now, the
tools for the management of virtual hearings. For this reason, it will be necessary to provide adequate
training for these persons, the financing of which must also be provided by the public
authorities.
4.3 Litigants Able to Access ICT and to Manage
Themselves Properly in Technological Environments
- The analysis, however, is different from the perspective of the
litigants. For them, whether or not to have the necessary technical means to act remotely is not only a
constraint but may affect their access to justice.[35]
- The problem may be seen as secondary when it comes to proceedings in
which the assistance of a lawyer is mandatory: lawyers are presumed to be in the possession of the
appropriate equipment and, in fact, it would be reasonable for professional standards to oblige them to
acquire and update digital skills. Indeed, an extension of the use of ICT systems in the judicial sphere
must go hand in hand with increased competence of the lawyers who have to assist the parties.[36] Consequently, the
duties of lawyers must be strengthened when dealing with this type of environment and, to that extent,
we could even talk about the right to a ‘technologically competent lawyer’, which is
reflected in the requirements imposed by professional associations for access to the profession, as is
happening in the United States, where in more and more states technological competence is being imposed
among the obligations of members;[37] the issue, of course, is discussed as well in
many other jurisdictions.[38]
- In addition, in many jurisdictions the scope of self-representation
is still very wide, and the digital gap may compromise the access to justice of those who would be
expected to intervene remotely without having the appropriate means. Challenges triggered by the digital
gap are recurrently highlighted in connection to remote hearings, a problem which will undoubtedly be
aggravated by their generalization.[39] If they are expected to
participate in a remote hearing, litigants in person need to have computer equipment, an internet
connection and a minimum level of skill in the use of videoconferencing tools; indeed, litigants should
have these means also if they are assisted by a lawyer if they want to have some independence and/or are
not able to attend the meeting from their lawyer’s premises.
- Many citizens in developed countries take this availability for
granted, but these requirements can be a real obstacle to access to justice in developing
countries[40] and, more generally, for vulnerable people:[41] not only for those who lack financial
resources, but also for those who do not have a minimum of digital literacy.[42] This is therefore a criticism
that can also be made, with all the more reason, in the face of an ultimate full digitization of court
proceedings. In fact, this digitization extends to all areas of civil life, not just justice, and this
should generate a duty on the part of public authorities to ensure the digital inclusion of all
citizens.[43]
- The problem became evident during the pandemic and will not
disappear with it. It is therefore necessary that national and supranational regulations of virtual
hearings take this into account and establish appropriate solutions, either by way of exception –
excluding the virtual format and opting for face-to-face proceedings which, in principle, should be
virtual –, or by way of assistance – providing the litigant with adequate means to appear
remotely, for example through public offices or enabling ad hoc spaces in court buildings, where some expert assistance would be made available –
as recently established, for instance, by Spanish law.[44]
- On a partially different level, halfway between technology, the
digital divide and the quality of justice, an additional issue can be identified, that of how the
participants in a virtual hearing should behave. In some jurisdictions, it has been deemed necessary to
adopt guidelines or recommendations regarding decorum and how to behave. In this regard, the guide drawn
up in March 2021 by the judges of New York[45] should be highlighted, because of its
simplicity and clearness:
Appropriate decorum/etiquette is a necessity during all virtual court proceedings.
All court proceeding participants shall recognize that this is a formal appearance
and should ensure the following:
- Dress in appropriate attire, as if you were appearing in-person in court
- Display an appropriate and professional background
- No consumption of food or drink during the proceeding
- Remain professional and dignified
- As in ln-Person proceedings, only one person should be speaking at a time
Please ensure that judges, court staff, attorneys, and all participants in court
proceedings are aware of the importance of the appropriate decorum which is necessary for all virtual court
proceedings.
- These guidelines, as many others approved in other
places,[46] are
fully valid and generalizable for a post-pandemic scenario and applicable in any country and before any
type of court.
- The need to adopt such recommendations and guidelines is basically a
reminder of the need to reinforce the seriousness of judicial proceedings when they take place online.
In this sense, it is also worth referring to the rules established in China’s online courts: the
Beijing Internet Court, for example, explains in a video[47] that in virtual hearings the symbols of the
judiciary and the People’s Republic will appear as a background and that, in addition, a sort of
robot judge will remind the participants that they are in a judicial, and therefore solemn, context.
Similar issues, although more specifically addressed to jury trials, are dealt with in an interesting
study/experiment carried out in the United Kingdom,[48] where judges and lawyers appeared in full court
dress and in transition moments participants were reminded of the solemnity of the occasion.
- Sticking to the old formats, for the time being, is a transitional
solution, possibly necessary to preserve the dignity and solemnity of online judicial acts.
Nevertheless, the virtual format will eventually lead to the emergence of new rituals or changes to
existing ones.[49] Rituals are strongly associated, among other factors, with the spaces in which they are
to take place; and the virtual space is different from a courtroom, so that the way to reinforce the
seriousness of the proceedings may not only focus on the manner of dress, or the need to stand up when
the judge enters the courtroom, or the presence of a bailiff who can forcibly ensure the peaceful
conduct of the session – to give some examples that many readers may draw from their ‘film
memory’.
5 Virtual Orality, Efficiency and Relevance of the
Matter at Stake: Criminal Justice and Low Intensity Civil Cases
- Both during the hardest times of the pandemic and in later times it
was assumed, at least in some jurisdictions, that certain procedural acts, legally foreseen as oral,
were only possible in person, so that they could not be held virtually. The clearest example is provided
by criminal justice, where some countries established red lines. By way of example, the legislation that
temporarily regulated remote hearings in Spain[50] established two important exceptions in
criminal matters. (1) In trials for serious crimes, the physical presence of the accused and their
lawyer is always required; the same applies if the crime is less serious, but the prosecution has
requested a prison sentence of more than two years – in this case, the face-to-face hearing is
imposed if so requested by the accused or their defence. (2) In addition to the trial itself, the
physical presence of the investigated or accused person shall be required, at their own request or that
of their counsel, at the hearing to be held to decide on the request for pre-trial detention. These
rules do not apply to the prosecuting parties or to those responsible for civil liability, nor do they
apply to witnesses and experts who are required to testify.
- A similar result was reached in France, albeit in a
different way. Initially, no limits were placed on the possibility of holding criminal trials virtually.
In the face of criticism that due process was being violated, the French Conseil d’État suspended the application of
the rule.[51]
- The debate surrounding remote trials in criminal
matters has been particularly intense in the United States, where its constitutionality has been
questioned. The origin of the discussion lies in the Confrontation Clause under the Sixth Amendment,
which gives any criminal defendant the right ‘to be confronted with the witnesses against
him’. The validity of this clause at the state level, as is well known, was made operative through
the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. However, during the pandemic, but also afterwards,
the question has arisen as to what extent this constitutionally required confrontation should take place
face to face or whether, on the contrary, it can also be satisfied in virtual environments. The impact
of virtual trials on the right to counsel has also been questioned, in cases where the virtual format
imposes physical separation between the defendant and their lawyer. The right to a public trial has also
been put at stake.[52]
- As is common in American doctrine, precedents, including nineteenth
century rulings, have been invoked for and against both positions; there have also been court decisions
in both directions during the period of lockdown.
- In any case, and apart from the question of their
constitutionality in the strict sense of the term, there are significant reservations about virtual
trials in criminal matters, considering that they are of inferior quality for the accused and that they
do not allow them to defend themselves in the same way as in face-to-face trials. In this line, it is
worth recalling a study coordinated by the Stanford Criminal Justice Center of the Stanford University
School of Law, based on both quantitative and qualitative analyses carried out in judicial districts
with very diverse characteristics.[53] The conclusions are devastating in relation to
issues such as access to technology (the digital gap is a recurrent issue), the dehumanization of the
proceedings (eg, through less attention and less empathy), the difficulties in assessing the credibility
and the truthfulness of remote witnesses or the quality of communication between the attorney and the
client: and this should trigger reflection before advancing in the path of generalization of remote
trials. It has been strongly asserted that ‘making virtual proceedings an option might thus open
the courthouse doors wider only to relegate some to the basement’.[54]
- At the European Union level, it may not be long before there is a
more or less ‘official’ answer from the Court of Justice on this issue, as it has been the
subject of a preliminary ruling in relation to the Directives regulating the European Investigation
Order[55] and
the presumption of innocence.[56]
- Art 24 of the EIO Directive envisages the possibility that
witnesses, experts and suspected or accused persons be heard by videoconference – or other
audiovisual transmission – if so requested by the issuing authority. In such cases, in addition to
the general grounds for non-recognition or non-enforcement of an EIO, the execution of the EIO in such a
manner – ie, by means of videoconference – may be refused if either (a) the suspected or
accused person does not consent or (b) the execution of such an investigative measure in a particular
case would be contrary to the fundamental principles of the law of the executing State.
- Specific provisions are additionally set up regarding the way to
perform the hearing by videoconference.
(i) The executing authority shall undertake to summon the witness, expert, suspected
or accused persons to appear for the hearing in accordance with the rules of the executing State and ensure
the identity of the person to be heard.
(ii) The hearing is to be conducted by the issuing authority according to its own
law, but the competent authority of the executing State shall be present and ensure both the identity of the
person to be heard and respect for the fundamental principles of its law.
(iii) Suspected or accused persons shall be informed in advance of the hearing of
the procedural rights which would accrue to them, including the right not to testify, under the law of the
executing State and the issuing State. Witnesses and experts may claim the right not to testify which would
accrue to them under the law of either the executing or the issuing State and shall be informed about this
right in advance of the hearing.
- Art 8(1) of the Directive on the presumption of innocence enshrines
the right to be present at the trial in a very simple and general manner: ‘Member States shall
ensure that suspects and accused persons have the right to be present at their trial’. No
distinction is made, thus, between ‘physical’ and/or ‘remote/virtual’ presence;
the Directive, on a different vein, is concerned with setting limits and conditions to trials in
absentia.
- Within this framework, a Latvian court – the Ekonomisko lietu tiesa – lodged a request for a
preliminary ruling[57] addressing many of the questions that are recurrently at stake when dealing with
videoconferencing. First of all, the court asks for clarification on whether the hearing envisaged by
the EIO includes the trial in a criminal case; in other words, the question is whether the EIO
provisions on videoconferencing are only applicable during the investigative or preliminary phases of
civil proceedings or, on the contrary, they may also be used to allow the accused person to participate
in their criminal trial. In addition – but not directly depending on the answer to that first
question –, the Latvian court asks if the right of accused persons to attend the oral procedure
may also be ensured by an accused person participating in the trial in a criminal case taking place in a
different Member State by videoconference from that person’s Member State of residence and if
participation by an accused person in the trial in a case that takes place in a different Member State
by videoconference from the Member State of residence equate to that person’s physical presence at
the hearing before the court in the Member State which is hearing the case. Although the cross-cutting
issue of the cross-border element is of relevance, the core question remains that of functional
equivalence between physical presence and video-participation: the cross-border dimension of the case
may demand higher standards (eg, interpreters), but only if it is assumed that voluntary
video-participation is admissible.
- Indeed, the Latvian court goes on to address another crucial issue
for the cross-border dimension of virtual hearings, that of the possibility of a court to summon
directly a witness, an expert or even an accused person to join a videoconference by sending them the
link, without ‘asking permission’ to the authorities of the Member State of residence of the
concerned persons: should this be regarded as in invasion of the other State’s sovereignty and,
thus, is it mandatory to arrange such a videoconference via the competent authorities of the Member
State of the affected person’s residence?[58]
- The answer of the Court of Justice to these relevant issues is still
waiting. The Court, nevertheless, has addressed a connected issue: in Sofiyska gradska prokuratura,[59] the question posed was
practically the reverse, ie, whether Art 8(1) of the Directive on the presumption of innocence could
preclude an accused person from being able, at his or her express request, to participate in the
hearings in his or her trial by videoconference. The Court, however, considered that this precise issue
was not governed by the Directive (para 29) and, therefore, limited itself to recalling the general duty
of the courts of Member States to guarantee the right to a fair trial.
- The legal exceptions adopted in some jurisdictions and, more
broadly, the discussion on the admissibility of criminal virtual hearings[60] show the special value that the
lawmaker and legal operators recognize to the physical presence of the defendant before the judge
conducting the investigation or before the trial court: however much functional equivalence a virtual
presence may provide, there is no desire to renounce the direct confrontation between the accused and
the judicial body that may end up taking a decision with a serious impact on their personal sphere. It
is thus legally recognized that direct interpersonal contact has a value that is difficult to explain,
but that can have an impact on the quality of the procedural activity – including the quality of
the exercise of the right of defence.
- It is clear, therefore, how lawmakers and courts have assumed the
limitations of remote hearings: in rules and in rulings such as those described above, the legislator
and the courts implicitly recognize that they are not the same as ordinary hearings and that they may
affect certain basic procedural safeguards.
- These precautions are exacerbated when the
seriousness of what is at stake becomes apparent, hence the clearest example is proceedings with
potential consequences on personal liberty. In civil proceedings, freedom is not at stake. But it seems
that the importance -social, economic, personal – of what is at stake in a proceeding – also
a civil one – is an element of relevance, which should work as a counterweight to mere
efficiency[61]. In
complicated cases involving large sums of money, it is difficult to imagine a court preferring a virtual
hearing for the trial/main hearing or that this format could be imposed on those who have large sums of
money or equivalent benefits at stake in the procedure. The same applies, for example, in family
proceedings where the court must hear a child before deciding to whom to award custody or whether there
are any valid grounds under the 1980 Hague Convention for refusing an application for the return of a
child who has been wrongfully removed or retained.[62] However, and even within these
‘complicated’, ‘high-value’ or ‘sensitive’ cases, a videoconference
will still be a reasonable and proportionate way to hold a preliminary conference between the court and
the lawyers in order to decide on some procedural and managerial issues.
- In this vein, it is frequently heard that, for the sake of
efficiency and proportionality, virtual hearings should become the rule for ‘low intensity
cases’, ie, for repetitive litigation, cases with a low economic value and/or an apparent low
difficulty, either from a factual or a legal perspective. This approach also may justify a more general
recourse to virtual hearings for managerial purposes, whereas reluctance should still be justified for
main hearings and/or evidentiary hearings to take place online, unless there is a relevant ground to do
it.[63]
6 ‘Virtual Orality’, Immediacy and Quality
of Justice: The ‘Added Value’ of Face-to-Face Hearings?
- The origin of the reticence and caution against the ‘new
virtual orality’ is probably to be found in the intuition that it has a negative impact on the
principle of immediacy or, if preferred, on the values that are associated to the physical presence of
the judges, the parties, the lawyers, the witnesses and the experts in a same room at a same time.
- A very clear synthesis of this ‘vision’ lays in a
Decision of the Vienna Oberlandesdgericht given on 7 July 2024.[64] In the context of insolvency proceedings, the
defendant’s administrator, who resided outside Austria and who was to be cross-examined by the
court, requested to do it by videoconference, invoking the Austrian special COVID-19 legislation, in
order to avoid the risk of detention – a possibility envisaged by the Austrian insolvency
legislation regarding the administrators of the insolvent business, that had been already ordered by the
judge, although it had been subsequently revoked by the OLG. The request to proceed by videoconference
was rejected in the first instance, on the ground that there was not a real Covid risk nor a detention
probability to sustain it. He then lodged the appeal that was decided – and dismissed – by
the Vienna Superior Court. Among the legal reasoning of the Court, the following shall be highlighted
(para 5.2):
Since the direct impression of the judge is of particular importance in the
examination of the parties, the law stipulates that the examination of the party before the adjudicating
court is the rule and only allows this evidence to be taken by way of legal assistance in exceptional cases
and to a much narrower extent than in the case of witness evidence […]. Video conferences are
therefore not generally authorised, but only as a substitute for the taking of evidence by way of legal
assistance. In this area, the advantages clearly outweigh the disadvantages, because hearings by way of
legal assistance – if they are successful at all – often only provide results that are of little
use […].
The law refers to the possibility of questioning using technical equipment for audio
and video transmission as ‘direct taking of evidence’, although strictly speaking this does not
really apply. Ultimately, the use of video conferencing technology means a compromise between genuine
(physical) immediacy and the avoidance of direct impressions. However, if the court takes evidence by means
of video conferencing without the legal requirements being met (i.e. if it is not a matter of substituting a
legal assistance examination), this constitutes a substantial procedural defect within the meaning of
Section 496 (1) Z 2 ZPO due to the violation of the principle of immediacy […].
Strictly speaking, the principles of orality (Section 176 ZPO) and immediacy
(Section 276 ZPO) are not breached by the authorization of the hearing by video conference, but they are
modified due to the physical distance and the acoustic and visual perception with the aid of technical means
of communication. With regard to immediacy, weaknesses of hearings by videoconference are criticised above
all in connection with the evidence procedure. The personal impression gained during a face-to-face hearing
is of essential importance for the assessment of the hearing and evidence and cannot be gained to the same
extent during a video conference. Above all, there is a risk that the video conference distorts
interpersonal perceptions and that non-verbal expressive behaviour is lost. In addition, there is the lack
of atmosphere in the courtroom and the lack of direct confrontation with the other party, which could hinder
the honesty of the parties and thus the establishment of the truth, but at the same time also the amicable
settlement of the dispute […]. In addition, when hearing a person connected from outside the court
building, for example, there is the problem that it is difficult to avoid influencing them […]
- According to the classical procedural literature,
there is a legal notion of immediacy, which has an unquestionable relevance for the right to effective
judicial relief – endorsed, indeed, by the case law of the European Court of Human
Rights[65] – and which is identified with the direct contact of the judge with the parties
and the evidence, which must be taken before the judge who has to issue the decision.[66] This notion of
immediacy and this approach have also been assumed by the ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil
Procedure and, more specifically, by Rule 64(2), pursuant to which ‘[t]he final hearing must be
before the judge or judges who are to give the final judgment’.[67]
- Can it be said that this direct contact also takes place in a
virtual context? In my opinion, not entirely, although we are already beginning to speak of
‘digital immediacy’ – and the need to use an adjective is not without
significance.
- In a remote hearing the spoken word is certainly used as a
communication tool, discussions, depositions and interrogations are possible, and documents can also be
exchanged instantaneously. It is common to point out, however, that in a virtual framework the
participants − often referred to as witnesses − are not subject to the environmental and
ritual influence typical of oral proceedings[68] and that the judge may thus be deprived of
useful elements for assessing the credibility of the account given.[69] It has also been said that
remote hearings have a negative impact on the adjudicator’s empathy – although it is
arguable whether empathy should be relevant or not for a fair decision making.[70] These assessments are also
frequently countered by the argument that orality and immediacy are somehow overvalued because the
supposed ‘metadata’ they provide are refutable from a scientific point of view[71] – judges,
according to some, lack adequate training to properly assess the body language of witnesses or the way
they speak, for example.[72] The controversy can be even more intense when it comes to jury trials.[73]
- The debate is undoubtedly of the utmost interest, a
preferably written or oral model of civil procedure and also from the perspective of the search for
efficiency – and that is the leitmotiv that seems to guide legislative action. But it cannot be
forgotten that in many systems the legislative option for a predominantly oral model is still in force,
which seeks to reinforce the value of personal evidence and increase the options for the parties to
place the judge in the best position to construct the factual account that is most in line with reality.
This decision of the legislator is influenced by that part of immediacy which is not easily defined, and
which derives from the advantages intuitively associated with the notions of meeting and
ritual,[74] of
encounter and of direct and immediate contact, without interfering elements.[75]
- Opting for orality and immediacy means assuming that direct
communication between persons interacting in the same physical space increases the chances that the
process will better fulfil its functions, including the consensual resolution of the dispute[76] − although the
lack of direct contact may be advisable in some cases.[77] Orality, implemented through face-to-face
hearings, also influences the social legitimacy of the judicial system:[78] it gives litigants their
‘day in court’ and increases the perception that the State, through the court, takes the
resolution of the specific case seriously – both for litigants who are natural persons[79] and for the natural
persons who are always behind the litigants who are legal entities – securing what has been called
as ‘the subjective experience of procedural justice’.[80]
- From this angle, both the screens and the limitations of
videoconferencing programs can be seen as instruments that mediatize the contact between the
protagonists of the procedural activity at hand and, to that extent, distort the communication required
by the process and a hypothetical ‘genuine’ immediacy, only achievable in face-to-face
environments. For this reason, the generalization of remote hearings as opposed to
‘traditional’ hearings brings into play two different ways of implementing the interaction
between the subjects involved in an oral procedural act. The absence of direct personal contact of
remote hearings may not in itself entail a complete breakdown of immediacy and adversarialism, as
advocated by the legal option for orality. The procedural activity takes place in any case
‘before’, or ‘in front of’, the court, and it is possible to fully comply with
the legal provisions on the content of each procedural act (adversarial debate using the spoken word).
However, the feeling inevitably remains that this is an orality of inferior quality, because it
determines a diminished immediacy: the screens and programs impose limits on the contact of the court
with the parties and other intervening subjects; elements of assessment and context may be lost, which
would result in a better quality of oral judicial activity and, ultimately, of the process
itself.
- A good example of an official assumption of these caveats may be
found in a 2020 judgment of the Constitutional Court of Chile,[81] where it had to address to what extent criminal
virtual trials – under the exceptional provisions given during the pandemic – were
compatible with the constitutional model of oral criminal proceedings. The Constitutional Court
expressly stated the following:
In this, the material dimension of immediacy is relativised and degraded by virtual
trials, because the transmission by screen and the focus only on the face accompanied by the voice becomes a
substitute for the most complete and immediate face-to-face perception, this videoconference mechanism being
a kind of ‘telematic mediation in real time’, that can also be called ‘virtual
presence’, which in principle is considered to be equivalent to face-to-face presence, but without the
elements of face-to-face perception, since not even the field of vision can be the same and it is not
possible to perceive whether or not the prohibition on reading scripts is being observed.[82]
- It is therefore necessary that a commitment to greater use of remote
hearings, aimed at making the system more efficient, takes on board this intrinsic deficit and
establishes the appropriate requirements to compensate or mitigate it: what is more easily accepted in
times of pandemic – second-rate or low-cost orality and immediacy – must be rigorously
subjected to the sieve of the right to a fair trial once health normality is restored. For the future,
therefore, it is essential to ensure that all remote hearings meet adequate technical requirements in
terms such as the location of the participants’ cameras, the possibility of close visual contact
between the interlocutors – ie, the speakers should be able to see the faces and expressions of
the listeners up close[83] –, the existence of a channel for the instantaneous sending of documents while
the hearing itself is taking place or the availability of confidential ‘breakout rooms’ for
attorney-client conversations. It must also be clear how to prove the identity of the participants, how
to ensure data protection, and how to record and preserve information, among other issues. The guides
and protocols approved in many countries at the beginning of the pandemic were concerned with these
questions, but it seems unavoidable that these requirements should attain true legal/binding status so
that real procedural rights and powers should be derived from them, the infringement of which could have
legal consequences – eg, a lack of defence with constitutional significance for one of the
parties. If the courts are to be given the power to decide and impose the format – virtual or
face-to-face – of oral proceedings in the exercise of case management powers, the parties must be
given the right to expect the virtual format to meet high-quality standards.
- The quality of ‘virtual courtrooms’ is
therefore a determining factor in the quality of the virtual hearings themselves,[84] just as the
architecture and internal layout of the court buildings themselves have an impact on the justice
system:[85] it
is important, for instance, that there are fixed positions for all participants (judge or judges,
parties, witnesses), in order to minimize confusion about who is who and what is each one’s role;
different cultural traditions, in addition, should lead to diverging settings depending on the
jurisdiction. It is clear that, in this respect, improvements can only be expected, through platforms
and programs that are progressively better adapted to the needs of the judiciary. But we must insist on
the need to understand that these are not merely technical or ancillary issues, which the procedural
legislator can disregard, because they have an influence on the environment in which the fundamental
right to effective judicial relief is exercised.
- In any case, it seems to me essential to recall that
a possible choice by the legislator in favour of remote hearings – even with their shortcomings
– is still a reaffirmation of the value of orality as opposed to writing, even if orality needs to
be reconsidered from the perspective of digitalization.[86] That is why it is so important to regulate them
correctly. This is the only way to avoid criticisms that delegitimize them for their lack of usefulness
or their low quality, something that in the end would not serve to justify a return to face-to-face
hearings, but rather the disappearance of orality itself.[87]
7 Virtual Hearings and Public Proceedings
- Beyond immediacy, remote hearings also entail a
paradigm shift in terms of publicity.[88] The court is no longer a physical space where
any citizen can go to see how justice is administered, since the hearings take place in virtual
environments and platforms whose location is not always public. On many occasions, the legal system
tries to alleviate the lack of publicity by allowing the court to agree to broadcast the hearings by
electronic means, provided that the material equipment is available to do so – although without
specifying what those means are or could be. This is an essential adjustment to ensure the validity of
the principle of public proceedings – as enshrined at a supranational level, for instance, by Art
6 ECHR and Art 47 CFREU[89] – and, with it, the constitutionality of the system of virtual
hearings.[90]
- If proceedings are written, the constitutional
mandate of publicity is fulfilled by allowing access to the files and/or records of the case to the
parties or to third parties showing a legitimate interest,[91] provided that data protection is
safeguarded.[92] And it is also true that virtual hearings will be documented by means of their
recording, which will also be accessible to interested parties.[93] However, being satisfied with this form of
publicity would entail a ‘label fraud’, since it would mean treating remote hearings as
written acts, when the truth is that they have been designed as an alternative format to comply with the
legal option for orality. Except for justified reasons associated with certain values -such as privacy,
the rights of minors or national security, it is characteristic of oral proceedings that the public can
attend them spontaneously if they so wish, without the need to show a specific legitimate
interest[94] – which is required for access to court records or files.[95]
- It is equally important to insist on the value that publicity brings
to oral proceedings: it is not only a basic safeguard for the parties, which protects them against the
arbitrariness of the public power;[96] again in the realm of the ineffable, the
(possible) presence of the public in oral proceedings results in a better quality of the system, since
it encourages the protagonists of the act – primarily judges and lawyers – to a better
performance of that part of their function that is visible in it; and this even if the audience at a
trial ‘is not supposed to do anything’, since ‘[t]he ultimate purpose of the public
trial is to prevent anything from occurring during the proceedings that would be subject to public
condemnation’.[97]
- Therefore, any option for the generalization of remote hearings
should be accompanied by a more detailed regulation of public access to the ‘virtual
courtrooms’,[98] through mechanisms that would ensure the publication on the electronic sites of the
judicial bodies of the links[99] or channels for live broadcasting of their proceedings.[100] The Indian criterion on this
matter, set already in 2018 in Swapnil Tripathi v Supreme Court of
India,[101] is of great interest: upon the petitions
filed by various individuals and groups before the Supreme Court of India under Art 32 of the
Constitution, the Supreme Court ruled that proceedings before the Supreme Court in cases having
constitutional and national importance and/or having an impact on the public at large or a large number
of people should be broadcast to the public.[102]
- It should be noted, in addition, that it is not the
same to broadcast – on TV or on an internet channel – a trial that is taking place in
public, which can be said to be in any case public,[103] as it is to broadcast an on-line trial, for
which streaming may be the only real formula for public access. After all, this is not just an issue for
virtual hearings, but more generally for all ‘online courts’ or equivalent features of the
future. The requirement for publicity will be in these cases more necessary than ever because, as has
been noted, ‘digital courts must be open courts’.[104]
- It is, in any case, something that must be done with caution and
with limits.[105] On the one hand, national lawmakers should not fall into the temptation of anachronism
and disregard the impact of ICT on the notion of public proceedings.[106] The German Act to Promote the
Use of Video Conferencing Technology in Civil and Specialist Jurisdictions might be seen, nevertheless,
as an example of attachment to an outdated approach to publicity, still identified to the possibility
for the public to enter the physical premise where the court activity is taking place. According to the
new legislation, publicity of virtual hearings is ensured in one of the following ways: if the judge (or
at least the presiding judge) is directing the hearing from the court premises any interested person
could enter the room and, of course, watch the screen where the virtual part of the hearing is being
displayed;[107] if the hearing is being conducted in fully virtual manner, then the hearing shall be
broadcasted into a room within the court building, where any interested person could enter
into.[108]
- The recent Spanish Act on the use of ICT in the Administration of
Justice enacted in 2023[109] is more reasonable on this point, as it provides for public broadcasting of procedural
activity trials that are held entirely by videoconference through electronic channels. In order to
ensure the public’s knowledge, the electronic judicial sites will publish the list of trials and
hearings to be held by each judicial body, and the form of access to them for publicity purposes. It is
also contemplated that there may be different levels of security and public access, as well as
non-transmission in the same cases in which a face-to-face trial would have to be held behind closed
doors (eg, when dealing with intimate matters or those affecting public safety). Where the proceedings
are hybrid, however, the solution is similar to the German one: the court may consider it sufficient to
allow the public access to the courtroom from which the physical part of the hearing takes place.
- Courts are public institutions and, therefore, must act in the
public eye, an eye that has become digital: digital publicity seems to be of the essence. Nevertheless,
it is necessary to act with clear awareness of the new context, where social media and social networks
are not neutral and may have an impact on judicial proceedings, on the independence of adjudicators and
on the privacy of the parties (especially, accused parties in criminal cases). This explains, for
instance, why Malaysia bans photography of any proceedings in the ‘physical’ courtrooms and
is considering whether taking screenshots during virtual hearings and sharing them would also amount to
contempt.[110] And it also explains, to put an example from the other side of the globe, the ban to
record virtual hearings that should be imposed in Germany on the parties according to the above
mentioned Act to Promote the Use of Video Conferencing Technology in Civil and Specialist
Jurisdictions[111] or in Spain, pursuant to the new Act on the use of ICT in the Administration of
Justice.[112]
- Data protection is equally essential – and the need to respect
it goes without saying. But it is not only about protecting the data of the parties and participants in
the proceedings. For the public, one can imagine that in many cases, access to a virtual hearing will be
made available through a link to the virtual session, which may be available online without further ado,
or which may be received upon registration and request. This second mode of access through a link
obtained upon registration avoids the risk of interference or disruption of the proceedings, but it
should be borne in mind that it removes the anonymity usually enjoyed by those who attend trials and
hearings in person at the physical seats of the courts. It must therefore be ensured that the data
collected for the purpose of authorizing public access to a judicial videoconference cannot be used for
other purposes and that the records are deleted after the videoconference has been held.
- And new additional safeguards, not imaginable in the face-to-face
world, can be used, like establishing a time gap between the filming and the dissemination, when this
appears sensible for the proper administration of justice.
8 Powers of the Court and of the Parties as to the
Format of the Hearing
- In a scenario of procedural reforms aimed at standardizing remote
hearings, legislators can be expected to offer general rules – in one sense or another – but
also exceptions to the rule and/or criteria to take into account for their application. Therefore, an
essential piece for a good regulation of the use of remote hearings will be the distribution of powers
between the court and the parties when defining the format of a specific oral activity, in application
or development of the legal provisions.
- Many of the rules regulating remote hearings as an emergency
solution during the pandemic established a preference for the virtual format, so that it would be the
in-person hearing that would have to be justified in each specific case. The initiative to opt for the
virtual or the face-to-face holding of an oral hearing was also attributed to the court, which could
impose it on the parties. This is a logical regulation in times of emergency and restrictions on
mobility and meetings of people in closed places.
- Is it reasonable to maintain it for the future? In my opinion, the
answer must be yes, at least in general terms.
- Indeed, it is up to the legislator to determine what the general
rule should be if it considers that there should be one: face-to-face or virtual (or hybrid)
development. It is also conceivable that there may be different general rules depending on the type of
oral activity in question or their possible content: thus, as seen above, it is conceivable that the
virtual holding of complex trials or trials in which important interests are at stake – be they
economic or not – may be prohibited. And it is also possible that the legislator prefers not to
make any general choice and refers the decision to the court in each specific case.
- However, whether there is a general referral to the court or to
legal rules, the court must have the power to define the specific format of an oral hearing, depending
on the circumstances of the case and those of the judicial body itself (agenda, available space, local
epidemiological situation, etc). Conversely, the court should also have the power to force the personal
presence of subjects who would have preferred a remote presence. The court should thus be attributed an
unequivocal case management power regarding the format of the hearings, for the exercise of which a
succinct motivation should suffice.
- Assuming the primary role of the court, in practice it is
interesting to define what the powers of the parties should be in relation to the format of oral
activity.
- (1) The will of the parties should undoubtedly be a very relevant
element when the court decides on the format of a hearing and, in any case, it should be provided for in
the legislation as a possible exception to any general rule. In fact, in some jurisdictions, it is seen
as a precondition for a virtual trial to take place.[113] But it would be excessive and, in many cases,
dysfunctional for the will of the parties to be imposed on the court. This approach probably explains
why regulation[114] or practice,[115] in other jurisdictions, grants the court the
power to decide the format. In addition, it is also worth considering the possibility that the parties
may enter into procedural contracts regarding this issue,[116] either to try to force the virtual holding of
a hearing legally foreseen as face-to-face or, conversely, to try to impose on the court their will to
hold a certain hearing foreseen as virtual by the law in a face-to-face manner. Even if parties would
not be allowed absolute power, it would be sensible, at most, to require the court to provide a
reinforced statement of reasons for departing from the previously agreed will of the litigants.
- (2) But, above all, it is up to the legislator to decide to what
extent it allows exceptions to the rule and, especially, to what extent it grants the parties the right
to request an exception to the rule.
- In accordance with what has been mentioned above, it would be
reasonable that a litigant could object to the virtual format of a hearing on the grounds of lack of
technical means to face it with full guarantees. In such a case, for purely procedural fairness reasons,
the court should offer adequate support measures and, if these are not feasible, a return to physical
presence could be considered, although this could result in the postponement of the procedural activity
to a later, perhaps undetermined, time.
- On the other hand, a possible rejection of the virtual
holding of a hearing validly based on an alleged lower quality of the procedural activity carried out in
this way would be more questionable. As seen above, there may be grounds for such a rejection,
especially if no legal measures have been taken to ensure a sufficient standard of technical quality.
But the generic nature of the argument would turn it into an overly broad power that would lead in
practice to a lack of legal certainty concerning the format of proceedings. In the United States, there
are precedents in which the primacy of the court’s discretion has been recognized.[117] In Australia, the
holding of a virtual trial was also challenged on the grounds that it would deprive the parties of the
safeguards of a face-to-face trial, especially regarding the cross-examination of witnesses. The Federal
Court, however, considered that the technical advantages of videoconferencing platforms did not create a
real disadvantage.[118] In Canada, to end the examples, courts have upheld the prevalence of virtual trials on
proportionality considerations.[119]
- Since 2021, China’s Online Litigation Rules of
the People’s Courts opened the way to the so-called ‘Smart Court’[120] and offer a very
detailed regulation on this issue.[121] Pursuant to Art 21, the decision to hold the
trial online will rest on the court that will decide based on factors such as the willingness of the
parties, the circumstances of the case, its social impact, and the technical conditions. However, the
rules provide for explicit exceptions, where online trial shall not apply:
(1) if all parties expressly object, or one of the parties objects with justifiable
reasons;
(2) if none of the parties has technical conditions and capability to participate in
online trial;
(3) if it is necessary to ascertain the identity, verify the original documents, or
examine the physical evidence on site during the trial;
(4) if the case is difficult and complicated, has considerable evidence, and
applying online trial is inconducive to ascertaining the facts of the case and applying the law;
(5) if the case concerns national security or State secrets;
(6) if the case has a significant social impact and has attracted wide public
attention; or
(7) if the People’s Courts deem that there are other circumstances under which
online trial is inappropriate to be applied.
- If the trial started under online format and any of the
aforementioned circumstances is detected at a later moment, the court shall immediately switch the trial
to offline trial, but activities completed during the online trial shall have legal effect. (This last
provision is very relevant, although it might be debatable, especially if the reason to abandon the
online trial is related to a defective taking of evidence).
- Looking into the future, interesting guidance is
offered, once again, by some of the most recent legal reforms. The German Act to Promote the Use of
Video Conferencing Technology in Civil and Specialist Jurisdictions has reinforced the judicial powers
regarding the holding of a hearing remotely: (i) the main power rests on the presiding judge, who is
entitled to order the remote participation in the oral hearing for one party, several or all parties to
the proceedings; (ii) this decision may be taken ex officio or at the request of a party; (iii) the presiding judge shall give reasons for refusing
a request to participate by videoconference in the oral hearing.[122] The Spanish Act on the use of
ICT in the Administration of Justice also gives judges the final say on the format of hearings and the
type of participation – face-to-face or virtual – to be had by the parties and other
participants (such as witnesses and experts).[123]
- In short, it is preferable for the general rule to be the primacy of
the court’s criterion, although it is a good legislative technique that the regulation on
this point should not be too rigid. After all, it is a matter of seeking efficiency with parameters of
proportionality. The legislator is, of course, expected to formulate in the procedural law, in general
terms, how the various conflicting values are to be reconciled. But it is the task of the court, with
the cooperation of the parties, through the notion of active case management, to establish what is most
efficient and fair in a specific case, something that is only possible with flexible rules.
- This is, in fact, the approach that can be deduced from the
ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil Procedure. First of foremost, because they place the
principle of cooperation at the heart of the relations between the court and the parties, and between
the parties among themselves.[124] And, as far as the specific issue of remote
hearings is concerned, because they offer a balanced, sensible and reasonable view. They do not directly
address the issue of virtual hearings, possibly because they were drafted before the pandemic. Perhaps
this is why special value should be placed on the general rule contained in Rule 18(4), which, in the
context of the dichotomy between oral and written proceedings, states that: ‘In so far as
appropriate, proceedings may be conducted using any available means of information and communication
technology’. This provision, in turn, is linked to the more specific Rule 97(3), which deals with
the taking of witness evidence, for which videoconferencing is admitted as a possibility.[125] All of this, in
turn, is related to the notion of case management on which the procedural model of the European Rules
also rests. And the case management powers of the court include, according to Rule 49(3), that to
‘determine the type and form of the procedure’.
9 Some Final Remarks
- The necessary reaction to the pandemic served to enshrine or to
reinforce remote hearings in civil proceedings all around the world. Now that the health emergency is
over, health protection is giving way to efficiency and sustainability in order to justify a format that
represents a turning point in the way of conceiving orality, immediacy and publicity of procedural
activity. The advantages of virtual hearings have been discovered and tested during the last four to
five years: they bring flexibility, convenience and procedural economy lato sensu; this explains the
current trend, in most jurisdictions, to turn provisional and emergency regulation into a far-reaching
development. But the experience of the last years has also served to detect – even to study
– their inconveniences: they deprive oral proceedings of ingredients that redound to the quality
of judicial activity and that, to a large extent, lie behind the legislative option for orality.
- It would be wrong, therefore, to consider that the commitment to
virtual hearings only affects the external or purely procedural dimension, ie, the forms or the
‘visible’ part of the development of proceedings. It should never be forgotten that the
external design of the procedure determines and guarantees the fairness of the process as a tool for the
protection of the legal system and the satisfaction of claims. The higher the quality of the tool, the
higher the quality of the result.
- By opting for remote hearings, most legislators are undoubtedly
seeking to jump on the bandwagon of efficiency, technological modernity, and sustainability. But they
are running the risk of doing so insufficiently if they omit the mandatory nature of technical and
procedural requirements suitable for reinforcing the quality in the development of the hearings, in
terms of immediacy and publicity. And it should not be forgotten that efficiency, properly understood,
always requires preserving the quality of the results.
- Likewise, it must be remembered that efficiency must always go hand
in hand with proportionality: the virtual development of the trial or the main hearing in a complex case
with abundant evidence will undoubtedly have a greater (negative) impact on the final outcome of the
process than the virtual holding of the hearing to decide on purely procedural or incidental issues. A
good exercise of the case management powers should include the appropriate choice – of course, in
a scenario without health hazards – of those hearings that are to be carried out in a virtual
format.
- At the moment, most countries are in a transition period and, to a
large extent, many of them are extending the validity at this point of rules on virtual hearings that
were approved in an emergency situation or that predated the pandemic and, therefore, had not been
subjected to the ‘stress test’ of ‘courts in lockdown’. It remains to be seen,
therefore, how the proposed or planned reforms will turn out.
- It is possible, in fact, that the debate on remote hearings will see
its paradigm shift in the years to come. In fact, we are still analysing the impact of virtual hearings
in the framework of proceedings that are still ‘traditional’ in their structure, that is,
they are still predominantly imagined by the legislator and practitioners as taking place
‘face-to-face’ in most of their parts: how the parties communicate with each other before
the conflict crystallizes; how lawyers relate to their clients; how the court staff works in the
courtroom; how the various judges who have to decide in panel communicate among them; and so on.
- But all this is what is changing. Possibly the generalization of
virtual hearings will cease to be so disruptive once – or if – online courts and online
proceedings become widespread – or even the normal. This will be discussed in the next part of
this chapter.
Part II
Online Courts and Online Proceedings: The Future of Civil
Proceedings?
- Using videoconferencing to take evidence or to hear
one party still leaves a physical place for the court and the rest of the parties, as well as for the
rest of the activity that the whole development of a procedure requires. As analysed in other chapters
of this segment, remote hearings are not the only IT-technology being used to improve procedural
efficiency: new functionalities are continually being added to the existing tools, which may lead to
forgetting the court as a physical place and replacing brick-and-mortar courtrooms by virtual judicial
networks in the near future. This is what lies behind the notion of online courts and online proceedings
and the different projects and experiences that are currently being developed in different
jurisdictions.[126]
- We have already seen how the use of videoconferencing does not have
merely formal consequences but can produce much more substantial effects. It is therefore conceivable
that the establishment of online courts affects not only fundamental procedural principles (such as that
of the adversarial principle) but also the way in which the administration of justice is perceived (by
lawyers, judges, and, above all, citizens).
10 Towards a Definition of Online Courts
- What are we talking about when we talk about online courts? This is
a basic question since the expression seems to be used to refer to different realities depending on who
is using it and what they are using it for. Many governments – as well as private businesses and
platforms − use the label ‘online courts’ or ‘virtual courts’ in the
projects they develop to promote the use of ICTs in the administration of justice. It is clear, on the
other hand, that talking about online courts in 2024 cannot have the same meaning it had in 2010,
because the evolution on this point is being dizzying. Nor can the content of the expression be expected
to be the same depending on whether we are in a developing country or a pioneering country in the
incorporation of technology into public governance.
- If we want to start with the simplest, we have to make clear what
online courts are not: they are not ordinary courts that use ICTs for a more efficient operation; or, if
preferred, the fact that an ordinary court uses technological tools does not automatically make it an
online court; in these cases we can speak of heavily technologized courts or courts that rely, to a
greater or lesser extent, on technological tools.
- Otherwise, the paradox would be that, thanks to e-filing and
e-service, many courts have unwittingly − even magically − become online courts! This would
be the case, for instance, in many courts of appeal and supreme courts, where hearings are not common,
especially at the highest level, where the extraordinary nature of cassation appeals does not require
the taking of evidence: if the appellate procedure is conducted in writing and all communications and
exchanges of pleadings take place via a digital platform, the illusion would be triggered that the
procedure is online and that the court itself operates online, even though nothing has changed in the
procedure itself or in the court. It would also be the case for those courts which deal with written
procedures in the first instance, something which is relatively frequent in administrative matters, but
also in the field of small claims: it should be recalled, in this respect, that the European legislator
itself attributes to the European Small Claims procedure a preferably written character.[127] And it would be the
same whenever a court conducts a full procedure online, but online because the circumstance is given
that the preliminary hearing (if any) and the trial (if any) take place online.
- However, the notion of online court cannot be identified with a mere
result that can be achieved because the conduct of proceedings before a court − before any court
− does not require the litigants, their lawyers or even the judges to go to the physical location
of a court building. In a different way, the expression online courts seeks to mark a difference, with
the intention of conveying the message that they are something more, that they represent a turning
point, insofar as a qualitative change in the way justice is dispensed is inherent to them, and that
this change is not limited to the mere use of electronic tools -although it is sustained by such
use.
- At the present time, I believe there are two essential elements that
define what a true online court is or should be: they are ODR systems, but they are still courts.
10.1 Online Courts as ODR Systems
- An online court is not an ordinary court, that is, it is not a
structure of human and material resources, attached to a physical
space, placed at the service of the development of those material activities
that are necessary to apply the law in particular cases and, thus, to solve disputes.
- Online courts belong to the world of Online Dispute Resolution and,
therefore, rather than bodies or structures, they are better qualified as systems and, more precisely, as comprehensive systems for
the online processing of certain activities that are considered appropriate to resolve a dispute.
- ODR is a very broad concept that does not coincide
exactly with that of jurisdiction or ADR.[128] What is unique to ODR is undoubtedly that all
activities are carried out in an advanced electronic form, based on communication networks (Internet)
and with the use of software and computer programs that allow the efficient processing of huge amounts
of data: what is characteristic, therefore, is that the resolution of disputes is carried out online. Of
the three letters of the acronym, therefore, it is the O that is most typically defining:
dematerialization is complete, as the support for all activity becomes electronic and is available
online.
- Things can be done online that would not work or would not make
sense in person (such as asynchronous communication at a distance); and, conversely, there are certain
things that make sense in a physical environment, but do not make sense online (such as the use of gowns
and wigs, where they still persist, which are associated with a type of formality and ritualism that
makes less sense online, even though formality itself and a certain ritualism may still be considered
essential). It is crucial to keep this in mind in order to understand that ODR is not about mimicking
traditional judicial processes, transferring the activity itself to the web. In a different way, ODR
requires a different way of working, which allows taking advantage of the functionalities of digital and
online, and which determines the need to resort to procedures that, undoubtedly, will also have to be
different. This is an essential factor when it comes to properly regulating ODR systems and, more
specifically, online courts.
- With ODR – and, hence, with online courts
– technology ceases to be a tool and becomes the core of the system.[129] It has been said, therefore,
that in ODR technology is a sort of ‘Fourth Party’,[130] whose function is to be at the service of a
more efficient resolution of the dispute by the neutral third party – the court, as far as we are
now concerned, but not only.
- As has been accurately noted by Katsh and
Rabinovich-Einy,[131] ODR brings about three major shifts in dispute resolution:
— From face-to-face or physical settings to virtual ones.
— From human intervention and decision making to software-supported
processes.
— From confidentiality to data management.
- (a) Regarding the first shift, ODR leads to the disappearance of the
court as a physical space or as a ‘place’ and, with it, to the disappearance of the notion
of ‘courtroom’. The implications of abandoning this courtroom-centric approach are many.
- The most visible one has occupied us so far: the replacement of
face-to-face by virtual hearings. In fact, this change is based on a larger one: it is not that some
hearings can be held virtually, while maintaining the physical space of the court as a possible meeting
place for the parties, lawyers, judges and court officials. The disappearance of the court as a physical
space determines that during the proceedings there is no interpersonal contact other than remote.
Consequently, the variables will no longer oscillate between face-to-face and virtual, but there will be
other duplexes for communication activities that will always take place online: synchronous or
asynchronous; in writing or with image and sound; intended to be recorded or conceived not to be
recorded, for instance. As can be seen, the debates currently existing in relation to virtual hearings
are typical of the pilot or 1.0 versions of genuine online court.
- If the notion of the court as a physical space
disappears, so do the constraints that space itself imposes on traditional courts and
proceedings.[132] It has been said, in this vein, that the virtual element modifies the relationship
between the proceedings, on the one hand, and the notions of time and space, on the other
hand.[133] To
the extent that technology permits, it is possible to design virtual environments suitable for the
development of procedural activities that require a meeting and interaction between the parties, their
lawyers and/or judges. There may be more scope for catering to the user experience, to the extent deemed
appropriate.[134] It is also clear that certain obstacles generated by physical barriers can be
alleviated. The ‘digital architecture’ of online courts may also play a significant role in
the fairness of the proceedings and in the procedural safeguards of litigants: decisions can be made as
to how it shall look like on the basis of psychology and behavioural research, aimed in turn at
nudging users to properly take advantage of all the facilities provided by the platform.[135] One latest trend
(in spring 2024) is the holding of trials ‘in the metaverse’:[136] with the use of virtual
reality glasses and through avatars, the joint presence is recreated, in the same imaginary space, of
those who are in different places. Like everything else, this option has advantages and disadvantages
(in addition to those of virtual trials). On the positive side, it can be said that the use of avatars,
for example, can free the parties from the prejudices that their physical appearance can provoke; in the
case of vulnerable persons or minors, it can provide a less hostile environment that mitigates secondary
victimization. But genuine eye contact − not even contact mediated by the screen − will no
longer be possible, and the notion of ‘justice with a human face’[137] may be seriously
compromised.
- It is to be expected that this type of experience will become more
widespread; but there is also a serious danger that, precisely because of its drawbacks, another trend
of a different sign will become mainstream: avoiding simultaneous meetings – ie, what we still
know as oral hearings – as much as possible and replacing them with writing or with asynchronous
exchanges of video messages or recordings. The progressive decline of personal means of evidence,
criticized for their reduced reliability, and the impressive tendency to have electronic traces of much
of the human activity, that leads to the use of electronic means of evidence, may end up triggering the
perception that oral trials, as the scenario where personal means of evidence are taken in a ritualized
manner, are unnecessary.
- The change of physical space should also lead −
as mentioned above − to the progressive replacement of the formalities and rituals that are
currently used − and which, in fact, vary from country to country − with others that make
sense in the virtual environment. In this respect, the evolution will probably be slower and will be
associated with a progressive generational changeover – from citizens to
‘netizens’[138] −, as people whose lives have developed more intensely in digital environments
become active participants in the judicial system and who are consequently clearer about the elements
(visual, sound, design) that are perceived as useful for reinforcing the seriousness and importance of
what takes place online.
- On the other hand, the disappearance of the
physical-spatial dimension of justice could end up influencing the judicial organization and the rules
for distributing the workload among the courts of each state. If there is one thing that characterizes
an online court, it is that it is not located in any specific place and can be accessed from anywhere:
for this reason, the very notion of territorial jurisdiction – ie, venue rules inside the borders
of a State − may become obsolete,[139] since online courts do not need to be linked
to a portion of the territory of the State that is close to their seat (remember that, traditionally,
judicial districts were constructed according to the distance it would take for litigants to reach a
court − eg, less than X days on horseback or less than Y hours by car). If up to now the division
and territorial deployment of courts have been based on criteria of access to justice understood as
physical access to the court building, the paradigm changes with online courts, since there is no other
access than good computer equipment and a good internet connection. The duty of the state, therefore,
has to be directed more than ever towards bridging the digital divide in all its dimensions (including
access to good internet-connected computer equipment in remote locations).[140] Although it is to be expected
that online courts will continue to have one or more physical seats,[141] these are irrelevant for
litigants. Therefore, a generalization of online courts should make subject matter the prevailing
criterion for the distribution of work among the courts of a state: it is easier to promote judicial
specialization in online courts, because the distribution of human resources (ie, specialized judges) is
done on a national, not territorial, basis.
- In fact, the notion of ODR and online courts was initially
associated with the idea of litigation also arising online,[142] mainly in the field of consumer
e-contracting.[143] However, this is not a requirement, because an ODR system is suitable, in principle,
for the adjudication of any matter. In any case, it is easier to imagine an online court in disputes in
which (all or part of) the facts to be judged have occurred online and, consequently, the evidence to be
handled by the court to resolve the dispute is also electronic. And, of course, it seems difficult to
imagine an online court dealing with a proceeding aimed at taking protective measures in respect of an
incapacitated person, where direct contact between the judge and the alleged incapacitated person is
usually required −to pose a radical example.
- (b) The second shift is even more disruptive for many of the current
generations, since it involves moving from a procedural model in which all decisions are made by human
beings to one in which decision-making is supported by computer programs, or even some decisions are
made directly by such programs.[144]
- From this point of view, what ends up changing is the structure of
the proceeding, that is, the pieces that compose it. The classic definition of ‘process’
tells us that it is a series or succession of acts, regulated by law, which leads to the achievement of
a certain end: in the case of a judicial process in the first instance, to the issuance of a judgment
that resolves the claim for relief brought by the plaintiff. The incorporation of technology in the
development of proceedings admits many degrees, depending on the type of technology and depending on the
aspect of the procedure to which it refers. The most basic, of course, is the automation of decisions
that depend on objective variables that can be ascertained without difficulty.[145] The most sophisticated, of
course, is the incorporation of artificial intelligence tools in decision making, whether these are
purely procedural[146] or even if it is a matter of the judgment on the merits.[147]
- In many respects, the transition from human decisions to machine
decisions can be justified on purely efficiency grounds: machines, if they are well programmed and well
‘trained’, work better than humans and are capable of doing much more (especially, as we
shall see below, taking better advantage of data). An automated structure, on the other hand, makes it
possible to better interconnect negotiation and decision-making techniques: this is why, as we shall
see, in most of the online court experiences developed so far, negotiation and mediation are part of the
ODR system and are not conceived as something ‘prior’ and, therefore, distinct or alien to
the proceedings.
- An online court, in any case, is characterized by using a procedure
that is highly digitalized and strongly controlled in its development by software programs: in other
words, it is a procedure much less dependent on the human factor to fulfil its purpose. [The human
factor is indispensable, but not so much in the operation as in the design and control of the software
and especially of the algorithms.]
- Automated processing of procedures may end up having an unexpected
beneficial effect on judicial processes. Indeed, one of the major criticisms levelled against state
justice is that it is slow, which is associated with its overload: with (very) limited human and
material resources, delays in the processing of cases cannot be avoided. Automation should bring an
exponential increase in the processing capacity of the courts and this, if well managed, may eventually
defuse the aforementioned criticism associated with slowness.
- This, however, should be taken with a grain of salt. At least at
present, a blind trust in technology, and especially in Artificial Intelligence, is not properly
justified. AI tools that support judicial work and that simplify and reduce procedures are undoubtedly
more acceptable and less controversial: it is not just a matter of speeding up the course of
proceedings, through a more automated impulse; we can also think, for example, of increasingly accurate
translation tools, or of tools for transcribing recordings of hearings. On the other hand, their use is
much more questionable when it comes to making autonomous decisions on relevant aspects of the process
and, in particular, to drafting decisions on the merits, even in simple cases. On this point,
supranational legal texts insist on the need to maintain human control and to limit the role of
computerized systems as much as possible.[148]
See, among the most relevant:
— The European ethical Charter on the use of
Artificial Intelligence in judicial systems and their environment, adopted in
December 2018 by the Council of Europe’s CEPEJ (European Commission for the Efficiency of
Justice).[149]
— The CCBE Considerations on the legal aspects of
Artificial Intelligence, approved in 2020 by the Council of Bars and Law Societies
of Europe.[150]
— The Guidelines of the Committee of Ministers of
the Council of Europe on online dispute resolution mechanisms in civil and administrative court
proceedings, adopted in June 2021,[151]
— The Guiding Principles for Automated
Decision-Making in the EU approved by the European Law Institute in May
2022.[152]
— The Opinion Moving forward: the use of assistive
technology in the judiciary adopted by the Consultative Council of European
Judges (CCJE) on 1 December 2023.[153]
— The Framework Convention on Artificial
Intelligence and Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law, approved by the
Council of Europe on 17 May 2024.[154]
— The Artificial Intelligence Act of the European Union,[155] including among high-risk AI systems those:
intended to be used by a judicial authority or on their behalf to assist a judicial
authority in researching and interpreting facts and the law and in applying the law to a concrete set of
facts, or to be used in a similar way in alternative dispute resolution.[156]
- (c) The third shift[157] is possibly the least flashy or glamorous,
but the most transformative. The big difference between the use of technology by ordinary courts to be
more efficient and the use made of it in ODR systems is that in the latter, data are collected, used and
reused. In other words, ODR systems are also characterized by the use of the data generated by each
specific case not only for the purposes of the case itself, but also for purposes other than the
management of that same case. Indeed, the processing of the data allows the system to identify the type
of litigation in progress, the identity of the litigants, the type of claim and the type of defence put
forward, among many other variables. This, when permitted by law and under the terms allowed by it, can
be used by AI systems to propose decisions to the judge or to automate certain decisions to be taken in
the course of the proceedings. But, beyond the specific process, ODR systems make it possible to gather
huge volumes of information through the data of each proceeding, which can be used by the public
authorities in many ways. On the one hand, to feed algorithms that propose solutions or decisions in
specific cases. Also to have a much more accurate and comprehensive judicial statistics, which can be
generated automatically, without relying on the human factor (where court officers are the ones who
periodically send information on specific items). This information can also be used to take a step
forward and prevent litigation. This is Online Dispute Prevention (ODP),[158] insofar as the data extracted
from the system makes it possible to detect the most recurrent types of disputes and the most common
sources of controversy, which in turn can lead to legislative changes aimed at correcting them or to the
adoption of other measures capable of reducing litigation (eg, by imposing new obligations on
businessmen in their transactions with consumers). This is why online courts and ODR are related to the
notion of e-governance.[159]
- This data handling, typical of ODR systems, always generates the
reluctance associated with the collection of big data and the respect of data protection rules. Judicial
proceedings, by definition, are public and, therefore, there is no confidentiality other than the strict
confidentiality stemming from the subject matter of certain disputes (eg, when they involve minors or
family law issues). The same is not true of ADR systems, which can also be channelled through ODR
systems: one of the advantages that ADR has over state justice is precisely confidentiality. It is
reasonable to think that the data processing techniques used by ODR systems do not make them public
– ie, generally available to the public – and that, in any case, when the data are personal
data, they will have to be respectful of the rules governing their processing (in Europe, the GDPR and
its national developments). But it is clear that this data will be stored and will be subject to use and
reuse so that the issue of security and protection takes on a scope with the ODR that it would not
ordinarily have.
10.2 Online Courts Are (Still) State Courts
- The notion of ODR is neutral in relation to who is its
‘sponsor’. In fact, its origins are in the field of ADR and, more specifically, associated
with the dispute resolution mechanisms offered by large online trading platforms, which assume that
their users value the existence of online channels for dispute resolution without having to go to court.
When an ODR system is used to operate a private ADR scheme – eg, the arbitration court of a
chamber of commerce or bar association − it is, in one way or another, subject to the rules of
competition in the market: if it is well designed and works well it will find more users and handle more
cases, which in turn will reinforce the volume and quality of the data, in whose proper processing and
use its strengths will also be found.
- However, to speak of online courts is to speak of the
use of ODR systems at the service of state justice. Online courts are courts of justice in the strict
sense of the word, ie, they are organs of the state that are vested with the public powers of courts and
their decisions therefore have all the attributes of judicial decisions.[160] They may even present
themselves as ‘court-annexed’, but indeed as a part of the court system.[161]
- Some experiences in the ODR field present the bodies
that administer it as online courts. It is important, however, to avoid misunderstandings and confusion
with the names: there are only true online courts, in the sense that interests us here, when they are
State bodies that meet the conditions to be qualified as judicial bodies.[162] Otherwise, they are in fact
ADR or arbitration systems, with decision-makers who may be empowered by the will of the parties to make
binding decisions, nothing more – but also nothing less.[163] This would entail the additional paradox that
it would be necessary to resort to the force of the state to promote the enforcement of decisions, given
their arbitral nature and the lack of power of these so-called ‘online courts’ to force
compliance.
- Consequently, where genuine online courts and online proceedings
exist, if the legislator so decides, they may be the only courts and the only way to obtain justice from
the State: although in some pilot experiences recourse to an online court is optional and requires the
agreement of both parties, it is also to be expected that at some point recourse to an online court will
be inevitable − it will be the only type of court for the dispute − and that, as a result,
online proceedings may be imposed on the opposing party. This, I believe, will only be a matter of
time.
- Moreover, the fact that online courts are courts in the strict sense
of the term means that they have the full backing of public force in the broad sense of the term. This
determines, firstly, that the judgments handed down by the online courts produce preclusion and can have
the effect of res judicata in the same way as any other judgment handed down by a traditional court in
the context of traditional proceedings. And, of course, these judgments will, depending on their
content, have declaratory, constitutive and/or executory force. Thus, a judgment handed down by an
online court can be entered in the land register if it declares a person other than the person
registered as the owner of the property to be the owner. And, of course, judgments issued by online
courts will also be enforceable. In fact, progress is also being made in the direction of electronic and
online enforcement, which can be more easily imagined, for instance, when it comes to enforcing the
payment of money judgments from assets held in bank accounts.
- The Spanish Punto Neutro
Judicial (Neutral Judicial Point) is a specific platform that shows great
success in this regard.[164] The PNJ is a complex platform, created by the General Council of the Judiciary, which
serves to make available to the courts a very diverse network of services, which have in common access
to applications and databases with useful information for the development of judicial activity. Very
diverse administrations are integrated into the PNJ: the Tax Agency, the representative bodies of the
legal professions (lawyers, notaries, registrars), the police, the traffic administration, the
Prosecutor’s Office, the Ministry of Justice, the prison administration, the social security
administration, among others. The PNJ provides a wide number of services, which include property
inquiries, information exchanges, prison inquiries and access to judicial statistics. The PNJ has proven
to be very useful in enforcement proceedings, more specifically when it comes to performing the
necessary tasks to carry out the discovery of assets. The information in public registers should be made
available through electronic means, as well as that in the possession of public bodies and financial
entities. This would allow sparing time, something which is of the essence if we want to avoid assets to
‘vanish’ as soon as the debtor has the suspicion that the creditor might be starting
enforcement proceedings against him. When court clerks are required by the creditor to perform an
investigation on the debtor’s assets, they just need to enter the platform and introduce the
debtor’s official identification number and launch a search with all relevant entities. The
request will be automatically transferred to the electronic files of those entities, which will in turn
deliver the information they are holding: immovable property, cars, bank accounts, and so on. The system
is not perfect, especially regarding bank accounts, because it does not allow any sort of online access
to the debtor’s bank account, but only monthly or quarterly reports. As compensation, the system
allows the court clerk to launch an immediate seizure of the money standing to the debtor’s
account –provided that there are sufficient funds.[165]
- In addition to the above, the fact that online courts are courts in
the strict sense of the word means something even more important than the above − or, in any case,
just as important: unless the parties reach an agreement during the proceedings, the parameter for the
resolution of the dispute must be the law. This is not the right time to emphasize the relevance of the
courts’ attachment to the law in designing a system of justice and, more generally, for the rule
of law. The important issue to underline now is that an evolution in the comparative landscape towards
online courts does not require a paradigm shift on this point: whether online or face-to-face, state
justice resolves disputes by applying the law. And, because online courts are state courts, it is
equally important that the proceedings before them are fair, ie, compliant with due process of law
requirements – eg, Art 6 ECHR or Art 47 CFREU).[166]
- In practice, however, there are at least two caveats to be
made:
- (a) To the extent that ODR and online court systems tend to
incorporate negotiation and mediation tools within the procedure, it cannot be ignored that there will
be a strong stimulus for a consensual solution, which does not necessarily have to be the one that would
result from a full application of the law. It should be noted, in any case, that this phenomenon of
imposing mediation – even if it does not become formally compulsory – is already occurring
in the ordinary courts.
- (b) The more online courts rely on AI systems to assist them in
their decision-making, the greater the risk that decisions will be based on an algorithmic view of the
law, conditioned by the AI systems’ analysis of past court decisions. This, again, is not a
problem unique to online courts, but it can be aggravated in this context and, above all, its use in
this area can be used as an argument to legitimize its extension to other areas. And all this, of
course, assuming the absence of errors, something which, however, is far from being a reality: in this
sense, a recent study carried out at Stanford University reveals a very high percentage of
hallucinations and, therefore, of legal mistakes,[167] something that was already beginning to be
sensed as the media echoed the sanctions imposed on lawyers for alleging non-existent court decisions in
their pleadings, due to the use of generative AI tools for their preparation without subjecting the case
law citations included to subsequent contrast, as detected in the US[168] or in Spain.[169] This, indeed, has
forced the bar associations to take measures.[170] The problem may also affect judges, as
already detected in Brazil.[171]
- In a different vein, and looking into the future, there are sectors
of legal life where it is difficult to imagine anything other than ODR to resolve the disputes that may
arise. This is the case, namely, with smart contracts, where decisions have to be taken at high speed.
In fact, judicial ODR may not be of any use to them either, as many of them use ways of deciding that
would be difficult to reconcile with the way it is reasonable to reach a decision in a judicial
proceeding (this is the case, for example, with the so-called ‘crowdsourcing jury voting’ on
which many blockchain-based dispute resolution systems associated with smart contracts are based, such
as Kleros).[172]
11 Some Experiences Around the World
11.1 Systems in Transition
- It has been said before that not every court that makes advanced use
of technology is an online court: not all self-proclaimed online courts really are online courts. Nor
are those bodies whose name in some way evokes their relationship with the digital − as is the
case with the Cyber Appellate Tribunal in India −.[173] Nor, certainly, is there any such thing as an
‘official certification’ that a court meets all the requirements to be a genuine online
court. On this point, as on so many others, the comparative picture offers very different and, above
all, constantly evolving results.
- The existence of genuine public or state online courts is, in some
cases, the result of legislative action that has agreed to design them from scratch with these
characteristics. Some of these will be discussed below. In most jurisdictions, however, an evolution or
transition can be observed via the digitalization of the proceedings. ‘Traditional’ courts
(offline courts, if the expression is accepted) are opening up to an increasingly complete handling of
the proceedings through digital tools, which end up producing a result that is equivalent, at least
externally, to an online court. The combination of e-filing, e-service and e-hearings results in neither
litigants nor lawyers having to move to the courthouse. The evolution becomes more acute as all these
tools are centralized through a platform capable of meeting appropriate security and authenticity
requirements. The incorporation of tools − often based on artificial intelligence − that
enable the generation of data that can be exploited − to better understand the reality of justice
and litigation, on the one hand, and to design legislative policies and legal reforms, on the other
− can close the transition. The seat of the court need not physically disappear, insofar as it is
considered convenient to group judges and judicial officials in the same place, for reasons of public
management. But it does disappear as the place where justice is dispensed, as that place will
increasingly be the digital environment.
- Some countries offer interesting examples of experiences that
exemplify this transition process and, above all, show that progress affects different elements of
proceedings: there is not a single way to make the transition into a clearer structure of online
courts.
11.1.1 Australia: the New South Wales Online
Court
- Australia offers one of the oldest examples of this phenomenon,
through the so-called New South Wales Online Court, operational since 2005.[174] The terminology, of course,
can be misleading. Indeed, the NSW government defines it on its website in the following terms:
‘Online court is an online forum that enables judicial officers and legal representatives in a
case to exchange written messages about NSW Supreme, District or Local Court matters, instead of
attending court to have the same exchange in person.’[175]
- It can therefore be said that the online court does not exist as a
specific judicial body, but that the online court is the expression used to describe the more or less
virtual and electronic conduct of certain proceedings before the courts of that State. The aim of the
online court is to replace face-to-face proceedings with online proceedings; hence it is probably more
appropriate to speak of ‘online proceeding’ rather than of online court.
- In addition, the New South Wales Online Court is limited in scope.
- Firstly, not all proceedings can be supported by the online court.
In the area of jurisdiction of the Supreme Court and the District Court, only some uncontested civil law
matters are suitable to be completely developed under the scheme of online court. At Local Court level,
it is only applied comprehensively in certain criminal cases.[176] In all other cases, the use of the online
court, through the JusticeLink and
Online Registry platforms,[177] is envisaged, but
only as a basis for e-filing and communication of the parties with the court.[178]
- The use of the online court, moreover, is not mandatory, but at the
discretion of the court: in the Supreme Court, it is the judge, as a rule, who selects a case for online
court and invites the legal representatives to participate (they can also suggest the use of the online
court to the court).[179] At Local Court level, on the other hand, the procedure is triggered automatically if
each of the parties is a registered user of the Online Registry Website and the proceeding enters an
approved list.[180]
- There are also some personal limits: before the Supreme Court the
system is not available to litigants, self-represented litigants or non-parties.[181] It can only be
used, therefore, by legal practitioners and judicial officers. In the Local Court, on the other hand,
the use of the online court is generally open to all parties.[182]
- Finally, the limits also affect the type of procedural activity to
which the online court applies, as mentioned above. Practice Note Gen 12 (Sec 12) and Practice Note Civ
1 (Sec 42.1) state − and, thus, acknowledge − that ‘online court is a virtual
courtroom’, ie, it is not intended to replace the physical seat of the court for all purposes, but
primarily for oral proceedings and, above all, for channelling communications between legal
practitioners, parties and the court. But it is excluded that it may be used ‘for communications
solely between the representatives of parties’ (Supreme Court)[183] or ‘solely between the
parties’ (Local Court).[184]
- This is a good example of the kind of evolution that many other
countries have followed: the digitization of communications and of some hearings serves to change the
landscape and to dematerialize proceedings, but falls short of a real revolution or disruption.
11.1.2 Singapore
- Singapore is also often mentioned as one of the jurisdictions where
justice is most digitized and which has made the most progress in having online courts.[185] Strictly speaking,
it must be said that Singapore’s courts are not online courts as such, as their dematerialization
is not complete (nor does it seem to be necessary). However, it is true that court proceedings are
heavily digitized and that judicial activity relies heavily on high-quality, specially designed
platforms.
- The most relevant platform, due to its general scope, is
eLitigation,[186] which serves to support the development of
civil cases in both the State Courts and the Supreme Court, to family cases in the Family Justice Courts
and to criminal cases at the Supreme Court. Its main utility is e-filing of applications addressed to
the courts.
- Alongside this, there are more specific platforms for the management
of certain types of proceedings or for the management of proceedings before certain courts. Access to
these platforms for litigants in person is associated with being registered in the Singpass system, a kind of multipurpose digital
identity.
- Community Justice and Tribunal Systems (CJTS),[187] for instance, offers support to Small Claims Tribunals, Employment Claims Tribunals,
Community Dispute Resolution Tribunals and to the Protection from Harassment Court.
- On family matters, two additional platforms are offered in addition
to eLitigation. On the one hand, the Integrated Family Application Management System (iFAMS),[188] which provides access to online services in matters related to maintenance, protection
against family violence and protection for vulnerable adults (the platform enables the filing of
applications, viewing case details, the submission of court documents or changing a court date, for
instance). On an even more targeted basis Divorce eService[189] has been developed,
that may be used to apply for divorce on the simplified track or to generate the documents needed to
file a divorce.
- In general, irrespective of the court, the proceedings are still
associated with the physical seat of the court: preliminary hearings and hearings for most trials are
face-to-face as a rule, notwithstanding the fact that the rules on videoconferencing may
apply.[190] However, when measuring the relevance of this data to determine the degree of
digitization of Singapore’s justice system, the uniqueness of the country must be taken into
account, especially in terms of its small size and the high concentration of its population, which
undoubtedly reduces some of the requirements that are usually used to justify a greater generalization
of remote hearings.
- More specifically, although in principle only applicable within the
Community Justice and Tribunal System, the possibility of launching an eNegotiation and eMediation tool,[191] which are both fully online, is particularly
attractive. The eNegotiation tool offers up to
five rounds of exchange, whereas the eMediation platform offers an online chat session with a court-appointed mediator. In both
contexts, if an agreement is reached, the issuance of a consent order by the court can be requested
electronically. This increased involvement of consensual resolution tools in the framework of state-run
dispute resolution is, as noted above, one of the features marking the evolution towards new forms of
e-Justice.
- On a general level the enormous help offered to users and, above
all, the high quality of the help for litigants in person is particularly significant: information on
the legal dimension and on how to manage the various steps of the procedure (including what documents to
bring, how to dress in case of a personal appearance or how to identify oneself in court) and the
various functionalities of the platforms are offered in a clear and understandable way. At this point,
of course, the end result is very similar to what a genuine online court would offer, as it allows the
core of the procedural activity to be managed without having to go to the physical seat of the court.
Although there is no online court, there is high quality online support for litigants in person, so that
the outcome, in many respects, resembles that which would be generated by fully online litigation before
a virtual court.
- An observation of the situation in Singapore also shows the
versatility and flexibility offered by the digital environment to provide courts and litigants with
tailor-made tools, depending on the disputes. Online courts are often associated with procedural
specialities, linked to both the subject matter and the digital environment of the process. The use of
unique and ad hoc platforms is, of course, an
example of their usefulness, especially if the diversity of platforms does not lead to confusion thanks
to the quality of the information. The transition towards greater digitization of the justice system
seems to respond primarily to criteria of efficiency and, more generally, of pure modernity: it is a
matter of adapting the justice system to the way in which economic and social life is increasingly
developing.
11.1.3 Brazil and the Juízo 100% Digital
- In Brazil the possibility of fully online proceedings has been open
for almost two decades. In 2006, a regulation was passed at federal level, Law n. 11.419,[192] which aimed at a
complete digitalization of judicial processes, both from the point of view of internal management within
the court, as well as in terms of communication between the parties and with the court, which was
implemented through platforms.[193] The most important is the so-called
Sistema Processo Judicial Eletrônico – Pje.[194] Others have been developed subsequently, such as SNIPER, designed to increase the
efficiency of asset searches for the purpose of enforcement.[195]
- This full equivalence between
‘traditional’ and ‘digital’ procedural acts was maintained with the adoption in
2015 of the new Code of Civil Procedure. Its Art 193 contains a very simple and broadly effective
general rule: ‘Procedural acts can be totally or partially digital, so that they can be produced,
communicated, stored and validated by electronic means, in accordance with the law.’ This general
rule, when the legislator considers it appropriate, is developed and detailed with regard to specific
procedural activity (as is the case, eg, with electronic service).
- During the pandemic, remote hearings, which were only
an option, became mandatory. The Conselho Nacional de
Justiça took the opportunity to deepen the digitization of justice
through Resolution 345/2020,[196] which created a specific tool, the
Juízo 100% Digital (‘100% Digital
Trial’).
- The Juízo 100%
Digital is, first and foremost, an online procedure that has no specific
regulation, but simply consists of all the procedural activities being carried out in electronic format
via the Internet. It does not, therefore, create a different procedure from those regulated in the Code
of Civil Procedure, but rather opts for the electronic format for all those that would also admit a
face-to-face version. It is specifically specified that hearings will be held ‘exclusively’
by videoconference[197] and that any interaction between the court and the parties, outside the procedural
activity in the strict sense of the word, will also be digital: thus, the courts’ attention to the
public will be non-face-to-face (it will be done by telephone, e-mail, videocalls, or digital
applications, such as the Balcão Virtual, a
kind of kiosk that allows access to all the elements of a court file[198]); the attention of judges to
lawyers will be developed in the same way;[199] it is clarified, however, that online
attention does not mean 24/7 attention, since the opening hours for the public will have to be
respected.
- Beyond the foregoing − which is already a lot – the
resolution of the Conselho Nacional de Justiça is interesting because it allows the creation of totally virtual judicial units, which
assume beforehand that all their proceedings will be handled as Juízo 100% Digital. In principle, the choice of
Juízo 100% Digital is optional, it cannot
be imposed: it must be accepted by the parties; moreover, it can be the subject of a prior procedural
contract.[200] However, in courts with several divisions, it is possible to allocate the cases in
dispute in such a way that those cases in which the parties have opted for the digital process are
attributed to the judicial units that have opted for this modality. These judicial units, therefore,
would be the embryo of true online courts, with the singularity that they ‘replicate’ in
virtual format a way of administering justice that is designed for the physical world and that they
continue to have a defined territorial demarcation, which remains unchanged.[201]
- In many ways, Brazil is a counterpoint to Singapore: a very large
and populous country, but also very unequal and with a genuine problem of access to justice. However,
digitization has also become a hallmark of its judicial system. Resolution 345/2020 stresses in its
recitals that the digitalization of proceedings promotes an increase in the speed and efficiency of
justice. But it can also be seen as an imperative to compensate for geographical and socio-economic
gaps, and thus as a tool to improve access to justice − and this is also pointed out in the first
recital of the resolution.
- In addition to the above, the situation in Brazil is also
interesting for the way in which the use of AI in the service of justice is managed. Since 2020, another
resolution of the Conselho Nacional de Justiça, Resolution 332/2020 of 21 August, adopts a fairly permissive and decentralized approach on
this point, which recognizes the initiative of the courts themselves to develop their own AI tools to
support their tasks, while subjecting them to certain requirements or safeguards.[202] Foremost among
these are, of course, respect for fundamental rights,[203] data security and protection[204] and
non-discrimination, which includes the duty to discontinue the use of an AI system when it becomes
apparent that it is biased and that the bias cannot be corrected.[205] Transparency is also ensured,
which includes, inter alia, documentation of identified risks, the possibility to identify the reason,
in case of harm caused by the AI tool, and the provision of satisfactory and verifiable explanation by a
human authority in relation to any proposed decision presented by the AI model.[206] The latter is associated with
the requirement for human judicial oversight in those systems that allow for the production of judicial
decisions (Art 19).[207]
11.1.4 England and Wales: The Online Civil Money
Claims
- In the United Kingdom the creation of online courts has been the
subject of political and academic discussion for some time now, with plans and studies taking place over
the years.[208] At the present time, the approach seems to be more modest: instead of creating a
genuine online court, the government decided to adopt an approach through which it would introduce
digitized forms of process for procedure in the County Court.
- The result, for the time being, has materialized in the Online Civil
Money Claims (OCMC) Pilot, regulated in Practice Direction 51R[209] and applicable between 7 August 2017 and 1
October 2025. The aim is to experiment, on a test basis, an online process with a view to extracting
information and experience to move towards wider digitization.[210] To that end, a new Online Procedure Rule
Committee (an advisory non-departmental public body) was set up in 2022 to create rules governing the
practice and procedure for specific types of online court and tribunal proceedings for civil claims,
family disputes and disputes in the tribunals justice system.[211] The Committee has not produced tangible
results so far.
- The OCMC applies with the support of a specific platform, the OCMC
Website, which is to be used to implement electronic communication. A claim is suitable to be dealt with
under the OCMC if some conditions are met:[212] in short − nuances and exceptions are
foreseen − monetary claims have to be involved, not for personal injury, and not exceeding the
amount of GBP 25,000 or GBP 10,000 (including interest), depending on whether the parties will be
assisted by a legal representative or not.
- Practice Direction 51R regulates in great detail a procedure that is
very special and that only sporadically and residually refers to the Civil Procedure Rules. Despite its
name, the procedure that has been designed is not completely dematerialized (ie, it is not 100% online):
rather, the regulation focuses on channelling the parties' communication with each other and with
the court electronically (e-filing and e-service, although in some cases and with regard to some
litigants without digital skills or equipment, the means of communication will continue to be
traditional mail).
- The procedure is only fully conducted in accordance with the
provisions of the OCMC when a judgment on admission, a settlement agreement or a default judgment is
reached, ie, when there is a consensual agreement or when the defendant’s opposition is not openly
expressed. This explains why the procedure is not normally under the control or direction of a judge but
in the hands of a ‘legal adviser.[213] Its essence, therefore, is to channel
communication between the parties that can lead to a solution that settles the dispute without the need
for a trial on the merits. Thus, the process ‘derails’ and falls outside the OCMC track and
is transferred to an ordinary court to follow the ordinary course when the parties do not reach an
agreement (unless they are legally represented, in which case a hearing will be held before the same
court, but it will not be necessarily a remote one).
- In view of the description above, it could be said that it is not a
particularly significant model. However, at least from an outsider’s point of view, there are
several interesting elements of the OCMC that allow it to be presented as an example of a transition
towards the notion of an online court, ie, as something more than a traditional court carrying out its
ordinary activity with the support of advanced IT tools.
- Firstly, the design of an ad
hoc procedure should be highlighted: the English legislator has considered
that a generic ‘functional equivalence clause’, such as those seen in other systems
analysed, is not sufficient. It is assumed, therefore, that online courts need tailor-made online
proceedings.
- Secondly, and closely related to the first point, it should be noted
that the regulation of the procedure in Practice Direction 51R is hyper-detailed − one might say
to the point of exhaustion −: an infinite number of scenarios are identified and meticulously
regulated, combining the possible reactions of the defendant and the counter-reactions of the plaintiff
in such a way that no hypothesis is left without a solution. It seems to have been conceived not so much
by a traditional procedural legislator, but by a computer programmer who describes in the form of a
provision what they themselves imagine as windows, screens and boxes in an application and on a
platform.
- A language is also used that is not excessively technical or legal
(it is more user-friendly). However, precisely because of what has just been pointed out − detail
and extension of the rules that make up Practice Direction 51R −, it is only really manageable for
citizens if they access its content in a mediated manner, through the website and the platform (if the
addressees of the OCMC had to read Practice Direction 51R directly, they would not have the feeling that
their Access to justice was being improved, of course).[214] This changes the focus of the legislative
technique, which is not necessarily thinking of a citizen who reads the law, but of a citizen who uses
the application and the website designed by the law to access the relevant information and navigate the
procedure autonomously and securely.
- Finally, it is important to underline the approach of the procedure
towards consensual conflict resolution, which is a feature closely associated with the notion of ODR and
which allows for a procedural management that relieves judges of work, as it can be entrusted to other
persons (in this case, the ‘legal advisers’).
- In addition to the OCMC, England and Wales have very recently dealt
with the use of AI in courts, following a soft law approach. On 12 December 2023, the Courts and
Tribunals Judiciary published a Judicial Guidance document, entitled Guidance for responsible use of AI in Courts and Tribunals.[215] The document aims to assist judicial office holders in relation to the use of AI. On
the one hand, it identifies risks and issues, and provides suggestions for minimizing them. On the other
hand, the document includes potential (admissible) uses, recalling the judiciary’s overarching
obligation to protect the integrity of the administration of justice.
- The guidance is focused on seven main areas of recommendation: 1.
Understand AI and its applications; 2. Uphold confidentiality and privacy; 3. Ensure accountability and
accuracy; 4. Be aware of bias; 5. Maintain security (eg, using work devices and work email address to
use AI tools); 6. Take Responsibility. [The Guidance reminds judicial office holders that they are
personally responsible for material produced in their name, even if an AI systems was used. But it also
acknowledges that generative AI could be ‘a potentially useful secondary tool’ in
judges’ preparatory work to produce a judgment]; 7. Be aware that court/tribunal users may have
used AI tools (some indications that work may have been produced by AI are included)
- In addition, indications are provided in distinguishing potentially
useful tasks and AI performed tasks that are not recommended. Among the first ones (potentially useful),
the following are mentioned: summarising large bodies of text (taking care to ensure that the summary is
accurate), writing presentations, and composing emails and memoranda. The Guidance, however, does not
recommend using AI tools to carry out legal research or legal analysis.
- The main goal, therefore, is to guide ‘institutional
users’ of AI systems and not to establish clear rules. It is probably just a first step, where the
focus on the rights and safeguards of litigants is secondary: they are to be considered in an indirect
manner, as a consequence of the recommendations and the rationale lying behind them.
11.1.5 Spain and its ‘Data-Oriented
Justice’ Programme
- A final example of these various digital transition formulas is
offered by the Spanish judicial system following the reform carried out in 2023 to further digitize
justice (with the Act regulating the use of ICT in the justice system,[216] in force since 20 March 2024.
In Spain, e-filing and e-service have been operational for almost two decades and have been mandatory
since 2015, with the aim of streamlining case management and eliminating paper from the process –
although in many cases it was and still is necessary to serve the defendant with a paper copy of the
statement of claim and supporting documents. During the pandemic, moreover, a provisional regulation was
approved that encouraged the remote holding of oral hearings[217] and which has been maintained, with some
changes, after the reform of 2023, which aims to dematerialize the judicial system as much as possible.
With the new regulation, it is in the hands of the court to decide whether the preliminary hearing and
the trial are to be held in person or virtually (Arts 414.2 and 432.1 of the Spanish Code of Civil
Procedure) and the right is recognized for parties, witnesses and experts to testify by videoconference
if they reside outside the place where the trial is held, unless the judge justifiably requests their
presence (Arts 129bis and 137 bis of the Spanish Code of Civil Procedure);[218] in many cases, therefore, it
is possible for proceedings to be conducted entirely online, even if the court remains offline and even
if, in fact, that same court may be conducting in parallel other proceedings in which all or some of the
hearings are being or have been held in person. In this respect, therefore, nothing distinguishes the
Spanish evolution from what is taking place or will take place in many other jurisdictions in the coming
years. However, the reform of the Spanish system in 2023 is interesting for two additional reasons,
which have a certain disruptive impact on progress in the digitization of justice.
- Firstly, the notion of ‘data-oriented justice’ is openly
embraced: the tools and platforms that are developed to support the e-management of the case must be
designed to be able to extract reusable data from them. According to Art 35 of the Act, the systems used
by the administration of justice must ensure the input, incorporation and processing of information in
the form of metadata, in accordance with common schemas, and in common and interoperable data models
that enable, simplify and support various purposes. Among them, we can now mention the search and
analysis of data and documents for jurisdictional, organizational and statistical purposes or the
publication of information on open data portals (in the service, thus, of dispute prevention). But this
data collection is also intended to be used for the production of automated, assisted and proactive
judicial and procedural acts, especially for the application of artificial intelligence techniques in
support of the judicial function, the conduct of proceedings and the definition and implementation of
public policies relating to the administration of justice. This legal option clearly shows that the
possibilities offered by e-justice go beyond the simple electronic conduct of proceedings.
- The new Spanish regulation is equally interesting, with regard to
the above, because it expressly allows for the use of Artificial Intelligence tools, aimed at automating
as far as possible the conduct of proceedings and assisting judges and prosecutors in their
decision-making tasks, while at the same time imposing certain limits. In this vein, the new Act has
expressly admitted making recourse to AI technology in support of a swifter development of court
proceedings, distinguishing between ‘automated’, ‘proactive’ and
‘assisted’ activities.
- (a) ‘Automated’ activities are defined as procedural
activities carried out by a computer system without the need for human intervention.[219] They are foreseen
mostly for simple tasks related to the management of electronic court files (eg, numbering or paging
documents, generating copies or certificates, declaring that a decision is final because it has not been
appealed within the legal time limit).
- (b) Automated actions are labelled as ‘proactive’ when
they are self-initiated by the system, without human intervention, taking advantage of the information
in an electronic judicial file for a specific purpose,[220] such as generating a notice that is
automatically served on a party.
- Automated and proactive activities aim to optimize the internal
management of the court’s more bureaucratic tasks, although even the most ‘innocent’
administrative task may end up having an impact on the parties. Therefore, the Act imposes three
requirements on these automated and proactive activities:
— They shall all be identifiable as such, traceable and justifiable.
— It shall be possible to carry out the same actions in a non-automated
form.
— It shall be possible to disable, revert or render ineffective the automated
actions that have already taken place.
- These provisions reflect the general principles of ‘human
supervision’ or ‘human in command’: AI-generated activities need to be traceable for
the parties, in order to allow them to react against them and, where appropriate, to have them revoked
or replaced in a non-automated manner.
- (c) The third category are ‘assisted’ procedural
activities, representing an additional step: the system generates a full or partial draft of a complex
data-driven document, which may be produced by algorithms, and may form the basis or support for a court
decision.[221] The description is very abroad and may encompass, among other examples, the drafting of
an order for payment in order for payment proceedings or of a judgment upholding the claim in a simple
eviction case. Most decisions could, at least in theory, undergo this first level of AI-generated draft,
if the system has the data needed by the algorithm to produce it (something that should be possible in a
data-oriented justice system, where the documents in all electronic court files are able to provide this
sort of additional information).
- As the qualitative impact is bigger, the safeguards imposed are
larger:
— These drafts shall not be generated in a proactive manner, even if this
could be technically possible: the draft will only be generated at the will of the user.
— The draft, additionally, has to be fully editable, ie, they user shall be
able to modify it freely and completely.
— In no case shall the draft in itself constitute a judicial decision, but
shall require validation by the competent authority.
- Here again the ‘human oversight’ and ‘human on
command’ approach prevails, as a clear policy choice by the Spanish lawmaker. These provisions do
not eliminate completely the risk – perhaps the temptation – that the competent authority
might tend to validate algorithmically generated drafts without further analysis, but at least they link
decisions to specific individuals, not to ‘computer systems’ for which no one would
ultimately be held responsible. It is part of the (legal and ethical) responsibility of
‘users’ to rigorously review drafts before validating them. And it is imperative to avoid
that something similar to the examples of lawyers sanctioned for providing documents produced with
generative Artificial Intelligence incorporating non-existent decisions could happen.
11.2 More ‘Advanced’ Online Courts
- The examples analysed so far show that there is no single way to
move towards a deeper digitization of justice and that there are many different elements to be taken
into account until a point is reached where it is no longer just a matter of doing digitally what has
been done non-digitally up to now, going beyond the mantra of functional equivalence. In the following,
the most established experiences of ‘online courts’ will be addressed in order to verify to
what extent the advantages described in an abstract manner may be confirmed in reality. What is
interesting about these experiences is precisely that they assume a different way of dealing with court
proceedings because they have to be conducted digitally: this new approach opens the way to establishing
genuine online courts and to conducting genuine online proceedings. To this end, the analysis will focus
on the Chinese Internet courts and on the Civil Resolution Tribunal of the Canadian British Columbia.
11.2.1 China’s Internet Courts
- China boasts of being the first country to have
created internet courts. The interesting thing about the Chinese case is that it was the subject matter
of the litigation (the internet) that foreshadowed the court. Indeed, the creation of online courts in
China has its origins in the need to resolve disputes arising on the internet (if one prefers, arising
from legal relations entered into on the Internet or from damages arising from activity carried out on
the Internet). The uniqueness of the disputes and evidence has allowed the proceedings to be online and
the courts themselves also to move online.[222]
- The first online court was established in Hangzhou:[223] it was set up in
June 2017. It was followed in September 2018 by the Beijing and Guangzhou internet courts. In other
places, special courts have not been created, although specialized sections or benches have been set up
for this type of case.[224]
- Focusing on the Beijing Internet Court – for which there is
more information available in English – it is possible to identify certain elements that are
characteristic of these courts.
- (a) An internet-centric scope of jurisdiction. Internet Courts are
so not so much because they operate on the internet, but because their objective is to solve disputes
related to the internet, in a broad sense: they are therefore presented as courts specialized in
litigation whose common element is their relationship with the internet and, in an increasingly broader
sense, with the entire sector linked to ICT developments.
- The Beijing Internet Court – and the other two courts appear
to have an equivalent scope – has jurisdiction to hear, under the criteria of territorial
jurisdiction that would refer the case to the Beijing courts, the following categories of
matters:[225]
(1) Disputes arising from the conclusion or performance of online shopping contracts
through e-commerce platforms;
(2) Online service contract disputes where the conclusion and performance are
completed on the Internet;
(3) Disputes over financial loan contracts and small loan contracts where the
conclusion and performance are completed on the Internet;
(4) Disputes over the ownership of copyright or neighboring rights of works
published on the Internet for the first time;
(5) Disputes arising from the infringement of copyright or neighboring rights on the
Internet of works published or communicated online;
(6) Disputes over Internet domain name ownership, infringement and contracts;
(7) Disputes arising from the infringement of the personal rights, property rights
or other civil rights of others on the Internet;
(8) Product liability disputes arising from the infringement of the personal or
property rights of others due to the defects of products purchased through an e-commerce platform;
(9) Internet public interest litigations filed by the procuratorial organ;
(10) Administrative disputes arising from administrative actions taken by
administrative organs such as Internet information service management, Internet commodity trading and
relevant service management;
(11) Other Internet civil and administrative cases designated by the people's
court at a higher level.
- This is admittedly limited, although the possible type of litigation
is becoming increasingly broad and includes e-commerce (sales and purchases, defective products),
internet services (such as online music or video streaming, but also internet loans), copyright in works
that are published or distributed on the Internet, domain names and cyber torts, among others. This is
allowing these courts to be among the first to resolve particularly novel issues, [226] which also include the world of AI: thus, in February 2024 the Guangzhou Internet Court
ruled on the possibility that a platform offering Generative AI may have infringed copyright, not only
by using data and images from a content creator, but also by offering results very similar to those
offered by the latter.[227] In fact, it is not hidden that the creation of these courts pursues to a large extent a
strategic political goal, ‘becoming a powerful country in science and technology, as well as
law-based governance of cyberspace’.[228]
- (b) A clear state presence: they are not presented as something
different or alternative to state justice, but rather as an improvement, an evolution or an adaptation
of state justice to the needs of the new times. It is clear at all times that these are courts that are
part of the Chinese judicial organization, composed of judges and staff of the ordinary Chinese judicial
system.[229] As they operate only at first instance, they are integrated into the organizational
pyramid of Chinese courts for appeal purposes.
- (c) An adapted procedural regime: the creation of internet courts
has been accompanied by the adoption of special procedural rules, designed to meet the new procedural
needs arising from the dematerialization of the process.
- Initially, the Supreme People’s Court (SPC) had accompanied
the creation of the Internet courts with three sets of online litigation rules, applicable exclusively
to these three courts.
- The fundamental one was the ‘Regulation on Several Issues
Concerning the Cases Adjudication by Internet Courts’ promulgated in September 2018, applicable to
the three Internet Courts in Hangzhou, Beijing and Guangzhou. They were followed by the
‘Implementation Measures of the Pilot Reform on Separation between Complicated and Simple Cases in
Civil Proceedings’ promulgated in January 2020, applicable to online case adjudication, electronic
document submission and electronic service of specific courts; and the ‘Notice on Strengthening
and Regulating Online Litigation during the Prevention and Control of COVID-19 Epidemic’
promulgated in April 2020, applicable to cases where courts could not conduct court hearings offline
when the epidemic was severe.
- However, on 16 June 2021 the SPC promulgated a new set of procedural
rules, the ‘Online Litigation Rules for People’s Courts’ (‘Online Litigation
Rules’), intended to be applied not only by Internet Courts, but more generally by any court
before which the parties opt for full or partial electronic development of the proceedings.
- The Online Litigation Rules aim at embedding the online litigation
technology into litigation proceedings in China.
- In the case of Internet Courts, their use is self-evident and
highlights the clear move towards an ODR system, as all procedural activity is articulated through a
multifunctional platform that incorporates multiple technological developments. Blockchain technology is
used to make the platform more reliable: multi-party supervision, non-tampering, and easy traceability
ensure the protection of trial data and the certification of electronic evidence.
- Several elements of this electronic procedure are worth
highlighting:
- (i) The consensual settlement attempt
as a stage of the process. As in most ODR mechanisms, the legal regulation
and the platform incorporate the attempt at conciliation as a stage of the procedure; if this attempt is
unsuccessful, then the platform activates the more ordinary dispute resolution stage.
- This initial mediation stage is highly developed and integrated into
the structure of the process.[230]
- Parties concerned file a request, which is assessed by a (human)
judge. If the parties agree to mediate, the mediation system will be triggered. The first steps deal
with the appointment and selection of the persons involved in the process: even if it sounds illogical,
the trial team (professional judges) will be first appointed, according to the relevant provisions to
distribute and allocate cases; the trial team will select the mediatorial judge, again pursuant to the
relevant provisions. The mediatorial judge, along with the parties, will select the mediation
organization which, in turn, will appoint the mediator. In this way, mediation is clearly under judicial
control and its incorporation into the process is more justified. Once mediation has started, it can
have two outcomes.
- If mediation is successful, the parties and/or the mediator will
inform the mediatorial judge of the result. If the judge confirms the result, a draft agreement will be
created and, once signed by the parties, they will submit an application to withdraw the lawsuit.
- If mediation is unsuccessful, the mediatorial judge will be as well
informed of the outcome and, if he/she confirms the result, the case will be referred to the judicial
system to follow the ordinary trial procedures.
- (ii) The possibility that the hearing of the parties does not take place in a
concentrated (synchronous) manner, but asynchronously.
- Pursuant to Art 14, if all parties agree to exchange evidence online
asynchronously, the court will grant them a period where they shall log into the litigation platform,
review and present examination opinions on the evidentiary materials that have been uploaded to the
litigation platform.
- But, more significantly, Art 20 must be taken into account: instead
of holding an online hearing, the parties may record their oral statements and upload the video to the
litigation platform within a designated period. This possibility, however, only applies for small claims
and summary civil cases, if they meet three conditions: (1) all parties have difficulty participating in
online trial simultaneously; (2) all parties agree; and (3) there is no dispute among the parties over
the main facts and evidence of the case. In fact, the rule is rather narrower in scope, as it is
intended to allow for asynchronous trials in which only legal issues are discussed, but in which
adversarial taking of evidence is not required. The important thing is that this rule also assumes that
the adversarial taking of evidence, which is necessary for it to be reliable, requires – at least
for the time being – the simultaneous interaction of the parties – its synchronous
character, to put it in the new terminology.
- (iii) A strong support for Artificial
Intelligence tools when developing many procedural acts:[231]
- On the one hand, for the identification of the parties and the
signing of documents: the parties can identify themselves through facial recognition, for which they can
simply use the camera of their mobile phone; if a document needs to be signed, an online electronic
signature system allows for this, through the generation of QR codes.
- On the other hand, for the drafting of documents. A system of
pleading automatic generation helps the parties to write their pleadings, by means of structured
questions designed according to the type of cases. A voice recognition in real time system transcribes
automatically oral activities and generates court records. And, especially, an AI assistant is able to
automatically generate the first draft of the judgment, ‘according to the transcript of the trial
and the rules of the case’.
- Finally – and always according to the BIC website – the
platform offers a ‘Litigation Risk Assessment’, that is, an ‘independent’
assessment of the probability of winning a lawsuit based on the basic facts entered by the
parties.
- Some conclusions: Experience is still recent, and information and
data are still scarce, but it seems clear that the Internet Courts that China is promoting fit quite
clearly into the notion of Online Courts and show where civil justice may evolve in the future:
- The court is dematerialized as a place for the parties and for the
conduct of the proceedings: they do not need to go to a specific venue in order for the process to be
fully developed. However, the court as such still has a physical seat, where the judges and other court
staff are located. Nor does the ‘human materiality’ of the court disappear, whose members
are not replaced by machines – even if they are assisted by them. Moreover, although the court is
dematerialized for the parties, it is still assigned a territorial scope of jurisdiction: internet
courts still have specific territorial demarcations and litigation has to be linked to those
demarcations. It is clear that this may change in the future, but it is also clear that a hypothetical
ubiquity of the court does not define what an online court should be.
- The procedure, as a tool, is becoming more technological and
adapting to the reality of the disputes it has to resolve, which have a clear technological background.
However, the evolution in Chinese law also shows that digitalization, initially promoted for these
courts, can be generalized and applied to any dispute.
- The prior attempt at mediation or conciliation is more naturally
integrated into the structure of the procedure. It is not a matter of going to mediation first, in a
place and before a structure other than the court, which can be approached later, if mediation fails.
The process starts before the court, only once and in only one (electronic) venue, so that the attempt
at mediation becomes a step in the process, not a prerequisite for it –which is often perceived as
an obstacle that slows access to justice. In addition, the development of the entire process online
facilitates the interrelation of the court with the institution managing the mediation and with the
mediator.
- The use of advanced technology and AI tools aims to promote
procedural efficiency and, undoubtedly, data-driven justice, allowing the information generated in the
procedure to be used for strategic and legislative policy purposes. In any case, the cautions regarding
the advantages and disadvantages of AI in the field of justice make as much sense in these courts as in
offline courts.
- These courts, finally, are clear proof that digitizing justice does
not necessarily mean privatizing it: Chinese internet courts are openly state courts, in which the
presence of state power is evident and constant. Instead, they have adapted the forms of manifestation
of public power to the online context.
11.2.2 The Canadian Experience and the British
Columbia Civil Resolution Tribunal
- Online courts also seem to have become an everyday
reality in Canada. The most paradigmatic example − although not the only one[232] − is provided
by the British Columbia Civil Resolution Tribunal.[233] It was created in 2012 through the Civil
Resolution Tribunal Act[234] and started operating in 2016, becoming Canada’s first online court. According to
the data provided by the Tribunal on its website, by 5 September 2024, the Tribunal had rendered more
than 9000 decisions (the vast majority of which were final decisions), which is indicative of its clear
establishment in the dispute resolution landscape in this Canadian province.
- Unlike what has just been seen with the Chinese Internet Courts, the
Civil Resolution Tribunal (CRT, hereinafter) is not a specialized body for resolving disputes related to
the Internet or new technologies. Rather, it offers itself as a mechanism to improve access to justice
in disputes that, for the most part, take place offline.
- More precisely, the Civil Resolution Tribunal has the authority to
resolve most of the following claims:[235]
— Vehicle accident claims including entitlement to accident benefits and
Insurance Corporation of British Columbia’s assessment of responsibility for an accident.
— Small claims up to 5,000 Canadian dollars.[236]
— Strata property claims of any amount.[237]
— Claims of any amount about societies incorporated in British Columbia, and
housing and community service cooperative associations.
— Intimate image protection claims.
- It should be noted that the CRT is not a real judicial body (it is
not a court), but something different, an administrative body specialized in dispute resolution (a
tribunal), composed of persons who are not judges, but are appointed by the Lieutenant Governor of
British Columbia.[238] In fact, the tribunal’s decisions are subject to ‘judicial
review’[239] and not to a genuine system of appeal. This is a difference that may be relevant from
the perspective of what the judicial function is, especially if viewed through ‘continental’
eyes. Be that as it may, the CRT is publicly presented as ‘part of the British
Columbia public justice system’. And, in any case, it is a public body: what it offers,
therefore, is ODR, and public ODR.
- The online character of the Tribunal, on the other hand, is not
clear from a simple reading of the Act that regulates it. The key for the British Columbia legislator
seems to be the use of electronic communication tools: pursuant to Sec 2(2)(c) CRT Act,
The mandate of the tribunal is to provide dispute resolution services in relation to
matters that are within its authority, in a manner that […/…] uses electronic communication
tools to facilitate resolution of disputes brought to the tribunal.
- However, when it comes to the regulation of the proceedings, the use
of electronic communication tools is presented as a possibility for the Tribunal,[240] although it seems
that it can in any case impose the use of electronic communication tools on the parties.[241]
- The mere use of electronic communications does not, of course,
simply turn a court into an online court. It is conceivable, however, that in 2012, when the CRT Act was
passed, and even in 2016, when the Tribunal became first operational, this expression was intended to
convey the idea that all acts of the proceedings could be conducted online, without the need for the
parties or the tribunal members to physically come to the seat of the Tribunal. Today, the CRT operates
through a platform and advertises itself as an institution that is accessible online every day and every
hour. The only point in the proceedings that does not necessarily take place online is the first service
on the defendant (‘Serving the Dispute Notice package’, in the terminology of the CRT), as
claimants are usually instructed to do this themselves and, among the methods for doing so, the use of
e-mail is only one possibility (not even the most recommended) and, in any case, it is done outside the
CRT platform.
- The CRT has its own special procedure, developed in the CRT Act. A
reading of the act, at least in my opinion, leads to the conclusion that the existence of this special
procedure does not derive from the online nature of the process, that is, it is not a response to the
need to regulate a digital process − unlike, therefore, what was seen with the Chinese internet
courts. Instead, the process is special because it is intended to encourage ‘a collaborative
approach to resolving disputes’, ‘rather than the traditional adversarial litigation
model’[242] and to reinforce the role of the court as a public instrument to provide dispute
resolution in a manner that is accessible, speedy, economical, informal and flexible[243], which also explains the
general rule that no lawyer is required[244]. These objectives are clearly visible when
analysing the structure of the process.
- First of all, and even before the complaint is filed, the CRT
platform offers an online Solution Explorer, providing free legal information, not legal advice, based
on the answers given to the (simple) questions asked about the dispute (in a free, anonymous and
confidential manner). The Solution Explorer offers template letters that the prospective claimant can
send to the other party in order to solve the dispute on their own. Finally, the Solution Explorer also
classifies the dispute and leads the claimant to the right CRT online application form, in order for
them to start the proceedings.
- Once the application is submitted, the proceedings before the
Tribunal are divided into two main phases,[245] the case management and the tribunal
hearing.
- In the case management
phase, resolution by agreement between the parties is facilitated and
preparations are made for the tribunal hearing should one be required.[246] This phase is in the hands of
a case manager, who is a tribunal officer. The platform itself first offers an online negotiation tool,
which allows the parties to agree on the best solution for the case. If the negotiation through the
platform is unsuccessful, the case manager will get involved to help the participants reach an agreement
(facilitation).
- If the dispute is not solved in the case management phase the
tribunal hearing phase will be opened, in which
the dispute is heard and the tribunal gives a final decision to resolve the dispute. CRT decisions
− including those upholding the agreement reached by the parties − can be enforced. They may
be challenged by means of judicial review. The CRT publishes all final decisions – except decisions for intimate image protection orders
− on its website, where it also offers a search tool. It should be noted, however, that these
decisions are not binding as precedents for other cases.
- As noted, the approach is clearly different from that offered by
China’s Internet Courts. The emphasis here is on the user-friendly solution and the flexible
development of the proceedings. In the CRT, therefore, the online dimension is not presented as a first
step in a broader ambition to digitize justice. Its online nature is, to a certain extent, secondary or
instrumental: it is at the service of that flexibility which, one senses, contributes to facilitating a
negotiated settlement of the dispute. The same is true of the public nature of the tribunal: pragmatism
predominates, and the emphasis is on how the
dispute will be resolved (quickly and, as far as possible, consensually), not so much on who will resolve it (hence the secondary nature, in the
system, of the concept of the CRT as a ‘tribunal’ and not as a genuine
‘court’).
- It can be concluded, in short, that the notion of online court is
quite flexible and can be adapted to the procedural culture of each country, ie, to the values that each
country attaches to dispute settlement mechanisms. In particular, the CRT reflects the British Columbia
legislator’s interest in providing a simple channel for the resolution of more everyday disputes,
with a focus on consensual settlement, but not at any price: at all times the users are informed that
the absence of agreement is not a negative thing per se, but rather opens the door to a decision on the
merits by the tribunal, which may end up giving them the whole reason (without the concessions of a
negotiated settlement).
12 Demands and Challenges for a Just Transition to
Online Justice
- Online courts aspire to be the next step in the
development of justice systems, insofar as they aim to represent the best of two worlds that, to a
certain extent, would not be fully compatible.[247] (i) As ODR systems, online courts aim to
bring the efficiency associated with
digitization;[248] the development of software with the potential to increase the capabilities of the
judicial system seems, in addition, unstoppable – at least as long as it is profitable. (ii) As
genuine courts, online courts bring justice, as
something that goes beyond the mere resolution of individual disputes and is linked to the social
legitimization of the judicial system as a whole.
- Less intense digitalization, focusing on the procedural dimension
(e-filing, e-service, e-case management) also brings efficiency and justice and is more
'affordable', insofar as it does not require such profound changes as those associated with the
establishment of genuine online courts. It is therefore worth asking what the incentive for national
legislators would be to go down the path of creating online courts.
- Private ODR mechanisms compete in the market precisely as an
effective alternative to state justice and as an added value of online procurement platforms and large
companies: many consumers prefer to purchase goods and services from companies and/or on platforms that
provide them with ODR mechanisms to resolve potential disputes. As far as these private ODR mechanisms
are concerned, the regulatory challenge consists of ensuring the existence of a real will on the part of
those involved in their use, in order to avoid situations of abuse and imposition.[249]
- This competitive incentive does not really exist in the case of
state justice systems: it is very forced to state that they compete with ADR mechanisms and private ODR
systems. However, there are several reasons that can be put forward by legislators to justify the
additional effort involved in the transition to a judicial system in which online courts play a greater
role.
- On the one hand, there are certain ‘liquid
expectations’,[250] especially among the digital natives, who demand more digital governance from the
public authorities, which also includes the justice system. It seems reasonable to expect the judicial
system to be a reflection of the society it serves; and that society is increasingly digital, which
means, among other things, that many citizens aspire to have their disputes − at least some of
their minor disputes − resolved online, in a manner analogous to other aspects of their
relationship with the public authorities for other purposes − eg, paying taxes or claiming social
security benefits.
- In addition, there is the argument of ‘enhanced
efficiency’ or, if preferred, the added value in efficiency provided by online courts: they bring
about more efficiency than digitized offline courts. Simply being satisfied with progress in the
managerial dimension, when technological advances allow for a much greater qualitative leap forward,
would mean failing to keep up with the times.
- And, above all, it is argued with the utmost
forcefulness that a deeper digitalization such as that provided by online courts and online proceedings
ensures a higher level of access to justice, for people and for claims that, in a different context (of
no digitalization or of a more tenuous digitalization), would not reach the state courts.[251] Efficiency and
digitalization are therefore allied in the political-legislative discourse to link online courts, online
proceedings and access to justice.
- Whether this ‘triad’ deserves veneration or is merely an
advertising slogan has clear ideological connotations but also depends to a large extent on the actual
delivery that citizens receive: unfulfilled promises, whether due to lack of means or lack of
technological capacity, are one of the greatest dangers facing legislators.
- Efficiency and digitization cannot come at the expense of quality:
the access to justice that is promised only deserves that label if it meets certain standards,
traditionally encompassed in the notion of procedural safeguards. Digitization is not a value in itself,
which can be imposed on any other consideration, but rather a tool at the service of another purpose,
which is the one that really matters, the resolution of the dispute in a legal manner, in the interests
of the litigant who is in the right and as a way of socially legitimising the validity of the legal
order. A just transition towards an intensification of online courts and online proceedings should not
be approached without responding to certain demands and facing certain challenges, all of which are
linked to the idea of quality.[252] Comparative experience with virtual hearings,
the various forms of transition to a more digital justice system and existing examples of more digitized
court proceedings at least serve to identify them.
- a) Online courts are associated with increasingly automated
procedures: in online proceedings the passage from one stage of the process to the next can be managed
automatically by a computer system, without the need for a specific person (the judge, the court clerk,
a court official) to keep an eye on and drive the process forward. However, adequate human supervision
must be foreseen in any case: a court system in which the only humans are judges and in which the only
function of the judges is to resolve the merits of the dispute would not be acceptable. Even if the
process is automated, there must be people (humans) responsible for its proper functioning who have
expertise as judges, court clerks or court officials. These will, of course, need to be joined by
experts in technical matters − currently absent from the ordinary staff of our courts − but
they should not replace them.
- b) For online courts and online proceedings to function effectively
as an advanced manifestation of ODR, the computer system must have the data it needs to operate: in
other words, the system must be able to feed on the information contained in the parties'
submissions – including, why not, videos or recordings that form part of an asynchronous remote
communication, as envisaged in the Chinese Online Litigation Rules. These documents or procedural
‘objects’ have to provide metadata that can be exploited − as demanded by the Spanish
legislation; thus, regarded from the outside, online proceedings before online courts require the use
and the setting of forms that, in turn, are supported by technical systems that extract the necessary
information from them. This in turn makes it necessary to ensure compliance with the rules on personal
data protection – an issue on which there is no need to elaborate further at this point. The need
to extract metadata from procedural objects and, in turn, the need to work with standardized forms to
enable such metadata collection will eventually influence the way parties’ submissions and
courts’ decisions are structured.
- c) A more digitalized procedure is an opportunity to integrate the
attempt at consensual resolution into the structure of the process itself, as seen in the Chinese
Internet Courts and the Civil Resolution Tribunal of British Columbia. This, in turn, helps to shift the
focus away from the constant discussion about the admissibility and/or desirability of imposing
mediation as a pre-trial step − criticizable as costly and dilatory. The regulation of online
proceedings before the online courts may open the door to a more cooperative structure. At the same
time, the integration of the conciliation or mediation phase within the process itself helps citizens
− especially the most vulnerable − to understand that they do not have to settle for
whatever is offered to them in a negotiation, as the decision on the merits in accordance with the law
is always available to them without changing channel or platform.
- d) A more digital justice system will undoubtedly have to rely on AI
tools: at this stage of development, it seems difficult to deny this. However, all the precautions
alluded to in supranational texts and already echoed by some national legislators, such as the Spanish
one, must be imposed, especially as far as human control is concerned.[253] On this point, I must now
refer to chapter 6 of this segment.
- e) The transition to a more digital justice system is forcing a
different way of legislating or, if preferred, to have different laws[254] − as evidenced by the
regulation of the OCMC in Practice Direction 51R in England and Wales. There is a need for technical
rules, which involve extra-legal terms and concepts, but through which the architecture of the system is
designed, as they regulate the way in which the abstract design of an online process is ultimately
reflected on a computer screen or in an application managed from a smartphone or tablet. Of course,
there is still a need for ‘classical’ procedural rules, intelligible to lawyers and defining
the safeguards and the ‘rules of the game’ according to which to define procedural
strategies, although these more classical rules cannot help but ‘imagine’ their transfer to
an environment that is virtual by definition, not physical nor virtual as a functional equivalent of a
physical one. This aspect of legislative technique is, in my view, particularly important, although it
has not been addressed as such. On the one hand, laws must always be comprehensible to their addressees,
so that the technological nature of their content must not be a pretext for their obscurity. On the
other hand, it is necessary to avoid procedural laws that, in an excessive and unjustified way, refer
their development − ie, their effective operation − to infra-legal rules or to
administrative decisions − eg, made by technical bodies or expert committees − that do not
have democratic endorsement. It should not be forgotten that procedural laws are the development of the
fundamental right to effective judicial protection.
- f) A more digital justice can only be fair if it pays due attention
to the shape of the virtual space in which the proceedings take place. Procedural activities move from
buildings to platforms, which have to be user-friendly and simple to handle for any litigant – as
shown, for instance, by the Singapore experience. The setting for virtual trials has to be configured in
a way that minimizes the inconvenience of non-contact as much as possible. Trials in the metaverse, for
the time being at least, should be approached with great caution: the use of avatars distorts the
perception of the human nature of disputes, proceedings and their participants.[255]
- g) Digitization entails a dependence on technology which, in turn,
obliges the legislator to be very cautious, from several points of view, including at least the
following:
(i) There must always be an escape valve that allows all or part of a judicial
process to be conducted in a non-digital way, if necessary.
(ii) A situation of dependence on external technology providers, usually private
companies,[256] who promise a lot and do not always deliver, must be avoided.[257]
(iii) The legislator must adapt the regulation to the real technological capacities
of each moment, that is, making sure that the system at its disposal is able to carry out the services that
the law foresees. ‘Technological fantasies’ should have no place in procedural law.
(iv) Systems should have tools to detect possible malfunctions.
- h) Finally, legislators who consider moving towards the creation of
online courts and the regulation of online proceedings have to face at least three decisions of the
utmost relevance, which have a rather strategic significance, ie, they do not condition the
admissibility of online courts in terms of justice, but in terms of political appropriateness.
- Firstly, it is up to national legislators to establish the scope of
action of these courts and to decide whether they are only offered to litigants for small disputes
− as is the case, roughly speaking, with the CRT in British Columbia or the OCMC in England and
Wales −, whether they are limited to disputes arising in digital environments and linked to that
sector − as in the Chinese internet courts − or whether they are attributed a much more
general potential. On this point, one thing must be clear: in the abstract, online courts should be able
to resolve any type of dispute, since elements such as the economic amount or the legal complexity of a
claim are unrelated to the online/offline variable. Therefore, on this issue, it is to be expected to
act on the basis of pilot and experimental programmes, normally confined to small claims or
technological disputes, probably because they are the ones where the (r)evolution is most easily
justified: to give access to justice to smaller cases and to respond to the expectations of the players
in the digital economy. However, in doing so, it is equally important to avoid these two possible side
effects: for small disputes, the perception that online proceedings before online courts are of poorer
quality than traditional ones; for digital-related disputes, and conversely, the perception that only
the technological world benefits from the advantages associated with digitization, even though they
could be projected to many other areas.
- In regulating online courts and online proceedings, legislators also
face the challenge of defining the role of lawyers and other legal professionals.[258] Online courts and
online proceedings tend to present themselves as more favourable environments for unrepresented
litigants,[259] especially if they provide ‘online guidance’.[260] Added to this are the
possibilities opened up by certain AI tools to offer something akin to legal advice. On this issue,
again, I refer to what is raised in chapter 6 of this segment.
- Finally, a last general issue shall be pointed out: the need to
regulate the coexistence between ordinary courts and online courts and, ultimately, the need to consider
whether online courts are bound to lead to the disappearance of online courts. In principle, online
courts are genuine state courts, and it would therefore be legitimate for legislation to stipulate that
they are the only courts available in their sphere of jurisdiction − and hence that proceedings
must be also conducted online proceeding. Assuming that adequate access to the online courts is granted
for litigants − through assistance and by making the necessary means available to them −
this would be a legitimate option, compatible with the standards of access to justice that stem, eg,
from Art 6(1) ECHR or Art 47 CFREU. It is also possible, of course, for the legislator, especially in an
initial, more experimental phase, to subject their jurisdiction and their operation to the will of the
parties and consequently to present them as an alternative for the willing parties – or, at least,
for the willing claimant. In this, of course, the economic, social and cultural context of each country
will be a determining factor. In the very long term, of course, it is conceivable that most courts will
be online courts, provided that in any case, as stated above, an escape route is guaranteed if this
proves to be indispensable. How desirable and convenient this image of the future will be, especially
for those who are still ‘offliners’, is another question.
Abbreviations and Acronyms
Art
|
Article/Articles
|
BGH
|
Bundesgerichtshof (Federal Court of
Justice) [Germany]
|
CEPEJ
|
Conseil de l'Europe Commission européenne pour
l’efficacité de la justice (Council of Europe European
Commission for the efficiency of justice)
|
CJEU
|
Court of Justice of the European Union
|
ed
|
editor/editors
|
etc
|
et cetera
|
ECtHR
|
European Court of Human Rights
|
ECLI
|
European Case Law Identifier
|
eg
|
exempli gratia (for example)
|
ELI
|
European Law Institute
|
EU
|
European Union
|
ff
|
following
|
ICT
|
Information and Communication Technologies
|
ie
|
id est (that is)
|
n
|
footnote (internal, ie, within the same chapter)
|
no
|
number/numbers
|
para
|
paragraph/paragraphs
|
Sec
|
Section/Sections
|
UK
|
United Kingdom
|
UNIDROIT
|
Institut international pour l'unification du droit
privé (International Institute for the Unification of
Private Law)
|
UP
|
|
University Press
|
|
US / USA
|
United States of America
|
v
|
versus
|
vol
|
volume/volumes
|
ZPO
|
Zivilprozessordnung (German Code of Civil Procedure)
|
Legislation
International/Supranational
Directive regarding the European Investigation Order in criminal matters, 2014/41 of
3 April 2014 (EU)
Directive on the strengthening of certain aspects of the presumption of innocence and
of the right to be present at the trial in criminal proceedings, 2016/343 of 9 March 2016 (EU)
European Convention on Human Rights 1950
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure 2020 (ELI / UNIDROIT)
Regulation on cooperation in the taking of evidence in civil or commercial matters,
1206/2001 of 28 May 2001 (EU)
Regulation creating a European Order for Payment Procedure, 1896/2006 of
12 December 2006 (EU)
Regulation establishing a European Small Claims Procedure 861/2007 of 11 July 2007
(EU)
Regulation laying down harmonised rules on artificial intelligence (Artificial
Intelligence Act), 2024/1689 of 13 June 2024 (EU)
National
Civil Resolution Tribunal Act 2012 (British Columbia, Canada)
Código de Processo Civil 2015 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Brazil).
Ley de Enjuiciamiento Civil 2000 (Code of Civil Procedure) (Spain)
Online Litigation Rules of the People’s Courts 2021 (China)
Practice Note SC Gen 12 – Supreme Court – online court Protocol 2007 (New
South Wales, Australia)
Practice Note Civ 1 of the Local Court of New South Wales 2024 (New South Wales,
Australia)
Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) (Germany)
Cases
International/Supranational
Riepan v Austria, Case 35115/97 (ECtHR), Judgment
14 November 2000 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2000:1114JUD003511597]
Marcello Viola v Italy, Case no. 45106/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 5 October 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:1005JUD004510604]
Jallow v Norway, Case 36516/19 (ECtHR), Judgment 2
December 2021 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:1202JUD003651619]
Sakhnovskiy v Russia, Case 21272/03 (ECtHR-GC),
Judgment 2 November 2010 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2010:1102JUD002127203] para 98***
Ichetovkina and Others v Russia,
Cases 12584/05 and 5 others (ECtHR), Judgment 4 July 2017
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2017:0704JUD001258405]
Bivolaru v Romania (no. 2), Case 66580/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 2 October 2018
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:1002JUD006658012]
Ramos Nunes de Carvalho e Sá v Portugal [GC], Cases 55391/13, 57728/13 and 74041/13 (ECtHR), Judgment 6 November 2018
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:1106JUD005539113].
Dijkhuizen v the Netherlands, Case 61591/16 (ECtHR), Judgment 8 June 2021
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:0608JUD006159116]
Commission v Breyer, Case C‐213/15 P (CJEU),
Judgment 18 July 2017 [ECLI:EU:C:2017:563]
VP v KS, Case C-188/02 (CJEU), Order of 8 September 2022
[ECLI:EU:C:2022:678]
Sofiyska gradska prokuratura, Case C-760/22 (CJEU), Judgment 4 July 2024
[ECLI:EU:C:2024:574]
National
Case 4870-2004 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 16/2009, of 26 January
[ECLI:ES:TC:2009:16].
Case 1232-2017 (Supreme Court, India), Judgment 26 September 2018 [10 SCC 628].
Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay v Union of India, Writ Petition
P(C) No. 699-2016 (Supreme Court, India) Judgment 9 November 2023 [2023 INSC 991]
Case 8892-2020 (Constitutional Court, Chile), Judgment of 10 December 2020,
<https://www.diarioconstitucional.cl/wp-content/uploads/2020/12/144270.pdf>
Case 3R149/22m [Oberlandesgericht Wien, Austria] Decision 7 July 2023
[ECLI:AT:OLG0009:2022:00300R00149.22M.0909.001]
Gould Elecs. Inc. v Livingston Cnty. Rd. Comm’n (US District Court, E.D. Michigan, Southern Division), Judgment 30 June 2020 [470 F. Supp.
3d 735 (E.D. Mich. 2020)]
Andrews v Autoliv Japan, Ltd. (UD District Court,
N.D. Georgia) Judgment 27 January 2021 [No. 1:14-cv-3432 N.D. Ga. 2021]
Capic v Ford Motors Ltd (Federal Court of
Australia) Judgment 15 April 2020 [2020] FCA 486.
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[1] This is one of the conclusions that
may be deduced from the different reports collected in B Krans and A Nylund (ed), Civil Courts Coping with Covid-19 (Eleven International
Publishing 2021); more specifically on remote hearings, A Sanders, ‘Video-Hearings in Europe
Before, During and After the COVID-19 Pandemic’ (2021) 12(2) International Journal of Court
Administration 1. See also European Commission for the Efficiency of Justice (CEPEJ), ‘Lessons
learnt and challenges faced by the Judiciary during and after COVID-19’ (2020) https://rm.coe.int/declaration-en/16809ea1e2 accessed 20 September 2024.
[2] And this is another conclusion to be
retrieved again from Krans and Nylund (n 1).
[3] M Fabri, ‘Will COVID-19
Accelerate Implementation of ICT in Courts?’ (2021) 12(2) International Journal of Court
Administration 1; M Velicogna, ‘Cross-border dispute resolution in Europe: looking for a new
“normal”’ (2022) 12(3) Oñati Socio-Legal Series 556.
[4] Of course, they are not new. For a
very interesting description of the pre-pandemic state of the art, see L Dumoulin and C Licoppe, ‘Grasping the Discrete Link
between Filming and Videoconferencing in the Courtroom. Reflections from the French Case’
(2017) 112 Revista Crítica de Ciências Sociais 115
http://journals.openedition.org/rccs/6608 accessed 2 October 2024.
[5] The ECtHR itself
considers that in proceedings before a court of first and only instance the right to a ‘public
hearing’ under Art 6(1) entails an entitlement to an ‘oral hearing’ unless there are
exceptional circumstances that justify dispensing with such a hearing (Guide on
Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights Right to a fair trial (civil limb), updated to 31 August 2021, https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/guide_art_6_eng.pdf accessed 25 September 2024. For a recapitulation of the case-law, see Ramos Nunes de Carvalho e Sá v Portugal [GC], Cases
55391/13, 57728/13 and 74041/13 (ECtHR), Judgment 6 November 2018
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:1106JUD005539113] para 188-190.
[6] See, for instance, M Cappelletti,
Procédure orale et procédure écrite. Oral and written procedure
in civil litigation (Giuffrè 1971); M Cappelletti, La testimonianza della parte nel sistema dell'oralità. Contributo alla teoria
della utilizzazione probatoria del sapere delle parti nel processo civile (Giuffrè 1974); M Storme, ‘More voice, less print. Why court proceedings
should become oral’ in F Carpi and M Ortells Ramos (ed), Oralidad y
escritura en un proceso civil eficiente. Oral and written proceedings: efficiency in civil
procedure (Vol I, Valencia University Press 2008) 34; R Stürner,
‘Mündlichkeit und Schriftlichkeit im europäischen Zivilprozess‘ in R Geimer and R
A Schütze (ed), Recht ohne Grenzen. Festschrift für Athanassios
Kaissis zum 65. Geburtstag (Sellier 2012) 991.
[7] Although the issue has long been
controversial: see, for instance, M Taruffo, ‘Orality and Writing as Factors of Efficiency in
Civil Litigation’ in Carpi and Ortells Ramos (n 6) 163; J Nieva Fenoll, ‘Los problemas de la
oralidad’ (2007) 1-2 Justicia 101.
[8] Good examples of the latter can be
found in M Kengyel and Z Nemessányi (ed), Electronic Technology and Civil
Procedure: New Paths to Justice from Around the World (Springer 2010).
[9] See B Krans, A Nylund, D Bamford, L
Ervo, F Ferrand, A Galič, W Hau, J Nieva Fenoll, C Salung Petersen, C Piché, P Rylski, E
Silvestri, J Sorabji, V Vėbraitė and H Zaneti jr, ‘Civil Justice and Covid-19’
(2020) 5 Septentrio Reports https://doi.org/10.7557/sr.2020.5 accessed 25 September 2024. See also, for Australia, M Legg and A Song, ‘The
Courts, the Remote Hearing and the Pandemic: From Action to Reflection’ (2021) 44(1) University of
New South Wales Law Journal 126; for India, A Pal Singh, ‘Virtual Courts during the COVID-19
Pandemic: A Critical Exposition’ (2021) 24 Supremo Amicus 452; and for the United States, K K
Henrickson, ‘COVID-19 & the Courts: The Pandemic’s Impact on the Practice of Litigation
and Considerations for Future Remote Proceedings’ (2021) 40(2) Review of Litigation 305.
Describing the situation in International Commercial Courts – but, in fact, analysing the domestic
law of the countries where these courts are established –, see S Domhan, ‘Online Hearings in
Proceedings before International Commercial Courts’ (2021) 30 Juridica International 49.
[10] This was the case, for instance,
of Belgium, Italy and The Netherlands (see P Taelman, ‘The Impact of Covid-19 on Civil Procedure
in Belgium’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 15, 17–19; E Silvestri, ‘Covid-19 and Civil Justice – News from the Italian Front’ in
Krans and Nylund (n 1) 103, 103; and B Krans, ‘The Aftermath of the Covid-19 Pandemic in the
Netherlands – Seizing the Digital Gains’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 129, 130.
[11] John Sorabji reports up to seven
different kind of hybrid hearings being held currently in England (J Sorabji, ‘Developing the New
Normal for English Civil Procedure Post Covid-19’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 63,
66–67).
[12] Although some of them also show a
trend to shift back to ‘traditional’ oral proceedings, as reported from Croatia (A Uzelac,
‘Croatian Civil Justice v. Covid-19 – The Empire Strikes Back’ in Krans and Nylund (n
1) 47, 54–55).
[13] See, in this vein,
Art 10(4) of Regulation on cooperation between the courts of the Member States in the taking of evidence
in civil or commercial matters, 1206/2001 of 28 May 2001 (EU) − now repealed − and Art 24 of
Directive regarding the European Investigation Order in criminal matters, 2014/41 of 3 April 2014
(EU).
[14] On this, see F Gascón
Inchausti, ‘The new regulation on digitalisation of judicial cooperation in the European Union:
something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue’ (2024) 24(4) ERA Forum.
Journal of the Academy of European Law 535, 546−550; E A Ontanu, ‘The Digitalisation of
European Union Procedures: A New Impetus Following a Time of Prolonged Crisis’ (2023) 5(1) Law,
Technology and Humans 93; E Themeli, ‘The frontiers of digital justice in Europe’ in X
Kramer, J Hoevenaars, B Kas and E Themeli (ed), Frontiers in Civil Justice.
Privatisation, Monetisation and Digitisation (Edward Elgar 2022)
102.
[16] According to a survey carried out
in the Netherlands among lawyers, most of them seemed to prefer a physical hearing to a digital one
[Krans (n 10) 132].
[17] Bart Krans also suggests the
possibility of facing a ‘feeling’ [(n 10) 132); and Anna Nylund calls for more empirical
research before defining the legal regime of remote hearings in the future (A Nylund, ‘Covid-19
and Norwegian Civil Justice’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 139, 142–143).
[19] This opens up a new space for
legal reflection: to what extent environmental protection and the fight against climate change can
become elements that justify the restriction of other fundamental rights, including procedural
safeguards.
[20] Richard Susskind describes this
as ‘economy-class Justice’ [Online Courts and the Future of
Justice (Oxford UP 2019) 187−191].
[21] Jallow v
Norway, Case 36516/19 (ECtHR), Judgment 2 December 2021
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:1202JUD003651619].
[22] On this point, the
Court brings up some of its rulings in relation to participation by videoconference in criminal
proceedings, in cases such as Dijkhuizen v the Netherlands, Case 61591/16 (ECtHR), Judgment 8 June 2021
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2021:0608JUD006159116] para 53; Bivolaru v Romania (no.
2), Case 66580/12 (ECtHR), Judgment 2 October 2018
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2018:1002JUD006658012] para 138; Ichetovkina and Others v
Russia, Cases 12584/05 and 5 others (ECtHR), Judgment 4 July 2017
[ECLI:CE:ECHR:2017:0704JUD001258405] para 37; and Marcello
Viola v Italy, Case 45106/04 (ECtHR), Judgment 5 October 2006 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2006:1005JUD004510604] para 67 and 73–74.See also
Sakhnovskiy v Russia, Case 21272/03 (ECtHR-GC),
Judgment 2 November 2010 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2010:1102JUD002127203] para 98.
[23] The European Court of Human
Rights has emphasized this in Sakhnovskiy v Russia (n 22) para 98: ‘As regards the use of a video link,
the Court reiterates that this form of participation in proceedings is not, as such, incompatible with
the notion of a fair and public hearing, but it must be ensured that the applicant is able to follow the proceedings and to be heard without technical impediments, and that effective and confidential communication with a lawyer is provided
for.’
[24] The video went viral in February
2021 and is still to be easily retrieved on the internet https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lGOofzZOyl8 accessed 10
September 2024.
[25] HM Courts & Tribunals Service
(n 15) 86–89.
[26] See R Jain and S Chaudhary,
‘The Renaissance of Virtual Courts: Towards the Digital Age’ (2021) 4 International Journal
of Law Management & Humanities 5722, 5728; V Kartikeya Agrawal, ‘Importance of Virtual Courts
in India’ (2021) 26 Supremo Amicus 550.
[27] In Ashwini Kumar Upadhyay v Union of India, Writ Petition P(C) No
699-2016 (Supreme Court, India) Judgment 9 November 2023 [2023 INSC 991] para 16, also cited in A Pal
Singh (n 9).
[28] Gesetz zur Förderung des Einsatzes von Videokonferenztechnik in der Zivilgerichtsbarkeit
und den Fachgerichtsbarkeiten (15 July 2024, Bundesgeseztblatt No 237, 18 July). The Draft was presented in
November 2022 and, during the legislative process, concerns were raised regarding the technical
requirements to meet all the expectations that the new provisions would create, as described by
M Stürner and J Stürner, ‘Videoverhandlung im zivilprozessualen
Erkenntnisverfahren’ (2023) 8 JuristenZeitung 340, 342–343.
[29] Nylund (n 17) 139; Sorabji (n 11)
63; L Ervo, ‘Pandemic and Digitalization – The Situation in the Finnish Lower Courts’
in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 73, 75. The positive response of Australia is described in Legg and Song (n
9).
[30] C Salung Petersen,
’Digitalisation of Danish Civil Justice – Perspectives from the Pandemic’ in Krans and
Nylund (n 1) 57.
[31] W Hau, ‘Covid-19, Civil
Justice 2020 and German Courts 2021?’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 93, 99.
[32] The text of the
Model European Rules of Civil Procedure, along with the official comments, is available at https://www.europeanlawinstitute.eu/fileadmin/user_upload/p_eli/Publications/200925-eli-unidroit-rules-e.pdf accessed 24 September 2024. General explanations can be read in R Stürner,
‘The ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil Procedure. An Introduction to Their Basic
Conceptions' (2022) 86 Rabelszeitschrift 421 and F Gascón Inchausti, ‘Las European
Rules of Civil Procedure: ¿un punto de partida para la armonización del proceso
civil?’ (2021) 13(1) Cuadernos de Derecho Transnacional 277. For an exhaustive and comprehensive
commentary, see A Stadler, V Smith and F Gascón Inchausti, European Rules
of Civil Procedure. A Commentary on the ELI/UNIDROIT Model Rules (Edward
Elgar 2023).
[33] The ‘official’
Comments to the rule, at 8, add the following: ‘The prevailing view was that the judiciary should
have at its disposal appropriate modern means of electronic communication, and that they should be given
the discretion to determine their appropriate use without the need for specific technical rules to be
formulated.’
On this, see also A Bruns, ‘General principles: rights of parties’ in
Stadler, Smith and Gascón Inchausti (n 32) para 4.035−4.039.
[35] In this vein see also Krans (n
10) 133.
[36] On this, see A Dondi,
‘Processo civile, new technologies e implicazioni etico-professionali’ (2019) 73(3) Rivista
trimestrale di diritto e procedura civile 863; see also C L Reyes and J Ward, ‘Digging into
Algorithms: Legal Ethics and Legal Access’ (2020) 21(1) Nevada Law Journal 325.
[37] This has been the case, for
instance, of California. Since March 2021, the comments to California Rule of Professional Conduct 1.1
provide that competent legal services include ‘the duty to keep abreast of the changes in the law
and its practice, including the benefits and risks associated with relevant technology.’
[38] See J Burke and S McCarthy,
‘Should Remote Hearings Be Extended Post the COVID-19 Pandemic in Hong Kong and What Could Be the
Ramifications for Practical Legal Training?’ (2022) 9(1) Journal for International and Comparative
Law 155.
[39] See for the UK HM Courts &
Tribunals Service (n 15) 58 ff.
[40] Addressing the situation in India
during the pandemic, see Pal Singh (n 9). Digital divide issues have also been identified in Nigeria
(see O Olugasa and A Davies, ‘Remote Court Proceedings in Nigeria: Justice Online or Justice on
the Line’ (2022) 13(2) International Journal for Court Administration 1).
[41] In the US, for instance, see DG
Carnahan, ‘Access to Justice in a Time of COVID’ (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 91,
who also recalls the problems created by platforms in dealing with persons with disabilities, for
first-time users or non-English speaking litigants.
[42] See, on this, E Gabardo, A C
Aguilar Viana and O L Castreghini de Freitas, ‘The digital divide in Brazil and the accessibility
as a fundamental right’ (2022) 11(2) Revista chilena de derecho y tecnología 1: although
the article is not strictly focused on digital justice, it analyses the notion of digital gap in a broad
sense and claims for the recognition of the right to access the internet as an essential aspect of
freedom and the essential means for exercising an individual’s citizenship in a digital
society.
[43] On this, from a Colombian
perspective, see M C Moreno Torres, ‘Los nuevos entornos tecnológicos y su impacto en la
garantía del derecho humano al acceso a la justicia: Un enfoque en la época de
covid-19’ (2021) 10(1) Revista chilena de derecho y tecnología 309.
[44] See Art 4 and 5 of the Act on the
use of ICT in the Administration of Justice (included in the framework of the Real Decreto-ley 6/2023, de 19 de diciembre, por el que se aprueban medidas urgentes para la
ejecución del Plan de Recuperación, Transformación y Resiliencia en materia de
servicio público de justicia, función pública, régimen local y
mecenazgo, Boletín Oficial del Estado 20 December 2023, https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-2023-25758 accessed 10 September 2024.
[45] Available under: State Of New
York – Unified Court System, ‘Memorandum’ 18 March 2021 https://www.law.buffalo.edu/content/dam/law/content/cle/22feb24-materials/Virtual%20Proceedings-Appropriate%20Decorum.pdf accessed 12 September 2024.
[46] See, for instance, the case of
Singapore (below, under 11.1.2).
[47] Beijing Internet Court,
‘Virtual court cabin eases hearings’ (2020) https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2020-12/14/c_321.htm accessed 4 October 2024.
[49] On this, see M Rossner,
‘Remote Rituals in Virtual Courts’ (2021) 48(3) Journal of Law & Society 334.
[50] First, through the Real Decreto-ley 16/2020, de 28 de abril, de medidas procesales y organizativas para hacer
frente al COVID-19 en el ámbito de la Administración de Justicia;
later on, by means of the Ley 3/2020, de 18 de septiembre, de medidas procesales
y organizativas para hacer frente al COVID-19 en el ámbito de la Administración de
Justicia, which applied until the health emergency was officially declared to be
over in July 2023.
[51] F Ferrand, ‘Covid-19 and
French Civil Justice – What Future for Civil Hearings?’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 83,
85–86.
[52] See, among many others, D F
Engstrom, ‘Post-COVID Courts’ (2020) 68 UCLA Law Review 246; A F Abu, ‘Remote Justice:
Confronting the Use of Video Teleconference Testimony in Massachussets Criminal Trials’ (2020)
34(1) Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 307; D Ariturk, W E Crozier and B L Garrett,
‘Virtual Criminal Courts’ (2020) University of Chicago Law Review Online 57 https://lawreview.uchicago.edu/online-archive/virtual-criminal-courts accessed 21 October 2024; N M Garland, ‘The Constitutionality of Remote
Trials’ (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 107; S E Smith, ‘The Online Criminal Trial as a
Public Trial’, (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 116; M C DeRegis, ‘Can You Hear Me Now?:
The Implications of Virtual Proceedings on Criminal Defendants’ Constitutional Rights’
(2022) 81 Maryland Law Review Online 71 https://digitalcommons.law.umaryland.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1080&context=endnotes accessed 21 October 2024
[54] Engstrom (n 52) 257.
[55] Directive
regarding the European Investigation Order in criminal matters, 2014/41/EU of 3 April 2014 (EU).
[56] Directive on the
strengthening of certain aspects of the presumption of innocence and of the right to be present at the
trial in criminal proceedings, 2016/343 of 9 March 2016 (EU).
[57] The request was lodged on 3 May
2023; Linte, Case C-285/23, OJ C 271, 31 July 2023,
15–16.
[58] The Court of
Justice has already had the opportunity to rule on a similar question, albeit in civil matters. In
VP v KS, Case C-188/02 (CJEU), Order of 8 September 2022
[ECLI:EU:C:2022:678], it recognized that the courts of the Member States are not necessarily obliged to
use the cooperation mechanisms established by European legislation − at that time Regulation
1206/2001 on the taking of evidence abroad − but that they may also make use of tools provided for
in their national legislation (in that case it was a question of obtaining a written statement from a
person resident in another Member State). In general, in relation to this issue, it is useful to have
regard to Part XIV of this Compendium.
[59] Sofiyska gradska prokuratura, Case C-760/22 (CJEU), Judgment 4 July 2024
[ECLI:EU:C:2024:574].
[60] The US also seem to have treated
criminal cases differently, and not only those to be tried by a jury (see R Marcus, ‘Covid-19 and
American Civil Litigation’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 195, 196 and 201–202). In Finland, from
a different perspective, no limits were set to conducting criminal trials virtually, provided that the
defendant agrees; strikingly, this possibility is excluded for negotiated criminal justice [Ervo (n 29)
79–80].
[61] In this vein, see also C
Piché, ‘The “New Normal” of Civil Procedure in Canada – Technological
Efficiency over Proportionality and Accuracy of Outcomes’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 35-40,
38.
[62] The proposal of Laura Ervo, who
points out the need for the rules on the format of hearings to be applied always taking into account the
singularities of the specific case, without generalizing, is therefore very sensible (Ervo (n 29)
78).
[63] See also Legg and Song (n 9) 166
ff.
[64] OLG Wien
3R149/22m, Decision 7 July 2023, ECLI:AT:OLG0009:2022:00300R00149.22M.0909.001; the text quoted below is
the author’s free translation.
[65] According to the Guide on Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights Right to a fair trial (criminal
limb) [updated on 31 December 2021, Nos 255–261, https://www.echr.coe.int/documents/guide_art_6_criminal_eng.pdf
accessed 12 August 2024]: ‘The Court has held that an important
element of fair criminal proceedings is also the possibility of the accused to be confronted with the
witness in the presence of the judge who ultimately decides the case. Such a principle of immediacy is
an important guarantee in criminal proceedings in which the observations made by the court about the
demeanour and credibility of a witness may have important consequences for the accused.’
According to the Spanish Constitutional Court, for instance: ‘[t]he
safeguard of immediacy consists in the requirement that the evidence is taken before the judicial body
which is to assess it. This is a safeguard of correctness which avoids the risks of inadequate
assessment arising from the intermediation between the evidence and the assessing body and which, in
personal evidence, as opposed to the […] minutes of the hearing, makes it possible to evaluate
not only the essence of a verbal sequence […] but also the totality of the words pronounced and
the context and the way in which they were pronounced: it allows access to the totality of the verbal
communicative aspects; it allows access to the non-verbal communicative aspects, of the person
testifying and of third parties; and it also allows, even to the limited extent tolerated by its
impartiality, the intervention of the judge to check the certainty of the factual elements’ [Case
4870-2004 (Constitutional Court, Spain), Judgment 16/2009 of 26 January [ECLI:ES:TC:2009:16] para 5;
author’s free translation].
[66] For a general overview of the
meaning of the principle, see C A Kern, ‘Der Unmittelbarkeitsgrundsatz im Zivilprozess’
(2012) Zeitschrift für Zivilprozess 53.
[67] The official Comments on the rule
are particularly telling: ‘Rule 64(2) addresses the principle of immediacy, according to which
only those judges who adjudicate in the final hearing are competent to give the final judgment. This
principle has a long common tradition across all of European civil procedure. It has been, however, of
limited significance in continental European jurisdictions. According to the prevailing continental
European understanding, it does not apply to those hearings that precede the final hearing where aspects
or, in some jurisdictions, where all of the evidence may be taken and considered by the court. In such
cases, this limited approach to the principle of immediacy has only prevented judges from rendering
judgments without them having conducted the hearing where the parties make their final submissions on
the evidence and where any preceding oral consultations between court and parties may take place. Rule
64(2) combined with Rule 64(3) extends, in part, the scope of immediacy to mandatory evidence-taking
within the final hearing (also see Rule 97(1), comment 2). At the same time, it strengthens the
significance of oral proceedings (see Rule 18). The use of communication technology (Rule 64(1)) and
especially of video-conferencing creates new forms of immediacy and orality of proceedings, albeit of a
lesser effect than when parties and witnesses are physically before the court (also see Rule 97(3)).
These Rules, however, consider such a development arising from communication technology to be more
efficient and citizen-oriented than written proceedings. The immediacy principle is the main one to
facilitate the best evaluation of evidence which is, in principle, not bound to specific rules (see Rule
98).’
See also E Vallines García, ‘Proceedings before a final hearing and
final hearing’ in Stadler, Smith and Gascón Inchausti (n 32) para
14.057−14.064.
[68] See O Chase, Law, Culture, and Ritual. Disputing Systems in Cross-Cultural Context (New York UP 2005).
[69] See, among many others, A De la
Oliva Santos, ‘Justicia y pandemia’ 10(2) International Journal of Procedural Law 230; K
Lisko, ‘Bearing Witness to, Well, Witnesses: An Examination of Remote Testimony versus in-Court
Testimony’ (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 63. This is also one of the main shortcomings
identified by those involved in the studies reflected in Benninger, Colwell, Mukamal and Plachinski (n
53); D L F de Vocht, ‘Trials by video link after the pandemic: the pros and cons of the expansion
of virtual justice’ (2022) 8 China-EU Law Journal 33 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12689-022-00095-9 accessed 20 September 2024.
[70] See S A Bandes and N Feigenson,
‘Empathy and Remote Legal Proceedings’ (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 20.
[71] See W P Heath and B D Grannemann,
‘How Video Image Size Interacts with Evidence Strength, Defendant Emotion, and the
Defendant-Victim Relationship to Alter Perceptions of the Defendant’ (2014) 32(4) Behavioral
Sciences & the Law 496.
[72] In this vein, P Andrés
Ibáñez, ‘Sobre el valor de la inmediación (una aproximación
crítica)’ (2003) 46 Jueces para la Democracia 57; J Nieva Fenoll, ‘Oralidad e
inmediación en la prueba: luces y sombras’ (2012) 1 Justicia 101; C De Miranda
Vázquez, ‘El mito de la influencia de la inmediación judicial en la
valoración de la prueba personal: una revisión crítica’ (2014) 2 Justicia
344. See also M A González Coulon, ‘El uso de videoconferencias en audiencias de prueba:
¿Desconfianza en la tecnología o en los medios de prueba declarativos?’ (2022) 11(2)
Revista Chilena de Derecho y Tecnología 27, who claims that, in the end, the origin of the
reluctance towards evidence taking in remote hearings does not lay in the technological mean that is
used, but in the type of evidence itself, always difficult to assess, either on-line as face-to-face. In
a similar vein, see the German literature cited by Stürner and Stürner (n 28) 345.
[73] See, among many others, T A
Donner, ‘Civil Jury Trials by Zoom: We’re All Plugged into One World Now’ (2021) 51(1)
Southwestern Law Review 71; or Lisko (n 69).
[74] A Garapon and J Lassègue,
Justice digitale (Presses Universitaires de France
2018) insist on the impact of the digital element on the ritual of proceedings and justice.
[75] In this vein, see also R Magnus,
‘New Media in the Courtroom: Benefits and Challenges’ in B Hess and A Koprivica Harvey (ed),
Open Justice. The Role of Courts in a Democratic Society (Nomos 2019) 91, 92. There are also those who have noted the limitations imposed by
face-to-face meetings: see O Rabinovich-Einy and E Katsh, ‘Digital Justice. Reshaping Boundaries
in an Online Dispute Resolution Environment’ (2014) 1(1) International Journal of Online Dispute
Resolution 5, 10–12.
[76] Meetings in court premises,
forced by face-to-face events, may serve as an opportunity for negotiation, even if it is not a factor
that can be measured empirically.
[77] In Spain, for example, an
analysis of the complaints lodged by litigants shows that they are more frequent in the courts of first
instance, which are the courts where this direct contact is most clearly made; they are fewer, however,
in the courts of appeal, where cases are processed in writing and, in fact, the Supreme Court, the
slowest and most congested court, receives only a small percentage of the complaints (see B
Sánchez López, ‘Entre la oralidad telemática y la escritura digital:
¿caminamos felices hacia el «medievo digital»?’ in F Gascón Inchausti
and P Peiteado Mariscal (ed), Estándares europeos y proceso civil. Hacia
un proceso civil convergente con Europa (Atelier 2022) 19,
43–45).
[78] See also Garapon and
Lassègue (n 74) 180. It has been said, in this vein, that ‘an adherence to tradition is
often perceived as a strength of courts, imbuing their procedures, including the hearing, with
legitimacy’ (Legg and Song (n 9) 164).
[79] Perhaps, in the future, it will
lose relevance in a society of ‘digital natives’, accustomed to perceiving virtual
encounters as the rule and, who knows, with greater difficulties of interaction in face-to-face
contexts. But the legislator is beholden to society as it is currently shaped.
[82] The text above, from recital 44,
is a free (non-official) translation of the Spanish original: ‘En ello, la dimensión
material de la inmediación se ve relativizada y degradada por los juicios telemáticos,
pues la transmisión por pantalla y el enfoque solamente en el rostro acompañado de la voz
pasa a ser un sucedáneo de la más completa e inmediata percepción presencial,
siendo este mecanismo de videoconferencia una suerte de ‘mediación telemática en
tiempo real’, también denominable como ‘presencia virtual’ que es tenido en
principio por una equivalencia de presencialidad, pero sin los elementos de percepción
presencial, pues ni siquiera el campo visual puede ser el mismo y tampoco se puede percibir si se cumple
o no la prohibición de lectura de libretos.’
[83] A common complaint from many
lawyers is that the videoconferencing system places the court so far away from the camera that it is not
possible to see the judge’s face and reactions, which is essential when making arguments or
formulating the conclusions of a trial.
[84] On the ‘architecture’
of virtual courts and its impact on the quality and fairness of proceedings, see A Sela,
‘E-Nudging Justice: The Role of Digital Choice Architecture in Online Courts’ (2019) 2
Journal of Dispute Resolution 127; A Saukuma, ‘Legal and Ethical Issues in Designing Online
Courts’ (2020) 19 Baltic Yearbook of International Law 138; also L Frame, ‘On the Design of
Virtual Courts: Creating User-Centred, Evidence-Based Spaces’ (2022) 80(3) Advocate (Vancouver Bar
Association) 385. See also the findings on this issue in HM Courts & Tribunals Service (n 15)
71–73.
[85] See J Resnik and D E Curtis,
Representing Justice: Invention, Controversy, and Rights in City-States and
Democratic Courtrooms (Yale UP 2011).
[86] See the ‘official’
comments to Rule 64(2) of the ELI/UNIDROIT Model European Rules of Civil Procedure (n 32): ‘The
use of communication technology (Rule 64(1)) and especially of video-conferencing creates new forms of
immediacy and orality of proceedings, albeit of a lesser effect than when parties and witnesses are
physically before the court (also see Rule 97(3)). These Rules, however, consider such a development
arising from communication technology to be more efficient and citizen-oriented than written
proceedings.’
Also E Vallines García (n 67) para 14.062; and C Chainais,
‘Open Justice and the Principle of Public Access to Hearings in the Age of Information Technology:
Theoretical Perspectives and Comparative Law’ in Hess and Koprivica Harvey (n 75) 59, 68:
‘it must be acknowledged that the choice of the authorities to use videoconferencing also
demonstrates a positive reaffirmation, in the digital
era, of the irreplaceable role of the public hearing’.
[87] As is more and more the case in
some jurisdictions, like France (see Ferrand (n 51) 87 ff).
[88] For a comprehensive and
comparative view on the impact of new technologies on the principle of public proceedings, see Chainais
(n 86). Addressing the difficulties during pandemic and post-pandemic times, see Ariturk, Crozier and
Garrett (n 52) 62 ff, who refer to studies showing harsher decisions taken after virtual hearings with
no real publicity. See also, among many others, Engstrom (n 52) 255–257. See also M Warren,
‘Open Justice in the Technological Age’ (2014) 40(1) Monash Law Review 45; S Ahmed,
‘Online Courts and Private and Public Aspects of Open Justice: Enhancing Access to Court or
Violating the Right to Privacy?’ (2023) Age of Human Rights Journal https://doi.org/10.17561/tahrj.v20.7516 accessed 21 Octobr 2024; K Puddister and T A Small, ‘Navigating the
principle of open court in the digital age: The more things change, the more they stay the same’
(2019) 62(2) Canadian Public Administration 202.
[89] See, on this, M
Szpunar, ‘Right to a Public Hearing According to Art 6 ECHR and Art 47 of the Charter of
Fundamental Rights of the EU: Constitutional Perspectives’ in Hess and Koprivica Harvey (n 75)
47.
[90] In general terms, this risk is
also warned of by J Walker, ‘Courts in Lockdown: Lessons from International Arbitration’
(2020) 10(2) International Journal of Procedural Law 178, 199.
[91] See, for instance, § 299 of
the German ZPO (Code of Civil Procedure) or Art 234 of the Spanish Act on the Judiciary (Ley Orgánica del Poder Judicial).
[92] Electronic access
to court files triggers a challenge to data protection and could discourage litigants from accessing the
court system, if there are not sufficient safeguards that their privacy will not be exposed in the
future. On this, N Vermeys, ‘Privacy v. Transparency: How Remote Access to Court Records Forces Us
to Re-examine Our Fundamental Values’ in K Benyekhlef, J Bailey, J Burkell and F Gélinas
(ed), eAccess to Justice (University of Ottawa
Press 2016) 123.
[93] This appears to be established in
England (Sorabji (n 11) 66), as in Spain or Germany (see above n 91).
[94] And it may end up being tricky,
as detected by the Court of Justice of the European Union in Commission v
Breyer, Case C‐213/15 P (CJEU), Judgment 18 July 2017
[ECLI:EU:C:2017:563], concerning a request for access to pleadings submitted to the Court.
[95] In that vein, the European Court
of Human Rights stated in Riepan v Austria, Case
35115/97 (ECtHR), Judgment 14 November 2000 [ECLI:CE:ECHR:2000:1114JUD003511597] para 29 the following:
‘The Court considers that a trial complies with the requirement of publicity only if the public is
able to obtain information about its date and place and if this place is easily accessible to the
public. In many cases, these conditions will be fulfilled by the simple fact that a hearing is held in a
regular courtroom large enough to accommodate spectators. However, the Court observes that the holding
of a trial outside a regular courtroom, in particular in a place like a prison, to which the general
public in principle has no access, presents a serious obstacle to its public character. In such a case,
the State is under an obligation to take compensatory measures in order to ensure that the public and
the media are duly informed about the place of the hearing and are granted effective
access.’
[96] Again, the ECtHR in Riepan v Austria (n 95) para 27: ‘The Court reiterates that the
holding of court hearings in public constitutes a fundamental principle enshrined in paragraph 1 of
Article 6. This public character protects litigants against the secret administration of justice with no
public scrutiny; it is also one of the means whereby confidence in the courts can be maintained. By
rendering the administration of justice transparent, publicity contributes to the achievement of the aim
of Article 6 § 1, namely a fair trial, the guarantee of which is one of the fundamental principles
of any democratic society.’
[97] S E Smith, ‘The Online
Criminal Trial as a Public Trial’ (2021) 51(1) Southwestern Law Review 116, 121 and 122. More
extensively, J Simonson, ‘The Criminal Court Audience in a Post-Trial World’ (2014) 127(8)
Harvard Law Review 2173.
[98] Having again recourse to the
Riepan v Austria judgment of the ECtHR (n 95), it
should be recalled that ‘hindrance in fact can contravene the Convention just like a legal
impediment’ (para 28).
[99] In Nigeria, for instance, virtual
hearings before the National Industrial Court are accessible by the public through Zoom and this, apparently, satisfies the public proceedings
standard of this country’s constitution (see E Emudainohwo, ‘Appraising the
Constitutionality of Virtual Court Hearings in the National Industry Court of Nigeria’ (2021)
12(1) Nnamdi Azikiwe University Journal of International Law and Jurisprudence 16. In the US, guidelines
on remote hearings also demand that information about the links be provided by court offices and/or
websites (see, addressing the example of Maryland, DeRegis (n 52) 104).
[100] Live broadcasting of trials is
a problematic issue, as explained by Szpunar (n 89) 53–55, who refers to the case law of the
German Constitutional Court (on this, with more detail, see also J Jahn, ‘German Courts Open Their
Doors (a Little Bit) Wider to the Media’ in Hess and Koprivica Harvey (n 75) 269).
[101] Case 1232-2017
(Supreme Court, India), Judgment 26 September 2018 [10 SCC 628].
[102] According to the Court, in
such cases the principles of public proceedings and open justice prevailed over the rights of privacy of
the parties involved; the ability to view live broadcasts of the Supreme Court proceedings flowed,
therefore, from the right of access to justice in the Constitution. The Court also held that this right
should not be absolute and provided a set of Model Guidelines which should govern the courts’
discretion on when such broadcast should be used.
[103] See, eg, the successful
experience of the China Trial Live Broadcast (see Y Fu, ‘Civil Justice in China in the Covid-19
Period’ in Krans and Nylund (n 1) 41).
[104] Sir E Ryder, ‘Securing
Open Justice’ in Hess and Koprivica Harvey (n 75) 125, 128.
[105] See, in this vein, the risks
also identified by Magnus (n 75) 95, who mentions the protection of the privacy of the parties and the
potential negative influence on witnesses or parties giving statements if they are aware of being the
object of worldwide broadcasting. In the same volume, see also M Bobek, ‘Past and Looming
Challenges to Open Justice’ in Hess and Koprivica Harvey (n 75) 277, 282.
[106] As stated by Chainais (n 86)
65: ‘we must avoid an outdated interpretation of publicity. Denying the contributions made by the
development of technology would be nonsensical. The vision of public access to hearings that prevailed
at the beginning of the twentieth century, limited to the public that was physically present in the
room, or to the accounts then provided by journalists, is obviously outdated.’
[107] New §128a (5) ZPO (Code
of Civil Procedure).
[108] New §16(4)
of the German Act to Give Effect to the Code of Civil Procedure (Gesetz
betreffend die Einführung der Zivilprozessordnung): ‘In
öffentlichen Verhandlungen ist die Öffentlichkeit herzustellen, indem die vollvirtuelle
Videoverhandlung in Bild und Ton an einen öffentlich zugänglichen Raum im zuständigen
Gericht übertragen wird‘. On this see (critically) Stürner and Stürner (n 28)
345.
[109] It is included in the
Real Decreto-ley 6/2023, de 19
de diciembre, por el que se aprueban medidas urgentes para la ejecución del Plan de
Recuperación, Transformación y Resiliencia en materia de servicio público de
justicia, función pública, régimen local y mecenazgo,
Boletín Oficial del Estado 20 December 2023
https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2023/12/20/ accessed 24 September 2024. The issue of public virtual proceedings is addressed in Art
66.
[110] On this, see S Mizan Ismail, T
Shu Yee and S Mohd Hussein, ‘Taking and Sharing Photographs of Virtual Court Proceedings to Social
Media: A Critical Appraisal on the Law of Contempt in Malaysia’ (2022) 13(2) International Journal
for Court Administration 1.
[111] The new version for §
128a (6) ZPO (Code of Civil Procedure). reads as follows: ‘Den
Verfahrensbeteiligten und Dritten ist es untersagt, die Videoverhandlung aufzuzeichnen. Hierauf sind sie
zu Beginn der Verhandlung hinzuweisen.’ (The parties to the proceedings
and third parties shall be prohibited from recording the video hearing. This shall be pointed out to
them at the beginning of the hearing).
[112] Art 67.2 of the Act prohibits
parties, participants or any persons having access to a remote hearing from recording, taking images or
using any means that allow for the subsequent reproduction of the sound and/or image of the
event.
[113] This appears to be the rule in
France, China or Denmark (see Ferrand (n 51) 88–90; Fu (n 103) 42; Salung Petersen (n 30)
58-59).
[114] This is, for instance, the
current situation in Spain (Art 129bis and 137 bis of the Code of Civil Procedure) and in Norway, where
remote or hybrid hearings may be imposed if the court considers them ‘necessary and
unobjectionable’, bearing additionally in mind that the court’s decision on this issue may
not be challenged (Nylund (n 17) 141–142).
[115] For instance, Australia (D
Bamford, ‘Responding to Covid-19 – Australian Courts in 2020’ in Krans and Nylund (n
1) 7, 11–12; Canada (Piché (n 1) 36) or the USA (see the cases reported below, n
117).
[116] As foreseen in Brazil for the
so-called Juízo 100%Digital (see below,
11.1.3).
[117] See
Gould Elecs. Inc. v Livingston Cnty. Rd. Comm’n (US District Court, E.D. Michigan, Southern Division), Judgment 30 June 2020 [470 F.
Supp. 3d 735 (E.D. Mich. 2020)]; also in Andrews v Autoliv Japan,
Ltd. (US District Court, N.D. Georgia) Judgment 27 January 2021 [No
1:14-cv-3432 N.D. Ga. 2021], where it was explicitly stated that ‘the Court is of the opinion that
it has discretion to order a virtual bench trial over Plaintiff’s objection’. See also some further cases referred to in Henrickson (n 9)
317.
[118] In Capic v Ford Motors Ltd (Federal Court of Australia) Judgment 15
April 2020 [2020] FCA 486.
[119] See the cases, especially from
Quebec courts, reported by Piché (n 61) 36.
[121] See Z S Tang, ‘Virtual
Hearing in China’s Smart Court?’ (2021) ConflictOfLaws.net https://conflictoflaws.net/2021/virtual-hearing-in-chinas-smart-court/ accessed 23 September 2024; T Liao, ‘How Emerging Technologies Shape the Face of
Chinese Courts?’ (2021) ConflictOfLaws.net https://conflictoflaws.net/2021/how-emerging-technologies-shape-the-face-of-chinese-courts%EF%BC%9F/ accessed 23 September 2024; G G Zheng, ‘China’s Grand Design of
People’s Smart Court’ (2020) 7(3) Asian Journal of Law and Society 561; W Y C Cheng,
‘Courtroom on the Clouds: How Online Courts Are Transforming China’s Court Performances at
the Local Level’ (2021) 9(1) Peking University Law Journal 45; Z Cao, ‘Online Dispute
Resolution Mechanism in China: Principle of Proceedings and Impact of Technologies’ (2022) 8(1)
China & WTO Review 29; Z Xia, ‘Observation, Reflection and Prospects for Remote Civil Trials
in China: Historical, Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives’ (2023) 13(1) International Journal
of Procedural Law 97.
[122] See §128a (2) and (3) of
the German ZPO (Code of Covil Procedure). The initial Draft of the Act established an additional rule:
if all parties request their participation by video and audio transmission, the presiding judge shall
order it. Some judges criticized the reduction of their powers that such a provision would entail, which
explains that it was not finally adopted (see Stürner and Stürner (n 28) 344).
[123] See Art 129bis of the Spanish
Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by the Real Decreto-ley 6/2023. On this, see F Gascón Inchausti, ‘Régimen jurídico de las
actuaciones judiciales por videoconferencia’ in J Banacloche Palao and F Gascón Inchausti,
Los procesos judiciales tras las reformas introducidas por el Real Decreto-Ley
6/2023 (La Ley 2024) 201, 220−221.
[124] According to Rule 2,
‘Parties, their lawyers and the court must co-operate to promote the fair, efficient and speedy
resolution of the dispute’. See on this L Cadiet and S Amrani-Mekki, ‘General principles:
co-operation and proportionality’ in Stadler, Smith and Gascón Inchausti (n 32) para
2.015−2.022.
[125] ‘The taking of evidence,
in hearings or in camera, can involve, where appropriate, the use of technology, such as
videoconferencing or similar distance communication technologies’. See A Stadler and M Strandberg,
‘General and procedural issues’ in Stadler, Smith and Gascón Inchausti (n 32) para
12.052−12.053.
[126] For a wide and positive
approach, primarily focusing on the situation in England and Wales, see R Susskind, Online Courts and the Future of Justice (Oxford UP 2019).
[127] See Art 5(1)
and 5(1a) of Regulation establishing a European Small Claims Procedure, 861/2007 of 11 July 2007
(EU) (consolidated version, available at https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?uri=CELEX%3A02007R0861-20170714):
1. The European Small Claims Procedure shall be a written procedure.
1a. The court or tribunal shall hold an oral hearing only if it considers that it
is not possible to give the judgment on the basis of the written evidence or if a party so requests. The
court or tribunal may refuse such a request if it considers that, with regard to the circumstances of
the case, an oral hearing is not necessary for the fair conduct of the proceedings. The reasons for
refusal shall be given in writing. The refusal may not be contested separately from a challenge to the
judgment itself.
[128] See P Cortés,
‘Using Technology and ADR Methods to Enhance Access to Justice’ (2018) 5(1-2) International
Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 103. More generally, see Part XIV of this Compendium.
[129] This was indeed one of the
theses stated already in 2012 by J E Cabral, A Chavan, T M Clarke and J Greacen, ‘Using Technology
to Enhance Access to Justice’ (2012) 26(1) Harvard Journal of Law & Technology 241.
[130] E Katsh and O Rabinovich-Einy,
Digital Justice. Technology and the Internet of Disputes (Oxford UP 2017) 37; the expression is also used and developed by Garapon and
Lassègue (n 74) 196 ff.
[131] Katsh and Rabinovich-Einy (n
130) 46–47.
[132] O Rabinovich-Einy and E Katsh,
‘Digital Justice. Reshaping Boundaries in an Online Dispute Resolution Environment’ (2014)
1(1) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 5, 27–29.
[133] Garapon and Lassègue (n
74) 117.
[134] This is sometimes emphasized
as one of the clearest strengths of ODR systems, their capability to adapt to the specific needs of
users depending on the affected sector of litigation: see D Reiling, ‘Beyond Court Digitalization
with Online Dispute Resolution’ (2017) 8(2) International Journal for Court Administration 2; Sela
(n 84).
[135] On this, E Katsh and J Rifkin,
Online Dispute Resolution: Resolving Conflicts in Cyberspace (Jossey-Bass 2001) 93–94. More recently, D Q Anderson, ‘Ethical Concerns in
Court-Connected Online Dispute Resolution’ (2018) 5(1-2) International Journal of Online Dispute
Resolution 20; Sela (n 84).
[137] Towards a justice with a human face was the title of a seminal
International Congress of the International Association of Procedural Law that took place in Ghent in
1977 under the direction – and the inspiration – of Professor Marcel Storme. It is also the
title of the book gathering the proceeds of that conference: M Storme and H Casman (ed), Towards a justice with a human face: the first International Congress of the Law of Civil
Procedure (Kluwer 1978).
[138] I take the term from Z
Juanjuan, ‘On China Online Dispute Resolution Mechanism: Following UNCITRAL TNODR and Alibaba
Experience’ (2017) 4(1) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 14, 19.
[139] This is also suggested by
Cortés (n 128) 117.
[140] I Oltra Gras, ‘Online
Courts: Bridging the Gap between Access and Justice?’ (2021) 10(1) UCL Journal of Law and
Jurisprudence 24, 45-47; J A Allende Pérez de Arce, ‘Tribunales civiles en línea:
Una propuesta para introducirlos sin afectar el derecho a acceder a la justicia de quienes no
están conectados a internet’ (2019) 8(1) Revista Chilena de Derecho y Tecnología
185.
[141] This is the case, eg, with the
Chinese Internet Courts, as will be seen below at 11.2.1.
[142] The mismatch between the needs
of online disputes and the reality of ordinary courts became apparent as more areas of legal life became
virtualised. See, for instance, K W Saunders, ‘Virtual Worlds – Real Courts’ (2007)
52(1) Villanova Law Review 187.
[144] Strictly speaking, it is
debatable whether a decision taken by a computer system is a real decision or something else, to be
defined by other parameters. In any case, and for functional purposes, it cannot be forgotten that every
process operates on the basis of ‘decisions’ that define its milestones; and the legislator
can establish that these milestones are reached not only on the basis of human decisions, but also on
the basis of computerized or automated ‘decisions’.
[145] In this, in fact, German
procedural law showed us several decades ago the possible automation of order for payment proceedings
(the so-called maschinelle Bearbeitung der gerichtlichen Mahnverfahren), which has opened the door to its online management
(see ‘Online-Mahnverfahren’ https://www.mahngerichte.de/online-mahnverfahren/ accessed
4 October 2024).
[146] See J Zeleznikow, ‘Using
Artificial Intelligence to provide Intelligent Dispute Resolution Support’ (2021) 30 Group
Decision and Negotiation 789 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10726-021-09734-1; D Marcos Francisco, ‘Smart ODR y su puesta en práctica: el salto a la
inteligencia artificial’ (2022) 59 Revista General de Derecho Procesal 114.
[147] On this, J Zeleznikow,
‘Can Artificial Intelligence and Online Dispute Resolution Enhance Efficiency and Effectiveness in
Courts’ (2017) 8(2) International Journal for Court Administration 30, addressing caveats in the
light of some models and proposals.
[148] See F Gascón Inchausti,
‘Regulating AI in Civil Justice’ (2024) 11 Pázmány Law Review.
[155] Regulation
laying down harmonised rules on artificial intelligence (Artificial Intelligence Act), 2024/1689 of 13
June 2024 (EU).
[156] Annex III, Sec 8 (a) of the AI
Act.
[157] Taking as a base, also here,
the proposals of Katsh and Rabinovich-Einy (n 130) 49–51.
[158] Katsh and Rabinovich-Einy (n
130) 51–54. Addressing more specifically the way data may be used for dispute prevention, see
167.
[159] E-governance is a very broad
notion, encompassing many different areas of public life. For a comprehensive overview backing on a
European perspective, see D Ramiro Troitiño (ed), E-Governance in the
European Union. Strategies, Tools, and Implementation (Springer
2024).
[160] See, among many others, B
Toy-Cronin, B Irvine, D M Nichols, S J Cunningham and T Tkacukova, ‘Testing the Promise of Access
to Justice through Online Courts’ (2018) 5(1-2) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution
39, 42–43; N Vermeys and J-F Roberge, ‘ODR as a Public Service: The Access to Justice-Driven
Canadian Experience’ (2019) 6(2) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 227.
[161] See, for instance, the project
to establish in the state of New York a court annexed online dispute resolution for consumer credit card
claims, described by D A Larson, ‘Designing and Implementing a State Court ODR System: From
Disappointment to Celebration’ (2019) 2 Journal of Dispute Resolution 77.
[162] This explains, for instance,
why the UNCITRAL’s Technical Notes on Online Dispute Resolution insist on the need of private ODR
systems to ensure the highest possible degree of independence in their ‘neutrals’, ie, in
the persons that serve as mediators and/or may end up making a binding decision. Under the heading of
‘Independence’, Notes 13 and 14 read as follows:
13. It is desirable for the ODR administrator to adopt a code of ethics for its
neutrals, in order to guide neutrals as to conflicts of interest and other rules of conduct.
14. It is useful for the ODR administrator to adopt policies dealing with
identifying and handling conflicts of interest.
[163] This is, for instance, the
case of the Dutch eCourt experience, which involves
an arbitration procedure (see W Netjes and A R Lodder, ‘e-Court – Dutch Alternative Online
Resolution of Debt Collection Claims: A Violation of the Law or Blessing in Disguise?’ (2019) 6(1)
International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 96.
[164] See J M González
García, ‘El Punto Neutro Judicial: una herramienta al servicio de la mayor eficacia de la
Administración de Justicia española’ in A De la Oliva Santos, F Gascón
Inchausti and M Aguilera Morales (ed), La e-Justicia en la Unión Europea.
Desarrollos en el ámbito europeo y en los ordenamientos nacionales (Aranzadi 2012) 197.
[165] It is the so-called
embargo masivo de cuentas a la vista (ECCV), launched
already in 2011, on the basis of an agreement between the CGPJ and the Spanish banking
associations.
[166] On this – although
addressing more broadly the phenomenon of ‘platform justice’, ie, including
‘private’ ODR – see E Tjong Tjin Tai and P Frenken, ‘Procedurele
rechtvaardigheid bij platformprocedures’ (2023) 3 Tidjschrift voor Civiele Rechtspleging 56. See
also Netjes and Lodder (n 163) describing the e-Court initiative, developed in 2017, where an online arbitration procedure was set up to
handle debt collection claims and that was discontinued because of heavy criticisms from the procedural
safeguards perspective (lack if impartiality, lack of transparency and shortcomings regarding the
defendant’s right to a fair trial).
On a different vein, however, it has been suggested that ‘private’
ODR systems should not be conditioned by judicial due process standards (see Cortés (n 128) 111);
it has also been mentioned that due process could be rethought where disputes take less time and involve
no face-to-face human interaction (H Hongju Koh, ‘The “Gant Principles” for Online
Dispute Resolution: Realizing the Chief Justice’s Vision for Courts in the Cloud’ (2021)
62(8) Boston College Law Review 2768, 2784. An additional question arises, as to who should design the
online court and establish the online proceeding: should it be the court itself? (see, on this, Anderson
(n 135) 24).
[168] See, for instance, in
Mata v Avianca (US District Court, S.D. New York) 22
June 2023 [22-cv-1461 (PKC) (S.D.N.Y. Jun. 22, 2023)], a judge of the Southern District of New York
imposed a USD 5,000 fine for bad faith to the lawyers that submitted pleadings including inexistent
precedents (the decision is retrievable at https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/new-york/nysdce/1:2022cv01461/575368/54/ accessed 6 October 2024). In Kruse v Karlen (Court of Appeals of Missouri, Eastern District, Second Division) 13 February 2024 [EDI 11172
(Mo. Ct. App. Feb. 13, 2024)], the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern
District ordered the non-represented appellant to pay USD 10,000 to
respondent in damages for filing a frivolous appeal generated by ChatGPT including many inexistent
precedents (the decision is retrievable at https://casetext.com/case/kruse-v-karlen accessed 6 October 2024). In Smith v Farwell (Massachusetts Superior Court, US) 12 February 2024, the Massachusetts Superior Court imposed
USD 2,000 fine to be paid to the court (the decision is retrievable at https://masslawyersweekly.com/wp-content/blogs.dir/1/files/2024/02/12-007-24.pdf, accessed 6 October 2024). More similar cases are reported by E Clinton jr at
‘Category: Fake Citations – Lawyer Referred to Grievance Panel for Nonexistent
Citation’ https://legalethicslawyer.blog/category/fake-citations/.
[172] See O Rabinovich-Einy and E
Katsh, ‘Blockchain and the Inevitability of Disputes: The Role of Online Dispute Resolution’
(2019) 2 Journal of Dispute Resolution 47; A Schmitz and C Rule, ‘Online Dispute Resolution for
Smart Contracts’ (2019) 2 Journal of Dispute Resolution 103; J Chaisse and J Kirkwood,
‘Smart Courts, Smart Contracts, and the Future of Online Dispute Resolution’ (2022) 5(1)
Stanford Journal of Blockchain Law & Policy 62 (addressing the specific issues of litigation linked
to China’s Belt & Road Initiative).
[173] The Cyber Appellate Tribunal
(CAT) was established under the Information Technology Act of 2000 to settle some cyber-related
disputes. However, it is not a genuine court of justice, but rather an administrative organism that
depends on the government (Sec 48−56 IT Act), whose main function is to solve appeals lodged
against decisions made by a controller or an adjudicating officer under the IT Act (Sec 57 IT Act); the
CAT’s decisions, indeed, may be challenged before the High Court (Sec 62 IT Act). And, moreover,
it is not a cyber-court, ie, it is not an organ necessarily working online: it acts with powers
equivalent to those of a civil court and, where appropriate, it may carry out its activity remotely,
under the same requirements established for judicial acts to be performed online (Sec 58 Act), but
nothing more: the word ‘cyber’ does not refer to the way the CAT acts, but to the scope of
its competence.
[176] Preliminary committal matters
for strictly indictable offences being prosecuted by the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
at the Downing Centre.
[179] Sec 8 of Practice Note SC Gen
12. The NSW Online Registry platform enables to make a request for the court to process the case in that
way; it also offers services for downloading forms, e-filing and access to information on pending cases
in which the user is involved.
[180] Practice Note Civ 1, Sec
43.1.
[181] Practice Note SC Gen 12, Sec 5
and 7.
[182] Practice Note Civ 1, Sec
41.3.
[183] Practice Note SC Gen 12, Sec
12.
[184] Practice Note Civ 1, Sec
42.2.
[185] See O Y T Leong, ‘Access
to Justice and Innovative Court Solutions for Litigants-in-Person: The Singapore Experience’
(2018) 5(1-2) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 9.
[190] ‘Traditional’
methods of serving the defendant with notice of the existence of the proceedings also have to be used in
many cases.
[192] ‘Presidência da
República – Casa Civil – Subchefia para Assuntos Jurídicos’ https://www.planalto.gov.br/ccivil_03/_ato2004-2006/2006/lei/l11419.htm accessed 24 September 2024.
[193] A general
depiction of the evolution of Brazil’s justice digitalization may be found in A Cabral,
‘Dispute Resolution and Technology in Brazil: Artificial Intelligence, ODR and Online
Courts’ (2024) 14(2) International Journal of Procedural Law.
[194] Introduced by Resolution No
185 of 18 December 2013 of the Conselho Nacional de Justiça (the National Justice Council, with wide competences in this field).
[197] Art 5 of Resolution
345/2020.
[198] Art 4 of Resolution
345/2020.
[199] Art 6 of Resolution
345/2020.
[200] Art 3 and 3A of Resolution
345/2020.
[201] Art 2 of Resolution
345/2020.
[203] Art 4 of Resolution
332/2020.
[204] Art 13−16 of Resolution
332/2020.
[205] Art 7 of Resolution
332/2020.
[206] Art 8 of Resolution
332/2020.
[207] Art 19 of Resolution
332/2020.
[208] For a comprehensive overview,
C Hodges, ‘Proposed Modernization of Courts in England & Wales: IT and the Online Court’
(2016) 6(1) International Journal of Procedural Law 149; R Assy, ‘Briggs's Online Court and
the Need for a Paradigm Shift’ (2017) 36(1) Civil Justice Quarterly 93; M Briggs, ‘The Civil
Online Court in England’ in R Assy and A Higgins (ed), Principles,
Procedure, and Justice: Essays in honour of Adrian Zuckerman (Oxford UP
2020) 135. A critical approach can be read in the report ‘Online court
services: Delivering a more efficient digital justice system’ (2023) The
Law Society (https://www.lawsociety.org.uk/topics/research/online-court-services accessed 24 September 2024), according to which the way the government is carrying out
the digitisation of the courts is ‘adding to the delays plaguing the civil court system and
undermining people’s access to justice when they need it most’.
[210] And is linked, to that extent,
with another pilot scheme, the Electronic Working, established in Practice Direction 51O to operate from
16 November 2015 to 1 November 2024, as a platform to enable parties to issue proceedings and file
documents online 24 hours a day every day all year round (https://www.justice.gov.uk/courts/procedure-rules/civil/rules/part51/practice-direction-51o-the-electronic-working-pilot-scheme accessed 24 September 2024).
[212] Sec 2.1(3) of Practice
Direction 51R.
[213] A ‘legal adviser’
is a court officer assigned to the County Court who is a barrister, a solicitor, a Fellow of the
Chartered Institute of Legal Executives, or a CILEX lawyer, who may exercise the jurisdiction of the
County Court with regard to the matters entrusted to them, including the management of OCMC.
[216] Real Decreto-ley 6/2023, de 19 de
diciembre, por el que se aprueban medidas urgentes para
la ejecución del Plan de Recuperación, Transformación y Resiliencia en materia de servicio público de justicia,
función pública, régimen local y
mecenazgo, Boletín Oficial del Estado 20 December 2023 https://www.boe.es/boe/dias/2023/12/20/ accessed 24 September 2024. On the architecture of the system, see P Peiteado Mariscal,
‘Los nuevos procesos digitalizados’ in Banacloche Palao and Gascón Inchausti (n 123)
53.
[217] Ley
3/2020, de 18 de septiembre,
de medidas procesales y organizativas para hacer frente al COVID-19 en el
ámbito de la Administración de Justicia, Boletín Oficial del Estado 20 September 2020 https://www.boe.es/buscar/act.php?id=BOE-A-2020-10923 accessed 24 September 2024.
[218] On this, see Inchausti,
‘Régimen jurídico de las actuaciones judiciales por videoconferencia’ (n
123).
[219] Art 56 of the Spanish
Act.
[220] Art 56 of the Spanish
Act.
[221] Art 57 of the Spanish
Act.
[222] See X Fang, ‘Recent
Developments of Internet Courts in China’ (2018) 5(1-2) International Journal of Online Dispute
Resolution 49; Z Cao, ‘Evolution of Online Courts in China: Situation and Challenges’ (2021)
11(2) International Journal of Procedural Law 300. The previous situation is well described in Juanjuan
(n 138).
[223] The city where one of the
internet giants, Alibaba, is based.
[224] Such as Changning Basic
People’s Court in Shanghai Municipality; they may also be found in Tianjin, Shenzhen, Wuhan, and Chengdu.
[225] See the official information
provided by the court itself in its website: https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2019-03/25/c_23.htm accessed 3 October 2024.
[226] A document prepared by the
Beijing Internet Court published in 2023 and titled ‘Beijing Internet Court Top Ten Typical Cases
in Five Categories’ identifies five main areas: digital copyright, digital consumption, platform
governance, data algorithm, and online-related rights protection (available at https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2023-12/13/c_677.htm accessed 3 October 2024).
[227] Legal operators in the sector
commented extensively on the judgment, given the novel nature of the litigation and its potential value
as a global leading case. See, among others, the information offered in M Nichols, ‘Guangzhou
court finds that generative AI infringes copyright’ (2024) The Trademark Lawyer https://trademarklawyermagazine.com/guangzhou-court-finds-that-generative-ai-infringes-copyright/ or in S Hann Chua, T Ke and A Roberts, ‘China: First AI output
copyright infringement case’ (2024) Linklaters https://techinsights.linklaters.com/post/102j4cb/china-first-ai-output-copyright-infringement-case accessed 3 October 2024.
[229] It is enough to see the
court's web presentation of its judges to realize the will to make clear their nature as State
courts. The short video presentation available on https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2020-12/14/c_321.htm (accessed 3 October 2024) also insists on making the national emblem visible on the
platform for the development of the videoconferences. According to Art 24 of the Online Litigation
Rules, ‘[t]he online courtroom shall present the national emblem in a conspicuous position, and
present the judges and table signs within the reasonable area of the screen.’
[230] See the description in Beijing
Internet Court, ‘Mediation procedures’ https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2019-05/09/c_149.htm accessed 3 October 2024.
[231] According to the information
provided by the BIC itself on its webpage https://english.bjinternetcourt.gov.cn/2019-03/26/c_26.htm accessed 3 October 2024. The risks have been warned since the very beginning; see, for
instance, Fang (n 222) 57.
[232] Vermeys and Roberge (n
160).
[233] S Salter and D Thompson,
‘Public-centered Civil Justice Redesign: A Case Study of the British Columbia Civil Resolution
Tribunal’ (2016-2017) 3 McGill Journal of Dispute Resolution 113.
[235] See Sec 118−137 CRT
Act.
[236] According to the information
provided by the CRT on its webpage (https://civilresolutionbc.ca/), small claims represent the main area of work of the Tribunal. Among the 8,355 final
decisions rendered as of 5 September 2024, 5,954 belong to this area.
[237] These claims are the second
most relevant in terms of workload, with 2,118 final decisions among the 8,355 rendered by the Tribunal
as of 5 September 2024.
[239] Sec 56.6−56.9 CRT
Act.
[240] Pursuant to Sec 19 CRT Act
The tribunal may use
electronic communication tools in conducting all or part of a tribunal proceeding, and may require or
authorize parties or other persons to use electronic communication tools provided by the tribunal in
relation to tribunal proceedings or other dispute resolution services provided by the tribunal.
In the case management phase, Sec 25(2) states that
Facilitated settlement may be conducted in person, in writing, by telephone, videoconferencing or email, or
through the use of other electronic communication tools, or by any combination of those means.
Finally, regarding the hearing phase, Sec 39(1) must be taken into account,
establishing that
In resolving a dispute, the tribunal may conduct a hearing in writing, by telephone, videoconferencing or email, or through
the use of other electronic communication tools, or by any combination of those means.
[241] See Sec 62(2)(f)(i) and
62(2)(l)(i) CRT Act; Sec 39(3), addressing the hearing phase, states that holding it in person has to be
regarded as an exception that the Tribunal must justify if it ‘considers that the nature of the
dispute or that extraordinary circumstances make an in-person hearing necessary in the interests of
justice’.
[243] Pursuant to the definition of
the Tribunal’s mandate according to Sec 2(2)(a) CRT Act.
[244] Sec 20 and 20.1 CRT
Act.
[247] See Zeleznikow (n 147); Oltra
Gras (n 140).
[249] H Eidenmüller and G Wagner, ‘Digital Dispute Resolution‘ in H
Eidenmüller and G Wagner, Law by Algorithm (Mohr Siebeck 2021) 223.
[250] Katsh and Rabinovich-Einy (n
130) 152.
[251] On this, again, Garapon and
Lassègue (n 74) 93; Vermeys and Roberge (n 160); M Philippe, ‘What Does It Take to Bring
Justice Online?’ (2019) 6(2) International Journal of Online Dispute Resolution 183.
[252] Garapon and Lassègue
also advocate for the need to submit digitalization of justice to human values (n 74) 327 ff.
[253] D Amoroso and G
Tamburrini, ‘The Human Control Over Autonomous Robotic Systems: What Ethical and Legal Lessons for
Judicial Uses of AI?’ in X Kramer, A Biard, J Hoevenaars and E Themeli (ed), New Pathways to Civil Justice in Europe. Challenges of Access to Justice (Springer 2021) 23.
[254] On this, see Garapon and
Lassègue (n 74) 13, 101, who point out how digitalization of law modifies its elaboration and how
a computerized reading of the law is redefining its very notion.
[255] Other mechanisms should be
used if the aim is to avoid biases related, for instance, to people’s physical appearance. On the
possibilities offered by online courts to overcome some barriers, see A Sela, ‘Diversity by
Design: Improving Access to Justice in Online Courts with Adaptive Court Interfaces’ (2021) 15(1)
Law & Ethics of Human Rights 125.
[256] S Díaz Bolívar
and M M Bustamante Rúa, ‘Análisis de los sistemas de solución de conflictos
en línea en el mundo y propuesta para su implementación en Colombia’ (2022) 11(2)
Revista Chilena de Derecho y Tecnología 245.
[257] A similar warning in Philippe
(n 251) 191.
[258] See, on this,
the analysis (and predictions) of R Susskind and D Susskind, The Future of the
Professions. How Technology Will Transform the Work of Human Experts (Oxford UP 2022).
[259] This is strongly sustained by
A Shela, ‘Streamlining Justice: How Online Courts Can Resolve the Challenges of Pro Se
Litigation’ (2016) 26(2) Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy 331. See also F Esteban de la
Rosa and J Zeleznikow, ‘Making Intelligent Online Dispute Resolution Tools available to
Self-Represented Litigants in the Public Justice System’ (2021) ICAIL '21: Proceedings of the
Eighteenth International Conference on Artificial Intelligence and Law 195 https://doi.org/10.1145/3462757.3466077 accessed 24 September 2024.
[260] Susskind (n 126)
121−133.