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CISG

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Title: CISG


1
CISG
  • History
  • General part
  • Articles 1-13
  • Matjaz Tratnik

2
Cicero
  • "Non erit alia lex Romae, alia Athenis, alia
    nunc, alia posthac, sed et apud omnes gentes, et
    omni tempore, una eademque lex obtinebit.

3
Major legal systems
  • French law (Cc, CdC)
  • German law (BGB, HGB)
  • Carl Friedrich von Savigny
  • English law (SGA 1893, 1979, 1994, 1995)
  • Common law and Equity
  • Unified Scandinavian law
  • Uniform Commercial Code (UCC), Art. 2 - American
    law
  • Karl Llewelyn
  • Old Kontract Principles and Karls New Kode
  • Soia Mentschikoff

4
History of the CISG
  • 1930 UNIDROIT (Ernst Rabel)
  • 1935 First Draft
  • 1964 Hague Uniform Laws (André Tunc)
  • 1968 UNCITRAL (Jorge Barrera Graf)
  • 1980 CISG
  • 1988 CISG enters into force

5
CISG - Main Characteristics
  • 2 sets of rules
  • National sale
  • International sale
  • CISG is the national law of the MS regarding
    intl sale of goods
  • Universal applicability
  • Not limited to contracts between parties in MS

6
Brief overview
  • Part I
  • Sphere of application (int'l sale of certain
    goods)
  • Rules for the interpretation
  • of the CISG and
  • of contracts, subject to the CISG

7
Part II - Conclusion
  • Offer
  • Revocability
  • Mirror image rule
  • Does not apply to the question of the validity of
    the contract (illegality, fraud, mistake )

8
Part III Sale of Goods
  • Substantive rules
  • Greatest practical significance
  • Defines parties obligations, rights and remedies
  • Risk of loss
  • Seller delivery of the goods in the right place
    at the right time (contract and supplementary
    rules of the CISG)
  • Conformity
  • Buyer timely payment and timely acceptance

9
Part III - Remedies
  • Buyers
  • Sellers
  • Common to both parties
  • Specific performance (Art. 28 CISG)
  • Avoidance fundamental breach, failure to
    perform after an additional time
  • Damages

10
Part IV Final provisions
  • Reservations
  • Applicability on ground of Article 1(1)(b)
  • Part II or Part III of the convention
  • The principle of non-formality

11
Procedure
  • Mostly Regulation 44/2001 (Brussels and Lugano
    Convention) or national statute
  • Jurisdiction clause
  • Domicile of the defendant
  • Place of the performance
  • Arbitration clause

12
Field of application - How to determine whether
the CISG applies?
  • Articles 1-6
  • Does the CISG apply by virtue of art 1?
  • Is this a sale of goods as defined in Article
    2-3?
  • Is the particular issue governed by the
    Convention according to Articles 4-6?
  • Or is it governed-but-not-settled under Article
    7(2)?
  • Have the parties exercised their freedom to
    contract out (all or part of) the CISG?

13
Internationality Article 1
  • (1) This Convention applies to contracts of sale
    of goods between parties whose places of business
    are in different States ()
  • (2) The fact that the parties have their places
    of business in different States is to be
    disregarded whenever this fact does not appear
    either from the contract or from any dealings
    between, or from information disclosed by, the
    parties at any time before or at the conclusion
    of the contract.
  • (3) Neither the nationality of the parties nor
    the civil or commercial character of the parties
    of the contract is to be taken into consideration
    in determining the application of this
    Convention.

14
Internationality Article 1
  • Subjective criterion
  • Sometimes not easy to decide where the place of
    business is (?Article 10)
  • Awareness (Article 1(2))
  • Nationality, civil or commercial character of PP
    is irrelevant (Article 1(3))

15
Contract of sale of goods
  • No positive definition
  • Definition can be derived from Part 3 (Articles
    30 and 53)
  • Articles 2-3 tell what is not a sale of goods
  • Often mandatory national rules
  • Rare in intl transactions

16
Excluded contracts (Article 2)
  • This Convention does not apply to sales
  • (a) of goods bought for personal, family or
    household use, unless the seller, at any time
    before or at the conclusion of the contract,
    neither knew nor ought to have known that the
    goods were bought for any such use
  • (b) by auction
  • (c) on execution or otherwise by authority of
    law
  • (d) of stocks, shares, investment securities,
    negotiable instruments or money
  • (e) of ships, vessels, hovercraft or aircraft
  • (f) of electricity.

17
Excluded contracts (Article 3)
  • (1) Contracts for the supply of goods to be
    manufactured or produced are to be considered
    sales unless the party who orders the goods
    undertakes to supply a substantial part of the
    materials necessary for such manufacture or
    production.
  • (2) This Convention does not apply to contracts
    in which the preponderant part of the obligations
    of the party who furnishes the goods consists in
    the supply of labour or other services.

18
Sphere of application (Article 1(1))
  • This Convention applies to contracts of sale of
    goods between parties whose places of business
    are in different States
  • (a) when the States are Contracting States or
  • (b) when the rules of private international law
    lead to the application of the law of a
    Contracting State.

19
Article 1(1)(a) Basic rule
  • Most significant and the easiest to apply
  • No PIL needed except for issues not governed by
    the CISG
  • Courts in MS bound to apply the CISG and should
    reach the same result
  • What if the forum is in a non-MS?
  • Arbitration?

20
Article 1(1)(b)
  • When the criterion of subsection (a) is not met
  • PIL of the forum State
  • Arbitration?
  • Sale A to GB
  • Sale SLO to GB (PIL statute)
  • Relevant Austrian PIL rule?
  • What if the parties have chosen the A law?
  • problem
  • Should the forum take into account the rules of
    PIL in the MS (renvoi)?

21
Article 95 declaration
  • Any State may declare at the time of the deposit
    of its instrument of ratification, acceptance,
    approval or accession that it will not be bound
    by subparagraph (1)(b) of article 1 of this
    Convention.

22
Article 95 declaration
  • Czechoslovak proposal
  • USA, CZ, SK, CHI, AUS
  • Sale GB ? USA
  • Forum in the USA
  • Choice of NY law
  • The US forum is not bound by

23
Problem
  • Is a State that made an Article 95 reservation
    still a MS under Article 1(1)(b)?
  • S (A) ? B (GB)
  • Choice of US law (NY)
  • Forum in A?
  • Forum in D?

24
German reservation
  • Führen die Regeln des IPR's zur Anwendung des
    Rechts eines Staates, der eine Erklärung nach
    Art. 95 ... abgegeben hat, so bleibt Art. 1 Abs.
    1 Buchstabe b des Übereinkommens außer betracht.

25
Not governed by the CISG (Art. 4)
  • This Convention governs only the formation of
    the contract of ale and the rights and
    obligations of the seller and the buyer arising
    from such a contract. In particular, except as
    otherwise expressly provided in this Convention,
    it is not concerned with
  • (a) the validity of the contract or of any of its
    provisions or of any usage
  • (b) the effect which the contract may have on the
    property in the goods sold.

26
Not governed by the CISG (Art. 5)
  • This Convention does not apply to the liability
    of the seller for death or personal injury caused
    by the goods to any person.

27
Freedom of Contract (Art. 6)
  • The parties may exclude the application of this
    Convention or, subject to article 12, derogate
    from or vary the effect of any of its
    provisions.

28
Freedom of Contract
  • Party autonomy
  • Contracting out
  • The court presumes the applicability of the CISG
  • Exclusion must be very clear
  • US NL sale (the laws of Switzerland)
    similar Austrian law or French law
  • Choice of Hamburg commercial court choice of D
    law (CISG)
  • Exception Art. 12

29
Parties can contract into the CISG regime
  • Designation of the law of a MS as lex contractus
  • S (JPN) B (GB)
  • ICC arbitration
  • choice of French law ? CISG (is a part of F law)
  • Designation of CISG as such
  • Designation of law merchant (lex mercatoria)

30
Interpretation of the CISG (Art. 7/1))
  • In the interpretation of this Convention,
    regard is to be had to its international
    character and to the need to promote uniformity
    in its application and the observance of good
    faith in international trade.

31
Interpretation of the CISG
  • Text
  • Secretariat Commentary to the 1978 Draft
    Convention
  • Legislative history

32
International interpretation
  • Independent interpretation, not through national
    legal systems
  • Danger that courts will interpret it against the
    background of their national legal systems
  • CLOUT (Case law under UNCITRAL texts)
  • Various databases (Pace, Freiburg)
  • UNILEX
  • Observance of decisions rendered in other MS

33
Good faith
  • Many national legal systems go further (BGB, BW,
    Cc, UCC, OR Cc it)
  • Reasonableness
  • Principle of loyalty and the protection of
    reliance

34
Governed by, but not expressly settled in (Art.
7(2))
  • (2) Questions concerning matters governed by this
    Convention which are not expressly settled in it
    are to be settled in conformity with the general
    principles on which it is based or, in the
    absence of such principles, in conformity with
    the law applicable by virtue of the rules of
    private international law.

35
Article 7(2)
  • Gap-filling provision
  • Permitting to stay within the Treaty and
    diminishing the need to revert to domestic rules
  • Only to matters, governed by but not expressly
    settled in the Convention
  • Question not governed, can only be resolved by
    resort to non-Convention rules of law (validity,
    product liability with regard to personal injury)

36
What to apply
  • General principles of the convention
  • Analogy
  • Analogy with express CISG rules
    (Gesetzesanalogie)
  • Or broader principles, which can be derived from
    one or more CISG rules (Rechtsanalogie)
  • Difficult to derive
  • National law, designed by PIL rules
  • No need to resort to PIL, also lex mercatoria
    could apply

37
Example
  • Writing in Art. 13 expressly include only
    telegram and telex
  • The question whether a telefax is also a writing,
    is a matter governed by but not settled in the
    convention
  • general principle in Article 13, that the term
    writing also means modern means of
    communication (telefax, e-mail etc.).

38
2 Austrian arbitral awards
  • Payment for non-conforming goods
  • Art. 78 provides for payment of interest on the
    price and other sums owed, but does not fix the
    rate.
  • Arbitrator decided that the question of the rate
    is governed by but not settled in the CISG and
    made a reference to the general principle of full
    compensation for loss, which flows from the
    breach.
  • A German Court expressly rejected such solution
    (LG Aachen 1995)

39
German court
  • Seller (USA) ? Buyer (D)
  • Damages to be paid by the Seller.
  • CISG does not determine the place, where the
    Seller has to pay damages
  • Art. 57(1)(a) payment of the purchase price at
    the seller's place of business ? general
    principle of the CISG applying to all payments
    under the CISG, to pay at the creditors place of
    business

40
Estoppel
  • Buyer failed to comply with notice requirement
    with regard to non-conforming goods (Art. 38-39)
  • Seller has previously led buyer to believe that
    the notice defense would not be raised
  • Arbitrator applied estoppel as a general
    principle of the CISG

41
Article 8(1, 2)
  • (1) For the purposes of this Convention
    statements made by and other conduct of a party
    are to be interpreted according to his intent
    where the other party knew or could not have been
    unaware what that intent was.
  • (2) If the preceding paragraph is not applicable,
    statements made by and other conduct of a party
    are to be interpreted according to the
    understanding that a reasonable person of the
    same kind as the other party would have had in
    the same circumstances.

42
Article 8 (3)
  • (3) In determining the intent of a party or the
    understanding a rasonable person would have had,
    due consideration is to be given to all relevant
    circumstances of the case including the
    negotiations, any practices which the parties
    have established between themselves, usages and
    any subsequent conduct of the parties

43
Interpretation of contracts
  • Interpretation of the statements (and conduct) of
    the parties
  • Subjective interpretation (intent) correction
    (8/1)
  • Objective interpretation reasonable person(8/2)
  • Reasonable understanding to the other partys
    general conditions
  • Concretisation of both (8/3)
  • Mistake of a party excluded, Article 4 (PIL)

44
Trade usages (article 9)
  • (1) The parties are bound by any usage to which
    they have agreed and any practices which they
    have established between themselves.
  • (2) The parties are considered, unless otherwise
    agreed, to have impliedly made applicable to
    their contract or its formation a usage of which
    the parties knew or ought to have known and which
    in international trade is widely known to, and
    regularly observed by, parties to contracts of
    the type involved in the particular trade
    concerned.

45
Trade usages
  • Part of the contract
  • PP only rarely expressly agree to be bound by a
    given trade usage
  • PP establish a binding practice by conduct
  • Implicite agreement under Article 9(2)
  • Protective clause to protect traders in less
    developed countries

46
Form (article 11)
  • A contract of sale need not to be concluded in
    or evidenced by writing and is not subject to any
    other requirements as to form. It may be proved
    by any means, including witnesses.

47
Form (Article 12)
  • Any provision of article 11, article 29 or Part
    II of this Convention that allows a contract of
    sale or its modification or termination by
    agreement or any offer, acceptance or other
    indication of intent to be made in any form other
    than in writing does not apply where a party has
    his place of business in a Contracting State
    which has made a declaration under article 96 of
    this Convention. The parties may not derogate or
    vary the effect of this article.

48
Form
  • Form of the contract (Articles 11-12, 29, 96)
  • Declaration under Article 96
  • ARG, BLR, CHI, EST, PRC, H, RS, UA USSR
    strongest proponent
  • CISG does not apply
  • PIL determines the applicable rules
  • Declaration does not always have practical
    consequences
  • S(A/SLO) ? B(H)

49
Hungarian decision
  • Seller (D) ? Buyer (H)
  • Buyer accepted an oral offer
  • D law applicable
  • H reservation irrelevant
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