rome regulation and rome convention

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  • 7/29/2019 Rome Regulation and Rome Convention

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    Do you feel that the Rome regulations have vastly improved upon the convention of 1980?

    After six long years and many rounds of discussions and political debates, the Rome

    Convention on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations was converted into a

    Community instrument: the Rome I Regulation. This Regulation entered into force on July

    24, 2008 and is applicable to the entire European Union (except Denmark). The Rome I

    Regulation applies to contracts concluded after December 17, 2009.

    The reason for converting the Rome Convention into a Regulation is because a regulation is

    more binding than a convention. Earlier, the Member States could withdraw or place

    reservations on the Convention. However, now with a set of binding rules, it is not easy for

    the member states to do so. Being a part of the Regulation they are expected to comply with

    the same.

    The Rome Convention, 1980 developed when the European Community was still in its

    nascent stage. It was the times when there was hardly any globalisation or industrialisation

    and the Convention was more or less a reflection of the customary practices. The ambition of

    the Rome I Regulation, on the other hand, is to lay down a comprehensive set of rules

    pertaining to choice-of-law for obligations in civil and commercial matters within the

    European Union. To this end, Rome I is complemented by the Regulation on the Law

    Applicable to Non-Contractual Obligations, which has been applied since January 11, 2009,

    and provides for choice-of-law rules regarding obligations arising out of tort/delict, unjust

    enrichment, negotiorum gestio, and culpa in contrahendo.

    The Rome Regulation, however, cannot act in certain condition, viz, (1) questions considering

    the legal status or capacity of a natural person, (2) obligations out of personal matters, eg.

    Marriage, succession, parentage, wills etc. Family law as such has been excluded from the

    Regulations. (3) Contracts relating to negotiable instruments, (4) arbitration agreements (5)

    principal- agent relationship contracts. (6) Fiduciary contracts (7) rules of evidence and

    procedure, which is decided by the forum where the matter is brought. An additional clause

    to these exceptions were introduced which excluded questions considering not just the legal

    status or capacity of a natural person but also that of artificial persons. This included within

    its ambit the liability, obligations of companies, insurance contracts etc.

    When compared to Rome II, which has no legal predecessor and, therefore, presents a

    milestone in the development of European private international law, Rome I is a relatively

    modest modernization of pre-existing choice of law rules designating the applicable law to

    contractual obligations. On the other hand, Rome I is by no means a verbatim copy of the

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    Rome Convention; indeed, the wording of several articles has been rephrased or clarified, and

    a number of important changes have been implemented. These changes include, inter alia: a

    minor adjustment to the principle of party autonomy (Article 3); a complete revision of the

    choice of law rules regarding the applicable law in the absence of choice (Article 4); new

    provisions on transports of carriage and insurance (Articles 5 and 7 respectively); an

    expansion of the choice of law rules regarding consumer contracts; and a rephrasing of the

    so-called mandatory rules of law. Some of the important changes in the Rome Regulation

    from that of the Rome Convention are discussed below:

    Article 3: This article essentially deals with the principle of party autonomy. The parties

    freedom to choose the law applicable to their contract, whether or not it is the law of an EU

    Member State, is still a fundamental principle in Rome I. The parties also continue to be

    allowed to choose the law applicable to only a part of their contract. No departure from the

    Rome Convention has been intended in these respects. In fact, except for one minor textual

    amendment, the principle of party autonomy has remained unaltered. This amendment relates

    to the criteria for making an implicit choice of law, which seem to have been tightened.

    Whereas under the Rome Convention an implicit choice must be demonstrated with

    reasonable certainty by the terms of the contracts or the circumstances of the case, Rome I

    says this choice must be demonstrated clearly. In this respect, Rome I embodies a

    preference for certainty over flexibility, limiting the courts discretion to determine whether

    the parties have made an implied choice of law. Moreover, under Rome I, one of the factors

    to be taken into account in determining whether an implicit choice of law has been clearly

    demonstrated is an agreement between the parties to confer on one or more courts or tribunals

    of a Member State exclusive jurisdiction to determine disputes under their contract. In the

    absence of an express choice of law, a choice of court could, therefore, bring about an

    implicit choice for the law of the country where the court has jurisdiction (the law of the

    forum). This soft rule, which is not to be found in the Rome Convention, has been both

    praised for its efficiency and criticized for its inconsistency with the principle of party

    autonomy.

    Like the Rome Convention, Rome I does not allow the contracting parties to choose anything

    but national law. Therefore, non-State rules of law - such as lex mercatoria. The Principles of

    European Contract Law, or the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial

    Contracts, cannot be chosen as the law applicable to the contract. This intentional omission

    has been criticized as being out-of-touch with international commercial reality, contradictory

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    to the principle of party autonomy and inconsistent with the arbitration laws of many

    countries. However, Rome I does not preclude the contracting parties from incorporating by

    reference into their contract non-State rules. Clause 3 of Article 3 also mentions that as long

    as there is no contradiction, the parties are free to be governed by the law chosen by them.

    However, when a contradiction arises, and if all the elements of the contract, such as

    performance, habitual residence etc., is found in one country which is not the preferred

    country, then the courts choose that country over the preferred country. One should also note

    that the freedom of choice is governed by the mandatory rules. The meaning of which ,

    varies from the Convention to the Regulation and has been clarified in the Regulation.

    Article 4: Article 3 deals with situations when the parties choose the law applicable, however,

    Article 4 is applicable when such a choice is not made. Rome I contains some major changes

    in respect of the choice-of-law rules regarding the law applicable to the contract in the

    absence of an express or implied choice of law by the contracting parties.

    First, Rome I provides for a bright-line approach in respect of eight categories of contracts,

    stating for each category the determinative connecting factor to designate the applicable law

    (the first main rule). Included in this list of categories are, for example, contracts for the sale

    of goods, contracts for the provision of services, franchise contracts, and distribution

    contracts. According to Rome I, the aforementioned contracts are governed by the law of the

    country where the seller, service provider, franchisee, or distributor, respectively, has his

    habitual residence. This bright-line approach contrasts with that of the Rome Convention,

    under which the main rule for every contract is that the contract shall be governed by the law

    of the country with which it is most closely connected, (close connection was generally

    presumed to be that place where the person effecting the contract habitually resides) subject

    to certain presumptions regarding, most importantly, characteristic performance. Note that

    Rome I also introduces a new provision on the definition of habitual residence.

    Second, contracts which fall outside the aforementioned categories shall be governed by the

    law of the country where the party required to effect the characteristic performance of the

    contract has his habitual residence (the second main rule). This rule also applies to contracts

    which fall into more than one of the aforementioned categories. Thus, the presumption of the

    Rome Convention relating to characteristic performance has been turned into one of the two

    main rules of Rome I regarding the applicable law in the absence of choice.

    Third, where the applicable law cannot be determined pursuant to the two main rules of

    Rome I mentioned above, the contract shall be governed by the law of the country with which

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    it is most closely connected. Thus, the main rule of the Rome Convention has been turned

    into the residual rule in Rome I. Just as with the implicit choice of law, certainty wins over

    flexibility in Rome I with respect to the choice-of-law rules regarding the applicable law in

    the absence of a choice.

    However, Rome I leaves some discretion to the courts in determining the applicable law in

    the absence of choice, by providing that the two main rules mentioned above (the

    categories rule and the characteristic performance rule) shall not apply where it is clear

    from all the circumstances of the case that the contract is manifestly more closely

    connected with a country other than that indicated by either of these two main rules. In such a

    case, the law of that other country shall apply. A similar exception is present in the Rome

    Convention, but without the adverb manifestly. This means that under Rome I courts have

    less leeway to resort to this exception than under the Rome Convention. Once again,

    therefore, Rome I provides for more certainty, albeit less flexibility, than the Rome

    Convention. On the other hand, the preamble of Rome I makes it clear that to determine the

    country with which the contract is manifestly more closely connected, account should be

    taken of, inter alia, whether that contract has a very close relationship with one or more

    other contracts. This suggests that the manifestly more closely connected exception may be

    more readily satisfied than on first sight.

    On analysing certain articles of the Rome I Regulation and the Rome Convention, I,

    personally feel that Rome I regulation has indeed vastly improved upon from the Convention

    of 1980. Rome I is a welcome update of the choice-of-law rules previously laid down by the

    Rome Convention. Several important new provisions have been introduced, such as those on

    contracts of carriage and insurance contracts, renvoi etc. and the language of pre-existing

    rules has been clarified, such as the rules that designate the applicable law in the absence of a

    choice. As a result, Rome I provides for more certainty than the Rome Convention, albeit

    sometimes at the cost of reduced flexibility. However, some issues, most notably the parties

    freedom to choose non-State rules as the law applicable to their contract, are not dealt with in

    Rome I and have been left for another day. It is clear, therefore, that Rome I is not an end

    product but merely another step in the development of private international law within the

    EU, although one that, together with Rome II and Brussels I, results in a more coherent

    framework of European choice-of-law rules.