Discussion Questions for
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Special Rules for Consumer Contracts under the Hague Convention |
General Rules |
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| If consumer contract does not contain a forum selection clause: | If consumer contract contains a forum selection clause: | |||
| Option 1: Current Text of Article 7 |
Consumers must be permitted to sue businesses at consumers' home; resulting judgments enforced under Convention. (White list) | Consumers must be permitted to sue businesses at consumers' home. Forum selection clauses not binding on consumers; resulting judgments enforced under Convention (White list) | Consumers can sue businesses under other provisions of Convention and enforce resulting judgment. For example,
if contract does not contain a forum selection clause,
if contract does contain forum selection clause consumer can sue business in forum designated by forum selection clause (modified Article 4) |
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| Option 2: Revise Convention: |
Consumer must be permitted to sue business at consumer's home; resulting judgments enforced under Convention. (White list) | Whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; resulting judgments not enforced under Convention (Grey area) | ||
| Option 3: Revise Convention: |
Consumers must be permitted to sue businesses at consumers' home; resulting judgments enforced under Convention. (White list) | Contracting States choose Option A or B with respect to Article 7(3) | ||
| Option A: Consumers must be permitted to sue businesses at consumers' home; forum selection clauses not binding on consumers; resulting judgments enforced in other opt-in countries but not enforced under Convention in opt-out countries | Option B: whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; if forum selection clause invalidated, consumer sues at home, with resulting judgment enforced only in opt-in countries under Convention. | |||
| Option 4: Revise Convention: |
Whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; resulting judgments not enforced under Convention (Grey area) | Whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; resulting judgments not enforced under Convention (Grey area) | ||
| Option 5: Exclude consumer contracts from Convention/No Convention |
Whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; resulting judgments not enforced under Convention | Whether consumers can sue at home is left to national law; resulting judgments not enforced under Convention | Consumer can never get the benefits of recognition and enforcement under the Convention. However, consumer could assert bases for jurisdiction that would have been prohibited by Convention (black list) such as
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1. The draft convention would create three categories of jurisdiction: (1) a white list, consisting of required bases for jurisdiction and recognition of judgments (generally Articles 3-16); (2) a black list, consisting of prohibited bases for jurisdiction and recognition of judgments (Article 18); and (3) a grey area, which covers everything else not covered by (1) or (2) (Article 17).
- The White List: Articles 3-16 set out jurisdictional rules for specific types of actions that the courts in Contracting States must provide, and from which any resulting judgment may gain the benefits of the recognition and enforcement provisions of the Convention.
- The Black List: Article 18 defines grounds of jurisdiction that are prohibited in Contracting States. Article 18(1) would place a general limitation on the exercise of jurisdiction based on the absence of a "substantial connection between that State and the dispute." Article 18(2)(e) is of particular interest to U.S. litigants because it states that jurisdiction cannot be based solely on the fact that the defendant carries on commercial or other activities in that State, except where the dispute is directly related to those activities. This provision would prohibit the exercise of general "doing business'" jurisdiction as currently recognized under U.S. law. Article 18(2) also would prohibit the exercise of "tag" jurisdiction in a court based on service upon the defendant in the State.
- The Grey Area: Everything that does not fall under either of these categories is included in the "grey area" as defined in Article 17. Generally, countries can continue to act as they normally do under their national law; however, judgments resulting from actions covered by this provision will not get the benefits of recognition and enforcement under the Convention.
