Course Details

Modern EU Private Law: Special Part

5 Credits
Total Hours: 115
With Ratings: 120h
Undergraduate Mandatory

Course Description

The module "Modern EU Private Law: Special Part" is aimed at studying special institutions of European private law, including obligation and contract law, corporate law, intellectual property law, family and inheritance law, as well as EU international private law in the digital era. The study of special institutions of European private law contributes to deepening knowledge about modern mechanisms of legal regulation in conditions of digitalization, features of consumer protection in the platform economy, innovative approaches to corporate governance and protection of intellectual rights in the digital environment. The module covers obligation relations, contract systems, consumer law, tort obligations, corporate law, intellectual property, family and inheritance relations, as well as EU international private law in the context of contemporary challenges of the digital economy. Instruction is conducted in Uzbek, Russian, and English languages.

Syllabus Details (Topics & Hours)

# Topic Title Lecture
(hours)
Seminar
(hours)
Independent
(hours)
Total
(hours)
Resources
1
General provisions on obligations
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Concept and Architecture of the Obligation in European Private Law

The concept of the obligation (obligatio) serves as the fundamental atomic unit of private law, traditionally defined as a legal bond (vinculum iuris) whereby one person, the debtor, is constrained to perform a certain act for the benefit of another, the creditor. In the context of European Private Law (EPL), this classical Roman definition, inherited by national civil codes like the French Code Civil and the German Bürgerliches Gesetzbuch (BGB), undergoes a functional transformation. While national systems view the obligation as part of a coherent, organic system of private justice, EU law approaches the obligation instrumentally, primarily as a vehicle for market integration. Consequently, the "European obligation" is often characterized by a dichotomy between the general national laws of obligations, which cover the entire lifecycle of the relationship, and specific EU directives that intervene surgically to modify these obligations in the name of consumer protection or internal market efficiency (Smits, 2017).

The architecture of the law of obligations in Europe is multilevel, consisting of the "acquis communautaire" (existing EU legislation), national laws, and international instruments like the United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG). This pluralism creates a complex landscape where the source of a legal duty may be simultaneously national and supranational. For instance, a sales contract is governed by national contract law, but the specific obligation to deliver goods in conformity with the contract is defined by the EU Sale of Goods Directive. Methodologically, this requires jurists to navigate between the "systematic" logic of national codes and the "problem-oriented" logic of EU directives, which often disrupt national dogmatics to achieve specific economic outcomes (Weatherill, 2016).

Academic efforts to harmonize this fragmented landscape led to the creation of the "Principles of European Contract Law" (PECL) and the "Draft Common Frame of Reference" (DCFR). Although not binding law, the DCFR serves as a "toolbox" or a soft-law restatement of the general provisions on obligations. It provides a unified terminology and structure for obligations that transcends the Civil Law/Common Law divide. Book III of the DCFR, for example, sets out general rules on obligations that attempt to synthesize the French concept of cause with the English concept of consideration, ultimately favoring a model based on the parties' intention to create legal relations. These academic frames act as a "shadow civil code," influencing national law reforms and the jurisprudence of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) (Von Bar et al., 2009).

The content of an obligation in EPL can be positive (to do, to give) or negative (to refrain from doing). The EU has significantly expanded the category of "information obligations" (pre-contractual duties). In the digital economy, the obligation to inform the consumer about their rights, the functionality of digital content, and the identity of the trader is a primary duty, breach of which leads to severe remedies. This shifts the focus of the law of obligations from the performance of the main service to the transparency of the transaction process. The "information paradigm" posits that the obligation to disclose restores the balance of power, modifying the classical caveat emptor (buyer beware) principle (Howells et al., 2018).

"Good Faith" (Bona fides, Treu und Glauben) is the overarching meta-principle governing obligations in Europe. While central to Civil Law, it was traditionally alien to English Common Law. However, through the Unfair Contract Terms Directive and the PECL, the duty to act in accordance with good faith and fair dealing has been generalized. In EPL, good faith is not just a gap-filler but a mandatory standard of conduct that limits the exercise of rights. It prevents the debtor from exploiting the creditor's mistake and mandates cooperation. The DCFR establishes that parties have a duty to cooperate in order to give full effect to the obligation, effectively socializing the private bond (Zimmermann & Whittaker, 2000).

The distinction between "means obligations" (obligation de moyens) and "result obligations" (obligation de résultat) is a legacy of French law that persists in European theory. In a means obligation (e.g., a doctor's duty), the debtor promises only to do their best; in a result obligation (e.g., delivery of goods), the debtor promises a specific outcome. EU consumer law tends to favor result obligations. Under the Sale of Goods Directive, the seller is liable if the result (conformity) is not achieved, regardless of fault. This strict liability for non-conformity reflects the EU's policy preference for guaranteeing outcomes in the internal market over protecting the diligent but unsuccessful debtor (Faure, 2009).

"Natural obligations" are those that cannot be enforced in court but, if performed voluntarily, cannot be reclaimed (e.g., gambling debts or time-barred debts). While national codes regulate these explicitly, EU law rarely addresses them directly. However, the principle of soluti retentio (retention of payment) underpins various restitutionary mechanisms in EPL. If a consumer voluntarily pays a debt that was technically unenforceable due to a technicality, the question of whether they can recover it depends on whether the payment was made in error or as a recognition of a moral duty, a distinction that varies across Member States but is converging through comparative scholarship (Lando, 2003).

The "Source" of obligations in EPL extends beyond contract and tort to include "unjustified enrichment" and "negotiorum gestio" (management of another's affairs). Book VII of the DCFR codifies unjustified enrichment, proposing a unified European model based on the absence of a legal basis for the transfer of value. This addresses situations where a contract is voided (e.g., due to withdrawal) and parties must return what they received. The harmonization of restitution rules is critical for the functioning of the Right of Withdrawal in e-commerce, ensuring that the "unwinding" of the obligation is handled consistently across the EU (Clive, 2009).

"Party Autonomy" in defining obligations is restricted by mandatory EU rules. While parties are free to create obligations, they cannot derogate from the "hard core" of consumer protection or competition law. Article 6 of the Rome I Regulation creates a conflict-of-laws rule that ensures a consumer is not deprived of the protection of their home country's mandatory laws. This creates a "hierarchy of obligations" where statutory duties override contractual terms. The obligation is thus no longer purely a creature of the will of the parties but a hybrid of private volition and public regulation (Grundmann, 2002).

The "intuitu personae" character of obligations (personal nature) is fading in the commercial context. Obligations are increasingly treated as tradable assets. The "commodification" of the obligation allows for the assignment of claims and the transfer of debts. EPL facilitates this through the Factoring Regulation and the Rome I rules on assignment. The obligation is depersonalized; it is a value entry in a ledger rather than a personal bond of loyalty. This facilitates the securitization of debts, a key engine of the modern financial economy (Whittaker, 2011).

"Conditional Obligations" depend on a future uncertain event. EPL recognizes both suspensive and resolutive conditions. In the digital context, "smart contracts" automate these conditions ("if X happens, pay Y"). This technological execution of conditions challenges traditional legal theory regarding the "waivability" of conditions. If the code executes automatically, the legal discretion to waive a condition is lost. EPL principles are currently adapting to interpret algorithmic conditions within the framework of traditional obligation theory (Werbach & Cornell, 2017).

Finally, the "Interpretation" of obligations in EPL follows the teleological method of the CJEU. An obligation must be interpreted in light of the objective of the relevant directive (e.g., high level of consumer protection). This often leads to a "protective interpretation" that expands the debtor's duties beyond the literal text of the contract. The obligation is essentially fluid, its content shaped dynamically by the evolving case law of the Luxembourg court to ensure the effet utile (effectiveness) of EU law.

Section 2: Performance and the Concept of Conformity

Performance (solutio) is the natural end of an obligation, the act by which the debtor fulfills their duty and is discharged. In European Private Law, the concept of performance has been revolutionized by the principle of "Conformity." Traditionally, Civil Law systems distinguished between "non-delivery" (aliud) and "defective delivery" (peius), while Common Law distinguished between "conditions" and "warranties." The EU Consumer Sales Directive (1999/44/EC, updated by 2019/771) swept these distinctions away, introducing a unified concept of "lack of conformity." Under this regime, performance is only valid if the goods or services meet both subjective requirements (contractual terms) and objective requirements (fitness for normal use, durability, quality reasonable for goods of that type) (Micklitz, 2011).

The "Objective Standard" of conformity represents a significant shift. Even if the parties agreed to a lower standard, the performance might be non-conforming if it fails to meet the legitimate expectations of the average consumer. This limits party autonomy; a trader cannot easily contract out of the objective quality standards unless the consumer expressly accepts the specific deviation. This ensures that the obligation to perform is anchored in market standards rather than just the fine print of the contract. It creates a "floor" of quality that constitutes the baseline of performance across the Internal Market (Mak, 2020).

"Time of Performance" is regulated to prevent indefinite delays. The Consumer Rights Directive mandates that, unless otherwise agreed, the trader must deliver goods without undue delay and within 30 days. If this deadline is missed, the consumer can terminate the contract after a grace period. In commercial transactions (B2B), the Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU) is the key instrument. It sets a statutory payment term of 30 days for public authorities and limits the ability of companies to impose grossly unfair payment terms. This turns the timing of performance from a contractual modality into a regulated element of market discipline (Janssen, 2015).

"Place of Performance" is critical for jurisdiction. Under the Brussels I Recast Regulation, the place of performance determines which court hears a dispute. For the sale of goods, it is the place of delivery; for services, the place of provision. The CJEU has had to clarify this in complex cases involving goods shipped across borders (Color Drack). The definition of the place of performance links the substantive obligation to the procedural architecture of the EU, determining the "legal geography" of the obligation (Dickinson, 2008).

"Monetary Obligations" are subject to the nominalism principle, but EPL governs the currency and interest. The Euro is the single currency for the Eurozone, and performance must generally be accepted in Euro. The Late Payment Directive harmonizes the interest rate for late performance in B2B relations (reference rate plus 8%). This statutory interest acts as a penalty to incentivize timely performance. The Directive also provides for a fixed sum of 40 Euros as compensation for recovery costs, recognizing that the administration of performance has a cost (Terryn, 2016).

"Performance by a Third Party" is generally permitted unless the obligation is personal (intuitu personae), such as an artistic performance. EPL facilitates outsourcing and subcontracting. However, the debtor remains vicariously liable for the performance of their auxiliaries (Article 79 CISG principle). This ensures that the creditor can look to their counterparty for remedies, regardless of who physically performed the act. In the digital economy, where platforms rely on gig workers, this principle of vicarious liability for performance is central to holding platforms accountable (Busch, 2020).

The "Right to Cure" (Nacherfüllung) gives the debtor a second chance to perform correctly before the contract is terminated. Under the Sale of Goods Directive, if the goods are non-conforming, the consumer must first request repair or replacement. This "hierarchy of remedies" prioritizes specific performance over termination. It reflects a policy of "saving the contract" (favor contractus). Performance is thus viewed as a process that can be corrected, rather than a one-time event that succeeds or fails instantly (Huber, 2011).

"Digital Performance" introduces new dimensions. The Digital Content Directive requires that digital goods be supplied in the most recent version and that the trader provides updates necessary to keep the content in conformity for a period of time. This creates a "continuous performance" obligation. The debtor is not discharged upon delivery of the software; they remain obligated to maintain its functionality and security against cyber threats. This stretches the temporal scope of the obligation into the future, creating a "lifecycle" performance duty (Spindler, 2016).

"Cooperation Duties" are implied in the performance of obligations. The creditor must facilitate the debtor's performance (e.g., being home to accept delivery). The DCFR codifies this duty of cooperation. If the creditor fails to cooperate, they fall into mora creditoris (creditor's delay), shifting the risk of loss to them. In complex IT contracts or construction projects, this mutual duty to cooperate is essential. It frames the obligation not as a unilateral burden on the debtor but as a collaborative project (Hesselink, 2011).

"Partial Performance" is generally not permitted; the creditor can reject it. However, the principle of good faith limits the right to reject if the missing part is insignificant. In EU consumer law, the consumer cannot terminate the contract for a "minor" lack of conformity. This "de minimis" rule protects the stability of transactions. It requires a proportionality assessment: does the defect substantially deprive the creditor of what they were entitled to expect? (Whittaker, 2011).

"Imputation of Performance" regulates which debt is paid when a debtor owes multiple debts to the same creditor. National rules vary (earliest debt vs. most burdensome debt). The DCFR proposes a harmonized rule: if the debtor does not specify, payment goes to the debt that is due, then to the one most burdensome to the debtor. This protects the debtor. These technical rules are vital for the proper accounting of obligations in the banking and utility sectors.

Finally, "Proof of Performance" lies with the debtor. In consumer cases, the burden is reversed regarding conformity. If a defect appears within one year (or two in some states) of delivery, it is presumed to have existed at the time of performance. This "presumption of non-conformity" radically alters the balance of the obligation, requiring the professional debtor to prove they performed correctly, rather than the creditor proving the breach. This is a core procedural protection in EPL.

Section 3: Non-Performance and the System of Remedies

Non-performance (breach) is the failure to fulfill an obligation. In classical systems, a distinction was made between "fault-based" liability (Roman/German tradition) and "strict" liability (English tradition). EPL, particularly through the CISG and Consumer Directives, has moved decisively towards a unitary concept of "non-performance" that is largely objective and strict. The debtor is liable for any failure to perform, regardless of fault, unless they can prove an exemption (force majeure). This shift simplifies the litigation of breach, focusing on the fact of non-performance rather than the moral culpability of the debtor (Zimmermann, 2005).

The "Hierarchy of Remedies" is a distinctive feature of EU consumer law. The primary remedies for non-conformity are specific performance: repair or replacement. Only if these are impossible, disproportionate, or fail, can the consumer move to the secondary remedies: price reduction or termination (rescission). This hierarchy protects the seller’s economic interest in curing the defect and preventing economic waste. It contrasts with the Common Law preference for damages as the primary remedy. This structure forces the parties to interact to fix the problem, maintaining the legal relation rather than dissolving it immediately (Mak, 2020).

"Specific Performance" (in natura) is the claim to get exactly what was promised. In Civil Law, this is the primary right; in Common Law, it is discretionary. EPL adopts the Civil Law stance: the creditor has a right to performance. In B2B transactions, this is tempered by economic efficiency exceptions (e.g., if performance is unlawfully expensive). In B2C, the consumer can demand repair or replacement unless it is "impossible or disproportionate." The definition of "disproportionate" is a key battleground, balancing the consumer's preference against the trader's cost (Smits, 2017).

"Termination" (Resolution/Withdrawal) is the most drastic remedy, destroying the obligation ex tunc (retroactively). In EPL, termination requires a "fundamental" or "material" breach. The Consumer Sales Directive allows termination only if the lack of conformity is not "minor." The DCFR defines fundamental non-performance as one that substantially deprives the creditor of what they were entitled to expect. Termination releases both parties from their obligations and triggers restitution. This remedy is a "self-help" mechanism in many EU jurisdictions, exercisable by notice rather than requiring a court order (Loos, 2015).

The "Right of Withdrawal" (Cooling-off Period) is a unique remedy in EU consumer law that does not require non-performance. It allows a consumer to exit a contract within 14 days for any reason in distance and off-premises contracts. This is a "penitence rights" remedy designed to correct the information asymmetry of buying unseen goods. It dissolves the obligation retroactively. This statutory right overrides the binding force of contract (pacta sunt servanda), creating a period of "provisional" obligation (Schulze, 2010).

"Price Reduction" (actio quanti minoris) is a remedy inherited from Roman law that allows the creditor to keep the defective performance but pay less. It restores the equilibrium of the exchange. In EPL, it is a secondary remedy available when repair/replacement fails. It is calculated proportionally: the price is reduced by the difference in value between the conforming and non-conforming goods. This remedy is particularly useful for minor defects where termination would be disproportionate (Faure, 2009).

"Withholding Performance" (Right of Retention) allows a creditor to suspend their own performance until the debtor performs. This is a defensive remedy (exceptio non adimpleti contractus). It pressures the debtor to comply without ending the contract. EPL principles recognize this as a general right in reciprocal contracts. It is a form of private policing of the obligation, allowing the creditor to use their own debt as leverage (Lando & Beale, 2000).

"Damages" are available for any loss caused by non-performance. Unlike the other remedies, damages often require a higher threshold or specific conditions in national laws (e.g., notice of default). However, the CJEU has ruled that the right to damages for non-conformity is an intrinsic part of the effectiveness of EU consumer law. Damages cover both "expectational loss" (what the creditor would have gained) and "reliance loss" (wasted expenditure). The aim is full compensation (restitutio in integrum) (Magnus, 2012).

"Anticipatory Non-Performance" allows a creditor to act before the due date if it is clear the debtor will not perform. Borrowed from Common Law and codified in the CISG and DCFR, this doctrine allows for early termination or suspension. It promotes efficiency by allowing the creditor to mitigate losses immediately rather than waiting for the inevitable breach. It reflects a proactive approach to obligation management (Liu, 2011).

"Cure by the Debtor" is the mirror image of the creditor's remedies. The debtor has a right to fix their mistake. This right to cure prevents the creditor from terminating immediately for a curable breach. It supports the economic policy of preserving transactions. In the digital services sector, "updates" are the primary mechanism of cure. The law facilitates this by obliging the consumer to cooperate with the installation of updates (Spindler, 2016).

"Member State Autonomy" in remedies remains a source of fragmentation. While the EU harmonizes the "what" (types of remedies), the "how" (procedural enforcement) is often national. For instance, whether termination requires a court order or a simple letter varies. The principle of "effectiveness" requires that national procedures must not make obtaining the remedy excessively difficult. This has led the CJEU to intervene in national procedural law, for example, by allowing judges to raise the issue of unfair terms on their own motion to ensure the remedy is applied (Storskrubb, 2011).

Finally, "Collective Redress" mechanisms (Representative Actions Directive) allow remedies to be claimed by a group. This overcomes the "rational apathy" of consumers with small claims. It aggregates the individual obligations into a collective claim, allowing for mass compensation or mass repair. This transforms the remedy from an individual private right into a tool of market regulation.

Section 4: Damages, Exemptions, and Force Majeure

The law of damages in EPL aims to place the creditor in the position they would have been in had the contract been performed ("positive interest"). This contrasts with tort damages which aim to restore the status quo ante. The calculation of damages includes both the loss suffered (damnum emergens) and the lost profit (lucrum cessans). While national calculation methods differ, the principle of "full compensation" is a cornerstone of EU law, derived from the requirement that remedies be "effective" and "dissuasive" (Faure, 2009).

"Foreseeability" limits the scope of damages. Based on the famous Hadley v Baxendale rule (Common Law) and similar Civil Law doctrines (Article 1150 Code Civil), a debtor is liable only for losses that were foreseeable at the time of the contract. The CISG (Article 74) and PECL adopt this foreseeability test. This allocates risk: the debtor prices the contract based on predictable risks. If the creditor has unusual risks (e.g., a "super-profit" dependent on the delivery), they must inform the debtor to make that loss foreseeable and recoverable (Bridge, 2013).

"Non-Pecuniary Loss" (pain and suffering, loss of enjoyment) is increasingly recoverable in contract. The seminal Leitner case (C-168/00) established that under the Package Travel Directive, consumers can recover damages for "loss of enjoyment of the holiday." This recognized that in consumer contracts, the "purpose" of the obligation is often pleasure or relaxation, not just profit. Breach of such an obligation causes immaterial harm that must be compensated. This expands the scope of damages beyond the purely patrimonial assets of the creditor (Gola et al., 2021).

"Force Majeure" is the primary exemption from liability. It excuses non-performance if it is due to an impediment beyond the debtor's control that they could not reasonably be expected to take into account or overcome. Standard examples include war, natural disasters, and pandemics. The consequences are usually the suspension of the obligation or, if the impediment is permanent, termination without damages. EPL (via the CISG and DCFR) adopts a strict, objective test for force majeure, distinguishing it from mere difficulty or increased cost (Brunner, 2008).

"Hardship" (Imprévision) deals with the situation where performance is still possible but has become excessively onerous due to a change in circumstances. Traditional Civil Law (pacta sunt servanda) rejected hardship. However, modern EPL (PECL, recent French reforms) recognizes a right to renegotiate the contract in cases of hardship. If renegotiation fails, the court may adapt or terminate the contract. This introduces flexibility into long-term obligations, acknowledging that rigid enforcement in changed conditions can be unjust (Kötz, 2017).

"Mitigation of Damages" is a duty of the creditor. They must take reasonable steps to minimize their loss (e.g., buying substitute goods). If they fail to mitigate, the damages are reduced by the amount that could have been avoided. This principle is universally accepted in EPL sources (CISG Art. 77, PECL). It reflects the economic logic of waste reduction and prevents the creditor from profiting from the debtor's breach by allowing losses to accumulate (Saidov, 2008).

"Penalty Clauses" and "Liquidated Damages" are treated differently across Europe. Common Law traditionally strikes down penalties (deterrents) and only enforces genuine pre-estimates of loss. Civil Law allows penalties but gives judges the power to reduce excessive amounts. The Council of Europe and DCFR trend towards the Civil Law model: penalty clauses are valid as a tool of party autonomy but subject to judicial moderation for fairness. This allows parties to price the risk of breach themselves (Schelhaas, 2016).

"Contributory Negligence" (Fault of the Creditor) reduces liability. If the creditor's own conduct contributed to the non-performance or the extent of the loss, damages are apportioned. This applies even in strict liability regimes. It reflects the principle that the debtor should not pay for the creditor's errors. In the context of digital obligations, if a consumer fails to install a security update and gets hacked, their claim for damages against the software provider may be reduced (Magnus, 2012).

"Interest on Damages" ensures that the time value of money is compensated. The Late Payment Directive sets high statutory interest rates for B2B debts. For damages claims, interest usually runs from the date of the breach or the date of notice. This prevents the debtor from gaining an advantage by delaying payment of the compensation.

"Currency of Damages" is a practical issue in the Single Market. The general rule is that damages are calculated in the currency of the loss. However, courts often have discretion to convert to the currency of the forum or the Euro. The volatility of exchange rates makes the date of conversion (breach date vs. judgment date) critical for the value of the obligation.

"Causation" must be proven. The "Conditio sine qua non" (but-for) test is the starting point, filtered by theories of "adequate causation" or "remoteness." In complex cases (e.g., environmental damage or financial loss), establishing the link between the breach and the loss is difficult. EPL is experimenting with "presumptions of causality" in areas like AI liability to help victims bridge the evidentiary gap (Wagner, 2019).

Finally, the "Disgorgement of Profits" is a controversial remedy. Should a creditor claim the profit the debtor made by breaching the contract? Traditionally no (efficient breach theory). However, some jurisdictions and academic drafts allow for the restitution of profits in cases of deliberate breach, aiming to deter opportunistic behavior. This shifts the focus of damages from compensation (loss) to restitution (gain).

Section 5: Transfer, Plurality, and Extinction of Obligations

The "Assignment of Claims" (Cession) allows a creditor to transfer their right to a third party (assignee). This is the legal engine of factoring and securitization. The main issue in EPL is the "conflict of laws": which law governs the effectiveness of the assignment against third parties? The proposed EU Regulation on the law applicable to the third-party effects of assignments of claims suggests the law of the assignor's habitual residence. This provides certainty for bulk assignments (e.g., a bank assigning thousands of loans). Substantively, EPL principles generally allow assignment without the debtor's consent, provided the debtor is notified (Whittaker, 2011).

"Assumption of Debt" transfers the passive side of the obligation (the duty to pay). Unlike assignment, this always requires the creditor's consent, as the creditor relies on the solvency of the specific debtor. EPL distinguishes between "full assumption" (original debtor released) and "cumulative assumption" (new debtor joins the old one). This mechanism is vital in corporate restructuring and M&A transactions (Anderson, 2010).

"Subrogation" is a legal transfer of the claim that occurs by operation of law, usually when a guarantor or insurer pays the creditor. The payer "steps into the shoes" of the creditor, acquiring all rights and securities. This prevents unjust enrichment. EPL harmonizes subrogation rules in insurance (Motor Insurance Directives) to ensure that cross-border accidents can be settled efficiently between insurers (Merkin, 2007).

"Set-off" (Compensation) extinguishes reciprocal obligations. If A owes B and B owes A, the debts cancel out. Civil Law often allows "set-off by notice" (extrajudicial), while some systems require a court order. The Financial Collateral Directive created a specialized regime for "Close-out Netting" in financial markets. This allows all obligations between two banks to be instantly netted upon insolvency, preventing the "cherry-picking" of contracts by the liquidator. This is a systemic risk management tool underpinning the derivatives market (Keijser, 2006).

"Plurality of Debtors" creates "Joint and Several Liability" (Solidarity) or "Proportionate Liability." The default rule in EPL (PECL/DCFR) and commercial practice is solidarity: the creditor can demand the full amount from any debtor. The paying debtor then has a right of recourse against the others. This favors the creditor by reducing the risk of one debtor's insolvency. In consumer law, co-debtors (e.g., spouses) are often protected by information duties to ensure they understand the risk of solidarity (Cherednychenko, 2007).

"Plurality of Creditors" is less common. "Joint Creditorship" means any creditor can demand full performance. "Solidary Creditorship" allows the debtor to pay any creditor to discharge the debt. EPL default rules typically presume that claims are divided proportionately unless agreed otherwise.

"Prescription" (Limitation of Actions) extinguishes the right to enforce the obligation after a period of time. National periods vary (3 to 30 years). EPL lacks a general limitation period, creating a trap for cross-border litigation. However, specific directives (Product Liability, Transport) harmonize periods for specific claims. The general trend in Europe is towards a "short" period (3 years) running from the time of knowledge of the claim (subjective system), balanced by a "long-stop" period (10-30 years) from the event (objective system) (Zimmermann, 2002).

"Merger" (Confusio) extinguishes an obligation when the debtor and creditor become the same person (e.g., corporate merger). This is a logical necessity. However, in asset securitization, special purpose vehicles (SPVs) are used to prevent merger, keeping the debts alive even if bought by related entities.

"Waiver" and "Remission" allow the creditor to voluntarily extinguish the debt. EPL generally requires an agreement (contractual release) rather than a unilateral act, protecting the debtor from unwanted gifts (e.g., for tax reasons). The form of the waiver is usually informal, consistent with the general principle of freedom of form.

"Novation" extinguishes an old obligation by creating a new one. This requires animus novandi (intention to novate). In modern finance, novation is used in clearing houses (CCPs) to interpose the clearing house between the original trading parties, extinguishing the bilateral contract and creating two new contracts with the CCP. This centralizes risk (Gullifer, 2017).

"Insolvency" serves as a collective extinction mechanism. The discharge of debt after bankruptcy allows the "fresh start" of the debtor. The EU Insolvency Regulation coordinates the effects of insolvency on obligations across Member States, determining which law governs the unenforceability of claims. The Restructuring Directive promotes "preventive restructuring" to modify obligations (cram-down) before insolvency hits, saving viable businesses.

Finally, "Smart Contract Extinction." In blockchain systems, the obligation is extinguished when the code executes the transfer. There is often no "state of pending performance" open to set-off or prescription in the traditional sense. The obligation is born and dies in the same block. Integrating this "instantaneity" with the complex legal rules of extinction (like insolvency avoidance actions) is the frontier of obligation theory.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Anderson, M. (2010). The Law of Assignment. Oxford University Press.

  • Bridge, M. (2013). The International Sale of Goods. Oxford University Press.

  • Brunner, C. (2008). Force Majeure and Hardship under General Contract Principles. Kluwer Law International.

  • Busch, C. (2020). The Future of EU Consumer Law. European Review of Private Law.

  • Cherednychenko, O. (2007). Fundamental Rights, Contract Law and the Protection of the Weaker Party. Sellier.

  • Clive, E. (2009). Restitution in the DCFR. Juridica International.

  • Dickinson, A. (2008). The Rome II Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Faure, M. (2009). Tort Law and Economics. Edward Elgar.

  • Gola, P., et al. (2021). GDPR Compensation. Computer Law & Security Review.

  • Grundmann, S. (2002). Information, Party Autonomy and Economic Agents. Common Market Law Review.

  • Gullifer, L. (2017). Intermediated Securities. Hart.

  • Hesselink, M. (2011). CFR & Social Justice. Sellier.

  • Howells, G., et al. (2018). Handbook of Research on International Consumer Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Huber, P. (2011). The CISG: A New Textbook for Students and Practitioners. Sellier.

  • Janssen, A. (2015). The New EU Late Payment Directive. European Review of Private Law.

  • Keijser, T. (2006). Financial Collateral Arrangements. Kluwer.

  • Kötz, H. (2017). European Contract Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Lando, O. (2003). Principles of European Contract Law. Kluwer.

  • Lando, O., & Beale, H. (2000). Principles of European Contract Law: Parts I and II. Kluwer.

  • Liu, C. (2011). Remedies for Non-performance: Perspectives from CISG, UNIDROIT Principles & PECL.

  • Loos, M. (2015). The Modernization of European Consumer Law. European Review of Private Law.

  • Magnus, U. (2012). CISG vs. CESL. Sellier.

  • Mak, C. (2020). Legal Methodology of European Private Law. Cambridge Companion.

  • Merkin, R. (2007). Colinvaux's Law of Insurance. Sweet & Maxwell.

  • Micklitz, H.-W. (2011). The Many Concepts of Social Justice in European Private Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Saidov, D. (2008). The Law of Damages in International Sales. Hart.

  • Schelhaas, H. (2016). The enforcement of penalty clauses in civil law. European Review of Private Law.

  • Schulze, R. (2010). European Private Law. Sellier.

  • Smits, J. M. (2017). The Making of European Private Law. Intersentia.

  • Spindler, G. (2016). Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content. Common Market Law Review.

  • Storskrubb, E. (2011). Civil Procedure and EU Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Terryn, E. (2016). The Late Payment Directive. J. Eur. Consumer & Mkt. L..

  • Von Bar, C., et al. (2009). Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). Sellier.

  • Wagner, G. (2019). Robot Liability. Oxford Handbook on the Law of Regulation.

  • Weatherill, S. (2016). Contract Law of the Internal Market. Intersentia.

  • Werbach, K., & Cornell, N. (2017). Contracts Ex Machina. Duke Law Journal.

  • Whittaker, S. (2011). The Optional Instrument of European Contract Law. Common Market Law Review.

  • Zimmermann, R. (2002). Comparative Foundations of a European Law of Set-Off and Prescription. Cambridge University Press.

  • Zimmermann, R. (2005). The New German Law of Obligations. Oxford University Press.

  • Zimmermann, R., & Whittaker, S. (2000). Good Faith in European Contract Law. Cambridge University Press.

2
Harmonization of contract law in the EU
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Rationale, Methods, and Legal Basis of Harmonization

The harmonization of contract law in the European Union is not an end in itself but a functional necessity of the Internal Market. The foundational logic is economic: divergences in national contract laws constitute "non-tariff barriers" to trade. A German company wishing to sell goods in France must navigate the Code Civil, incurring transaction costs for legal advice, translation, and adaptation of standard terms. These costs discourage cross-border trade, particularly for Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs). Consequently, the EU's competence to harmonize contract law is derived primarily from Article 114 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), which authorizes the approximation of laws to ensure the functioning of the internal market. This economic rationale dictates the "instrumental" nature of EU contract law; rules are crafted not to achieve dogmatic purity but to facilitate market access and consumer confidence (Weatherill, 2016).

In the early stages of European integration, the dominant method was "Minimum Harmonization." Directives set a "floor" of rights (e.g., a minimum two-year guarantee for goods), allowing Member States to maintain or introduce higher levels of protection. This approach respected the principle of subsidiarity and national legal cultures. It resulted in a "gold-plating" phenomenon, where states added extra protections, preserving the fragmentation of the legal landscape. For a business, minimum harmonization meant that compliance with the EU directive was not enough; they still had to check 27 national rulebooks for stricter local deviations. This method improved consumer standards but failed to achieve a true single market for businesses (Dougan, 2004).

Recognizing this failure, the EU shifted in the 21st century towards "Maximum (or Full) Harmonization." Instruments like the Consumer Rights Directive (2011/83/EU) and the Product Liability Directive prohibit Member States from maintaining divergent rules within their scope, whether stricter or more lenient. This sets a "ceiling" as well as a floor. Maximum harmonization unifies the rulebook, allowing a trader to use a single contract across the EU without modification. However, it is politically controversial because it forces states with high social protection (like Germany or France) to lower their standards to the EU average, sparking debates about the "race to the bottom" and the erosion of national social contracts (Mak, 2020).

The "Salami Slicing" approach characterizes the scope of harmonization. The EU has never harmonized "General Contract Law" (formation, validity, mistake, capacity) in its entirety. Instead, it harmonizes specific sectors (consumer sales, package travel, e-commerce) or specific problems (late payments, unfair terms). This creates a "fragmented" system where islands of unified EU law float in a sea of diverse national laws. A single contract may be governed by the EU Consumer Rights Directive regarding withdrawal, but by the German BGB regarding the definition of "mistake." This interplay requires complex "vertical" coherence between the EU and national levels (Grundmann, 2011).

The dichotomy between B2C (Business-to-Consumer) and B2B (Business-to-Business) contracts is central. B2C law is heavily harmonized to protect the weaker party and encourage cross-border shopping. B2B law remains largely national, governed by the principle of party autonomy and Private International Law (Rome I Regulation). However, "spill-over" effects occur. National legislators, when implementing EU consumer directives, often voluntarily extend the rules to B2B contracts to avoid a "split regime" in their civil codes. Thus, EU harmonization indirectly shapes commercial law even where it lacks direct competence (Twigg-Flesner, 2008).

The choice of instrument—Directive vs. Regulation—affects the intensity of harmonization. Directives require transposition into national law, allowing for "interpretative divergence" and delays. Regulations (like the Flight Compensation Regulation) are directly applicable, creating a single text identical in all states. The modern trend favors Regulations (e.g., GDPR, Digital Services Act) to ensure absolute uniformity in the digital market. This shifts the source of law from the national parliament (implementing a directive) to the EU official journal, bypassing local filters entirely (Prechal, 2005).

The "Autonomous Interpretation" by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) is a powerful engine of harmonization. Concepts like "consumer," "damage," or "delivery" in EU instruments must be interpreted uniformly across the EU, independent of national definitions. The CJEU creates a "supranational legal lexicon." This judicial harmonization often goes further than the legislature intended, eroding national doctrinal differences through case law. National courts must interpret their domestic codes "in conformity" with these autonomous EU meanings, effectively rewriting national law from the bench (Lenaerts & Gutiérrez-Fons, 2014).

"Legal Irritants" is a sociological concept describing the friction of harmonization. When a harmonized rule (e.g., "good faith") is transplanted into a national system (e.g., English law), it does not function exactly as intended. It interacts with local procedural rules and legal culture, producing a hybrid outcome. Harmonization is not a mechanical overwrite but a chemical reaction. The "received" EU law is transformed by the "host" national system. Understanding this dynamic explains why, despite identical directives, the practical application of contract law still varies across Europe (Teubner, 1998).

The "Optional Instrument" is an alternative method of harmonization. Instead of replacing national law, the EU creates a "28th regime" (like the proposed Common European Sales Law). Parties can choose this EU law to govern their contract instead of French or German law. This "opt-in" model respects sovereignty while offering a unified solution for those who want it. While the CESL failed politically, the idea persists in the form of optional intellectual property regimes (Unitary Patent), representing a non-coercive path to unity (Smits, 2012).

The "Better Regulation" agenda impacts harmonization. The Commission now conducts "fitness checks" (REFIT) to see if existing harmonized laws are working. This leads to "re-casting" or consolidating directives to reduce complexity. The "Omnibus Directive" (2019/2161) modernized four existing consumer directives at once. This iterative process shows that harmonization is not a one-off event but a continuous cycle of legislative maintenance and adjustment to market realities (Weatherill, 2016).

Political resistance to harmonization stems from the cultural symbolic value of Civil Codes. For nations like France and Germany, the Civil Code is a constitution of civil society, a monument of national identity. Replacing it with a "European Code" is seen as a loss of cultural sovereignty. This resistance has halted the project of full unification, confining the EU to the "sectoral" approach. The "political limit" of harmonization is reached where the economic benefits of trade no longer outweigh the cultural costs of legal homogeneity (Collins, 2013).

Finally, the "Coherence" of the Acquis is a persistent challenge. Different directives use different definitions of "consumer" or "goods." The lack of a central "General Part" creates contradictions. The academic work on the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR) was an attempt to provide this missing grid. While not enacted, the DCFR serves as a "toolbox" for the Commission to ensure that new definitions in future directives are consistent, providing a "soft" methodological harmonization behind the scenes (Schulze, 2010).

Section 2: The Consumer Law Acquis as the Engine of Integration

Consumer law is the Trojan horse of European contract law harmonization. Under the guise of consumer protection, the EU has harmonized vast swathes of general contract law, including formation, information duties, unfair terms, and remedies for non-performance. The Unfair Contract Terms Directive (93/13/EEC) is the cornerstone. It introduced a substantive fairness test for standard terms: a term is unfair if it causes a "significant imbalance" in rights and obligations contrary to "good faith." This directive forced Common Law systems to accept the civil law principle of good faith and forced Civil Law systems to accept judicial review of price/quality ratios in certain contexts. It revolutionized the policing of standard form contracts across Europe (Micklitz, 2011).

The Consumer Sales Directive (1999/44/EC), replaced by the Sale of Goods Directive (2019/771), harmonized the core of the sales contract: the definition of quality ("conformity") and the remedies for defect. It replaced the diverse national concepts (like the French vice caché or English merchantable quality) with a single European concept of "conformity with the contract." It established a hierarchy of remedies (repair/replacement first, then price reduction/termination), which conflicted with national traditions that allowed immediate termination. This directive created a uniform "warranty law" for Europe, ensuring that a toaster bought in Lisbon carries the same guarantee rights as one bought in Berlin (Stuyck, 2015).

The Consumer Rights Directive (2011/83/EU) (CRD) harmonized the rules on distance and off-premises contracts. It standardized the "Right of Withdrawal" (14 days) and the "Pre-contractual Information Duties." By fully harmonizing the withdrawal period and the modalites of its exercise (the model withdrawal form), the CRD eliminated the fragmentation where states had periods ranging from 7 to 30 days. This created a "uniform cooling-off period" across the EU, a fundamental right of the digital consumer that overrides the binding force of contract (pacta sunt servanda) (Loos, 2014).

The "Information Paradigm" underpins this acquis. The EU assumes that the weaker position of the consumer is due to information asymmetry. Therefore, harmonization focuses on mandatory disclosure. The list of information that must be provided (identity, price, main characteristics) is exhaustive and fully harmonized. Failure to provide this information leads to penalties, such as the extension of the withdrawal period by 12 months. This transforms contract law into a "transparency regime," where the validity of the bond depends on the quality of the pre-contractual signal (Ben-Shahar & Schneider, 2014).

The role of the national judge as a "European judge" is crucial. In cases like Pannon and Aziz, the CJEU ruled that national judges must examine unfair terms ex officio (on their own motion), even if the consumer does not raise the plea. This procedural harmonization is radical; it overrides national rules of civil procedure (party disposition principle) to ensure the "effectiveness" of EU law. The judge becomes an active inquisitor protecting the weaker party, ensuring that the harmonized substantive law is not undermined by passive procedural rules (Reich, 2014).

The Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (2005/29/EC) harmonized the pre-contractual marketing phase. It bans misleading actions, omissions, and aggressive practices. While technically public/administrative law, it impacts contract law significantly. Many Member States (and now the EU via the Omnibus Directive) provide contract law remedies (damages, nullity) for contracts concluded as a result of unfair practices. This bridges the gap between tort (unfair competition) and contract (validity of consent), harmonizing the definition of "defect of will" in the market context (Weatherill, 2012).

The "Omnibus Directive" (2019/2161) modernized the acquis for the digital age. It introduced harmonized penalties (fines up to 4% of turnover) for widespread infringements, aligning consumer law sanctions with the GDPR and competition law. It also extended transparency requirements to "free" digital services (paying with data) and search result rankings. This update ensures that the harmonized rules remain relevant in the platform economy, addressing issues like fake reviews and personalized pricing (Busch, 2020).

The "Services Directive" (2006/123/EC) contains contract law provisions regarding non-discrimination. It prohibits traders from discriminating against consumers based on their nationality or residence (e.g., refusing to deliver to another country). This "Geo-blocking Regulation" (2018/302) further harmonized the "duty to sell" in cross-border contexts. It limits the contractual freedom to choose one's counterparty, mandating a "shop like a local" principle that integrates the European market at the level of the individual transaction (Hatzopoulos, 2012).

The interplay with Private International Law (Rome I Regulation) acts as a safety valve. Article 6 of Rome I dictates that a consumer cannot be deprived of the protection of the mandatory provisions of the law of their habitual residence. This means that even with harmonization, the "local" consumer law still acts as a benchmark. Full harmonization reduces the conflict here: if the laws are identical, the choice of law becomes irrelevant. The drive for full harmonization is essentially a drive to make Article 6 of Rome I obsolete by removing the differences it seeks to protect (Dickinson, 2008).

"Gold Plating" remains a friction point. Despite maximum harmonization, states find creative ways to retain local rules (e.g., by classifying them under "general contract law" or "property law" outside the directive's scope). The Commission launches infringement proceedings to police this boundaries. The definition of the "scope" of a directive is the battlefield where the line between EU uniformity and national autonomy is drawn (Smits, 2010).

The "Travel Law" sector (Package Travel Directive) represents the most advanced harmonization. It creates a comprehensive code for holiday contracts, covering liability for sub-contractors, insolvency protection, and rights to transfer the contract. The strict liability of the tour organizer for any lack of conformity in the services creates a unified high standard of protection that has reshaped the European tourism industry, making the "package" a distinct and safe legal object (Tonner, 2011).

Finally, the consumer acquis has spilled over into general contract law theories. Concepts like "transparency," "good faith," and "non-bindingness of unfair terms" have influenced judicial reasoning in B2B cases and national law reforms (e.g., the German reform of the law of obligations in 2002). The "Consumerization" of private law means that the harmonized European consumer model is gradually becoming the default model for all contractual relations.

Section 3: The Project for a European Civil Code: Ambition and Retreat

The idea of a "European Civil Code" was the grand ambition of European private law scholarship in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. Proponents argued that a true single market requires a single code of private law, just as the 19th-century nation-states required codes to unify their fragmented regions. The European Parliament passed resolutions in 1989 and 1994 calling for work on a code. This project was driven by the belief that the sectoral fragmentation of directives was unsustainable and that a systematic "General Part" was needed to provide coherence and legal certainty for pan-European commerce (Von Bar, 2001).

The Commission on European Contract Law, led by Ole Lando, produced the Principles of European Contract Law (PECL) in three parts (1995-2003). The PECL was a "Restatement" of contract law, drafted by academics without a formal political mandate. It synthesized the Common Law and Civil Law traditions into a coherent set of rules on formation, validity, interpretation, performance, and remedies. The PECL demonstrated that a common European legal grammar was possible. It served as a "source of inspiration" for national judges and legislators, proving that the cultural divide was bridgeable (Lando & Beale, 2000).

Following the PECL, the European Commission launched a more formal process in 2001, leading to the Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). A massive network of scholars (the Study Group on a European Civil Code and the Acquis Group) drafted this text. The DCFR, published in 2009, covers not just general contract law but also specific contracts (sales, lease, services), torts, unjustified enrichment, and movable property. It is a proto-Civil Code in all but name. Its definitions and model rules were intended to serve as a "toolbox" for the EU legislator to ensure consistency in future directives (Von Bar et al., 2009).

However, the political climate shifted. Member States, particularly Germany and France, were reluctant to surrender their Civil Codes, which are central to their national identity and legal culture. The UK fiercely opposed a code that looked too "continental." Consequently, the Commission retreated from the idea of a binding Code. Instead, it proposed the Common European Sales Law (CESL) in 2011 as an "Optional Instrument." The CESL would not replace national law but would exist as a second regime within each national system (a "28th regime") that parties could voluntarily choose for cross-border contracts (Smits, 2012).

The CESL proposal was innovative but doomed. It aimed to lower transaction costs by providing a single set of rules for cross-border sales, available in all EU languages. It included a high level of consumer protection to build trust. However, business groups argued that an optional regime would not be used (lack of familiarity), and consumer groups feared it would be used to bypass stricter national laws. The Juncker Commission withdrew the CESL proposal in 2014, signaling the end of the "Grand Codification" era. The focus shifted back to sectoral harmonization via the Digital Single Market strategy (Whittaker, 2011).

Despite the failure of the "hard" code, the DCFR and PECL have achieved "soft" harmonization. They are frequently cited by the Advocates General of the CJEU to interpret EU law. They influenced the reform of the French Civil Code (2016) and the new Civil Codes of Eastern Europe (e.g., Hungary, Romania). They function as a "ius commune" of legal scholarship, providing a shared vocabulary for European jurists. The "Europeanization" of legal education, utilizing these texts, creates a generation of lawyers who think in European rather than purely national terms (Jansen, 2010).

The "Feasibility Study" carried out by the Expert Group on European Contract Law (2011) identified the core areas where harmonization was most needed and feasible. It highlighted that while general contract law (validity, mistake) is culturally sensitive, "market-related" areas (remedies, unfair terms) are ripe for unification. This pragmatism now guides the Commission: harmonize only what is strictly necessary for the digital and green transitions, leaving the "dogmatic core" of contract law to the Member States (Hesselink, 2011).

The failure of the Code also reflects the principle of Subsidiarity. Critics argued that a European Code was unnecessary; the internal market functions well enough with choice of law rules (Rome I). They pointed to the US, which has a single market without a single contract code (though it has the UCC). The diversity of legal systems is seen by some as a benefit ("regulatory competition") rather than a cost. This view prevailed politically: harmonization should remove specific barriers, not homogenize the entire legal culture (Collins, 2013).

The "Toolbox" function of the DCFR remains active. The Commission uses its definitions when drafting new proposals. For example, the definition of "digital content" or "goods with digital elements" in recent directives draws on the academic work of the DCFR. This ensures a degree of terminological consistency across the acquis, preventing the chaos of definitions that plagued early EU legislation. The Code exists, not as a statute, but as a "legislative drafting guide" (Schulze, 2010).

The rise of "Private Codification" fills the gap. Industry bodies draft standard contracts (e.g., Orgalime for engineering, FIDIC for construction) that function as a unified law for specific sectors. The PECL is often chosen as the governing law in arbitration. This "bottom-up" harmonization by the market achieves uniformity where "top-down" political harmonization failed. It creates a "lex mercatoria" that is European in origin but global in application (Cafaggi, 2006).

The "Social Justice" critique of the DCFR argued that it was too neoliberal, prioritizing market efficiency over social solidarity. Critics like the "Study Group on Social Justice in European Private Law" argued that a Code creates a rigid structure that prevents national legislatures from responding to social needs (e.g., housing crises). The retreat from the Code is thus also a victory for those who believe private law should remain responsive to local democratic preferences regarding social protection (Hesselink, 2011).

Finally, the legacy of the Code project is the "European Legal Method." It forced a comparative dialogue that exposed the "common core" of European law. It revealed that beneath the different concepts of "cause" and "consideration," the functional outcomes of European systems are often identical. This intellectual integration paves the way for future, perhaps more modest, harmonization efforts.

Section 4: The Digital Single Market and Techno-Legal Harmonization

In the absence of a Civil Code, the Digital Single Market (DSM) strategy has become the primary vector of contract law harmonization. The digital economy requires uniformity more than the physical economy because digital transactions are inherently cross-border. A website is accessible from everywhere. The "geo-blocking" of customers due to legal differences is a major target. The EU's response has been to harmonize the specific "digital" aspects of contract law, creating a layer of "Lex Digitalis" that sits on top of national contract laws (De Franceschi, 2016).

The Digital Content Directive (2019/770) is a landmark instrument. It harmonizes the rules for the supply of digital content (apps, music, cloud services). Crucially, it recognizes "data as a counter-performance." If a consumer provides personal data in exchange for a "free" service, the Directive applies, granting remedies for lack of conformity. This harmonizes the "monetization of privacy" across the EU. It establishes that digital services must meet objective conformity standards (functionality, interoperability) and be updated. This creates a unified "digital warranty law" (Metzger, 2019).

The Sale of Goods Directive (2019/771) ("Smart Goods Directive") updates the sale of goods rules for the IoT era. It introduces the category of "goods with digital elements" (smart fridges, connected cars). It mandates that the seller is liable for the hardware and the software, including a duty to provide security updates for a period the consumer can reasonably expect. This harmonizes the "lifecycle liability" of sellers, preventing planned obsolescence through software neglect. It aligns contract law with the reality of connected products (Spindler, 2016).

The shift to Regulations is evident in the Digital Services Act (DSA) and Digital Markets Act (DMA). Unlike directives, these are directly applicable. While primarily regulatory, they impact contract law directly. The DMA invalidates "Most Favored Nation" (MFN) clauses and "anti-steering" provisions in contracts between gatekeepers (platforms) and business users. The DSA mandates transparency in Terms of Service (ToS) and creates a dispute resolution mechanism for content moderation. This creates a uniform "platform contract law" that overrides the private autonomy of Big Tech (Busch, 2020).

Smart Contracts and the Data Act represent the harmonization of "automated" law. The Data Act includes a "kill switch" requirement for smart contracts used in data sharing, ensuring they can be terminated. It harmonizes the "essential requirements" for smart contracts to be legally recognized. This is the beginning of harmonizing the "code" itself. By setting standards for the technology that executes the contract, the EU harmonizes the performance phase of digital obligations (Werbach & Cornell, 2017).

The Platform-to-Business (P2B) Regulation harmonizes the B2B relationship in the digital economy. It imposes transparency regarding ranking parameters and restricts the platform's right to suspend accounts without reasons. This protects the "dependent" business user. It introduces mandatory fairness rules into commercial contracts that were previously unregulated, acknowledging the power asymmetry in the platform economy. This extends the logic of consumer protection to small businesses in the digital sphere (Busch, 2020).

"Legal Tech" and Automated Compliance. The harmonization of digital law enables the use of Legal Tech. Because the rules on withdrawal buttons or cookie consents are uniform (GDPR, Consumer Rights Directive), companies can use automated tools to ensure compliance across 27 countries. This "compliance by design" is facilitated by the detailed, prescriptive nature of EU digital regulations. The law becomes a set of technical specifications that can be coded into the web interface.

The AI Act impacts contractual liability. By classifying AI systems as "high-risk," it imposes conformity assessment duties on providers. If an AI system fails (breach of contract), the non-compliance with the AI Act serves as proof of defect. The proposed AI Liability Directive harmonizes the "burden of proof," creating a presumption of causality in favor of the victim. This harmonizes the tort/contract interface for AI damages, ensuring that the "black box" nature of AI does not deny justice to the user (Wagner, 2019).

The tension between GDPR and Contract Law. The GDPR gives users the right to withdraw consent for data processing "at any time." Contract law binds parties to a term. If a user withdraws consent for data processing that is essential for the service, does the contract terminate? The interaction between the "fundamental right" logic of the GDPR and the "exchange" logic of contract law is a friction point. EPL is evolving to treat the withdrawal of data consent as a termination for cause, harmonizing the exit rights across the two regimes (Purtova, 2015).

"Portability" as a contract right. The GDPR and Data Act create rights to port data from one provider to another. This reduces "lock-in," a major barrier to competition. It harmonizes the "switching costs" in digital markets. This right transforms the contract from a closed relationship into an open one, where the history of the relationship (data) belongs to the customer, not the vendor. It introduces a "proprietary" element into the service contract (Drexl, 2016).

Blockchain and DLT Pilot Regime. The EU is harmonizing the definition of "financial instruments" on the blockchain. The DLT Pilot Regime allows for the trading of tokenized securities. This harmonizes the legal status of the "token" as a valid object of a contract, providing legal certainty for the crypto-economy. It integrates the decentralized ledger into the centralized legal order of the EU (Hacker & Thomale, 2018).

Finally, the "Brussels Effect" implies that by harmonizing digital contract law for the EU market, the EU sets the global standard. Global tech companies often adopt EU rules (like GDPR or warranty terms) worldwide to simplify their operations. Thus, EU harmonization acts as a lever for global harmonization of digital commerce norms.

Section 5: Future Directions: Sustainability, Brexit, and Granular Harmonization

The next frontier of harmonization is the Green Transition. The "European Green Deal" requires contract law to serve sustainability goals. The "Right to Repair" initiative aims to amend the Sale of Goods Directive to prioritize repair over replacement, extending the lifespan of products. The Empowering Consumers for the Green Transition directive bans "greenwashing" and requires information on durability. This moves contract law from "consumer sovereignty" (getting what you want) to "planetary boundaries" (getting what is sustainable). The "conformity" of goods will increasingly include "environmental conformity" (Micklitz, 2021).

Supply Chain Due Diligence is harmonizing the external dimension of contracts. The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D) requires large companies to cascade human rights and environmental obligations down their value chains via contract clauses. This turns private contracts into vehicles for enforcing public international law standards globally. It harmonizes the "duty of care" of lead firms, preventing them from outsourcing liability to suppliers in the Global South. This creates a "transnational" harmonized standard of corporate responsibility (Sjåfjell, 2018).

Brexit has created a major divergence. The UK, formerly a key influence on the internal market, is now diverging from EU rules. The UK may choose to deregulate or adopt different digital standards (e.g., a different AI regime). This reintroduces "legal friction" at the Channel. For EU harmonization, Brexit means the loss of the Common Law voice, potentially accelerating the "civilianization" of EU private law. It also creates a competitor: a "Singapore on Thames" model that might attract business through lighter regulation, putting pressure on the EU to justify its high harmonized standards (Ungerer, 2020).

"Granular Harmonization" describes the future method. Instead of broad directives, the EU uses targeted, detailed rules for specific problems (e.g., roaming charges, geo-blocking, batteries). This "pointillist" harmonization is less intrusive on national systems but creates a complex, dense web of rules. It relies on technology (databases, apps) to make the rules accessible. The ambition of a "System" is replaced by the efficiency of "Solutions" (Weatherill, 2016).

Enhanced Cooperation allows a subset of Member States to harmonize where unanimity fails. The regulations on the property regimes of international couples (2016/1103 and 2016/1104) apply only to 18 Member States. This creates a "Multi-speed Europe" or "Variable Geometry" in private law. While it breaks the unity of the internal market, it allows willing states to deepen integration in sensitive areas like family wealth, creating a "core Europe" of harmonized civil law (Gallant, 2016).

The limits of Article 114 TFEU remain a constitutional check. The CJEU in the Tobacco Advertising case ruled that the EU cannot use internal market harmonization to regulate issues that do not genuinely improve the conditions for trade. This prevents the EU from harmonizing purely domestic areas of private law (e.g., education or pure family law) under the guise of the market. The "competence creep" is policed by the Court, ensuring that harmonization remains linked to cross-border functionality (Weatherill, 2016).

Private International Law (Conflict of Laws) remains the alternative to substantive harmonization. The Rome I and II Regulations unify the choice of law rules, not the law itself. They ensure that every court in the EU applies the same national law to a dispute. This "coordination" approach is sufficient for many areas (e.g., torts, complex commercial contracts) where substantive harmonization is impossible. It respects diversity while preventing forum shopping. The future will likely see a mix of substantive harmonization for consumer/digital law and conflict-of-laws coordination for general commercial law (Dickinson, 2008).

"3D Printing" and "Decentralized Manufacturing" pose new challenges. If a consumer prints a defective product using a downloaded file, who is the "seller"? Is it the designer of the file or the printer manufacturer? EU product liability and contract law will need to harmonize the status of "digital blueprints" to ensure safety and liability in a world of distributed production. The distinction between "goods" and "services" will be further tested.

Crisis Harmonization. The COVID-19 pandemic and energy crisis showed that in emergencies, national laws diverge (e.g., voucher vs. refund for cancelled flights). The EU may develop "Emergency Contract Law" mechanisms—harmonized rules on force majeure or hardship that activate during pan-European crises to prevent the fragmentation of the market and ensure solidarity (e.g., shared burden of cancellations).

The "Social Justice" dimension will grow. High inflation and energy poverty are putting pressure on contract law to protect basic needs. Harmonization may move towards defining "essential services" (energy, internet) that cannot be disconnected for non-payment. This would harmonize the "social minimum" of private law, ensuring that the internal market does not leave vulnerable citizens behind.

Finally, the Global Influence of EU harmonization. The "Brussels Effect" means that EU standards often become global standards because multinational firms prefer a single rule. By harmonizing high standards for AI, data, and sustainability, the EU exports its private law values. The future of EU harmonization is not just about integrating Europe, but about regulating globalization through the leverage of the world's largest single market.

Questions


Cases


References

Reference List

  • Ben-Shahar, O., & Schneider, C. E. (2014). More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure. Princeton University Press.

  • Busch, C. (2020). The Future of EU Consumer Law. European Review of Private Law.

  • Cafaggi, F. (2006). The Institutional Framework of European Private Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Collins, H. (2013). The European Civil Code: The Way Forward. Cambridge University Press.

  • De Franceschi, A. (2016). European Contract Law and the Digital Single Market. Intersentia.

  • Dickinson, A. (2008). The Rome II Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Dougan, M. (2004). National Remedies Before the Court of Justice. Hart.

  • Drexl, J. (2016). Designing Competitive Markets for Industrial Data. JIPITEC.

  • Gallant, E. (2016). Matrimonial Property Regimes in Europe. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Grundmann, S. (2011). European Contract Law. Intersentia.

  • Hacker, P., & Thomale, C. (2018). Crypto-Securities Regulation. ECFR.

  • Hatzopoulos, V. (2012). Regulating Services in the European Union. Oxford University Press.

  • Hesselink, M. (2011). CFR & Social Justice. Sellier.

  • Howells, G., et al. (2018). Handbook of Research on International Consumer Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Jansen, N. (2010). The Making of Legal Authority. Oxford University Press.

  • Kirkpatrick, C., & Parker, D. (2007). Regulatory Impact Assessment. Edward Elgar.

  • Lando, O., & Beale, H. (2000). Principles of European Contract Law. Kluwer.

  • Lenaerts, K., & Gutiérrez-Fons, J. A. (2014). To Say What the Law of the EU Is. Columbia Journal of European Law.

  • Loos, M. (2014). The Rights of Withdrawal. European Review of Private Law.

  • Mak, C. (2020). Legal Methodology of European Private Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Metzger, A. (2019). Data as Counter-Performance. JIPITEC.

  • Micklitz, H.-W. (2011). The Many Concepts of Social Justice in European Private Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Micklitz, H.-W. (2021). Constitutionalization of European Private Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Prechal, S. (2005). Directives in EC Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Purtova, N. (2015). The illusion of personal data as no one's property. Law, Innovation and Technology.

  • Reich, N. (2014). General Principles of EU Civil Law. Intersentia.

  • Schulze, R. (2010). European Private Law. Sellier.

  • Sjåfjell, B. (2018). Beyond Climate Risk. Deakin Law Review.

  • Smits, J. M. (2012). The Common European Sales Law. Intersentia.

  • Smits, J. M. (2017). The Making of European Private Law. Intersentia.

  • Spindler, G. (2016). Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content. Common Market Law Review.

  • Stuyck, J. (2015). Unfair Contract Terms. Common Market Law Review.

  • Teubner, G. (1998). Legal Irritants. Modern Law Review.

  • Tonner, K. (2011). Passenger Rights. European Review of Contract Law.

  • Twigg-Flesner, C. (2008). The Europeanisation of Contract Law. Routledge.

  • Ungerer, J. (2020). Brexit and the Conflict of Laws. European Law Review.

  • Von Bar, C. (2001). The Study Group on a European Civil Code.

  • Von Bar, C., et al. (2009). Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). Sellier.

  • Wagner, G. (2019). Robot Liability. Oxford Handbook on the Law of Regulation.

  • Weatherill, S. (2012). EU Consumer Law and Policy. Edward Elgar.

  • Weatherill, S. (2016). Contract Law of the Internal Market. Intersentia.

  • Werbach, K., & Cornell, N. (2017). Contracts Ex Machina. Duke Law Journal.

  • Whittaker, S. (2011). The Optional Instrument. CMLR.

  • Zimmermann, R., & Whittaker, S. (2000). Good Faith in European Contract Law. Cambridge University Press.

3
Consumer contracts in the digital economy
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Paradigm Shift: From Goods to Digital Content and Services

The transition to the digital economy has fundamentally altered the ontology of the consumer contract, shifting the focus from the transfer of ownership of tangible goods to the provision of access to digital content and services. In the classical model, consumer law was predicated on the sale of a physical object—a toaster or a car—where the transaction was discrete and the transfer of title was the primary legal event. Today, consumers increasingly engage in contracts for streaming services, cloud storage, and social media access, where no physical object changes hands and "ownership" is replaced by a revocable license. This shift from a "transfer of ownership" model to an "access" model necessitates a reconceptualization of the core elements of contract law, particularly the definition of the subject matter. The EU responded to this shift with the Digital Content Directive (EU) 2019/770 (DCD), which creates a specific legal category for "digital content" (data produced and supplied in digital form) and "digital services" (services allowing the creation, processing, or storage of data), establishing that these intangible assets are valid objects of contractual obligations with specific remedies for non-conformity (Spindler, 2016).

A defining feature of the digital consumer contract is the emergence of "data as counter-performance." In the analog world, the price was almost exclusively monetary. In the digital economy, "free" services are ubiquitous, yet they are economically sustained by the monetization of user data. For years, legal uncertainty existed regarding whether a transaction where no money changed hands could be classified as a consumer contract protected by EU law. The DCD resolved this by explicitly including within its scope contracts where the consumer provides or undertakes to provide personal data to the trader, provided that the data is processed for purposes other than strictly supplying the content or complying with legal requirements. This legislative move commodifies personal data within the private law framework, acknowledging that data functions as a currency, while simultaneously creating friction with the fundamental rights approach of the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) which views data as an inalienable right (Metzger, 2019).

The distinction between "goods" and "services" has been blurred by the "Internet of Things" (IoT). A modern car or a smart fridge is a hybrid entity, consisting of physical hardware and essential software. If the software fails, the hardware becomes useless. To address this, the Sale of Goods Directive (EU) 2019/771 (SGD) introduced the concept of "goods with digital elements." These are tangible items that incorporate or are inter-connected with digital content or services in such a way that the absence of that digital content or service would prevent the goods from performing their functions. This classification is crucial because it applies the unified regime of sales law to the entire hybrid product, preventing the trader from splitting the contract into a "sale of metal" (goods law) and a "license of software" (general contract law) to evade liability. The legal regime follows the functional unity of the connected device (Staudenmayer, 2020).

The temporal dimension of the consumer contract has also transformed from discrete transactions to continuous relationships. In a traditional sale, the trader’s primary obligation ends upon delivery. In the digital economy, the contract is often a subscription or a long-term service relationship involving continuous updates and server access. This requires a shift in the legal understanding of "conformity." A digital product must not only work at the moment of download but must remain functional over time. This has led to the introduction of the mandatory "obligation to update," requiring traders to provide security and functionality updates for a period of time the consumer may reasonably expect. This effectively extends the contractual performance far into the post-delivery phase, creating a lifecycle responsibility for the trader (Mak, 2020).

The "license vs. sale" dichotomy remains a contentious issue in digital consumer contracts. Software publishers typically frame transactions as "licenses" to avoid the exhaustion of rights doctrine (which allows resale) and to impose usage restrictions. However, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in UsedSoft ruled that the transfer of a copy of a computer program for an unlimited period in return for a fee corresponds to a "sale," regardless of the label used by the trader. This re-characterization protects the consumer's proprietary expectations. Nevertheless, for purely streaming services or temporary access (e.g., Netflix), the contract remains a service, and the consumer acquires no ownership. This leads to the fragility of the consumer's "digital library," which can vanish if the service is terminated or the platform goes bankrupt, highlighting the precarious nature of "access-based" consumption (Perzanowski & Schultz, 2016).

The concept of the "trader" in the digital economy has expanded to include platforms acting as intermediaries. The Platform-to-Business (P2B) Regulation and the modernization of consumer law address the triangular relationship between the platform, the third-party supplier, and the consumer. A crucial issue is establishing who the contractual partner of the consumer is. If a platform (like Amazon or Uber) exerts a predominant influence over the transaction, consumers may reasonably expect the platform to be liable. Under the Omnibus Directive (EU) 2019/2161, online marketplaces must transparently disclose whether the third party offering the goods is a trader or a non-trader. If the seller is a peer (non-trader), EU consumer protection law does not apply, a critical distinction that determines the activation of the entire protective regime (Busch, 2020).

The "digital divide" and consumer vulnerability take on new forms in this context. While traditional law focused on the "average consumer," the digital environment allows for the granular profiling of consumers, identifying specific vulnerabilities (e.g., addiction, financial distress). Algorithmic personalization can exploit these vulnerabilities in real-time. The "Unfair Commercial Practices Directive" (UCPD) is increasingly interpreted to cover such "digital vulnerability." Contracts concluded under the influence of manipulative algorithmic targeting may be voidable for aggressive practices or undue influence. The legal subject of the digital contract is thus viewed not just as a rational actor, but as a potentially manipulated data subject, requiring a more paternalistic intervention by the legal system (Helberger et al., 2017).

Interoperability is a key functional requirement for digital consumer contracts. A major barrier to consumer welfare is "lock-in," where a consumer cannot switch providers because their data or content is trapped in a proprietary format. The Digital Content Directive treats the lack of interoperability as a potential lack of conformity. Furthermore, the GDPR introduces a right to data portability. These provisions aim to ensure that the consumer contract does not become a cage. By mandating that digital content must function with hardware and software other than that with which it is normally used (to the extent reasonably expected), the law attempts to preserve the consumer’s freedom of choice and market mobility (Drexl, 2016).

The integration of "smart contracts" creates a new layer of automated enforcement. In these arrangements, the contractual terms are executed by code (e.g., automatic payment upon delivery). While this increases efficiency, it challenges consumer law principles like the right to suspend performance or withhold payment in case of defect. If the code executes automatically, the consumer loses their "self-help" remedies. Legal theory currently grapples with how to embed consumer protection "stop-buttons" into the code of smart contracts to ensure that technological execution does not bypass legal safeguards (Werbach & Cornell, 2017).

"Geo-blocking" creates artificial borders in the digital single market. Consumers often find they cannot access content or buy goods from another Member State due to their IP address. The Geo-blocking Regulation (EU) 2018/302 prohibits unjustified discrimination based on the consumer's nationality, place of residence, or place of establishment. This regulation forces traders to treat the digital consumer as a "European" consumer rather than a national one, although it contains significant exceptions for copyright-protected audiovisual content. This illustrates the tension between the territorial nature of copyright licenses and the borderless aspiration of the digital consumer contract (Hatzopoulos, 2018).

The "payment" in digital contracts creates specific legal issues regarding cryptocurrencies. If a consumer pays with Bitcoin, does the consumer law apply? The definition of "price" in the new directives includes "any digital representation of value." This confirms that contracts paid in crypto-assets are fully covered by consumer protection rules. The volatility of the exchange rate does not exempt the trader from the obligation of conformity. This "technological neutrality" ensures that the protective scope of the law evolves alongside financial innovation (Maume & Maute, 2020).

Finally, the overarching principle of the digital consumer contract is "technological neutrality." The law aims to define rights and obligations in a way that does not depend on a specific technology (e.g., blockchain vs. cloud). However, the specificities of digital goods—their intangibility, replicability, and dependence on external infrastructure—require rules that are fundamentally different from the laws of physics governing tangible goods. The shift from "atom" to "bit" has necessitated a complete overhaul of the private law architecture, moving from a static law of sales to a dynamic law of digital services.

Section 2: Pre-contractual Information and the Transparency Paradox

The "Information Paradigm" has long been the central regulatory strategy of EU consumer law. It posits that the "weaker" position of the consumer is primarily due to information asymmetry and that mandating disclosure will restore the balance of power, enabling rational decision-making. In the digital economy, this paradigm has faced a crisis known as the "transparency paradox": consumers are inundated with so much complex information (privacy policies, terms of service) that they read none of it. Despite this failure, the EU has doubled down on information duties, while simultaneously attempting to modernize how that information is presented to make it digestible in a digital environment. The focus has shifted from "formal disclosure" to "effective transparency" (Ben-Shahar & Schneider, 2014).

The Consumer Rights Directive (CRD) mandates an extensive list of information that must be provided "in a clear and comprehensible manner" before the consumer is bound by a distance contract. This includes the main characteristics of the goods or services, the identity of the trader, the total price, and the right of withdrawal. In the digital context, specific emphasis is placed on "functionality" (what the content can do) and "interoperability" (what hardware/software it works with). The failure to provide this information constitutes a breach of the pre-contractual duty, which can lead to the extension of the withdrawal period by up to 12 months or claims for damages. This transforms the pre-contractual phase into a highly regulated procedure where the validity of the consumer's consent is conditional on the quality of the information received (Loos, 2015).

The "Omnibus Directive" (Directive (EU) 2019/2161) updated these duties for the platform economy. It introduced a requirement for "Ranking Transparency." Online marketplaces must now disclose the main parameters determining the ranking of offers presented to the consumer and the relative importance of those parameters. This addresses the "black box" of search algorithms, ensuring consumers know if a top result appears because it is the best product or because the seller paid for placement. This moves transparency beyond the product itself to the architecture of the marketplace, acknowledging that the medium of presentation influences the consumer's decision as much as the product attributes (Busch, 2020).

"Personalized Pricing" is another area of enhanced transparency. Algorithms can now estimate a consumer's maximum willingness to pay based on their browsing history and device type. While price discrimination is generally legal, the Omnibus Directive mandates that traders must inform consumers if the price presented to them has been personalized on the basis of automated decision-making. This protects the consumer's autonomy by alerting them that the price is not a standard market price, potentially triggering them to search elsewhere. It attempts to preserve the signaling function of price in a market where prices are becoming fluid and individual-specific (Townley et al., 2019).

The "Button Solution" is a critical formal requirement introduced by the CRD to ensure consumers understand the financial consequence of their click. The trader must ensure that the consumer, when placing the order, explicitly acknowledges that the order implies an obligation to pay. If placing an order entails activating a button, it must be labeled "order with obligation to pay" or a corresponding unambiguous formulation. If this specific formal requirement is not met, the consumer is not bound by the contract or order. This represents a return to "formalism" in contract law, using interface design mandates to protect the consumer from "subscription traps" where "free trials" silently convert into paid contracts (Hesselink, 2014).

"Dark Patterns" represent the antithesis of transparency. These are user interfaces designed to trick or manipulate consumers into making decisions that are not in their best interest (e.g., making the "reject cookies" button invisible). While the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (UCPD) prohibits misleading practices generally, the Digital Services Act (DSA) specifically bans providers of online platforms from using dark patterns. This regulation of "choice architecture" acknowledges that information disclosure is useless if the interface is designed to subvert the consumer's will. The law now scrutinizes not just the text of the information, but the design of the digital environment in which the information is presented (Luguri & Strahilevitz, 2021).

The interaction between consumer law transparency and GDPR transparency is complex. Both regimes require information about data processing. However, consumer law focuses on the economic value and contractual necessity, while the GDPR focuses on fundamental rights. The "overlap" can lead to information overload. To mitigate this, legal scholars advocate for "layered notices" and standardized icons. The aim is to allow the consumer to grasp the essential risks (both economic and privacy-related) at a glance, without needing to parse legal texts. This moves the legal standard from "comprehensive disclosure" to "salient disclosure" (Zuiderveen Borgesius, 2015).

Transparency regarding "User Reviews" has been strengthened to combat fake reviews. The Omnibus Directive requires traders to state whether and how they ensure that the published reviews originate from consumers who have actually used or purchased the product. This addresses the "reputation economy" where reviews function as a proxy for trust. By regulating the verification process of reviews, the law treats "social proof" as a material piece of pre-contractual information that determines the transactional decision. Misleading consumers about the authenticity of reviews is now a blacklisted unfair commercial practice (Goanta, 2020).

For "Free" digital services, the transparency requirements now mirror those for paid services. The Omnibus Directive extended the CRD information duties to contracts where the consumer provides personal data instead of money. This ensures that users of social media or email services receive the same pre-contractual information about the service's characteristics and their rights as users of paid software. This aligns the "legal visibility" of the data-paying consumer with that of the money-paying consumer, reinforcing the concept that data is a form of value that demands full contractual disclosure (Metzger, 2019).

The "Durable Medium" requirement remains a stumbling block in digital contracts. EU law requires that certain information be provided on a durable medium (e.g., email, PDF) that allows the consumer to store the information and reproduce it unchanged. The CJEU ruled in Content Services Ltd that a mere hyperlink to a website does not constitute a durable medium because the trader can change the website content. This jurisprudence forces traders to actively "push" the static contract terms to the consumer (e.g., via email attachment) rather than just expecting the consumer to "pull" them from a dynamic website. This protects the evidentiary position of the consumer in case of a future dispute (Terryn, 2016).

"Influencer Marketing" transparency creates duties for new market actors. Influencers who promote products are considered traders or acting on behalf of traders. Under the UCPD, they must clearly disclose the commercial nature of their content (e.g., #ad). Failure to do so is a misleading omission. This extends pre-contractual information duties to the "social" pre-contractual phase, recognizing that in the digital economy, the transactional decision is often made on social media platforms long before the consumer reaches the checkout page (Goanta & Ranchordas, 2020).

Finally, the future of pre-contractual information lies in "machine-readable" terms. As Personal Information Management Systems (PIMS) and AI agents begin to negotiate contracts on behalf of consumers, the law must ensure that transparency information is structured in a way that software can process. This would allow an AI agent to automatically flag unfair terms or privacy risks to the user, potentially solving the transparency paradox by automating the reading of the fine print.

Section 3: Formation of Contract and the Right of Withdrawal

The formation of consumer contracts in the digital environment is governed by the objective theory of contract: the contract is formed when the parties' conduct objectively manifests an intention to be bound. However, the "Click-Wrap" mechanism—where a consumer clicks "I agree"—has raised questions about the reality of consent. While courts generally uphold click-wrap agreements as valid manifestations of assent, EU law intervenes to ensure this assent is not merely a reflex. The E-Commerce Directive requires that the service provider must acknowledge the receipt of the recipient’s order without undue delay and provide appropriate, effective, and accessible technical means to identify and correct input errors prior to the placing of the order. This "double-click" or review requirement ensures that the digital formation process includes a moment of verification, preventing accidental binding (Savelyev, 2017).

The Right of Withdrawal (or Right of Renunciation) is the most powerful tool in the digital consumer's arsenal, often described as the "cooling-off period." Codified in the Consumer Rights Directive (CRD), it grants the consumer a period of 14 days to withdraw from a distance or off-premises contract without giving any reason and without incurring any costs. This right is a deviation from the principle of pacta sunt servanda (agreements must be kept). Its rationale is twofold: first, to allow the consumer to inspect the goods (as they could in a shop), and second, to protect against the psychological pressure and information asymmetry inherent in distance selling. The withdrawal right transforms the initial conclusion of the contract into a "provisional" state, where the bond is fully crystallized only after the 14 days have elapsed (Loos, 2014).

The mechanics of withdrawal are strictly regulated. The trader must inform the consumer of this right. If the trader fails to provide this information, the withdrawal period is extended by 12 months. This penalty creates a massive incentive for compliance. To exercise the right, the consumer need only make an "unequivocal statement" or use the model withdrawal form. The burden of proof lies with the consumer, but the trader must reimburse all payments, including delivery costs, within 14 days. This allocation of risk and cost is designed to make the "exit" from the contract as frictionless as possible, encouraging trust in the digital market (Schulze, 2016).

Crucially, there are Exceptions to the Right of Withdrawal that are specific to the digital nature of the goods. For the supply of digital content which is not supplied on a tangible medium (e.g., downloading an app, streaming a movie), the right of withdrawal is lost if the performance has begun with the consumer's prior express consent and their acknowledgment that they thereby lose their right of withdrawal. This exception is necessary because digital content cannot be "returned" in any meaningful sense once consumed or copied. The requirement for "express consent and acknowledgment" is strict; a pre-ticked box is insufficient. This ensures that the consumer consciously waives their right in exchange for immediate access (Svantesson, 2017).

For contracts for services, the right of withdrawal expires once the service has been fully performed, provided that the performance has begun with the consumer's prior express consent. If the consumer withdraws during the performance of the service (e.g., cancelling a consulting gig halfway through), they must pay a proportionate amount for the part of the service already provided. This prevents unjust enrichment of the consumer while preserving the freedom to exit. The calculation of this proportionate amount is based on the total price agreed in the contract, ensuring the trader is compensated for the value delivered (Becherril, 2015).

The interaction between the GDPR and Withdrawal creates a novel legal landscape. If a consumer exercises their right of withdrawal from a contract where they "paid" with data, the trader must refrain from using the data. The DCD aligns with the GDPR: upon termination, the trader must comply with the obligations applicable under the GDPR (erasure of data). Furthermore, the DCD grants the consumer a right to retrieve user-generated content (e.g., photos uploaded to a platform) free of charge and in a commonly used, machine-readable format. This "data restitution" mirrors the physical restitution of goods, ensuring that the consumer can walk away from a digital contract without leaving their digital life behind (Metzger, 2019).

Browse-Wrap agreements, where terms are posted via a hyperlink at the bottom of a page and purport to bind the user simply by using the site, face significant validity challenges in the EU. The CJEU jurisprudence on "unfair terms" and "transparency" suggests that terms not brought to the consumer's attention before the contract is concluded are not binding. While not explicitly banned, browse-wrap agreements often fail the "incorporation test" because the user has no actual opportunity to read them before being bound. Effective formation requires an active manifestation of assent (a click), reinforcing the "notice and action" model of contract formation (Kim, 2014).

Smart Contracts pose a challenge to the withdrawal mechanism. Since smart contracts execute automatically and immutably on the blockchain, "reversing" a transaction to honor a withdrawal right is technically difficult. There is no central authority to reverse the ledger. Legal compliance requires the smart contract code to include a "function" that allows for reversal or for a refund to be triggered by an oracle or a trusted third party. Without this "coding of law," the smart contract violates the mandatory EU consumer acquis. The principle is that the technical immutability of the blockchain cannot override the legal mutability of the consumer contract during the cooling-off period (De Filippi & Wright, 2018).

The "Omnibus Directive" clarifies that the right of withdrawal applies to contracts for digital services where the consumer provides personal data. Previously, some argued these were not "paid" contracts. Now, the law is clear: the provision of data triggers the full suite of consumer rights, including withdrawal. This confirms that the "cooling-off" period is not just about financial reflection, but also about "privacy reflection"—giving the user time to reconsider whether they want to share their data with the trader (Busch, 2020).

Abuse of the Right of Withdrawal is a concern for traders (e.g., buying a dress, wearing it once, and returning it). The CRD clarifies that consumers are liable for any "diminished value" of the goods resulting from handling other than what is necessary to establish the nature, characteristics, and functioning of the goods. This means a consumer can "test" the goods as they would in a shop, but not "use" them. If they do, they don't lose the right of withdrawal, but they get a partial refund. This nuanced rule balances the right to test with the trader's right to the residual value of the good (Terryn, 2016).

Ancillary Contracts (e.g., a consumer credit agreement linked to a purchase) are automatically terminated if the consumer exercises the right of withdrawal from the main contract. This "domino effect" protects the consumer from being trapped in a loan for a product they have returned. It views the transaction as a single economic unit, ensuring that the legal dissolution of the purchase propagates through the entire contractual web.

Finally, the formation of the contract is increasingly Algorithmic. When a consumer asks a voice assistant (Alexa) to "buy milk," the AI negotiates the purchase. EPL principles attribute the AI's action to the user, provided the user set the parameters. However, if the AI orders the wrong product, the right of withdrawal serves as the ultimate safety net, correcting the errors of automated commerce.

Section 4: Digital Content and Services: Conformity and Remedies

The adoption of the Digital Content Directive (DCD) (2019/770) and the Sale of Goods Directive (SGD) (2019/771) marked a milestone in EU private law, creating a harmonized regime for the quality of digital products. These directives introduce a "conformity" test that blends subjective and objective elements. A digital product is in conformity only if it meets the subjective requirements (description, quantity, and quality agreed in the contract) and the objective requirements (fit for the purposes for which digital content of the same type would normally be used, possessing the qualities and performance features, including security, that are normal for such content). This dual test ensures that traders cannot hide behind low contractual standards to supply substandard digital goods; the law imposes a "floor" of reasonable expectations (Mak, 2020).

A revolutionary feature of these directives is the mandatory "Obligation to Update." The trader must ensure that the consumer is informed of and supplied with updates, including security updates, that are necessary to keep the goods or content in conformity for the period of time the consumer may reasonably expect (or the duration of the contract for continuous services). This addresses the "security vs. obsolescence" problem in the IoT and software markets. If a manufacturer stops patching a smart TV after six months and it gets hacked, this is a "lack of conformity" (a legal defect), triggering remedies. This provision legally mandates the sustainability and security of digital infrastructure (Spindler, 2016).

The "Incorrect Integration" rule addresses the complexity of installing digital content. If the digital content is incorrectly integrated into the consumer's digital environment, and this incorrect integration is due to instructions provided by the trader (or lack thereof), it counts as a lack of conformity. This places the burden of "usability" and "instruction clarity" on the trader. In a world of complex installations and compatibility issues, this rule protects the consumer from the technical hazards of setting up digital ecosystems (Staudenmayer, 2020).

"Interoperability" and "Compatibility" are key objective criteria. While the directive does not mandate universal interoperability, it requires the content to function with the hardware and software with which content of the same type is normally used. If a specific interoperability was promised in the contract (subjective), it must be delivered. This pushes against the "walled garden" ecosystems of Big Tech by making technical compatibility a legal quality requirement. A lack of interoperability where expected becomes a breach of contract (Drexl, 2016).

The Remedies for Lack of Conformity follow a hierarchy. In the first instance, the consumer is entitled to have the digital content or service brought into conformity (repair or replacement). This must be done free of charge, within a reasonable time, and without significant inconvenience. Unlike physical goods, "repair" in digital means a software patch or a fresh download. If bringing into conformity is impossible or disproportionate (e.g., the code is fundamentally broken), or if the trader fails to do so, the consumer can move to the second tier: price reduction or termination of the contract (Carvalho, 2019).

Termination implies specific consequences for the digital economy. Upon termination, the trader must reimburse the consumer. But crucially, the trader must also stop using any content (other than personal data) provided or created by the consumer, unless it has no utility outside the context of the digital content. The trader must make this user-generated content available to the consumer. This "digital assets return" provision prevents user lock-in upon contract exit. It ensures that exercising a legal remedy does not result in the loss of one's creative work or digital history (Metzger, 2019).

The Reversal of the Burden of Proof is strengthened. For digital elements and content, the burden of proof is on the trader to show that the lack of conformity did not exist at the time of supply. Under the SGD, this period is one year (Member States can extend to two). For continuous supply contracts, the burden remains on the trader for the entire duration of the contract. This recognizes the extreme information asymmetry in software; a consumer cannot prove why an app crashed (code error vs. user error), so the law presumes it is the developer's fault unless proven otherwise (Hoekstra, 2020).

Modifications of Digital Content (updates that change the product) are regulated. Traders often change the features of a service (e.g., removing a song from a playlist or changing a game mechanic). The DCD allows this only if: the contract allows it, there is a valid reason, it is done without cost, the consumer is informed, and—if the change negatively impacts access or use—the consumer has the right to terminate the contract free of charge. This protects the consumer's "digital status quo" against unilateral degradation of the service, balancing the need for innovation with the sanctity of the bargain (Loos, 2020).

The relationship between GDPR and Conformity is explicit. A violation of the GDPR (e.g., weak security leading to a data breach) can constitute a "lack of conformity" under the contract law directives. If an app collects more data than agreed or fails to secure it, it is "defective" as a product. This fuses data protection law with contract law, allowing consumers to use contractual remedies (termination, damages) for privacy violations. It creates a "private law enforcement" mechanism for GDPR standards (Helberger et al., 2017).

"Goods with Digital Elements" (Smart Goods) create a liability bridge. If the software in a smart car fails, the seller of the car is liable under the SGD. The seller then has a right of redress against the software supplier in the chain of transactions. This "chain of liability" forces the integration of software quality standards into the physical supply chain. It prevents the car dealer from saying "not my problem, call the software vendor," ensuring a single point of contact for the consumer (Staudenmayer, 2020).

The Scope of Application includes "Freemium" models. Even if the consumer only pays with data, the conformity rules apply. If a free social media app is full of bugs or security holes, the consumer has rights to rectification. While price reduction is impossible (since price is zero), the remedy of termination remains. This establishes that "quality" is a right even in the non-monetary economy.

Finally, the Member State Options create some fragmentation. States can maintain shorter or longer liability periods or notification duties. However, the core definition of conformity and the remedy structure are harmonized. The "European notion of defect" in the digital age is now codified: a product is defective if it is insecure, outdated, or fails to respect the privacy expectations inherent in the contract.

Section 5: Unfair Terms, Platform Liability, and the DSA

The control of Unfair Contract Terms is a cornerstone of EU consumer protection, governed by Directive 93/13/EEC (UCTD). A term is unfair if it causes a "significant imbalance" in the parties' rights and obligations to the detriment of the consumer, contrary to the requirement of good faith. In the digital economy, standard Terms of Service (ToS) are the norm, and they are notoriously one-sided. The CJEU has developed a robust jurisprudence (e.g., Aziz, Pannon) requiring national courts to assess unfair terms ex officio (on their own motion). This means that even if a consumer does not know a term is unfair, the judge must intervene to declare it non-binding. This procedural activism is essential in the digital realm where "click-wrap" agreements are never negotiated (Micklitz, 2013).

Specific types of Digital Unfair Terms have been identified by courts and regulators. These include: clauses granting the platform the unlimited right to modify the service or price without notice; clauses allowing the platform to suspend or terminate a user's account without cause ("digital death"); clauses creating broad licenses over user-generated content; and mandatory arbitration clauses (often void in EU consumer arbitration). The principle is that the trader cannot use standard terms to shift the entire business risk onto the consumer or to deprive the consumer of the essence of the service (Loos, 2015).

Platform Liability has shifted from the "Safe Harbor" regime of the E-Commerce Directive (2000) to the "Due Diligence" regime of the Digital Services Act (DSA) (2022). Under the old regime, platforms were not liable for user content unless they had "actual knowledge" of illegality. This created a perverse incentive to remain ignorant. The DSA changes the paradigm: while retaining the conditional immunity, it imposes strict "due diligence" obligations on platforms to monitor their systems, provide transparency, and handle complaints. For "Very Large Online Platforms" (VLOPs), there are additional obligations to assess and mitigate systemic risks (e.g., disinformation). This moves from a liability shield to a "regulated responsibility" model (Frosio, 2017).

The DSA and Contract Terms. The DSA explicitly requires providers of intermediary services to include in their terms and conditions information on any restrictions that they impose in relation to the use of their service (content moderation policies). These terms must be drafted in clear, plain, and intelligible language. Crucially, platforms must apply these terms in an objective, proportionate, and non-discriminatory manner. This "horizontal effect" of fundamental rights (freedom of expression) into private terms of service means that platforms can no longer arbitrarily censor users based on vague contractual clauses. The contract becomes a venue for protecting public discourse (Wilman, 2022).

"Shadow Banning" and Account Suspension are now regulated contractual issues. Under the DSA, if a platform restricts access to a user's content, it must provide a "Statement of Reasons." The user has a right to internal complaint handling and out-of-court dispute settlement. This proceduralizes the platform-user relationship. The suspension of an account is no longer just a contractual termination but a quasi-administrative sanction that requires due process. This protects the consumer's "digital existence" from the arbitrary power of the platform (Douek, 2021).

The Platform-to-Business (P2B) Regulation (2019/1150) addresses unfair terms in contracts between platforms and business users (e.g., app developers, marketplace sellers). While technically B2B, these relationships exhibit power asymmetries similar to B2C. The P2B Regulation blacklists certain practices (e.g., sudden termination without notice) and mandates transparency regarding ranking and differentiated treatment. This illustrates the "spill-over" of consumer protection logic into the commercial sphere of the digital economy, creating a category of "dependent business users" who need protection from the platform's sovereign power (Busch, 2020).

"Price Personalization" Clauses. Terms that allow traders to adjust prices based on automated decision-making must be transparent. If a term allows the trader to use profiling to extract the maximum surplus from a consumer, it may be challenged as unfair if it lacks transparency or exploits vulnerability. The intersection of unfair terms law and data protection law is critical here: a term that forces consent to intrusive profiling as a condition of service might be unfair under the UCTD and invalid under the GDPR (forced consent) (Botta & Wiedemann, 2019).

Dispute Resolution Clauses. Terms that force consumers to sue in a foreign jurisdiction (e.g., California) or mandate arbitration are generally void in the EU under the Brussels I Recast Regulation and the UCTD. The consumer has the "Right to be Sued at Home." In the digital context, Online Dispute Resolution (ODR) mechanisms are encouraged, but they cannot replace the judicial remedy. The DSA mandates that platforms participate in out-of-court dispute settlement bodies, creating a specialized "platform justice" system that operates alongside the courts (Cortés, 2017).

Unilateral Modification Clauses are heavily scrutinized. In long-term digital contracts (social media, cloud storage), platforms often reserve the right to change terms "at any time." The CJEU has ruled that such clauses are unfair unless they specify the valid reasons for the change and provide the consumer with a reasonable notice period and the right to terminate. A consumer cannot be bound by a contract whose content is fluid and determined solely by the will of the trader (Loos, 2020).

Liability Exclusions. Clauses that exclude liability for "service interruptions" or "data loss" are common but often unfair. Given that the core obligation of a cloud provider is to provide access and storage, a total exclusion of liability for failing to do so deprives the contract of its substance ("empty shell" contract). EPL demands that platforms accept liability for negligence, especially regarding data integrity and security.

The "Blacklist" and "Greylist". The UCTD Annex contains a list of potentially unfair terms. National implementations often create strict blacklists. In the digital sector, terms that automatically renew subscriptions without notice (subscription traps) are increasingly blacklisted. The "click-to-cancel" principle (if you can sign up online, you must be able to cancel online) is becoming a mandatory standard of fairness, combating "roach motel" designs where entry is easy but exit is hard.

Finally, the Enforcement of Fairness relies on "Collective Redress." The Representative Actions Directive (2020/1828) empowers consumer organizations to bring class actions against platforms using unfair terms. This overcomes the "rational apathy" of individual users. A single judgment can invalidate a clause (e.g., a privacy setting) for millions of users. This collective mechanism is the enforcement muscle that ensures the principles of fairness and transparency are respected by global digital giants.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Becherril, M. (2015). The Right of Withdrawal in the Consumer Rights Directive. European Review of Private Law.
    • Ben-Shahar, O., & Schneider, C. E. (2014). More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure. Princeton University Press.
    • Botta, M., & Wiedemann, K. (2019). The Interaction of EU Competition, Consumer, and Data Protection Law in the Digital Economy. Antitrust Bulletin.
    • Busch, C. (2020). The Future of EU Consumer Law: A Digital Perspective. European Review of Private Law.
    • Carvalho, J. M. (2019). Sale of Goods and Supply of Digital Content: Two Worlds Apart? Journal of European Consumer and Market Law.
    • Cortés, P. (2017). The Law of Consumer Redress in an Evolving Digital Market. Cambridge University Press.
    • De Filippi, P., & Wright, A. (2018). Blockchain and the Law. Harvard University Press.
    • Douek, E. (2021). Governing Online Speech. University of Chicago Law Review.
    • Drexl, J. (2016). Designing Competitive Markets for Industrial Data. JIPITEC.
    • Frosio, G. F. (2017). From Illegal Content to Toxic Speech: Remapping Intermediary Liability. International Journal of Law and Information Technology.
    • Goanta, C. (2020). The Regulation of Social Media Influencers. Edward Elgar.
    • Goanta, C., & Ranchordas, S. (2020). The Regulation of Social Media Influencers. Edward Elgar.
    • Hatzopoulos, V. (2018). The Collaborative Economy and EU Law. Hart Publishing.
    • Helberger, N., et al. (2017). The Perfect Match? A Closer Look at the Relationship between EU Consumer Law and AI. Cambridge Law Journal.
    • Hesselink, M. (2014). The Politics of European Contract Law. Who Decides?.
    • Hoekstra, J. (2020). The Conformity of Digital Content. Journal of European Consumer and Market Law.
    • Kim, N. S. (2014). Wrap Contracts: Foundations and Ramifications. Oxford University Press.
    • Loos, M. (2014). The Rights of Withdrawal. European Review of Private Law.
    • Loos, M. (2015). Transparency of Digital Services. European Review of Private Law.
    • Loos, M. (2020). The Modernization of European Consumer Law. European Review of Private Law.
    • Luguri, J., & Strahilevitz, L. J. (2021). Shining a Light on Dark Patterns. Journal of Legal Analysis.
    • Mak, C. (2020). Legal Methodology of European Private Law. Cambridge University Press.
    • Maume, P., & Maute, L. (2020). Financial Services and the Digital Economy. European Company and Financial Law Review.
    • Metzger, A. (2019). Data as Counter-Performance. JIPITEC.
    • Micklitz, H.-W. (2011). The Many Concepts of Social Justice in European Private Law. Edward Elgar.
    • Micklitz, H.-W. (2013). European Consumer Law. Intersentia.
    • Perzanowski, A., & Schultz, J. (2016). The End of Ownership. MIT Press.
    • Savelyev, A. (2017). Contract law 2.0: 'Smart' contracts as the beginning of the end of classic contract law. Information & Communications Technology Law.
    • Schulze, R. (2016). European Contract Law. Beck/Hart/Nomos.
    • Spindler, G. (2016). Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content. Common Market Law Review.
    • Staudenmayer, D. (2020). The Directives on the Sale of Goods and Digital Content. European Review of Private Law.
    • Svantesson, D. (2017). Solving the Internet Jurisdiction Puzzle. Oxford University Press.
    • Terryn, E. (2016). The Late Payment Directive. J. Eur. Consumer & Mkt. L..
    • Townley, C., et al. (2019). Big Data and Personalized Price Discrimination. Yearbook of European Law.
    • Werbach, K., & Cornell, N. (2017). Contracts Ex Machina. Duke Law Journal.
    • Wilman, F. (2022). The Responsibility of Online Intermediaries. Oxford University Press.
    • Zuiderveen Borgesius, F. (2015). Improving Privacy Protection in the Area of Behavioural Targeting. Kluwer.
4
Non-contractual obligations in European law
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Architecture of Non-Contractual Obligations in Europe

The law of non-contractual obligations, encompassing tort (delict), unjustified enrichment, and negotiorum gestio (management of another's affairs), represents the second great pillar of private law alongside contract. In the European context, this field is characterized by a profound tension between diverse national traditions and the harmonizing force of the European Union. While national Civil Codes conceptualize tort liability differently—the French Code Civil relies on a broad general clause of "fault" (Article 1240), while the German BGB enumerates specific protected interests (life, body, property)—EU law has superimposed a layer of functional harmonization. This supranational layer does not aim to replace national tort law entirely but to unify specific areas critical to the internal market, such as product liability, competition damages, and environmental liability. Consequently, European Tort Law is currently a "multi-level system" where national dogmatics coexist with European regulations (Van Gerven, 2000).

The primary function of tort law in Europe has traditionally been "compensation" (restitutio in integrum)—restoring the victim to the position they would have been in had the tort not occurred. However, EU intervention has increasingly emphasized "deterrence" and "regulation." In areas like anti-discrimination and data protection, the EU mandates that sanctions be "effective, proportionate, and dissuasive." This shifts the focus from purely repairing private loss to policing market behavior. The General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), for instance, couples compensation rights with massive administrative fines, blending private law remedies with public law punishment. This "instrumentalization" of tort law uses private liability as a tool of European governance to ensure compliance with EU norms (Faure, 2009).

Academic efforts to map and unify this field resulted in the "Principles of European Tort Law" (PETL) and the relevant books of the "Draft Common Frame of Reference" (DCFR). Although soft law, these instruments provide a common grammar for European jurists. The PETL synthesizes the diverse national approaches into a flexible system based on three grounds of liability: fault, strict liability for abnormally dangerous activities, and liability for others. This comparative work reveals a "Common Core" of European tort law, suggesting that despite doctrinal differences, the functional outcomes of cases across Europe are often similar. These academic frames act as a "shadow code," influencing judicial reasoning and national law reforms (Koziol, 2004).

The shift from "fault-based" to "strict" liability is a defining trend of modern European law. In the 19th century, "no liability without fault" was a dogma of liberal individualism. In the "Risk Society" of the 21st century, where industrial and digital risks are systemic, EU law increasingly favors strict liability. The Product Liability Directive was the pioneer, holding producers liable for defects regardless of negligence. This trend is expanding to new technologies; the debate on AI liability centers on whether to apply strict liability to high-risk algorithms. The rationale is "enterprise liability": those who create risks for profit should bear the costs of those risks, regardless of moral culpability (Wagner, 2019).

The "Constitutionalization" of non-contractual obligations involves the horizontal application of fundamental rights. The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the EU influences the scope of liability. For example, in defamation and privacy cases, national tort rules must be interpreted to balance the right to private life (Article 7) with freedom of expression (Article 11). The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ensures that national liability rules do not disproportionately restrict these rights. This injects a constitutional dimension into private disputes, meaning that a tort claim is often a clash of fundamental rights adjudicated through private law concepts (Mak, 2013).

The distinction between "damage" and "injury" (wrongfulness) varies across systems. German law requires the infringement of a protected right (wrongfulness), while French law focuses on the fait générateur (generating fact) and the damage. EPL tends towards a broad concept of compensable damage, including pure economic loss and non-material damage. The CJEU’s jurisprudence on "non-material damage" in travel law (Leitner) and data protection (UI v. Österreichische Post) confirms that EU law requires compensation for distress and loss of enjoyment, even without physical injury. This harmonizes the "scope of protection" across the Union (Magnus, 2012).

The "Concurrence of Actions" (border with contract) is a classic problem. Can a victim sue in tort if they have a contract with the injurer? National systems differ (French non-cumul rule bans it; German law allows it). EU law generally does not resolve this dogmatic conflict but ensures that the classification does not deprive the victim of EU rights. In product liability, the victim can sue the producer (tort) independently of their contract with the seller. However, in conflict of laws (Rome I and II), the distinction remains crucial for determining the applicable law, requiring precise characterization of the claim (Dickinson, 2008).

"Mass Torts" and collective redress are transforming the procedural landscape. The traditional tort claim is individual: one victim vs. one tortfeasor. Modern disasters (Dieselgate, data breaches) involve millions of victims. The Representative Actions Directive introduces a mechanism for "Qualified Entities" to seek redress for groups. This "collectivization" of liability changes the economics of tort law. It enables the enforcement of small claims that would be rational to ignore individually (rational apathy), turning tort law into a credible threat against systemic corporate malfeasance (Stadler, 2016).

"Insurance" acts as the silent partner of tort law. The expansion of liability is only economically viable if risks are insurable. EU directives often mandate compulsory insurance (e.g., Motor Insurance Directive) to ensuring that victims are actually paid. The "Deep Pocket" rationale drives the assignment of liability to the party best able to insure (the employer, the car owner, the producer). In the AI liability debate, the availability of insurance products for algorithmic risks is a prerequisite for imposing strict liability regimes (Faure & Hartlief, 2006).

"Unjustified Enrichment" constitutes the third track of obligations, correcting transfers of value without legal basis. While less harmonized than tort, it is crucial for the internal market. When a contract is voided (e.g., due to consumer withdrawal), restitution rules determine who gets what. The CJEU has developed autonomous principles of restitution in cases of "repayment of taxes levied in breach of EU law," creating a nascent European law of restitution based on the principle that Member States cannot profit from their own illegality (Clive, 2009).

Negotiorum Gestio (benevolent intervention in another’s affairs) allows a person who acts to help another (e.g., securing a neighbor’s crumbling roof) to claim reimbursement. While a marginal institution in some systems, it reflects the principle of altruism. In the digital context, "white hat hackers" who patch a security vulnerability in a company’s system without being asked might invoke analogies to gestio to avoid liability and claim expenses. EPL principles explore how to incentivize such "benevolent interference" in a connected world (Von Bar, 2009).

Finally, the "Rome II Regulation" serves as the conflict-of-laws backbone for this entire field. It determines which national law applies to a non-contractual obligation in cross-border cases. By harmonizing the choice of law rules, Rome II prevents "forum shopping" where victims sue in the country with the most generous tort laws. It unifies the "legal geography" of liability, ensuring that the applicable law is predictable regardless of where the case is litigated.

Section 2: Product Liability and the Strict Liability Revolution

The Product Liability Directive (85/374/EEC) is the grandmother of European tort law harmonization. Adopted to facilitate the free movement of goods, it introduced a regime of strict liability for defective products. This means the producer is liable for damage caused by a defect in their product without the victim needing to prove negligence or fault. This shifted the risk of industrial accidents from the consumer to the manufacturer. The rationale is that the producer is in the best position to control quality and insure against risk. This Directive created a "maximum harmonization" ceiling, preventing Member States from introducing stricter liability rules that would distort competition (Sengayen, 2017).

The core concept is the "Defect." A product is defective if it does not provide the safety which a person is entitled to expect. This "consumer expectation test" is objective; it does not matter if the producer tried their best. Factors include the presentation of the product, its reasonably expected use, and the time it was put into circulation. The CJEU in Boston Scientific Medizintechnik ruled that for medical devices (pacemakers), a potential defect in a production batch classifies all units in that batch as defective, even if a specific unit has not yet failed. This precautionary approach broadens the definition of defect to include the "risk of failure" in high-stakes products (Goldberg, 2013).

The "Development Risks Defense" allows producers to escape liability if the state of scientific and technical knowledge at the time the product was put into circulation was not such as to enable the existence of the defect to be discovered. This controversial defense aims to encourage innovation by not penalizing producers for "unknown unknowns." However, the CJEU interprets this strictly: the knowledge must be accessible at the highest level globally, not just in the specific industry sector. This balances the incentive to innovate with the need to compensate victims of "unavoidable" technological risks (Fairgrieve, 2005).

The digital transformation has rendered the 1985 Directive outdated. Is software a "product"? Is a 3D-printing file a product? The New Product Liability Directive (PLD) (revised proposal 2022) expands the definition of "product" to explicitly include digital manufacturing files and software, whether embedded in a device or standalone. This closes the gap where app developers or cloud software providers could evade strict liability. It acknowledges that in the digital economy, code can cause physical harm (e.g., a software bug crashing a car) just as steel can (Machnikowski, 2020).

The concept of the "Producer" is also expanding. In the Circular Economy, a company that "refurbishes" or "substantially modifies" a product is treated as a producer. If a tech shop replaces the battery and OS of a smartphone and sells it, they assume the producer's liability. This ensures that the chain of liability is not broken by the circular lifecycle of goods. Furthermore, if the manufacturer is outside the EU, the importer or the fulfillment service provider (in e-commerce) can be held liable. This ensures that consumers always have a liable defendant within the EU jurisdiction (Tonner, 2019).

"Damage" under the old directive was limited to death, personal injury, and damage to other property (with a threshold). It excluded damage to the defective product itself and purely economic loss. The revised PLD expands this to include loss or corruption of data. If a defective hard drive wipes a business's database, this is now a compensable loss under strict liability. This recognizes data as a valuable asset whose destruction constitutes a "material" damage in the digital age, aligning tort law with the reality of the data economy (Borghetti, 2019).

Causation is the hardest hurdle for victims in complex technical cases. Proving that a specific line of code caused a crash is difficult ("black box" problem). The revised PLD introduces a "rebuttable presumption of defect and causality" if the claimant faces excessive difficulties in proving the claim due to technical complexity, and the product likely caused the damage. This procedural shift lowers the evidentiary barrier for consumers, acknowledging the information asymmetry between the user and the tech giant (Wagner, 2019).

The intersection with Product Safety Regulation is critical. The General Product Safety Regulation imposes ex ante standards. Product liability imposes ex post sanctions. Non-compliance with safety standards is strong evidence of a defect. However, compliance with standards does not automatically grant immunity; a product can be compliant but still defective if it is unsafe in practice. This dual regime creates a "safety net": regulation prevents harm, liability compensates it when prevention fails.

Cybersecurity vulnerabilities are now defects. Under the new regime, a product is defective if it lacks the cybersecurity features necessary for safety. If a smart camera is hacked because it had a default password "admin/admin," the producer is liable for the resulting damage. This integrates the Cyber Resilience Act into the heart of tort law, treating digital insecurity as a manufacturing flaw (Spindler, 2016).

Environmental Liability operates on a separate track. The Environmental Liability Directive (2004/35/EC) applies to "operators" of dangerous activities. It requires them to prevent and remediate environmental damage (to biodiversity, water, land). Unlike product liability (which compensates individuals), this is a "public tort" regime where the state (or NGOs) enforces the remediation. It enforces the "Polluter Pays Principle." The strict liability here is justified by the hazardous nature of the activity, forcing companies to internalize the ecological cost of their operations (Winter, 2008).

The "Right of Recourse" ensures the fair distribution of loss. If the final seller is held liable to the consumer, they have a right of redress against the manufacturer or software developer upstream. Harmonizing these recourse actions is essential to prevent liability from sticking to the wrong party (the retailer) simply because they are the most visible. The supply chain is viewed as a single liability unit where the cost should ultimately rest with the entity that caused the defect.

Finally, the Total Harmonization nature of the new PLD prevents Member States from having different liability caps or thresholds. This creates a true "European Tort" for defective products. A German car and a French software package face the exact same liability regime, ensuring that the cost of insurance and risk management is uniform across the Single Market.

Section 3: AI Liability and the Challenge of Digital Torts

Artificial Intelligence challenges the traditional paradigms of tort law: autonomy, opacity, and connectivity. Traditional tort law assumes a human agent or a static tool. AI is an "autonomous" agent that learns and acts in ways not explicitly programmed by the creator. If an autonomous drone chooses a flight path that causes a collision, who is liable? The programmer? The user? Or the AI itself? EPL rejects "AI personhood" (liability of the machine) and focuses on attributing the acts of the AI to a human or corporate subject (anthropocentric approach). The challenge is determining which human is responsible when the machine acts unpredictably (Abbott, 2020).

The "Black Box" Problem (opacity) makes proving fault (negligence) or defect nearly impossible. In a neural network, the decision-making path is often unintelligible even to the developer. A victim cannot prove the developer failed to use "reasonable care" if no one understands why the AI acted as it did. This creates an "accountability gap." The EU's response is the AI Liability Directive (AILD) proposal, which focuses on procedural facilitation. It introduces a "right to disclosure of evidence" requiring providers to release the "logs" and training data parameters. It essentially forces the "black box" to be opened for the court (Watcher et al., 2017).

The "Presumption of Causality" is the AILD's core mechanism. If the victim can demonstrate that the AI provider failed to comply with the AI Act (e.g., used poor quality training data or lacked human oversight) and that this failure is reasonably likely to have caused the harm, the court must presume causality. The burden shifts to the provider to prove the AI didn't cause the harm. This links the administrative safety rules of the AI Act with the private liability rules of tort law. Compliance with the AI Act becomes the shield; non-compliance becomes the sword for the victim (Wagner, 2019).

For High-Risk AI (e.g., autonomous vehicles, medical robots), the debate has centered on Strict Liability. The European Parliament proposed a strict liability regime for high-risk AI, similar to cars. The reasoning is that the operator of a high-risk AI creates a danger for their own profit and should bear the cost regardless of fault. However, the Commission's current proposal relies on a "fault-based" regime with reversed burdens of proof, fearing that strict liability might stifle innovation. The compromise is likely a strict liability regime for specific sectors (like cars) and a fault-based regime for general software, bridged by the PLD's strict liability for "defective products" (Bertolini, 2020).

The distinction between "Frontend Operator" and "Backend Operator" is crucial. The backend operator (developer/provider) defines the features and updates the system; the frontend operator (user/company) deploys it in a specific context. Liability should align with control. If the harm results from the algorithm's design, the backend operator is liable. If it results from how the AI was used (e.g., inputting bad data), the frontend operator is liable. This "sphere of control" theory attempts to allocate liability in the complex AI value chain (Yeung, 2018).

Data Protection Liability under Article 82 GDPR is a new "statutory tort." It grants any person who has suffered material or non-material damage as a result of an infringement of the GDPR the right to receive compensation from the controller or processor. The CJEU in UI v. Österreichische Post clarified that the mere infringement is not enough; there must be "damage." However, "damage" is interpreted broadly to include loss of control over data or anxiety. This creates a mass tort mechanism for privacy violations, where companies face millions in cumulative liability for data breaches independent of regulatory fines (Gola et al., 2021).

Cybersecurity Liability is governed by the NIS2 Directive and the Cyber Resilience Act. These impose duties of care regarding network security. A failure to patch a vulnerability that leads to a ransomware attack on a third party (supply chain attack) constitutes negligence. The "standard of care" is defined by technical standards (ISO). This creates a "tort of insecurity," where liability flows from the failure to maintain digital hygiene. Companies are liable not just for what their software does, but for what it fails to prevent (Schmitt, 2013).

"Software as a Service" (SaaS) complicates product liability. If a cloud-based AI fails, is it a defective "product"? The new PLD says yes. However, liability can also arise from the "service" aspect under national tort law (negligence). The interplay between the strict liability of the PLD and the fault-based liability for services creates a complex matrix. The trend is to treat the digital service as a "functional equivalent" of a product if it drives a tangible outcome (e.g., a smart thermostat service controlling heat), extending strict liability logic to the cloud (Borghetti, 2019).

Robotics and the physical interface. When AI controls a robot, the damage is physical. The "connectivity" aspect means a robot can be hacked or updated remotely. The "Log-box" (like a flight recorder) is essential for liability attribution. Was the crash caused by a sensor failure, a software bug, or a hacker? The AI Act mandates the recording of logs. In tort litigation, these logs are the "smoking gun." The destruction or failure to keep logs shifts liability to the operator, creating a "spoliation of evidence" sanction (Pagallo, 2018).

The "Chilling Effect" argument warns that excessive liability will drive AI development out of Europe. The "Sandbox" approach allows companies to test AI in a controlled environment with reduced liability exposure. This "experimental legal regime" attempts to balance safety with innovation. Liability rules are suspended or modified within the sandbox to allow for learning, representing a "regulatory agility" in the face of uncertainty (Allen, 2019).

Non-Material Damage in AI torts involves bias and discrimination. If an AI hiring tool discriminates against women, the damage is dignitary and economic. The AILD covers this. Victims can sue for the loss of opportunity and the insult to dignity. This integrates "Anti-Discrimination Law" into the core of AI tort liability, making algorithmic fairness a matter of private damages, not just public fines (Wachter et al., 2021).

Finally, the Global Dimension. AI is developed globally. If a US AI causes damage in the EU, Rome II Regulation dictates that the law of the place of damage applies. This subjects global AI providers to EU liability standards for harms occurring in Europe. The "Brussels Effect" implies that by setting a high liability standard, the EU forces global developers to design safer AI to avoid lawsuits in the European market.

Section 4: Unjustified Enrichment and Negotiorum Gestio

Unjustified Enrichment (Condictio) is the law of restitution. It addresses transfers of value that lack a valid legal basis. In the European context, national systems are deeply divided. The "Germanic" model focuses on the "absence of legal ground" (sine causa), while the "Common Law" model focuses on "unjust factors" (mistake, duress). The DCFR Book VII attempts a synthesis, adopting the "absence of basis" approach as the primary rule: a person who obtains a benefit from another without legal justification must restore it. This broad principle covers payments made on void contracts, mistaken payments, and value taken by interference (Clive, 2009).

In the Digital Economy, enrichment often involves "Data as Value." If a platform collects user data based on a contract that is later declared void (e.g., unfair terms), the platform is "unjustifiably enriched" by the data. Traditional restitution returns money. How do you return data? The Digital Content Directive mandates that the trader must refrain from using the data and make it available to the consumer. This "Data Restitution" is a novel form of restitutio in integrum. It treats data retention without a valid contract as a form of unjust enrichment, requiring the disgorgement of the informational asset (Metzger, 2019).

Restitution of Services is complex. If a consumer withdraws from a service contract after it has started, they must pay for the value received. But if the service was unsolicited or based on an aggressive practice, the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive states the consumer is exempt from payment. This creates a "punitive" element in enrichment law: the trader is impoverished (service provided), and the consumer is enriched (service received), but the law denies restitution to deter aggressive marketing. This "forced enrichment" of the consumer is a regulatory tool (Weatherill, 2012).

The defense of "Change of Position" (Disenchantment) protects the innocent enriched party. If the recipient spent the money in good faith before knowing of the mistake, they may not have to repay. In EPL, this defense is harmonized in specific contexts like the Consumer Rights Directive: a consumer is not liable for the diminished value of goods resulting from handling necessary to establish their nature. This allocates the risk of "wasted enrichment" to the risk-taker (the professional), protecting the patrimony of the good faith consumer (Lando, 2003).

"Interference Enrichment" (Eingriffskondiktion) occurs when someone uses another's asset without permission. In Intellectual Property, if someone infringes a patent, they are enriched by the saved license fee. The IP Enforcement Directive allows the damages to be calculated based on the "unjust profits" of the infringer. This merges tort damages with enrichment restitution. The goal is to strip the infringer of the gain, ensuring that "crime does not pay." This functional overlap ensures that the holder of the right captures the full economic value of their asset (Ohly, 2009).

Negotiorum Gestio (Management of Another's Affairs) is a Civil Law institution where a person acts to benefit another without authority (e.g., fixing a neighbor's leaking roof while they are away). The intervenor can claim reimbursement. Common Law traditionally rejects this ("officious bystander"). The DCFR Book V adopts a modern version of gestio: it encourages "benevolent intervention." In the cross-border context, this could apply to emergency services or environmental cleanups where one entity acts to prevent harm to another's property across a border (Von Bar, 2009).

Digital Negotiorum Gestio is a theoretical frontier. "White Hat Hackers" who discover a vulnerability in a company's code and patch it (or secure the data) without permission are acting as benevolent intervenors. Under strict cybercrime laws, this is illegal access. Under negotiorum gestio principles, it could be a justified intervention entitling the hacker to expenses (bug bounty) rather than criminal charges. EPL scholars argue for a "Good Samaritan" defense in cyber-law based on gestio principles, promoting pro-active security (Hacker, 2019).

Financial Restitution involves "mistaken bank transfers." The Payment Services Directive (PSD2) regulates this. If a payer makes a mistake (wrong IBAN), the payment service provider must make "reasonable efforts" to recover the funds. The recipient has an obligation to return the unjust enrichment. This statutory regime creates a simplified restitution process for the banking sector, reducing the need for complex common law tracing claims in routine error cases (Miedema, 2019).

Cross-border Enrichment Claims are governed by Rome II (Article 10). The applicable law is the law governing the existing relationship between the parties (e.g., the void contract). If there is no relationship, it is the law of the place where the enrichment occurred. This "accessory connection" ensures that if a French contract is void, French law governs the restitution. It maintains coherence between the cause of the transfer and the unwinding of the transfer (Dickinson, 2008).

"Indirect Enrichment" involves three parties. A contracts with B to build on C's land. B goes bankrupt. Can A sue C for the value of the building? National laws diverge sharply (subsidiary action vs. strict privity). The DCFR proposes a balanced rule allowing direct claims only if the third party consented or if the enrichment is "unjustified" in the triangular context. This remains a "hard case" in European harmonization, touching on the fundamental structure of insolvency priority.

Public Law Enrichment. When the EU levies a tax that is later declared illegal by the CJEU, the state is unjustly enriched. The CJEU has developed a robust right to repayment of charges levied in breach of EU law. National procedural rules (time limits) cannot make this recovery "excessively difficult" (San Giorgio principle). This creates a "European right to restitution" that overrides national fiscal finality, anchoring the citizen's claim against the state in the logic of corrective justice (Dougan, 2004).

Finally, the Moral Basis of enrichment. It prevents "getting something for nothing" where there is no valid reason. In the digital age of "free" services and "intangible" value, defining what constitutes a "benefit" and a "valid reason" is shifting. The trend is to view access to data and attention as quantifiable benefits that trigger restitutionary obligations when the legal basis fails.

Section 5: Cross-Border Torts and the Rome II Regulation

In a borderless internal market, torts frequently cross frontiers. A French product injures a German tourist in Italy. A Polish website defames a Spanish celebrity. Determining which law applies is the function of the Rome II Regulation (864/2007). This instrument unifies the conflict of laws rules for non-contractual obligations, ensuring that courts across the EU apply the same national law to the same dispute. This prevents "forum shopping" and ensures legal certainty. Rome II is the "procedural constitution" of European tort law (Dickinson, 2008).

The General Rule (Article 4) is Lex Loci Damni: the law of the country where the damage occurs applies, regardless of where the event giving rise to the damage occurred. This prioritizes the victim's environment. If a factory in France pollutes a river causing damage in Belgium, Belgian law applies. This "place of injury" rule aligns with the modern focus on victim protection. However, if the victim and the tortfeasor have their habitual residence in the same country, that country's law applies (Article 4(2)), reflecting the closer connection of the parties to their common home system (Symeonides, 2008).

Product Liability (Article 5) has a specific cascade of connecting factors to balance the interests of the producer and the consumer. The primary rule applies the law of the victim's habitual residence if the product was marketed there. This ensures the consumer is protected by their own law (predictability for the victim). If not marketed there, other factors apply. This complex rule prevents a producer from being surprised by the law of a country they never targeted, while ensuring consumers can rely on local safety standards (Magnus, 2010).

Unfair Competition (Article 6) applies the law of the country where competitive relations or the collective interests of consumers are affected. This is usually the market where the goods are sold (Lex Loci Mercatus). This ensures that all competitors in a given market play by the same rules ("level playing field"). If a German company uses misleading ads in France, French law applies, protecting French competitors and consumers. The focus is on market regulation rather than individual loss (Fitchen, 2012).

Environmental Damage (Article 7) introduces a unique "Favor Laesi" principle. The victim can choose to base their claim on the law of the country where the damage occurred or the law of the country where the event giving rise to the damage occurred. This choice allows the victim to select the stricter environmental liability regime. It serves a policy of high environmental protection, incentivizing operators in low-standard countries to raise their standards to avoid liability under the higher standards of their neighbors (Winter, 2008).

Intellectual Property (Article 8) applies the Lex Loci Protectionis: the law of the country for which protection is claimed. For a Community Trade Mark (EUTM), there is a unitary EU law. For national rights, it is the law of the state where the infringement occurs. This territoriality principle is strict; parties cannot contract out of it. It reflects the fact that IP rights are monopolies granted by a specific state for its territory (Desantes, 2011).

Industrial Action (Article 9) applies the law of the country where the strike takes place. This was a politically sensitive compromise (Viking/Laval cases) to protect the right to strike from being undermined by the law of the employer's country. It anchors the liability for industrial action in the local labor law context, respecting the social policy of the host state (Reich, 2008).

Freedom of Choice (Article 14) allows parties to agree on the applicable law after the dispute has arisen (or before, if both are businesses). This "Party Autonomy" in torts allows for efficient settlement. If a German and a French company have a collision, they can agree to apply English law to resolve it. However, this freedom is restricted to protect weaker parties (consumers, employees) from being forced into unfavorable laws (ex ante clauses are void for them).

Overriding Mandatory Provisions (Article 16) and Public Policy (Article 26) act as safety valves. The forum court can refuse to apply a foreign law if it is "manifestly incompatible" with the public policy of the forum (e.g., punitive damages are often rejected in Civil Law courts). Additionally, the court must apply the "police laws" of the forum (e.g., safety regulations) regardless of the applicable tort law. This ensures that the core values of the forum state are not displaced by foreign rules (Hellner, 2009).

The "Mosaic Theory" in personality rights (defamation/privacy) remains a complex area. Rome II excludes defamation (privacy is debated) due to lack of consensus. For online defamation, the CJEU's eDate/Shevill jurisprudence applies: the victim can sue in the place of the publisher (for global damages) or in each country where the content is accessible (for local damages). This creates a "mosaic" of applicable laws. A post might be legal in France but libelous in Poland. The lack of a harmonized conflict rule for privacy creates significant legal uncertainty for digital media (Kuipers, 2011).

Digital Torts pose challenges for the "Place of Damage." In a cyber-attack or data breach, where is the damage? Is it where the server is, or where the user is? The trend is to locate the damage at the user's "center of interests" (habitual residence). This creates a "data protection" shield around the user, applying their local law to global digital torts. This territorializes the internet for liability purposes, rejecting the "law of the server" approach (Svantesson, 2017).

Finally, the relationship with the Brussels I Recast Regulation (jurisdiction) is vital. Jurisdiction and applicable law are distinct. A French court (jurisdiction based on defendant's domicile) might have to apply Polish law (lex loci damni) to a tort case. Rome II ensures that the outcome of the case does not depend on where it is heard, but on which law applies, fulfilling the goal of "decisional harmony" in the European judicial area.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Abbott, R. (2020). The Reasonable Robot. Cambridge University Press.

  • Allen, H. J. (2019). Regulatory Sandboxes. George Washington Law Review.

  • Bertolini, A. (2020). Artificial Intelligence and Civil Liability. European Parliament.

  • Borghetti, J. S. (2019). Civil Liability for Artificial Intelligence. Dalloz.

  • Clive, E. (2009). Restitution in the DCFR. Juridica International.

  • Dickinson, A. (2008). The Rome II Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Fairgrieve, D. (2005). Product Liability in Comparative Perspective. Cambridge University Press.

  • Faure, M. (2009). Tort Law and Economics. Edward Elgar.

  • Faure, M., & Hartlief, T. (2006). Financial Compensation for Victims of Catastrophes. Springer.

  • Fitchen, J. (2012). The Applicable Law in Cross-Border Competition Law Actions. LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers.

  • Gola, P., et al. (2021). GDPR Compensation. Computer Law & Security Review.

  • Goldberg, R. (2013). Perspectives on Product Liability. Hart Publishing.

  • Hacker, P. (2019). Teaching an Old Dog New Tricks? Verfassungsblog.

  • Hellner, M. (2009). The Rome II Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Koziol, H. (2004). Principles of European Tort Law. Springer.

  • Kuipers, J. J. (2011). The Law Applicable to Violation of Privacy. European Review of Private Law.

  • Machnikowski, P. (2020). European Product Liability. Intersentia.

  • Magnus, U. (2010). The Rome II Regulation. Sellier.

  • Magnus, U. (2012). Unification of Tort Law: Damages. Kluwer.

  • Mak, C. (2013). Fundamental Rights in European Contract Law. Kluwer.

  • Metzger, A. (2019). Data as Counter-Performance. JIPITEC.

  • Miedema, J. (2019). The Law of Electronic Money. Kluwer.

  • Ohly, A. (2009). Three Principles of European IP Enforcement Law. German Law Journal.

  • Pagallo, U. (2018). The Laws of Robots. Springer.

  • Reich, N. (2008). The Rome II Regulation and Labour Law. European Labour Law Journal.

  • Schmitt, M. (2013). Tallinn Manual. Cambridge University Press.

  • Sengayen, M. (2017). Product Liability Law in Transition. Springer.

  • Stadler, A. (2016). Collective Redress. Research Handbook.

  • Svantesson, D. (2017). Solving the Internet Jurisdiction Puzzle. Oxford University Press.

  • Symeonides, S. C. (2008). Rome II and Tort Conflicts. American Journal of Comparative Law.

  • Tonner, K. (2019). The New Product Liability Directive. EuCML.

  • Van Gerven, W. (2000). Cases, Materials and Text on National, Supranational and International Tort Law. Hart.

  • Von Bar, C. (2009). Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). Sellier.

  • Wachter, S., et al. (2017). Counterfactual Explanations. Harvard Journal of Law & Technology.

  • Wachter, S., et al. (2021). Bias Preservation. SSRN.

  • Wagner, G. (2019). Robot Liability. Oxford Handbook on the Law of Regulation.

  • Weatherill, S. (2012). EU Consumer Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Winter, G. (2008). Ecological Damage. ELNI.

  • Yeung, K. (2018). Algorithmic Regulation. Regulation & Governance.

5
Contract systems in European law
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Typology of Contracts and the Systematization of Obligations

The systematization of contract law in Europe is a legacy of the Roman law tradition, refined by the Enlightenment codifications. National Civil Codes typically divide contract law into a "General Part" (applicable to all obligations) and a "Special Part" dealing with specific types of contracts (nomina). This typological approach organizes contracts based on their economic function: transfer of ownership (sale, gift), transfer of use (lease, loan), provision of services (mandate, service), and security (suretyship). The purpose of this classification is to provide default rules (ius dispositivum) that fill the gaps in the parties' agreement. However, European Union law has disrupted this tidy taxonomy. EU directives often cut across these traditional categories, creating new functional groupings like "distance contracts" or "consumer contracts" that apply regardless of whether the underlying transaction is a sale or a service. This creates a "dual system" where a contract is simultaneously governed by the national type (e.g., kaufvertrag) and the EU functional overlay (e.g., distance selling regulation) (Zimmermann, 1996).

The distinction between "Nominate" (named) and "Innominate" (unnamed) contracts is central to the civil law system. Nominate contracts (like sale or lease) have a specific statutory regime. Innominate contracts are sui generis agreements created by the parties under freedom of contract (e.g., franchising, factoring in their early stages). The challenge for European Private Law (EPL) is that modern commercial practice invents new contract types faster than national codes can be updated. "Mixed contracts" involving elements of sale and service (e.g., installation of a kitchen) create classification problems. The EU Sale of Goods Directive resolves this by prioritizing the "main purpose": if the goods are the dominant element, sales law applies. This "absorption theory" simplifies the legal regime but can obscure the complexity of hybrid transactions (Hesselink, 2011).

The "System of Sales" is the most harmonized area. The sale of goods is the archetype of the market transaction. The UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) provides a uniform sales law for B2B cross-border transactions, accepted by most EU states. For B2C transactions, the Consumer Sales Directive (2019/771) harmonizes conformity and remedies. This creates a "bifurcated" sales law: a liberal, international regime for businesses (CISG) and a protective, mandatory regime for consumers (EU Directives). The national Civil Code sales law is left as a residual category for domestic B2B or C2C sales, shrinking its practical relevance in the face of these specialized regimes (Huber, 2011).

The "System of Services" remains largely fragmented. Unlike sales, there is no comprehensive EU directive on service contracts. Services are governed by diverse national rules on "work contracts" (Werkvertrag) or "mandates" (Auftrag). The Services Directive (2006/123/EC) removes administrative barriers but does not harmonize the private law of services. However, the Digital Content Directive treats the supply of digital services (e.g., cloud storage) similarly to sales, creating a "digital service" category with conformity rules. This signals a trend towards "commodifying" services, applying sales-like logic (guarantees, conformity) to intangible performance where the result can be standardized (Loos, 2010).

"Long-term Contracts" (Relational Contracts) pose a challenge to the classical "discrete transaction" model. Distribution agreements, franchises, and commercial leases involve continuous relationships where trust and cooperation are paramount. National laws vary: Germany has a detailed law on "continuing obligations" (Dauerschuldverhältnisse), while England relies on the specific contract terms. The Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR) proposes rules for long-term contracts, such as a right to terminate for "compelling reason" (e.g., breakdown of trust) even without a breach. This acknowledges that in long-term relations, the "human element" and future cooperation are as important as the initial exchange (Hesselink, 2011).

"Distribution Contracts" (Agency, Franchise, Concession) are the infrastructure of the internal market. The Commercial Agents Directive (86/653/EEC) is a rare example of harmonized B2B service law. It grants agents a mandatory "goodwill indemnity" upon termination, protecting their investment in building the principal's client base. This introduces a "quasi-property" right in the customer portfolio. For franchising, there is no directive, but the Principles of European Law on Commercial Agency, Franchise and Distribution (PEL CAF) provide model rules. These soft law instruments attempt to fill the legislative void, offering a "Common Frame of Reference" for drafting pan-European distribution networks (Martinek, 2008).

"Financial Contracts" (Loans, Credit, Insurance) are heavily regulated. The Consumer Credit Directive and Mortgage Credit Directive create a standardized pre-contractual phase (ESIS form, APR calculation) to allow comparison shopping. However, the substantive contract law (e.g., validity of security, default rules) remains national. The "standardization" here is procedural. For insurance, the Principles of European Insurance Contract Law (PEICL) offer an optional instrument model. The complexity of financial risk requires a specialized contract system that balances the mathematical logic of actuaries with the legal logic of consumer protection (Grundmann, 2012).

"Construction Contracts" are governed by national law or international standard forms like FIDIC. The lack of EU harmonization is due to the deep connection with national land law and administrative planning rules. However, the posted workers directive and public procurement rules influence the execution of these contracts cross-border. The complexity of construction led to the development of specific "subcontracting" liability rules in some states (e.g., France), protecting the weaker subcontractor against the general contractor's insolvency. EPL is slowly developing a principle of "chain liability" in this sector (Van Gerven, 2000).

"Lease Contracts" (Locatio conductio) are divided into residential and commercial. Residential tenancy is intensely local and politicized (rent control, eviction protection), resisting harmonization. Commercial leases are more convergent due to the needs of multinational retailers. The "Service Lease" (leasing equipment) is a financial tool governed by commercial law. The new IFRS 16 accounting standard treats leases as liabilities, influencing the drafting of these contracts globally. The legal categorization (lease vs. sale on credit) is often determined by the economic substance rather than the legal form (Schmid, 2014).

"Digital Contracts" are emerging as a distinct type. They blend elements of sale, license, and service. A "subscription" to software involves a license to use (IP), a service of hosting (cloud), and sometimes a sale of hardware (IoT). EPL attempts to unify this through the concept of "Digital Elements." The classification of these contracts determines the remedies: can you "return" a stream? Can you "repair" a cloud outage? The law is moving towards a sui generis category of "Digital Supply" that absorbs these hybrid features (Spindler, 2016).

"Security Contracts" (Suretyship, Guarantee) are critical for access to credit. National laws differ on the protection of the surety (e.g., the spouse of the debtor). The CJEU in Dietzinger applied the Doorstep Selling Directive to a suretyship contract, extending consumer protection to guarantors. This illustrates how EU functional concepts (consumer) override national dogmatic classifications (unilateral contract) to provide social protection. The DCFR Book IV.G proposes a model law for personal security, emphasizing the duty to warn the surety of the risks (Cherednychenko, 2007).

Finally, the "System" is in flux. The traditional "vertical" silos of contract types (sale, lease) are being crossed by "horizontal" regulations (consumer, digital, sustainable). The modern European contract system is a matrix where the applicable rule depends on the intersection of the type of activity and the status of the parties.

Section 2: The Sale of Goods: The Core of the Internal Market

The contract of sale (emptio venditio) is the engine of the European economy. Its harmonization has been the primary goal of EU private law policy. The dual regime of the CISG (for international B2B) and EU Directives (for B2C) defines the landscape. The Sale of Goods Directive (SGD) (2019/771) creates a nearly fully harmonized regime for consumer sales. It defines "conformity" based on both subjective requirements (contract terms) and objective requirements (normal quality, durability). This definition is mandatory; parties cannot contract out of it to the detriment of the consumer. This ensures that a "European standard of quality" applies across the internal market, reducing the "lemon" problem in cross-border trade (Staudenmayer, 2020).

The CISG (Vienna Convention) is a success story of global unification. Adopted by most EU states (major exception: UK), it governs B2B sales unless excluded. It adopts a "unitary" concept of breach (any non-performance) and a "functional" approach to remedies. Unlike national codes that might distinguish between "delivery of wrong goods" (aliud) and "defective goods" (peius), the CISG treats both as a "lack of conformity." This simplification reduces litigation costs. The CISG's concept of "fundamental breach" (Article 25) restricts termination to serious cases, preserving the contract whenever possible (favor contractus). This pro-trade bias makes it the default law for European exporters (Schwenzer, 2016).

The Remedies structure in EU consumer sales is hierarchical. The consumer must first request repair or replacement (cure). Only if these are impossible, disproportionate, or fail, can they request price reduction or termination. This hierarchy protects the seller's right to cure and prevents economic waste. It contrasts with the UK's traditional "right to reject" (short-term right to terminate immediately). The SGD compromise allows Member States to maintain a short-term right to reject (30 days), respecting the common law tradition while enforcing the hierarchy for long-term defects. This creates a "tiered" remedy system that balances the seller's interest in stability with the consumer's interest in utility (Mak, 2020).

"Durability" is a new objective requirement for conformity under the SGD. Goods must possess the durability that is normal for goods of the same type. This empowers consumers to claim remedies if a product fails prematurely (e.g., a washing machine breaking after 2 years). It is a legal tool against "planned obsolescence." While the limitation period is generally 2 years, the durability requirement can theoretically extend the assessment of conformity. The introduction of the "Commercial Guarantee of Durability" forces producers who advertise durability to be legally bound by that statement (Svennerstål, 2022).

"Goods with Digital Elements" (Smart Goods) are integrated into the sales regime. A smart watch is a single good consisting of hardware and software. The seller is liable for the conformity of both. This solves the problem of "mixed contracts." Crucially, the seller owes an "obligation to update" the software for a reasonable period. This extends the sales contract into a continuous service relationship. The seller is not just delivering a product but maintaining a digital ecosystem. Failure to update constitutes a lack of conformity, triggering sales remedies (Spindler, 2016).

Passing of Risk is harmonized for consumer sales by the Consumer Rights Directive. The risk passes when the consumer acquires "physical possession" of the goods. This protects the consumer from loss during transport. In B2B sales (CISG/National law), risk often passes upon handing over to the carrier (FOB/ex works). This difference reflects the policy that the professional trader is better placed to insure the transport risk than the consumer. The clear definition of the risk transfer point is essential for determining who bears the cost of lost or damaged shipments (Loos, 2014).

Delivery rules are also harmonized. The trader must deliver without undue delay and no later than 30 days. Failure to deliver allows the consumer to terminate after a grace period. This statutory deadline provides certainty. In B2B sales, "Time is of the essence" clauses are common, allowing immediate termination for late delivery in volatile markets (e.g., commodities). The divergence between the "strict" commercial time and the "flexible" consumer time reflects the different economic functions of the contracts (speculation vs. consumption).

"Burden of Proof" regarding defects is a critical procedural rule. Under the SGD, any lack of conformity which becomes apparent within one year of delivery is presumed to have existed at the time of delivery. (Member States can extend this to two years). This reversal of the burden of proof is the "teeth" of consumer protection. It relieves the consumer of the impossible technical task of proving the origin of the defect. For the seller, it creates a risk period where they are effectively strictly liable for any malfunction (Hoekstra, 2020).

"Direct Action" against the producer is not fully harmonized. In some states (France), a buyer can sue the manufacturer directly (action directe). In others (Germany), privity of contract restricts claims to the immediate seller. The SGD allows Member States to introduce direct producer liability but does not mandate it. However, the "Commercial Guarantee" (manufacturer's warranty) is legally binding under EU law. If a producer advertises a "5-year warranty," the consumer has a direct contractual claim against the producer based on the advertising statement. This "marketing" creates a collateral contract (Terryn, 2016).

Installation is part of conformity. If the goods are installed incorrectly by the trader, or by the consumer due to poor instructions ("IKEA clause"), this is a lack of conformity. This rule integrates the service element (installation) and the information element (instructions) into the concept of the good itself. It ensures that the consumer buys a "functioning result," not just a box of parts.

Finally, the Circular Economy impacts sales law. The "Right to Repair" initiative aims to prioritize repair over replacement even more strongly. Proposals suggest extending the guarantee period after repair or requiring sellers to offer refurbished goods. This shifts the logic of sales law from "turnover" (selling new things) to "sustainability" (keeping things working). The contract of sale is being repurposed to serve ecological goals.

Section 3: Service Contracts and the Services Directive

The service sector accounts for 70% of the EU economy, yet the "Contract of Service" remains the least harmonized area of private law. There is no "European Service Contract Act." Instead, services are governed by the Services Directive (2006/123/EC), which is primarily an administrative law instrument removing authorization schemes and barriers. However, it contains private law provisions: Article 20 prohibits discrimination against service recipients based on nationality or residence (e.g., distinct prices for tourists). Article 22 imposes information duties on providers (insurance, contact details). These rules inject public law "market access" principles into private service contracts (Hatzopoulos, 2012).

National laws distinguish between various types of services: Construction (Werkvertrag - result based), Medical Treatment (Dienstvertrag - means based), Legal Advice, and Transport. The DCFR Book IV.C attempts to create a general framework for "Service Contracts." It proposes a default rule that if the service provider is a professional, they must exercise the care and skill which a reasonable professional would exercise. If the result is guaranteed (e.g., fixing a shoe), it is strict liability. If the result is uncertain (e.g., surgery), it is fault-based. This "professional standard" is the unifying thread of European service law (Von Bar, 2009).

"Information Duties" are the primary tool of EU regulation in services. The Services Directive and the Consumer Rights Directive require providers to disclose the total price, the scope of the service, and their liability insurance. For complex services (financial, legal), these duties are extensive. The rationale is that services are "experience goods" whose quality is hard to judge before consumption. Transparency reduces this risk. A breach of these information duties can lead to damages or the right to terminate the service contract (Busch, 2020).

"Professional Qualifications" and the recognition of diplomas (Directive 2005/36/EC) affect the validity of service contracts. If a professional (e.g., an architect) is not recognized in the host state, can they validly contract? The CJEU case law (Corsten) suggests that disproportionate qualification requirements cannot bar the enforcement of a contract. The principle of "Mutual Recognition" applies: a service validly provided under home state rules should be accepted in the host state. This allows the "service contract" to travel across borders without being nullified by local corporatist rules (Davies, 2008).

Construction Contracts are notoriously complex. The lack of harmonization leads to the use of standard forms like FIDIC (International Federation of Consulting Engineers) in cross-border projects. These forms act as a private "lex constructionis." They regulate risk allocation, variations, and dispute resolution. In the absence of an EU code, this "private ordering" standardizes the construction market. However, issues like "joint and several liability" in subcontracting chains are regulated by the Posted Workers Enforcement Directive to prevent social dumping in the construction sector (Van Gerven, 2000).

Medical Services are regulated by the Cross-Border Healthcare Directive (2011/24/EU). It codifies the patient's right to receive services in another Member State and be reimbursed. It requires transparency regarding quality and safety standards. While it does not harmonize medical liability law (which remains national tort/contract law), it creates a "European Patient" subject with market rights. The service contract here is embedded in a system of social security reimbursement, creating a triangular relationship between patient, provider, and the state (Hervey & McHale, 2015).

Legal Services are liberalized by the Lawyers' Services Directive. Lawyers can provide temporary services in another state under their home title. The contract for legal services is subject to the deontological rules of the host state (e.g., professional secrecy, conflict of interest). This "double deontology" creates a complex contractual environment where the lawyer must navigate two sets of ethical codes. The CJEU (Wouters) has scrutinized bar association rules (e.g., bans on multidisciplinary partnerships) to ensure they do not disproportionately restrict the freedom to provide legal services (Morijn, 2006).

"Digital Services" (Social Media, Cloud) are now regulated by the Digital Services Act (DSA) and Digital Content Directive. These are service contracts where the counter-performance is often data. The DCD applies "sales-like" remedies (conformity, termination) to these services. The DSA imposes "due diligence" obligations on intermediary services (hosting, caching). This creates a specialized "Digital Service Law" that is far more harmonized than the general law of physical services. The intangible nature of the service allows for easier standardization (Metzger, 2019).

Financial Services (MiFID II, PSD2) are subject to detailed conduct of business rules. The service provider (bank, investment firm) must act honestly, fairly, and professionally in the best interests of the client. They must perform a "suitability" or "appropriateness" test before selling a product. A breach of these regulatory duties can lead to private law liability (damages) for "misselling." This "juridification" of the financial advice contract protects the client from the conflicts of interest inherent in the commission-based service model (Moloney, 2014).

Transport Services are governed by specific Regulations (Air Passenger Rights 261/2004, Rail Passengers). These create a strict liability regime for delays and cancellations. The contract of carriage is overlaid with statutory rights to compensation. The CJEU has interpreted these rights broadly (e.g., technical faults are not extraordinary circumstances). This sectoral regime provides a high level of protection that exceeds general contract law, treating the passenger as a "captive" of the service provider (Tonner, 2011).

"Servitization" of the Economy (Product-as-a-Service). Manufacturers are moving from selling cars to selling "mobility" (car sharing). This shifts the legal relation from a transfer of ownership to a continuous service contract. The focus shifts from "defect at delivery" to "guaranteed uptime." Private law must adapt to regulate these "performance-based contracts" where the risk of asset maintenance remains with the provider.

Finally, the "Services of General Interest" (Utilities: water, energy) are subject to "Universal Service Obligations." The provider must contract with every consumer at an affordable price. The freedom of contract (freedom to choose the partner) is abolished to ensure social inclusion. The service contract here fulfills a public function, ensuring access to essential needs within a market framework (Sauter, 2013).

Section 4: Commercial Contracts and Supply Chains

Commercial (B2B) contracts are the nervous system of the European economy. While guided by the principle of Freedom of Contract, they are increasingly subject to EU regulation to ensure fair competition and protect SMEs. The Late Payment Directive (2011/7/EU) is the primary intervention. It combats the culture of long payment delays that bankrupt SMEs. It sets a default payment term of 30 days and makes "grossly unfair" payment terms and interest rates unenforceable. This limits the power of large buyers to use their suppliers as cheap credit lines. It introduces a mandatory "payment discipline" into commercial relations (Janssen, 2015).

Distribution Agreements (Agency, Franchise) are crucial for market penetration. The Commercial Agents Directive (86/653/EEC) is a key instrument. It protects independent commercial agents by granting them a right to "indemnity" or "compensation" upon termination of the contract, representing the value of the goodwill they built up. This creates a "proprietary" interest in the customer base. The CJEU (Ingmar) ruled that these protections are mandatory and apply even if the contract is governed by non-EU law, provided the agent acts in the EU. This "territorial scope" prevents principals from evading EU social protection standards through choice of law clauses (Saintier, 2002).

Franchising relies on the block exemption regulations in competition law. A franchise agreement restricts competition (e.g., exclusive territories, price recommendations). To be valid, it must comply with EU antitrust rules (Article 101 TFEU). The "Vertical Block Exemption Regulation" (VBER) creates a "safe harbor" for agreements that meet certain market share thresholds. This effectively codifies the permissible structure of distribution contracts. Contract drafting in Europe is thus an exercise in "antitrust compliance," ensuring the network structure does not constitute a cartel (Whish & Bailey, 2018).

Global Supply Chains are regulated by the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D). This directive requires large companies to identify and mitigate human rights and environmental impacts in their supply chains. It obliges companies to integrate these duties into their contracts with suppliers ("cascading" clauses). Breach of this duty can lead to civil liability. This turns the private supply contract into a vehicle for enforcing public international norms (e.g., no child labor). It extraterritorializes EU values through the mechanism of private contract law (Sjåfjell, 2018).

Unfair Trading Practices (UTP) Directive in the agri-food chain protects farmers and small suppliers from the buying power of supermarkets. It blacklists practices like late payments for perishables, unilateral contract changes, or forcing suppliers to pay for wastage. This sector-specific regulation acknowledges that in highly concentrated markets, freedom of contract is a myth. It imposes a "fairness code" on the supply chain, policing the abuse of economic dependence (Purnhagen, 2019).

Factoring and Receivables Finance relies on the assignment of claims. The main legal barrier is "bans on assignment" in supply contracts. Big buyers prohibit suppliers from assigning their invoices to banks. The UN Receivables Convention (and national reforms influenced by it) overrides these bans, making the assignment valid despite the contractual prohibition. This promotes access to finance. The proposed EU Regulation on the law applicable to the third-party effects of assignments aims to provide legal certainty for cross-border factoring, facilitating the flow of liquidity in supply chains (Bazinas, 2011).

"Smart Contracts" in Supply Chains. Blockchain is used to track provenance and automate payments. A smart contract can release payment automatically when a GPS sensor confirms the goods have arrived. This "automated performance" reduces transaction costs. However, it requires a legal framework that recognizes digital evidence and automated declarations of will. The Data Act facilitates this by regulating the "smart contracts" used for data sharing, setting essential requirements for their robustness and termination (De Filippi & Wright, 2018).

Choice of Law and Forum. B2B contracts rely on the Rome I and Brussels I Recast Regulations. Parties have wide autonomy to choose the applicable law (e.g., English law is popular even post-Brexit) and the court (e.g., Paris or Amsterdam commercial courts). The Hague Choice of Court Convention ensures that these exclusive jurisdiction clauses are respected globally. This "judicial market" allows companies to select the most efficient legal infrastructure for their deals, driving regulatory competition among legal systems (Garcimartín, 2016).

Arbitration is the standard for international commercial disputes. The New York Convention ensures the enforceability of awards. While arbitration is private, EU law (competition, consumer) constitutes a "public policy" (ordre public) that arbitrators must respect. The Eco Swiss judgment confirmed that an arbitral award can be set aside if it violates EU competition law. This establishes the supremacy of EU economic public order even over the private justice system of arbitration (Bermann, 2012).

Standard Terms (General Terms and Conditions). B2B contracts are often battles of forms. National laws vary on the "knock-out" vs. "last shot" rule. The PECL and DCFR favor the "knock-out" rule: conflicting standard terms cancel each other out, and the default law applies. This promotes fairness and prevents a party from imposing its terms by simply sending the last email.

"Hardship" and Price Adaptation. In volatile supply chains (energy, commodities), price fluctuation is a major risk. Hardship clauses allow for renegotiation. If the contract is silent, national laws diverge (French law allows judicial adaptation; English law does not). The trend in international contracting (ICC Hardship Clause) is to include explicit mechanisms for price adjustment to ensure the long-term survival of the commercial relationship.

Finally, the "Digitalization of Trade Finance" (e-Bills of Lading). The Model Law on Electronic Transferable Records (MLETR) is being adopted by some states to allow trade documents to be purely digital. This removes the paper bottleneck in global supply chains, allowing the "legal flow" of goods to move as fast as the "physical flow."

Section 5: The System of Consumer Credit and Financial Contracts

Consumer credit is the fuel of consumption. The Consumer Credit Directive (2008/48/EC) (CCD) harmonizes the market to allow cross-border lending and prevent over-indebtedness. Its core tool is the Standard European Consumer Credit Information (SECCI) form. This standardized document allows consumers to compare offers (APR, total cost) from different banks. The directive also grants a 14-day right of withdrawal, allowing consumers to walk away from impulsive borrowing. This "cooling-off" period is a safeguard against the aggressive marketing of easy money (Ferretti, 2008).

The "Creditworthiness Assessment" is a mandatory duty. Before lending, the creditor must assess the consumer's ability to repay based on sufficient information. This is a "responsible lending" obligation. If a bank lends to someone who cannot pay, they may lose their right to interest or face sanctions. This shifts the responsibility from the borrower (to know their limits) to the lender (to check the limits). It aims to prevent the social cost of insolvency. In the age of Big Data, this assessment increasingly relies on algorithmic scoring, raising GDPR issues about profiling and data accuracy (Vanderdiepen, 2019).

The Mortgage Credit Directive (2014/17/EU) regulates housing loans. It introduces the ESIS (European Standardised Information Sheet) and imposes strict competency standards on staff. It regulates "tying practices" (forcing consumers to buy insurance with the loan). Crucially, it creates a framework for "foreign currency loans," requiring lenders to offer a right to convert the loan into the national currency if the exchange rate fluctuates significantly. This directly addresses the trauma of the Swiss Franc mortgage crisis in Eastern Europe, allocating the currency risk to the professional lender (Raslan, 2017).

"Early Repayment" is a statutory right. Consumers can pay off their debt early to reduce the interest burden. Lenders can charge a "fair and objective" compensation for their lost funding costs, but this is capped. This right ensures "financial mobility," allowing consumers to switch to cheaper loans. It prevents "debt prisons" where borrowers are locked into high-interest products (Rott, 2013).

"APR" (Annual Percentage Rate) is the harmonized metric of cost. It creates a single mathematical formula to express the price of credit, including interest and fees. This "truth in lending" tool is the cornerstone of price transparency. However, the rise of "Buy Now Pay Later" (BNPL) and "zero-interest" schemes challenges this model. The new Consumer Credit Directive proposal aims to cover these "interest-free" but fee-laden products, ensuring that all forms of digital credit are transparent (Cherednychenko, 2013).

"Unfair Terms" in Financial Contracts. The CJEU’s jurisprudence (Kasler, Ibercaja) has been particularly active here. Terms setting "floor clauses" (minimum interest rates) or "default interest" that is disproportionately high are routinely struck down. The Court requires transparency not just of the text but of the economic mechanism. A borrower must understand how the variable rate is calculated and what the economic consequences are. This "material transparency" standard is higher for complex financial products than for ordinary goods (Domurath, 2013).

Crowdfunding is regulated by the European Crowdfunding Service Providers Regulation (ECSP). It creates a single passport for platforms. It imposes investor protection rules (Key Investment Information Sheet). It distinguishes between "sophisticated" and "non-sophisticated" investors, creating a tiered contract law regime. This facilitates the "democratization of finance" while managing the high risks of startup investing (Macchiavello, 2015).

Payment Services (PSD2) revolutionize the contract between customer and bank. It introduces "Open Banking." Customers can mandate third parties (TPPs) to access their bank account data to initiate payments or aggregate information. This breaks the bank's monopoly on the customer's data. It creates a new set of contractual relations involving the user, the bank (ASPSP), and the fintech (TPP), governed by strict security and liability rules for unauthorized transactions. The principle is that the customer "owns" their account data and can contract with anyone to use it (Gikay, 2019).

Crypto-Asset Services (MiCA). Contracts for the custody or exchange of crypto-assets are now regulated. Providers must be authorized and follow conduct of business rules. They are liable for the loss of crypto-assets due to hacks (strict liability up to the market value). This integrates the "wild west" of crypto into the disciplined system of EU financial contract law, providing consumers with a safety net when dealing with digital value (Zetzsche et al., 2020).

Insurance Contracts remain largely national due to the failure of harmonization. However, the Insurance Distribution Directive (IDD) harmonizes the sales process. It imposes the "demands and needs" test: the insurer must specify the customer's needs before selling. For insurance-based investment products (IBIPs), the rules are even stricter. While the contract (coverage, exclusions) varies, the distribution (how it is sold) is unified, ensuring that consumers are not mis-sold unsuitable products across the EU (Marano, 2019).

Finally, the "Financial Inclusion" principle. The Payment Accounts Directive guarantees the right to a "basic bank account" for all legal residents, including the homeless and asylum seekers. Banks cannot refuse based on profitability. This creates a "universal service obligation" in banking. The financial contract is recognized as an essential utility for social participation, transforming the private bank account into a semi-public right of citizenship.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Bazinas, S. V. (2011). The Work of UNCITRAL on Security Interests. Uniform Law Review.

  • Becherril, M. (2015). The Right of Withdrawal in the Consumer Rights Directive. European Review of Private Law.

  • Ben-Shahar, O., & Schneider, C. E. (2014). More Than You Wanted to Know: The Failure of Mandated Disclosure. Princeton University Press.

  • Bermann, G. A. (2012). Navigating EU Law and the Law of International Arbitration. Arbitration International.

  • Busch, C. (2020). The Future of EU Consumer Law. European Review of Private Law.

  • Cherednychenko, O. (2007). Fundamental Rights, Contract Law and the Protection of the Weaker Party. Sellier.

  • Cherednychenko, O. (2013). Europeanisation of Consumer Credit Law. European Review of Private Law.

  • De Filippi, P., & Wright, A. (2018). Blockchain and the Law. Harvard University Press.

  • Domurath, I. (2013). Mortgage Debt and the Social Function of Contract. European Law Journal.

  • Ferretti, F. (2008). The Law and Consumer Credit Information in the European Community. Routledge.

  • Garcimartín, F. (2016). The Hague Choice of Court Convention. Recueil des Cours.

  • Gikay, A. (2019). European Consumer Law and Blockchain Based Financial Services. Springer.

  • Grundmann, S. (2012). European Company Law. Intersentia.

  • Hatzopoulos, V. (2012). Regulating Services in the European Union. Oxford University Press.

  • Hervey, T., & McHale, J. (2015). European Union Health Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Hesselink, M. (2011). CFR & Social Justice. Sellier.

  • Hoekstra, J. (2020). The Conformity of Digital Content. EuCML.

  • Huber, P. (2011). The CISG. Sellier.

  • Janssen, A. (2015). The New EU Late Payment Directive. European Review of Private Law.

  • Loos, M. (2010). The Review of the Consumer Acquis. Sellier.

  • Loos, M. (2014). The Rights of Withdrawal. European Review of Private Law.

  • Macchiavello, E. (2015). Peer-to-Peer Lending and EU Regulation. European Business Law Review.

  • Mak, C. (2020). Legal Methodology of European Private Law. Cambridge Companion.

  • Marano, P. (2019). The Insurance Distribution Directive. Springer.

  • Martinek, M. (2008). Commercial Agency, Franchise and Distribution Contracts. Sellier.

  • Metzger, A. (2019). Data as Counter-Performance. JIPITEC.

  • Micklitz, H.-W. (2011). The Many Concepts of Social Justice in European Private Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Moloney, N. (2014). EU Securities and Financial Markets Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Morijn, J. (2006). Reframing Human Rights and Trade. Intersentia.

  • Perzanowski, A., & Schultz, J. (2016). The End of Ownership. MIT Press.

  • Purnhagen, K. (2019). The Unfair Trading Practices Directive. European Law Review.

  • Raslan, A. (2017). Consumer Credit in Europe. Cambridge University Press.

  • Rott, P. (2013). The Consumer Credit Directive. Common Market Law Review.

  • Saintier, S. (2002). Commercial Agency Law. Hart.

  • Sauter, W. (2013). Public Services in EU Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Schmid, C. U. (2014). Tenancy Law and Housing Policy in Europe. Edward Elgar.

  • Schwenzer, I. (2016). Commentary on the UN Convention on the International Sale of Goods. Oxford University Press.

  • Sjåfjell, B. (2018). Beyond Climate Risk. Deakin Law Review.

  • Spindler, G. (2016). Contracts for the Supply of Digital Content. Common Market Law Review.

  • Staudenmayer, D. (2020). The Directives on the Sale of Goods and Digital Content. European Review of Private Law.

  • Stuyck, J. (2015). Unfair Contract Terms. Common Market Law Review.

  • Svennerstål, P. (2022). The Right to Repair in the EU. European Environmental Law Review.

  • Terryn, E. (2016). The Late Payment Directive. J. Eur. Consumer & Mkt. L..

  • Tonner, K. (2011). Passenger Rights. European Review of Contract Law.

  • Van Gerven, W. (2000). Cases, Materials and Text on National, Supranational and International Tort Law. Hart.

  • Vanderdiepen, S. (2019). The Creditworthiness Assessment. Journal of European Consumer and Market Law.

  • Von Bar, C. (2009). Draft Common Frame of Reference (DCFR). Sellier.

  • Werbach, K., & Cornell, N. (2017). Contracts Ex Machina. Duke Law Journal.

  • Whish, R., & Bailey, D. (2018). Competition Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Whittaker, S. (2011). The Optional Instrument. CMLR.

  • Zetzsche, D., et al. (2020). The Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation. EBI.

  • Zimmermann, R. (1996). The Law of Obligations. Oxford University Press.

6
EU Corporate Law
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Evolution and Constitutional Basis of EU Company Law

European Company Law is a unique supranational legal field that has evolved significantly since the Treaty of Rome (1957). Its primary objective is to create a Single Market for companies, ensuring that businesses can be formed and operate across the European Union without legal discrimination. The constitutional basis for this field lies in the "Freedom of Establishment" (Articles 49 and 54 TFEU), which grants companies the right to set up subsidiaries, branches, or agencies in other Member States. Article 50(2)(g) TFEU specifically empowers the EU to coordinate national company laws to protect the interests of members (shareholders) and third parties (creditors). This "harmonization" mandate has led to a dual system: a layer of EU directives that coordinate national laws, and a layer of EU regulations that create supranational corporate forms. The tension between the goal of market integration and the preservation of national legal traditions defines the history of this field (Grundmann, 2012).

In the early decades, the EU pursued a strategy of "prescriptive harmonization." Directives were detailed and aimed at standardizing every aspect of company law, from formation to capital maintenance. The First Company Law Directive (1968) harmonized the rules on disclosure, validity of obligations, and nullity of companies. This ensured that a third party dealing with a German GmbH or a French SARL could rely on a common set of safeguards regarding the company's existence and the power of its directors. This foundational harmonization created a baseline of trust essential for cross-border trade. However, as the EU expanded, the diversity of legal systems made detailed consensus impossible, leading to a stagnation in the legislative process during the 1980s and 1990s (Andenas & Wooldridge, 2009).

The "jurisprudential turn" in the late 1990s revolutionized the field. The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) delivered a series of landmark judgments—Centros (1999), Überseering (2002), and Inspire Art (2003)—that liberalized corporate mobility. The Court ruled that Member States could not refuse to recognize companies incorporated in other Member States, even if they had no real economic activity there. This validated the "incorporation theory" for the purpose of free movement, allowing companies to choose the most favorable jurisdiction (regulatory competition) regardless of their physical location. This jurisprudence dismantled the protectionist "real seat" doctrines of countries like Germany, forcing a modernization of national company laws to prevent corporate flight (Ringe, 2013).

Following this judicial liberalization, the EU shifted its legislative strategy from prescriptive harmonization to "enabling" legislation and "minimum harmonization." The Action Plan of 2003 focused on modernizing corporate governance and fostering efficiency. The emphasis moved away from protecting stakeholders through rigid capital rules towards ensuring transparency and shareholder rights. This neoliberal turn aligned EU company law with the global trend towards the "shareholder value" model, albeit tempered by the European social model's insistence on employee participation. The "Better Regulation" agenda further pushed for simplifying rules to reduce administrative burdens on SMEs (Hopt, 2015).

The "supranational forms" represent the most ambitious layer of EU company law. The creation of the Societas Europaea (SE) in 2001 offered businesses a corporate form governed directly by EU law (Regulation 2157/2001). The SE allows a company to operate throughout the EU with a single legal personality and a unified management structure, bypassing the need for a web of national subsidiaries. However, the SE Regulation is incomplete; it relies on the national law of the registered office for tax and insolvency issues. This hybrid nature—part EU, part national—reflects the political compromise necessary to overcome Member State resistance to a fully federal corporate law (Eidenmüller, 2003).

The "European Cooperative Society" (SCE) and "European Economic Interest Grouping" (EEIG) are other supranational forms designed for specific types of collaboration. The EEIG allows companies to form a consortium for specific projects without merging. These forms demonstrate the EU's commitment to providing a diverse "menu" of corporate vehicles. However, the failure of the "European Private Company" (SPE) proposal, due to disagreements over worker participation, highlights the persistent difficulty in creating a unified form for SMEs. The current landscape is thus dominated by national forms operating within a harmonized framework (Schulze, 2010).

"Corporate Governance" harmonization has accelerated in response to financial crises. The Shareholder Rights Directives (SRD I and II) aim to encourage long-term shareholder engagement and transparency. They regulate "Say on Pay" (shareholder vote on director remuneration) and related party transactions. Unlike the US model, which relies on federal securities law, the EU intervenes directly in the internal governance structure of companies. This "publicization" of corporate governance reflects the EU view that the internal health of companies is a matter of public interest for the stability of the internal market (Moloney, 2014).

"Digitalization" is the current frontier. The Digitalisation Directive (2019/1151) mandates that Member States allow the online formation of companies without the need for physical presence before a notary. This pushes national systems (especially those with strong notarial traditions like Germany and Spain) to modernize. It creates a "digital lifecycle" for companies, from registration to filing documents. The interconnection of business registers (BRIS) ensures that information about a company in one state is instantly accessible in all others, creating a transparent pan-European corporate data space (Schmidt, 2020).

"Employee Participation" (Codetermination) remains the most politically sensitive area. Countries like Germany and Sweden require worker representatives on the board. The fear that companies would use EU freedoms to escape these rules blocked harmonization for decades. The solution found in the Cross-Border Mergers Directive and SE Regulation is the "before-after" principle: if a company had participation before the merger/conversion, it must retain it. This "negotiation mechanism" protects the European social model while allowing corporate restructuring, creating a complex layer of labor law within corporate law (Villiers, 2010).

"Capital Maintenance" rules, traditionally strict in Europe (minimum capital, restrictions on distributions), have been liberalized. The Second Company Law Directive was amended to allow more flexibility, influenced by the US model of "solvency tests." However, most Continental systems retain the concept of "legal capital" as a creditor protection mechanism. The debate between "legal capital" (static protection) and "solvency tests" (dynamic protection) continues to divide European scholars, representing the clash between the Civil Law emphasis on certainty and the Common Law emphasis on efficiency (Enriques & Macey, 2001).

"Groups of Companies" law remains largely unharmonized. While the economic reality is dominated by corporate groups, the law still treats each subsidiary as an independent entity. The EU has abandoned the idea of a "Ninth Directive" on groups. Instead, it relies on specific interventions: accounting consolidation rules, insolvency coordination, and the "Rozenblum doctrine" (allowing intra-group transfers if balanced over time). This lack of a comprehensive group law is a major gap, often filled by judge-made law on "shadow directorship" and "piercing the corporate veil" (Petrin & Choudhury, 2018).

Finally, the "Sustainability" turn is redefining the purpose of the corporation. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) and the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D) impose mandatory ESG obligations. This moves EU company law beyond the shareholder/stakeholder debate towards a "planet-centric" model. The constitutional basis is expanding from pure market integration (Art 114) to sustainable development (Art 11 TFEU), embedding the corporation in a broader societal and ecological context.

Section 2: Corporate Mobility: Mergers, Divisions, and Conversions

Corporate mobility refers to the ability of a company to restructure and move across borders within the Single Market. This includes Cross-Border Mergers, Divisions (splitting), and Conversions (moving the seat). For decades, this was practically impossible due to conflicting national laws and tax barriers. The Cross-Border Mergers Directive (2005/56/EC), later consolidated into the Company Law Package (Directive 2019/2121), created a procedural framework to facilitate these operations. It ensures that a merger between a French and a German company is legally valid and that the new entity succeeds to all assets and liabilities. This legal certainty is the lubricant of European industrial consolidation (Siems, 2008).

The "Cross-Border Conversion" (redomiciliation) was the most contentious issue. Can a company move its headquarters from Poland to Luxembourg without liquidating and re-incorporating? The CJEU in Polbud (2017) confirmed that the freedom of establishment includes the right to convert. The 2019 Directive codified this, creating a harmonized procedure for cross-border conversions. This allows companies to change their applicable law (lex societatis) while retaining their legal personality. It creates a "market for corporate charters" in Europe, similar to the US, where companies can migrate to the most efficient jurisdiction (Wouters, 2018).

The Protection of Stakeholders is the counterweight to mobility. The 2019 Directive introduces a "triple protection" mechanism for employees, creditors, and minority shareholders. Creditors can apply for safeguards (guarantees) if the move jeopardizes their claims. Minority shareholders who oppose the move have a "right of exit" (cash compensation) at a fair price. Employees have information and consultation rights, and participation rights are preserved. This "conditioned mobility" ensures that the freedom to move is not used to expropriate stakeholders or escape liabilities (Schmidt, 2020).

The "Abuse Check" is a critical new feature. National authorities must block a cross-border operation if it is set up for "abusive or fraudulent purposes," such as evading tax or labor standards. This codifies the Cadbury Schweppes jurisprudence but gives national registrars the power to stop "artificial" moves. This creates a tension: how to distinguish legitimate regulatory arbitrage from abuse? The Directive lists indicators (shell companies, no economic activity) to guide this assessment, empowering national authorities to act as gatekeepers of the internal market's integrity (Borg-Barthet, 2012).

Cross-Border Divisions allow a company to split into two entities in different Member States or spin off a subsidiary across a border. Before the 2019 Directive, this was legally uncertain. The new rules facilitate corporate restructuring and "asset partitioning." A company can now separate its risky assets from its safe assets across borders legally. This is vital for M&A activity and restructuring, allowing for the "partial migration" of a corporate entity (Winner, 2019).

The SE (Societas Europaea) Transfer of Seat was the precursor to general conversion rights. An SE can move its registered office to another Member State. This procedure served as a laboratory for the general directive. Major companies like Allianz and BASF adopted the SE form partly to gain this mobility. The SE experience showed that mobility is used not just for tax reasons but for aligning the legal seat with the commercial headquarters, rationalizing the corporate structure (Eidenmüller, 2003).

Taxation remains the biggest friction point. While company law allows the move, tax law often imposes an "Exit Tax" on unrealized capital gains. The CJEU in National Grid Indus ruled that immediate exit taxes are disproportionate; states must offer the option to defer payment until the assets are actually sold. The Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD) harmonizes exit tax rules. Corporate mobility in the EU is thus a dance between the "license to move" granted by company law and the "price of moving" charged by tax law (Terra & Wattel, 2012).

Insolvency and mobility are linked. Companies might move to a jurisdiction with a favorable insolvency regime ("bankruptcy tourism") before filing. The EU Insolvency Regulation attempts to curb this by pinning jurisdiction to the "Centre of Main Interests" (COMI). However, a genuine relocation of the COMI is permitted. The interaction between the Mobility Directive (corporate law) and the Insolvency Regulation creates a complex strategic space for distressed companies seeking to restructure (McCormack, 2017).

Digital Procedures facilitate mobility. The Business Registers Interconnection System (BRIS) allows the registry of the destination state to communicate directly with the registry of the departure state. This "digital handshake" ensures that the company is not deregistered in the old state until it is fully registered in the new one, preventing any "legal vacuum" or "zombie companies." This administrative interoperability is the backbone of the legal mobility regime.

The Role of Notaries and independent experts is reinforced. They must issue certificates confirming that all pre-operation conditions (stakeholder protection, solvency) are met. This "preventive control" provides legal certainty. Once the certificate is issued, the validity of the cross-border operation cannot be challenged. This shields the restructured company from nullity claims, ensuring the stability of the new corporate entity (Dysart, 2011).

Regulatory Arbitrage is the intended outcome. By making mobility easy, the EU encourages Member States to compete. This has led to reforms in national laws (e.g., the Belgian Code on Companies and Associations 2019) to make them more attractive. However, the "abuse check" and minimum harmonization of stakeholder rights set a floor to this competition, preventing a "race to the bottom" in essential standards while allowing a "race to the top" in efficiency (Enriques, 2006).

Finally, the "Real Seat" Debate is effectively dead for EU companies. A Member State can no longer require a company formed under its law to maintain its head office there. The "connecting factor" for EU companies is the registered office. This aligns the EU with the Anglo-American model, creating a fully fluid market for corporate charters bounded only by the abuse principle.

Section 3: Corporate Governance and Shareholder Rights

Corporate governance in the EU has evolved from a patchwork of national codes to a harmonized legal framework aimed at ensuring transparency, accountability, and long-termism. The Shareholder Rights Directive (SRD II) (2017/828) is the central instrument. It addresses the agency problems between shareholders and managers, and increasingly, between companies and society. Unlike the US focus on litigation, the EU focuses on ex ante rights: the right to vote, the right to information, and the right to approve pay. This reflects a "voice" rather than "exit" or "sue" approach to governance (Winter, 2018).

"Say on Pay" is a flagship reform. SRD II gives shareholders the right to vote on the "remuneration policy" (binding or advisory, depending on the state) and the "remuneration report." This aims to curb excessive executive pay and align it with the long-term interests of the company. It links pay to performance, including non-financial (ESG) metrics. This politicizes executive pay, making it a subject of public transparency and shareholder oversight, correcting the "managerial hegemony" of the past (Thomas & Van der Elst, 2015).

Identification of Shareholders is crucial in a system of intermediated securities where shares are held by chains of banks. SRD II grants companies the right to identify their shareholders. Intermediaries must pass on information down the chain. This "transparency of the chain" enables direct communication between the company and the investor, facilitating the exercise of voting rights. It overcomes the "rational apathy" caused by the complexity of cross-border voting (Micheler, 2015).

Institutional Investors and Asset Managers are subject to "comply or explain" transparency rules. They must disclose their engagement policies: how they monitor investee companies, exercise voting rights, and manage conflicts of interest. This attempts to turn passive index funds into active stewards ("Stewardship"). The EU views institutional investors not just as speculators but as guardians of corporate governance who have a duty to engage with management on strategy and sustainability (Sjåfjell, 2018).

Proxy Advisors (firms advising investors on how to vote) are regulated to prevent conflicts of interest and ensure the quality of their advice. They must disclose their methodology and code of conduct. This addresses the power of the "proxy duopoly" (ISS and Glass Lewis) over European corporate decisions. It ensures that the voting recommendations driving the market are based on accurate and transparent analysis (Hill, 2018).

Related Party Transactions (RPTs) are a major risk for looting, especially in concentrated ownership structures common in Europe (families, states). SRD II mandates that material RPTs be approved by the shareholders or the board and publicly announced. This protects minority shareholders from "tunneling" (extraction of assets) by controlling shareholders. It substitutes the heavy-handed ban on self-dealing with a regime of "transparency and procedural fairness" (Enriques, 2015).

The "Comply or Explain" principle remains the basis for Corporate Governance Codes. Listed companies must follow a national code or explain why they deviate. The EU monitors the quality of these explanations. While flexible, this soft law approach relies on the market to penalize poor governance. However, persistent poor quality of explanations has led the EU to harden some governance rules (like remuneration) into directives, signaling the limits of voluntary self-regulation (Keay, 2014).

Board Diversity is no longer optional. The "Women on Boards" Directive (2022/2381) requires large listed companies to ensure that at least 40% of non-executive directors are of the underrepresented sex. This is a quota with teeth (fines, annulment of appointments). It shatters the "glass ceiling" using hard law. It redefines "merit" to include diversity, arguing that diverse boards make better decisions and reflect societal values. This is social engineering through corporate law (Lombardo, 2017).

Audit Reform followed the financial crisis. The Audit Regulation enforces the rotation of auditors and restricts the non-audit services (consulting) they can provide to clients. This aims to ensure auditor independence and break the "cozy relationship" between auditors and management. The audit committee of the board plays a key supervisory role. This strengthens the "third line of defense" in corporate governance (truly independent verification) (Coffee, 2019).

Directors' Duties are traditionally national (business judgment rule). However, the CS3D introduces a harmonized duty for directors to consider "sustainability matters" (human rights, climate) in their decisions. This overrides the strict "shareholder primacy" model in national laws that might compel directors to maximize short-term profit. It creates a "duty of care" towards stakeholders and the environment, embedding ESG into the fiduciary DNA of the European director (Sjåfjell, 2018).

Short-termism is the enemy. The EU action plan on sustainable growth identifies "short-termism" in capital markets as a barrier to sustainability. The reform of governance rules aims to foster "long-term value creation." This includes potential loyalty shares (extra voting rights for long-term holders) and reporting on non-financial risks. The temporal horizon of EU corporate law is shifting from the quarterly report to the generational outlook.

Finally, the Enforcement of governance rules relies on a mix of public supervision (financial regulators) and private enforcement (shareholder suits). The difficulty of bringing derivative actions in Europe means that public oversight remains crucial. The EU is strengthening the powers of national competent authorities to police the new transparency and reporting rules.

Section 4: Corporate Sustainability and Non-Financial Reporting

The integration of sustainability into corporate law is the most transformative trend of the 21st century. It moves from "Corporate Social Responsibility" (voluntary philanthropy) to "Environmental, Social, and Governance" (mandatory legal duties). The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) (2022/2464) forces approx. 50,000 large companies to report on their impact on people and the planet. This is not just about financial risk to the company ("outside-in"), but the company's impact on the world ("inside-out"). This "Double Materiality" principle is the cornerstone of the EU approach, distinguishing it from the US/IFRS focus on purely financial materiality (Baum, 2021).

The European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) provide the technical grammar for this reporting. Companies must disclose data on carbon emissions, pollution, workforce treatment, and human rights. These reports must be audited ("limited assurance"). This elevates sustainability data to the same level of rigor as financial data. It creates a "taxonomy of virtue" where capital can be allocated based on reliable ESG performance. It aims to stop "greenwashing" by standardizing the metrics of corporate goodness (EFRAG, 2022).

The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CS3D) takes the next step: from reporting to acting. It requires large companies to identify, prevent, mitigate, and end adverse human rights and environmental impacts in their "chain of activities" (supply chain). This is a duty of conduct, not just result. Companies must have a due diligence policy, contractual assurances from suppliers, and a complaints mechanism. This extraterritorializes EU standards: a German carmaker must ensure its cobalt supplier in Congo respects human rights. It turns the multinational corporation into a "private regulator" of global standards (Sjåfjell, 2018).

Civil Liability attaches to this duty. If a company fails to perform due diligence and harm occurs (e.g., a factory collapse or oil spill), victims can sue the company in EU courts. This pierces the veil of the supply chain. Traditionally, a lead firm was not liable for the torts of its suppliers. CS3D creates a direct link of responsibility. It monetizes human rights violations, creating a powerful economic incentive for compliance. It bridges the gap between soft law (UN Guiding Principles) and hard civil liability (Bright, 2020).

Directors' Duties are expanded. Directors must take into account the consequences of their decisions for sustainability matters in the short, medium, and long term. They are responsible for setting up and overseeing the due diligence actions. This clarifies that "fiduciary duty" in the EU is not synonymous with maximizing share price at any cost. It creates a safe harbor for directors who sacrifice short-term profit to avoid environmental harm, aligning corporate governance with the Green Deal (Johnston, 2020).

The Taxonomy Regulation classifies what counts as "sustainable." It defines "environmentally sustainable economic activities." This prevents greenwashing by providing a scientific definition of "green." Companies must disclose what percentage of their turnover is Taxonomy-aligned. This directs capital flows towards the green transition. It is a "dictionary" for the green economy, turning vague ecological concepts into hard legal classifications (Busch, 2021).

Sustainable Finance connects corporate law with banking. Banks must assess the ESG risks of their loan books. This creates a transmission mechanism: banks pressure their corporate clients to be sustainable to improve the bank's own ratios. The cost of capital becomes linked to sustainability performance. Corporate law provides the data (CSRD), and financial law provides the incentive (Green Asset Ratios).

Stakeholder Engagement is mandated. The CS3D requires companies to engage with affected stakeholders (workers, communities) during the due diligence process. This is not just shareholder democracy but "stakeholder democracy." It gives a voice to those outside the corporate legal shell who are affected by its externalities. It proceduralizes the social license to operate.

Climate Litigation is the enforcement shadow. Cases like Milieudefensie v. Shell (in the Netherlands) use the "duty of care" in tort law, interpreted in light of the Paris Agreement, to order companies to reduce emissions. The CS3D codifies this duty. Corporate law becomes a battleground for climate justice. The company is treated as an actor with obligations to the global climate system, enforceable by civil society (Winter, 2021).

SMEs are indirectly affected. While the directives target large firms, the "trickle-down" effect means large buyers will demand sustainability data and compliance from their SME suppliers. The EU provides support and simplified standards for SMEs to prevent them from being squeezed out of supply chains. This integrates the entire economy into the sustainability reporting web.

Global Reach. The EU rules apply to non-EU companies generating significant turnover in the EU. This "Brussels Effect" forces US and Chinese firms to adopt EU sustainability standards to access the single market. The EU sets the global baseline for corporate accountability.

Finally, the Purpose of the Corporation. These reforms legally redefine the corporation. It is no longer a private property aggregate for shareholder gain, but a "socio-economic institution" embedded in a planetary reality. EU law is engineering a shift from "Shareholder Capitalism" to "Stakeholder Capitalism" through the mechanism of hard disclosure and liability.

Section 5: The "Societas Europaea" and Supranational Forms

The Societas Europaea (SE) (Council Regulation 2157/2001) is the flagship supranational corporate form. It allows companies to merge or form a holding company under EU law rather than national law. The SE has a European legal personality. It can move its seat to another Member State without liquidation. This mobility is its primary asset. Major corporations like Allianz, BASF, and SAP converted to SE status to signal their European identity and streamline their governance structure. The SE represents the "Europeanization" of the corporate subject (Eidenmüller, 2003).

However, the SE is not a complete federal company. It relies on the national law of its registered office for many issues (tax, insolvency, winding up). It is a "zebra"—striped with EU and national rules. This creates the "SE paradox": while designed to be uniform, an SE in Germany looks different from an SE in France. The Regulation is a skeleton; national law provides the flesh. This incomplete harmonization limits its utility for SMEs, as the setup costs are high (minimum capital €120,000) (Teichmann, 2003).

Worker Participation in the SE was the great compromise. The Directive on employee involvement (2001/86/EC) mandates negotiations between management and workers on participation (board seats) before an SE can be formed. The "standard rules" apply if negotiations fail, guaranteeing that workers do not lose existing rights (the "before-after" principle). This prevented companies from using the SE to escape German co-determination (Mitbestimmung). The SE thus exports the German/Nordic model of industrial democracy to the European level (Villiers, 2010).

The European Cooperative Society (SCE) (Regulation 1435/2003) mirrors the SE for the cooperative sector. It allows cooperatives to operate cross-border while preserving their democratic structure (one member, one vote). It promotes the "social economy." While less used than the SE, it provides a legal identity for mutuals and cooperatives that aligns with their specific values, distinct from the capital-centric stock corporation (Henn, 2013).

The European Economic Interest Grouping (EEIG) (Regulation 2137/85) was the first EU form. It is a partnership-like structure designed for cross-border collaboration (e.g., lawyers, R&D consortiums). It has unlimited liability for members and is tax-transparent (profits taxed at member level). It is a lightweight vehicle for "project cooperation." Its success lies in its simplicity and flexibility for joint ventures (Schulze, 2010).

The failure of the European Private Company (SPE) proposal. The EU attempted to create a simplified form for SMEs (the SPE) with 1 Euro capital and flexible governance. It failed due to opposition over worker participation and cross-border seat transfers. This failure leaves a gap: there is no simple "EU Inc." for startups. The gap is partially filled by the Single-Member Company Directive, which harmonizes national rules for one-person companies, but a true EU form for SMEs remains the "missing link" (Becht, 2008).

The "SUP" (Societas Unius Personae) was a subsequent attempt to create a digital, single-member company form. It also stalled. The political difficulty of harmonizing SME law (which touches on national labor and tax sensitivities) contrasts with the success of harmonizing Big Corp law (SE). The result is that the "European Corporate Form" is a luxury product for multinationals, while startups remain locked in national forms.

Regulatory Arbitrage with the SE. Companies use the SE to negotiate employee participation. In Germany, a growing company must add worker representatives to the board when it hits 2000 employees. By converting to an SE before hitting the threshold, the company can "freeze" the participation level at zero or a lower level. This "freezing effect" is a major driver of SE conversions in Germany, using EU law to bypass national labor thresholds. This remains legal but controversial (Gelter, 2018).

Branding and Identity. The SE label is used for corporate branding. It signals "Europeanness" and neutrality. For a merger of equals between a French and a Dutch company (e.g., Airbus), the SE avoids the "conquest" narrative of one national law prevailing. It provides a neutral legal ground. This symbolic value is a tangible asset in cross-border M&A.

Taxation of the SE. The SE does not have a consolidated tax base. It pays tax in each country where it has a permanent establishment. The lack of a "Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base" (CCCTB) limits the SE's efficiency. The "European" company still faces 27 tax authorities. Tax harmonization is the "final frontier" needed to make the supranational form truly effective.

Future Forms. Proposals for a "European Association" and "European Mutual" resurface regularly to support the non-profit sector. The idea of a "European B-Corp" (Benefit Corporation) is discussed to align with the sustainability agenda. The evolution of supranational forms reflects the changing priorities of the Union: from facilitating trade (EEIG) to consolidating capital (SE) to potentially fostering sustainability.

Finally, the Competition of Forms. The SE competes with national forms. If the SE is too complex, companies use the Dutch BV or Irish Ltd. The "market for corporate forms" ensures that the EU form must add value (mobility, image) to survive. The SE has found its niche, but it has not replaced national champions. The European corporate landscape remains a diversity of forms held together by a harmonized functional framework.


Questions


Cases


References
  • Andenas, M., & Wooldridge, F. (2009). European Comparative Company Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Baum, H. (2021). The Globalization of Corporate Governance. Global Jurist.

  • Becht, M. (2008). The European Private Company (SPE). ECGI.

  • Borg-Barthet, J. (2012). The Governing Law of Companies in EU Law. Hart.

  • Bright, C. (2020). The Civil Liability of the Parent Company for the Acts of its Subsidiaries. European Review of Private Law.

  • Busch, C. (2021). The Green Taxonomy. EuCML.

  • Coffee, J. C. (2019). The Future of the External Auditor. Columbia Law School.

  • Dysart, R. (2011). The Notary in France. Real Property, Trust and Estate Law Journal.

  • EFRAG. (2022). Draft European Sustainability Reporting Standards.

  • Eidenmüller, H. (2003). The Societas Europaea. European Business Organization Law Review.

  • Enriques, L. (2006). EC Company Law Directives and Regulations. Common Market Law Review.

  • Enriques, L. (2015). Related Party Transactions. European Corporate Governance Institute.

  • Enriques, L., & Macey, J. R. (2001). Creditors Versus Capital Formation: The Case Against the European Legal Capital Rules. Cornell Law Review.

  • Gelter, M. (2018). Centros, the Freedom of Establishment for Companies, and the Court's Accidental Vision for Corporate Law. ECGI.

  • Grundmann, S. (2012). European Company Law. Intersentia.

  • Hacker, P. (2019). Corporate Governance for Complex Cryptocurrencies. ECFR.

  • Henn, G. (2013). Handbuch des Aktienrechts. C.F. Müller.

  • Hill, J. G. (2018). Good Activist/Bad Activist. Vanderbilt Law Review.

  • Hopt, K. J. (2015). Corporate Governance in Europe. Journal of Corporate Law Studies.

  • Johnston, A. (2020). Climate-Related Financial Disclosures. European Company Law.

  • Keay, A. (2014). Comply or Explain. Legal Studies.

  • Lombardo, S. (2017). Some Reflections on the Gender Quota for Corporate Boards. European Business Organization Law Review.

  • McCormack, G. (2017). Business Restructuring in Europe. Journal of Corporate Law Studies.

  • Micheler, E. (2015). Intermediated Securities. Cambridge University Press.

  • Moloney, N. (2014). EU Securities and Financial Markets Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Petrin, M., & Choudhury, B. (2018). Group Company Liability. European Business Organization Law Review.

  • Ringe, W. G. (2013). Corporate Mobility in the European Union. Law and Financial Markets Review.

  • Schmidt, J. (2020). The New EU Company Law Package. European Company and Financial Law Review.

  • Schulze, R. (2010). European Private Law. Sellier.

  • Siems, M. (2008). Convergence in Shareholder Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Sjåfjell, B. (2018). Beyond Climate Risk. Deakin Law Review.

  • Teichmann, C. (2003). The European Company. German Law Journal.

  • Terra, B., & Wattel, P. (2012). European Tax Law. Kluwer.

  • Thomas, R. S., & Van der Elst, C. (2015). Say on Pay around the World. Washington University Law Review.

  • Villiers, C. (2010). Employee protection in the SE. European Business Law Review.

  • Winner, M. (2019). The New Cross-Border Division. ECFR.

  • Winter, J. (2018). Shareholder Engagement and the modern corporation. European Company Law.

  • Winter, G. (2021). The Rise of Climate Litigation. Journal of Environmental Law.

  • Wouters, J. (2018). The Freedom of Establishment. Common Market Law Review.

7
Intellectual Property Law in the EU
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Constitutional Architecture and the Dual System of Protection

The intellectual property (IP) law of the European Union is characterized by a unique "dual system" of protection that reflects the tension between national sovereignty and market integration. Unlike the United States, where IP is largely federal, the EU operates with two parallel layers of rights: national titles (e.g., a German patent, a French trademark) and unitary EU titles (e.g., the European Union Trade Mark, the Community Design). This architecture derives from the historical reluctance of Member States to cede control over property rights, which are deeply tied to national industrial policy and culture. However, the completion of the Internal Market necessitated the removal of barriers created by territorial IP rights. The legal basis for this unification is found in Article 118 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), which empowers the Parliament and Council to establish measures for the creation of European intellectual property rights to provide uniform protection throughout the Union.

The "Principle of Territoriality" remains the starting point of IP law, dictating that a right is effective only within the borders of the granting state. This creates a "partitioning" of the market, where a rights holder could theoretically block the import of genuine goods from another Member State. To counter this, the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) developed the "Doctrine of Exhaustion" (or First Sale Doctrine). This judge-made rule, now codified in directives, establishes that once a good protected by an IP right has been placed on the market in the European Economic Area (EEA) by the rights holder or with their consent, the right to control the further distribution of that good is "exhausted." This doctrine is the keystone of the free movement of goods, preventing IP rights from being used to re-erect border posts within the Single Market (Stothers, 2007).

The harmonization of national laws has been pursued through Directives, which require Member States to align their statutes while retaining their own grant procedures. The Trade Mark Directive and the Designs Directive are prime examples, creating a "harmonized coexistence" where national offices apply the same substantive rules as the EU Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO). This legislative technique ensures that even if a company opts for a national trademark, the conditions for validity and infringement are identical to those of an EU trademark. This reduces "forum shopping" and ensures legal certainty for businesses operating across borders. However, procedural harmonization remains incomplete, with significant variations in the speed and cost of national litigation (Kur & Senftleben, 2017).

The "Unitary" titles represent a higher level of integration, creating a single property object valid across the entire Union. The European Union Trade Mark (EUTM) and the Registered Community Design (RCD) are unitary in character: they can only be registered, transferred, or revoked for the whole of the EU. This "all or nothing" principle prevents the fragmentation of the title. If an EUTM is invalid in Malta, it falls for the entire EU. This centralization significantly reduces administrative costs for businesses, who need only file one application to cover 450 million consumers. The success of the EUTM has made the EUIPO in Alicante a central node in the global IP infrastructure (Von Mühlendahl et al., 2016).

The role of the Court of Justice (CJEU) has been transformative, moving from a "negative integrator" (striking down barriers) to a "positive lawmaker" via teleological interpretation. Through the preliminary ruling procedure, the CJEU has harmonized key concepts such as "distinctiveness" in trademark law and "communication to the public" in copyright law. The Court’s jurisprudence often prioritizes the "internal market" objective over traditional national dogmatics. For instance, in the field of trademarks, the Court has broadly interpreted the functions of a trademark to include not just the "origin function" but also "investment" and "advertising" functions, expanding the scope of protection against dilution and free-riding (Gangjee, 2013).

Competition law acts as an external constraint on the exercise of IP rights. While the existence of the right is protected, its exercise is subject to Article 102 TFEU (abuse of dominance). The "Essential Facilities Doctrine," applied in landmark cases like Magill and IMS Health, mandates that a dominant company must license its IP if the refusal prevents the emergence of a new product for which there is consumer demand and eliminates all competition. This interface between IP (exclusivity) and Antitrust (access) defines the limits of the property right, ensuring that IP does not become a tool for monopolizing downstream markets (Anderman, 2011).

The philosophical underpinnings of EU IP law are a hybrid of the "utilitarian" approach (incentivizing innovation) and the "moral rights" tradition (personality theory). Continental systems, particularly France and Germany, emphasize the droit d'auteur, which protects the personal bond between the author and the work. The EU acquis has had to reconcile this with the Anglo-Saxon copyright tradition, which treats the work as a tradable commodity. The resulting synthesis is evident in the term of protection (70 years post mortem auctoris), which reflects a high level of protection driven by the continental "author-centric" view (Sterling, 2018).

"Intellectual Property" in the EU is also a fundamental right, protected under Article 17(2) of the Charter of Fundamental Rights. This "constitutionalization" of IP requires the courts to balance the property right against other fundamental rights, such as freedom of expression and information (Article 11) or the freedom to conduct a business (Article 16). In cases involving internet filtering or blocking injunctions, the CJEU uses a proportionality test to ensure that IP enforcement does not disproportionately impinge on user privacy or the freedom of service providers. This shifts IP adjudication from a technical rule-application to a constitutional balancing exercise (Geiger, 2015).

The international dimension is governed by the TRIPS Agreement (Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) under the WTO. The EU was a driving force behind TRIPS, pushing for high global standards. Consequently, EU law is TRIPS-compliant, and the CJEU often refers to TRIPS to interpret EU directives. However, the EU often goes beyond TRIPS ("TRIPS-plus") in its bilateral trade agreements, exporting its high standards of protection (e.g., for Geographical Indications) to trading partners. This "Brussels Effect" makes EU IP norms a global regulatory benchmark (Bradford, 2020).

"Innovation Union," a flagship initiative of the Europe 2020 strategy, placed IP at the center of economic policy. It emphasized the need for a cheaper, simpler, and more effective patent system. This political momentum finally broke the decades-long deadlock on the Unitary Patent. It reframed IP not just as a legal technicality but as a crucial driver of competitiveness in the knowledge economy. The strategy also highlighted the need to valorize "intangible assets" for SMEs, which often underutilize the IP system due to high costs (European Commission, 2010).

The concept of "overlapping rights" adds complexity. A single product (e.g., a designer lamp) might be protected by copyright, design rights, and trademarks simultaneously. The CJEU has had to clarify the boundaries, particularly in the Cofemel judgment, where it ruled that national laws cannot impose a higher "artistic value" threshold for copyright protection of designs. If an object is "original" (the author's own intellectual creation), it gets copyright protection, regardless of whether it is mass-produced. This "cumulation" of rights strengthens the position of rights holders but complicates the "public domain" status of industrial objects (Derclaye, 2010).

Finally, the institutional framework is evolving. The EUIPO is expanding its competence beyond trademarks and designs to include the enforcement observatory and, recently, the registry for Geographical Indications for craft and industrial products. This agency serves as the administrative engine of the EU IP system, generating a massive surplus of fees and fostering a "network of offices" with national IP authorities. The system is moving towards a federalized administration of intellectual property, even if the substantive law remains partially split.

Section 2: Copyright and the Digital Single Market Strategy

Copyright law in the EU has undergone a radical transformation under the "Digital Single Market" (DSM) strategy. Unlike trademarks or patents, there is no "Unitary Copyright" (a single EU title). Instead, the EU has harmonized national copyright laws through a series of directives, culminating in the controversial Directive (EU) 2019/790 on Copyright in the Digital Single Market (DSM Directive). This legislation aims to adapt copyright rules to the realities of platform capitalism, data mining, and cross-border streaming. It addresses the "value gap"—the disparity between the profits made by platforms (like YouTube) from user-uploaded content and the remuneration received by the creators (Frosio, 2019).

Article 17 of the DSM Directive is the centerpiece of this reform. It changes the liability regime for "Online Content-Sharing Service Providers" (OCSSPs). Previously protected by the "safe harbor" of the E-Commerce Directive (no liability without actual knowledge), these platforms are now considered to perform an act of "communication to the public." Therefore, they are directly liable for unauthorized copyrighted content uploaded by users unless they demonstrate "best efforts" to obtain licenses and to prevent the availability of specific works identified by rights holders. This de facto mandates the use of upload filters (content recognition technologies), shifting the burden of policing copyright from the rights holder to the platform algorithm (Husovec, 2019).

The concept of the "Work" has been harmonized by the CJEU, most notably in the Infopaq decision. The Court established that a work is protected if it is the "author's own intellectual creation." This standard is autonomous and uniform, replacing divergent national thresholds (such as the "sweat of the brow" in the UK or "Schöpfungshöhe" in Germany). This low threshold means that even short snippets of text (11 words in Infopaq) can be protected if they reflect the author's creative choice. This harmonization is crucial for the data economy, as it determines the boundaries of what can be freely scraped or mined (Rosati, 2013).

Text and Data Mining (TDM) is critical for the development of Artificial Intelligence. The DSM Directive introduces two mandatory exceptions for TDM. Article 3 provides a broad exception for research organizations and cultural heritage institutions to mine data for scientific purposes. Article 4 provides a narrower exception for commercial entities, which applies only if the rights holder has not expressly reserved their rights ("opt-out"). This creates a "machine-readable" copyright regime where website owners can use protocols (like robots.txt) to block AI scrapers. This "opt-out" mechanism is the current battlefield between AI developers and content industries (Geiger et al., 2018).

The "Press Publishers' Right" (Article 15 DSM) creates a new neighboring right for news publishers. It targets news aggregators (like Google News) that display snippets of news stories. Publishers now have the exclusive right to authorize or prohibit the online use of their publications. This attempts to redistribute revenue from tech platforms to the struggling journalism sector. However, critics argue it threatens the "link economy" of the web. The directive explicitly excludes "hyperlinks" and "very short extracts," but the precise definition of these exclusions remains a source of litigation (Xalabarder, 2016).

Software Protection is governed by the Computer Programs Directive (2009/24/EC). It protects the code as a literary work but excludes the "functionality" and "ideas" underlying the software. This distinction is vital for competition; it allows a competitor to write new code that achieves the same function (cloning functionality is legal; copying code is not). The CJEU’s SAS Institute judgment confirmed that programming languages and data formats are not copyrightable, ensuring interoperability. The UsedSoft judgment further revolutionized the market by validating the "digital exhaustion" of software, allowing the resale of downloaded licenses ("second-hand software") (Stothers, 2013).

Database Rights provide a dual layer of protection. The Database Directive (96/9/EC) offers copyright protection for the structure of a database (if creative) and a sui generis right for the investment in obtaining, verifying, or presenting the contents. The sui generis right protects the "sweat of the brow" of data producers. However, the CJEU in Ryanair and British Horseracing Board limited this right, ruling that investment in creating data (e.g., generating flight schedules) does not count; only investment in collecting existing data is protected. This prevents the monopolization of upstream data sources, keeping data flows open for the digital economy (Hugenholtz, 2001).

Cross-border Access to content is facilitated by the Portability Regulation (2017/1128). It allows EU subscribers to access their home content services (e.g., Netflix, Sky) while temporarily traveling in another Member State. This creates a "fictional localization" where the user is legally deemed to be in their home country. While it does not abolish geo-blocking entirely, it prevents the "partitioning of the individual" who moves across the Union. The SatCab II Directive further facilitates cross-border broadcasting by applying the "country of origin" principle to certain online services of broadcasters (Mazziotti, 2019).

Exceptions and Limitations were traditionally optional and exhaustive (Article 5 InfoSoc Directive), leading to fragmentation. The DSM Directive introduces mandatory exceptions for digital teaching activities, preservation of cultural heritage, and TDM. This shifts EU copyright from a system of "permitted exceptions" to "mandatory user rights." The CJEU has also ruled that exceptions must be interpreted in a way that safeguards their effectiveness, moving away from the strict constructionist approach. The "Three-Step Test" (international standard) still restricts the scope of these exceptions, ensuring they do not unreasonably prejudice the rights holder (Senftleben, 2010).

Moral Rights (paternity and integrity) remain largely unharmonized, residing in national laws. This creates friction in the digital market, where works are constantly remixed and modified. However, the CJEU in Deckmyn (parody exception) implicitly harmonized aspects of moral rights by defining "parody" as an autonomous EU concept that must strike a fair balance between the author's interests and the user's freedom of expression. This suggests a creeping harmonization of moral rights through the back door of exceptions (Rosati, 2015).

Collective Management Organizations (CMOs) are regulated by the CRM Directive (2014/26/EU) to ensure transparency and facilitate multi-territorial licensing for music. In the digital age, streaming services need licenses covering the entire EU. The directive pushes national CMOs (like GEMA or SACEM) to modernize and aggregate their repertoires or compete to license EU-wide rights. This breaks the traditional national monopolies of collecting societies, fostering a single market for music licensing (Guibault & Van Gompel, 2016).

Finally, the AI Act (2024) intersects with copyright by imposing transparency obligations on General Purpose AI (GPAI) providers. They must publish a sufficiently detailed summary of the content used for training their models. This transparency is intended to help rights holders enforce their "opt-out" rights under the TDM exception. It represents the first legislative attempt to regulate the "input" side of generative AI, linking product safety regulation (AI Act) with property rights (Copyright).

Section 3: The Unitary Patent and Industrial Property Revolution

The patent system in Europe has historically been a fragmented "bundle" of national patents. The European Patent Convention (EPC) of 1973 created a centralized application process via the European Patent Office (EPO), a non-EU organization. However, once granted, the "European Patent" splintered into a bundle of national patents, each requiring separate validation, translation fees, and enforcement in national courts. This fragmentation led to high costs and legal uncertainty ("torpedo" actions). The Unitary Patent (UP) package, which became fully operational on June 1, 2023, is the most significant reform in the history of European patent law, creating a single patent title with unitary effect across participating Member States (Pila & Wadlow, 2015).

The legal basis for the Unitary Patent is "Enhanced Cooperation" (Regulation 1257/2012), as Spain and Italy initially opposed the language regime (English, French, German). The UP provides uniform protection and has equal effect in all participating Member States. It can only be limited, transferred, or revoked in respect of all those states. This eliminates the need for validation and translation in each country (after a transitional period), drastically reducing costs for SMEs and simplifying portfolio management. The UP effectively creates a federal patent right for the Eurozone and beyond, treating the internal market as a single inventive territory (Ullrich, 2013).

The Unified Patent Court (UPC) is the judicial pillar of this revolution. Established by an international agreement, it has exclusive jurisdiction over both Unitary Patents and "classic" European Patents (unless opted out). The UPC consists of a Court of First Instance (with central, local, and regional divisions) and a Court of Appeal in Luxembourg. Its decisions have effect across all participating states. A single revocation action at the UPC can knock out a patent in 17+ countries simultaneously; conversely, a single infringement action can yield a pan-European injunction. This centralization of litigation ends the era of parallel lawsuits and divergent national judgments on the same patent (Lamping, 2015).

The Biotech Directive (98/44/EC) harmonized the patentability of biotechnological inventions, a sector fraught with ethical controversy. It clarifies that biological material isolated from its natural environment (e.g., a gene sequence) is patentable if it has a technical application. However, it excludes from patentability processes for cloning human beings and uses of human embryos for industrial purposes. The CJEU in Brüstle v. Greenpeace interpreted "human embryo" broadly to include any fertilized ovum, prioritizing human dignity over commercial incentives. This directive illustrates the intrusion of ethical "ordre public" clauses into the technical realm of industrial property (Plomer, 2012).

Supplementary Protection Certificates (SPCs) extend the effective life of patent protection for pharmaceuticals and agrochemicals by up to 5 years. This sui generis right compensates for the long delay caused by regulatory marketing authorization procedures. The SPC regime is currently fragmented (granted by national offices), but a proposal for a Unitary SPC is underway to complement the Unitary Patent. This ensures that the incentive for high-risk pharmaceutical R&D is maintained in the European market, balancing the needs of originators and generic manufacturers (Hilty, 2013).

Standard Essential Patents (SEPs) are patents that are indispensable for implementing a technical standard (like 5G or Wi-Fi). The holder of a SEP has a dominant position. To prevent abuse ("hold-up"), standard-setting organizations require SEP holders to license on FRAND (Fair, Reasonable, and Non-Discriminatory) terms. The CJEU in Huawei v. ZTE established a behavioral framework: a SEP holder cannot seek an injunction against an implementer who is willing to take a license on FRAND terms. This integrates competition law defenses directly into patent enforcement, creating a negotiation protocol backed by the threat of antitrust fines (Contreras, 2017).

Compulsory Licensing is a mechanism where the state forces a patent holder to license their invention in the public interest (e.g., health emergencies). While traditionally national, the EU is developing a Compulsory Licensing Regulation for crisis management (post-COVID-19). This would allow the Commission to declare a cross-border compulsory license for the entire Union to ensure the supply of critical medicines or green technologies. This represents a significant shift of sovereignty, prioritizing "security of supply" over the absolute exclusivity of the patent right (Hilty et al., 2021).

Industrial Designs are protected by a dual system: the Community Design Regulation (CDR) (unitary right) and the Design Directive (harmonized national right). The 2024 Design Reform Package modernizes this framework. It updates the definition of "design" to include digital formats (animations, graphical user interfaces, virtual goods in the Metaverse). Crucially, it introduces a permanent "repair clause" across the EU, allowing the reproduction of spare parts (e.g., car bumpers) for repair purposes without infringing design rights. This aligns IP law with the "Right to Repair" and circular economy goals, breaking the monopoly of car manufacturers on the aftermarket (Suthersanen, 2010).

Trade Secrets were harmonized by the Trade Secrets Directive (2016/943). Previously protected by diverse unfair competition laws, they are now a quasi-IP right. The directive protects information that is secret, has commercial value, and is subject to reasonable protection steps. It provides remedies for unlawful acquisition, use, or disclosure. However, it creates strong exceptions for whistleblowers and journalistic freedom, balancing the protection of corporate know-how with the public interest in transparency. This is vital for the data economy, where algorithms are often protected as secrets rather than patents (Varese, 2021).

Plant Variety Rights are governed by the Community Plant Variety Office (CPVO). This sui generis regime protects new varieties of plants. It contains a specific "breeder's exemption" (allowing use of protected varieties to breed new ones) and a "farmer's privilege" (allowing farmers to save seeds). This regime is distinct from patents and is tailored to the biological innovation cycle of agriculture. The tension between patents (on gene edited plants) and plant variety rights is a key issue in the "New Genomic Techniques" debate (Kock, 2021).

Employee Inventions remain largely national, governed by labor law. However, the Unitary Patent regime requires clear rules on ownership to determine who can apply. In cross-border R&D teams, the "applicable law" for determining ownership of an invention is the law of the country where the employee is habitually employed. This connects industrial property to the conflict-of-laws rules of employment, ensuring legal certainty for multinational innovators.

Finally, the "Patent Package" is not just legal but political. It shifts the center of gravity of the European patent system from a loose intergovernmental organization (EPO) towards an EU-integrated judicial structure (UPC). It creates a unified market for technology, aiming to reduce the "innovation gap" between the EU and the US/China by making IP protection more accessible and enforceable.

Section 4: Trademarks and Geographical Indications: The Branding of Europe

The European Union Trade Mark (EUTM) (formerly CTM) is the most successful unitary right, established by Regulation 2017/1001. It grants a single exclusive right valid across all Member States. If a business registers an EUTM, it can stop infringement from Lisbon to Helsinki. The unitary character means it stands or falls as a whole; if a mark is descriptive in just one Member State (e.g., "Matratzen" for mattresses is descriptive in German-speaking areas), the EUTM must be refused. This forces companies to adopt "linguistically neutral" or truly global brands. The EUTM system coexists with national systems, allowing businesses to choose the geographical scope of their protection ("Principle of Coexistence") (Kur & Senftleben, 2017).

The definition of a trademark has been liberalized. The requirement for "graphical representation" was removed in the 2015 reform. Now, a sign need only be represented in a manner that enables authorities and the public to determine the clear and precise subject matter. This opens the door for non-traditional marks: sound files (the Netflix "ta-dum"), motion marks, and holograms. However, the CJEU remains strict on functionality; shapes that are necessary to obtain a technical result (e.g., the Lego brick shape) cannot be trademarked permanently. This prevents trademark law from being used to extend patent monopolies indefinitely (Simoncini, 2018).

The functions of a trademark have expanded beyond the traditional "indication of origin." The CJEU recognizes the "investment," "communication," and "advertising" functions. This protects the brand's reputation and "aura" against dilution or tarnishment, even if there is no consumer confusion. In L'Oréal v. Bellure (smell-alike perfumes), the Court ruled that taking unfair advantage of the "distinctive character or repute" of a famous mark is infringement. This shifts trademark law from consumer protection (avoiding confusion) to property protection (protecting brand equity), creating a broad anti-misappropriation right for famous brands (Gangjee, 2013).

Geographical Indications (GIs) are a distinct European specialty, protecting the link between a product and its territory (terroir). The EU has a sui generis system for wines, spirits, and agricultural products (PDO/PGI). This protects names like "Champagne" or "Parmigiano Reggiano" against any usurpation, imitation, or evocation (even "Champanillo" for a tapas bar was banned). GIs are collective rights that cannot be delocalized; they protect rural economies and cultural heritage. The EU aggressively exports this model in trade deals (e.g., with China), clashing with the "generic" approach of New World countries (paramountcy of trademarks) (Evans, 2019).

A major development is the extension of GIs to Craft and Industrial Products (CIGIs) under Regulation (EU) 2023/2411. Previously, GIs covered only agri-food. The new regulation, fully applicable from 2025, protects non-food products like "Murano Glass," "Solingen Cutlery," or "Donegal Tweed." This unifies the protection of European craftsmanship, allowing artisans to prevent cheap knock-offs. It connects the IP system with regional development and the preservation of traditional knowledge, validating "local know-how" as a protectable intellectual asset (Calboli, 2016).

Domain Names and the ".eu" Top Level Domain (TLD) intersect with trademarks. Cybersquatting (registering a trademark as a domain to sell it back) is resolved through Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) mechanisms like the ".eu ADR." The legal principle is that a domain registration in "bad faith" without a "legitimate interest" must be transferred. This creates a fast, administrative layer of protection for brands in the digital address space, circumventing slow court procedures.

Keyword Advertising (Google AdWords) was a battleground. Can a competitor buy "Louis Vuitton" as a keyword to trigger their own ad? The CJEU in Google France ruled that the trademark owner can prohibit this only if the ad does not enable the average internet user to ascertain whether the goods originate from the trademark holder or a third party. This nuanced "function of origin" test balances brand protection with the freedom of internet commerce and consumer information. It permits "invisible" use of trademarks as long as the visible ad is not confusing (Rosati, 2015).

Trademark Exhaustion applies to the EEA market. Parallel imports from outside the EEA (e.g., cheap Levi's from the US) can be blocked by the trademark owner (Silhouette judgment). The EU rejects "international exhaustion" to protect the value of European brands and distribution networks. This creates a "Fortress Europe" for branded goods, allowing price discrimination between the EU and the rest of the world. However, within the EU, the free movement is absolute; rights holders cannot stop the resale of goods unless "legitimate reasons" exist (e.g., the goods are damaged or repackaged in a way that harms the reputation) (Stothers, 2007).

Anti-Dilution protection for marks with a reputation covers dissimilar goods. A famous car brand can stop a clothing company from using its logo. The test is "unfair advantage" or "detriment." This acknowledges the trademark as a financial asset. The psychological association in the consumer's mind is the property object. The law protects the "image" transfer. This powerful protection for famous marks is a hallmark of the EU system, often criticized for chilling parody or artistic use, though recent reforms have strengthened the "referential use" and "parody" defenses.

Bad Faith registration is a ground for invalidity. If a trademark is filed not to be used, but to block a competitor (trademark troll) or to extract money (Lindt's Gold Bunny case), it is invalid. The CJEU defines bad faith as "dishonest intention" falling short of accepted principles of ethical behavior. This introduces a moral standard into the registration system, preventing the abuse of the "first-to-file" principle. It ensures that the register reflects genuine commercial intent (Kur, 2013).

Enforcement of GIs is robust. Unlike trademarks, GIs are enforced ex officio by Member State authorities. A local food inspector can seize fake "Feta" cheese. This "public enforcement" of private rights highlights the public interest nature of GIs in Europe. They are not just private property but instruments of agricultural and cultural policy.

Finally, the Metaverse challenges trademark classes. Brands are rushing to register marks for "virtual goods" (Class 9) to protect against NFT infringement. The "Hermès v. Rothschild" (MetaBirkins) logic is influencing EU practice: a virtual bag is not the same as a physical bag, but the trademark protects the brand value in the virtual space. The EUTM is adapting to become the "Digital Brand Title" for the web3 economy.

Section 5: Enforcement, Intermediaries, and Future Challenges

The substantive rights of IP are useless without effective enforcement. The IP Rights Enforcement Directive (IPRED) (2004/48/EC) harmonizes civil remedies across the EU. It mandates that Member States provide for injunctions, damages, evidence preservation orders (saisie-contrefaçon), and the "right of information" (forcing infringers to reveal their supply networks). It requires remedies to be "effective, proportionate, and dissuasive." IPRED shifted the focus from merely compensating the loss to stripping the infringer of profits and preventing future violations. It created a "toolkit" for rights holders to police the market (Ohly, 2009).

Intermediary Liability is the fulcrum of online enforcement. The IPRED allows for injunctions against intermediaries (ISPs, payment providers, marketplaces) whose services are used by a third party to infringe an IP right, even if the intermediary is not liable. This is the basis for "website blocking" orders against pirate sites (e.g., The Pirate Bay case). The CJEU ruled that such injunctions must be balanced: they must be effective but not require general monitoring of all traffic. This deputizes the internet infrastructure providers to act as gatekeepers for IP protection (Husovec, 2017).

The Digital Services Act (DSA) (2022) updates the "Notice and Takedown" regime. It creates a uniform procedure for reporting illegal content (including IP infringements) and requires platforms to have "Trusted Flagger" mechanisms. For marketplaces, it introduces "Know Your Business Customer" (KYBC) obligations to trace sellers of counterfeit goods. While retaining the conditional liability shield, the DSA imposes stricter "duties of care" on Very Large Online Platforms (VLOPs) to mitigate systemic risks, including large-scale counterfeiting. This moves enforcement from a reactive "whack-a-mole" to a proactive "compliance by design" model (Frosio, 2023).

Counterfeiting and Piracy remain systemic threats. The EUIPO Observatory on Infringements of IP Rights produces data showing that piracy is shifting from downloading to streaming and IPTV. The response is "Follow the Money": voluntary agreements with advertisers and payment providers to cut off revenue to pirate sites. This "soft law" enforcement complements the hard law of IPRED. The goal is to demonetize infringement, making it economically unviable rather than just legally prohibited (Weatherill, 2016).

Dynamic Injunctions are a judicial innovation. Because pirate sites constantly change domains ("mirror sites"), static injunctions are ineffective. Courts now issue dynamic injunctions that cover the main domain and any future mirrors or IP addresses notified by the rights holder to the ISP. This creates a "live" enforcement mechanism that adapts to the evasion tactics of infringers. It represents a pragmatic adaptation of procedural law to the fluid reality of the internet (Nordemann, 2014).

Damages Calculation aims to be dissuasive. IPRED allows damages to be calculated as a lump sum (license fee) or based on the infringer's profits. Some national courts award "moral damages" to companies for reputational harm. While "punitive damages" are generally alien to Civil Law, the directive’s requirement for "dissuasiveness" pushes courts to award amounts that exceed simple restitution, blurring the line between civil compensation and punishment.

Cross-Border Enforcement is facilitated by the Brussels I Recast Regulation. A rights holder can sue an infringer in the country of the infringer's domicile for EU-wide damages. However, for online infringement, the "Mosaic Theory" allows suing in any country where the website is accessible, but only for local damages. This fragmentation complicates pan-European enforcement. The Unified Patent Court (UPC) solves this for patents by offering a single cross-border ruling, but for trademarks and copyright, the jurisdictional puzzle remains (Torremans, 2017).

AI and Enforcement. AI is both a threat and a tool. "Deepfakes" and AI-generated counterfeits threaten brand integrity. Conversely, automated content recognition (ACR) tools are used to detect infringements at scale. The challenge is "over-blocking." Automated enforcement often ignores exceptions (parody, fair use). The DSA mandates complaint mechanisms to protect users against wrongful takedowns, acknowledging that algorithmic enforcement lacks the nuance of human judgment.

Intellectual Property in the Metaverse and NFTs. Ownership of an NFT does not automatically convey copyright in the underlying art. This "smart contract gap" leads to fraud. Enforcement is difficult due to the anonymity of blockchain wallets ("pseudonymity"). Future challenges involve serving injunctions via "airdrop" to wallets and freezing digital assets. The legal system must adapt its coercive power to the decentralized web (Fairfield, 2021).

3D Printing challenges the control of physical goods. A user can download a CAD file and print a spare part or a toy, infringing design rights or patents. The new Design Directive (2024) explicitly makes the creation or distribution of such files an infringement. This shifts enforcement from the physical object to the "digital blueprint," targeting the source of the decentralized production chain (Desmond-Hudson, 2019).

Public Domain protection. There is a growing recognition that enforcement should not encroach on the public domain. The DSM Directive (Art. 14) states that faithful reproductions of works of visual art in the public domain cannot be subject to new copyright. This prevents museums from claiming rights over digital photos of Old Masters. It enforces the "negative right" of the public to use non-protected works freely.

Finally, the Geopolitics of Enforcement. The EU uses its trade policy (Free Trade Agreements) to export its enforcement standards to third countries. It maintains a "Watch List" of countries with weak IP protection. Enforcement is a tool of economic statecraft, ensuring that European intangible assets are respected in the global value chain.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Abbott, R. (2020). The Reasonable Robot: Artificial Intelligence and the Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Anderman, S. D. (2011). The Interface Between Intellectual Property Rights and Competition Policy. Cambridge University Press.

  • Bradford, A. (2020). The Brussels Effect: How the European Union Rules the World. Oxford University Press.

  • Calboli, I. (2016). Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of Trade, Development, and Culture. Cambridge University Press.

  • Contreras, J. L. (2017). The Cambridge Handbook of Technical Standardization Law. Cambridge University Press.

  • Derclaye, E. (2010). The Copyright/Design Interface. Cambridge University Press.

  • Desmond-Hudson, R. (2019). 3D Printing and the Law. Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice.

  • European Commission. (2010). Europe 2020 Flagship Initiative Innovation Union. COM(2010) 546 final.

  • Evans, G. E. (2019). The Comparative Advantages of Geographical Indications and Community Trade Marks. WIPO Journal.

  • Fairfield, J. (2021). Tokenized: The Law of Non-Fungible Tokens. Indiana Law Journal.

  • Frosio, G. F. (2017). Reconciling Copyright with Cumulative Creativity: The Third Paradigm. Edward Elgar.

  • Frosio, G. F. (2023). Platform Responsibility in the Digital Services Act. Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice.

  • Gangjee, D. S. (2013). Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Climate Change. Edward Elgar.

  • Geiger, C. (2015). Criminal Enforcement of Intellectual Property: A Handbook of Contemporary Research. Edward Elgar.

  • Geiger, C., et al. (2018). Text and Data Mining: Articles 3 and 4 of the Directive 2019/790. EIPR.

  • Guibault, L., & Van Gompel, S. (2016). Council Directive 2014/26/EU on Collective Management of Copyright. Kluwer.

  • Hilty, R. (2013). The Unitary Patent Package: Twelve Reasons for Concern. Max Planck Institute.

  • Hilty, R., et al. (2021). Covid-19 and the Role of Intellectual Property. Max Planck Institute.

  • Hugenholtz, B. (2001). The New Database Right: Early Case Law from Europe. Fordham IP Law Journal.

  • Husovec, M. (2017). Injunctions Against Intermediaries in the European Union. Cambridge University Press.

  • Husovec, M. (2019). The Promises of Algorithmic Copyright Enforcement. IIC.

  • Kock, M. A. (2021). Open Intellectual Property Models for Plant Innovations. Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice.

  • Kur, A. (2013). European Intellectual Property Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Kur, A., & Senftleben, M. (2017). European Trade Mark Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Lamping, M. (2015). Enhanced Cooperation in the Area of Unitary Patent Protection. Scripted.

  • Mazziotti, G. (2019). EU Digital Copyright Law and the End-User. Springer.

  • Nordemann, J. B. (2014). Website Blocking in the EU. JIPLP.

  • Ohly, A. (2009). Three Principles of European IP Enforcement Law. German Law Journal.

  • Pila, J., & Wadlow, C. (2015). The Unitary EU Patent System. Hart Publishing.

  • Plomer, A. (2012). After Brüstle: EU accession to the ECHR and the future of European patent law. SCRIPTed.

  • Rosati, E. (2013). Originality in EU Copyright. Cambridge University Press.

  • Rosati, E. (2015). Copyright and the Court of Justice of the European Union. Oxford University Press.

  • Senftleben, M. (2010). The International Three-Step Test. JIPLP.

  • Simoncini, M. (2018). Administrative Regulation Beyond the Non-Delegation Doctrine. Hart.

  • Sterling, J. A. L. (2018). World Copyright Law. Sweet & Maxwell.

  • Stothers, C. (2007). Parallel Trade in Europe. Hart Publishing.

  • Stothers, C. (2013). The UsedSoft Decision. JIPLP.

  • Suthersanen, U. (2010). Design Law in Europe. Sweet & Maxwell.

  • Torremans, P. (2017). Research Handbook on Cross-border Enforcement of Intellectual Property. Edward Elgar.

  • Ullrich, H. (2013). The Unitary Patent. Springer.

  • Varese, E. (2021). Trade Secrets and the Digital Single Market. JIPITEC.

  • Von Mühlendahl, A., et al. (2016). Trade Mark Law in Europe. Oxford University Press.

  • Wagner, G. (2019). Robot Liability. Oxford Handbook on the Law of Regulation.

  • Weatherill, S. (2016). Contract Law of the Internal Market. Intersentia.

  • Xalabarder, R. (2016). Press Publisher Rights in the New Copyright Directive. Creaut.

8
Family Law in the EU: Limited Harmonization and Digital Challenges
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Limits of Competence and the Brussels II Architecture

Family law is the most sensitive area of private law, deeply rooted in national culture, religion, and history. Unlike contract or company law, there is no direct legal basis in the EU Treaties for the harmonization of substantive family law (e.g., grounds for divorce, conditions for marriage, or definition of parentage). The principle of subsidiarity is most potent here. However, the free movement of citizens creates a practical necessity for coordination. If a couple marries in France, moves to Germany, and divorces in Spain, whose law applies? The EU's competence is therefore limited to "judicial cooperation in civil matters having cross-border implications" (Article 81 TFEU). This results in a "conflicts-law" approach: the EU does not create a European Divorce Code but unifies the rules on jurisdiction (which court hears the case) and applicable law (which national law applies) (Boeele-Woelki, 2005).

The cornerstone of this architecture is the Brussels II Regulation (now Brussels IIb or "Recast," Regulation 2019/1111). It governs jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in matrimonial matters and matters of parental responsibility. Its primary goal is to prevent "limping" relationships where a divorce is recognized in one state but not another. It abolishes the need for intermediate proceedings (exequatur) for most family judgments, creating a "free movement of judgments." A divorce granted in Poland is automatically valid in Portugal. This procedural unification creates a single judicial space for families, even if the underlying substantive laws remain divergent (McEleavy, 2019).

The issue of Jurisdiction in divorce is determined by a list of alternative grounds (e.g., habitual residence, nationality) in Brussels IIb. This flexibility allows mobile couples to choose the forum, but it also creates a "rush to court" risk. Because the first court seized establishes jurisdiction (lis pendens), spouses may race to file in the jurisdiction with the most favorable divorce laws (e.g., shortest separation period). This "forum shopping" is a direct consequence of the lack of substantive harmonization. The Regulation manages this competition but does not eliminate the incentive to strategize based on national differences (Kruger & Samoy, 2017).

Parental Responsibility (custody, access) is the second pillar of Brussels IIb. The overriding principle is the "best interests of the child." Jurisdiction generally lies with the court of the child's habitual residence. This ensures that the judge closest to the child's social environment makes the decision. However, in cases of Child Abduction (one parent taking the child to another Member State without consent), the Regulation reinforces the Hague Convention mechanism. It mandates the immediate return of the child (within 6 weeks) and limits the grounds for refusal. This harsh "return first, argue later" rule prioritizes the stability of the child's residence over the parents' dispute, enforcing a strict jurisdictional discipline (Beaumont et al., 2016).

The "Voice of the Child" is strengthened in the Brussels IIb Recast. It requires that children be given a genuine and effective opportunity to express their views in proceedings concerning them. While procedural methods vary (direct hearing vs. social worker report), the obligation to hear the child is now a condition for the cross-border recognition of the judgment. This injects a human rights standard (Article 24 Charter) into the procedural regulation, harmonizing the procedural status of the child as a subject, not just an object, of the proceedings (Daly, 2020).

The Abolition of Exequatur for privileged decisions (access rights and return orders) means that a French order granting a father access to his child in Germany is directly enforceable by German police without any German court review. This is the highest level of mutual trust. It removes the "sovereignty filter" of the receiving state. However, it places a heavy burden on the originating judge to ensure due process, as there are no checks at the destination. It creates a "borderless" enforcement space for the most sensitive family rulings (Mellone, 2018).

Substantive harmonization has occurred only in very narrow areas, such as Maintenance Obligations (Alimony). The Maintenance Regulation (4/2009) unifies jurisdiction and applicable law (via the Hague Protocol). It ensures that maintenance creditors (usually the weaker party) can easily sue and enforce judgments. By decoupling maintenance from divorce (which is not harmonized), the EU ensures that financial support flows across borders regardless of the status of the marriage. This prioritizes "financial solidarity" over "status solidarity" (Walker, 2011).

The "Public Policy" (Ordre Public) exception allows a state to refuse recognition of a judgment if it is manifestly contrary to its core values. In family law, this is the battleground for cultural differences. Can a state refuse to recognize a repudiation (talaq) or a same-sex marriage judgment? The CJEU interprets this exception strictly; it can only be used if the effects of recognition would violate fundamental rights. Mere difference in law is not enough. This forces states to tolerate foreign family forms that they would not allow domestically, creating a "methodological tolerance" essential for a diverse Union (Murphy, 2016).

Mediation is strongly encouraged by the Mediation Directive and Brussels IIb. Cross-border family litigation is costly and emotionally damaging. The EU promotes mediation to reach amicable solutions, especially in abduction cases. However, the enforceability of mediated agreements across borders remains complex unless they are converted into court orders. The "juridification" of mediation agreements is a developing area, attempting to give "soft" family resolutions "hard" trans-border effects (De Palo & Trevor, 2012).

The definition of "Habitual Residence" is the key connecting factor. It is an autonomous EU concept, defined by the CJEU (Mercredi) as the place of "some integration" into a social and family environment. It is factual, not legal. This prevents parents from manipulating jurisdiction by changing official registrations. The factual nature of the test ensures that jurisdiction follows the reality of the child's life, not the legal construct of the parents' domicile.

The Matrimonial Property Regimes Regulations (2016/1103 and 2016/1104) fill a major gap. They determine which law governs the division of assets for international couples (married or registered partners). They allow couples to choose the applicable law (e.g., law of nationality). This introduces "party autonomy" into family property, treating the couple as rational economic actors who can plan their asset regime. It brings legal certainty to the financial consequences of divorce without harmonizing the divorce itself (Gallant, 2016).

Finally, the architecture is Asymmetric. Not all Member States participate in all instruments (e.g., Denmark's opt-out, Enhanced Cooperation for property regimes). This creates a "patchwork" family law Europe. The lack of a uniform "European Family Code" means that the "European Family" is a procedural reality but a substantive fiction.

Section 2: Same-Sex Unions and the Free Movement of Families

The recognition of same-sex marriage and registered partnerships is the most politically charged issue in EU family law. The Union is divided: Western states mostly allow same-sex marriage, while Eastern states often constitutionally ban it. Since the EU lacks competence to define "marriage," it cannot force a state to introduce same-sex marriage. However, the Free Movement of Citizens (Directive 2004/38) requires states to facilitate the entry and residence of family members. The conflict arises when a same-sex couple married in Belgium moves to Romania. Does Romania have to recognize the "spouse" for residency rights? This clash between the national definition of family and the EU right to move defines the jurisprudence (Tryfonidou, 2019).

The Coman case (C-673/16) was a watershed moment. The CJEU ruled that the term "spouse" in the Free Movement Directive includes a same-sex spouse. Therefore, Romania was obliged to grant a residence permit to the American husband of a Romanian man, despite Romanian law prohibiting same-sex marriage. The Court distinguished between the status of marriage (national competence) and the rights derived from free movement (EU competence). Romania does not have to introduce same-sex marriage, but it must recognize the effects of such a marriage concluded elsewhere for the purpose of residency. This creates a "functional recognition" that overrides national public policy defenses based on the definition of marriage (Vaigė, 2019).

This "recognition without harmonization" strategy is the EU's primary tool. It forces a "portability of status." If a status (marriage, parentage) is validly acquired in one Member State, it should persist when the citizen crosses a border. To deny this would deter free movement. This creates a "de facto" harmonization for mobile citizens: a same-sex couple is "married" for EU law purposes (residence, healthcare) even in a state that denies their marriage for domestic purposes (adoption, tax). It creates a "split status" for the couple depending on which right they are exercising (Guidi, 2018).

Registered Partnerships are covered by Directive 2004/38 only if the host state treats partnerships as equivalent to marriage. If a state does not have partnerships, it has no obligation to recognize foreign ones as "spouses," though it must facilitate entry as "durable partners." This creates a hierarchy where marriage (even same-sex) enjoys stronger EU protection than partnership. The variability of partnership laws (some resemble marriage, others differ) makes mutual recognition difficult. The Matrimonial Property Regulations try to solve this by creating specific conflict rules for the property consequences of registered partnerships (Waaldijk, 2020).

Parentage in rainbow families is the next frontier. If a lesbian couple has a child in Spain (both listed as mothers), and they move to Bulgaria (which recognizes only biological maternity), does the child lose a parent? The CJEU in V.M.A. v. Stolichna (C-490/20) ruled that if one Member State recognizes a parent-child relationship (even for same-sex parents), all other Member States must recognize it for the purpose of the child's right to free movement. The child has the right to a passport and to reside with both parents. This ruling confirms that a "parent in one country is a parent in every country" for EU rights, preventing the "loss of identity" at the border (Polgári, 2021).

The proposed Parenthood Regulation aims to codify this jurisprudence. It proposes a "European Certificate of Parenthood" and harmonized conflict rules. It seeks to ensure that parenthood established in one state (whether by birth, adoption, or surrogacy) is recognized everywhere for all purposes, including succession and maintenance. This is a bold step into substantive harmonization via recognition. It faces opposition from states viewing it as a backdoor to legalizing surrogacy or same-sex adoption, highlighting the tension between the "best interests of the child" (continuity of status) and "national identity" (definition of family) (Trimmings & Dutta, 2021).

Surrogacy remains a "red line" for many states. International surrogacy arrangements often result in "limping parentage," where the intended parents are recognized in the country of birth (e.g., USA, Ukraine) but not in the home state. The ECtHR jurisprudence (Mennesson v. France) mandates that the biological link with the father must be recognized, and a mechanism (like adoption) must exist for the intended mother. EU law pushes for recognition to prevent statelessness and loss of rights for the child. The "public policy" exception is narrowing; the child's welfare trumps the state's moral objection to the mode of conception (Curry-Sumner, 2018).

The "Rainbow Families" movement argues for "freedom of movement for families," not just workers. They assert that families come in diverse forms and that the EU must be neutral. The "mutual recognition" principle is their primary legal lever. If a good (cheese) can move freely, why not a family? This commodification of status arguments uses market logic to achieve human rights outcomes. It forces conservative states to "import" liberal family norms attached to mobile citizens (Bonini-Baraldi, 2020).

Transgender Rights and family law intersect in the recognition of gender change. The CJEU in MB v. Secretary of State ruled that a state cannot require a person to divorce to obtain legal gender recognition (if the state does not allow same-sex marriage). This protects the continuity of the marriage against the administrative requirement of gender change. It links the right to gender identity with the right to family life, ensuring that a transition does not destroy the family unit (Sharpston, 2018).

The role of the ECtHR (Strasbourg) vs. the CJEU (Luxembourg). While the CJEU focuses on free movement, the ECtHR focuses on Article 8 (Right to Family Life). The ECtHR has ruled (Oliari v. Italy) that states have a positive obligation to provide some form of legal recognition for same-sex couples (civil unions). The CJEU builds on this "minimum standard" to enforce "cross-border recognition." The two courts operate in tandem, tightening the net around states that refuse to recognize diverse families.

"Social Engineering" through mobility. Critics argue that EU rules encourage "evasive" mobility. A couple moves to Spain to marry or conceive, then returns to Poland demanding recognition. EU law generally protects this "fraud on the law" (fraude à la loi) if it involves genuine residence. It views the utilization of different laws as a right of citizenship, not an abuse. This effectively allows citizens to "opt out" of their restrictive national family laws by moving, creating a "market for family rights."

Finally, the Future. The trend is towards the complete "de-territorialization" of family status. A status validly acquired anywhere in the Union should be valid everywhere. This envisions a "European Civil Status" that floats above national registers, guaranteeing that the family unit remains intact regardless of geography.

Section 3: Cross-Border Divorce and the Rome III Regulation

Divorce law in Europe is characterized by the divergence between "liberal" regimes (no-fault, unilateral) and "conservative" regimes (long separation periods, fault). When an international couple divorces, the applicable law determines how quickly and easily the marriage ends. The Rome III Regulation (1259/2010) was the first EU instrument adopted via "Enhanced Cooperation" (participated in by 17 states) to harmonize the conflict of laws rules for divorce and legal separation. Its goal is to provide legal certainty and prevent the "rush to court" by ensuring that the applicable law is the one with the closest connection to the couple, not necessarily the law of the court seized (Boiché, 2012).

The core innovation of Rome III is Party Autonomy. Article 5 allows spouses to choose the applicable law. They can select the law of their habitual residence, their last habitual residence, their nationality, or the lex fori (law of the court). This empowers the couple to "design" their divorce in advance (e.g., in a prenuptial agreement). It allows a French-German couple living in Italy to agree to divorce under German law. This introduces contractual freedom into the status-based world of divorce, allowing couples to opt for the law that best reflects their cultural identity or strategic interests (Boeele-Woelki, 2013).

In the absence of choice, Article 8 sets a cascade of connecting factors: 1) Habitual residence at the time the court is seized; 2) Last habitual residence (if one still lives there); 3) Common nationality; 4) Lex fori. This hierarchy prioritizes the "social environment" of the couple over their nationality. It ensures that the divorce is governed by the law of the society where the marriage actually disintegrated. This "integration" principle prevents the application of a distant nationality law that might be irrelevant to the couple's current life (Fiorini, 2012).

The "Malta Problem" (lack of divorce) and restrictive laws. Rome III contains a public policy exception (Article 12) but also a specific rule (Article 13) that if the applicable law makes no provision for divorce (e.g., Malta before 2011) or does not grant one of the spouses equal access to divorce (discriminatory laws), the lex fori applies. This acts as a "favor divortii" (favoring divorce) clause. It ensures that a European citizen is not trapped in a marriage by a restrictive foreign law if they litigate in a Rome III state. It exports the "right to divorce" as a fundamental principle of EU private international law (Beaumont, 2011).

"Rush to Court" remains a problem for non-Rome III states. In states not participating in Rome III (e.g., Poland, UK pre-Brexit), the court usually applies its own law (lex fori). This incentivizes the spouse who wants a quick divorce to file in a liberal jurisdiction ("London as the divorce capital"). Rome III mitigates this within the participating zone by decoupling jurisdiction from applicable law. Even if a French court is seized, it might have to apply German law. This removes the incentive to forum shop for substantive law, though procedural advantages (speed, costs) remain drivers (Kruger, 2011).

The application of foreign law by national judges is a practical challenge. A Spanish judge applying Hungarian divorce law must ascertain its content. The European Judicial Network provides support, but mistakes happen. This complexity leads many judges to encourage parties to choose the lex fori or finding ways to apply local law. The theoretical elegance of Rome III clashes with the practical difficulty of being a "cosmopolitan judge." This friction limits the effectiveness of the regulation (Meeusen, 2014).

Private Divorce (non-judicial) is rising. In some states (Italy, France), couples can divorce by mutual consent before a notary or registrar without a judge. The Brussels IIb Regulation now explicitly covers these "extra-judicial agreements," ensuring they circulate as judgments. This "de-judicialization" of divorce treats it as an administrative or contractual event rather than a judicial dispute. It reflects the privatization of family status: if the parties agree, the state simply stamps the exit visa from the marriage (Pataut, 2019).

Religious Divorce (e.g., Talaq, Get) poses recognition issues. Rome III applies to "divorce" but does not define it. The CJEU in Sahyouni ruled that Rome III does not apply to private divorces (unilateral repudiation) pronounced before a religious court in a third country (Syria). Recognition of such divorces depends on national law. This ruling limits the scope of EU harmonization to "state-sanctioned" divorces, refusing to validate discriminatory private religious repudiations through the EU conflict rules. It draws a line between the secular EU legal order and religious family laws (Corneloup, 2018).

Interaction with Matrimonial Property. Divorce ends the marriage but also triggers the division of assets. While Rome III governs the status breakdown, the Matrimonial Property Regulation governs the assets. The applicable laws might differ (scission). A couple might divorce under Italian law but divide property under German law. This fragmentation requires careful legal coordination. The trend is towards unifying the choice of law for both divorce and property to avoid "dépeçage" (splitting the legal regime) (Gallant, 2016).

Brexit Impact. The UK was a major hub for international divorce. Post-Brexit, the UK is outside Brussels II and Rome III. Recognition relies on the 1970 Hague Divorce Convention (narrower scope). This reintroduces "limping divorces" and parallel proceedings (lis pendens is gone). It creates a hard border for family law, increasing legal uncertainty for Anglo-European families.

Maintenance is often the real battleground. The Maintenance Regulation allows the creditor to sue in their place of residence. The applicable law is usually the law of the creditor’s residence (Hague Protocol). This favors the weaker party. By separating maintenance from divorce jurisdiction, the EU ensures that a spouse cannot use a "torpedo" divorce action in a low-maintenance jurisdiction to block financial support claims in the proper forum.

Finally, the "European Divorce" is a procedural reality. While there is no single "EU Divorce Act," the combination of choice of law, recognition, and maintenance rules creates a predictable framework for dissolving cross-border unions. It respects national diversity while managing the interface, allowing Europeans to uncouple with relative legal security.

Section 4: Child Protection and International Abduction

Child protection is the area where EU family law is most coercive. The Brussels IIb Regulation establishes a strict regime to prevent and resolve International Child Abduction (parental kidnapping). When a relationship breaks down, one parent often returns to their home country with the child without the other's consent. This is illegal. The EU regime, building on the 1980 Hague Convention, aims to ensure the "prompt return" of the child to their habitual residence. The logic is that custody disputes should be resolved in the state where the child lived, not the state to which they were abducted (McEleavy, 2015).

The "Six-Week Rule". Brussels IIb mandates that courts must issue a return order within six weeks. This acceleration is crucial because delay solidifies the abduction ("settlement" of the child). The Regulation limits the number of appeals to one, preventing the abducting parent from dragging out proceedings. This "fast-track" justice prioritizes the jurisdictional status quo over the merits of the custody case. It assumes that return is in the best interests of the child unless proven otherwise (Beaumont et al., 2016).

The "Trump Card" Mechanism (Overriding Mechanism) is the EU's unique addition. If the state of refuge (where the child was taken) refuses to return the child (e.g., due to grave risk under Article 13b Hague), the court of the original habitual residence (home state) can issue a second judgment ordering return. If this second judgment is certified, it overrides the refusal and is directly enforceable in the refuge state without any possibility of opposition. This asserts the "supremacy" of the home court. It prevents the abductor from gaining a tactical advantage by fleeing to a sympathetic jurisdiction (Schuz, 2013).

"Grave Risk" Defense (Article 13b). The Hague Convention allows refusal of return if there is a grave risk of harm to the child. Abducting parents (often mothers fleeing domestic violence) rely on this. Brussels IIb tightens this defense: a court cannot refuse return if "adequate arrangements" have been made to protect the child in the home state (e.g., protective orders, safe housing). This puts faith in the ability of the home state's authorities to protect the child and mother upon return. It shifts the focus from "refusal" to "safe return," reflecting mutual trust between Member States (Trimmings, 2014).

Hearing the Child. Brussels IIb strengthens the child's right to be heard in abduction proceedings. A return order cannot be issued if the child hasn't been given an opportunity to express their views (appropriate to age/maturity). The child’s objection can be a ground for non-return. This proceduralizes the child's autonomy. The weight given to the child's voice varies by culture (high in Germany, lower elsewhere), but the obligation to listen is harmonized (Daly, 2020).

Cross-Border Placement of children (e.g., foster care) requires consent. If a state wants to place a child in an institution in another state, it must consult the authorities there. This ensures that child protection measures do not become a form of "dumping" difficult cases on neighbors. It creates a cooperation mechanism between Central Authorities to manage the transnational movement of vulnerable children in state care.

Mediation in Abduction. The Regulation actively promotes mediation. A voluntary agreement to return or relocate is better than a forced order. Specialized "cross-border family mediators" help parents reach solutions. The "juridification" of these agreements (making them enforceable judgments) allows parents to settle custody and access bindingly, avoiding the trauma of enforcement.

Enforcement of Return Orders remains a weak link. While the order is legally binding, physically taking a child from a parent requires police or bailiffs. National enforcement laws vary. Some states are reluctant to use force against a primary carer. Brussels IIb harmonizes the grounds for suspending enforcement but leaves the methods to national law. This "enforcement gap" can leave a valid European return order unexecuted for months, undermining the system's efficiency.

Brussels IIb and Domestic Violence. Critics argue the strict return mechanism harms victims of domestic violence (mostly mothers) by forcing them back to the abuser's jurisdiction. The "adequate arrangements" provision tries to mitigate this, but the "return first" logic remains dominant. The interplay between the "Istanbul Convention" (violence against women) and Brussels IIb is a tension point: does the duty to protect victims override the duty to return abducted children? The trend is towards more rigorous risk assessment before ordering return (Lamont, 2016).

Relocation Disputes (Move-Away cases) are the flip side of abduction. A parent wants to move legally. There is no harmonized EU law on relocation. National courts apply different tests (pro-relocation vs. pro-stability). The lack of harmonization means that a parent's freedom of movement is effectively restricted by the other parent's veto. This is a major gap in the freedom of movement of families; the right to move is conditional on the family judge's permission.

Finally, the European Certificate. Brussels IIb introduces standard certificates for judgments. These act as "passports" for the decision. A custody order accompanied by a certificate travels across the EU without translation or legalization. This bureaucratization of trust makes the protection of the child portable, ensuring that a protective measure (e.g., banning contact) follows the child wherever they go.

Section 5: The Digitalization of Family Law and Future Challenges

The digitalization of family life and legal procedures presents new frontiers for EU family law. Digital Assets in Divorce and Succession are a growing issue. Crypto-currencies, NFTs, and social media accounts are valuable assets. When a couple divorces, how are these divided? They are often hidden or held anonymously. The Matrimonial Property Regulations cover "all assets," but enforcement is difficult. Digital forensics is becoming a standard part of family litigation. The challenge is that these assets are often located outside the EU (on the blockchain or US servers), complicating the "location of assets" rules for jurisdiction (Cutler, 2020).

"Smart Wills" and Blockchain Inheritance. The succession of digital assets is complex. "Smart wills" executed on a blockchain could automatically transfer crypto-assets upon death (verified by an oracle). However, this bypasses the formal requirements of wills (notarization, witnesses) in many Civil Law states. The EU Succession Regulation recognizes dispositions of property upon death, but valid form is governed by the Hague Testamentary Convention. A smart contract might fail the formal validity test. Integrating "algorithmic inheritance" with the strict formalities of succession law is a future challenge (Blandin et al., 2019).

Electronic Civil Status Records. The Public Documents Regulation (2016/1191) simplifies the circulation of birth and marriage certificates. It abolishes the "apostille" for many documents and introduces multilingual standard forms. This is a step towards a "digital civil status." The vision is an interconnected system of civil registries (like BRIS for companies) where a birth in Italy is instantly updateable in the parents' records in Poland. This digital interoperability is the administrative backbone of the free movement of families (Weller, 2017).

Online Divorce and ODR. Some Member States (e.g., Estonia, Netherlands) allow for online divorce proceedings for consensual cases. The "Rechtwijzer" platform was a pioneer. Brussels IIb is technology-neutral, but the "digitalization of justice" regulation (2020) encourages the use of videoconferencing for hearings (especially for cross-border taking of evidence). This reduces the cost and disruption of international family litigation. The "Zoom divorce" allows parties to participate without travelling, increasing access to justice.

AI in Family Justice. Algorithms are being used to calculate maintenance (alimony) guidelines or predict asset division. While helpful for consistency, "robo-justice" in family law raises ethical concerns. Family disputes involve sensitive qualitative factors (best interests of child) that AI struggles to quantify. The "human in the loop" remains essential. However, AI can aid in calculating complex cross-border maintenance obligations involving different currencies and costs of living.

"Sharenting" and Children's Privacy. Parents posting photos of children online creates a conflict between parental rights and the child's data rights (GDPR). When children come of age, they may want this "digital footprint" erased. EU law is evolving to recognize the child's independent "Right to be Forgotten" against their own parents. In high-conflict divorces, courts increasingly issue injunctions prohibiting parents from posting about the child on social media. This treats the child's image as a personality right needing protection from parental commodification (Steinberg, 2017).

Cross-Border Surrogacy and Digital Markets. The market for surrogacy is digital. Intended parents find surrogates online. This global digital marketplace outpaces national bans. The EU is forced to deal with the results (the children) rather than the process. The digital facilitation of surrogacy renders national prohibition ineffective, forcing a shift towards regulation and recognition.

Cyber-Stalking and Digital Domestic Violence. Technology facilitates new forms of abuse (spyware, tracking apps). The "Istanbul Convention" (ratified by the EU) covers digital violence. Protection orders (European Protection Order) must cover digital harassment. A ban on contacting the victim must include digital contact. Family law must adapt to protect the "digital integrity" of the victim as well as physical safety.

Bioethics and Digital Genetics. Online DNA tests (23andMe) reveal "surprise" paternity or siblings. This "genetic transparency" disrupts established legal parentage (pater est rule). EU data protection law regulates genetic data, but the family law consequences (can a donor child sue for recognition based on a digital DNA match?) are national. The availability of digital genetic data creates a pressure to align legal parentage with biological truth, challenging the social construction of the family.

Finally, the "Digital Family". Families often live apart but are connected digitally ("Skype families"). The right to "maintain contact" (Article 24 Charter) in cross-border custody cases increasingly includes "digital contact" (video calls). Courts regulate the schedule of digital access. This recognizes that in the 21st century, "family life" occurs as much in the digital sphere as in the physical home.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Beaumont, P., et al. (2016). The Recast of the Brussels IIa Regulation. Hart.

  • Boeele-Woelki, K. (2005). The Principles of European Family Law. Intersentia.

  • Boeele-Woelki, K. (2013). The Proposal for a Regulation on the Property Consequences of Registered Partnerships. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Boiché, A. (2012). The Rome III Regulation. Droit de la famille.

  • Bonini-Baraldi, M. (2020). Roma Gay Pride and the recognition of same-sex families in the EU.

  • Blandin, A., et al. (2019). Inheritance of Digital Assets. European Review of Private Law.

  • Corneloup, S. (2018). The Sahyouni Case. Journal du Droit International.

  • Curry-Sumner, I. (2018). Cross-border Surrogacy. Intersentia.

  • Cutler, C. (2020). Asset Tracing in a Digital World.

  • Daly, A. (2020). Children, Autonomy and the Courts. Brill.

  • De Palo, G., & Trevor, M. (2012). EU Mediation Law and Practice. Oxford University Press.

  • Fiorini, A. (2012). Rome III: Choice of Law in Divorce. ICLQ.

  • Gallant, E. (2016). Matrimonial Property Regimes in Europe. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Guidi, G. (2018). The 'Coman' Case. European Papers.

  • Kruger, T. (2011). Rome III and Parties' Choice. Journal of Private International Law.

  • Kruger, T., & Samoy, I. (2017). Brussels IIa: Rome III. Intersentia.

  • Lamont, R. (2016). Domestic Violence and the Hague Convention. Child and Family Law Quarterly.

  • McEleavy, P. (2015). The European Court of Human Rights and the Hague Child Abduction Convention. ICLQ.

  • McEleavy, P. (2019). The Brussels IIa Recast. Modern Law Review.

  • Mellone, M. (2018). Mutual Trust and the Brussels IIa Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Murphy, J. (2016). International Dimensions of Family Law. Manchester University Press.

  • Pataut, E. (2019). Private Divorce and the Brussels IIa Recast. ERA Forum.

  • Polgári, E. (2021). The V.M.A. Case. Maastricht Journal.

  • Schuz, R. (2013). The Hague Child Abduction Convention. Hart.

  • Sharpston, E. (2018). Opinion in MB. CJEU.

  • Steinberg, S. B. (2017). Sharenting. Emory Law Journal.

  • Trimmings, K. (2014). Child Abduction within the European Union. Hart.

  • Trimmings, K., & Dutta, A. (2021). Research Handbook on EU Family Law. Edward Elgar.

  • Tryfonidou, A. (2019). The Free Movement of Same-Sex Families. Common Market Law Review.

  • Vaigė, L. (2019). The Coman Case. Baltic Journal of Law & Politics.

  • Waaldijk, K. (2020). Legal Recognition of Same-Sex Relationships in Europe. Intersentia.

  • Walker, L. (2011). Maintenance and Child Support in Private International Law. Hart.

  • Weller, M. (2017). The New EU Regulation on Public Documents. Yearbook of Private International Law.

9
Inheritance Law in the EU
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Architecture of the EU Succession Regulation (Brussels IV)

The fragmentation of inheritance laws across Europe has historically created profound legal uncertainty for the estimated 450,000 international successions occurring annually within the European Union. Before 2015, Member States applied divergent "conflict of laws" rules: some determined the applicable law based on the deceased's nationality (lex patriae), while others looked to the deceased's domicile or habitual residence. Furthermore, systems often distinguished between movable assets, governed by the personal law of the deceased, and immovable assets, governed by the law of the country where the property was located (lex rei sitae). This "scission" system frequently resulted in a single estate being split between multiple competing legal regimes, leading to contradictory outcomes and excessive administrative costs. The EU Succession Regulation (No 650/2012), widely known as "Brussels IV," was adopted to resolve these conflicts by unifying the rules on jurisdiction, applicable law, and recognition of judgments in matters of succession (Dutta, 2015).

Brussels IV operates on the fundamental principle of "unity of succession." This principle dictates that a single law should govern the entire estate, regardless of the nature of the assets or their location. Whether the deceased owned a villa in Spain, a bank account in Luxembourg, or shares in Germany, one legal system now determines the heirs, their shares, and the administration of the estate. This holistic approach eliminates the legal fragmentation that previously plagued cross-border estates, ensuring that the succession is treated as a coherent economic and legal unit. This simplification is the Regulation's most significant contribution to the European legal area, drastically reducing the complexity of administering transnational wealth (Calvo Caravaca et al., 2016).

The Regulation introduces a primary connecting factor to determine both jurisdiction and the applicable law: the "habitual residence" of the deceased at the time of death. This shift away from nationality reflects a modern sociological reality where citizens increasingly live, work, and build families outside their country of origin. Habitual residence is a factual concept, not a legal one, requiring an overall assessment of the deceased’s life, including the duration and regularity of their presence and the reasons for their stay. This creates a "center of interests" test that aligns the applicable law with the social environment where the deceased was most integrated. However, defining habitual residence can be factually complex in cases of "snowbirds" or mobile professionals who split their time between countries (Lagarde, 2012).

To mitigate the rigidity of the habitual residence rule, the Regulation includes a "manifestly closer connection" exception clause. If it is clear from all the circumstances that the deceased was manifestly more closely connected to a state other than the state of habitual residence (for instance, a person who moved shortly before death but retained all assets and family ties in their home country), the law of that other state applies. This escape clause acts as a safety valve, preventing accidental changes in the applicable law due to temporary relocations or end-of-life care decisions. It ensures that the applicable law reflects the genuine substance of the deceased's connections rather than a purely formalistic residency test (Bonomi & Wautelet, 2016).

The scope of the Regulation is broad, covering all civil law aspects of succession to the estate of a deceased person. It includes the transfer of assets, rights, and obligations to heirs and legatees, the capacity to inherit, the disinheritance and unworthiness to inherit, and the sharing-out of the estate. Crucially, however, the Regulation explicitly excludes revenue and administrative matters. It does not harmonize inheritance tax law. This means that while a single law governs who inherits, multiple states may still claim the right to tax the inheritance based on the location of assets or the residence of heirs. This disconnect between civil succession law and tax law remains a significant burden for cross-border estates, as double taxation treaties are not comprehensive (Frimston, 2013).

The Regulation also excludes questions of matrimonial property regimes and property rights created during a lifetime. The division of assets upon death is often preceded by the liquidation of the matrimonial property regime (e.g., community of property). While Brussels IV governs the succession, the new Twin Regulations (2016/1103 and 2016/1104) govern matrimonial property and registered partnerships. The interaction between these instruments is critical: the matrimonial regime determines what falls into the estate, while the Succession Regulation determines how that estate is distributed. Legal practitioners must therefore navigate a "multi-instrument" landscape to fully settle an international estate (Viarengo, 2017).

Brussels IV applies to the succession of persons who die on or after 17 August 2015. It has universal application, meaning that the conflict-of-law rules apply even if the designated law is that of a non-Member State. If a French resident dies habitually resident in Japan, a French court applying Brussels IV will designate Japanese law as the applicable law for the entire estate. This universality underscores the Regulation's commitment to a global, rather than merely intra-European, approach to conflict of laws. It prevents the creation of a "fortress Europe" in succession matters, acknowledging the global mobility of assets and people (Lazić & Stuij, 2018).

The Regulation creates a "concentration of jurisdiction." The courts of the Member State of the deceased's habitual residence generally have jurisdiction to rule on the succession as a whole. This aligns the forum with the applicable law (gleichlauf), ensuring that courts apply their own domestic law, which reduces judicial errors and costs. If the deceased chose the law of their nationality (discussed in Section 2), the parties concerned can agree that the courts of that Member State should have exclusive jurisdiction. This "party autonomy" in jurisdiction is a significant innovation, allowing heirs to litigate in a forum that is culturally and linguistically familiar (Magnus & Mankowski, 2023).

Despite its comprehensive nature, the Regulation faces a "geographical gap" due to the opt-outs of Ireland and Denmark (and the departure of the UK). These countries are not bound by the Regulation and continue to apply their own conflict-of-law rules, which typically rely on the scission system (domicile for movables, situs for immovables). This creates a "clash of systems" when dealing with estates involving these jurisdictions. A French court might apply French law to a UK national resident in France, while a UK court might apply UK law to the movable assets and French law to the immovable assets. This fragmentation requires careful estate planning to avoid conflicting judgments (O'Brien, 2017).

The Regulation addresses the problem of "simultaneous death" (commorientes) where the order of deaths is uncertain. If two people die under circumstances where it is impossible to determine who died first, and their successions are governed by different laws that solve the problem differently, the Regulation provides a default rule that neither shall have any rights to the succession of the other. This harmonized substantive rule prevents legal deadlocks where national laws might presume different survival orders, ensuring a clean separation of the estates (Leleu, 2016).

The treatment of "clawback" rules highlights the tension between succession and gift law. Some legal systems allow heirs to reclaim lifetime gifts made by the deceased if they infringe on the reserved share (forced heirship). The Regulation provides that the law applicable to the succession also governs the restoration of gifts. This means a lifetime gift made years ago under one legal regime could theoretically be challenged under the succession law applicable at the time of death. This creates uncertainty for the recipients of gifts, as the validity of their title may remain contingent until the donor's death (Davì, 2014).

Finally, the Regulation introduces rules for the "adaptation of rights in rem." Because property law is not harmonized, a right created under the law of succession (e.g., a specific type of usufruct) might not exist in the law of the country where the asset is located. The Regulation requires the latter state to adapt the unknown right to the closest equivalent right under its own law. This adaptation mechanism prevents the "limping" of property rights across borders, ensuring that the substantive outcome of the succession can be practically implemented in the land registers of different Member States (Van Erp, 2014).

Section 2: Party Autonomy and the Choice of Law (Professio Juris)

One of the most revolutionary aspects of the EU Succession Regulation is the introduction of limited party autonomy through professio jurisWhile the default rule connects the estate to the habitual residence, Article 22 allows a person to choose the law of the state whose nationality they possess at the time of making the choice or at the time of death. This choice must be made expressly in a declaration in the form of a disposition of property upon death (usually a will) or be demonstrated by the terms of such a disposition. This mechanism empowers citizens to maintain a connection with their cultural and legal heritage, providing stability against the mutability of habitual residence (Dutta, 2016).

The choice is strictly limited to the law of nationality. A testator cannot choose the law of a country simply because they like its tax regime or liberal rules; there must be a genuine link of citizenship. This restriction prevents "law shopping" while respecting the identity of the individual. For citizens with multiple nationalities, the Regulation allows the choice of any of their nationalities. This offers significant strategic flexibility. A person with dual Italian and US citizenship resident in Italy could choose US law (specifically the law of the relevant US state) to govern their succession, potentially bypassing Italian forced heirship rules (Bonomi, 2015).

The primary driver for exercising this choice is often the desire to avoid "Forced Heirship" rules. Many Continental systems (e.g., France, Italy, Germany) mandate that a portion of the estate (the reserved share) must go to children or spouses, restricting testamentary freedom. In contrast, Common Law systems generally allow complete freedom of testation. By choosing the law of a Common Law nationality, a testator living in a Civil Law country can theoretically disinherit their children or leave everything to a charity, effectively exporting their national freedom into their host country. This clash of legal cultures is one of the most contentious areas of the Regulation's application (Garrou, 2018).

The Regulation attempts to balance this autonomy with the "Public Policy" (Ordre Public) exception. A judge can refuse to apply the chosen foreign law if its application is manifestly incompatible with the public policy of the forum. However, the European Court of Justice and national courts have generally signaled that forced heirship is not a matter of international public policy. The mere fact that the chosen law gives less protection to children than the forum law is not sufficient grounds for refusal. The public policy exception is reserved for extreme violations of fundamental principles, not just differences in legislative preference (Wautelet, 2014).

The validity of the choice of law is governed by the chosen law itself. This creates a "bootstrap" effect: if the choice is valid under the law chosen, it is deemed valid. Modification or revocation of the choice must also follow the formal requirements of the chosen law. This ensures that the testator's intent is evaluated within the legal framework they selected, preventing the frustration of that intent by the formalistic rules of the habitual residence. It creates a "self-referential" validity that strengthens the autonomy of the testator (Lange, 2016).

For dispositions made prior to the Regulation (before August 17, 2015), transitional provisions apply. A choice of law made prior to this date is valid if it meets the requirements of the Regulation or the rules of private international law in force at the time. Furthermore, if a deceased person had made a will in accordance with the law of their nationality, the Regulation creates a "fictitious choice of law," presuming they intended that law to apply. This retroactive validation protects the legitimate expectations of those who planned their estates under the old rules (Honorati, 2017).

The choice of law governs the entire succession ("unity of choice"). A testator cannot pick French law for their house in Paris and English law for their bank account in London. This prohibition on dépeçage (splitting the law) simplifies administration but reduces flexibility. The testator must accept the chosen legal system as a package deal, "warts and all." If US law is chosen to avoid forced heirship, it also brings with it US rules on administration and probate, which may be unfamiliar and costly to implement in a Civil Law context (Hayton, 2016).

The interplay between the choice of law and "agreements as to succession" (inheritance contracts) is complex. Many Member States (e.g., Germany) allow binding contracts regarding future inheritance, while others (e.g., Italy, France) historically prohibit them as pacts on future succession. The Regulation introduces special conflict rules for these agreements. The admissibility and validity are governed by the law which would have been applicable to the succession if the person had died on the day the agreement was concluded. This "hypothetical applicable law" allows parties to lock in a legal regime, providing certainty for estate planning instruments like mutual wills or waivers of compulsory portions (Dutta, 2016).

The Regulation also addresses "Renvoi" (referral back). Generally, the Regulation excludes renvoi—meaning a reference to the law of a state is a reference to its substantive law, not its conflict rules. However, there is a limited exception for third states. If the Regulation points to the law of a third state (e.g., USA), and that state's conflict rules refer back to a Member State or to another third state, the Regulation accepts this renvoi. But crucially, renvoi is excluded if the testator made an express choice of law. If you choose the law of your nationality, you get the substantive law, stopping the "ping-pong" of legal referrals (Symeonides, 2014).

The practical execution of a choice of law often requires the involvement of notaries. In Civil Law jurisdictions, notaries play a central role in drafting wills and settling estates. They are now tasked with advising clients on the strategic use of professio juris. This places a heavy burden on notaries to be familiar with foreign laws. The European Network of Registers of Wills Association (ENRWA) facilitates the cross-border search for wills, ensuring that a choice of law made in one country is discovered by the authorities in another (Carrascosa González, 2016).

Strategic planning using professio juris is now a standard part of international wealth management. "Brussels IV Wills" are drafted to explicitly invoke the nationality law. For UK nationals owning property in France or Spain, this has become a critical tool to avoid local forced heirship rules. While the UK is a third state, the Regulation respects the choice of UK law (as a law of nationality). This creates a paradoxical situation where UK citizens benefit from an EU Regulation their own government opted out of (Haringer, 2018).

Finally, limits exist regarding the "fraud on the law" (fraude à la loi). While the Regulation allows choosing nationality to bypass residence law, this is a sanctioned right, not a fraud. However, artificial changes of nationality solely to manipulate succession law could potentially be challenged, though the bar for proving abuse is high. The system is designed to permit "regulatory arbitrage" based on the genuine link of citizenship, accepting that this may lead to results that differ from the social policy of the state of residence.

Section 3: The European Certificate of Succession (ECS)

The creation of the European Certificate of Succession (ECS) is the major procedural innovation of Regulation 650/2012. It serves as a unified, transnational document to prove the status of heirs, legatees, executors of wills, and administrators of the estate. Before the ECS, heirs often had to obtain national certificates (like the German Erbschein or French Acte de Notoriété) and then go through cumbersome legalization or translation processes to have them accepted in other Member States. The ECS is designed to circulate freely; it is automatically recognized throughout the EU without the need for any special procedure, acting as a "European passport" for the heir (Cröne & Pintens, 2014).

The ECS is an optional instrument. It does not replace internal national documents. An heir can still choose to use a national certificate for domestic purposes and an ECS for cross-border matters, or use a national certificate abroad if it is accepted. However, the ECS has a superior "legitimacy effect" in cross-border situations. Its use is not mandatory, but its acceptance is: authorities in other Member States cannot refuse to accept a valid ECS. This creates a parallel track of European documentation that sits alongside national systems, providing a streamlined alternative for international estates (Dutta, 2015).

The competence to issue an ECS lies with the authorities of the Member State that has jurisdiction over the succession. This ensures consistency between the judicial decision and the evidentiary document. The issuing authority (court or notary) must verify the information provided by the applicant and can make its own inquiries. The ECS is issued using a standard multilingual form (Form V), which reduces translation costs and ensures that banks and land registries in different countries can easily understand the content. This standardization is a key element of its practical utility (Bergquist, 2015).

The ECS produces specific legal effects defined by Article 69 of the Regulation. First, it has a "presumption of accuracy." It is presumed that the person mentioned in the Certificate as the heir or legatee has the status mentioned and that their rights are not subject to any conditions other than those stated. This shifts the burden of proof to anyone challenging the status of the heir. Second, it creates "public faith" protection. Any person who pays the heir mentioned in the ECS (e.g., a bank releasing funds) is discharged from liability, even if it later turns out the ECS was incorrect, provided they acted in good faith. Similarly, anyone buying property from the certified heir is protected (Buschbaum, 2016).

The validity of the ECS is valid for a period of six months (extendable). This limitation reflects the fact that the status of heirs can change (e.g., discovery of a new will). The issuing authority has the power to rectify, modify, or withdraw the Certificate if it is established that it is inaccurate. This creates a mechanism for correction that remains within the jurisdiction of the origin state. Member States must inform each other of any rectification, preventing the circulation of invalid certificates. This dynamic validity requires users to check for the most current version (Gierl, 2016).

Despite its "direct effect," the ECS faces implementation challenges, particularly regarding land registers. Article 69(5) states that the ECS constitutes a valid document for the recording of succession property in the relevant registers of a Member State. However, this is "without prejudice" to the national rules on the procedure for recording. National land registries often have strict formal requirements (e.g., specific identification of parcels). Friction arises when a generic ECS ("I inherit everything") clashes with the specificity requirements of a local land registry ("List every plot number"). The CJEU in Kubicka clarified that land registries cannot require additional evidence if the ECS contains all necessary information, pushing back against national bureaucratic resistance (Pfeiffer, 2018).

The ECS also certifies the powers of executors and administrators. This is particularly useful for Common Law executors acting in Civil Law jurisdictions, where the concept of a personal representative is often unknown. The ECS translates these powers into a standardized European format, allowing an executor to liquidate assets or pay debts in another Member State without needing a local grant of probate. This functional translation of powers bridges the gap between the "administration" and "direct succession" systems (Wauters, 2014).

The evidentiary value of the ECS is limited to the succession. It does not prove the ownership of the deceased. It only proves the transfer of whatever rights the deceased had. If the deceased did not actually own the asset listed, the ECS does not cure that defect of title. It certifies the "inheritance title," not the "property title." Banks and registries must accept it as proof of heirship, but they may still require other checks regarding the underlying asset (Trautwein, 2013).

Third states (non-EU) are under no obligation to recognize the ECS. For assets located in the US or Switzerland, the ECS may be treated merely as a piece of evidence or completely ignored in favor of local probate procedures. This limits the utility of the ECS to the territory of the participating Member States. For truly global estates, the ECS is a partial solution, effective only within the Regulation's geographical scope (Bonomi, 2016).

The Regulation mandates that Member States provide redress procedures against decisions to issue or refuse an ECS. This judicial review ensures that the powerful effects of the certificate are subject to due process. Interested parties (e.g., disinherited relatives) can challenge the issuance. During the challenge, the effects of the ECS can be suspended. This balances the need for speed with the need for accuracy and the protection of rival claimants (Dutta, 2015).

Data protection rules apply to the processing of personal data in the ECS. The circulation of sensitive family information (illegitimacy, disinheritance) across borders requires strict adherence to GDPR principles. The standardized forms are designed to minimize data minimization, including only what is necessary to prove the right.

Finally, the ECS represents the "materialization" of the European judicial area in family matters. It is a tangible document that citizens can hold, symbolizing the removal of borders. Its growing usage statistics indicate that despite initial teething problems with land registries and banks, it is becoming the standard currency of cross-border inheritance administration.

Section 4: Public Policy and the Protection of Vulnerable Parties

Public policy (ordre public) serves as the ultimate safeguard in the EU Succession Regulation, allowing Member States to refuse the application of a foreign law or the recognition of a foreign judgment if it is "manifestly incompatible" with their public policy. In inheritance law, this exception is invoked primarily to protect fundamental national values regarding family solidarity and non-discrimination. However, the CJEU interprets this exception restrictively: it is not enough that the foreign law is different; it must violate a fundamental principle of the legal order of the forum (Lagarde, 2012).

One of the most contentious areas is "forced heirship" (reserved shares). If a testator chooses US law to disinherit their children, can a French court refuse to apply it on public policy grounds? Historically, France viewed the reserved share as a matter of public policy. However, the Regulation's goal is to respect the chosen law. The consensus is that the mere absence of forced heirship in the chosen law is not a violation of public policy. However, recent French legislation (2021) attempts to reinstate forced heirship for French residents regardless of the chosen law, creating a direct conflict with the Regulation. This "sovereignist backlash" tests the limits of EU supremacy in sensitive family matters (Nourissat, 2022).

Discrimination is a clear ground for invoking public policy. A foreign law that discriminates between legitimate and illegitimate children, or based on gender (e.g., Sharia-based laws giving sons double the share of daughters), would be set aside. The Regulation explicitly states that discrimination based on sex, race, religion, etc., violates public policy. In such cases, the court will disapply the discriminatory provision but enforce the rest of the foreign law if possible, or substitute it with the lex fori (law of the court) (Basedow, 2013).

The protection of the surviving spouse is a priority. National laws vary: some grant the spouse ownership (share of estate), others a usufruct (life interest), and others a maintenance claim. The Regulation ensures that the surviving spouse is protected by the applicable succession law. If the applicable law provides no protection, courts might use public policy to intervene, but more often, they rely on the "maintenance family" exception. Claims for maintenance are governed by the Maintenance Regulation, not the Succession Regulation. This allows a spouse to claim support even if the succession law (e.g., chosen US law) leaves them nothing (Walker, 2011).

Protection of "vulnerable persons" (minors and adults with incapacity) is reinforced. Jurisdiction rules favor the court of the habitual residence, ensuring that the authorities closest to the vulnerable person oversee the succession. Furthermore, the Regulation does not affect the application of the 2000 Hague Protection of Adults Convention. Protective measures (e.g., appointment of a guardian to manage the inheritance) are governed by the law of the person's residence, separate from the law of succession. This ensures that the administration of the inheritance does not compromise the welfare of the beneficiary (Laganà, 2016).

"Clawback" claims against lifetime gifts can impoverish recipients years later. While the Regulation subjects these to the succession law, public policy might be invoked if the clawback destroys the recipient's economic livelihood disproportionately. However, the CJEU prioritizes the predictability of the applicable law. The "protection of legitimate expectations" of the gift recipient is balanced against the "protection of the reserved heir." The Regulation allows agreements to waive these clawback claims if permitted by the applicable law, fostering certainty (Dutta, 2016).

The treatment of same-sex partners involves public policy. If the applicable law does not recognize the inheritance rights of a same-sex spouse, can the forum state intervene? If the forum state recognizes same-sex marriage, applying a discriminatory foreign law would likely violate its public policy. The Regulation's recitals encourage courts to interpret foreign concepts broadly to prevent discrimination. However, for registered partnerships, the Regulation has specific rules: the law of the state of registration applies to the succession rights of the partner, ensuring their status travels with them (Waaldijk, 2020).

"Commorientes" (simultaneous death) rules are harmonized to protect the estate structure. If the applicable laws presume different survival orders (e.g., one presumes the younger survived, another that they died together), the Regulation imposes a substantive rule that neither inherits from the other. This prevents circular litigation and the arbitrary shifting of assets based on unprovable presumptions. It protects the integrity of the respective bloodlines or designated heirs of each deceased (Leleu, 2016).

"Unknown Heirs" and vacant estates. If there are no heirs under the applicable law, the state usually claims the estate. The Regulation stipulates that the law of the state where the assets are located applies to the appropriation of "ownerless" property. This prevents a foreign state from claiming immovable property located in the forum state under the guise of succession law. It protects the sovereign interest of the situs state over vacant land within its territory (Bonomi, 2013).

The "Adaptation of Rights in Rem" is a mechanism to protect the integrity of the property law system of the Member State where the asset is located. If the succession law grants a right unknown to the host state (e.g., a specific trust interest), the host state is not forced to introduce it but must adapt it to the closest equivalent domestic right. This protects the "numerus clausus" of property rights (public policy of property law) while ensuring the heir receives the economic value of their inheritance (Van Erp, 2014).

"Evasion of Law" (fraude à la loi) is a classic exception. If a person changes habitual residence solely to manipulate the succession law and disinherit relatives, courts might refuse to apply the new law. However, the Regulation's acceptance of professio juris suggests that "planning" is legitimate. The threshold for fraud is high; it requires an artificial arrangement with no genuine connection. The EU favors "mobility" over "sedentary" notions of loyalty to a legal system.

Finally, the "Public Policy" exception acts as the border guard of the Regulation. It is the filter through which foreign laws must pass. While intended to be exceptional, the rise of "sovereignist" family policies in some Member States suggests that public policy may become a more frequent battleground, challenging the Regulation's goal of neutral conflict-of-law rules.

Section 5: Digital Inheritance and the Vacuum of Law

The digitization of wealth and personal life has given rise to the concept of "Digital Inheritance." Digital assets include cryptocurrencies, NFTs, social media accounts, cloud storage, emails, and domain names. These assets have economic and sentimental value. However, the EU Succession Regulation was drafted with physical assets in mind. It does not contain specific rules for digital assets. Consequently, the transmission of digital wealth is governed by the general rules of the Regulation, which leads to significant friction when applied to the intangible, extraterritorial, and encrypted nature of digital property (Blandin et al., 2019).

The primary question is the qualification of digital assets. Are they "property" capable of being inherited? Most Member States and the CJEU jurisprudence treat digital assets with economic value (crypto) as part of the estate. However, assets with purely personal or sentimental value (emails, chats) face conflicting approaches regarding post-mortem privacy. The German Federal Court of Justice (BGH) in the 2018 Facebook case ruled that a Facebook account is part of the estate and passes to the heirs (parents) just as physical letters would. This judgment relies on the principle of "universal succession," rejecting the idea that the "digital person" dies with the biological body. It sets a powerful precedent for treating digital assets as inheritable property (Löhnig, 2018).

This "universal succession" approach clashes with the Data Protection regime (GDPR). Does the right to privacy survive death? The GDPR does not apply to deceased persons (Recital 27), leaving Member States to regulate post-mortem data protection. Some states (e.g., Estonia, France) have enacted laws allowing individuals to give instructions on the fate of their data or granting heirs access. Others protect the privacy of the deceased's correspondence strictly. The Succession Regulation determines who inherits, but data protection laws determine what access rights exist. This creates a conflict between the heir's property right (to access the asset) and the deceased's (and their communicators') privacy right (Harbinja, 2017).

Jurisdiction and Applicable Law for digital assets are problematic. Under Brussels IV, the law of the habitual residence applies. But where is a Bitcoin wallet or a Facebook account located? If the server is in the US and the platform's Terms of Service (ToS) choose California law, there is a conflict. The Regulation asserts that the succession law governs the transmission of the estate. However, platforms often refuse access to heirs citing US privacy laws (SCA) or their own ToS ("non-transferability" clauses). This creates a "private international law of platforms" that competes with EU succession law. The heir may be the legal owner under EU law but locked out by the platform's contract terms (Conway, 2016).

Terms of Service (ToS) often contain clauses that terminate the account upon death or forbid sharing passwords. The German Facebook judgment declared such clauses invalid if they contradict the principle of universal succession. It ruled that the contract with the platform passes to the heir. This implies that EU consumer and succession law overrides the contractual autonomy of digital platforms. However, enforcing this against US-based tech giants requires litigation, which is costly for average heirs. The practical reality is often determined by the platform's "Legacy Contact" policies rather than the Succession Regulation (Edwards & Harbinja, 2013).

Cryptocurrency presents unique challenges due to encryption. "Not your keys, not your coins." If the deceased dies without sharing the private key, the asset is mathematically inaccessible, regardless of what the law says. The Succession Regulation can declare the heir the owner, but it cannot decrypt the wallet. This creates a category of "lost inheritance." Estate planning now requires "digital wills" or secure mechanisms to transfer keys. For assets held on exchanges (custodial), the exchange must comply with the ECS and release the funds, treating them like bank accounts (Kutler, 2011).

"Digital Wills" and Formal Validity. Can a will be made by video, email, or blockchain smart contract? The Regulation refers the formal validity of wills to the Hague Testamentary Convention (lex loci actus). Most Member States still require writing, signatures, or notarial deeds. A video will or a smart contract might fail these formal requirements. The lack of modernization in "form requirements" is a major barrier to digital estate planning. While some states are exploring electronic wills, the EU landscape is largely analog, risking the invalidity of digital dispositions (Sitkoff, 2020).

Intellectual Property in the digital estate (e.g., an iTunes library or Kindle books) highlights the "license vs. sale" issue. Platforms argue users only have a non-transferable license that expires at death. Heirs cannot "inherit" the music library. This contrasts with physical books. The legal trend is to challenge these restrictive licenses, but current copyright law often supports the platform. The "digital exhaustions" doctrine (allowing resale) is limited. Thus, the digital inheritance is often "hollowed out" compared to the physical one (Perzanowski & Schultz, 2016).

The role of "Digital Executors". Some jurisdictions allow the appointment of a specific person to manage digital assets. The ECS can certify the powers of this executor. However, their practical power depends on the cooperation of service providers. The EU lacks a regulation mandating "API access" for executors. A "Right to Digital Access" for heirs, similar to the data portability right, is debated as a necessary legislative update to make digital succession effective.

Social Media "Memorialization". Platforms offer statuses like "memorialized accounts" where content stays but cannot be logged into. This is a contractual solution. However, if the heir needs access to find financial information or photos, memorialization is insufficient. The conflict is between the platform's standardized "death management" features and the heir's bespoke legal rights under the Succession Regulation.

Genetic Data and Bio-banks. Inheriting access to the deceased’s DNA data (e.g., 23andMe) involves bioethics. This data affects the privacy of living relatives. The legal regime for this "biological digital inheritance" is nascent, sitting at the intersection of succession, health law, and GDPR.

Finally, the Future of Digital Inheritance requires EU action. A revision of the Succession Regulation or a new digital assets directive is needed to clarify the relationship between the heir's rights and the platform's rules, enforce access rights against foreign providers, and harmonize the post-mortem privacy protection. Until then, digital inheritance remains a zone of legal friction between the code of law and the code of the platform.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Beaumont, P., et al. (2016). The Recast of the Brussels IIa Regulation. Hart.

  • Bergquist, U. (2015). The European Certificate of Succession. ERA Forum.

  • Blandin, A., et al. (2019). Inheritance of Digital Assets. European Review of Private Law.

  • Bonomi, A. (2015). The European Succession Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Bonomi, A., & Wautelet, P. (2016). Le droit européen des successions. Bruylant.

  • Buschbaum, M. (2016). The European Certificate of Succession. DNotZ.

  • Calvo Caravaca, A. L., et al. (2016). The EU Succession Regulation. Cambridge University Press.

  • Carrascosa González, J. (2016). The Regulation of International Successions. Edward Elgar.

  • Conway, H. (2016). Digital Assets and the Law. Computer Law & Security Review.

  • Cröne, R., & Pintens, W. (2014). The European Certificate of Succession. ERA Forum.

  • Davì, A. (2014). Clawback and the EU Succession Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Dutta, A. (2015). The European Succession Regulation. Max Planck Private Law Research Paper.

  • Dutta, A. (2016). Cross-border estate planning. ERA Forum.

  • Edwards, L., & Harbinja, E. (2013). Protecting Post-Mortem Privacy. Cardozo Arts & Entertainment Law Journal.

  • Frimston, R. (2013). The European Succession Regulation and Tax. Trusts & Trustees.

  • Gallant, E. (2016). Matrimonial Property Regimes in Europe. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Garrou, A. (2018). Forced Heirship and the EU Succession Regulation. Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law.

  • Gierl, W. (2016). The European Certificate of Succession. Rpfleger.

  • Harbinja, E. (2017). Post-mortem privacy in the EU. SCRIPTed.

  • Haringer, A. (2018). The EU Succession Regulation and Third States. Common Market Law Review.

  • Hayton, D. (2016). The EU Succession Regulation. Trust Law International.

  • Honorati, C. (2017). Transitional Provisions in the EU Succession Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Kruger, T. (2011). Rome III and Parties' Choice. Journal of Private International Law.

  • Kutler, J. (2011). Protecting Your Online Afterlife. William & Mary Law Review.

  • Laganà, C. (2016). Protection of Vulnerable Adults and Succession. Rivista di diritto internazionale privato.

  • Lagarde, P. (2012). La résidence habituelle. Dalloz.

  • Lange, K. (2016). Choice of Law in Succession. RabelsZ.

  • Lazić, V., & Stuij, S. (2018). Brussels IIbis Regulation: Changes and Challenges. Springer.

  • Leleu, Y. H. (2016). Commorientes in the EU Succession Regulation. Revue critique de droit international privé.

  • Löhnig, M. (2018). The BGH Facebook Judgment. NJW.

  • Magnus, U., & Mankowski, P. (2023). Brussels IIbis Regulation. Sellier.

  • McEleavy, P. (2019). The Brussels IIa Recast. Modern Law Review.

  • Mellone, M. (2018). Mutual Trust and the Brussels IIa Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Nourissat, C. (2022). The French Clawback Law and EU Public Policy. La Semaine Juridique.

  • O'Brien, M. (2017). The EU Succession Regulation and Ireland. Irish Jurist.

  • Perzanowski, A., & Schultz, J. (2016). The End of Ownership. MIT Press.

  • Pfeiffer, T. (2018). The Kubicka Case and Land Registers. IPRax.

  • Sitkoff, R. (2020). Electronic Wills. Trusts & Estates.

  • Symeonides, S. C. (2014). Renvoi in the EU Succession Regulation. American Journal of Comparative Law.

  • Trautwein, T. (2013). The Evidentiary Effects of the ECS. DNotZ.

  • Trimmings, K. (2014). Child Abduction within the European Union. Hart.

  • Van Erp, S. (2014). Adaptation of Rights in Rem. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Viarengo, I. (2017). The New Regulations on Property Regimes. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Waaldijk, K. (2020). Legal Recognition of Same-Sex Relationships in Europe. Intersentia.

  • Walker, L. (2011). Maintenance and Child Support in Private International Law. Hart.

  • Wautelet, P. (2014). Public Policy in the EU Succession Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Wauters, B. (2014). The European Certificate of Succession and Executors. Trusts & Trustees.

  • Weller, M. (2017). The New EU Regulation on Public Documents. Yearbook of Private International Law.

10
EU International Private Law
2 2 7 11
Lecture text

Section 1: The Architecture of the European Judicial Area

European International Private Law (EIPL), often referred to as Private International Law (PIL) or Conflict of Laws, is the set of rules that determines how cross-border private law disputes are handled within the European Union. Unlike substantive law, which tells us "who is right," PIL answers three preliminary questions: which court has jurisdiction (forum), which national law applies to the dispute (ius), and whether a judgment from one country will be recognized and enforced in another. The construction of a unified EIPL system is a necessary corollary to the Internal Market. If citizens and businesses are to move freely, the legal risks associated with crossing borders—such as being sued in a distant court or facing an unfamiliar legal system—must be predictable and managed. This field transforms the EU from a mere economic zone into a "European Judicial Area" where justice can flow as freely as goods and capital (Basedow, 2011).

The constitutional basis for this unification is Article 81 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU). This article empowers the EU to develop judicial cooperation in civil matters having cross-border implications. This competence marked a shift from the early days of the EEC, where judicial cooperation was managed through intergovernmental conventions (like the 1968 Brussels Convention), to a supranational era where cooperation is governed by EU Regulations. Regulations are directly applicable in all Member States, ensuring a uniformity that conventions could never achieve. This "communitarization" of PIL means that the rules on jurisdiction and applicable law are now federalized EU law, interpreted centrally by the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), rather than divergent national rules (Dickinson, 2008).

The cornerstone of the system is the principle of "Mutual Trust" (or Mutual Recognition). This principle posits that all Member States share a commitment to the rule of law and fundamental rights, and therefore, a judgment delivered by a French judge should be accepted by a German judge as if it were their own. This trust justifies the abolition of "exequatur," the intermediate procedure traditionally required to validate a foreign judgment. In the ideal "European Judicial Area," a judgment circulates without border checks. However, mutual trust is a presumption, not always a reality, and it is occasionally tested by concerns over judicial independence or procedural fairness in specific Member States, creating tension between the efficiency of the market and the protection of rights (Storskrubb, 2011).

The scope of EIPL instruments is generally limited to "civil and commercial matters." This is an autonomous EU concept, defined by the CJEU to exclude public law disputes where the state exercises sovereign powers (acta iure imperii). For instance, a dispute over a tax debt or a fine is not "civil," even if the state uses civil courts to collect it. Conversely, a dispute involving a state-owned enterprise acting as a private investor is covered. This definition draws the boundary between the "European private law space," where judgments circulate freely, and the "public law space," where territorial sovereignty remains paramount. Defining this boundary is a constant task of the CJEU (Kruger, 2011).

The architecture rests on two main pillars: the "Brussels Regime" for jurisdiction and enforcement, and the "Rome Regime" for applicable law. The Brussels I Recast Regulation (1215/2012) is the procedural engine, determining where to sue. The Rome I (Contract) and Rome II (Tort) Regulations determine the substantive law. These regimes are complementary but distinct. It is entirely possible, and common, for a court in Italy (jurisdiction via Brussels I) to apply the law of Poland (applicable law via Rome I). This separation of forum and ius is a fundamental feature of modern PIL, requiring judges to be "cosmopolitan" in applying foreign norms (Magnus & Mankowski, 2016).

"Universal Application" is a key characteristic of the Rome Regulations. When an EU court determines the applicable law under Rome I or II, it applies that law even if it is the law of a non-Member State (e.g., USA or China). The EU does not restrict the choice of law to EU laws. This reflects a "globalist" approach to justice; the goal is to apply the law with the closest connection to the case, not necessarily European law. In contrast, the Brussels jurisdiction rules have a more "intra-EU" focus, primarily allocating jurisdiction among Member States, though recent reforms have extended certain rules to third-state defendants (Briggs, 2015).

The relationship with the Hague Conference on Private International Law is vital. The EU is a member of the Hague Conference and actively promotes global conventions. The Hague Choice of Court Convention (2005) and the Hague Judgments Convention (2019) extend the logic of the Brussels regime to the global level. The EU ensures that its internal regulations align with these global instruments to avoid "treaty conflicts." This creates a concentric circle of judicial cooperation: a tightly integrated inner circle (EU Regulations), a wider circle (Lugano Convention with EFTA states), and a global circle (Hague Conventions) (Goddard, 2010).

"Forum Shopping" is a phenomenon the system seeks to manage. Parties often try to sue in the court most likely to give a favorable outcome (e.g., high damages in Ireland, quick injunctions in the Netherlands). EIPL does not ban forum shopping entirely; it allows "legitimate" forum selection (e.g., choice of court clauses). However, it combats "abusive" forum shopping through strict lis pendens rules. If the same dispute is filed in two courts, the second court must wait for the first to decide. This preventing of parallel proceedings ensures "decisional harmony" and prevents conflicting judgments that would undermine the internal market (Bell, 2005).

The concept of "weak party protection" permeates the architecture. In contracts involving consumers, employees, and insurance policyholders, the general rules of jurisdiction and choice of law are modified. The weaker party is generally allowed to sue in their home court (domicile) and is protected by the mandatory laws of their home country. This "protective jurisdiction" overrides the general commercial logic of the regulations. It recognizes that in asymmetric relationships, the "freedom of contract" to choose a court or law is often a fiction imposed by the stronger party (Tang, 2010).

"Public Policy" (Ordre Public) is the emergency brake of the system. A Member State can refuse to apply a foreign law or enforce a foreign judgment if it is "manifestly incompatible" with its public policy. This exception is interpreted restrictively by the CJEU. It cannot be used merely because the foreign law is different. It is reserved for violations of fundamental principles, such as a breach of the right to a fair trial or discrimination. This ensures that while Europe respects legal diversity, it maintains a "red line" of fundamental values (Mills, 2008).

"Administrative Cooperation" supports the judicial framework. The European Judicial Network (EJN) helps judges communicate to ascertain foreign law or serve documents. The digitalization of justice (e-CODEX) aims to connect national case management systems. EIPL is not just a set of abstract rules but an operational infrastructure involving central authorities and liaison magistrates. This bureaucratic layer is essential for the practical functioning of cross-border justice, turning theoretical cooperation into logistical reality.

Finally, the "Variable Geometry" of the EU affects EIPL. Denmark has an "opt-out" from the Area of Freedom, Security and Justice, meaning EU civil justice regulations do not automatically apply there (though Denmark often adopts them via parallel agreements). Ireland has an "opt-in" regime. This creates a fragmented map where the "European Judicial Area" does not perfectly match the political map of the EU. Understanding these geographical nuances is critical for the practitioner (Hess, 2012).

Section 2: Jurisdiction in Civil and Commercial Matters (Brussels I Recast)

Regulation (EU) 1215/2012, known as the "Brussels I Recast," creates the procedural backbone of the single market. Its primary function is to allocate jurisdiction among Member State courts, preventing conflicts where multiple courts claim authority over the same dispute. The fundamental rule (Article 4) is actor sequitur forum rei: persons domiciled in a Member State shall, whatever their nationality, be sued in the courts of that Member State. This defendant-centric rule is based on the principle of defense; it is harder to defend oneself in a foreign court, so the claimant must travel to the defendant. "Domicile" is the key connecting factor, determined by national law for individuals and by the statutory seat, central administration, or principal place of business for companies (Briggs, 2015).

However, the Regulation provides "Special Jurisdiction" grounds (Article 7) that offer the claimant an alternative forum. These are based on a "close connection" between the court and the dispute. In matters relating to a contract, a person may be sued in the courts for the place of performance of the obligation in question. For the sale of goods, this is the place where the goods were delivered. This rule links jurisdiction to the economic reality of the transaction. It allows a seller to sue a non-paying buyer in the seller’s home court if that is where delivery occurred (or was meant to occur), facilitating debt collection (Magnus & Mankowski, 2016).

In matters relating to tort, delict, or quasi-delict, jurisdiction lies with the courts for the "place where the harmful event occurred." In the famous Bier v. Mines de Potasse case, the CJEU ruled that this covers both the place where the damage occurred (Erfolgsort) and the place of the event giving rise to the damage (Handlungsort). The claimant can choose between them. If a factory in France pollutes the Rhine, damaging a nursery in the Netherlands, the victim can sue in France (action) or the Netherlands (damage). This "ubiquity" principle favors the victim, especially in cross-border environmental or product liability cases (Dickinson, 2008).

"Exclusive Jurisdiction" (Article 24) overrides both domicile and party choice. Certain disputes are so closely linked to the sovereignty or administration of a state that only its courts can hear them. This applies to rights in rem in immovable property (land ownership), the validity of the constitution of companies, and the validity of public registers. If a dispute concerns the ownership of a holiday home in Spain, only Spanish courts have jurisdiction, even if both owners are German. This respects the territorial interest of the state in controlling its land and public records (Hess, 2012).

"Prorogation of Jurisdiction" (Choice of Court Agreements) allows parties to contract out of the general rules (Article 25). If parties agree that the courts of a specific Member State shall have jurisdiction, that jurisdiction is exclusive unless agreed otherwise. This "Party Autonomy" is vital for commercial certainty. The Recast Regulation strengthened this by ensuring that the chosen court has priority to decide on the validity of the clause, preventing the abusive "Italian Torpedo" tactic (where a party rushes to a slow court to block the chosen court). Now, the chosen court can proceed even if another court was seized first (Garcimartín, 2016).

The "Lis Pendens" rule (Article 29) manages parallel proceedings. If proceedings involving the same cause of action and between the same parties are brought in the courts of different Member States, any court other than the court first seized must stay its proceedings. The "first-in-time" rule is strict and mechanical. It prevents irreconcilable judgments. However, combined with the slow speed of some judiciaries, it historically encouraged a "race to court." The reform regarding choice of court agreements was a necessary correction to prioritize contractual agreement over the speed of filing (Hartley, 2013).

"Protective Jurisdiction" applies to insurance, consumer, and employment contracts. The weaker party (consumer) can sue the business in the consumer's home court (forum actoris) or the business's home court. However, the business can generally only sue the consumer in the consumer's home court. This deviation from the general rule aims to correct the power imbalance. It ensures that a consumer is not deterred from seeking justice by the cost of litigating abroad. It effectively forces businesses targeting foreign consumers to accept the risk of foreign litigation (Tang, 2010).

The "Abolition of Exequatur" (Article 39) is the Recast's major innovation. A judgment given in a Member State which is enforceable in that state shall be enforceable in other Member States without any declaration of enforceability. The judgment is treated as a domestic judgment. This removes a significant administrative burden and cost. However, the defendant can still apply for "refusal of enforcement" in the receiving state on limited grounds (public policy, lack of proper service of documents). The presumption is enforceability; the burden is on the defendant to stop it (Pocar, 2007).

"Provisional and Protective Measures" (Article 35) allow a court to issue interim orders (e.g., freezing assets) even if it does not have jurisdiction over the substance of the case. This is crucial for preventing the dissipation of assets. The European Account Preservation Order (EAPO) complements this by creating a specific European procedure for freezing bank accounts. These tools ensure that the "time" of litigation does not destroy the "value" of the claim (Hess, 2012).

The scope of the Regulation regarding "Third States" (non-EU) was expanded. While the general domicile rule applies to EU defendants, certain rules (consumer protection, exclusive jurisdiction) apply regardless of the defendant's domicile. If a US company targets French consumers, the French consumer can sue in France under the Regulation rules. This "extraterritorial" reach ensures that the protective umbrella of EU law covers internal market activities even when the actor is outside the Union.

"Arbitration" is explicitly excluded from the Regulation. This boundary is contentious (West Tankers). If a court case involves the validity of an arbitration clause, does the Regulation apply? The Recast clarifies that the Regulation does not apply to arbitration, but a court judgment on the invalidity of an arbitration clause does not circulate. This uneasy truce aims to preserve the autonomy of the arbitration system (New York Convention) while maintaining the supremacy of EU law in court proceedings (Bermann, 2012).

Finally, the relationship with the Lugano Convention is critical. The Lugano Convention extends a nearly identical regime to Switzerland, Norway, and Iceland. This creates a wider "European Judicial Area" beyond the EU. Interpreting Brussels I usually implies interpreting Lugano, creating a parallel jurisprudence that integrates these EFTA states into the EU's civil justice ecosystem.

Section 3: The Law Applicable to Contractual and Non-Contractual Obligations (Rome I & II)

Once a court has jurisdiction, it must determine which law applies. The Rome I Regulation (593/2008) governs the law applicable to contractual obligations. Its guiding star is Party Autonomy (Article 3). Parties are free to choose the law governing their contract, including the law of a non-Member State (e.g., Swiss or New York law). This choice can be express or clearly demonstrated. This freedom facilitates international commerce by allowing parties to select a neutral or sophisticated legal system to govern their deal, reducing legal risk and transaction costs (Ferrari, 2015).

In the absence of choice, Article 4 provides clear default rules based on the "Center of Gravity" or "Characteristic Performance." For a sale of goods, the law of the seller's habitual residence applies. For services, the law of the service provider applies. The rationale is that the party performing the characteristic obligation (supplying the goods/service) operates under their own regulatory and cost environment. If the contract does not fit these types, it is governed by the law of the country where the party required to effect the characteristic performance has his habitual residence. This "rigid" system (compared to the flexible "closest connection" test of the old Rome Convention) provides high legal certainty (Lagarde, 2008).

Consumer Contracts (Article 6) are a major exception to general autonomy. A choice of law cannot deprive the consumer of the protection of the mandatory provisions of the law of their habitual residence, provided the trader "directs activities" to that country. If a German consumer buys from Amazon France, and the contract chooses French law, the German consumer still benefits from German mandatory consumer rights (if they are higher). If no choice is made, the law of the consumer's residence applies. This prevents businesses from using choice-of-law clauses to evade consumer protection standards (Calliess, 2012).

Overriding Mandatory Provisions (Article 9) act as a sovereignty shield. These are "police laws" regarded as crucial by a country for safeguarding its public interests (political, social, or economic). A court can always apply the overriding mandatory provisions of the forum (its own law), regardless of the law governing the contract. For example, a French court might apply French minimum wage laws to a contract governed by Polish law if the work is performed in France. This ensures that the regulatory core of the state cannot be contracted away (Hellner, 2009).

Rome II Regulation (864/2007) governs non-contractual obligations (torts/delicts). The general rule (Article 4) is Lex Loci Damni: the law of the country where the damage occurs applies, regardless of where the event giving rise to the damage occurred. This prioritizes the victim's environment. If a German factory explodes and damages a French house, French law applies. This rule avoids the complexity of modern supply chains where the "act" (manufacturing) could happen anywhere (Symeonides, 2008).

Product Liability (Article 5 Rome II) has a specific cascade. It applies the law of the habitual residence of the person sustaining the damage, if the product was marketed there. If not, it falls back to the law of the country where the product was acquired, or the place of damage. This complexity aims to balance the producer's need for foreseeability (not being sued under a law they couldn't predict) with the consumer's expectation of protection under their local standards (Magnus, 2010).

Unfair Competition (Article 6 Rome II) applies the law of the country where competitive relations or the collective interests of consumers are affected. This effectively means the law of the market (lex loci mercatus). If a Spanish company engages in misleading advertising in Italy, Italian law applies. This ensures a level playing field; all competitors in the Italian market play by Italian rules, regardless of their origin. It treats unfair competition as a market regulation issue rather than a private tort (Fitchen, 2012).

Environmental Damage (Article 7 Rome II) introduces a unique "Favor Laesi" (favoring the victim) principle. The victim can choose to base their claim on the law of the country where the damage occurred or the law of the country where the event giving rise to the damage occurred. This incentivizes high environmental standards. A victim in the Netherlands harmed by a German polluter can choose German law if it offers higher damages or stricter liability. This "regulatory competition" pushes companies to adhere to the highest standards to avoid liability (Winter, 2008).

Intellectual Property (Article 8 Rome II) applies the Lex Loci Protectionis: the law of the country for which protection is claimed. This is a strict territorial rule; parties cannot contract out of it (Article 14 restriction). An infringement of a French copyright is governed by French law. For unitary rights like the EU Trade Mark, EU law applies. This reflects the territorial nature of IP monopolies; a state grants an IP right for its own territory, and its law must govern the infringement within that territory (Desantes, 2011).

Freedom of Choice in Torts (Article 14 Rome II) allows parties to agree on the applicable law after the dispute has arisen. For commercial parties, they can also agree before the event. This allows businesses to bundle their contractual and non-contractual liabilities under a single law. If two German trucks collide in France, they can agree to apply German law to the damages, simplifying the settlement. This extension of party autonomy to torts is a modern trend in PIL.

Digital Torts (Privacy/Defamation) are problematic. The "Mosaic Theory" (Shevill/eDate) in jurisdiction means a victim can sue in every country where the content is accessible. Rome II explicitly excludes defamation/privacy from its scope due to lack of political consensus (media lobbies vs. privacy advocates). This leaves the applicable law for defamation to national conflict rules, creating a major gap in the harmonization of digital liability.

Finally, the goal of both Regulations is "Decisional Harmony." Whether a case is heard in Paris or Berlin, the applicable law should be the same. This prevents forum shopping for substantive law. By unifying the conflict rules, the EU ensures that the outcome of a case depends on the merits, not on the geographical accident of where the lawsuit is filed.

Section 4: Special Regimes: Family, Succession, and Insolvency

Beyond general civil law, the EU has created specialized PIL regimes for sensitive areas. Brussels IIb (2019/1111) governs matrimonial matters and parental responsibility. Unlike commercial law, jurisdiction here is often based on the "habitual residence" of the spouses or the child, rather than the defendant's domicile. The overriding principle is the "best interests of the child." Jurisdiction over a child generally lies with the court of the child's habitual residence, ensuring that the judge closest to the child's life makes the decisions (McEleavy, 2019).

International Child Abduction is a central focus. Brussels IIb strengthens the 1980 Hague Convention. It imposes a strict 6-week deadline for return proceedings. It limits the "grave risk" defense for refusing return. Crucially, it creates a "trump card" mechanism: if a court in the refuge state refuses to return the child, the court of the original home state can issue a subsequent return order which is automatically enforceable without any possibility of opposition in the refuge state. This "super-enforcement" prioritizes the swift return of the child over the judicial sovereignty of the refuge state (Beaumont et al., 2016).

Applicable Law in Divorce is governed by the Rome III Regulation (1259/2010). This was adopted via "Enhanced Cooperation" (not all EU states participate). It allows spouses to choose the law applicable to their divorce (e.g., law of nationality or residence). In the absence of choice, a cascade of connecting factors applies, starting with current habitual residence. This prevents one spouse from rushing to a "fast divorce" jurisdiction to apply a law unfavorable to the other spouse (the "rush to court"). It brings legal certainty to the dissolution of international marriages (Boiché, 2012).

The Maintenance Regulation (4/2009) governs alimony and child support. It is extremely creditor-friendly. Jurisdiction can be based on the creditor's residence. The applicable law is determined by the Hague Protocol (usually the law of the creditor's residence). Decisions on maintenance are abolished from exequatur; a maintenance order from Poland can be enforced directly against a debtor's wages in Germany. This ensures that financial support flows across borders without bureaucratic delays (Walker, 2011).

The Succession Regulation (Brussels IV - 650/2012) revolutionizes cross-border inheritance. It creates a "unitary" system: a single court and a single law govern the entire estate (movables and immovables). The connecting factor is the deceased's "habitual residence" at the time of death. However, citizens can choose the law of their nationality to govern their succession (Professio Juris). This allows a British citizen living in France to choose English law, potentially bypassing French forced heirship rules. The European Certificate of Succession serves as a unified proof of heirship, accepted by land registers and banks across the EU (Dutta, 2015).

The Insolvency Regulation (2015/848) manages corporate distress. It rejects "universal" bankruptcy where one court grabs all assets worldwide. Instead, it uses "Modified Universalism." Main proceedings are opened in the state of the "Centre of Main Interests" (COMI)—usually the registered office, but rebuttable. This main proceeding encompasses the debtor's worldwide assets. However, "Secondary Proceedings" can be opened in other states where the debtor has an "establishment," covering only local assets. This compromise protects local creditors while facilitating cross-border rescue (McCormack, 2017).

COMI Migration (Forum Shopping in Insolvency) is regulated. The Regulation presumes COMI is the registered office but allows evidence to the contrary. Companies sometimes move their COMI to a "rescue-friendly" jurisdiction (like the UK or Netherlands) before filing. The Regulation tries to prevent "abusive" forum shopping by requiring a 3-month look-back period for COMI shifts. However, genuine restructuring mobility is permitted. The definition of COMI is the battlefield where the jurisdiction for corporate rescue is decided (Bork & Mangano, 2016).

Matrimonial Property Regimes are covered by two Twin Regulations (2016/1103 and 2016/1104). They cover the division of assets for married couples and registered partnerships. They follow the logic of Rome III and Brussels IV: allowing choice of law and connecting jurisdiction to the divorce or succession court. This fills the last major gap in EU family PIL, ensuring that the "money" follows the "status" in cross-border separations (Gallant, 2016).

Public Policy in family law is sensitive. Can a state refuse to recognize a same-sex marriage or a talaq divorce? The CJEU (Coman) ruled that the term "spouse" in free movement law includes same-sex spouses, forcing recognition for residency rights. However, for substantive family law (Rome III), public policy can still block discriminatory foreign laws. The tension between the "portability of status" (being married everywhere) and "national identity" (definition of family) defines this field.

"Brussels IIb" and the Voice of the Child. The Recast Regulation mandates that children must be given a genuine and effective opportunity to express their views in cross-border proceedings. This harmonizes a procedural right, ensuring that the child is a subject, not just an object, of the jurisdictional dispute. Recognition of a judgment can be refused if the child was not heard (Daly, 2020).

Interconnection of Insolvency Registers. The Regulation mandates the interconnection of national insolvency registers. This transparency allows creditors in Italy to check if their German partner has filed for bankruptcy. It prevents fraud where a debtor continues to trade in one country while insolvent in another. Digital transparency is the enforcement mechanism of the insolvency regime.

Finally, the "European Certificate" concept is expanding. From the Certificate of Succession to the certificates in Brussels IIb for return orders, the EU is creating standardized, multilingual forms that act as "passports" for judgments and rights. This bureaucratization of PIL reduces the need for translation and legal analysis by receiving authorities, streamlining the cross-border life of citizens.

Section 5: Digital Challenges and the Future of EU PIL

The digital economy disrupts the territorial logic of Private International Law. Jurisdiction and applicable law traditionally rely on physical connecting factors: domicile, place of delivery, place of damage. In the metaverse or cloud, these concepts are elusive. Internet Jurisdiction is the primary challenge. Where is the "place of damage" for an online defamation? The CJEU’s eDate judgment created the "Center of Interests" ground: a victim can sue for global damages in the place where they have their center of interests (usually habitual residence). This adapts the physical rule to the ubiquity of the internet, creating a "portable" protective jurisdiction for personality rights (Kuipers, 2011).

For consumer contracts, the "Directing Activities" test (Pammer/Alpenhof) determines jurisdiction. A consumer can sue at home if the trader "directs" its activities to the consumer's state (e.g., via a website in the local language or shipping options). Mere accessibility of a website is not enough. This test attempts to distinguish between the passive and active digital trader. In the age of geo-targeting and algorithmic ads, determining "direction" requires analyzing the digital architecture of the transaction (Tang, 2016).

Cloud Computing complicates the location of assets. Data stored in the cloud is physically fragmented across servers in multiple jurisdictions. For insolvency, is data an asset located at the COMI or the server? For succession, where is a crypto-wallet located? The trend is to decouple the legal location from the physical server location, attributing the digital asset to the location of the account holder or the "center of main interests" of the user. This "fictional localization" is necessary to prevent the arbitrariness of server geography from dictating legal results (Svantesson, 2017).

Blockchain and Smart Contracts pose a radical challenge. A DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization) has no registered office and no directors. Whom do you sue and where? If a smart contract executes automatically, what is the "law of the contract"? Rome I allows choice of law, but DAOs often lack a choice clause. Proposals for a "Lex Cryptographia" suggest that the code itself is the law. However, EU regulators (MiCA) are imposing "off-chain" legal entities on crypto-service providers to re-anchor them in the territorial legal system, ensuring there is always a liable party within the jurisdiction (De Filippi & Wright, 2018).

GDPR as a PIL Instrument. The General Data Protection Regulation applies to any entity offering goods/services to or monitoring the behavior of people in the EU (Article 3). This "territorial scope" rule is a unilateral conflict-of-laws rule. It asserts the application of EU public law based on the target market, regardless of the data controller's establishment. This extraterritorial reach ("Brussels Effect") forces global tech giants to apply EU law, effectively harmonizing the digital law applicable to European residents (Kuner, 2015).

Service of Documents in the digital age. The Service Regulation (2020/1784) promotes the electronic service of documents. It creates a decentralized IT system (e-CODEX) for courts to exchange documents securely. The goal is to make serving a writ in Portugal as fast as serving one domestically. However, service by email or social media on a defendant in a third state remains legally complex, balancing the right to be heard with the reality of digital communication (Kramer, 2020).

Taking of Evidence by video link. The Taking of Evidence Regulation (2020/1783) encourages the use of videoconferencing to hear witnesses in another Member State. This "digital proximity" reduces the need for physical travel. It modernizes the judicial cooperation machinery, acknowledging that in a digital world, physical presence is not a prerequisite for testimony.

Brexit has created a "black hole" in EIPL. The UK is now a "Third State." The Brussels Regime no longer applies. Judgments must be enforced under the old Hague rules or national law, reintroducing exequatur. The UK applied to join the Lugano Convention (which extends Brussels-like rules to EFTA states), but the EU blocked it. This reflects the political nature of the European Judicial Area: access to the seamless recognition of judgments is a benefit of Single Market membership, not a universal right. The "hard border" for judgments increases legal risk for EU-UK trade (Ungerer, 2020).

The Hague Judgments Convention 2019 is the future global solution. The EU has acceded to it. It aims to be a "Brussels Regime for the World," creating a basic framework for recognizing judgments between the EU, USA, China, etc. While narrower than Brussels I (more grounds for refusal), it provides a minimum floor of global circulation for commercial judgments, reducing the reliance on pure comity (Garcimartín, 2020).

Algorithmic Dispute Resolution (e-Justice). As ODR platforms resolve millions of disputes (e.g., eBay, Amazon), "private PIL" emerges. The platform's algorithm decides jurisdiction and law (usually the platform's own rules). This privatized justice bypasses state courts and conflict rules. The challenge for EU PIL is how to regulate these "digital courts" to ensure they respect mandatory EU rights (consumer protection) while accepting their efficiency for low-value claims.

Finally, the "Brussels I for the Internet". Proposals exist to reform the jurisdiction rules specifically for the digital economy, potentially introducing a "destination" principle where jurisdiction always lies where the digital service is consumed. This would align legal jurisdiction with the economic reality of digital value extraction, ensuring that digital giants cannot hide behind the veil of a distant domicile.

Questions


Cases


References
  • Basedow, J. (2011). The Law of the European Union and the European Judicial Area.

  • Beaumont, P., et al. (2016). The Recast of the Brussels IIa Regulation. Hart.

  • Bell, A. (2005). Forum Shopping and Venue in Transnational Litigation. Oxford University Press.

  • Bermann, G. A. (2012). Navigating EU Law and International Arbitration. Arbitration International.

  • Boiché, A. (2012). The Rome III Regulation. Droit de la famille.

  • Bork, R., & Mangano, R. (2016). European Insolvency Proceedings. Oxford University Press.

  • Briggs, A. (2015). Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments. Informa Law.

  • Calliess, G. P. (2012). Rome Regulations: Commentary. Kluwer.

  • Daly, A. (2020). Children, Autonomy and the Courts. Brill.

  • De Filippi, P., & Wright, A. (2018). Blockchain and the Law. Harvard University Press.

  • Desantes, M. (2011). Intellectual Property and Rome II. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Dickinson, A. (2008). The Rome II Regulation. Oxford University Press.

  • Dutta, A. (2015). The European Succession Regulation. Max Planck Research Paper.

  • Ferrari, F. (2015). Rome I Regulation. Sellier.

  • Fitchen, J. (2012). The Applicable Law in Cross-Border Competition Law Actions. LSE.

  • Gallant, E. (2016). Matrimonial Property Regimes. Yearbook of PIL.

  • Garcimartín, F. (2016). The Hague Choice of Court Convention. Recueil des Cours.

  • Garcimartín, F. (2020). The Hague Judgments Convention. Yearbook of PIL.

  • Goddard, D. (2010). The Hague Conference on Private International Law. Victoria University Law Review.

  • Hartley, T. C. (2013). Civil Jurisdiction and Judgments in Europe. Oxford University Press.

  • Hellner, M. (2009). The Rome II Regulation. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Hess, B. (2012). The Brussels I Regulation: Recent Case Law. Common Market Law Review.

  • Kramer, X. (2020). Service of Documents and Taking of Evidence. European Parliament.

  • Kruger, T. (2011). Civil Jurisdiction Rules of the EU and their Impact on Third States. Oxford University Press.

  • Kuipers, J. J. (2011). The Law Applicable to Violation of Privacy. European Review of Private Law.

  • Kuner, C. (2015). The EU GDPR and the Future of Data Transfer. Global Privacy Law Review.

  • Lagarde, P. (2008). Le règlement Rome I. Revue critique de droit international privé.

  • Magnus, U. (2010). The Rome II Regulation. Sellier.

  • Magnus, U., & Mankowski, P. (2016). Brussels Ibis Regulation. Sellier.

  • McCormack, G. (2017). Business Restructuring in Europe. Journal of Corporate Law Studies.

  • McEleavy, P. (2019). The Brussels IIa Recast. Modern Law Review.

  • Mills, A. (2008). The Dimensions of Public Policy in Private International Law. Journal of Private International Law.

  • Pocar, F. (2007). The New Lugano Convention. Yearbook of Private International Law.

  • Storskrubb, E. (2011). Civil Procedure and EU Law. Oxford University Press.

  • Svantesson, D. (2017). Solving the Internet Jurisdiction Puzzle. Oxford University Press.

  • Symeonides, S. C. (2008). Rome II and Tort Conflicts. American Journal of Comparative Law.

  • Tang, Z. S. (2010). Consumer Contracts and the Internet in EU PIL. Hart.

  • Tang, Z. S. (2016). Electronic Consumer Contracts in the Conflict of Laws. Hart.

  • Ungerer, J. (2020). Brexit and the Conflict of Laws. European Law Review.

  • Walker, L. (2011). Maintenance and Child Support in Private International Law. Hart.

  • Winter, G. (2008). Ecological Damage in Public International Law. ELNI.

Total All Topics 20 20 75 115 -

Frequently Asked Questions