London is a leading centre for international commercial dispute resolution. Most of the cases brought before the English commercial courts involve one or more foreign parties, and many of these have little or no connection with the United Kingdom. Parties from around the world are drawn to litigate in England, seeking to take advantage of the expertise of English law, lawyers and courts. In the (somewhat provocative and controversial) words of the well-known English judge Lord Denning, “You may call this ‘forum-shopping’ if you please, but if the forum is England, it is a good place to shop in, both for the quality of the goods and the speed of service.” (The Atlantic Star [1973] QB 364, 382).
Many of the international commercial claims being brought in the English courts raise complex issues regarding whether, and if so how, the courts should resolve such cases. Any time that proceedings are commenced which have connections with more than one legal system, questions of private international law or the conflict of laws must be considered. The three main questions which arise are:
Jurisdiction – whether the courts will hear a dispute (including how the courts take into account connections that the dispute may have with foreign legal systems, or the existence of parallel proceedings in a foreign court);
Applicable law – which law or laws will be applied to resolve the dispute (perhaps counterintuitively, courts will often apply foreign substantive law if the case has its most significant connections with a foreign legal order); and
The recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments – whether the courts will give effect to a foreign judgment which has already sought to determine the issues between the parties.
This module examines the rules and principles which apply to resolve these questions as they arise in international commercial litigation. It focuses on the rules and principles which apply in the English courts, but also draws comparisons with the way these issues are dealt with in some other legal systems. This module also examines some of the key ancillary orders which the courts may make in dealing with such disputes, including anti-suit injunctions (which seek to protect English jurisdiction by restraining a party from bringing foreign proceedings) and asset freezing orders (which seek to protect English jurisdiction or assist foreign courts by preserving assets against which a judgment might ultimately be enforced). While the focus is on the treatment of these issues in commercial disputes, it is not just litigation lawyers who need to understand these issues – transactional lawyers also need to understand and advise on litigation risk when drafting and negotiating contracts.
The module also features ‘problem-focused’ classes, which examine some of the key contemporary issues in commercial litigation, drawing on the research interests of the teaching team. For example, one of these examines the increasing number of claims before the English courts against multinational companies, seeking to hold English parent companies responsible for the conduct of their foreign subsidiaries. Another looks at the impact of the internet on problems of private international law, including the complexities of dealing with online defamation.
The module draws on a range of sources – the law which applies in England is a mixture of common law rules, statutes, retained EU law, and international conventions, and comparisons are also made with the approaches under some other legal systems.
Module syllabus
Introduction
Jurisdiction
Parallel Proceedings and Anti-Suit Injunctions
Asset Freezing Orders
Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments
Choice of Law in Contract
Choice of Law in Tort
Choice of Law in Unjust Enrichment
Choice of Law in Property
Substance and Procedure
Rule against the Enforcement of Foreign Public Laws; Acts of State; Public Policy and Mandatory Rules
Pleading and Proof of Foreign Law
Problem-focused classes
Recommended materials
Module reading lists and other materials will be provided via online module pages, available at the beginning of term once students have enrolled. The following is a provisional guide to relevant books:
Text books
‘Cheshire, North and Fawcett’s Private International Law’ (15th edn, 2017, Oxford University Press)
'Clarkson & Hill's Conflict of Laws’ (5th edn, 2016, Oxford University Press)
Further reading
'Dicey, Morris & Collins on the Conflict of Laws’ (16th edn, 2022, Sweet and Maxwell)
Hartley, ‘International Commercial Litigation: Text, Cases and Materials on Private International Law’ (3rd edn, 2020, Cambridge University Press)
Rogerson, ‘Collier’s Conflict of Laws’ (4th edn, 2013, Cambridge University Press)
Preliminary reading
‘Cheshire, North and Fawcett’s Private International Law’ (15th edn, 2017, Oxford University Press), chapter 1
Clarkson & Hill, ‘The Conflict of Laws’ (5th edn, 2016, OUP), chapter 1
Key information
Module details | |
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Credit value: | 45 credits (450 learning hours) |
Convenor: | Alex Mills |
Other Teachers: | Ugljesa Grusic |
Teaching Delivery: | 20 x 2-hour weekly lectures, Term One and Two |
Who may enrol: | LLM students only |
Prerequisites: | None |
Must not be taken with: | None |
Qualifying module for: | LLM in Litigation and Dispute Resolution; LLM in International Commercial Law; LLM in International Law |
Assessment | |
Practice Assessment: | TBD |
Final Assessment: | 3- Hour in Person Controlled Condition Exam (80%) 1,200 Word Case note (20%) |