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Private International Law and Family Law
Private International Law and Family Law
Through this Project I would like to through some light on PIL and Family Law. Private International Law is emerging branch of law in todays era of globalization, people are crossing national boundaries for various purposes and thus subjugate themselves to foreign legal systems. PIL plays are vital role in settling disputes where parties are foreigners.
TBALE OF CONTENTS
Table of Latin Terms and Abbreviations 1. Introduction 2. The Concept of Domicile and Its Relevance 2.1 Meaning and definition of Domicile 3. PIL and Matrimonial Disputes
2 3 4 5 7
3.1Couts Role and Duty in Matrimonial Cases..7 3.2 Conflict of Law Rules in Unmarried Cases8 3.3The Status of Foreign Law.10 3.4Harmonization...11 4. Conclusion....................................................................................................11 5. Bibliography.12
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LATIN TERMS
1. Lex Domicilii: The lex domicilii is the Latin term for "law of the domicile" in the Conflict of Laws. 2.LexLoci Contractus: The lex loci contractus is the Latin term for "law of the place where the contract is made" in the Conflict of Laws 3. Lex Loci Solutionis: The lex loci solutionis is the Latin term for "law of the place where relevant performance occurs" in the Conflict of Laws. 4.Lex Loci Celebrationis: The lex loci celebrationis is the Latin term for "law of the place where the marriage is celebrated" in the Conflict of Laws. 5.Lex Situs: The Lex Situs is the Latin term for law of the place or law of the place in which property is situated for the purposes of the Conflict of laws. 6.Lex Fori: In Conflict of Laws, the Latin term lex fori literally means the "law of the forum".
FEW ABBREVIATIONS
1. EU Union 2. PIL 3. CEDAW Women 4. EC European Council Private International Law Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination against European
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW 2. The next step is the classification of the cause of action into its component legal categories like as if in case of divorce validity of marriage may arise, whether the lex forum should recognize a marriage which is solemnized in other state etc. Aspects of procedural and substantive laws are taken into account. 3. Each legal category is having choice of law and which law to be applicable. A key element in this may be the rules of renvoi(send back) 4. Once the applicable law is decided, that law must be proved before the forum court and applied to reach a judgment. 5. The successful party must then enforce the judgment which will first involve the task of securing cross-border recognition of the judgment. Private International Law is of more importance in family matters like divorce, adoption, inheritance of property, movable or immovable etc. IN Family disputes the most important aspect which is taken into account is of domicile i.e. the parties are domicile .In Era of globalization importance of Private International Law cannot be undermined specially in family disputes which are increasing day by day
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW Meaning and Definition of Domicile The meaning and definition of domicile were elucidated by the Private International Law Committee in its First Report in 1954 as follows: A persons domicile may be defined as meaning the country (in the sense of a territorial unit possessing its own system of law) in which he has his home and intends to live permanently. The law regards every person as having a domicile, whether it be the domicile of origin which the law confers on him at birth, or the domicile of choice which he may subsequently acquire. The two requisites for the acquisition of a fresh domicile are: (1) residence; and (2) intention to remain permanently, and both these elements must be present before a new domicile can be acquired. If a person, having acquired domicile of choice, abandons it without acquiring a fresh one, the law regards his domicile of origin as having revived until a fresh domicile of choice is acquired, even though he may never in fact have returned to his domicile of origin. Hence, according to this statement, domicile may be defined as the legal system within whose jurisdiction an individual makes his or her home, intending to remain there permanently. It can be seen that the cornerstone underlying the English concept of domicile is permanent home.
For Purpose of better understanding of domicile in respect of Private International Law, it can be categorised as follows:
1.
The domicile of origin is the domicile a person acquires at birth, and remains with that
thereafter until it is replaced by a domicile of dependency or domicile of choice. A posthumous child, that is, a child born after his or her fathers death, derives his or her domicile of origin from that of the mother. As for the domicile of origin of a foundling, this is derived from the country where he or she is found.
2.
Domicile of dependency
It is a well settled rule that no dependent person can acquire a domicile of choice. The domicile of such persons depends on, and changes with, the domicile of the person on whom they are legally dependent. Two classes of persons must be examined, namely, children under the age of 16 and married women. As for mentally disordered persons, it suffices to note that, in general, the domicile of such a person depends on the person to whose care a mentally disordered person has been entrusted.
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW Example: children who are still minor and age of minority differs from state to state.
3.
Domicile of choice
Every independent person is capable of acquiring a domicile of choice by residing in a country other than the country of origin, with the intention of remaining there permanently. Both the elements of residence and intention must be satisfied before English law can recognise a change of domicile. Although these elements are considered distinct, they are, as the remainder of this section will show, interrelated. A domicile of choice is acquired by an individual residing in a country, other than the country of his or her origin, with the intention of remaining there permanently. The onus of proving the acquisition of such a domicile is on the party alleging it, and the burden of proof is a heavy one. Residence is a question of fact. It has to exist, but need not be prolonged. However, it must indicate a real link between the individual and his or her alleged new homeland. Intention to reside in the new homeland must be permanent or indefinite. It does not suffice to have the intention conditional upon the occurrence of an act. Older case law seems to impose an almost irrefutable presumption against the acquisition of a domicile of choice. More recent cases appear to make a distinction between a likely and unlikely contingency. Where the contingency is not sufficiently clear, it will not prevent the acquisition of a domicile of choice. On the other hand, where it is clear, the court looks at the likely possibility of it happening. If so, this will prevent the acquisition of a domicile of choice.
4.
Abandonment of domicile
A dependent person will, on independence, retain his or her domicile of dependency as a domicile of choice until it is abandoned at any time thereafter. A domicile of choice will be abandoned when a person departs from a country and the intention to return has withered away. A domicile of origin endures until a domicile of choice is acquired. Once a domicile of choice is abandoned, the domicile of origin revives until another domicile of choice is acquired.
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW are imposed, including notarization, witnesses, and special acknowledgment forms. In some countries, these must be filed (or docketed) with a domestic court, and the terms must be so ordered by a judge. This is done in order to ensure that no coercion or oppression has been exerted by one spouse against the other. Upon presenting a property agreement between spouses to a court of divorce, that court will generally assure itself of the following factors: signatures, legal formalities, intent, later intent, , lack of oppression, reasonableness and fairness, consideration, performance, reliance, later repudiation in writing or by conduct, and whichever other concepts of contractual bargaining apply in the context. Choice of law The applicable law in nullity suits depends on the classification of the relevant issue, that is, whether it is an issue of formal validity or an issue of essential validity. Lack of parental consent has been classified as an issue of form. In relation to defects affecting consent, such as fraud, duress, mental illness, and so forth, the weight of judicial opinion seems to favour reference of the issue of consent as one of essential validity and, therefore, subject to the law of domicile. IN relation to physical defects or incapacity, the position is unclear. Such defects have been classified as issues of form in some instances, and as issues of capacity in others
Where a decree is granted elsewhere ,then conflict arises and court may or may not recognize it .Recognition depends upon various grounds as like is there any bilateral treaty of any such convention where both parties and state of filing suit is party to it or not.eg private law agreements like Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, the Hague Convention on the Recognition of Divorces and Legal Separations, as well as provisions from CEDAW and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and the regional convention reflected in the European Council regulations on divorce. In the absence of a valid and enforceable agreement, heres how the conflict of law rules work:
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Movable v. Immovable - In general, applicable matrimonial law depends on the nature of the property. Lex situs is applied to immovable property (i.e., real estate), and the law of matrimonial domicile applies to movable property, provided there has been no subsequent change in the spouses domicile.
Full Mutability Doctrine - property relations between spouses are governed by their latest domicile, whether acquired before or after the marriage. This is also the norm in England, except for a few cases where severe injustice results from a harsh application. In those cases, the court also examines whether newly acquired property can be traced back to property owned before the change.
Immutability Doctrine - the original personal law of the parties at the time of marriage continues to govern all property including subsequently acquired property, regardless of a later change in domicile or nationality. E.g. in Israel: property relations between spouses shall be governed by the law of their domicile at the time of the solemnization of the marriage, provided that they may by agreement determine and vary such relations in accordance with the law of their domicile at the time of making the agreement Note that the Israeli application of the Immutability Doctrine does not distinguish between personal and real property. Both are subject to the law of domicile at marriage.
Partial Mutability or Mutability of New Acquisition - this is the American approach to conflicts of law in matrimonial property division cases. All movable property acquired during the marriage is subject to the parties domicile law at the time of acquisition, and not that of the original or intermediate domicile. What was acquired before the marriage is governed by the law of the parties' domicile at the time of marriage. Thus, if rights vested in a property when and where it was purchased, it would not be adversely affected by a later change of domicile.
Lex Fori - In many cases, courts simply avoid this complicated and expensive analysis by applying their local law to the parties' entire property, even if there is a foreign element. This is based on the assumption that laws around the world are basically similar in their treatment of marriage as a co-partnership. Since the partnership can be placed in the forum, the forums law applies to all its aspects.
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW Conflict of law rules in unmarried cases Unlike marriage which has an international recognised legal status, there are no international treaties on recognition of unmarried couple's legal status. If an unmarried couple change residence to different countries, then the local law on where the couple is last domiciled is applied to them. This covers, legal; status of the relationship, rights, obligations and all worldwide movable and immovable property. To otherwise interpret the law would mean if the unmarried couple had assets in several different countries, they would then need separate legal cases in each country to resolve all their movable and immovable property. In the absence of a valid and enforceable agreement for an unmarried couple, heres how the conflict of law rules work:
Full Mutability Doctrine - property relations between the unmarried couples are governed by their latest domicile, whether acquired before, during or after the relationship.
The status of foreign law Generally, when the court is to apply a foreign law, it must be proved by foreign law experts. It cannot merely be pleaded, as the court has no expertise in the laws of foreign countries nor in how they might be applied in a foreign court. Such foreign law may be considered no more than an evidence rather than law because of the issue of sovereignty. If the local court is actually giving extraterritorial effect to a foreign law, it is less than sovereign and so acting in a way that is potentially unconstitutional. The theoretical responses to this issue are:
That each court has an inherent jurisdiction to apply the laws of another country where it is necessary to achieving a just outcome; or
That the local court creates a right in its own laws to match that available under the foreign law. This explanation is sustainable because, even in states which apply a system of binding legal precedents, any precedent emerging from a conflicts case can only apply to future conflicts cases. There will be no ratio decidendi that binds future litigants in entirely local cases.
That the national court, when applying a foreign law, does not give an extraterritorial effect but recognizes, through its own "conflict of laws rule", that the situation at hand
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW falls under the scope of application of the foreign rule. In order to understand this argument one must first define the notion of extraterritorial application of a rule. This notion is susceptible to two distinct meanings: On the one hand, this notion is used to describe the situation where a local court applies a rule other than the Lex fori (local law) Harmonization As Private International Law is also known as Conflict of Law so theres need of harmonization while adjudicating disputes where foreign element is present. Its the moral duty of courts to harmonize various legal systems to provide justice to the parties. The very object of law i.e. justice should not be defeated, thus theres a need of harmonization To apply one national legal system as against another may never be an entirely satisfactory approach. The parties' interests may always be better protected by applying a law conceived with international realities in mind. The Hague Convention on Private International Law is a treaty organization that oversees conventions designed to develop a uniform system.
CONCLUSION
Law in the field of Conflict of law or Private International law is continuously developing and changing with the change in society. Law can never be static it is always dynamic as law is for the society not society of the law, so with the change in society law too changes. People are moving to other states for various reasons like trade and commerce, job, tourism etc. and thus if any dispute arises and parties cannot settle dispute amicably then rules of PIL is applied. Family Law is that type of law which is not uniform in nature, even within India, there are different Family Law for different sections of society. Family Law derives its origin from Religion and customs, so its very difficult to bring uniformity in it unlike criminal law. As unlike principles of criminal law which are somewhat similar in nature through globe, family law on the other hand is much more complex as religion, place/domicile, customs play vital role in it.
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PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FAMILY LAW In matrimonial case, court find difficulty in in resolving such disputes as in some country grounds for divorce may not in other, similarly validity of marriage, minors marriage, succession rights etc. recognition of foreign judgements, decree etc. are of much relevance in PIL and courts are under moral duty to provide best relief in favour of parties, so that the ultimate of law is not defeated. Family law is such a law which can never be uniformed nor can any convention be made applicable while adjudicating disputes as its law which has its origin mostly from religion and customs. For example even in India Dr. Ambedkar proposed for a Uniform Code governing family matters but was widely criticised as still people are very religious and cant go against it even though it may be wrong.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
1.Abla J Mayss, LLM, PhD, Licence en Drot ,Principles of Conflict of Laws, Cavendish Publishing Limited, London, Sydney,3Rd ed,1999. 2. J. G AUTOR COLLIER, John Greenwood Collier, Conflict of Laws, Cambridge University Press, 2001 3. http://abookmedhin.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/principles-of-conflict-of-laws.pdf 4.http://books.google.co.in/books?id=gOYveQFbMakC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_g e_summary_r&cad=0#v=onepage&q&f=false 5. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conflict_of_laws 6. http://www.bsos.umd.edu/gvpt/lpbr/subpages/reviews/stark0207.htm 7. http://www.legalserviceindia.com/articles/frpca.htm 8. Lectures of Dr.K. Parameswaran.
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