Louisiana Law Review - Nbr. 65-2, January 2005
Wayne R. Barnes - Associate Professor, Texas Wesleyan University School of Law
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I. Introduction. II. The Two Dominant Legal Systems of the World: Common Law and Civil Law. A. The Pervasive Reach of the Two Systems. B. Basic Origins, Precepts, and Characteristics of the Common Law System. 1. Historical Roots. 2. Basic Mechanics of the Common Law System. 3. Legislation in Common Law Systems. 4. Equitable Powers of the Courts. 5. The Role of the Court and Judges in the Common Law System. 6. Summary of Common Law System. C. Basic Origins, Precepts and Characteristics of the Civil Law System. 1. Roman Origins and the Corpus Juris Civilis. 2. Revived European Study of the Corpus Juris Civilis. 3. The Rise of the Nation-State, the Revolution, and the Advent of National Codes. 4. Codification Efforts in England and the United States. 5. The Code in the Modern Civil Law System. 6. The Judicial Function in the Modern Civil Law System. 7. The Status of Judges in the Civil Law System. 8. Summary of Civil Law System. III. Internationalized Contract Law: Past and Present. A. The Need for International Contract Law. B. Historical International Contract Law: The Jus Commune and Lex Mercatoria. C. Present Day Echoes of the Lex Mercatoria. 1. Uniform Laws on Sales of Goods (ULIS, ULFIS, and CISG). 2. Principles of European Contract Law and the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts. D. The Implementation of CISG as Positive Law and the Degree of Uniformity in its Interpretation Among Contracting States. IV. Prospects for the Future Internationalization of Contract Law and the Pragmatic Effects of Implementing a Civilian Resolution. A. An International Civil Law Code Will Have a Unifying Effect on the Globalized Rule of Contract Law. B. An International Civil Law Code Will Limit the Delegation of the Sovereignty of Nations. C. The Conditions that Historically Have Led to Codification Are Currently Present in the International Commercial Community. D. Common Law Jurisdictions Are Increasingly Receptive to Codification. E. Other Practical Considerations Portend Eventual Codification. V. Conclusion.

U.S. Supreme Court - Conroy v. Aniskoff, 507 U.S. 511 (1993)
U.S. Supreme Court - Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833 (1992)
U.S. Supreme Court - Southern Pacific Co. v. Jensen, 244 U.S. 205 (1917)
Contemplating a Civil Law Paradigm for a Future International Commercial Code
Associate Professor, Texas Wesleyan University School of Law. Some of the ideas in this article were originally presented at the conference celebrating the 150th Anniversary of Hadley v. Baxendale: "The Common Law of Contracts as a World Force in Two Ages of Revolution," which conference was held on June 7-8, 2004, in Gloucester, England, at the University of Gloucestershire, Oxtalls Campus. I benefitted from discussions I had with many of the conference participants, including Joseph M. Perillo, Andrew Tettenborn, Dr. Florian Faust, and Joe Spurlock. I also benefitted from the input and suggestions of my colleagues Frank Snyder, Paul George, Cynthia Fountaine, and Susan Ayres, who reviewed prior drafts of this article and/or provided valuable suggestions.
I. Introduction. The international community has worked toward a global law of contracts for the last century. These efforts include the Uniform Law on the International Sale of Goods, the Uniform Law on the Formation of Contracts for the International Sale of Goods, the UNIDROIT Principles of International Commercial Contracts, the Principles of European Contract Law, and the Vienna Convention for the International Sales of Goods (CISG). These texts are all tremendous achievements in their own right. The CISG, especially, is a monumental achievement, testifying to the increasing willingness of modern nations to cooperate toward a unification of commercial law.1 However, they reflect a delicate juxtaposition of the two primary legal systems of the world-the civil law and the common law. A consequence of this tension has been that the texts are full of compromises between the two systems. The excessiveness of these compromises has resulted in confusion and lessened effectiveness of the resultant provisions.2 The hybridized legislation is devoid of interpretational methodologies which accompany statutes in the common law and civil law systems, respectively. The international effort at a unifying law of contracts is therefore at a relative impasse because of this tension between the two systems.3 A solution is needed. Suggesting the solution to this tension is the purpose of this article. That is, this article seeks to determine, between the two great and dominant legal systems of the world-the common law and the civil law-which of the two is more workable as the model on which any future regime of international contracts law should be based. The purpose is not to argue for the superiority of one system or another in the abstract sense, or in the sense of superiority as applied to a single nation's domestic system of laws.4 Rather, this article's narrow focus is to decide whether a common law or civil law model is more efficacious in implementing any future effort at such a sophisticated system of international contracts law. For reasons I shall expound, I believe that in this narrow sense, the civil law may prove a more pragmatic and politically expedient solution to this dilemma. Section II demonstrates that the common law and the civil law are easily the most widely practiced legal systems in the world. It will also provide a comprehensive historical overview and basic description of both the common law system and the civil law system. Particular emphasis is placed on the civil law. Section III describes the perceived need for an international law of contracts, the history of the efforts to attain such a regime, and the problem of uniform international interpretation of the current such law, the Convention for the International Sale of Goods (CISG). The effects of having participating nations from both legal systems is also discussed. Section IV asserts that a civil law model would provide a more pragmatic and efficacious solution for a future international contracts code, for the following reasons: (1) the civil law would be more distinctly unifying of the international law of contracts, (2) the civil law would minimize the surrender of nations' sovereignty to an international regime of contract law, primarily by promulgating a comprehensive code and eliminating stare decisis, (3) the characteristics of the international contract law-in excess of one thousand years old, and simultaneously a new supranational regime in the embryonic stages-are such that codification is especially appropriate for immediate implementation of any such regime, (4) common law jurisdictions have evidenced increasing amenability to codification of existing law and have also revealed an observable trend away from strict adherence to stare decisis, whereas there is no discernible converse trend in civilian jurisdictions, and (5) other considerations-including the sheer population numbers which weigh in favor of the civil law-point toward implementing a civilian international contracts code as the logical and pragmatic solution. Section V presents a brief conclusion. Section V, therefo...Try vLex for FREE for 3 days
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