IBT Outline F09
IBT Outline F09
IBT Outline F09
INTRODUCTION...............................................................................................3
A. International Trade and Business Issues.............................................................3
Incoterms as Trade Usage..................................................................................3
Commercial Terms..............................................................................................3
Absolute/Comparative Advantages.....................................................................4
Methods of Protectionism...................................................................................4
B. Legal and Regulatory Systems............................................................................5
Customary International Law..............................................................................5
Treaties..............................................................................................................5
Lex Mercatoria....................................................................................................5
C. International Economic Law Organizations..........................................................6
Taxonomy of Tariff Structures............................................................................6
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) Treaty.....................................6
World Trade Organization (WTO)........................................................................7
European Union (EU)..........................................................................................7
North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)................................................8
THE DOCUMENTARY SALE OF GOODS......................................................................9
A. Contract Formation.............................................................................................9
The Basic Transaction.........................................................................................9
Concerns in the Contract Formation...................................................................9
Problem 4.1 – Insulation to Germany................................................................10
Problem-Solving Approach to Contract Issues by Prof. Frank Garcia.................10
B. Choice of Law – United States...........................................................................12
Restatement 2d § 187 – Law of the State Chosen By the Parties......................12
Restatement 2d § 188 – Law Governing In Absence of Effective Choice By the
Parties................................................................................................................13
Restatement 2d § 6 – Choice of Law Principles.................................................14
Use of the Forum’s Law by Default...................................................................14
C. Choice of Law – European Union ......................................................................14
Convention on the Law Applicable to Contractual Obligations (EEC)/EC
Regulation 593/2008..........................................................................................14
D. Convention on the International Sale of Goods (CISG)......................................15
Application of the CISG.....................................................................................15
The CISG Applied to Problem 4.1......................................................................16
Arguing for the Court in Kansas to Apply the CISG...........................................16
Summary of Problem 4.1..................................................................................17
E. Business Planning..............................................................................................18
Structuring Contracts.......................................................................................18
F. Distributorships/Agents and the Use of Countertrade........................................18
Distributor or Agent..........................................................................................18
Termination Issues...........................................................................................19
Establishing a Distributorship/Agency in Mexico...............................................20
Countertrade – Back to Bartering.....................................................................20
G. Letters of Credit................................................................................................21
The Basic Commercial Letter of Credit Transaction..........................................21
The Nature of Strict Documentary Compliance.................................................22
The Basis of Strict Documentary Compliance...................................................23
Voest-Alpine Standard and UCP 600.................................................................23
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INTRODUCTION
Commercial Terms
The “E” term EXW (ex works) is where the goods are made available to
the buyer, but use of a carrier is not expressly required.
The “F” terms FCA (free carrier), FAS (free along side), FOB (free on
board) require the seller only to assume the risks and costs to deliver the
goods to a carrier nominated by the buyer.
Free Carrier.
Need only notify buyer that “goods have been delivered into the
custody of carrier.”
Seller must provide a commercial invoice or equivalent, any
necessary export license and usually a transportation document
that will allow buyer to take delivery of goods.
Free on Board.
Appropriate only to water-borne transportation.
Need only notify buyer that “goods have been delivered on
board.”
Risk of loss transfer to buyer when the goods have passed the
ship’s rail.
Seller must also clear the goods for export from the place of
delivery and thus must pay any costs of customs formalities and
export taxes.
The “C” terms CFR (cost and freight), CIF (cost, insurance and freight),
CPT (carriage paid to), CIP (carriage and insurance paid to) require seller
to assume the risks and costs to deliver the goods to a carrier, arrange
and paid for the main transportation – and sometimes insurance – but
without assuming additional risks due to post-shipment events.
Cost, Insurance and Freight.
Appropriate only to water-borne transportation.
Seller must arrange the transportation and pay the freight costs
to the destination port, but has completed its delivery obligations
when the goods are “on board the vessel at the port of
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shipment.”
Seller must pay the freight and unloading costs of the carrier at
the destination port under the term, but the buyer must pay all
other costs, including unloading costs not collected by the carrier.
The “D” terms DAF (delivered at frontier), DES (delivered ex ship), DEQ
(delivered ex quay), DDU (delivered duty unpaid), DDP (delivered duty
paid) require the seller to deliver the goods to a carrier, arrange for their
transportation, and assume the risks and costs until the arrival of goods
at an agreed country of destination.
Absolute/Comparative Advantages
Absolute advantage is the common reason why two countries engage in
trade; i.e., one country produces a better product than the other. Westia
has an absolute advantage in producing garments (1/2 day/yd vs. 5
days/yd in Tropica).
Comparative advantage is about specializing in what you are least
inefficient in producing. Westia should focus on garments (10x more
efficient) and Tropica should focus on producing wine since that is their
least inefficient production.
Methods of Protectionism
Tariffs; ad valorem taxes; calculated as a percentage of the cost of the
good.
Attractive because they are a source of revenue; doesn’t appear to
be a direct tax upon the population although it is since manufacturer
will just incorporate the tariff into the price.
Tariffs are also invisible; citizenry isn’t necessarily aware.
International business actually prefers tariffs because they are more
visible for negotiation and/or discussion.
Quotas; numerical restriction on imports.
Doesn’t affect the price in the same manner; however through the
operation of supply/demand the price will be driven up.
Premium from the quota goes to the producers’ pocket, not the
governments.
Governments can create auctions to divide quotas.
Economists discuss a balancing point where same level of protection
achieved through tariffs or quotas.
By and large illegal under international trade laws.
Currency valuations; devaluing currency to increase exports, decrease
imports.
Devaluing currency is not popular in the international markets.
Non-Tariff Barriers.
Labeling requirements; product safety standards.
Subsidizing domestic industries; artificially reduces cost of
production.
Customs requirements; discrete restrictions through logistics.
Import Substitution
Development policy where the country focuses resources to
industries dominated by imports; prohibit certain categories of
imports to encourage domestic development and production.
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Treaties
Treaties may be seen as “self-executing,” in that merely becoming a
party puts the treaty and all of its obligations into effect.
EU treaties are unique in that they often do apply to European
citizens.
A “dualist” system understands domestic law and international law to
be two separate systems and it is a constitutional issue as to how
and where international law will apply.
In contrast, many European laws have provisions that it is illegal to
violate an international law through a domestic regulation.
Other treaties may be non-self-executing and require “implementing
legislation” – a change in the domestic law of a state party that will
direct or enable it to fulfill treaty obligations.
It is the change in the domestic law that has effect – not the treaty
itself.
An example of a treaty requiring such legislation would be one
mandating local prosecution by a party for particular crimes.
If a treaty requires implementing legislation, a state may be in
default of its obligations by the failure of its legislature to pass the
necessary domestic laws.
Assume that treaties create rights and obligations only for the states to
it, not to private parties within a state.
For treaties without direct effect provisions, treaties often set the
framework for domestic regulations (i.e., the WTO does not set forth
customs laws but rather only sets forth things that states can and cannot
do).
Treaties often set up dispute resolution mechanisms but are usually only
available to states, not to private parties!
Lex Mercatoria
Mercantile custom; not necessarily reflected in any official regulations.
Independent private legal system.
Often drafted to accommodate and incorporate the customs and usages
of the trade.
Can be codified and/or incorporated by reference into legal documents
and given effect in legal systems.
Examples include the Uniform Customs and Practices (UCP) and the UCC.
May come up in arbitration, where the arbitrators may choose to
disregard a national law (the arbitrator, when in his discretion, finds that
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The deeper integration, the more sovereignty each member state must
give up to central institutions.
Article III
Article III is the “national treatment” provision, which requires a
state to treat foreign goods in the same manner the state treats
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domestic goods.
Plugs the gap for wily nations who try to circumvent the MFN
requirements by leaving the tariff alone but including a tax on
foreign goods.
EU Institutions
European Council
One country, one chair representation.
Presidency of council rotates among the members.
Membership depends on the subject matter being discussed, i.e.,
a transportation issue would be discussed by the members’
transportation ministers.
Enacts legislation.
European Commission
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Initiates legislation.
Operating in the best interests of the community, not individual
member states.
European Parliament
Directly elected representatives; seats allocated according to
population.
Role has been enlarged to represent constituents; co-decision
role.
Parliament has no independent legislative power.
European Court of Justice
Has a policing role within the branches of the system itself.
Provides court for intra-community disputes and enforcement.
Article 234 – preliminary reference process*
Community law enforcement and adjudication can be brought in
the courts of any member state.
Functions as the “supreme court” on matters of community law
only.
European community law is available to private parties.
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government.
Chapter 19 covers US/Canada trade agreement provisions and
provides for bi-national review panels for impartial appellate
proceedings.
A. CONTRACT FORMATION
The Basic Transaction
The transaction in five stages: (i) contract formation, (ii) letter of credit,
(iii) shipment, (iv) payment and (v) delivery.
Transactions present the risk of nonpayment, risk of fraud, non-
conforming goods, loss or damage in transit, currency fluctuations,
confusion over choice of law, customs formalities, insolvency of one
party, language misunderstandings.
International trading community has sought to avoid large and uncertain
risks by creating devices, which break them down into many small and
measurable risks.
Accomplished through the (i) sale contract between buyer and seller;
(ii) letter of credit contract (confirmed irrevocable negotiable loc)
between buyer’s bank and seller; and (iii) bill of lading between
seller and carrier.
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Initial Issues
Was a contract ever formed? (UCC 2-207 v. Germany’s “mirror
image” rule).
Was Universal’s price sheet an offer or an invitation to bid?
What contract law should we apply to the problem?
If Euro’s first transmission of the purchase order was an offer and
Universal’s acknowledgment was an acceptance, what effect does
Universal’s additional terms have?
All events above occur and within a week Universal ships the goods and
bills Euro. Euro accepts the goods and pays for them.
The pipe insulation reacts negatively with the Euro pipes and causes it to
corrode.
Secondary Issues
If not previously, has a contract been formed now?
Under the UCC performance can complete a contract.
Under mirror image rule, the last offer on the table controls (“last
shot rule”).
Party accepting the goods accepted the last offer on the table.
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German Law
Mirror image rule + last shot doctrine → the disclaimer is in.
Performance as a method of acceptance.
Thus we want German law to apply to this claim.
Under UCC § 2-207, the courts can find parties had a contract
through performance.
Blockbuster acceptance. See comments to § 2-207, 1
through 3.
4. IDENTIFY THE ARGUMENTS UNDER THE RELEVANT CHOICE OF LAW RULES FOR PROVIDING
THE BEST CHANCE OF SUCCEEDING IN GETTING THE LAW IDENTIFIED IN STEP THREE.
If party is a defendant (as here), it must anticipate what forums
might be sued in – here it would be Kansas or Germany.
For choice of law rules for Kansas – R.2d of Laws § 6 and § 188 –
would also need to know whether the supreme court of
Kansas/legislature has adopted the restatement language.
§ 187 basically states the principle of party autonomy – allows the
parties to make their own choice. But it doesn’t tell you what to
do if unsure if both parties have not agreed to choice of law.
EU created a treaty between the member states for a single set of
choice of law rules.
Only available now as a regulation to apply to domestic laws.
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Could interpret that § 187 cannot apply (no choice made) – per se
ineffective choice.
Then we move on to limited § 188 analysis.
Can use law determined under § 188 to fill in the gaps for issues
remaining under § 187 choice of law analysis.
Using § 188 to select a body of contract law in order to work on the
choice of law analysis.
Only to determine which jurisdiction has the most significant
contacts with respect to this issue alone (i.e., what contract law
will I use to determine whether choice of law language is valid
and included in the contract).
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Article 4. To the extent that the law applicable to the contract has not
been chosen in accordance with Article 3, the contract shall be governed
by the law of the country with which it is most closely connected.
It shall be presumed that the contract is most closely connected with
the country where the party who is to effect the performance which
is characteristic of the contract has, at the time of conclusion of the
contract, his habitual residence, or, in the case of a body corporate or
unincorporated, its central administration.
Application to Problem.
If contract or term of contract were valid under Kansas law, under
Article 3 it would be the law of Kansas to determine if the choice is
valid.
You would use the law they tried to choose to determine if their
choice of law was valid – give party the benefit of the doubt in the
choice they tried to make.
Section 3 of Article 4 allows one to argue that the contract is
“manifestly more closely connected” with Germany than Kansas.
If case is tried in Germany, Kansas law would apply given the
Articles above and thus Universal would lose the disclaimer as
well.
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The only Article 1(1)(b) situations arise with one non-contracting party to
3-way transaction.
If parties are the US and Germany, then you involve the reservation.
If case is filed in US and choice of law points to Germany, then
German law applies because the US made the reservation.
Conflicting Terms
Existence of conflicting terms creates a gap that the court can fill by
recourse to Article 7(1)’s principle of good faith (“knock out rule”), it
can accept that the terms provided in the acceptance control (the
“second shot rule”), or it can incorporate the terms of the last
communication (the “last shot rule”).
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E. BUSINESS PLANNING
Structuring Contracts
Have important terms/provisions specifically negotiated and bargained
for.
Could be problematic for seller’s sales team; time consuming;
appearance of not standing behind product.
Blockbuster offer/acceptance (expressly conditioned on certain terms, §
2-207).
If both parties have it and perform, no contract is formed on
documents.
Can have order processing people flag problematic acceptances.
Any commercial method for risk spreading, limitation of liability rather
than disclaimer.
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Termination Issues
It is vitally important to know the termination laws in nation where
distributorship proposed.
Right to Terminate. If restrictions on termination are imposed, they
usually nevertheless allow termination for just cause.
Some nations do not allow termination at will and may not even
approve a fixed term.
Inappropriate notice may be treated as termination without just
cause.
Parties should consider actions that immediately terminate the
agreement.
Termination for unsatisfactory performance usually requires some
notice and may require an opportunity to have a second chance after
renegotiation.
Notice of Termination. Host nation may have laws requiring notice not
only to the agent/distributor but also to a government office, along with
specifics for delivering notice.
Rights Upon Termination. Where termination is without just cause, rights
may be extensive.
Usually includes some of monetary settlement.
Agent/Distributor may have to be paid any goods in possession, for
any goodwill established by the agent/distributor, for any
promotional expenses assumed, and for any other expenses or
investments made during the time of the agreement.
Waiver of Termination Rights. The laws or public policy of the country
may reject any waiver of rights because the agent/distributor is
presumed to have little bargaining leverage.
Denial of Import Privileges. If the process to determine the compensation
of a terminated agent/distributor is continuing, the principal may be
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denied any further rights to import into the country and may not simply
shift the distributorship to another party.
Denial of Export Privileges. The US party should include a provision that
allows suspension, or possibly termination, of any obligations to provide
products to fulfill orders, when the US government imposes restrictions
on exports for any reason.
Particularly important for agency agreements when orders are placed
directly to the US supplier rather than with sales from the supply of
the foreign distributor.
Counterpurchase Arrangement
In such an arrangement, a private firm agrees to sell products to a
sovereign nation and to purchase from the nation goods that are
unrelated to the items that it is selling.
Each party is paid in currency upon the delivery of its products to
the other party.
Private firms will often resell the countertraded goods at a
discount, seeking to offset this loss by larger profits generated by
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Compensation Arrangement
The most common arrangement and referred to as compensation or
“buy-back,” where a private firm will sell equipment, technology or
even a turn-key plant to a sovereign nation and agree to purchase a
portion of the output produced from the use of the equipment or
technology.
The products acquired are frequently of marketable quality and in
demand in the international market, allowing the firms to earn a
profit reselling said products.
Switch Trading
A device used to balance a bilateral clearing agreement. In a bilateral
clearing arrangement between X and Y, X may have taken more
products from Y than Y has taken from X. In this instance, Y will have
a “credit” in its clearing account.
In the switch trade, Y will located a third party interested in
purchasing goods from X and substitutes the third party’s
purchase of X’s goods in satisfaction of its own purchase
obligation.
G. LETTERS OF CREDIT
The Basic Commercial Letter of Credit Transaction
Generally involves three separate transactions: (i) the underlying
contract between the buyer and seller for the purchase of goods; (ii) the
agreement between the issuer and its customer, and (iii) the bank’s
obligation to pay the seller under the letter of credit itself.
Fundamental Principles
The principle of independence establishes that each contract is
completely independent of the next. Therefore, a letter of credit is
independent of the underlying sales contract and both the banks and
the parties must construe and perform the letter of credit in
accordance with their own terms, without reference to any other
agreement or transaction.
The principle of compliance dictates that documents presented to the
bank must comply with the letter of credit requirements.
Governing Laws
UCC Article 5. The US is the only country with an extensive specific
regulation for letters of credit. International practice, as reflected in
the UCP, heavily influenced the UCC revisions in 1995.
Article 5 governs only a limited part of the letter of credit
transaction.
Can be a source of illumination particularly on matters involving
fraud or forgery.
Uniform Customs and Practice for Documentary Credits. The UCP is a
set of rules based on internationally accepted banking practices
regulating the issuance and use of letters of credit, drafted by the
International Chamber of Commerce.
US courts and arbitration tribunals recognize and enforce the UCP
where it is specifically incorporated into the letter of credit. When
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Governing Law
The letter of credit specifically incorporated the UCP.
Comment 3 to § 5-116 also directs us to ignore UCC Article 5.
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Adequacy/Timeliness of Notice
Under Articles 16(c) and (f), the first notice of discrepancy (LCD v.
ICD) is effect but the second notice (no originals and pro forma) is
precluded.
Article 16(f) states that a notice of discrepancy must be provided
“no later than the close of the fifth banking day following the day
of presentation.”
Under UCC § 5-108 the preclusion issue is less clear. The phrase
“timely notice” raises questions of whether a second timely notice
received within the seven days stipulated in subsection (b) would be
acceptable or precluded.
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A. CROSS-BORDER IP TRANSFERS
Overview
Developing nations want production processes which maximize use of
abundant, inexpensive labor but which result in products that are
competitive in the international market; capital intensive production
processes (e.g., robotic assembly lines for automobiles) of less interest.
The predominant vehicle for controlling technology transfers across
national borders is the license or franchise agreement.
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IP Protection
Patent Protection.
For the most part, patents represent territorial grants of exclusive
rights and are granted to inventors according to national law.
In the US, a patent issued will grant the right for 20 years from the
date of application (17 years from the date of issuance prior to
TRIPS) to exclude anyone from making, using or selling the patented
invention without the permission of the patentee.
The US has a first to invent priority – not first to file.
The US also has an examination system, inquiring into
patentability of the invention.
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Knowhow.
Knowhow is commercially valuable knowledge.
Unlike patents, copyrights and trademarks, you cannot by
registration obtain exclusive rights to knowhow – once released to
the community, it cannot be retrieved.
Protecting knowhow is mostly a function of contract, tort and trade
secrets law.
The Economic Espionage Act of 1996 creates criminal penalties for
misappropriation of trade secrets for the benefit of foreign
governments or anyone.
A trade secret is defined as “financial, business, scientific,
technical, economic or engineering information” that the owner
has taken reasonable measures to keep secret and whose
“independent economic value derives from being closely held.”
Trademarks.
Obtaining international trademark protection requires separate
registration under the law of each nation where it is sought.
The scope of trademark protection may differ substantially from
country to country.
Although national trademark schemes differ, it can be said that
generally a valid trademark will be protected against infringing use.
Unlike patents and copyrights, trademarks may be renewed
continuously.
The principal US trademark law, the Lanham Act of 1946, has been
construed to apply extraterritorially to foreign licensees engaging in
deceptive practices.
Foreigners who seek a registration may be required to prove a prior
and valid “home registration” and a new registration in another
country may not have an existence independent of the home country
registration’s continuing validity.
Copyrights.
Nearly one hundred nations recognize some form of copyright
protection for authors’ works – varying from country to country.
In the US, it is not necessary to publish a work to obtain a copyright;
it is sufficient that the work is original and fixed in a tangible medium
of expression.
US copyright protection now extends for 70 years after the death of
the author and also controls all derivative works.
Registration with the copyright office is not required to obtain
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Eisele, meaning that INRA would ensure that its French marketing
organization would prevent the relevant varieties from being
exported to Germany through parallel importers.
By 1972 it became apparent that dealers in France were selling the
varieties directly to German traders who were marketing the
products in breach of the breeder’s rights claimed by Eisele. Eisele
brought suit and the French traders agreed to seek permission. After
a second suit, the French trader filed a complaint with the
Commission.
The Commission found that both the agreement and the settlement
violated Article 81(1) because they granted an exclusive license and
provided absolute territorial protection.
The ECJ reversed the Commission with respect to exclusivity but
upheld the Commission’s finding with respect to absolute territorial
protection.
The ECJ drew a distinction between “open” licenses, which do not
necessarily fall under Article 81(1), and “closed” licenses that do
so.
EU Regulations
Article 81 of the Treaty of Rome
(1) The following shall be prohibited as incompatible with the
common market: all agreements between undertakings, decisions by
associations of undertakings and concerted practices which may
affect trade between Member States and which have as their object
or effect the prevention, restriction or distortion of competition within
the common market, and in particular those which:
(a) directly or indirectly fix purchase or selling prices or any other
trading conditions;
(b) limit or control production, markets, technical development, or
investment;
(c) share markets or sources of supply;
(d) apply dissimilar conditions to equivalent transactions with
other trading parties, thereby placing them at a competitive
disadvantage;
(e) make the conclusion of contracts subject to acceptance by the
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Basic Assumptions
Licenses between firms with greater market shares pose a greater
risk to competition than licenses between firms with smaller market
shares; reason why there are market share caps.
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General Obligations
There is a general duty to protect intellectual property adequately
and effectively, as long as barriers to legitimate trade are not
created.
At a minimum this necessitates adherence to Chapter 17 of the
NAFTA agreement.
Also requires adherence to substantive provisions of the: Geneva
Convention of Phonograms; Berne Convention for the Protection
of Literary and Artistic Works; Paris Convention for the Protection
of Industrial Property; and International Convention for the
Protection of New Varieties of Plants.
Process of enforcement is also addressed, requiring fair, equitable
and not unduly complicated, costly or time-consuming enforcement
procedures.
Patents
Article 1709 of NAFTA assures the availability of patents in all fields
of technology.
All patent rights must be granted without discrimination as to
field of technology, country of origin, and importation or local
production of the relevant products.
Since the US awards patents on a first-to-invent basis, activities in
Canada and Mexico now count for purposes of establishing the
date of an invention.
NAFTA specifically reserves the right to deny patents for diagnostic,
therapeutic and surgical methods, transgenic plants and animals,
and for essentially biologic processes that produce plants or animals.
If commercial exploitation might endanger public morality or state
security, no patents need be granted.
No mention is made of the right to block infringing or unauthorized
imports.
Though not authorized under US law, governments may allow limited
nonexclusive usage without the owner’s authorization (compulsory
licensing) for emergencies or public policy.
Trade Secrets
At a minimum, each nation must ensure legal means to prevent
trade secrets from being disclosed, acquired or used without consent
“in a manner contrary to honest commercial practices.”
NAFTA does not mention, however, the practice of reverse
engineering.
No government may discourage or impede the voluntary licensing of
trade secrets. Imposing excessive or discriminatory conditions on
know-how licenses is prohibited.
NAFTA-Plus
US free trade agreements since NAFTA have evolved substantially under
a policy known as competitive liberalization.
Coverage of labor and environmental law enforcement is folded into
the trade agreement and all remedies are intergovernmental.
Post-NAFTA free trade agreements insert the word “customary” before
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is reasonably necessary.
The duration of the restraint can be an important factor in
determining whether it is reasonably necessary to achieve the
putative pro-competitive efficiency.
A restraint that may be justified by the needs of a new entrant,
for example, may not have a pro-competitive efficiency
justification in different market circumstances.
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Article 13.
Contracts for the importation of technology must contain clauses
about at least the following matters: (a) identification of the parties
and express indication of their nationality and residence; (b)
identification of the methods used to transfer the imported
technology; (c) contract prices of each of the elements involved in
the transfer of technology; and (d) determination of the effective
period of the contracts.
Article 14.
In order to register transfer of technology, trademark or patent
contracts, Member Countries may bear in mind that those
contracts not contain the following:
a) Clauses by virtue of which the supply of technology or the use
of a trademark bears with it the obligation of the recipient
country or enterprise to acquire, from a given source, capital
equipment, intermediate products, raw materials or other
technologies, or to use on a permanent basis personnel indicated
by the enterprise supplying the technology;
b) Clauses by virtue of which the enterprise selling the
technology or enterprise granting use of a trademark reserves
the right to set sale or resale prices for the products that are
manufactured using that technology;
c) Clauses that contain restrictions on the volume and structure
of production;
d) Clauses that prohibit use of competing technologies;
e) Clauses that establish a total or partial purchase option in favor
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Article 15.
In the degree to which intangible technological contributions do not
constitute capital investments, they shall grant the right to receive
royalties, in keeping with Member Countries legislation.
The accrued royalties may be capitalized, pursuant to the terms of
this Regime, after payment of the taxes due.
When these contributions are supplied to a foreign enterprise by its
parent corporation or by another branch of the same parent
corporation, the payment of royalties may be authorized in cases
judged beforehand by the competent national agency of the recipient
country.
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Non-competition provisions.
Prohibited under Article 14(d) but would also need to examine
national laws.
Termination.
Agreement must include valid termination provisions.
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
A. DIRECT INVESTMENT
The Lifecycle Approach to Foreign Investment
The natural progression from sales of goods → licensing → foreign direct
investment.
Entry → Operations → Termination/Withdrawal.
Entry Stage
Where to invest?
Tax and regulatory issues.
Social stability (i.e., low wages can mean high social unrest).
Jurisdiction has history of nationalizing assets or industries?
Trade law (i.e., how product is treated based on where it was
manufactured).
Rules of Origin – products need to be transformed, not just
assembled.
Quality of life issues for officers/employee of the corporation.
Operational Code – the law as its written v. how it actually
operates.
What type of entity to establish?
Generally between large publically traded (AG, SA and PLC) v.
small privately held company (GmbH, SARL, PLC).
Also have hybrids (like S-corps in the US or the SAS in France).
Operating as a subsidiary or as a branch.
Keeping costs separated in the subsidiary v. spreading the
losses.
If problem on exam has not indicated which type the client
has chosen, it is worth discussing pros/cons of each option.
Operating as a joint venture.
Operating investment as an acquisition or a “greenfield?”
Different foreign investment laws for acquisitions v. creating
new opportunities.
Acquisition may trigger an anti-competition review.
Operational Stage
Minimizing liability.
Taxation (i.e., worldwide taxation, double taxation).
Currency exchanges and availability.
Transfer pricing
Manipulating prices between sub/parent to obtain artificial
advantages.
Transferring income to obtain better tax treatment
Termination/Withdrawal Stage
Regulations can be burdensome when trying to withdraw corporate
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assets.
Foreign treatment if investment enters into bankruptcy.
Parent making secured loans to sub rather than just infusing capital.
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B. LOCATION OF INVESTMENT
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Incorporate in Delaware?
The US is a party to a Friendship, Commerce and Navigation Treaty
with Germany which seems to give any US corporation legal status in
Germany. In 2003 and 2004, the German Bundesgerichtshof decided
that a Florida and a Delaware corporation, respectively, were entitled
to have their judicial status recognized in Germany.
While the decisions do not answer whether there must be some
greater link with the state of incorporation than mere
incorporation, it seems clear that any required greater link does
not extend to have its principal place of business in that state.
C. CODETERMINATION
Codetermination by Workers in German Enterprises
The Codetermination Act of 1976.
Mandates the formation of a supervisory board composed of 50%
shareholders’ and 50% employees’ representatives for all business
organizations regularly employing more than 2,000 employees.
At least one enterprise worker, one salaried employee and one
executive employee must be elected, and the number of
representatives from each group must reflect the actual proportion of
each group to the total work force.
Depending on the size of the supervisory board, two or three
seats are reserved for the unions represented in the enterprise.
The codetermination rules are not extended to management but
the unions do expect that the elected labor relations director will
enjoy the confidence of the employee representatives.
The Works Constitution Act of 1952.
Mandates that the supervisory board of every stock corporation1 and
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D. MERGER CONTROL
Overview
The EC is trying to determine which mergers pose a threat to its
economy.
It can sometimes be to a company’s benefit to fall under the competition
law regulations since there will be only one regulatory authority to
appease.
Principle is not to ban such mergers but only to trigger a review process.
No focus on the nationality of the corporation – only focused on effects.
EC grants an extraterritorial reach of the competition provisions.
Provisions also take a broad definition of what constitutes a “merger.”
Cash → Stock – taxable
Cash → Assets – taxable
Stock → Stock – tax-free
Stock → Assets – tax-free
Merger control provisions apply to “all concentrations with a community
dimension.”
Under the “Dutch Clause,” even if a merger does not meet the
financial thresholds, a member state can still petition the
Commission to investigate on public policy grounds.
Under the “German Clause,” if a member state convinces the
Commission that a merger disproportionately affects a distinct
market, the Commission can defer to the local authorities.
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E. PRIVATIZATION
Fundamental Issues
Absence of an adequate legal infrastructure.
Many former nonmarket economies have functioned without
necessary legal framework.
New laws must address formation and operation of business
enterprises, transfer of property, bankruptcy, banking and securities
regulation.
New institutions must also be established to regulate such laws.
Government approval process.
Many governments have created a special agency to deal with
privatization – usually leads to additional layers of bureaucracy and
the potential for corruption.
Agency may develop a list of approved companies for privatization.
Likely that such transactions will not be formulaic – it will require
detailed negotiation with the host government to resolve issues on
an ad hoc basis.
Worker participation in approval process.
Likely concern of the workers is loss of employment.
If works are given approval, privatization may prove impossible.
One reason privatization is adopted is to reverse the over-
employment consequence of state ownership with no accountability
for costs of production.
Rights of nationals to preferences.
Governments may sometimes set aside a percentage of the company
to be privatized for local ownership on behalf of the employees.
Employees may be given the first opportunity to purchase shares of
their company.
Since nothing is paid for such shares, a foreign investor is likely to
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NAFTA Regulations
Preamble to agreement states the signing parties’ resolution to “ensure
a predictable commercial framework for business planning and
investment.”
Investment Provisions.
The principal assurances of access and protection are found in Ch.
11-A.
11.02 – National Treatment.
11.03 – MFN.
11.04 – Standard of Treatment.
Must give MFN status or national treatment.
Requires parity.
11.05 – Minimum Standard
Must give a basic level of protection consistent with
international law.
11.06 – Performance Requirements.
Things not allowed that restrict trade.
11.08 – Reservations.
Allows reservations or exceptions.
11.10 – Expropriation/Compensation.
Enforcement of regulations is found is Ch. 11-B.
Binding arbitration.
Supranational.
Individual direct claim against a government.
Private party rights and obligations.
Ch. 11 Panel.
Disputes.
18 – against Canada.
15 – against Mexico.
17 – against U.S.
NAFTA Chapter 11
NAFTA Chapter 11 has three objectives: first, 'to establish a secure
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Transfer Pricing
A multinational corporation may manipulate its intra-company (parent →
subsidiary) pricing.
Typical market mechanisms that establish prices for such transactions
between third parties will not apply. The choice of the transfer price will
affect the allocation of the total profit among the parts of the company.
MNC may import finished goods or components into the country of
ultimate sale at low prices, allowing the subsidiary to charge a low
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International Bankruptcy
Increasing numbers of transnational insolvency proceedings have placed
a burden on courts in various countries to engage in creative and
innovative responses to specific challenges.
Reform efforts are proceeding by treaty, by harmonization and by
coordination.
Moratorium
A general stay is found in most insolvency systems worldwide and is
essential to orderly liquidation and successful
reorganization/rehabilitation.
Ensures court control in each country and by preventing
individual action it promotes consultation and possible agreement
among creditors – incentives to find solution.
Opportunity for creditor consultation and agreement is of critical
importance in cross-border cases where there are few legal rules and
precedents.
Information Sharing
Highly desirable to have methods of judicial communications not
dependent on parties.
Most countries require extensive disclosure by the debtor and this
information should be available to the courts and parties in each
interested jurisdiction.
Creditor Involvement
Most countries give national treatment to foreign creditor claims, but
there are very few provisions relating to fair representation of foreign
interests and communication.
Subsidiary’s creditors might try to force an involuntary bankruptcy on
the corporation before the parent has an opportunity to try and
consolidate one proceeding, allowing them to have the process take
place in their home jurisdiction.
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Priority/Preferences
The Istanbul Treaty provides that creditors entitled to priority in
distribution under local law should be paid from local assets, and
what remains should be returned to the main proceeding, where the
priorities of the main jurisdiction’s law will govern.
Discharge
Very few cases regarding the transnational effect of a discharge.
For example, a creditor free to enforce its pre-existing, pre-
reorganization rights against a corporate debtor in jurisdiction B,
despite a discharge in the reorganization approved in jurisdiction A,
would effectively bar the debtor from operating in jurisdiction B and
the prospect might make the reorganization impossible.
H. PROJECT FINANCING
Basic Structure
Project finance is nonrecourse financing predicated on the merits of a
project rather than the credit of the project sponsor.
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Financing Sources
Sources of funds include equity, senior/junior loans, and the capital
markets.
Equity often includes investment funds, multilateral institutions like
the IFC, regional development banks and international and local
equity markets.
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Capital Markets
SEC Rule 144A permits certain qualified institutional investors to
purchase securities not registered with the SEC. Foreign companies
issue equity in the US by means of American Depository Receipts
issued by a US Bank.
Publically offered bonds must be registered with the SEC and the
borrower must be rated by a credit rating agency.
May create potential issues not present in commercial lending,
i.e., negative carries.
Eurobonds can be issued in any convertible currency and sold to
institutional investors.
Risk Mitigation
Limited guarantees can be used to provide the minimum
enhancement necessary to finance a project (i.e., cost overrun
guarantees).
Letters of credit can be used to guaranty the creditworthiness of a
party.
Surety obligations provided by the contractor can ensure that the
project will operate at a certain level – the risk passed off to a surety
that issues performance and payment bonds.
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Force Majeure
Extraordinary events independent of the parties’ will that cannot be
foreseen or averted by them even with due diligence, being beyond
their control and preventing the Contracting Parties or Party from
fulfilling the obligations undertaken in the contract.
Examples: Storms, earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes, war, civil
unrest.
A standard force majeure clause in a K requires:
The circumstances or event be external;
It must render performance radically different from that originally
contemplated;
It must have been unforeseen (subjective) or unforeseeable
(objective); and
Its occurrence beyond the control of the party concerned.
UCC standard: Commercially impracticable standard.
Increase in cost is not impracticable unless the rise in costs is due
to some unforeseen contingency that alters the essential nature
of the performance.
i.e. not a rise or collapse in the market, but a severe shortage of
raw materials due to a war, embargo, crop failure, shutdown of
major sources of supply.
French Law: Impossible standard.
Irresistibility.
A force that is superior to that of man, making the execution
of a contract totally impossible.
This encompasses both natural phenomena, as well as man-
made occurrences.
The essence of this concept lies in the contracting party’s
inability to do anything about the turn of events.
The judge applies the standard of whether any person placed
in the same situation, as the contracting party would have
been similarly unable to overcome the obstacles presented.
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DISPUTE RESOLUTION
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Service of Process
Plaintiff in international litigation must think of complying with the
service of process laws of at least two nations, where plaintiff has
filed suit and where defendant is located.
Hague Convention on Service Abroad.
Signed by nearly 50 nations.
Each signatory designates a private company as the Central
Authority to receive requests from other participating states to
carry out service in their state.
Several nations have made declarations or reservations
prohibiting service by mail in their jurisdiction.
This has significant effect on the use of substituted or
constructive service by US plaintiffs, where documents may
have to be transmitted abroad to complete the service
process.
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US Approach to Jurisdiction
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Brussels Regulation
Article 2 (General Jurisdiction).
Applies to persons domiciled within a member state without
regard to nationality.
Articles 5 and 6 (Special Jurisdiction).
Allow a person domiciled in one member state to be sued in
another member state.
Article 5.
Contract matters: grants jurisdiction to the courts for the place of
performance of the obligation in question (Article 5.1.a).
Place of performance in:
Sale of Goods: where the goods were delivered or should have
been.
Provision of services: where the services were provided or
should have been (Article 5.1.b).
Article 6.
(1) One of a number of defendants with closely connected claims
(2) third party
(3) on a counter-claim arising from the same contract
(4) In matters relating to the contract, if the action can be
combined with an action against the same defendant in matters
relating to right in rem in immovable property, in the court of the
member state in which the property is located
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State Law
Because actions brought in federal court are dependent on state law
(Erie v. Tompkins) and Hilton was not Constitutional doctrine, state
courts have felt free to pursue other analyses and doctrines.
Uniform Acts
Recognition v. Enforcement
Courts may give one of two effects to a foreign judgment:
Recognize the judgment.
If judgment is limited to recognition, the court has decided
that the issue or issues do not need to be re-litigated.
Enforce the judgment.
If judgment is enforced, the successful party is granted some
or all of the judgment decreed by the foreign court
Application of UFCMJRA
Society of Lloyd’s v. Turner (2002)
“A foreign country judgment is not conclusive if…the judgment
was rendered under a system that does not provide impartial
tribunals or procedures compatible with the requirements of due
process of law.”
Foreign proceedings need not comply with the traditional
rigors of American due process – must be fundamentally fair
and not offend against basic fairness.
A court is provided with discretion not to enforce a foreign
country money judgment if “the cause of action on which the
judgment is based is repugnant to the public policy of the state.”
Standard for non-recognition is whether the cause of action is
repugnant to state policy, not whether the standards for
evaluating the cause of action are the same or similar in the
foreign country.
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Canada France
Principles Comity principles Absent an
similar to those used international
by the United States. agreement to the
contrary, a foreign
Canadian court applies judgment in order to
an “international” have res judicata
standard which limits effect needs an
recognized jurisdiction exequator
to five bases
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Choice of Currency
Restatement (Third) of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States
(1987))
Traditionally, United States has rendered money judgments
payable in United States dollars only (§823 cmt b.).
§ 823(1): Courts are allowed to render judgment in the currency
in which the obligation is denominated or the loss was incurred.
§ 823 (2): The conversion from foreign currency to dollars should
be made at such rate as to make the creditor whole and to avoid
rewarding a debtor who has delayed in carrying out the
obligation.
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