1. Conflict of laws deals with situations involving foreign elements to determine the appropriate law to apply. The principles are based on comity, not extraterritorial validity of foreign law.
2. Comity refers to the recognition one nation allows to another's legislative, executive, or judicial acts, with due regard to international duty and rights of citizens.
3. There are three main issues in conflict of laws: adjudicatory jurisdiction, choice-of-law, and recognition/enforcement of foreign judgments.
1. Conflict of laws deals with situations involving foreign elements to determine the appropriate law to apply. The principles are based on comity, not extraterritorial validity of foreign law.
2. Comity refers to the recognition one nation allows to another's legislative, executive, or judicial acts, with due regard to international duty and rights of citizens.
3. There are three main issues in conflict of laws: adjudicatory jurisdiction, choice-of-law, and recognition/enforcement of foreign judgments.
1. Conflict of laws deals with situations involving foreign elements to determine the appropriate law to apply. The principles are based on comity, not extraterritorial validity of foreign law.
2. Comity refers to the recognition one nation allows to another's legislative, executive, or judicial acts, with due regard to international duty and rights of citizens.
3. There are three main issues in conflict of laws: adjudicatory jurisdiction, choice-of-law, and recognition/enforcement of foreign judgments.
1. Conflict of laws deals with situations involving foreign elements to determine the appropriate law to apply. The principles are based on comity, not extraterritorial validity of foreign law.
2. Comity refers to the recognition one nation allows to another's legislative, executive, or judicial acts, with due regard to international duty and rights of citizens.
3. There are three main issues in conflict of laws: adjudicatory jurisdiction, choice-of-law, and recognition/enforcement of foreign judgments.
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Conflict of laws 3.
War
- The principles of conflict of laws incorporated in
municipal laws are based not on the extraterritorial validity of the law of a foreign state BUT ON COMITY OF NATIONS. Objective Comity - To provide rational and valid rules or guidelines in - Is the recognition which one nation allows within its deciding cases where either the parties, events or territory to the legislative, executive or judicial acts of transactions are linked to more than one jurisdiction. another nation, having due regard both to - Conflict of law rules aim to provide stability and international duty and convenience, and to the rights uniformity of solutions provided by the laws and courts of its own citizens or of other persons who are under of each state called upon to decide conflicts cases. the protection of its laws. Three distinct but interrelated issues in conflict of laws Note: 1. Issue of adjudicatory jurisdiction - Judgment rendered in a foreign country is allowed the - Which determines the circumstances that allow for a same effect ONLY as the courts of that country allow legal order to impose upon its judiciary the task of to the judgments of the country in which the judgment deciding multi-state and multinational disputes. in question is sought to be executed. 2. Issue of choice-of-law - Judgment rendered in one country are not entitled to - Refers to the probable sources from which the full credit and conclusive effect when sued upon in this applicable law of the controversy may be derived. country, BUT are prima facie evidence only of the 3. Recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments justice of the plaintiff’s claim. - Deals with the study of situations which justify - International law is founded upon mutuality and recognition by the forum court of a judgment rendered reciprocity. by a foreign court or the enforcement of such within Definition the forum.
a. Public International law Sources of conflict of laws
o Governs states in their relationships - The primary sources of the law are found in the civil amongst themselves. codes of different countries. 1. One basic source of law in the Philippines is the 1987 b. Private International law Constitution which contains principles on nationality and o Governs individuals in their private comity. transactions which involve a foreign - Special Statutes element. o Corporation Code; Distinction o General Banking Act No. 337 o Act instituting the foreign currency system - Sources of law RA 426 o Philippine foreign law guarantee PUIL PRIL corporation o Act regulating retail business Article 38 of the Statute of International law of each o Anti-dummy law the ICJ State o The nationalization of the rice and corn industry o Insurance Code Note: o Protection of intellectual property - Conflict of law rules are therefore either: o Patent law a. National conflict rules which refer to the o Trademark law international law of each country; or o Carriage of goods by sea act b. International conflict rules which constitutes o Salvage law international conventions, foreign case law and o Public service act commentaries interpreting these conventions. o Civil aeronautics act o Philippine overseas shipping act PUIL PRIL o Investment incentives act o Export incentives act Persons involved o Export incentives act o RA 7722 – liberalizing the entry of foreign only states and Individuals or corporations banks in the Philippines. internationally recognized organizations 2. Treaties and international conventions Transactions 3. Treatises, commentaries and studies of learned societies - In interpreting statutes and codes involving conflict of State-to-state or Relates to private laws, courts resort to works of distinguished jurists as government-to-government transactions between well as studies of learned societies. matters individuals 4. Judicial decisions
Remedies (in case of violation of international law)
1. Diplomatic protest; All the remedies are provided
2. peaceful means of by municipal laws of the settlement of international state, such as resort to courts disputes (diplomatic or administrative tribunals. negotiations, arbitration or conciliation, or adjudication by filing a case before international tribunals)
Law School Survival Guide: Outlines and Case Summaries for Torts, Civil Procedure, Property, Contracts & Sales, Evidence, Constitutional Law, Criminal Law, Constitutional Criminal Procedure: Law School Survival Guides
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