There are several public registers that may be useful for identifying the asset position of another party prior to enforcement. By way of example, judgment creditors wishing to identify their debtor’s real estate assets in France may turn to the real estate registry (registre de la publicité foncière), which holds ownership information for real estate in France.
The register of commerce (registre du commerce et des sociétés) is available via the Infogreffe website and identifies the directors of registered companies. The register also identifies the shareholders who are liable for the company’s debts to an unlimited extent (société civile immobilière and société en nom collectif). It can also be used to check the debt report (privileges and pledges) of a company and whether a corporation faces bankruptcy proceedings.
Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019 also created a register of movable securities (registre des sûretés mobilières et autres operations connexes), which is available via the National Council of Commercial Court Clerks (Conseil National des Greffiers des Tribunaux de Commerce, or CNG)’s online portal (as implemented by decree No 2021-1887).
All French trade marks, patents, registered design applications and registrations are publicly available on the online databases of the French National Institute of Industrial Property (Institut National de la Propriété Industrielle, or INPI). Caution is advised when looking up very recent trade marks, patents, registered design applications and registrations , as they are subject to publishing delays.
In addition, as a matter of principle, court proceedings in France are public and many trial court decisions are reported on Légifrance, which is the French government’s official website for the publication of legislation, regulations, and legal information. It may therefore be possible to find useful information about a debtor by scrutinising judicial decisions.
Judgment creditors may also hire a private investigator to gather information on the debtor’s asset position.
If the information collected by the aforementioned means is incomplete and/or insufficient, there are other means by which a party can lawfully identify another party’s asset position within France – namely, by entrusting the task to a French bailiff (huissier de justice). French law allows bailiffs to make information requests to a wide range of public bodies and bodies authorised by French law to hold deposit accounts. The latter can be done by accessing the FICOBA (fichier national des comptes bancaires et assimilés) registry, which is an inventory of all deposit accounts in France. The bailiff is not allowed to request information from the presumed debtor’s employer.
Public bodies may only disclose the address of the debtor, the identity and address of their employer, or all third-party debtors or custodians of liquid or payable amounts, and a list of real estate assets. Organisations authorised by French law to hold deposit accounts may only disclose whether one or more accounts, joint accounts or merged accounts have been opened in the name of the debtor, and where the accounts are held.
Normally, the information collected will be sufficient to identify the debtor’s asset position and enforce a judicial decision. Details obtained by the bailiff may not be disclosed to third parties, or even to the bailiff’s principal. Costs associated with these enquiries are fixed by statute.
Different types of domestic judgments are available under French law. French scholars usually draw a distinction between judicial decisions that have become final after all rights of appeal have been exhausted, or following the expiry of relevant time limitations, and those that have not become final.
In addition, a judgment may be contentious or non-contentious (jugement gracieux). A contentious judgment settles a dispute whereas a jugement gracieux is rendered in non-contentious matters.
French scholars also make a distinction between judgments rendered by adversarial hearing (jugements contradictoires – ie, in the presence of both/all parties concerned and after both/all parties have presented their cases), on the one hand, and judgments assumed to have been rendered by adversarial hearing (jugements réputés contradictoires) and judgments rendered by default (jugements par défaut) on the other hand. Default judgments arise in circumstances where a defendant fails to appear before the court in a case brought by a claimant. Even though not present before the court, the defendant is bound by the court’s ruling and is subject to any sanction imposed by the court.
To qualify as such, a default judgment must fulfil two cumulative conditions: the judgment must have been rendered in last resort and the defendant must not have been served with the document that instituted the proceedings. A judgment will be réputé contradictoire if only one of these two conditions is fulfilled. Opposition (opposition) appears in the French Code of Civil Procedure as the main remedy against judgments rendered by default; opposing a default judgment suspends its execution. However, filing an opposition is not de facto an obstacle to provisional execution, as generalised by Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019.
Another useful distinction can be drawn between the following:
The key distinction is between enforceable and unenforceable judgments. In principle, judgments will be enforceable after all ordinary rights of appeal have been exhausted or following the expiry of the relevant time limitations.
Provisional Enforcement
By way of exception and before Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019, provisional enforcement could be ordered at the request of the parties or sua sponte each time the judge deemed it appropriate and compatible with the nature of the matter, and where it was not prohibited by law. In addition, summary orders (ordonnances de référé), decisions containing provisional orders (mesures provisoires) governing the course of a proceeding, orders providing for protective measures (mesures conservatoires) and directions of the pre-trial judge (juge de la mise en état) granting an interim payment (provision) to a creditor were all enforceable provisionally by law.
Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019 reforming French civil procedure established that “first instance judgments are enforceable provisionally by law unless the law or the judgment handed down provides otherwise” (new Article 514 of the French Code of Civil Procedure). In other words, provisional enforcement is now automatic, and is attached to first-instance judgments without the need for the judge to order it. The decree thus reverses the rules previously in force in judicial proceedings, which required the claimant to request provisional enforcement to be ordered.
The principle of the provisional enforcement by law of first-instance judgments is only applicable to judicial proceedings initiated on or after 1 January 2020 and is now a general rule:
Appeal
In the event of an appeal, and if the judge of first instance has rejected the provisional enforcement by law of their judgment, a request may be made before the first president of the court of appeal ‒ or, when the matter is referred to them, the pre-trial judge of the court of appeal (conseiller de la mise en etat) – to ask for the reinstatement of the provisional enforcement by law (Article 514-4 of the French Code of Civil Procedure). The following three conditions must then be met:
Titres Exécutoires
An “enforceable judgment” is referred to in French legislation as a “titre exécutoire”. The wording is not limited to enforceable judgments resulting from judicial proceedings. The following are considered to be the main titres exécutoires:
The enforcement of titres exécutoires is subject to a ten-year statute of limitations, starting from the date it has been served on the debtor – unless actions for recovery of the claims set out by other laws are subject to a longer statute of limitations.
For the sake of simplicity, the concept of “enforceable judgment” set out hereafter will refer to enforceable judgments resulting from judicial proceedings.
A lawyer is generally instructed to organise and co-ordinate the enforcement process, and to represent the client during the enforcement proceedings, if there are any.
Act No 2019-222 of 23 March 2019 (on the 2018–22 Programming and Reform of the Justice System) and Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019, which reformed French civil procedure, came into force on 1 January 2020. These new provisions entail very important changes, so it is advisable not to take any procedural steps without carefully checking the possible impact of the reform on such steps.
French law provides various options for enforcing a domestic judgment. The rules set out here aim to give an overview of the manner in which judgments can be enforced in France. They do not deal with special regimes, such as rehabilitation (redressement judiciaire) and liquidation proceedings (liquidation judidiciaire) or household over-indebtedness (surendettement des particuliers) proceedings, which trigger an automatic stay of enforcement against the debtor (subject to few exceptions).
At the outset, it should be underlined that – in principle – the enforcement judge (juge de l’exécution) has specific jurisdiction to deal with disputes arising between debtors and creditors on the basis of a final judgment only if and when enforcement has actually been launched, as recalled by the French Supreme Court (Cour de cassation) in a judgment rendered on 8 February 2024. Representation by a lawyer before the enforcement judge is required as a matter of principle, except for claims “originating from a debt not exceeding EUR10,000” as stated by Decree No 2019-1333 of 11 December 2019.
That being said, a distinction must be drawn between:
Protective Measures
The various types of protective measures differ according to the nature of the assets to be attached. However, the general circumstances in which any protective measure is granted are very similar. Application is made to the enforcement judge, who in practice will be the president of the judicial court (tribunal judiciaire) in which the debtor is located. Application may also be made to the president of the commercial court (tribunal de commerce) if the application deals with commercial matters and if proceedings have not yet commenced on the substance of the case.
Application to the enforcement judge will normally be made ex parte. The creditor must simply demonstrate the existence of their claim and the threat of non-recovery of said claim. In a simple debt collection situation, it is usual to present copies of all relevant invoices – together with a copy of a formal demand letter before action (mise en demeure) – by recorded delivery post.
If the application is successful, the creditor must ensure that the bailiff serves notice of the protective measure on the debtor within three months of the judge’s order – failing which, it is no longer effective. The creditor will be obliged to start proceedings to obtain an enforceable judgment within one month from the date of enforcement of the protective measure; failure to do so results in the automatic lapse of the measure. The low standard of proof required to obtain a protective measure and the nature of ex parte proceedings put the creditor in a strong position. Therefore, if the creditor fails to obtain an enforceable judgment, they may be liable for any damage suffered by the debtor.
The appropriate protective measure requested from the enforcement judge will depend on the nature of the debtor’s asset to be frozen. If the debtor is a company, every asset is at risk – whether movable or immovable, tangible (corporels) or intangible (incorporels). The position is very similar for an individual debtor, apart from movable property that is necessary for general living or employment, which is not subject to attachment.
Protective measures can be divided into two categories, as follows.
The debtor may challenge these protective measures obtained by the creditor at any time before the judge who granted the measure, particularly when the conditions for granting it were not satisfied from the beginning. The judge may order its discharge (mainlevée) or, upon the request of the debtor, may substitute any measure for the initial protective measure. In a judgment rendered on 17 May 2023, the Cour de cassation ruled that this discharge does not have a retroactive effect. The protective measure retains its effect of interrupting the limitation period.
A creditor may also choose to obtain an enforceable judgment without having previously sought a protective measure and simply proceed to enforcement of their judgment against the debtor’s assets.
A creditor holding an enforceable judgment can instruct the bailiff to enforce payment of sums owed to the debtor by third parties to the creditor (saisie attribution). This attachment is executed by the bailiff notifying the third party that sums owed to the judgment debtor are to be paid directly to the judgment creditor up to the amount due, pursuant to the enforceable judgment. The third party is thereby forbidden from paying the debtor.
Saisie Vente
The procedure of saisie vente (not applicable to real estate property) involves several stages. First, a bailiff is instructed to serve the debtor with an order to pay the debt (commandement de payer). The bailiff then draws up an inventory of the property of the debtor, which has the effect of rendering the assets non-transferable. This process triggers a one-month period in which the debtor may, with the agreement of the creditor, organise the sale of the assets. In the absence of an agreement between the creditor and the debtor, a forced sale takes place following a public announcement, and control of the assets passes to a ministerial officer appointed for the sale. The proceeds of the sale, whether forced or not, will be paid directly to the creditor.
As of 1 January 2023, the seizing creditor who arranges for the removal of goods to organise their forced sale must inform ‒ by registered letter with acknowledgement of receipt – the creditors holding a published security interest in the same goods. Under penalty of nullity, this letter must indicate the name and address of the ministerial officer in charge of the sale as enshrined by Decree No 2021-1888 of 29 December 2021 in application of Ordinance No 2021-1192 of 15 September 2021 reforming the law on securities. The main goal of this rule is to prevent unfair competition between multiple creditors of a same debtor.
A judgment can be enforced against financial instruments to be attached by the bailiff on the issuing entity or its authorised agent, depending on the nature of the financial instruments and their form of management (saisie des droits d’associés et des valeurs mobilières). Once the attachment has been effected, all pecuniary rights attached to the financial instruments become non-transferable. The debtor can obtain the release of the attachment by paying the relevant corresponding sum of money to discharge the debt secured by this charge.
The attachment of salaries (saisie des rémunérations) as a way to enforce judgments must also be mentioned. However, in practice, this type of attachment is difficult to obtain in France owing to the natural reluctance of the French courts to withhold the only source of income from a debtor.
In circumstances where the creditor has to enforce their judgment against the real estate of the debtor, they must seek a foreclosure of real estate (saisie immobilière). Traditionally, the forced sale of real estate is not perceived as a matter of priority, in view of how time-consuming this process is.
Time
The length of the proceedings to enforce domestic judgments will depend on a wide range of factors, including the nature of the enforcement measure, how easy it is to determine the debtor’s assets, and the nature and location of the debtor’s assets.
Costs
Enforcement costs are subject to a scale of charges that establishes the remuneration owed to bailiffs for each enforcement measure. Under Decree No 96-1080 of 12 December 1996, the remuneration scale for bailiffs comprises fixed and proportional charges. As a matter of principle, the debtor must ultimately pay the major part of the costs of enforcing the judgment against their own assets.
When the publicly available information concerning the debtor’s assets is incomplete and/or is not sufficient to determine the debtor’s assets, there are other means by which a creditor holding an enforceable judgment can lawfully identify another party’s asset position within the French jurisdiction – mainly by entrusting the task to the bailiff charged with obtaining forced execution against the debtor’s property.
As a matter of principle, the debtor may challenge enforcement measures within one month following the date of service. The case must be filed with the enforcement judge, who generally rules within three to six months, after the parties have had the chance to file written briefs and appear in court.
The enforcement judge may exercise discretionary powers in favour of a debtor, including granting the debtor a period of up to two years to repay the debt.
Enforcement covers all proceedings permitting the carrying out of “enforceable” obligations against the debtor’s assets. Examples under French law include:
The basic principle in French law is that any creditor holding an enforceable judgment relating to one of these three categories of obligations may obtain forced execution against the property of the debtor. Therefore, and broadly speaking, a judgment will not be enforceable if it remains subject to ordinary recourses or if it is not provisionally enforceable by law.
It should also be emphasised that ‒ as of 2008 – an enforcement action is time-barred ten years after the date of the judgment, as a matter of principle.
The Cour de cassation’s documentation and analysis service has a database mainly containing the decisions and opinions of the Cour de cassation, as well as decisions of particular interest issued by other judicial courts. The database is publicly available under the conditions applicable to public service legal publications on the internet. Most of the published court decisions can be accessed via the Légifrance legal portal.
Judgments are part of the public record and there is no way under French law for a judgment debtor who has paid what is owed to remove the judgment from the above-mentioned database. Steps may be taken during the judicial proceedings to remove the names of the parties, but only in exceptional circumstances.
Act No 2016-1321 of 7 October 2016, amended by Act No 2019-222 of 23 March 2019, implemented open data for judgments of the Cour de cassation and the French courts of appeal via the “Judilibre” search engine. Judilibre is available on the Cour de cassation’s and makes the judgments rendered by the Cour de cassation and the courts of appeal available to everyone, as of 1 October 2021 and 21 April 2022 respectively.
The three key conflicts private international law aims to resolve are those relating to jurisdiction, choice of law and the recognition/enforcement of foreign judgments.
There are three main types of law relevant to the enforcement of a foreign judgment:
France is a party to a large number of multilateral treaties (all of which are available on the Légifrance legal portal), including the Hague Choice of Court Agreement 2005, and also to bilateral treaties.
Throughout the EU, the primary tool used to enforce foreign judgments is Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 of 6 December 2012 (the “Brussels 1a Regulation”). This recast regulation has applied since 10 January 2015 and replaced Council Regulation (EC) No 44/2001 (the “New Brussels I Regulation”), which continues to apply to the recognition and enforcement of all judgments rendered in proceedings initiated before 10 January 2015. These regulations are supplemented by a number of other pieces of European legislation, as follows:
The relationship between the EU and Norway, Switzerland and Iceland is governed by a similar piece of legislation to the Brussels 1a Regulation – namely, the Convention on Jurisdiction and the Recognition and Enforcement of Judgments in Civil and Commercial Matters of the European Community with Iceland, Norway and Switzerland of 30 October 2007(the “Lugano Convention”).
Variations in approach to the enforcement of foreign judgments may exist, depending on their jurisdiction of origin – eg, inside or outside the EU.
If the judgment falls within the scope of the Brussels 1a Regulation, there will be no need for the grant of “exequatur”. The Brussels 1a Regulation shall apply in civil and commercial matters but will not extend ‒ in particular ‒ to revenue, customs or administrative matters, nor to the liability of the State for acts and omissions in the exercise of state authority. In addition, the Brussels 1a Regulation shall not apply to:
Because of this simplified approach settled by the Brussels 1a Regulation, judgments rendered in EU member states will be easier to enforce than non-EU judgments.
On 2 July 2019, the Hague Conference on Private International Law finalised a new treaty on the enforcement of judgments: the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Judgments in Civil or Commercial Matters (the “2019 Hague Judgments Convention”). The 2019 Hague Judgments Convention creates rules for the circulation of judgments, except in cases where there was a judgment produced on the basis of a choice of court agreement between parties to an international dispute, which are governed by the 2005 Hague Choice of Court Convention.
The definition of “judgment” in the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention covers any decision on the merits given by a court in the civil and commercial context, with some legal exceptions set out in the convention – for example, there are certain subject matter exclusions, such as insolvency, IP, privacy or certain antitrust matters. It should be noted that arbitration and related proceedings are excluded from the scope of the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, as are judgments providing for interim measures of protection.
To be enforceable under the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, the judgment must meet one of the jurisdictional requirements set out in the convention – for example, relating to residency, consent to jurisdiction, place of performance of a contractual obligation, or jurisdiction agreements. The 2019 Hague Judgments Convention also gives a list of limited grounds on which recognition or enforcement can be refused (including where, broadly, there was improper notice of the proceedings, where the judgment was obtained by fraud, or where recognition or enforcement would be manifestly incompatible with public policy), with it being specified that under no circumstances may a judgment given in a contracting state be reviewed as to its substance under the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention.
The Hague Conference press release describes the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention as a “game-changer in international dispute resolution”, which will provide “better, more effective, and cheaper justice for individuals and businesses alike”, even if its effect is more limited than the Brussels 1a Regulation regime. By way of example, recognition and enforcement can be refused on broader grounds under the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention.
Nonetheless, it should be underlined that it will be some time before the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention can apply. First of all, it will only apply between those countries that ratify it and bring it into force (approximately 12 months after ratification); even then, it will not apply unless the proceedings that led to a judgment were initiated at a time when the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention was in force for both the state of origin and the state where the judgment is to be enforced.
It is also worth noting that the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention provides for a number of circumstances in which a contracting state may make declarations that limit its application – for example, a state with a strong interest in not applying the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention to a specific matter can declare that it will not be applied to that matter. A contracting state can also refuse to have a reciprocal relationship with another contracting state. There are also provisions stating that the convention will not affect the application of other treaties where certain criteria are met.
There are currently seven signatory states:
On 29 August 2022, the EU deposited its instrument of accession to the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, becoming the largest contracting party to the convention. Shortly afterwards, Ukraine deposited its own instrument of ratification, meaning the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention takes effect towards this country on 1 October 2024. The convention entered into force on 1 September 2023. The EU’s accession is binding on all its member states, with the exception of Denmark.
Brexit led to the end of the application of the Brussels 1a Regulation and the Lugano Convention on 1 January 2021. In a judgment rendered on 13 September 2023, the Cour de cassation held that the Lugano Convention kept applying during the transitional period. After the UK’s application to re-accede to this convention was refused, the country signed the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention to facilitate the cross-border circulation of certain judgments. The 2019 Hague Judgments Convention will take effect on the first day of the month following the expiry of a period of 12 months after the contracting states are notified of the UK’s deposit of an instrument of ratification. It appears this procedure has not been initiated yet.
In the meantime, either the Hague Convention of 2005 or the domestic law will apply. The Hague Convention 2005 ensures the effectiveness of exclusive choice of court agreements concluded in civil and commercial matters in an international context. Currently in force in the EU27, the UK, Mexico, Singapore and Montenegro, the Hague Convention 2005 provides a framework for the mutual enforcement of judgments across its contracting states, so that a judgment given by a court of a contracting state designated by an exclusive choice of court agreement will be recognised and enforced in all contracting states. If the Hague Convention of 2005 does not apply, the domestic law of France or the UK will govern the enforcement of judgments.
In the absence of an international convention between France and the country that issued the judgment, non-EU judgments shall be enforceable if the following conditions as set by current French case law are satisfied:
Under the Brussels 1a Regulation, a judgment issued in an EU member state that is enforceable in that member state shall be enforceable in other EU member states.
Subject to special regimes set out by bilateral or multilateral conventions, the legal framework under which a foreign judgment rendered outside the EU may be enforced in France is the French Code of Civil Procedure and the French Code of Civil Enforcement Procedures, supplemented by the relevant case law.
In practice, creditors seeking to recover a claim in France will seek an enforcement order (exequatur). To obtain an exequatur, which is not an act of enforcement according to a judgment rendered by the Cour de cassation on 1 March 2023, the judgment creditor must summon the opposing party before the tribunal judiciaire. The application may be made to the court of the opposing party’s domicile or the court of the place where the enforcement is sought. On 11 January 2023, the Cour de cassation stated that the “exequatur” action itself is not subject to any statute of limitations.
If the exequatur is granted, it will be done so by a single judge following the exchange of written pleadings and a hearing. Parties must be represented by a lawyer. The requesting party must provide a copy of the foreign judgment, together with a translation if needed. The French judge must make sure that the following conditions as set by current French case law are satisfied:
French courts may not review the merits of the foreign judgment. The exequatur may be appealed within one month of being served by one party on the other (or within three months for parties domiciled abroad).
Decisions rendered by the jurisdictions of EU member states are enforced in other EU member states following a simplified regime initially adopted by the Brussels Convention of 1968 (1972 OJ (L 299) 32), later superseded by the New Brussels I Regulation, which was itself superseded by the Brussels 1a Regulation, which has been in force since 10 January 2015.
According to the Brussels 1a Regulation, once a judgment is obtained in any EU member state’s court, it must be readily recognised and enforced throughout the EU. Therefore, the judgment creditor needs only to serve on the judgment debtor a copy of the judgment that satisfies the conditions necessary to establish its authenticity, accompanied by a certificate from the court of origin certifying that the judgment is enforceable and containing details of the judgment (ie, the issuing court, the names of the judgment creditor and judgment debtor, the date of the judgment, and what the judgment requires to be done) – as well as a translation of the judgment if requested – before enforcing the judgment. The judgment creditor is then entitled to enforce the foreign judgment as if it were a French judgment, unless the foreign judgment was provisionally enforceable and the foreign court subsequently suspended its execution. In a judgment rendered on 22 March 2023, the Cour de Cassation ruled that this suspension deprived the recognition in France of the enforceability of the judgment of any legal basis. However, the French enforcement authority will adapt any unknown measure or order contained in the foreign judgment to a domestic legal equivalent, with equivalent legal effects that pursue similar aims and interests.
For the purposes of enforcement in an EU member state of a judgment rendered in another member state ordering a provisional measure (including a protective measure), the applicant must serve on the judgment debtor a copy of the judgment and the certificate containing details of the judgment (as well as a description of the measure) and certifying that the court had jurisdiction over the substance of the matter and that the judgment is enforceable in the member state of origin. Where the measure was ordered without the defendant being summoned to appear, the judgment creditor must also provide proof of service of the judgment.
As regards the issue of the enforcement of an order of payment, the CJEU stated on 7 April 2022 (C-568/20) that an order for payment (injonction de payer) rendered in an EU member state constitutes a “judgment” under the Brussels 1a Regulation and is therefore enforceable in other EU member states if it was handed down at the end of adversarial proceedings in the member state of origin and was declared to be enforceable in that member state. Therefore, the fact that it is a “judgment” gives the right to the defendant to enforcement to request refusal of enforcement on one of the grounds referred to in Article 45 of the Brussels 1a Regulation, such as the exception of public policy.
The costs and timeframe for enforcing foreign judgments will depend on whether the foreign judgment was given in an EU or non-EU jurisdiction. As previously stated in 3.2 Variations in Approach to Enforcement of Foreign Judgments, in the first case, a judgment creditor does not need to obtain an enforcement order, so enforcement proceedings will be quicker and less expensive than when a judgment creditor seeks to enforce a non-EU judgment. Indeed, the exequatur proceedings require the judgment creditor to be represented by a lawyer, and the procedure may take a few months at least before the exequatur is obtained.
The costs and timeframe for enforcing EU and non-EU judgments alike will depend on a wide range of factors, including – in particular – the nature of the enforcement measure, how easy it is to determine the debtor’s assets, and the nature and location of those assets.
Instructing a competent local bailiff and a competent local lawyer experienced in foreign judgment enforcement is a key consideration when seeking the enforcement of foreign judgments in France and increases the probability of effective collection, in terms of both cost and time.
The Brussels 1a Regulation gives the right to the judgment debtor to seek suspension of or to challenge the EU judgment via an ordinary appeal in the EU member state of origin, as well as challenge the enforcement of the judgment in the EU member state where it is sought.
If the judgment is successfully challenged in the EU member state of origin, this could neutralise the original judgment. However, this possibility does not affect the presumption of the Brussels 1a Regulation that the original judgment – when presented in the EU member state where enforcement is sought – is entitled to receive both recognition and enforcement, even if the enforcement court has the discretion to wholly or partially suspend the enforcement of a foreign judgment if it is challenged in the member state of origin.
Article 45 of the Brussels 1a Regulation exhaustively sets out the exceptional grounds that – when present – prevent the recognition and hence the enforcement of a foreign judgment in the EU member state where the request is made, as follows:
Non-EU judgments may be challenged if the court that initially rendered the judgment did not have jurisdiction over the case or if the judgment is incompatible with French international public policy or was procured by fraud. The exequatur may be appealed within one month of the date of the service by one party on the other (or within three months for parties domiciled abroad).
In 1981, France enacted a decree on arbitration, which successfully consolidated its position as the leading country in international commercial arbitration. A new decree on French arbitration law came into effect on 1 May 2011 and is seen as strongly establishing France’s will to maintain its leading role in international commercial arbitration and its aim to have arbitrating parties continue to select Paris as their seat of arbitration.
France is also a party to the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards 1958 (the “New York Convention”), which entered into force in France on 24 September 1959 and deals with the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards. However, the New York Convention specifically provides that it shall not apply when the legislation of the state where the recognition or enforcement of the award is sought is more favourable to recognition and enforcement than the New York Convention, which is the case under French law.
As will be seen hereinafter, the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards may be refused on only a few grounds, making it typically far easier to enforce an arbitral award than a non-EU court judgment.
The enforcement of arbitral awards involves the very important preliminary question of whether an arbitral award should be characterised as an international or a domestic award. Articles 1487 et seq of the French Code of Civil Procedure apply to the enforcement of domestic (ie, French) arbitral awards, whereas Articles 1514 et seq apply to the enforcement of international arbitral awards, covering foreign awards and awards rendered in international matters in France and abroad.
As French law makes a distinction between a contract and the arbitration convention it holds, French jurisdictions used to apply its substantive rules to appreciate the validity of an arbitration convention. A recent judgment ruled by the Cour de Cassation on 28 September 2022 stated that French substantive rules now apply to arbitration conventions “unless the parties have expressly submitted the validity and effects of the arbitration agreement itself to another law”. Thus, the parties can choose the law applicable to their arbitration convention and avoid the systematic application of French substantive rules by judges reviewing an award. However, the choice of applicable law to the arbitration convention cannot be inferred from the law applicable to the contract itself, as it must expressly relate to the clause.
Despite the slight differences of regime between international and domestic awards, French law and French courts are generally considered as pro-arbitration, and decisions denying the enforcement of awards are quite rare.
As previously stated in 4.2 Variations in Approach to Enforcement of Arbitral Awards, French arbitration law takes a pro-enforcement position regarding the recognition and enforcement of arbitral awards. Therefore, it is possible to obtain recognition and enforcement in France of interim or partial awards, for instance. It may also be possible to obtain the recognition and enforcement in France of foreign awards granting non-monetary relief (eg, an order requiring a party to produce documents). An international award rendered outside France (whether international or domestic) that is set aside in the place of arbitration may also be recognised and enforced in France.
Finally, the main limit on the recognition or enforcement of arbitral awards is that the award must not be manifestly contrary to public policy considerations.
Under the Code of Civil Procedure, an arbitral award must be followed by an enforcement decision (exequatur) obtained through ex parte proceedings in order to be enforceable or recognised in France.
French arbitration law does not expressly provide for a limitation period applicable to the commencement of legal proceedings for the enforcement of awards. However, the French Civil Code provides a five-year limitation period that generally applies to personal actions and should be considered to apply to the filing of legal proceedings for the enforcement of domestic awards in France. There is a debate concerning whether the limitation period may apply to the enforcement of international awards in France, but there is no specific case law on this issue.
The provisions pertaining to the recognition and enforcement of a domestic arbitral award are set out in Article 1487 et seq of the Code of Civil Procedure. First, the party seeking to rely upon the arbitral award must be able to prove the existence thereof. This is a basic requirement and will be easily satisfied upon production of the arbitral award itself, together with the arbitration agreement. The second condition to the recognition or enforcement of the arbitral award is that it must not be manifestly contrary to public policy.
Therefore, a domestic arbitral award may be enforced by virtue of an exequatur from the tribunal judiciaire in whose jurisdiction the arbitral award was given, and the party wishing to enforce a domestic arbitral award must produce the original award, together with the arbitration agreement (or duly authenticated copies of such documents). Exequatur can also result from the dismissal of an appeal for annulment of the arbitration award. On 7 June 2023, the Cour de cassation clarified that the appeal must have been dismissed and not declared inadmissible.
A judgment granting an order of exequatur is not subject to any review. A judgment refusing an order of exequatur is subject to appeal within one month of service (or within three months for parties domiciled abroad). This procedure has been reformed by Decree No 2023-1391 of 29 December 2023, applicable to appeals lodged from 1 September 2024. In accordance with the provisions of Article 901 of the French Civil Procedure Code, the statement of appeal will have to contain the subject matter of the appeal (ie, in the case of an appeal against an exequatur order, the reversal of the order). The statement of appeal will also have to criticise the “operative provisions of the judgment” (chefs du dispositif du jugement) – in other words, to challenge the refusal to grant exequatur. A successful appeal against the award will result in its revocation by the court of appeal so that the award becomes unenforceable in France.
An international arbitral award shall be enforced in France on the same conditions provided for domestic awards – ie, if the party relying on it can prove its existence and if such recognition or enforcement is not manifestly contrary to international public policy. In a judgment rendered on 17 May 2023, the Cour de cassation clarifies that it is the solution given to the dispute that is tested for compliance with international public policy and not the reasoning followed by the arbitrators.
As with domestic arbitrations, an international arbitral award may be enforced by virtue of an exequatur from the tribunal judiciaire in whose jurisdiction the international arbitral award was given, if it was given in France. If the arbitral award was given in a foreign country, it may be enforced by virtue of an exequatur from the Paris Tribunal Judiciaire. A party wishing to enforce an international arbitral award must produce the original award, together with the arbitration agreement (or duly authenticated copies of such documents). All these documents must be translated into French by a certified translator, if requested. Again, an appeal against an exequatur must be brought before the court of appeal within one month from the date of proper service of the exequatur (or three months for parties domiciled abroad).
When it comes to enforcing an arbitral award against the assets of a debtor in France, the governing legislation is the law on civil enforcement procedures described earlier.
As stated above, because of the minimal checks necessary to obtain an exequatur of an arbitral award (whether domestic or international), the costs incurred in the related proceedings may not be great, even if the award creditor is represented by a lawyer. As a matter of principle, the party wishing to enforce an international arbitral award must produce the award together with the arbitration agreement translated into French, so the fees of a certified translator should be taken into account. It may take only a few weeks to obtain an exequatur of an arbitral award.
The costs and timeframe for enforcing arbitral awards will depend on a wide range of factors, including ‒ in particular – the nature of the enforcement measure, how easy it is to determine the debtor’s assets, and the nature and location of those assets (especially in the case of foreign awards).
Service of the arbitral award is significant under French law, as this will determine the time period for exercising any rights of recourse against the arbitral award.
Only ordinary recourses are dealt with in this section; applications for the revision of an arbitral award (recours en revision) and applications by which third parties may challenge an arbitral award (tierce opposition) will not be addressed hereinafter.
Domestic Awards
As regards domestic awards, an appeal (if the possibility of such a recourse has been agreed between the parties) or an action for setting aside must be brought before the court of appeal in whose jurisdiction the arbitral award was issued. These recourse actions are admissible as soon as the award has been given, until the end of a one-month period starting from the service of the award (or three months for parties domiciled abroad). Appeals and actions for setting aside are brought, managed and determined according to common French rules governing procedure in contentious matters before the court of appeal. Therefore, they are subject to the reform of the appeal’s procedure, resulting from Decree No 2023-1391 of 29 December 2023, applicable to appeals lodged from 1 September 2024. According to Article 1495 of the Civil Procedure Code, appeals in the arbitration field are subject to the provisions of Articles 900 to 930-1 of said code. This means that appeals for annulment, appeals against exequatur orders, and appeals against domestic awards are all affected by the reform. Attention is drawn to the provisions of Article 901 aforementioned in the context of an appeal against an exequatur order.
There are six grounds on which the court of appeal may deny the enforcement of a domestic arbitral award, as follows:
It should be underlined that, in principle, parties are deemed to have waived their right to subsequently rely on any irregularities that they knowingly – and without legitimate reason – refrained from raising before the tribunal. In a judgment rendered on 20 March 2024, the Cour de cassation stated that this is considered as a ground of inadmissibility in both domestic and international arbitration. This is not limited to procedural irregularities, but also applies with regard to all of the available grounds to set aside an award, with the exception of public policy grounds.
Appeals and actions to set aside a domestic award lead to a suspension of enforcement, unless the award has been rendered with the provisional enforcement.
International Awards
As regards international arbitral awards, whether obtained in France or abroad, the time period for applying for the arbitral award to be set aside is one month following service of the exequatur (or three months for parties domiciled abroad). There is no option to challenge an international award without an exequatur. Therefore, there is no preventative recourse, contrary to domestic arbitration. The procedure for setting aside an arbitral award relies on commonly applicable civil procedures under French law. It is therefore subject to the provisions of Articles 900 to 930-1 of the Civil Procedure Code as amended by the aforementioned Decree No 2023-1391.
There are five grounds on which the court of appeal may deny the enforcement of an international arbitral award, as follows:
International Public Policy
The notion of international public policy has been interpreted by French case law in terms of French public policy requirements and not as truly international public policy. Notably, the Paris Court of Appeal has stated that “international public policy means our conception of international public policy – that is to say, the entirety of the rules and matters of fundamental importance [that] the French legal system requires to be respected even in situations of an international character”.
Historically, French courts used to perform a minimal review of objections on the grounds of international public policy. Indeed, they did not enquire whether the award infringed a rule of public policy of some other state.
At the very beginning, the scope of this minimal review was limited to the “manifest infringement” of international public policy, which means that the courts were to find whether the award constituted an “effective and concrete” violation of international public policy. Following an evolution of the French case law, the alleged infringement then had to be “serious, accurate and consistent”; however, this minimal review was criticised, as it did not prevent an award that infringed international public policy (bribery, laundering, etc) being enforced in France.
The case law of the Paris Court of Appeal then showed a tendency towards a deeper assessment of international public policy, which was confirmed on 23 March 2022 by the Cour de cassation. The Cour de cassation confirmed the decision of the Paris Court of Appeal of 21 February 2021 (repealing an award infringing international public policy) by approving the foregoing ‒ considering that the judge’s control “was neither limited to the evidence produced before the arbitrators, nor bound by the findings, assessments and qualifications made by them”. This means that a judge is still able to re-examine the facts, even though they are forbidden to amend the award, as long as their examination is only meant to assess whether the award does indeed infringe a rule of international public policy.
French case law has clarified the scope of international public policy, with French courts considering that the failure of the arbitrator to comply with a European rule of law ‒ if this rule is imperative and effectively applicable to the case – infringes the French concept of international public policy. French international public order also encompasses equality of arms (in the context of the right to a fair trial), as well as access to justice (see Paris Court of Appeal, 23 November 2021).
Ultimately, it should be emphasised that the French arbitration law that came into effect on 1 May 2011 provides the possibility for a party to enforce an international award notwithstanding a pending action to set aside or a challenge to enforcement. In this respect, two decisions of the Paris Court of Appeal on 12 July 2021 and 12 January 2022 held that the setting aside of the award by the court of the place of arbitration does not prevent the enforcement of the award in France.
Accordingly, an exequatur of an international arbitral award granted by the tribunal judiciaire is provisionally enforceable as of right, whereas actions to set aside or appeals against an exequatur of an award previously led to a suspension of enforcement. However, the person against whom enforcement is sought and who challenges the enforcement may request a temporary stay of enforcement, if such enforcement could severely prejudice their rights.
It should also be noted that the grounds for denying enforcement of an international arbitral award under French law are almost the same as those provided in the New York Convention. The only difference under French law is that French courts do not refuse or stay the enforcement of a foreign award simply because a challenge against the award has been sought in a foreign court or because a judgment of a foreign court has set aside or annulled the award.
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info@de-pardieu.com www.de-pardieu.comLegal Framework Regarding the Enforcement of Domestic Judgments
The legal framework for the enforcement of civil and commercial domestic judgments is governed by the French Code of Civil Procedure (FCCP) (Articles 500 to 524) and the Code of Civil Enforcement Procedures.
Except in cases of a voluntary performance of the decision, enforcement of judgment will require prior notification. The purpose of notification is to inform the party against whom the enforcement is sought of its rights and obligations ‒ in particular, whether it has a right to challenge the judgment or the enforcement and the time limits within which it can do so. The notification also marks the starting point of the time limits for any type of appeal.
Prior notification will usually be carried out by a bailiff (formerly known as “huissier de justice” and now known as “commissaire de justice”); it is made through the service of an enforceable copy of the judgment to the party against whom the enforcement is being sought. The enforceable copy of the judgment is easily recognisable, as it bears the “enforcement formula” (formule exécutoire) ‒ a specific wording relating to enforceability vested by the court. However, some judgments are immediately enforceable on the basis of the “minute” (master copy) of the decision alone (ie, without any need for prior notification).
With regard to proceedings commenced on or after 1 January 2020, first-instance decisions are automatically enforceable on a provisional basis, unless the law or the decision provides otherwise (Article 514 of the FCCP). As a result, appeal proceedings initiated by the judgment debtor at first instance are not suspensive and the appeal will be delisted (radié) if it is established that the first-instance decision has not been duly enforced by the party who lodged the appeal.
Legal Framework Regarding the Enforcement of Foreign Judgments
Depending on which foreign jurisdiction issued the judgment, different legal instruments may apply and will supersede French law. In concrete terms, international treaties ratified by France and the EU law will trump French law.
Under Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 of 12 December 2012 on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments in civil and commercial matters (known as “Brussels I bis”), judgments rendered in civil and commercial matters within an EU member state benefit from automatic recognition (Articles 36 to 38) and enforceability (Articles 39 et seq) in France, without any need for exequatur ‒ as long as the party seeking to enforce obtained a certificate of enforceability issued by the court of origin (Article 42(b)). (These rules apply to all EU member states except Denmark.) EU judgments are therefore directly enforceable on French territory, without any specific formality, and the same goes for the enforcement of French judgments in other EU member states.
Nevertheless, upon the application of any interested party, the recognition or enforcement of a judgment can be refused on one of the grounds referred to in Article 45 of Brussels I bis ‒ namely, if:
With regard to the recognition and enforcement of judgments in specific matters not included within the scope of Brussels I bis, one should refer to other EU Regulations such as:
As regards judgments issued in non-EU member states, one should then assess whether there are any treaties applicable.
The Lugano Convention dated 30 October 2007 provides similar rules for Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, Switzerland, Denmark, and EU member states. Under this convention, the recognition of foreign judgments is automatic; however, enforcement will require the production of a declaration of enforceability, which will therefore require the enforcing party to institute exequatur proceedings. After Brexit, the UK filed a formal application to join the Lugano Convention, but the EC expressed a negative opinion on this application in May 2021.
The Hague Convention on Choice of Court Agreements of 30 June 2005 is applicable to exclusive jurisdiction agreements. Consumer, employment and IP disputes and interim protective measures fall outside its material scope.
An important recent development relates to the ratification, on 27 June 2024, by the UK of the Hague Convention on the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in civil and commercial matters of 2 July 2019 (the “2019 Hague Judgments Convention”). The convention came into force in all member states and in Ukraine on 1 September 2023 (this does not apply to Denmark) and it will come into force on 1 October 2024 for Uruguay and on 1 July 2025 for the England and Wales (the convention does not apply to Scotland and Northern Ireland). Until that date, British judgments rendered subsequently to Brexit must be submitted to the usual French exequatur procedure applicable to foreign judgements. Obviously, the ratification will ease the circulation of British judgments between the UK and EU member states.
The USA, Russia, Israel and Costa Rica have also signed the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, pending ratification.
This recent development, however, raises the question of how this convention, Brussels I bis and French private international law will fit together in the French legal landscape. The conditions governing the circulation of judgments between EU member states will continue to be governed by EU rules, and the immediate and automatic effect of judgments is not being challenged in this context. On the other hand, the conditions governing the circulation of a judgment between an EU member state and a third country will be governed by the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention, provided that the third country is a contracting party. Pending future ratifications, this means that the 2019 Hague Judgments Convention will only apply before French or EU courts to judgments rendered in civil or commercial matters by Ukrainian, Uruguayan and British courts. When the third country issuing the judgment is neither an EU member state nor a contracting state to any of the above-mentioned conventions, national rules on the effectiveness of foreign judgments will apply.
Foreign judgments rendered outside the scope of the above-mentioned texts are governed by French international private law.
French courts have set several conditions so that a party can obtain leave to enforce. In accordance with the seminal Cornelissen decision rendered by the French Supreme Court (Cour de cassation) (Cass Civ 1, 20 February 2007, No 05-14.082), three cumulative conditions are required for the enforcement of a foreign judgment, as follows:
The recognition and enforcement proceedings are carried out exclusively before the French tribunal judiciaire with territorial jurisdiction. The assistance of a French attorney, who will draft the application that will be served to the party against whom enforcement is sought, is mandatory.
Recent Illustration of the Scope of Exequatur of Foreign Judgments
Despite the above-mentioned principles, French courts often have to clarify the conditions described earlier for granting leave to enforce a foreign judgment.
Recently, the Cour de cassation handed down a decision illustrating a refusal to grant leave to enforce on the grounds of fraudulent manoeuvering by a party (Cass Civ 1, 17 May 2023, No 21-18.406). In this case, an Italian parent company had initiated arbitration proceedings against its Italian co-contractor. After the arbitral tribunal rejected the claim, a subsidiary of the parent company decided in turn to initiate commercial litigation against the co-contractor before the Albanian courts with regard to the same claim. The Albanian court ruled (at first instance and at appeal) in favuor of the company and its subsidiary, leading them to apply for enforcement of the judgment in France. The Italian co-contractor objected to such enforcement on the basis of the existence of the arbitral award. The Cour de cassation upheld the decision issued by the Paris Court of Appeal and refused to enforce the Albanian judgment, as it had been rendered in fraud of the pre-existing arbitration award.
In 2024, the Paris Tribunal Judiciaire heard a similar case. The Libyan State requested the enforcement of a judgment that has no purpose other than to prevent a pending award from being recognised and enforced on the grounds that it would be irreconcilable with said judgment, even though that judgment was given in proceedings instituted after the arbitral tribunal was seised. Consequently, the request was declared inadmissible (Paris, 24 April 2024, No 23/10389).
Scope of Immunity and the End of the Eurodif Case Law
Since the decision of the Cour de cassation dated 14 March 1984 (Cass Civ 1, 14 March 1984, No 82-12.642) (the “Eurodif case law”), it has been accepted that “a foreign state in principle benefits from immunity of execution”; however, “this immunity may exceptionally be ruled out whenever the seized asset has not been allocated to the exercise of a sovereign activity, but with an economic or commercial activity governed by private law and which gives rise to the legal action”. It has also been considered that a lifting of the immunity from enforcement is possible in the event of a waiver by the foreign state.
The question of the waiver of immunity from execution has given rise to different case law. It has been considered that such waiver must be express (Paris Court of Appeal, 26 September 2001, No 2001/12633). It was then requested that, in relation to diplomatic assets or tax and social security debts, renunciation be both express (ie, written without ambiguity) and special (ie, contractually determined by the foreign state) (Cass Civ 1, 28 September 2011, No 09-72.057; Cass Civ 1, 28 March 2013, No 11-10.450). The Cour de cassation later modified its position, deciding that ‒ in relation to diplomatic assets ‒ an express renunciation was sufficient (Cass Civ 1, 13 May 2015, No 13-17.751). In this decision, the Cour de cassation referred to the 2004 United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property. Article 19 of this convention provides three alternative conditions to justify the seizure of the assets of a state ‒ one of which is the express consent of the state. (The 2004 United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property has not yet entered into force but is referred to by French courts.)
It is in this unsettled context that the Law No 2016-1691 on Transparency, Anti-Corruption and Modernisation of Economic Life (“Sapin II”) of 9 December 2016 was introduced. This law increases the sanctions available against companies and individuals found guilty of corruption or influence-peddling and incorporates new rules with regard to the enforcement of decisions against foreign states.
With Sapin II, the new Articles L.111-1-1 to L.111-1-3 of the Code of Civil Enforcement Procedures have tightened the implementation framework for enforcement measures, and thus can be said to have enhanced the protection granted to sovereign assets against decisions from domestic courts or arbitral tribunals that have ruled against states.
Pursuant to Article L.111-1-1 of the Code of Civil Enforcement Procedures, provisional or enforcement measures cannot be carried out against the property of a foreign state unless a prior authorisation has been given by a judge in an ex parte order (sur requête).
Article L.111-1-2 provides three alternative bases upon which interim measures or enforcement measures against assets of a state may be granted:
It should be mentioned that, following the latest Commisimpex case, assets enumerated for the purpose of paragraph (3) of Article L.111-1-2 ‒ and which are considered de facto related to non-commercial public services ‒ may still be subject to enforcement measures if the state in question gave an express waiver (Cass, Civ 1, 13 April 2023, No 18-20.915). Contrary to diplomatic assets, no special waiver is required, even if they are sensitive assets (ie, related to tax, defence, or cultural heritage). To prevent such a situation, the state must demonstrate that the assets are related to its diplomatic mission (Cass, Civ 1, 13 April 2023, No 18-20.915). A French scholar has criticised the decision (JCP G, 15 May 2023, p568, No 19, L. d’Avout)
Finally, according to Article L.111-1-3 of the Code of Civil Enforcement Procedures and in relation to diplomatic assets only, a waiver of immunity by the state must be express and special (confirmed by Cass Civ 1, 10 January 2018, No 16-22.494; Cass Civ 1, 3 February 2021, No 19-10.669).
Recently, the Cour de cassation ‒ by referring to Article 19 of the 2004 United Nations Convention on Jurisdictional Immunities of States and Their Property ‒ abandoned the anachronistic requirement of a nexus between the seized asset and the activity at issue, which had been introduced by the longstanding Eurodif case law. It also defined the criterion of the seizable nature of an asset belonging to a foreign state or one of its emanations by reference to its nature alone (Cass Civ 1, 3 November 2021, No 19-25.404).
Distinction Between Recognition and Enforcement of an Award in Relation to Winding Up
Under French insolvency law, arbitrators are prohibited from ordering a debtor in bankruptcy to pay any amount. Indeed, arbitral tribunals are only empowered to fix the amount of the debt. Consequently, an award ordering a debtor in bankruptcy to pay is unenforceable in France where the bankruptcy proceeding is being conducted.
However, in a recent decision, the Cour de cassation confirmed a decision from the Paris Court of Appeal where the court allowed the claimant to seek leave to enforce an award ‒ although the arbitral tribunal had ordered the debtor in bankruptcy to pay. The rationale of the decision lies in the fact that the claimant requested the leave to enforce only to acknowledge the amount of the claim established by the award, so that their claim could be recognised in the bankruptcy procedure.
This decision is to be welcomed; international arbitrators may not necessarily be aware of French insolvency law peculiarities and may not have been properly briefed by the parties. Although ignorance should certainly never be a cause for justification, it would be highly prejudicial if an award were to be found as contrary to public policy on that basis alone ‒ whereas public policy could simply act as a filter to the enforcement of the payment obligation and limit the order to the fixed amount of damages (if any), thereby resolving the parties’ need for an effective dispute adjudication mechanism and the considerations of public policy surrounding the protections granted to the debtor in bankruptcy.
That said, in order to avoid the above-mentioned difficulties, the recommended option remains to request recognition of the award only, not its enforcement (Cass Civ 1, 15 May 2024, No 23-11.012).
Focus on Recent European Case Law and Its Impact on French Law
Enforcement of decisions against frozen assets
During the past few decades, the EU has issued numerous sanctions against states and related entities. Yet, in the context of international trade, economic operators may be entitled by a judgment or an award to recover monies from a sanctioned entity ‒ although such recovery is difficult, as said assets are frozen as a consequence of EU sanctions. Hence, the big question for the creditor is: can they pursue enforcement of a decision against frozen assets and, if so, under which procedure? Given that most sanctions are issued by the EU, and each of them has its own features, the CJEU progressively clarifies the legal regime applicable to enforcement against frozen assets.
On 11 November 2021, the CJEU ruled that provisions from EU regulations concerning restrictive measures against Iran must be interpreted “as precluding the implementation of protective measures, without prior authorisation from the competent national authority, in respect of funds or economic resources that have been frozen in the context of the common foreign and security policy, which establish a right to be paid on a priority basis in favour of the creditor concerned in relation to other creditors, even if such measures do not have the effect of removing assets from the debtor’s estate” (aff C-340/20 – Bank Sepah v Overseas Financial Limited, Oaktree Finance Limited).
Consequently, no protective measures may be taken against frozen assets without prior authorisation from the designated national authority, even if such use of the funds “does not have the effect of removing assets from the debtor’s estate”. And, given that the provision used in the regulation aimed against Iran is generic to most regulations related to sanctions, the interpretation given by the CJEU can be used in other contexts.
In France, this means that no measures ‒ whether protective (mesures conservatoires, rendering assets unavailable for their owner and other creditors) or final (eg, saisies attribution) – can be ordered without prior authorisation from the Treasury director (Cass, Ass, 29 April 2022, No 18-18.542; 18-21.814; Cass, Civ 1, 7 September 2022, No 19-25.108 and 19-21.964). The practical consequence is that no creditor can, in any circumstance, pursue any type of enforcement without prior authorisation from the Treasury director. Practical tip: the authorisation can be requested through a secured teleservice system.
Particularly broad interpretation of the concept of “decision” within Brussels I bis
On 7 April 2022, the CJEU ruled that an order for payment issued by a court located in an EU member state on the basis of a final judgment issued in a non-member state is a decision within the meaning of Article 2(a) of Brussels I bis (aff C-568/20 – J v H Limited). Consequently, the fact that orders qualify as decisions greatly simplifies their enforcement in EU member states, while also providing the defendant to the enforcement with the option to apply for refusal of enforcement based on one of the grounds referred to in Article 45 of the Regulation – in particular, the public policy exception.
First concrete illustration of what “exceptional circumstances” can be under the EEO Regulation
The Regulation (EC) No 805/2004 of 21 April 2004 creating a European Enforcement Order for uncontested claims (the “EEO Regulation”) defines a procedure that allows a judgment rendered on an uncontested claim and delivered in an EU member state to be easily recognised and enforced in another member state (ie, no exequatur proceedings and no option to challenge its recognition, Article 5). However, Article 23 of the EEO Regulation provides the possibility of stay of such enforcement when there are “exceptional circumstances”.
In a very recent decision, dated 16 February 2023 (aff C-393/21), the CJEU ruled for the first time that “exceptional circumstances” may include a situation of force majeure or a case where the continuation of enforcement would expose the debtor to a real risk of particularly serious harm – for which compensation would be impossible or extremely difficult if the action or application brought in the state of origin were successful.
This decision recalls the French provision (Article 514-3 of the FCCP) that applies with regard to staying or limiting the provisional enforcement of a judgment and which requires the demonstration that “there is a serious ground for setting aside or reversing the judgment and that enforcement is likely to entail manifestly excessive consequences”.
Recent Issues Regarding the Enforcement of Arbitral Awards
The enforcement of arbitral awards in the French legal system is governed by a regime that is highly favourable. Based on the Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards 1958 (the “New York Convention”), the French legislator has developed a more liberal regime that provides an even less restrictive framework by which to enforce arbitral awards than that provided for in the New York Convention. Indeed, Article VII.1 of the New York Convention authorises any interested party to avail itself of the more favourable provisions in force in the state of recognition.
This is precisely the case with the French provisions provided in the FCCP. The only obstacle to the recognition or exequatur in France of arbitral awards rendered abroad or in international arbitration is the existence of a manifest conflict with international public policy (Article 1514 of the FCCP). However, should the order granting leave to enforce be appealed, this would offer additional grounds to dispute the enforceability of the foreign award – ie, the same grounds as that of an action to set aside under Article 1520 of the FCCP.
The Cour de cassation recently reiterated the impact of an action to set aside an award on its enforceability (Cass Civ 1, 7 June 2023, No 22-12.757). It ruled that a decision declaring an action for annulment of an award inadmissible does not amount to rendering the award enforceable. Thus, notwithstanding a favourable decision of the French appellate court on the validity of the award, a party wishing to pursue the enforcement of an award is not exempt from applying to the court in order to obtain an order granting leave to enforce. Such order will be issued following a review of the existence of the arbitration agreement and in the absence of any manifest conflict with French international public policy.
A recent example of French international public policy in relation to arbitral awards concerns insolvency proceedings (Cass Com, 8 February 2023, No 21-15.771). In this case, the Cour de cassation ruled that the stay of individual proceedings – which is an automatic effect following the opening of insolvency proceedings – falls within the scope of French international public policy. In this decision, the arbitral tribunal had been seised after the opening of the insolvency proceedings by a creditor whose claim had existed prior to the opening of the insolvency proceedings. The arbitral award that was issued was declared unenforceable in France as it was in violation of creditors’ equality of arms and of the principle of stay of individual proceedings, and therefore in contravention of French international public policy.
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