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BCL Law Notes Conflict of Laws BCL Notes

Car Trim Notes

Updated Car Trim Notes

Conflict of Laws BCL

Approximately 588 pages

These are case summaries (excerpts from cases - not paraphrased) I made during the Oxford BCL for the Conflict of Laws course. ...

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Car Trim (2010)

Facts

KeySafety, which is established in Italy, supplies Italian car manufacturers with airbag systems. Between July 2001 and December 2003, KeySafety purchased from Car Trim components used in the manufacture of those systems, in accordance with five supply contracts ('the contracts').

KeySafety terminated the contracts with effect from the end of 2003. On the view that those contracts should have run, in part, until summer 2007, Car Trim claimed that the terminations were in breach of contract and brought an action for damages before the Landgericht Chemnitz (Regional Court, Chemnitz), which has jurisdiction for the place where the components were manufactured. The Landgericht Chemnitz held that it had no jurisdiction to rule on the action on the ground that the German courts have no international jurisdiction.

Nature of the contract: The Oberlandesgericht noted that, under the contracts, Car Trim was obliged to manufacture airbags of a certain shape, in the traditional manner of a supplier of equipment for the automobile industry, using products purchased from agreed suppliers, so as to be able to supply them to order, according to the needs of KeySafety's production process and in conformity with a large number of requirements relating to the organisation of the work, quality control, packaging, labelling, delivery orders and invoices.

It is possible for the German courts to have jurisdiction to adjudicate the action for damages only if the place of production is to be regarded as the place of performance of 'the obligation in question' within the meaning of Article 5(1) of Regulation No 44/2001.

Questions

Is Article 5(1)(b) of Council Regulation No 44/2001 to be interpreted as meaning that contracts for the supply of goods to be produced or manufactured are, notwithstanding specific requirements on the part of the customer with regard to the provision, fabrication and delivery of the components to be produced, including a guarantee of the quality of production, reliability of delivery and smooth administrative handling of the order, to be classified as a sale of goods (first indent), and not as provision of services (second indent)? What criteria are decisive for the distinction?

If a sale of goods is to be presumed: in the case of sales contracts involving carriage of goods, is the place where under the contract the goods sold were delivered or should have been delivered to be determined according to the place of physical transfer to the purchaser, or according to the place at which the goods were handed over to the first carrier for transmission to the purchaser?'

Holding

Question 1 – Distinction between sale of goods and supply of services

Classification based on the nature of the obligation: In view of that fact, it is therefore necessary to take as a basis the obligation which characterises the contracts at issue. A contract which has as its characteristic obligation the supply of a good will be classified as a 'sale of goods' within the meaning of the first indent of Article 5(1)(b) of Regulation No 44/2001. A contract which has as its characteristic obligation the provision of services will be classified as a 'provision of services' within the meaning of the second indent of Article 5(1)(b) of that regulation.

Three criteria

Manufacture is not conclusive: Court relied on CISG and European directives to hold that the fact that the goods to be delivered are to be manufactured or produced beforehand does not alter the classification of the contract at issue as a sales contract.

Who supplied the Materials: It is necessary to take into account the criterion, relied upon by the Commission of the European Communities, relating to the origin of the raw materials. Another factor which can be taken into consideration is whether or not those materials were supplied by the purchaser, for the purposes of the interpretation of Article 5(1)(b) of Regulation No 44/2001. Where all the materials from which the goods are manufactured, or most of them, have been supplied by the purchaser, that fact could be an indication that the contract should be classified as a 'contract for the provision of services'. On the other hand, where the material has not been supplied by the purchaser, that fact is a strong indication that the contract should be classified as a 'contract for the sale of goods'. It is clear from the case-file referred to the Court that, in the case before the referring court, even though KeySafety determined the suppliers from which Car Trim had to...

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