The Position of small and medium-sized enterprises in European contract law
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The Position of small and medium-sized enterprises in European contract law
(Ius commune, 121)
Intersentia, c2014
Available at 2 libraries
  Aomori
  Iwate
  Miyagi
  Akita
  Yamagata
  Fukushima
  Ibaraki
  Tochigi
  Gunma
  Saitama
  Chiba
  Tokyo
  Kanagawa
  Niigata
  Toyama
  Ishikawa
  Fukui
  Yamanashi
  Nagano
  Gifu
  Shizuoka
  Aichi
  Mie
  Shiga
  Kyoto
  Osaka
  Hyogo
  Nara
  Wakayama
  Tottori
  Shimane
  Okayama
  Hiroshima
  Yamaguchi
  Tokushima
  Kagawa
  Ehime
  Kochi
  Fukuoka
  Saga
  Nagasaki
  Kumamoto
  Oita
  Miyazaki
  Kagoshima
  Okinawa
  Korea
  China
  Thailand
  United Kingdom
  Germany
  Switzerland
  France
  Belgium
  Netherlands
  Sweden
  Norway
  United States of America
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
According to the European Commission, differences in contract law and the additional transaction costs and complexity they generate in cross-border transactions dissuade a considerable number of traders, in particular SMEs, from expanding into markets of other Member States. These differences are also said to limit competition in the internal market. Furthermore, they underlie the European Commission's draft Regulation for a Common European Sales Law (CESL). The 2012 Ius Commune workshop on Contract Law was dedicated to the position of SMEs in European Contract law and focused on their contractual relations with other SMEs (SME2SME), consumers (SME2C and C2SME) and larger companies (B2SME and SME2B). Is there a need for a kind of "consumer law for professionals"? This book contains the most interesting and challenging contributions to this workshop.
Table of Contents
The Position of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises in European Contract Law: An Introduction Marco B.M. Loos and Ilse Samoy 1. Introduction: the development of a consumer policy 2. Protection of other parties lacking bargaining power? 3. Recognition of the position of weaker commercial parties in European B2B contract law 4. The Draft Common Frame of Reference and the proposal for a Common European Sales Law 5. A brief description of the papers in this book Chapter 1. SMEs in the Common European Sales Law Fernando Dias Simoes 1. The importance of SMEs for the European Market 1.1. SMEs and transaction costs 1.2. SMEs as the weaker party 2. The personal scope of application of the Proposal 3. Does the Proposal protect the interests of SMEs? 3.1. The reduction of transaction costs 3.2. SMEs as the weaker party: from mandatory rules to standard contract terms 4. The development of 'European model contract terms' 5. Final remarks Chapter 2. Can the Common European Sales Law do without the definition of an SME? Sonja Kruisinga 1. Introduction 2. Background of the Regulation on CESL 3. The definition of an SME in the Regulation on CESL 3.1. Defining an SME Contents 3.2. Questions which were left unanswered concerning the definition of an SME 4. A comparison: the definitions of small and large enterprises in private law in the Netherlands 4.1. Large companies within the meaning of Article 6:235(1) of the Netherlands Civil Code 4.2. Large companies within the meaning of Articles 2:153 and 263 of the Netherlands Civil Code 5. Concluding remarks Chapter 3. A Consumer Law for Professionals: Radical Innovation or Consolidation of National Practices? Pieter Brulez 1. Protecting the weaker party through detailed legislation. 1.1. No detailed legislation specifically designed for B2B transactions 1.2. Extending the consumer notion 1.3. Criticism 2. Protection through general principles 2.1. Good faith, fair dealing and mutual cooperation 2.2. Good faith in the pre-contractual stage 2.3. Good faith in the contractual stage 3. P.CESL accepts procedural fairness and contextualization in a B2B context Chapter 4. The CESL and its Unfair Terms Protection for SMEs Josse Klijnsma 1. Introduction 2. The case for unfair terms protection for SMEs 2.1. An internal market argument 2.2. A weaker party protection argument 3. Unfair terms protection for SMEs in the CESL 3.1. Definition of the consumer and mixed contracts 3.2. The unfairness test of Article 86 CESL. 4. An autonomous interpretation as the way forward? Chapter 5. Unfair Terms in Contracts Between Businesses A Comparative Overview in Light of the Common European Sales Law Sander Van Loock 1. Introduction 2. SMEs as a novel concept in European contract law 2.1. Definition 2.2. Criticism 3. Theory of unfair contract terms 3.1. Benefits and risks of standard terms Contents 3.2. Justification of judicial control 3.2.1. Abuse of bargaining power 3.2.2. Transaction costs. 4. Conceptual analysis of unfair terms. 4.1. European Union: Unfair Contract Terms Directive, DCFR and CESL 4.1.1. Unfair Contract Terms Directive 4.1.2. DCFR 4.1.3. CESL 4.2. Germany 4.2.1. Standard terms 4.2.2. Individually negotiated terms (im Einzelnen ausgehandelt) 4.3. The Netherlands 4.4. France 4.5. Belgium 4.6. United Kingdom 4.7. Conclusion 5. Judicial control 5.1. European Union: Unfair Contract Terms Directive, DCFR and CESL 5.1.1. Unfair Contract Terms Directive 5.1.2. DCFR 5.1.3. CESL 5.2. Germany 5.2.1. Content of the judicial control 5.2.2. Differentiations 5.2.3. Indizwirkung 5.2.4. Criticism 5.3. The Netherlands 5.4. France 5.4.1. Consumer law and B2B contracts 5.4.2. Modern developments and perspectives 5.5. Belgium 5.5.1. B2C contracts 5.5.2. B2B contracts 5.6. United Kingdom 5.6.1. Reasonableness test 5.6.2. Dealing as consumer 5.6.3. Recommendations of the Law Commissions 5.7. Conclusion 6. Conclusion Chapter 6. Harmonisation of Rules on Business-to-Business Marketing Practices: A Critical Analysis of the MCAD Report Bert Keirsbilck 1. The current European law on unfair commercial practices 1.1. UCPD 1.2. MCAD 1.3. Critical analysis of the dualistic approach 1.4. Consultation on the MCAD 2. Possible options for the further harmonisation of rules on business- to-business practices 2.1. Minor revision of the MCAD 2.2. Substantial revision of the MCAD so as to mirror the UCPD 2.3. Substantial revision of the UCPD so as to integrate the MCAD 2.4. Maintaining the status quo 3. Conclusion and epilogue on the need and desirability of harmonisation of rules concerning unfair business-to-business trading practices
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